The Day After Trinity (1981) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
15 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Powerful stuff
lemmy caution5 June 2000
Often gripping documentary detailing the father of the American atomic bomb. Two interesting themes emerged throughout the film. The first is the tension between the delight of scientific discovery and the social responsibility for its results. The second was the story of how the American government co-opted the scientific brilliance of a generation of progressive/left-wing scientists (who were rallied by anti-fascist fervour) to ignite a so-called Cold War with Communist Russia.

In both cases the hubris of the scientists (that nuclear weapons can be controlled, that politicians will act selflessly and share the knowledge, and enter into an international stewardship of the Bomb) reminds us of the gulf between technical skill and political savvy.

All of this is well presented well in the film, focused through the lens of the story of Robert Oppenheimer, and his triumphs and failings - his genius and short-sightedness - are laid bare. It does falter a bit after detailing the use of atomic weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki - seeing anything after the presentation of this destruction leaves us emotionally exhausted - but Oppenheimer's fall from grace does feel like an anti-climax, and seems a little rushed.

Rating 7 out of 10 (quite good).
18 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Science and Sorrow
jbmann1 March 2007
I have never worked directly with nuclear weapons but after viewing this movie, I wished I had.

That said, let me state unequivocally that my heart breaks for the suffering of the victims of these terrible weapons, as I sorrow for all victims of war and it's associated atrocities.

What I mean is that this documentary filmmaker has achieved the rare goal of so involving me in the time, place and action of these events, that when the movie ends, it's like saying goodbye to very dear friends.

I don't think I've seen another movie that so effectively combines still shots, interviews, background music and narration. This film should be boring and it is anything but.

Most of the scientists interviewed here have passed on and I mourn both the loss of their lives and the loss of the age. The age that was a time that America excelled in everything it put it's mind to.

A previous reviewer identified the tension between the delight of scientific discovery and the tremendous moral responsibility for the results. I agree; it is deeply moving to witness the obvious delight the scientists have in reliving what may have been the best years of their lives while attempting to resolve the deep struggle with the suffering it occasioned.
18 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The Man Who Would Become The Destroyer Of Worlds
timdalton0078 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
To future generations J. Robert Oppenheimer will be remembered as the father of the atomic bomb. Yet the question remains: who was this man who led the effort to create the first atomic bomb for the Manhattan Project and then, after regretting that work and trying to reverse it, found himself ostracized from the very people he had worked so hard to build it for? In this documentary entitled The Day After Trinity (which is taken from a quote Oppenheimer made in the 1960's) we are presented with an intimate look at the man and a tense look at the bomb he created.

Perhaps the most distinguishing feature of this documentary is the amount of personal interviews with those who knew Oppenheimer during his life. These include his brother Frank, fellow physicists such as Hans Bethe and Freeman Dyson, Oppenheimer's former students including Robert Wilson and Haakon Chevalier the Berkeley professor who would play a defining role in Oppenheimer's downfall. The interviews reveal a man who was as much a student of poetry and philosophy as a scientist and help to explain how Oppenheimer went from the leader of the Manhattan Project to an arch advocate for limits on the nuclear weapons he had helped to create. The interviews also illustrate the atmosphere that led to the building of the first atomic bomb, the lead up to the Trinity test plus the various responses to the test and the effect of the bomb's use on Japan. Perhaps the most surprising interviews are from the civilians who saw the bomb's test from far away including a woman whose blind sister incredibly saw the flash of the bomb. The interviews though don't exactly complete though. This is due to the fact that the only major figure who does not seemed to have been interviews is Edward Teller, the father of the hydrogen bomb, whose role in Oppenheimer's downfall seems to have been skimmed over here. Despite the lack of Teller the interviews reveal the character of Oppenheimer plus the construction of the bomb, The other strength of the documentary is the amount of visual materials used as well. These include not only much of the stock footage of the atomic bomb but rare photographs of the life and work at Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project years. There is also a wealth of photographs and footage of Oppenheimer himself of course which illustrate his life from childhood to his final years after his downfall. When combined with the aforementioned interviews, the result is a work that is visually interesting as well as intellectually interesting as well.

The only real fault of the documentary is its length. At eighty-eight minutes it does seem slightly crammed at times with trying to fit everything in. As a result numerous issues are skipped over such as Oppenheimer's long time affair with Communist Jean Tatlock and a more detailed look at the various pieces of testimony (especially that of Edward Teller) which helped to condemn him in the end. That said the documentary is mostly successful in covering Oppenheimer's life and the building of the atomic bomb.

