Tag: Oppenheimer

  • Oscars 2024: Oppenheimer To Poor Things, A Look At The Complete List Of Nominees | Movies News

    New Delhi: The 96th annual Academy Awards are scheduled to take place at the Dolby Theater in Hollywood, Los Angeles on March 10, reported Deadline.

    With 13 nominations in total, director Christopher Nolan's biopic 'Oppenheimer' leads the nominations list, followed by 'Poor Things' with 11 noms and Martin Scorsese's 'Killers of the Flower Moon' with 10.

    Big names like Jodie Foster, Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling, Robert De Niro, Bradley Cooper, and Robert Downey Jr. are among the actors nominated.

    See the full list of nominees below:

    1. Best Picture American Fiction Anatomy of a Fall Barbie The Holdovers Killers of the Flower Moon Maestro Oppenheimer Past Lives Poor Things The Zone of Interest

    2. Actor in a Leading Role Bradley Cooper Colman Domingo Paul Giamatti Cillian Murphy Jeffrey Wright

    3. Actress in a Leading Role Annette Bening Lily Gladstone Sandra Huller Carey Mulligan Emma Stone

    4. Actor in a Supporting Role Sterling K Brown Robert De Niro Robert Downey Jr Ryan Gosling Mark Ruffalo

    5. Actress in a Supporting Role Emily Blunt Danielle Brooks America Ferrera Jodie Foster Da'Vine Joy Randolph

    6. Directing Justine Triet Martin Scorsese Christopher Nolan Yorgos Lanthimos Jonathan Glazer

    7. Writing (Adapted Screenplay) American Fiction Barbie Oppenheimer Poor Things The Zone of Interest

    8. Writing (Original Screenplay) Anatomy of a Fall The Holdovers Maestro May December Past Lives

    9. International Feature Film Io Capitano Perfect Days Society of the Snow The Teachers' Lounge The Zone of Interest

    10. Animated Feature Film The Boy and the Heron Elemental Nimona Robot Dreams Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

    11. Documentary Feature Film Bobi Wine: The People's President The Eternal Memory Four Daughters To Kill a Tiger 20 Days in Mariupol

    12. Live Action Short Film The Actor Invincible Knight of Fortune Red, White and Blue The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar

    13. Documentary Short Film The ABCs of Book Banning The Barber of Little Rock The Island In Between The Last Repair Shop Nai Nai and Wai Po

    14. Animated Short Film Letter to a Pig Ninety-Five Senses Our Uniform Pachyderme War Is Over!

    15. Film Editing Anatomy of a Fall The Holdovers Killers of the Flower Moon Oppenheimer Poor Things

    16. Production Design Barbie Killers of the Flower Moon Napoleon Oppenheimer Poor Things

    17. Costume Design Barbie Killers of the Flower Moon Napoleon Oppenheimer Poor Things

    18. Music (Original Score) American Fiction Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny Killers of the Flower Moon Oppenheimer Poor Things

    19. Music (Original Song) The Fire Inside I'm Just Ken It Never Went Away Wahzhazhe (A Song for My People) What Was I Made For?

    20. Makeup and Hairstyling Golda Maestro Oppenheimer Poor Things Society of the Snow

    21. Sound The Creator Maestro Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One Oppenheimer The Zone of Interest

    22. Visual Effects The Creator Godzilla Minus One Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3 Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One Napoleon

  • The Race To The 'Oscars 2024', A Likely Clean Sweep for Oppenheimer; Take A Look At The Predictions | Movies News

    New Delhi: As the countdown begins to the biggest movie night in showbiz, The Academy Awards, are there going to be the proverbial Oscar upsets, snubs and jaw-hanging surprises? Unlikely.

    Christopher Nolan's epic blockbuster biopic Oppenheimer which chronicles the life and times of the father of the atomic bomb, j Robert Oppenheimer is poised to make a clean sweep in the major categories. The film has been lauded for being one of the most detailed and intricate biopics and has been the indisputable toast of the industry.

    Oppenheimer has had the perfect season so far, bagging every honor from the Golden Globes, Critics Choice, DGA, BAFTA, SAG and PGA, in the run-up to the Oscars.

    Everyone has bet their last penny that not only will the film take home Best Picture, but will also win Christopher Nolan the Best Director trophy.

    Cillian Murphy's restrained and moving performance as Oppenheimer is a hands-down winner in the best actor category. But, he could face a likely upset from Paul Giamatti for his moving performance as the cranky teacher in “The Holdovers”.

    In the best actress category, it is a race between Emma Stone and Lily Gladstone with the latter having a slight edge.

    Gladstone's restrained performance as Molly Burkhart has been called the soul of “Killers of the Flower Moon”.

    Emma Stone as the uber-exuberant feminist Bella Baxter in Poor Things is as impressive but might get upstaged by Gladstone. Emma Stone has previously won La La Land, and if Gladstone wins it could well be Oscar history, as she would be the first Native American to win Best Actress.

