Oppenheimer will open July 21 exclusively in theaters and in IMAX. It will be the longest film of Christopher Nolan’s career, clocking in at nearly three hours. And honestly, for me that isn’t long enough, now having read 2/3rds of American Prometheus by Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin, the book upon which the screenplay is based.
This is a big story to tell. It’s not just the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer as the director for the Manhattan Project. His life was expansive in ways I am honestly not sure even exist for many people anymore. He was as exceptional as Einstein (if not more so) and he belongs in the pantheon along with him and every other major groundbreaking scientist and inventor we remember and revere, like Galileo, Da Vinci, Darwin.
The deets:
Writer/Director: Christopher Nolan
Oppenheimer: Cillian Murphy
Truman: Gary Oldman
Kitty Oppenheimer: Emily Blunt
Jean Tatlock: Florence Pugh
Leslie Groves: Matt Damon
Lewis Strauss: Robert Downey, Jr.
Cinematography: Hoyte van Hoytema
Score: Ludwig Göransson
Editing: Jennifer Lame
Production Design: Ruth De Jong
Costumes: Ellen Mirojnick
This is already shaping up to be an incredible year for film and something to be excited about. Between Oppenheimer (Christopher Nolan), Killers of the Flower Moon (Martin Scorsese), Dune: Part Two (Denis Villeneuve), Napoleon (Ridley Scott), and The Killers (David Fincher), it almost feels like we’re seeing a resurgence of sprawling, ambitious, and epic movies. Two of those are financed by streaming platforms, though will also get a theatrical release. Aiming at large canvas movies best seen on the big screen means we can have the best of both worlds.
Nolan shot Oppenheimer in IMAX, a massive logistical mission that few directors dare to tackle, and even fewer know how to fully exploit for maximum cinematic impact.
The film will apparently refrain from showing sequences of the bombs dropping on Hiroshima and Nagasaki (I think, but I don’t know). If so, that’s probably for the best, since any accurate depiction would be too horrific to witness up close.. We’ll see the Trinity test — and that is enough.
Because deploying the atomic bomb to bring an end to World War II was such controversial decision, showing that kind of horror would be, I think, too overwhelming for audiences. It remains as controversial today as it did then, which is why we don’t see it discussed much. Similarly, the barbarism inflicted on the Osage Indians at the hands of greedy white men in Oklahoma has been a story too shameful to be told in any major way.
The Oppenheimer biography American Prometheus takes us deep into the life of the brilliant Oppie, whose active and curious mind had him learning multiple languages, reading every book he could get his hands in his youth. And then there was his love life – fascinating unto itself. He was accused of being homosexual by J. Edgar Hoover, but his biographers, Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, insist that was Hoover’s paranoia (or perhaps his projection). Though Oppenheimer doesn’t seem like a man who would rule out any kind of experimentation.
He had three major relationships with women. One was with Jean Tatlock (beautiful, fascinating, possibly gay, maybe murdered by the FBI for being a communist and because they feared she might leak nuclear secrets to the Soviets, though her official cause of death is suicide), portrayed by Florence Pugh. His wife Kitty, mother of his two kids, would also take her own life, and is portrayed by Emily Blunt.

I kind of fell in love with Oppie while reading this book, I’m not gonna lie. He’s just so brilliant and charismatic, even just through the pages of the book and in the few interviews that remain. He has what the Talking Heads would call a “face with a view,” eyes that depict a depth of soul.
Though his curiosity and ambition to do something “important” brought him to Los Alamos to build a small city to build a big bomb, after the end of the war he told President Harry Truman, “I have blood on my hands.” Truman essentially wrote him off as a “crybaby,” and ordered his staff to never let him near the White House again.
When Oppie objected to the development of the hydrogen bomb, he was called to testify in the anti-communist hearings and had his security clearances revoked. They’d been tracking him as a suspected communist for years, but the mass hysteria reached its peak in the 1950s after the Soviets developed their own bomb and after the Rosenbergs were outed as Russian spies (and then executed).