The Day After Trinity is a fascinating look at not only perhaps the most defining invention of the twentieth century but at Oppenheimer, the man who led the effort to build it, as well. With its combination of personal interviews with those involved with Oppenheimer and a wealth of visual images this is a documentary that is as much visually intriguing but is an intimate look at the man and a tense look at the bomb he created. Above all it is the personal tale of a man who led a great effort then came to regret that very work and the tragedy of the man who would become "death, the destroyer of worlds.".
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A historical treasure
bandw16 October 2011
For a 90 minute film, this documentary does an admirable job of telling the tale of the making of the atom bomb. It's great value is the recording of interviews of some of the major players at a time when they had had time to reflect on the event. Since most all of those directly involved with the development of the bomb are now dead, this documentary is a priceless piece of history.

The events are centered around Robert Oppenheimer, the brilliant physicist who became the director of the Los Alamos branch of the Manhattan Project that was responsible for the design, construction, and testing of the bomb. Oppenheimer was a person who had that unusual combination of a supreme knowledge of technology and theory as well as skills as an administrator. I think part of his success as an administrator was due to the respect he commanded from all who worked with him. Ultimately there were hundreds of scientists at the Los Alamos site; it was remarked that there has never been in history such a large gathering of world-class scientists at one place. I found it odd that there was no mention of Leó Szilárd who envisioned the idea of a nuclear chain reaction in 1933.

Unfortunately Robert Oppenheimer was not alive to be interviewed for this film, but there is substantial archival footage of him. Robert's brother Frank, also a physicist, was interviewed at some length. There is archival footage of the destruction caused by the dropping of the two bombs, both the physical and human destruction. Such scenes require a strong stomach to watch, and what is shown is only a small glimpse of the horror. The dropping of the bombs had a profound effect on the scientists who were responsible for the development. Some, like Robert Wilson, abandoned all classified work. Oppenheimer--who made the remark, "the physicists have known sin, and this is a knowledge which they cannot lose"-- spent time after the war agitating for world control over nuclear weapons; he was never the same person after the war and became a tragic figure.

Given that the development of the atom bomb was a significant event in human history, there is no lacking of reference material. A complete exposition is contained in Richard Rhodes', "The Making of the Atom Bomb." I found the fact-based docudrama, "Day One," to be interesting, particularly in its dealing with the discussions surrounding the decision to drop the bombs.
12 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
It changed my life
hellman-116 September 2007
I first saw this documentary in 1981 and I am not exaggerating when I say it changed my life. A few years later I took an 18 month unpaid leave from my professorship to work as a full-time volunteer trying to defuse the nuclear threat. While many factors contributed to that decision, "The Day After Trinity" certainly was one of them.

The thing that impressed me most about this film was that it showed me how we can fool ourselves as to our motivation. We think we base our decisions on a rational foundation, but this film helped me to see places in my own past where I had made major decisions and not been totally honest about some of my motivation. We have socially acceptable and socially unacceptable reasons for doing things and hide the socially unacceptable ones even from our own consciousness. But they are at work in the unconscious, where they can take over and do great harm. Watching this film made me vow to do my utmost never to do that again. (It's not as easy as it might sound!) It is not light fare, but definitely worth watching. Aside from what a viewer can learn from it, the film is very well done, with much high drama.
26 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
One of the most suspenseful films ever made.
Preston-107 February 2000
Jon Else's documentary, The Day After Trinity, is about the life of J. Robert Oppenheimer, a genius who helped develop the atomic bomb and whose life ended in criticism by Joseph McCarthy. The film also documents the establishment of Los Alamos and the length of time that led up to the Trinity test along with interviews of the people who worked with Oppenheimer. It is the best document involving nuclear weapons that I have seen and I highly recommend it to those would like to know more about the people who assisted on the world's most dangerous weapon. The actual footage of the hoisting of the bomb is excellent.
17 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Fantastic
gbill-748776 February 2023
"The physicists have known sin, and this is a knowledge which they cannot lose."

