Oppenheimer: Christopher Nolan’s new movie gets explosive trailer

Oppenheimer: Christopher Nolan’s new movie gets explosive trailer




Oppenheimer: Christopher Nolan’s new movie gets explosive trailer

Universal Pictures has released the poster and first trailer for “Oppenheimer,” the new film from director Christopher Nolan (“Tenet”). Biopic of the father of the atomic bomb, preview highlights actor Cillian Murphy (“Peaky Blinders”) in the title role, who reflects on the responsibility of unleashing that power into the hands of men, while testing the explosive capacity of his invention.

The production’s stellar cast also includes Emily Blunt (“A Quiet Place”), Matt Damon (“Jason Bourne”), Robert Downey Jr. (“Iron Man”), Benny Safdie (“Good Time”), Florence Pugh (” Black Widow”), Rami Malek (“007 – No Time to Die”), Dane DeHaan (“Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets”)”), Matthew Modine (“The Dark Knight Rises”), Kenneth Branagh (“Tenet”), Michael Angarano (“This Is Us”), Alden Ehrenreich (“Solo: A Star Wars Story”) and David Krumholtz (“The Devil”).

In addition to directing, Nolan wrote the screenplay for the feature film, an adaptation of the book “American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer” by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin. Published in 2005, the book won the Pulitzer Prize.

The plot revolves around the creation of the atomic bomb in the United States, with Murphy as scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer, who spearheaded the project, and Blunt as his wife, Katherine “Kitty” Oppenheimer. The two actors recently worked together on “A Quiet Place – Part II”.

“Oppenheimer” will also be Nolan’s first feature film produced by Universal Pictures, following the director’s 20-year partnership with Warner Bros.

Though a biographical drama, Universal describes the project as an “epic thriller” about the “pulsing paradox of the enigmatic man who must risk destroying the world to save it.”

The first is scheduled for July 20 in Brazil, close to the date marking the anniversary of the explosion of the bombs over Hiroshima (August 6, 1945) and Nagasaki (August 9, 1945).



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Source: Terra

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