When Oppenheimer premieres July 21, it will nearly coincide with the 78th anniversary of the Trinity test, which was on July 16, 1945. America dropped the bomb on Japan the following month of August. It killed hundreds of thousands of people, though Oppie thought it would kill around 20,000.
Oppenheimer and the other physicists believed they were building the bomb to stop Hitler. Oppenheimer was Jewish and a victim of antisemitism throughout his life, and going after Hitler seemed justified. But after Germany surrendered, the decision was made to use the bomb against Japan since they refused “unconditional surrender.” There is some discrepancy in the book about that, though. Could America have warned them? Could we instead have demonstrated the power of the bomb to persuade them to surrender? The book even suggests that negotiations could have taken place.
Oppenheimer would spend much of the rest of his life trying (and failing) to find a way to eliminate the nuclear program entirely so such a tragedy could never again occur — yet, here we are, with nine countries on our fragile planet in possession of more than 12,000 nuclear warheads.
After suffering 5 brutal years of World War II, there was increasing desperation to end the war before even more allied soldiers died. We had already hit so much of Japan with conventional bombs, yet they kept coming, kept on fighting because Japan’s imperial mindset of the era required control of territory for economic reasons, not purely ideological ones. That meant, for the Japanese, they had to win. The Japanese people knew only what they were told on national radio and newspapers, and many believed that the Emperor was endowed with divine power. Japan’s military had attacked us first, awakening the sleeping giant, but were unprepared to discover that their aggression would result in such tragic and devastating consequences.
When America dropped the two atomic bombs, the U.S. military not only targeted areas that could cripple the Japanese economy, but also areas that had been largely untouched by prior bombing raids, so we could take full measure of the strength and destructiveness the bombs would deliver. It may be easy for some people to look back and pretend we knew the right thing to do (it’s a no-brainer for me: don’t drop a nuke), but in the fog of war, it’s never easy to make the right decisions.
The result was that Oppenheimer’s genius was co-opted by the U.S. military, and his moral sensitivity was subverted. Pandora’s box had been opened and made impossible to close. On the other hand, had America not got there first, there’s a good chance that Germany would have developed a nuclear weapon of their own.
I had not realized that Oppenheimer was such an enigmatic figure until I started reading American Prometheus. A boy genius who could learn a language in a couple of weeks, he had studied physics in Germany, graduated from Harvard, taught at some of the best universities, and lived the life of a bohemian in the 1930s.

Oppenheimer was the kind of guy who would take off on a long horseback journey, armed with only Vienna sausages, booze, and chocolate, and would ride for days and days, sometimes even in the pouring rain. Then he would sit by the fire and read D.H. Lawrence. I mean, COME ON. Just try to resist the man.
Back then, being a communist was akin to what today is called being “woke.” Nearly a century ago, those drawn to Socialism were the “social justice warriors” who were concerned with human equality and economic rights. Communism would become a dirty word much later, once it the darker side of the ideology became clear (see Orwell’s 1984 and Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago), and was soon regarded as an ideology that became a threat to the American way of life which would come roaring back in the post-war America, especially under Eisenhower.
(By the way, that era from the 1930s through the 1950s was the last “Fourth Turning.” We’re in another one now. Hold onto your butts.)
As far as the Best Picture race is concerned, with a dozen major movies as yet unseen, we have no idea how things will go, but there are some things we can still be sure about, even in June. The first is this: the biggest and most important films this year will be directed by men, and probably many of them white, many of them heterosexual — that’s still a problem for Hollywood, even if the co-director of last year’s Best Picture winner was a white male. No one wants to say any of this out loud, but they don’t call it a Fourth Turning for nothing. I’m not going to lie to you, dear readers. I have to tell it like it is, no matter how much people want me to tell it like they want it to be.