What makes this documentary of J. Robert Oppenheimer outstanding is the number of interviews it conducts with those who knew him as a friend, those who worked with him on the first atomic bomb at Los Alamos, and the locals who witnessed the bomb's testing first-hand. While Oppenheimer had passed away 14 years earlier, the number of people who were still alive, including his brother and many other leading physicists, really brought the archival footage to life. It's horrifying to hear of the unknown range of outcomes over the first testing in July, 1945 at the so-called Trinity site, with Enrico Fermi "taking side bets on the possibility of incinerating the state of New Mexico," and another scientist commenting on the speculation that they might "explode the atmosphere, in which case the world disappears." It's even more horrifying to see the devastation and loss of life at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which while certainly not new information, hits differently after having been taking on this journey of the country's finest minds working on this immense problem to create what they referred to as the "gadget."

The picture the documentary paints is incredibly conflicting: the scientists (including Oppenheimer) were aghast at the rise of fascism in Europe and for the most part liberals (if not sympathizers with communism), and believed they were working on something that would prevent the Nazis from ushering in a period of darkness that would set Western civilization back 1000 years. After V-E day the project was swept along by inertia, and the film touches on the arguments for and against using the weapon on Japan three weeks after the first successful test in New Mexico. It's not a deep dive but it certainly raises the moral question at a time when Reagan was president and patriotism was on the rise, and points out that upon understanding that hundreds of thousands of people had been killed, most if not all of the physicists had severe pangs of remorse. One of those was Robert Wilson, who quit and never again worked on nuclear weapons; his interview clips are wonderful.

The documentary is also balanced in its portrayal of Oppenheimer, an extraordinary intellect whose life went through incredible transitions, from apolitical intellectual to radical, anti-fascist leftist, to leader of thousands of people to create the first WMD, to trying desperately (and unsuccessfully) to control the proliferation of atomic weapons via involvement in Washington DC, to a disgrace of sorts in the revoking of his security clearance. It's to the current administration's credit that it exonerated him of the McCarthy-era allegations against him recently, in Dec. 2022, 68 years after the fact. Oppenheimer's personal breadth is also intriguing, collecting artwork, communing with nature on his ranch, and reading poetry and texts like the Bhagavad Gita, the source for his famous quote "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."

However, this is a clear-eyed treatment of the man. Freeman Dyson is remarkably candid about the Faustian bargain Oppenheimer had made in running the project, and in his analysis of how dropping the bomb became practically an inevitably, which is pretty damning if you think about it. Quite factually and without the least bit of rancor, he points out that "Oppenheimer gave his consent, in a certain sense. He was on a committee which advised the Secretary of War, and that committee did not take any kind of stand against dropping the bomb." Haakon Chevalier points out that by Oppenheimer cooperating with the Red Scare tribunals and providing information about his past in such an ambiguous way, he was "betrayed," lost his job, and might have been sentenced to a lengthy prison term. I only wish that this portion of the documentary had been expanded on and given longer treatment.

These interviewees are for the most part physicists, and they present themselves informally, with the refined air of intelligence and always honest. Robert Serber talking about everything from riding horses on a ridge with Oppenheimer at midnight during a thunderstorm to walking around Nagasaki after the war is a perfect example. However, despite having worked so hard on a technical problem and having achieved success, they all understood the dangerous new age they had unleashed upon the world. When taken together with Paul Frees' narration and the no-nonsense direction from Jon H. Else, this becomes a blend of admiration for genius, and horror at the results.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Man's Reckless Pursuit Of Ultimate Power
strong-122-47888526 August 2015
(Documentary quote referring to the Atomic bomb's detonation) - "Thank god it wasn't a dud!"

And, I ask you - Do 2 wrongs (Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor & America's A-bombing of Hiroshima) make a right?

Well, if you were to have asked "The Father of the Atomic Bomb", Robert Oppenheimer, that very question following all that took place in 1945, he, I'm sure, would have very likely replied back with a flat "No!".

Anyway - In order to fully appreciate this documentary (which is now 35 years old) and comprehend its historical relevance completely, the viewer must first be willing to look beyond its glaring production deficiencies in order to realize the incredible story that it tells just below its surface flaws.... And, as we all know - It's a story that literally changed the very course of man's future, forever.

*Note* - Robert Oppenheimer (born in 1904) died in 1967 from throat cancer. He was 62 at the time.
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A Different Story
boblipton4 August 2023
I came to look at this television documentary shortly after seeing Christopher Nolan's OPPENHEIMER (2023). The principal difference in the story is that in Nolan's movie, he tries to mislead the security forces about his sources concerning Russian spying at Alamogordo, and is later surprised to discover that it centered around Haakon Chevalier; in the documentary, he is the source for suspicions about the man.