    The best-supporting actor category seems locked with Robert Downey Jr. (“Oppenheimer”) and Da’Vine Joy Randolph (“The Holdovers”) leading the pack. But Downey Jr's turn as the charismatic Lewis Strauss is the likely one to take the golden man home.

    He will in all probability be accompanied by Da' Vine Joy Randolph for best actress in a supporting role. Randolph has been applauded and won all industry accolades for her performance in The Holdovers as Mary, a grieving mother who works as a cook at a private school.

    Greta Gerwig's “Barbie” has been snubbed at most awards and appears to be the frontrunner in the original song category, with the Grammy-winning “What Was I Made For? And with Ryan Gosling giving us some Ken Vibes with his performance of “I Am Just Ken from the film.

  • Oscar 2024: ‘Barbie’ Gets Snubbed At The Nominations- List Of Nominees For The 96th Academy Awards | Movies News

    Being recognized by the Academy is a dream come true and a nomination can be life-changing, said actors Zazie Beetz and Jack Quaid as they took to the stage to announce nominations for the 96th Academy Awards, The Oscars, on January 23rd.

    The two films, which dominated the box office last year and became known as the cultural phenomenon “Barbenheimer”, the battle lines had been clearly defined between Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer and Greta Gerwig’s, Barbie. However the nominations snubbed Barbie in the major categories, Nolan who has been leading the show in the awards circuit so far, seems all set for Oscar glory

    With Hollywood having been in turmoil with the biggest strike bringing the industry to a standstill, the hosts were categorical that celebrating writers was the need of the day.

    The Nominations for Oscars 2024 are as follows

    Best actor

    Bradley Cooper, Maestro

    Colman Domingo, Rustin

    Paul Giamatti, The Holdovers

    Cillian Murphy, Oppenheimer

    Jeffrey Wright, American Fiction

    Best Actress

    Annette Bening, Nyad

    Lily Gladstone, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Sandra Hüller, Anatomy of a Fall

    Carey Mulligan, Maestro

    Emma Stone, Poor Things

    Best director

    Justine Triet, Anatomy of a Fall

    Martin Scorsese, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer

    Yorgos Lanthimos, Poor Things

    Jonathan Glazer, The Zone of Interest

    Best Supporting Actor

    Sterling K. Brown, American Fiction

    Robert De Niro, Killers of the Flower Moon

    Robert Downey Jr., Oppenheimer

    Ryan Gosling, Barbie

    Mark Ruffalo, Poor Things

    Best Supporting Actress

    Emily Blunt, Oppenheimer

    Danielle Brooks, The Color Purple

    America Ferrera, Barbie

    Jodie Foster, Nyad Da’Vine

    Joy Randolph, The Holdovers

    best pictures

    American Fiction

    Anatomy of a Fall

    Barbie

    The Holdovers

    Killers of the Flower Moon

    Maestro

    Oppenheimer

    Past Lives

    Poor Thing

    The Zone of Interest

    Best Original Screenplay

    Anatomy of a Fall

    The Holdovers

    Maestro

    May December

    Past Lives

    Best Adapted Screenplay

    American Fiction

    Barbie

    Oppenheimer

    Poor Things

    The Zone of Interest

    The Oscars will be announced on March 10

  • Wish ‘Oppenheimer’ showed ‘what happened to the Japanese people’, says Spike Lee 

    By PTI

    WASHINGTON: Calling “Oppenheimer” a great film, veteran filmmaker Spike Lee said it would have been better if its director Christopher Nolan had showed the impact of the nuclear bombs on the Japanese people during World War II.

    Fronted by Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer” is a 180-minute-long sprawling biographical drama on the titular American theoretical physicist, which was released in theatres on July 21.

    It has emerged as one of the biggest-grossing films of the year.

    In an interview with The Washington Post, Lee said what he said about the film was “not criticism”, but a comment.

    “Chris Nolan with ‘Oppenheimer’, he’s a massive filmmaker. Great film and this is not a criticism. It’s a comment.

    If (‘Oppenheimer’) is three hours, I would like to add some more minutes about what happened to the Japanese people.

    “People got vaporized. Many years later, people are radioactive. It’s not like he didn’t have power. He tells studios what to do.

    I would have loved to have the end of the film maybe show what it did, dropping those two nuclear bombs on Japan,” the Oscar winner told the publication.

    Lee also shared he showed Nolan’s World War II epic “Dunkirk” in his New York University film class.

    “Understand, this is all love. And I bet (Nolan) could tell me some things he would change about ‘Do the Right Thing’ and ‘Malcolm X’,” he added.

    In the same interview, the director also praised Martin Scorsese for his latest directorial venture “Killers of the Flower Moon”.

    “That’s my guy; it’s a great film,” he said.