The films that I would ordinarily see as Best Picture frontrunners would be:
Oppenheimer — Christopher Nolan
Killers of the Flower Moon — Martin Scorsese
The Killer — David Fincher
The Holdovers — Alexander Payne
Napoleon — Ridley Scott
Ferrari — Michael Mann
Poor Things — Yorgos Lanthimos
The Color Purple — Blitz the Ambassador (Samuel Bazawule)
Next Goal Wins — Taika Waititi
Maestro — Bradley Cooper
Pain Hustlers — David Yates
White Bird — Marc Forster
Leave the World Behind — Sam Esmail
Zone of Interest — Jonathan Glazer
Dune: Part Two — Denis Villeneuve
Then we get to the higher profile films by women:
Barbie — Greta Gerwig
Past Lives — Celine Song
Saltburn — Emerald Fennell
Anatomy of a Fall — Justine Triet
Film Twitter does seem to drive the Best Picture race these days, and they seem to be 100% on board with Past Lives at the moment, according to the Queen of Oscar Twitter, Zoë Rose Bryant (no shade, it’s just the truth — she’s unseated Matt Neglia for the moment. Someday I want to write the definitive power list for Oscar Twitter but that day is not today):
Of course, at the moment, Past Lives is the only one of the 20 contenders we just listed that anyone has yet seen.
But as is often the case, it’s not simply about the movies or the directors when it comes to what drives the awards race. It is how the movies reflect how the industry wants to be seen. And for the moment, it seems the way that many people want to be seen is as “good Puritans” for their inclusivity utopia. That’s not a bad thing. It just is what it is. This allegiance to champion a great and important cause used to revolve more around the Holocaust because the Academy was ruled by the Greatest Generation (and largely still is). Then, when the Boomers took over, it became more about movies that addressed significant social issues of the day, though the Holocaust and race relations still resonated, especially with the older voters.
Now, since the Academy has expanded the membership and invited many younger and international members in, things have changed dramatically in terms of what they consider important. It’s hard to argue against the idea that identity matters more than anything else, and identity vis-à-vis the new reversed hierarchy of the internet. What do I mean by that? Well, the old hierarchy, driven by the free market and the ticket buying majority, was mostly controlled by the patriarchy. Specifically, the white male patriarchy. For some, even more specifically, the white, male, heteronormative, cis-gendered patriarchy.
The internet mostly reversed that hierarchy as Gen Z came of age, birthed from the loins of Tumblr circa 2012 and helicopter parents like me. What that means is that they feel good when anyone but the (see above) wins. A woman, a woman of color, a transgender person, someone who is disabled. And the list keeps getting longer. It’s basically anything but the majority in America.
I know this bothers people when I talk about it. I mean to say it’s all about inclusivity and progress, etc. And for them, it really is. It isn’t just virtue signaling. This is something deeply felt, a religion of sorts, as we saw when Everything Everywhere All at Once won everything everywhere all at once. It was a kind of religious rapture for many movie-lovers. So when some people are deciding what movie they think should win, they are judging it from inside that utopian bubble, as opposed to how it used to be decided: box office, alpha male prowess, who was King for a Day.
There’s no point in sugar-coating what most people already realize about what the film industry and the Oscars have become. Not that it’s a bad thing. It just is what it is.
Thus, even with nearly two dozen of the year’s most anticipated movies are directed by (see bad thing above), that doesn’t mean they will be the frontrunners. If the Oscar race is micromanaged by the activist-driven Film Twitter, then we know how this is going to go. They will need “correct” winners, and when a white male is involved, in general, many of them will pick it apart and criticize it in a way they would never do with films directed by people at the top of the reversed hierarchy.
That said, I will do my best to mitigate some of that wherever possible, meaning I’m ready to challenge Oscar Twitter if they, say, go after David Fincher. So we can pretty much have that drama to look forward to. Hey, we have to entertain ourselves somehow, right? Here, at the world’s end.
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What about the Palme d’or winner Anatomy Of A Fall that was made by a woman?
Good call, Ashwin! Added.