It's not enough to change the story about Oppenheimer, but with the same set of facts, one can construct many stories. Nolan's movie is much more about Oppenheimer's personal life, and begins much earlier. This offers a viewpoint of his activities after the war, to control and limit the damage caused by his work. Each takes advantage of considerable hindsight to reach very different conclusions, both of which seem impeccable given the facts chosen by each. Based on having seen both within a short period of time, I can only conclude that they are both brilliantly done, and both badly lacking in completeness.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
"The Day After Trinity" is a very sobering look at the A-Bomb
chuck-reilly17 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, who headed the scientific team at Los Alamos (the "Manhattan Project") during World War II which developed the atomic bomb, may be unfamiliar to many of today's viewers. That's too bad because this film should be part of every high school's history department curriculum. Goaded on by hard-as-nails General Leslie Groves, a team of the best scientists in the free world, led by Oppenheimer, worked night and day under a crushing deadline to develop the first atomic device. Suffice to say, and as this fine documentary film does in its own unique way, that "Oppy" had severe regrets about his role in the creation of the bomb and he eventually fell out of favor with his own government. Several reviewers have already noted that the part Edward Teller (Mr.Hydrogen Bomb) played in Oppenheimer's downfall is only touched on very lightly here. Teller was most assuredly instrumental in the disgrace of his colleague for a myriad of reasons including jealousy. After the dust cleared, Oppenheimer ended up somewhat of a broken man although President Kennedy did rescue him from obscurity with some belated honors at the White House.

"The Day After Trinity" refers to the first day after the bomb (called the "Gadget" by its developers) was tested in the remote desert of New Mexico. The crux of the film details the interviews with the loose confederation of scientists who participated in the project and who were naive enough to think that the politicians would use their (i.e. the scientists') collective knowledge for the good of mankind. Unfortunately, the development of nuclear weapons spread rapidly after World War II and ushered in the Cold War. Oppenheimer's anti-nuke stance and former close associations with known communists landed him in big trouble and he lost his Top Secret Security clearance after much harassment and forced testimony. As it stands, "The Day After Trinity" is a sober reminder of the consequences of total war and the development of weapons of mass destruction. Many of the scientists at Los Alamos were positively sure that the "powers that be" in Washington would not drop the bomb on Japan, but would merely threaten them with it through the means of a test off their coast. That was wishful thinking at its best. The necessity of dropping the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki is still being debated today in some circles. The fact remains that the Japanese government surrendered unconditionally a few days after the second bomb fell and World War II came to an abrupt end. Another fact is that the world changed forever "The Day After Trinity" and J. Robert Oppenheimer lived long enough to regret his involvement in the project.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
And After All Was Said And Done....
roddekker6 September 2015
Meet "The Father of the Atomic Bomb", Robert Oppenheimer.

In 1942, brilliant physicist, Robert Oppenheimer, joined the top-secret "Manhattan Project" team which had set up its headquarters near the isolated town of Lamy, New Mexico (located in the desert wasteland).

By 1945, Oppenheimer, and his diligent colleagues, had perfected the Atomic bomb. And, yes, it was, then, in retaliation to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbour that the US government (inevitably) ordered that this most-destructive weapon of all be dropped directly onto Hiroshima.

Riddled with guilt over America's horrendous act of mass annihilation, Oppenheimer spent the remainder of his years trying (but to no avail) to somehow undo the wrong he believed he had inadvertently committed as a result of giving birth to the Atomic bomb.