    Lee, also an Academy member, said the film’s breakout star Lily Gladstone could become the first Native American actress to win a lead actress Oscar.

    “Lily Gladstone, she’s winning an Oscar. She’s got my vote,” he added.

    WASHINGTON: Calling “Oppenheimer” a great film, veteran filmmaker Spike Lee said it would have been better if its director Christopher Nolan had showed the impact of the nuclear bombs on the Japanese people during World War II.

    Fronted by Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer” is a 180-minute-long sprawling biographical drama on the titular American theoretical physicist, which was released in theatres on July 21.

    It has emerged as one of the biggest-grossing films of the year.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    In an interview with The Washington Post, Lee said what he said about the film was “not criticism”, but a comment.

    “Chris Nolan with ‘Oppenheimer’, he’s a massive filmmaker. Great film and this is not a criticism. It’s a comment.

    If (‘Oppenheimer’) is three hours, I would like to add some more minutes about what happened to the Japanese people.

    “People got vaporized. Many years later, people are radioactive. It’s not like he didn’t have power. He tells studios what to do.

    I would have loved to have the end of the film maybe show what it did, dropping those two nuclear bombs on Japan,” the Oscar winner told the publication.

    Lee also shared he showed Nolan’s World War II epic “Dunkirk” in his New York University film class.

    “Understand, this is all love. And I bet (Nolan) could tell me some things he would change about ‘Do the Right Thing’ and ‘Malcolm X’,” he added.

    In the same interview, the director also praised Martin Scorsese for his latest directorial venture “Killers of the Flower Moon”.

    “That’s my guy; it’s a great film,” he said.

    Lee, also an Academy member, said the film’s breakout star Lily Gladstone could become the first Native American actress to win a lead actress Oscar.

    “Lily Gladstone, she’s winning an Oscar. She’s got my vote,” he added.

  • Wish ‘Oppenheimer’ showed ‘what happened to the Japanese people’, says Spike Lee

    By PTI

    WASHINGTON DC: Calling “Oppenheimer” a great film, veteran filmmaker Spike Lee said it would have been better if its director Christopher Nolan had showed the impact of the nuclear bombs on the Japanese people during World War II.

    Fronted by Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer” is a 180-minute-long sprawling biographical drama on the titular American theoretical physicist, which was released in theatres on July 21.

    It has emerged as one of the biggest grossing films of the year.

    In an interview with The Washington Post, Lee said what he said about the film was “not criticism”, but a comment.

    “Chris Nolan with ‘Oppenheimer’, he’s a massive filmmaker. Great film, and this is not a criticism. It’s a comment. If (‘Oppenheimer’) is three hours, I would like to add some more minutes about what happened to the Japanese people. People got vaporized. Many years later, people are radioactive. It’s not like he didn’t have power. He tells studios what to do. I would have loved to have the end of the film maybe show what it did, dropping those two nuclear bombs on Japan,” the Oscar winner told the publication.

    Lee also shared he showed Nolan’s World War II epic “Dunkirk” in his New York University film class.

    “Understand, this is all love. And I bet (Nolan) could tell me some things he would change about ‘Do the Right Thing’ and ‘Malcolm X’,” he added.

    In the same interview, the director also praised Martin Scorsese for his latest directorial venture “Killers of the Flower Moon”.

    “That’s my guy. It’s a great film,” he said.

    Lee, also an Academy member, said the film’s breakout star Lily Gladstone could become the first Native American actress to win a lead actress Oscar.

    “Lily Gladstone, she’s winning an Oscar. She’s got my vote,” he added.

    READ HERE:

    People filling theatres to see ‘Oppenheimer’, ‘Barbie’ victory for cinema: Francis Ford Coppola 

    ‘Oppenheimer’ movie review: Nolan’s bleak biopic is measured and masterful

    WASHINGTON DC: Calling “Oppenheimer” a great film, veteran filmmaker Spike Lee said it would have been better if its director Christopher Nolan had showed the impact of the nuclear bombs on the Japanese people during World War II.

    Fronted by Cillian Murphy, “Oppenheimer” is a 180-minute-long sprawling biographical drama on the titular American theoretical physicist, which was released in theatres on July 21.

    It has emerged as one of the biggest grossing films of the year.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    In an interview with The Washington Post, Lee said what he said about the film was “not criticism”, but a comment.

    “Chris Nolan with ‘Oppenheimer’, he’s a massive filmmaker. Great film, and this is not a criticism. It’s a comment. If (‘Oppenheimer’) is three hours, I would like to add some more minutes about what happened to the Japanese people. People got vaporized. Many years later, people are radioactive. It’s not like he didn’t have power. He tells studios what to do. I would have loved to have the end of the film maybe show what it did, dropping those two nuclear bombs on Japan,” the Oscar winner told the publication.