Clayton Davis of Variety….LOL with him yesterday predicting FOUR Cannes premieres will make the best picture list:
Anatomy of a Fall
Dune: Part Two
The Holdovers
Killers of the Flower Moon
Maestro
May December
Oppenheimer
Saltburn
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse
The Zone of Interest
Across the Spider-Verse? SERIOUSLY? WHAT THE AF?
Spider-Verse is getting great reviews, not outside the realm of possibility
96% at Rotten Tomatoes, not that crazy it gets a Best Picture nod along with Animated.
People were saying the same about Del Toro’s Pinocchio.
I’m crossing my fingers that The Zone of Interest, Anatomy of a Fall and Past Lives are all nominated this year.
OH MY! I’ve missed you,I’ve missed you, I’ve missed you, I’ve missed you, I’ve missed you Sasha.
This is the exceptional and captivating writer that I felt was mostly distracted during Oscars 2023 but now not only there is no Top Gun 2 anymore (Still don’t see what you and many other saw in that) but even the film-twitter paragraphs film more thoughtful and effective (At least for me).
Thank you for another excellent piece. You made an already promising year a million times more exciting.
Oh My, I got Sasha to include Leave the World Behind! I feel like a bomb went off somewhere…
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/640/cpsprodpb/060F/production/_113815510_83a99b1e-7787-41b7-a3b1-d8d01d071b87.jpg
I include the photo simply because we need to know what we did. If audiences find it too tragic then it becomes even more important that we include it.
There is a way to look at the bombing as an isolated occasion. And then there’s the correct way, how it changed the course of history. There is no doubt the bomb was going to come into existence sooner or later and it’s more likely than not that someone was going to use it (like in Korea, where the damage was extensive). The bombs would have been even stronger by then. Imagine Seoul getting bombed. 1,000,000 people lived in Seoul at the time. What about Havana? Miami? Would they be eliminated?
But, no, because the world knows the destructive power the world knows not to use them again. Since WW2, there has been no major war in Europe, a historic length of peace. It wasn’t until Putin invaded Ukraine did we have such an immediate threat, and no one really thinks it will happen.
Nolan’s point about the proxy wars that were created because of a fear of Mutually Assured Destruction is quite valid, and I’m fascinated how this movie will handle that issue.
I’d point out that the Yugoslavian war was a fairly major post-WWII European conflict. I was visiting Vienna in 1998 when that was going on, and my hosts pointed out that the distance between Vienna and that war was about the distance between Chicago and Cleveland
Yeah, it was more or less a civil war though. Sure by 1999 and the Serbian invasion of Kosovo it was much less a civil war. But it was all still within the original Yuogslavian boundaries.
Plus, there was no threat of it spreading (except maybe into Albania), or of nuclear war.
I am a bit biased toward idea to drop the bomb as my grandfather had been serving in Europe and about to be deployed for the planned invasion of Japan that was likely to be a bloodbath making D-Day look sedate. So a good chance if he’d gone, my family wouldn’t be here today.
It’s tough to tell as it was obvious Japan was ready to fight on against a regular invasion and something big needed to sway them. It’s easy to look back and judge it now but the times then much different.
Either way, looking forward to this film as Nolan should be able to tell the story well.
The Nagasaki one is slightly hard for me to justify, and has it ever been completely proven that Hiroshima changed zero minds inside Japan’s regime? Either way, what’s done is done obviously.
Certainly Nagasaki is more controversial. Perhaps give the Japanese another week or two to access the damage. I am sure the shock of the event prevented them from thinking it through thoroughly.
How Nolan chooses to address all of this is going to be incredibly fascinating.
Well, I am convinced if he doesn’t show the effects of the bombing, that it will ruin the film’s BP chances. Otherwise it will be accused of whitewashing history.
I have issues with some of Nolan’s tics, but he’s NOT a careless filmmaker. He’s smart enough to know he’d get destroyed if he fudged details
Hiroshima changed some minds, but not enough.
I will always argue that dropping the bomb is the right thing. The two killed about 250,000 within a month of dropping them. I am sure the cancer and other illnesses more than double that amount.
