This is essentially the subject of Nolan’s most recent movie, which he has ostensibly always wanted to produce. Oppenheimer details the life of the American theoretical physicist.

who served as the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory during World War II. Created the first nuclear weapon that would put an end to the Pacific War. It is based on the biography American Prometheus, written by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin in 2005.  A crescendo of such epic proportions is constructed in the lead-up to the Trinity nuclear test. In the New Mexico desert, the first atomic bomb detonation as part of the Manhattan project.

When you think back on Oppenheimer’s famous Bhagavad Gita remark. Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds, all the more unsettling. But although being a visually stunning feat, the explosion alone does not deserve the anticipation. With the aid of the unsettling score by Ludwig Goransson.

The staggering use of 65-millimeter film by the cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytem. The frantic frames by the editor Jennifer Lame, Nolan transports. You inside the tragic workings of a protagonist repulsed by his own prominence. Tortured by his futile attempt to oppose further nuclear development.

Robert Downey Jr IN OPPENHEIMER :-

Now he’s back in Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer, playing Admiral Lewis Strauss, the businessman turned government official who locked horns with the physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer in the years following World War II. With his roles as Sherlock Holmes and Iron Man in two massive film franchises, Robert Downey Jr. is one of the most popular actors of the recent decades.