    Lee also shared he showed Nolan’s World War II epic “Dunkirk” in his New York University film class.

    “Understand, this is all love. And I bet (Nolan) could tell me some things he would change about ‘Do the Right Thing’ and ‘Malcolm X’,” he added.

    In the same interview, the director also praised Martin Scorsese for his latest directorial venture “Killers of the Flower Moon”.

    “That’s my guy. It’s a great film,” he said.

    Lee, also an Academy member, said the film’s breakout star Lily Gladstone could become the first Native American actress to win a lead actress Oscar.

    “Lily Gladstone, she’s winning an Oscar. She’s got my vote,” he added.

    READ HERE:

    People filling theatres to see ‘Oppenheimer’, ‘Barbie’ victory for cinema: Francis Ford Coppola 

    ‘Oppenheimer’ movie review: Nolan’s bleak biopic is measured and masterful

  • Oppenheimer becomes highest-grossing biopic of all time

    By Express News Service

    Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer has now claimed the title of the highest-grossing biopic of all time, surpassing Bryan Singer’s 2018 biographical musical drama film Bohemian Rhapsody.

    Oppenheimer has taken $912.7 million worldwide at this time of writing, meaning it beat the previous record held by Bohemian Rhapsody, which earned $910.8 million in 2018.

    Oppenheimer currently stands as the third-highest-grossing film of 2023. Greta Gerwig’s Barbie, which was released on the same day as Nolan’s biographical thriller, has officially claimed the title of the biggest movie of 2023 with a colossal USD 1.416 billion in global box office earnings.

    The film, set during World War II, follows physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, known as the Father of the Atomic Bomb. It is set during a period in history when he feared that testing the atomic bomb would ignite the atmosphere and destroy the world, yet he pushed the button anyway.

    Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer has now claimed the title of the highest-grossing biopic of all time, surpassing Bryan Singer’s 2018 biographical musical drama film Bohemian Rhapsody.

    Oppenheimer has taken $912.7 million worldwide at this time of writing, meaning it beat the previous record held by Bohemian Rhapsody, which earned $910.8 million in 2018.

    Oppenheimer currently stands as the third-highest-grossing film of 2023. Greta Gerwig’s Barbie, which was released on the same day as Nolan’s biographical thriller, has officially claimed the title of the biggest movie of 2023 with a colossal USD 1.416 billion in global box office earnings.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The film, set during World War II, follows physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, known as the Father of the Atomic Bomb. It is set during a period in history when he feared that testing the atomic bomb would ignite the atmosphere and destroy the world, yet he pushed the button anyway.

  • ‘Barbie’ tops USD 1 billion worldwide, breaks another record for female directors

    By AFP

    Hollywood’s pink wave has yet to crest as Warner Bros.’ “Barbie” dominated for a third straight weekend in North American theaters, pushing the film’s global haul past USD 1 billion in a first for a solo woman director, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations said Sunday.

    The Greta Gerwig-directed blockbuster has tapped into a cultural zeitgeist: not only did it make history by hitting the billion-dollar box office milestone, it also did so faster than any film — including those directed by men — in Warner Bros.’ 100-year history, executives there said.

    The film, which earlier scored the biggest opening weekend of the year, “has captured the imagination of moviegoers around the world and the results are incredibly impressive,” analyst Paul Dergarabedian of Comscore said.

    Starring Margot Robbie as iconic doll Barbie and Ryan Gosling as boyfriend Ken, the movie earned a projected USD 53 million for the Friday-through-Sunday period, for a domestic total of USD 459 million and a whopping USD 1.03 billion worldwide.

    Co-written by Gerwig and her partner Noah Baumbach, it follows Barbie as she contends with her woman-led, pink-plastered fantasy land becoming infected with real-world problems, in a comic self-aware commentary on the dolls’ decades-old cultural significance.

    A supporting cast including Will Ferrell, Kate McKinnon and America Ferrera add even more star power to the film, while its soundtrack includes new songs by chart toppers Dua Lipa, Lizzo and Nicki Minaj — as well as a surprise hit in “I’m Just Ken,” the power ballad sung in the film by Gosling.

    “Barbie” is only the sixth film to surpass USD 1 billion at the box-office since the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Variety.

    Falling to third place was Universal’s “Oppenheimer,” the dark historical drama whose opening the same week as “Barbie” sparked the massive “Barbenheimer” social media trend.

    ‘Oppenheimer’ becomes top-grossing WWII filmIt was bumped by Warner Bros. newcomer “Meg 2: The Trench,” an action sequel in which Jason Statham tries to survive attacks by gargantuan prehistoric sharks.

    “Meg 2” pulled in USD 30 million for the weekend, while Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” earned USD 28.7 million to push its global total to USD 552 million.

