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I feel like one of the biggest elements of his character as shown in the film is how blinded he is by science and the chance of discovery that he never stops to think about anything else around the project, mostly “what tha bomb is actually used for” but “where the material is coming from” fits that too.
The turning point for his character is once the bombs are ready he starts to have doubts about what he’s done.
People just ignore any of this character work to push their own complaints.
My comment got eaten but I will repost (sorry if it’s showing up twice for anyone):
This article doesn’t read to me like a complaint about the film, though?
The tone seems to me to be more, I went to a film about A+B, now I’m sharing my experience that C was a big part of that which wasn’t shown, even though it was symbolised by marbles.
To me, that’s always worth pointing out, especially when so many people seem to get a lot of their views about history from moving image media.
And maybe one day when someone does make something that touches a bit on the historical conditions behind “Great Man” style history, it might be more welcomed than it would be in the current climate, if articles like this one help people know a bit more.
I’m remembering when Patricia Rozema’s adaptation of Mansfield Park came out. The Jane Austen novel is about people living in a house that was literally owned by a slave owner with plantations in the West Indies, but that stuff had never been shown before. Some people were really scandalised but I thought it was quite interesting. Understanding about how Western history intersects with, say, African history is helpful in understanding the world we live in now.