But, alas - No matter how noble a man's pursuit for the greater good may be, it's what happens, later, when those of very questionable ethics get to play their hand in this ever-treacherous game of "life".
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The morality of science
steviemagay28 December 2021
Can't wait for Nolan's 'Oppenheimer', so decided to see this docu. Quiet old but the story itself is pretty amazing. No wonder Nolan picked this story. Guess even without an advance in Germany with the allied troops, this is where the Nazis lost. Innovation is key! Glad Hitler and the Nazis didn't invest much in it. Got me curious how Nolan will use this powerful story of the Manhattan Project and Oppenheimer to his weird but entertaining storytelling.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A deep insight in how our world changed forever
kantei28 July 2023
"Oppenheimer" is a great movie, which deserves every accolade it receives. Yet, I recommend watching this documentary from 1980. It has clearly been an inspiration for both the the movie as well as the biography, and it presents real interviews with those actually involved in building the atomic bomb. The reason I give the documentary 10 stars is that it is not only a great documentary in itself, but also a most important historical research effort that was conducted at a time when most of the main actors in the drama were still alive. Without this documentary many facts and thoughts would have been lost forever. Having said this, I really hope that all the original material made and collected for this documentary has been archived properly, so that this material too may be used by future historians.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Essential documentary "The Day After Trinity" = about the beginning of the Atomic-age (and terrifying-immediate-aftermath........
Ed-from-HI22 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This superlative documentary "The Day After Trinity" (a Peabody Award-winner, and Academy Award nominee from 1980/81) produced and directed by Jon H. Else provides a great deal of insight into the steps leading-up to that fateful day when the Atomic-age began in New Mexico (at "Trinity' Test-site located in the vicinity of Jornada del Muerto = ironically translated as "Deadman's trail/ route") and its terrifying-aftermath (and in effect how our World & civilization could never be the same in the wake of that earth-shattering 'Atomic-awakening')

The detonation of the first Atomic bomb occurred within the New Mexico desert under the watchful-eye and keen-guidance of the otherworldly-brilliant theoretical-physicist and unlikely intellectual-Leader of the 'Manhattan-Project' J. Robert Oppenheimer (who had been surprisingly hand-selected by the visionary Army General Leslie Groves = the two of them essentially ushering in the modern Nuclear-Age, for better or worse) ==> it was undoubtedly 'better' that the democratic US-Allied-Powers unlocked those atomic-secrets first (thankfully, before the Axis-powers could) - but we're of course still living with the potentially terrifying ramifications and most genuinely 'fateful' knowledge uncovered by Oppenheimer (and his hyper-brilliant Los Alamos/'Manhattan-Project' team)

Much of the deep insights within this unique film "The Day After Trinity" come by way of interviews with participants/ scientists that were still with us (circa1979/1980 - Robert Oppenheimer himself unfortunately passed-away in 1967) = but the great theoretical-physicists Hans Bethe, Robert Serber, Robert Wilson, I.I. Rabi and others provide a number of first-hand reminiscences and intriguing points-of-view that are truly invaluable in order to even begin extracting the tiniest 'glimpse' into what it might have been like to have been a part of/ witness to such literally 'earth-shaking' (or perhaps even shattering) events. Only critique is that these interviews should have been longer (and in fact this documentary itself could have benefitted from an additional 20 to 30 minutes in length - due to the momentous-complexity of historic subject matter!)

Some participants even expressing a degree of later regret-remorse regarding the moral-dilemmas faced in the aftermath of actual A-bomb detonation on Japan (i.e. the initial moral-thrust of the project was based on the goal of beating Germany in terms of being the 'first' to successful A-bomb development - but once the Axis in Europe had surrendered, was there still sufficient moral-imperative to continue the project to its devastating-ends? (with the potential for nuclear-conflagration sill casting a foreboding shadow thru present day.)

In any event, "The Day After Trinity" is certainly one of the best historical introductions to the ushering in of the Atomic-age, and an important Story worth revisiting now = especially with the incessant threat of 'nuclear-proliferation' (and the intensive ongoing efforts to at least limit/ minimize the potential devastation inherent) a topic unfortunately still at the very Top of the daily news-headlines.

note: the Kai Bird/Martin Sherwin biography of Robert Oppenheimer called "American-Prometheus" is fantastic supplemental reading! (with additional in-depth insights into the 'Manhattan-Project' and much beyond).......
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Meet Robert Oppenheimer: "The Father Of The Atomic Bomb"
In 1942, brilliant physicist, Robert Oppenheimer, joined the top-secret "Manhattan Project" team which had set up its headquarters near the isolated town of Lamy, New Mexico (located in the desert wasteland).

By 1945, Oppenheimer, and his diligent colleagues, had perfected the Atomic bomb. And, yes, it was, then, in retaliation to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor that the US government (inevitably) ordered that this most-destructive weapon of all be dropped directly onto Hiroshima.

Riddled with guilt over America's horrendous act of mass annihilation, Oppenheimer spent the remainder of his years trying (but to no avail) to somehow undo the wrong he believed he had inadvertently committed as a result of giving birth to the Atomic bomb.

But, alas - No matter how noble a man's pursuit for the greater good may be, it's what happens later when those of very questionable ethics get to play their hand in this ever-treacherous game of "life".
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed