• 2 years ago
It's time to go inside the visual effects from the biographical drama movie Oppenheimer, directed by Christopher Nolan.

Oppenheimer Cast:

Cillian Murphy, Emily Blunt, Robert Downey Jr., Matt Damon, Rami Malek, Florence Pugh, Benny Safdie, Michael Angarano, Josh Hartnett and Kenneth Branagh

Stream Oppenheimer now on Digital!
Transcript
00:00 This is a matter of life and death.
00:02 I can perform this miracle.
00:04 With our visual effects approach,
00:06 there's one sense in which
00:08 computer graphics is the obvious way to do it.
00:10 But going down that route,
00:12 I didn't feel we were going to get anything
00:14 that would feel personal and unique
00:16 to this character.
00:18 When you do Chris's movies, things that when you read
00:20 a script you normally would think would be
00:22 visual effects, you know that you're going
00:24 to be doing this stuff practically.
00:26 On this show, a lot of the effects work is
00:28 special effects and visual effects
00:30 very much bundled together.
00:32 Andrew, together with Scott Fisher,
00:34 they had to film the world
00:36 of quantum physics.
00:38 Their whole unit was one big science project.
00:40 I was daily very jealous.
00:42 The two of them did a lot of R&D.
00:44 They did a lot of experimentation.
00:46 They came up with some very interesting analog methods.
00:48 You know, it was a little bit
00:50 getting inside of Chris's head to see
00:52 what he wanted to see.
00:54 So we would do tests and play with stuff
00:56 and try to figure it out.
00:58 It was constantly evolving. You show it to Chris,
01:00 he's like, "Yeah, that's the right idea.
01:02 Now we're going to do it in IMAX."
01:04 We used a lot of different traditional methodologies,
01:06 you know, working with cloud tanks,
01:08 water, all different kinds of macro lenses,
01:10 high-speed cameras,
01:12 and some very low-tech approaches
01:14 to some of these concepts.
01:16 The thing that they did in the bedroom with Killian,
01:18 the spinning atom,
01:20 it just allows you to use takes
01:22 and footage where he's actually looking at something.
01:24 You know, Oppenheimer
01:26 sees things in sort of different dimensions,
01:28 so sometimes when his brain
01:30 is going, the background is vibrating,
01:32 and that's all done in-camera.
01:34 That's the beauty of, like,
01:36 stuff that you do in-camera,
01:38 is it can be full-size,
01:40 it can be half-size, and depending upon
01:42 how you photograph it, you know, if it looks right,
01:44 then the scale's right.
01:46 We wanted that Trinity Explosion to be both
01:48 beautiful and mesmerizing,
01:50 but horrifying in equal measure.
01:52 I think for modern-day effects,
01:54 this is kind of bigger than normal.
01:56 Back in the day, a lot of--this was commonplace
01:58 on a lot of movies, but I think now
02:00 they're, well, not quite this big.
02:02 Okay, we're hot. Here we go. Roll cameras.
02:04 Rolling. Rolling, rolling.
02:06 And...
02:08 What we were able
02:10 to come out with
02:12 and get into the finished film, to me,
02:14 is extraordinarily beautiful,
02:16 but also very frightening.
02:18 (whooshing)
02:20 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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