Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer recreates the first atomic weapons test

Christopher Nolan hard at work on his next movie promotion. Oppenheimer, a film about J. Robert Oppenheimer’s life. So he has to have a completely new and ridiculously practical result. And he did, in truly prophetic fashion. According to an interview with TotalFilm magazine, Nolan says he recreated an atomic test without “computer graphics.”

Is this a sign that Nolan made a prototypical nuclear device for Los Alamos to use? It is unlikely. But the best part of his increasingly ridiculous commitment to (mostly) practical effects is that you really can’t rule much out. He did, in fact, crash his real 747 into an actual building. Tenet. Nolan technically just says that he and his team “recreated the Trinity test,” which could mean just the conditions, or the feel, but not the explosion itself. That being said, it’s awfully hard to imagine Nolan passing up the opportunity to engage in the great American tradition of detonating a massive explosive device in a remote New Mexico dessert.

While Nolan’s vague implication that he and visual effects supervisor Andrew Jackson created a (fake) nuclear weapon is certainly attention-grabbing, so is his insistence that they did so “without the use of computer graphics.” Given Nolan’s love of practical effects, this is no surprise, but it also shouldn’t be misunderstood. Not using CGI for the real-world recreation is one thing, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that the footage they shoot of the explosion won’t be touched up with a few flourishes before release, similar to a movie like Mad Max Fury Road.

One thing Nolan’s latest comments about Oppenheimer make clear is that should he ever cast Tom Cruise — Hollywood’s other foremost practical effects advocate — in one of his movies, it’s possible no one would be safe from their CGI-less shenanigans.

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