    That total made the story about the creation of the atomic bomb the all-time top-grossing World War II film, ahead of Nolan’s own “Dunkirk” (USD 527 million) and Steven Spielberg’s “Saving Private Ryan” (USD 482 million), not adjusted for inflation, according to Hollywood Reporter.

    Fourth place for the weekend went to “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem,” the latest in the franchise about a team of reptilian heroes in a half-shell. The Paramount animated comedy, featuring the voices of Jackie Chan and Post Malone, brought in USD 28 million.

    Disney release “Haunted Mansion” slid two spots to fifth, with the lavishly produced kid-centric film — starring LaKeith Stanfield, Tiffany Haddish and Owen Wilson — earning USD 8.9 million.

    Holding its own in sixth was the independent “Sound of Freedom,” from Santa Fe Films and Angel Studios, at USD 7 million. The low-budget action thriller has sparked controversy, with critics saying its story about child sex trafficking plays into Qanon conspiracy theories.

    All in all, it was an exceptional weekend for Hollywood, with the top four films all raking in USD 28 million or more — though whether the industry can sustain that momentum in the face of a historic writers’ and actors’ strike remains to be seen.

    Not only did the top films come close to doubling the total from the same weekend last year, they surpassed the corresponding pre-pandemic weekend in 2019, analysts said.

    As Ken might have said — in a line reportedly ad-libbed by Gosling in “Barbie” — the weekend was “Sublime!”

    Rounding out the top 10 were:

    “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part 1” (USD 6.4 million)

    “Talk to Me” (USD 6.2 million)

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” (USD 1.5 million)

    “Elemental” (USD 1.2 million)

    Hollywood’s pink wave has yet to crest as Warner Bros.’ “Barbie” dominated for a third straight weekend in North American theaters, pushing the film’s global haul past USD 1 billion in a first for a solo woman director, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations said Sunday.

    The Greta Gerwig-directed blockbuster has tapped into a cultural zeitgeist: not only did it make history by hitting the billion-dollar box office milestone, it also did so faster than any film — including those directed by men — in Warner Bros.’ 100-year history, executives there said.

    The film, which earlier scored the biggest opening weekend of the year, “has captured the imagination of moviegoers around the world and the results are incredibly impressive,” analyst Paul Dergarabedian of Comscore said.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2′); });

    Starring Margot Robbie as iconic doll Barbie and Ryan Gosling as boyfriend Ken, the movie earned a projected USD 53 million for the Friday-through-Sunday period, for a domestic total of USD 459 million and a whopping USD 1.03 billion worldwide.

    Co-written by Gerwig and her partner Noah Baumbach, it follows Barbie as she contends with her woman-led, pink-plastered fantasy land becoming infected with real-world problems, in a comic self-aware commentary on the dolls’ decades-old cultural significance.

    A supporting cast including Will Ferrell, Kate McKinnon and America Ferrera add even more star power to the film, while its soundtrack includes new songs by chart toppers Dua Lipa, Lizzo and Nicki Minaj — as well as a surprise hit in “I’m Just Ken,” the power ballad sung in the film by Gosling.

    “Barbie” is only the sixth film to surpass USD 1 billion at the box-office since the Covid-19 pandemic, according to Variety.

    Falling to third place was Universal’s “Oppenheimer,” the dark historical drama whose opening the same week as “Barbie” sparked the massive “Barbenheimer” social media trend.

    ‘Oppenheimer’ becomes top-grossing WWII film
    It was bumped by Warner Bros. newcomer “Meg 2: The Trench,” an action sequel in which Jason Statham tries to survive attacks by gargantuan prehistoric sharks.

    “Meg 2” pulled in USD 30 million for the weekend, while Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” earned USD 28.7 million to push its global total to USD 552 million.

    That total made the story about the creation of the atomic bomb the all-time top-grossing World War II film, ahead of Nolan’s own “Dunkirk” (USD 527 million) and Steven Spielberg’s “Saving Private Ryan” (USD 482 million), not adjusted for inflation, according to Hollywood Reporter.

    Fourth place for the weekend went to “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem,” the latest in the franchise about a team of reptilian heroes in a half-shell. The Paramount animated comedy, featuring the voices of Jackie Chan and Post Malone, brought in USD 28 million.

    Disney release “Haunted Mansion” slid two spots to fifth, with the lavishly produced kid-centric film — starring LaKeith Stanfield, Tiffany Haddish and Owen Wilson — earning USD 8.9 million.

    Holding its own in sixth was the independent “Sound of Freedom,” from Santa Fe Films and Angel Studios, at USD 7 million. The low-budget action thriller has sparked controversy, with critics saying its story about child sex trafficking plays into Qanon conspiracy theories.

    All in all, it was an exceptional weekend for Hollywood, with the top four films all raking in USD 28 million or more — though whether the industry can sustain that momentum in the face of a historic writers’ and actors’ strike remains to be seen.