For comparison, about 25,000 died in the bombing of Dresden. Expand that to Tokyo, Kyoto, and Osaka. 10,000ish died on D-Day, an invasion that allowed for a German retreat and the locals thinking the new soldiers were heroes. The Americans would have faced so many problems with the Japanese population. These smaller number start to add up quick. The total US soldiers killed up to that point was 300,000. It could have risen much higher if the invasion of Japan was as brutal as some have suggested could have been.
And you didn’t even mention that more than 100,000 Japanese soldiers and civilians died in the battle of Okinawa. An invasion of Japan would have killed more Japanese people than the bomb did.
yup
Japan can’t be an easy place to occupy, what with the mountain range running down through the middle along with the fact that there are several major islands.
To invade and occupy the country would have been a nightmare. How many American Soldiers would it take? Imagine the supply lines!
2 years of major fighting at a minimum I’d guess.
I went back and forth about posting this, and I assure everyone that I am not trying to be disrespectful or attacking anyone here.
I disagree with the premise laid out at the end of the article that white male directors are somehow an issue with the Academy.
Since 2000:
18 white men have won Best Director (and I’m including the Three Amigos five Oscars in six years in that count as well as co-directing winners)
3 women have won
5 Asians have won
Right there, that’s still 2 to 1 white guys winning.
I would politely suggest that it’s not a complete discussion if you don’t include nominees
So, among the non-winning nominees since 2000
82 white men nominated
3 Asian men nominated
3 women nominated
5 black men
So that’s 8 to 1 white guys getting nominated
And to be clear, if you win Best Director it’s because you did a good enough job to justify winning.
You are woke pretending to be impartial.
Math is woke, I guess?
4 asians have won director (Kwan, Zhao, Bong and Lee x 2), but for a total of 5 times.
Best Animated Feature is settled. https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/a766cd9b9cad4f7712266a7dfb01a6f1e0dbd50fc120931ad6c22c7a3590df6f.jpg
Animated film is a vast wasteland this year, save for Mario Bros. Weakest year in a long, long time.
No one has seen the Miyazaki film, including you
It’s not going to win regardless. At best it will get the token “foreign/indie” nomination slot at the Oscars.
Mario Bros, the boilerplate video game adaptation without an ounce of genuine inspiration?
Understand that wasn’t an endorsement of SMB. Nostalgia for things long gone is ruling that roost and checking one’s brain at the door is why it’s made $550m stateside. But this is an off-year for good animation films. Shit happens.
not so fast. It’s not only a sequel to a winner. It’s HALF the sequel. If it wins, it’s almost compromising to 3/3 when the next one is released.
Sascha : Absolutely fantastic post ! As for Oppenheimer’s competition in my opinion there is none ! Probably besides Lily Gladstone’s performance in Killers of the Flower Moon is the only worthwhile thing about Martin Scorsese’s latest Bloat Float is the King of F- Bombs ( Raging Bull – 114 , The Irishman -136 , The Departed – 237 , Goodfellas -300 , Casino -438 , and Wolf of Wall Street – 569 ) lack of F-Bombs ! Also i find it hilarious that St. Marty has become Michael Corleone in Godfather 3 trying to make a deal with the Vatican to wash away his ‘ cinematic sins ‘ by making his next movie another movie about Jesus ! Regarding Oppenheimer in 1947 there was a movie called The Beginning or the End directed by Norman Taurog with Hume Cronyn as Oppenheimer and Brian Donlevy as General Leslie Groves which of course is only about the building of the bomb . In 1969 there was a Broadway play starring Joseph Wiseman called In The Matter Of J. Robert Oppenheimer which can be heard on the Internet Archive ! I have to go now and read my copy of the Bhagavad Gita !
