SENATE AIDE: Well, there were, uh, a couple of unexpected holdouts. (solemn music playing)
Oppenheimer
4.3s
Little remote for that. Yes. Let's get some sleep.
Oppenheimer
3s
The brat is down. Where are the martinis?
Oppenheimer
1.6s
I have known him for years.
Oppenheimer
1.2s
Now.
Oppenheimer
34s
You're a dilettante, a womanizer, a suspected Communist... I'm a New Deal Democrat. I said "suspected." Unstable, theatrical, egotistical, neurotic... Nothing good, no? Not even "he's brilliant, but..." Well, brilliance is taken for granted in your circle, so no. No, the only person who had anything good to say was Richard Tolman. Tolman thinks you have integrity, but he also strikes me as a guy who knows more about science than people. Yet here you are. You don't take much on trust. I don't take anything on trust.
Oppenheimer
2.1s
Wait, what's he saying?
Oppenheimer
4.6s
Frank knows the desert, he's left politics behind, he's been working with Lawrence for two years now.
STRAUSS: As you can see, Robert, it's not yet signed. May I keep this? NICHOLS: No.
Oppenheimer
4s
(distant explosion) (distant rumbling)
Oppenheimer
3.3s
(intense classical music continues)
Oppenheimer
25.6s
MARSHALL: If a Russian bomb is inevitable, perhaps we should invite their top scientists to Trinity. President Truman has no intention of raising expectations that Stalin be included in the atomic project. Informing him of our breakthrough and presenting it as a means to win the war need not make unkeepable promises. But the Potsdam peace conference in July will be President Truman's last chance to have that conversation. Can you give us a working bomb by then?
Oppenheimer
6.8s
Robert. Robert. - God, what's the matter? - (grunts softly) - What happened? - (sighs)