Top 5 underrated American actors.veryfuller said:
Also, Casey Affleck was so good in that very quick role.
Head Ninja In Charge said:Top 5 underrated American actors.veryfuller said:
Also, Casey Affleck was so good in that very quick role.
This is how it felt doing math homework with your dad pic.twitter.com/BPYzriedYh
— Sydney🚀 (@CountVolpe) July 25, 2023
Cliff.Booth said:
Many Americans were interested in several political movements that seemed more resolute than boring old republicanism. It took a few decades of war and mass murder for the reality of these trends to become apparent to those who hadn't read the source material closely enough before joining a party.
TCTTS said:This is how it felt doing math homework with your dad pic.twitter.com/BPYzriedYh
— Sydney🚀 (@CountVolpe) July 25, 2023
Quote:
Robb was the court-appointed attorney for Earl Browder, a leader of the Communist Party, in a Contempt of Congress case in 1950, earning praise from Browder despite their political differences. He also successfully defended Otto Otepka, a former State Department official accused of giving unauthorized material to a Senate committee.
Robb was special counsel to the Atomic Energy Commission at an AEC hearing on the loyalty of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb. Over the course of four weeks, Robb and the AEC panel interrogated Oppenheimer and other witnesses on his past affiliations with Communists, with Robb using harsh prosecutorial tactics. The board voted 2-1 to strip Oppenheimer of his security clearance. This became a major part of the plot line of the 2023 Christopher Nolan movie Oppenheimer.
In 1968, Robb represented Barry Goldwater in his libel suit against Ralph Ginzburg and Fact magazine, which had claimed that Goldwater was mentally unstable. The jury awarded Goldwater $1 in compensatory damages and $75,000 in punitive damages, which was upheld on appeal.
Quote:
I think, like many things, the theory was prettier than the application. Nearly anything can sound promising in theory.
Squadron7 said:
Reading American Prometheus lets you know that the FBI has always done and probably always will be doing unauthroized wiretaps.
poundstone said:
Why was that too rough? Truman wasn't exactly a great guy
Interesting story but, with hindsight of the whole movie...kind of an interesting moment.TCTTS said:
Finally - and this was pretty hilarious - one part of the theater started doing exactly what the audience in the bleachers had just been doing on screen - stomping their feet and clapping - and pretty soon the entire theater joined in - all 900 or so people stomping, clapping, and laughing - and the theater finally turned off the movie.
FtWorthHorn said:Interesting story but, with hindsight of the whole movie...kind of an interesting moment.TCTTS said:
Finally - and this was pretty hilarious - one part of the theater started doing exactly what the audience in the bleachers had just been doing on screen - stomping their feet and clapping - and pretty soon the entire theater joined in - all 900 or so people stomping, clapping, and laughing - and the theater finally turned off the movie.
There's been a lot of conversation about Nolan's choice not to show the results of Hiroshima/Nagasaki. That scene, with the stomping, was (IMO) pretty clearly the stand-in. And it's not just because of the visuals of skin peeling off - I thought the stomping itself was the real point. There's this crowd of people madly cheering, and on one hand you get it...but they're cheering for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians. By the end of the movie, I found the stomping to be pretty horrifying, and I think that was the point.
Squadron7 said:FtWorthHorn said:Interesting story but, with hindsight of the whole movie...kind of an interesting moment.TCTTS said:
Finally - and this was pretty hilarious - one part of the theater started doing exactly what the audience in the bleachers had just been doing on screen - stomping their feet and clapping - and pretty soon the entire theater joined in - all 900 or so people stomping, clapping, and laughing - and the theater finally turned off the movie.
There's been a lot of conversation about Nolan's choice not to show the results of Hiroshima/Nagasaki. That scene, with the stomping, was (IMO) pretty clearly the stand-in. And it's not just because of the visuals of skin peeling off - I thought the stomping itself was the real point. There's this crowd of people madly cheering, and on one hand you get it...but they're cheering for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians. By the end of the movie, I found the stomping to be pretty horrifying, and I think that was the point.
It would be more accurate to say that they were cheering for the unexepended lives of American GI's, however much animosity they may have had for the Japanese.
Everyone agrees that Japan was essentially defeated. It is a huge talking point, then and now.
But on every battlefiend acroos the Pacific where we faced them, how many lives were we (and the Japanese) forced to expend to reach the end of fighting regardless of how foregone the outcome.
From Midway forward...Peleliu, Guam, Saipan, Tinian, Iwo, Okinawa....how foregone the outcome was mattered not at all.
The acceptance and/or realization of defeat is not the same as surrender. And while the weapon was singularly destructive as a single device, our incindiary bombings raids killed many more civilians.
Squadron7 said:FtWorthHorn said:Interesting story but, with hindsight of the whole movie...kind of an interesting moment.TCTTS said:
Finally - and this was pretty hilarious - one part of the theater started doing exactly what the audience in the bleachers had just been doing on screen - stomping their feet and clapping - and pretty soon the entire theater joined in - all 900 or so people stomping, clapping, and laughing - and the theater finally turned off the movie.
There's been a lot of conversation about Nolan's choice not to show the results of Hiroshima/Nagasaki. That scene, with the stomping, was (IMO) pretty clearly the stand-in. And it's not just because of the visuals of skin peeling off - I thought the stomping itself was the real point. There's this crowd of people madly cheering, and on one hand you get it...but they're cheering for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians. By the end of the movie, I found the stomping to be pretty horrifying, and I think that was the point.
It would be more accurate to say that they were cheering for the unexepended lives of American GI's, however much animosity they may have had for the Japanese.
Everyone agrees that Japan was essentially defeated. It is a huge talking point, then and now.
But on every battlefiend acroos the Pacific where we faced them, how many lives were we (and the Japanese) forced to expend to reach the end of fighting regardless of how foregone the outcome.
From Midway forward...Peleliu, Guam, Saipan, Tinian, Iwo, Okinawa....how foregone the outcome was mattered not at all.
The acceptance and/or realization of defeat is not the same as surrender. And while the weapon was singularly destructive as a single device, our incindiary bombings raids killed many more civilians.
Yeah, I almost added this but was posting right before a call started. I'm not implying the bomb was unnecessary, a wrong decision, I didn't understand the crowd, etc. But in the context of the movie, I thought it was fairly clear that the stomping was, in Oppenheimer's mind and when it was repeated throughout the movie, the sound of the consequences of the bomb.
Edit: Actually discussed this with my wife right after we saw it last night, it was particularly interesting in the context of Oppenheimer trying and struggling to explain when his moral qualms began. He tried to intellectualize some fission vs. fusion issue, but my takeaway (for the movie, if not Oppenheimer in reality) was that it was really that auditorium scene that did it. It's what hit him with the consequences, and his feelings in the future always went back to that moment.
bonfarr said:
Just saw it and was disappointed. Very little of the movie is devoted to the actual building of the Bomb, it is all about the moral conundrum and politics of the bomb. A significant portion of the film takes place in a claustrophobic room filled with men questioning Oppenheimer and others. I expect a big drop off after the opening weekend and I would not spend time watching the movie again when it is streaming.