    Not only did the top films come close to doubling the total from the same weekend last year, they surpassed the corresponding pre-pandemic weekend in 2019, analysts said.

    As Ken might have said — in a line reportedly ad-libbed by Gosling in “Barbie” — the weekend was “Sublime!”

    Rounding out the top 10 were:

    “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part 1” (USD 6.4 million)

    “Talk to Me” (USD 6.2 million)

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” (USD 1.5 million)

    “Elemental” (USD 1.2 million)

  • People filling theatres to see ‘Oppenheimer’, ‘Barbie’ victory for cinema: Francis Ford Coppola 

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Veteran filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola says he is happy to see audiences flocking to cinema halls to watch “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer”, terming the favourable response to the two big-ticket releases “a victory for cinema”.

    Coppola said this in response to fans’ questions on his Instagram Stories, asking if he had watched Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” by Christopher Nolan yet.

    “I have yet to see them, but the fact that people are filling big theatres to see them and that they are neither sequels nor prequels, no number attached to them, meaning they are true one-offs, is a victory for cinema,” the 84-year-old director said.

    According to entertainment website The Hollywood Reporter, “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” have been on a roll since their opening weekend from July 21-23.

    Gerwig’s film not only had one of the top openings since the COVID-19 pandemic but “Barbie” also broke the record for the biggest opening for a female director.

    As far as Nolan’s movie is concerned, “Oppenheimer” ranked as the third-biggest opening ever for a biographical film in North America, the outlet stated.

    While Coppola previously expressed his dislike for franchises, he was behind “The Godfather” film trilogy, which spawned from Mario Puzo’s best-selling 1969 novel.

    When another social media user asked him about the future of cinema, the director said he had big hopes for the film exhibition industry.

    “My hunch is that we’re on the verge of a golden age.

    Wonderful and illuminating cinema seen in large theatres,” he said.

    LOS ANGELES: Veteran filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola says he is happy to see audiences flocking to cinema halls to watch “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer”, terming the favourable response to the two big-ticket releases “a victory for cinema”.

    Coppola said this in response to fans’ questions on his Instagram Stories, asking if he had watched Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” by Christopher Nolan yet.

    “I have yet to see them, but the fact that people are filling big theatres to see them and that they are neither sequels nor prequels, no number attached to them, meaning they are true one-offs, is a victory for cinema,” the 84-year-old director said.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    According to entertainment website The Hollywood Reporter, “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” have been on a roll since their opening weekend from July 21-23.

    Gerwig’s film not only had one of the top openings since the COVID-19 pandemic but “Barbie” also broke the record for the biggest opening for a female director.

    As far as Nolan’s movie is concerned, “Oppenheimer” ranked as the third-biggest opening ever for a biographical film in North America, the outlet stated.

    While Coppola previously expressed his dislike for franchises, he was behind “The Godfather” film trilogy, which spawned from Mario Puzo’s best-selling 1969 novel.

    When another social media user asked him about the future of cinema, the director said he had big hopes for the film exhibition industry.

    “My hunch is that we’re on the verge of a golden age.

    Wonderful and illuminating cinema seen in large theatres,” he said.

  • Oppenheimer: The day after Trinity —The umbrella of the mushroom cloud

    Express News Service

    When asked about talks for curbing the spread of nuclear weapons, the father of the atom bomb, physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, famously stated that this thought had come two decades too late: “It should have been done the day after Trinity”. It’s this statement from which Jon H Else’s 1981 Academy Award-nominated documentary derives its title. The film is as much about the enigma that was Oppenheimer as it is about the moral and ethical questions he was confronted with after the Trinity Test, the detonation of the first nuclear weapon.

    It’s a perfect accompaniment for Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer. It could also help find answers to some of the questions that the Nolan film might have left you with. Available to stream for free on The Criterion Channel, it pieces together the story of the creation of the first atom bomb through rare archival footage and candid anecdotes and testimonies from several scientists involved in the Manhattan Project—Hans Bethe, Robert Serber, Robert Wilson among others—as well as Oppenheimer’s physicist brother Frank, his writer friends Haakon Chevalier, and Francis Fergusson and some of the residents of New Mexico, the site of the great laboratory that produced something that, as the film puts it, was as much about life as destruction.

    the day after trinityAs opposed to Nolan’s astounding creative leaps and play with the narrative in the recent biopic, there’s something wholesomely comprehensive and methodical about Else’s approach to the subject. It’s all negotiated step by step, one aspect of the issue leading to another to give a rounded picture of a slice of history and its repercussions as Else sees it.

    We begin with the genius himself who died much before the film was shot. Oppie to close friends and family, is described variously as gentle, reticent, and eloquent. A man of tremendous intellect with a razor-sharp, quick mind and as sharp a tongue, he had literary inclinations but, in his early days of youth, was also “ignorant of practical matters” and never read newspapers. What he did read was Marx and Lenin and the Bhagavad Gita. He was charmed by the Hindu text, we are told, without quite being religiously involved with it.

