Found 2305 results

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(timer ticking) Twenty minutes.

Oppenheimer

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But I can't see you again.

Oppenheimer

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You're aiming for the 6th? It's up to the CO in the Pacific.

Oppenheimer

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Gentlemen, if I... if I seem uncooperative, I think you can understand that's because of my insistence in not getting innocent people into trouble. GROVES: You're trying to protect your friend. Who's protecting you? Well, you could. If you gave me the name. If you order me to, I'll do it. That's a mistake, Robert. You need to volunteer this name.

Oppenheimer

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Try Groves.

Oppenheimer

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Do I have to make an appointment?

Oppenheimer

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It's just it was all so very long ago, - Mr. Robb, wasn't it? - Not really. Long enough to have forgotten. Did you return the card or rip it up? The card whose existence I've forgotten? Your Communist Party membership card. Haven't the slightest idea.

Oppenheimer

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Teachers are unionized. Why not professors? Don't you have somewhere to be? Lawrence, academics have rights too. Look, it's not that. I've got a group coming. - Well, I'll sit in. - Not this one.

Oppenheimer

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Would the Japanese surrender if they knew what was coming?

Oppenheimer

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ROBERT: Well done.

Oppenheimer

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Oh, dear. You haven't heard.

Oppenheimer

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What do moral qualms have to do with that? Wha... What do moral qualms - have to do with it? - ROBB: Yes. Oppenheimer wanted to own the atomic bomb. He wanted to be the man who moved the Earth. He talks about putting the nuclear genie back in the bottle. Well, I'm here to tell you that I know J. Robert Oppenheimer, and if he could do it all over, he'd do it all the same. You know he's never once said that he regrets Hiroshima? He'd do it all over. Why? Because it made him the most important man who ever lived. (voice quivering): Well, we've... we've freely used the atomic bomb... ROBB: In fact, Doctor, you assisted in selecting the target to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, - didn't you? - Yes. ROBB: Well, then you knew, did you not, that by dropping that atomic bomb on the target you selected, that thousands of civilians would be killed or injured, is that correct? Yes, not as many as turned out... Oh. Well, how many were killed or injured? - 70,000. - ROBB: 70,000 at both Hiroshima and... 110,000 at both. ROBB: On the day of each bombing? (tense music playing) Yes. And in the weeks and years that followed? It has been put at somewhere between 50 and 100,000. - 220,000 dead at least? - ROBERT: Yes. Any moral scruples about that?

Oppenheimer

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You know, people here depend on you.

Oppenheimer

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(music fades out)

Oppenheimer

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Ever get the feeling our kind isn't entirely welcome here? Physicists? 'S funny. Not in the department. They're all Jewish too.

Oppenheimer

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ROBB: Doctor, did you think social contacts between a person engaged on secret war work and Communists was dangerous? My awareness of the danger would be greater today. I mean, it's fair to say that during the war years, you felt that such contacts were potentially dangerous.

Oppenheimer

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(intense music playing)

Oppenheimer

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(both gasp)

Oppenheimer