Scorsese has been pondering religion with his films since the beginning.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kB3HxHXF-0
I’ll never understand why people think all Scorsese makes are mob films
I’m actually looking more forward to his Jesus film than Killers of the Flower Moon ( which seems to be just another opportunity for him to do a movie full of brutal killings , bitter voice overs and biting condemnations of American Capitalism) Just think Leonardo Decaprio as Jesus , Robert , De Niro as Pontious Pilate , Joe Pesci as Herod and Harvey Keitel reprising his role as Judas from The Last Temptation of Christ !
More and more people are saying this.
More and more people should also be saying that in 1926 a Native American filmmaker by the name of James Young Deer made a 90 minute black and white silent film called Tragedies of the Osage hills !
It’s a hell of a balancing act for Oppenheimer. Yeah, while the Hiroshima bombing was strategically correct, morally? Not so much. Nagasaki especially not justified. But Nolan has spoken about how the movie deals with the unintended consequence of the Bomb ushering in decades of ruinous proxy wars. Might be too much for people who want all movies to reflect solely their own world view (both right and left). My only hesitation is Damon seems out of place in the trailers.
As for Past Lives, it looks great. Again, Korean cinema (or Korean-American in this case) is in absolute ascendancy. But this is a year of BIG movies, and it’s going to have a hard time getting traction unless all the BIG films bomb artistically/critically and/or run lousy campaigns. And it happens. With Oscar it helps to be more lucky than good at times, doesn’t it? Sure hoping that there isn’t going to be preemptive takedown campaigns against it or any other offbeat film before they’re even seen. Wouldn’t that be nice?
Bought tix to Oppenheimer for July 20 in 70mm format and cannot wait!
I personally still think KOTFM is going to be the one to beat but if it’s gonna be beat it’s gonna be by Oppenheimer.
Hi, JP. I hope you enjoy seeing Oppenheimer. I plan on seeing it the first weekend it comes out if possible. I also am so excited to see KOTFM.
I saw Past Lives and it’s wonderful. Definitely a contender!
After Cannes, A24 wil invest in The Zone of Interest. Let’s wait and see how Film Twitter will react to The Zone of Interest.
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Everything was going so nice on here this past month…and then Sasha had to come back and unleash a can full of racism because something something identity politics something something gen z something something fourth turning.
I currently have:
Killers of the Flower Moon (Apple TV+)
Blitz (Apple TV+)
The Color Purple (Warner Bros)
Maestro (Netflix)
Napoleon (Apple TV+)
Saltburn (Amazon)
The Holdovers (Focus)
Past Lives (A24)
Rustin (Netflix)
Dune Part II (Warner Bros.)
With the foreign produced films in the mix:
The Zone of Interest (A24)
Conclave (TBD)
One Life (TBD)
Anatomy of a Fall (NEON)
The Pot au Feu (TBD)
Overlap and some thoughts from your list:
Oppenheimer — Christopher Nolan
Killers of the Flower Moon — Martin Scorsese
The Killer — David FincherI don’t see this being a player outside of acting.The Holdovers — Alexander Payne
Napoleon — Ridley Scott
Ferarri — Michael Mann
Poor Things — Yorgos LanthimosDoesn’t look like player outside of crafts and acting.The Color Purple — Blitz the Ambassador (Samuel Bazawule)
Next Goal Wins — Taika Waititi
Maestro — Bradley Cooper
Pain Hustlers — David Yates
White Bird — Marc ForsterSeems too YA for best picture, but it’s way down on my list in case it surprises.Leave the World Behind — Sam Esmail
Zone of Interest — Jonathan Glazer
Dune: Part Two — Denis Villeneuve
Other possibilities/wait and see:
Air (Amazon) – Can it survive the season?
Ferrari (TBD) – Another ferrari movie?
Priscilla (A24)
The Boys in the Boat (MGM)
Shirley (Netflix)
Oppenheimer (Universal) – skeptical on the Academy’s response
Next Goal Wins (Searchlight)
Caste (TBD)
Asteroid City (Focus) – trailer didn’t look like much a player, but well-received at Cannes.