    The personal details about him are telling—how he may have looked frail but was tough as nails, how for days he would go alone in the woods of New Mexico with his horse, how he was “dashing in an elegant way” and a darling of women.

    Having established him as a larger-than-life figure in the garb of an ordinary man, the film then moves on to Oppenheimer’s Jewish background and anxieties about Hitler. Simultaneously, we see the larger anxiety in the world after the discovery of nuclear fission by the Germans, which could potentially mean that “the end of Western civilization” could well be very near. Oppenheimer led the effort to build something that was regarded then as “necessary to save the Western civilization”. Equally motivating was the patriotic fervor of the Americans.

    The documentary also shows how the project brought together the finest of minds—Nobel laureates and young academicians, with an average age of 29—in the middle of nowhere, how young scientists kept disappearing from their respective institutes, how a tiny train station outside Santa Fe suddenly started seeing unprecedented traffic. Oppie was “the conductor of this opera” seen as the one for a good cause, something inevitable. It also marked a shift for the physicist, from an unworldly, unpolitical individual to emerge as a great administrator.

    The dropping of the bomb itself, both at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a political act for which the scientists worked with eyes wide open but weren’t prepared for it to happen so fast. As the film moves to describe Trinity itself—the light that was ‘seen’ even by a blind woman, the sun rising from the wrong direction, the flashbulb on the face—it’s for Wilson to put the moral dimension of the “marvellous weapon” in context as a “Faustian bargain to sell the soul for knowledge and power”. An alliance in which there is no going back but only learning to live with it. Or as Oppie put it: “The physicists have known sin and it’s a knowledge they can’t lose”.

    Cinema Without  BordersIn this weekly column, the writer explores the non-Indian films that are making the right noises across the globe. This week, we talk about  Jon H Else’s The Day After Trinity 

    When asked about talks for curbing the spread of nuclear weapons, the father of the atom bomb, physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, famously stated that this thought had come two decades too late: “It should have been done the day after Trinity”. It’s this statement from which Jon H Else’s 1981 Academy Award-nominated documentary derives its title. The film is as much about the enigma that was Oppenheimer as it is about the moral and ethical questions he was confronted with after the Trinity Test, the detonation of the first nuclear weapon.

    It’s a perfect accompaniment for Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer. It could also help find answers to some of the questions that the Nolan film might have left you with. Available to stream for free on The Criterion Channel, it pieces together the story of the creation of the first atom bomb through rare archival footage and candid anecdotes and testimonies from several scientists involved in the Manhattan Project—Hans Bethe, Robert Serber, Robert Wilson among others—as well as Oppenheimer’s physicist brother Frank, his writer friends Haakon Chevalier, and Francis Fergusson and some of the residents of New Mexico, the site of the great laboratory that produced something that, as the film puts it, was as much about life as destruction.

    the day after trinityAs opposed to Nolan’s astounding creative leaps and play with the narrative in the recent biopic, there’s something wholesomely comprehensive and methodical about Else’s approach to the subject. It’s all negotiated step by step, one aspect of the issue leading to another to give a rounded picture of a slice of history and its repercussions as Else sees it.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    We begin with the genius himself who died much before the film was shot. Oppie to close friends and family, is described variously as gentle, reticent, and eloquent. A man of tremendous intellect with a razor-sharp, quick mind and as sharp a tongue, he had literary inclinations but, in his early days of youth, was also “ignorant of practical matters” and never read newspapers. What he did read was Marx and Lenin and the Bhagavad Gita. He was charmed by the Hindu text, we are told, without quite being religiously involved with it.

    The personal details about him are telling—how he may have looked frail but was tough as nails, how for days he would go alone in the woods of New Mexico with his horse, how he was “dashing in an elegant way” and a darling of women.

    Having established him as a larger-than-life figure in the garb of an ordinary man, the film then moves on to Oppenheimer’s Jewish background and anxieties about Hitler. Simultaneously, we see the larger anxiety in the world after the discovery of nuclear fission by the Germans, which could potentially mean that “the end of Western civilization” could well be very near. Oppenheimer led the effort to build something that was regarded then as “necessary to save the Western civilization”. Equally motivating was the patriotic fervor of the Americans.

    The documentary also shows how the project brought together the finest of minds—Nobel laureates and young academicians, with an average age of 29—in the middle of nowhere, how young scientists kept disappearing from their respective institutes, how a tiny train station outside Santa Fe suddenly started seeing unprecedented traffic. Oppie was “the conductor of this opera” seen as the one for a good cause, something inevitable. It also marked a shift for the physicist, from an unworldly, unpolitical individual to emerge as a great administrator.