Barbie: The Movie (Warner Bros) – trailer has me skeptical of this being anything other than an acting play
May December (TBD) – Cannes response says this is campy, acting only
Challengers (MGM)
La Chimera (Neon)
Without Blood (TBD)
Leave The World Behind (Netflix)
The Movie Teller (TBD)
The Critic (TBD)
Bob Marley: One Love (Paramount)
Pain Hustlers (Netflix)
La Cocina (TBD) – there is something about this one that has me excited
Foe (Amazon)
The Bikeriders (20th Century Studios)
The Nickel Boys (MGM)
The Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can-Eat (Searchlight)
The Burial (Amazon)
The Iron Claw (A24)
The Actor (Neon)
Love Lies Bleeding (A24)
The Outrun (TBD)
The Collaboration (TBD)
Long Day’s Journey Into Night (MGM)
Flint Strong (MGM)
I think it’s admirable that someone finally wants to mitigate what Oscar Twitter says. And after that’s done, I hope we can course correct what all those drunken loudmouths in bars say about sports. They’re positively ruining my enjoyment of the games!
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I have come to the conclusion it’s going to come down to Oppenheimer v. Of an Age.
Bet you a half-eaten stale candy corn!
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Sasha, I challenge you to take a political science class so you can learn the difference between socialism and communism and authoritarian and totalitarian. And also learn that many countries in the past and in the present will misrepresent forms of govt in their names. People’s Republic of China, Democratic Republic of Korea, National Socialism Party. I could go on.
As a primer – Socialism is when the workers control the government and power structure. Communism is when there is no private property and everything is shared equally, this includes the power structure. So basically, socialism and communism are more political philosophies than actual countries/governments.
A good example of a socialist in this country’s history is Eugene Debs. He advocated for unions and criticized capitalism as it encouraged classes which hurt the workers of America. He did not advocate for the killing of Jews. That would be Hitler.
Karl Marx, the father of communism, believed that capitalism caused workers to be alienated and isolated as they took on specialization in the workplace. This, he believed, ran contrary to what made people happy. He did not advocate for the starvation of Ukrainians or putting political enemies in Gulags. That would be Stalin.
Thanks for playing.
Also you could probably describe Jesus Christ as ” Woke ” and a ” Social Justice Warrior ” ! That’s one of the reasons why the powers that be back in the day the High Priests of the Temple in Jerusalem and the Roman Empire wanted him dead !
Back then, being a communist was akin to what today is called being “woke.”
https://media.tenor.com/q9crr_x6HLYAAAAC/princess-bride-you-keep-using-that-word.gif
Just wondering, how does everyone feel about the fact that Spider-man: Across the Spider-verse is essentially half a movie?
Sorry, everyone, I just don’t get the success of Spider-verse. It’s SO sloppily and slapdash-ily animated. Like a rough cut they greenlit. They have a great marketing campaign, you gotta give them that.
You can have criticisms against that film, but it’s breathtakingly animated in my view.
One of the films i’m looking forward to most is Nyad which has a true great underdog story plus 2 wonderful leads in Foster and Bening,you know Fosters going to be demoted to supporting.
Going with acting only there for Bening—Foster’s character doesn’t seem like it would pop.
Sascha keeps talking about ” The Fourth Turning ” ! Maybe she’s referring to the ” Tuning “that takes place in Dark City ?
The Fourth Turning is alt-right nonsense that conservatives feed to each other to stoke fear and grift, brewed in the same fetid pot that gave us the “Great Replacement Theory”. Hey, whatever happened to that guy who pushed that delirious doozy?
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Very early NGNGs:
1) Alexander Payne’s The Holdovers (Focus Features, 11.10.23) is going to win the Oscar in Best Picture.
2) Paul Giamatti of The Holdovers is going to win the Oscar in Best Actor.
3) Da’Vine Joy Randolph of The Holdovers is going to win the Oscar in Best Supporting Actress.
Da’Vine Joy Randolph will be a historic Oscar win. No matter how I feel about most of Payne’s films (I hated The Descendants), I’m rooting for her. However, I think Gladstone might be the sole major win for Scorsese’s movie.