    The dropping of the bomb itself, both at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was a political act for which the scientists worked with eyes wide open but weren’t prepared for it to happen so fast. As the film moves to describe Trinity itself—the light that was ‘seen’ even by a blind woman, the sun rising from the wrong direction, the flashbulb on the face—it’s for Wilson to put the moral dimension of the “marvellous weapon” in context as a “Faustian bargain to sell the soul for knowledge and power”. An alliance in which there is no going back but only learning to live with it. Or as Oppie put it: “The physicists have known sin and it’s a knowledge they can’t lose”.

    Cinema Without  Borders
    In this weekly column, the writer explores the non-Indian films that are making the right noises across the globe. This week, we talk about  Jon H Else’s The Day After Trinity 

  • ‘Barbie’ takes the box office crown and ‘Oppenheimer’ soars in a historic weekend

    By Associated Press

    “ Barbenheimer ” didn’t just work – it spun box office gold. The social media-fueled fusion of Greta Gerwig’s “ Barbie ” and Christopher Nolan’s “ Oppenheimer ” brought moviegoers back to the theatres in record numbers this weekend, vastly outperforming projections and giving a glimmer of hope to the lagging exhibition business, amid the sobering backdrop of strikes.

    Warner Bros.’ “Barbie” claimed the top spot with a massive $155 million in ticket sales from North American theatres from 4,243 locations, surpassing “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” (as well as every Marvel movie this year) as the biggest opening of the year and breaking the first-weekend record for a film directed by a woman. Universal’s “Oppenheimer” also soared past expectations, taking in $80.5 million from 3,610 theatres in the U.S. and Canada, marking Nolan’s biggest non-Batman debut and one of the best-ever starts for an R-rated biographical drama.

    It’s also the first time that one movie opened to more than $100 million and another movie opened to more than $80 million in the same weekend. When all is settled, it will likely turn out to be the fourth biggest box office weekend of all time with over $300 million industrywide. And all this in a marketplace that increasingly curved towards intellectual property-driven winner takes all.

    The “Barbenheimer” phenomenon may have started out as a good-natured competition between two aesthetic opposites, but, as many hoped, both movies benefitted in the end. Internationally, “Barbie” earned $182 million from 69 territories, fueling a $337 million global weekend. “Oppenheimer” did $93.7 million from 78 territories, ranking above “Barbie” in India, for a $174.2 million global total.

    ALSO READ | Barbenheimer escapes brunt of Hollywood halt

    The only real casualty was “Mission: Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part I,” which despite strong reviews and a healthy opening weekend fell 64% in weekend two. Overshadowed by the “Barbenheimer” glow as well as the blow of losing its IMAX screens to “Oppenheimer,” the Tom Cruise vehicle added $19.5 million, bringing its domestic total to $118.8 million.

    “Barbenheimer” is not merely counterprogramming either. But while a certain section of enthusiastic moviegoers overlapped, in aggregate the audiences were distinct.

    Women drove the historic “Barbie” opening, making up 65% of the audience, according to PostTrak, and 40% of ticket buyers were under the age of 25 for the PG-13 rated movie.

    “It’s just a joyous time in the world. This is history in so many ways,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros.’ president of domestic distribution. “I think this marketing campaign is one for the ages that people will be talking about forever.”

    “Oppenheimer” audiences meanwhile were 62% male and 63% over the age of 25, with a somewhat surprising 32% that were between the ages of 18 and 24.

    Both “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” scored well with critics with 90% and 94% on Rotten Tomatoes, respectively, and audiences who gave both films an A CinemaScore. And social media has been awash with reactions and “takes” all weekend – good, bad, problematic and everywhere in between – the kind of organic, event cinema, watercooler debate that no marketing budget can buy.

    “The ‘Barbenheimer’ thing was a real boost for both movies,” Goldstein said. “It is a crowning achievement for all of us.”

    “Oppenheimer” had the vast majority (80%) of premium large format screens at its disposal. Some 25 theatres in North America boasted IMAX 70mm screenings ( Nolan’s preferred format ), most of which were completely sold out all weekend — accounting for 2% of the total gross. Theaters even scrambled to add more to accommodate the demand including 1 a.m. and 6 a.m. screenings, which also sold out.

    “Nolan’s films are truly cinematic events,” said Jim Orr, Universal’s president of domestic distribution.

    IMAX showings alone made up 26% of the domestic gross (or $21.1 million) from only 411 screens and 20% of the global gross, and “Oppenheimer” will have at least a three-week run on those high-demand screens.

    “This is a phenomenon beyond compare,” said Rich Gelfond, the CEO of IMAX, in a statement. “Around the world, we’ve seen sellouts at 4:00 a.m. shows and people travelling hours across borders to see ‘Oppenheimer’ in IMAX 70mm.”

    This is the comeback weekend Hollywood has been dreaming of since the pandemic. There have been big openings and successes – “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” “Top Gun: Maverick,” and “Avatar: The Way of Water” among them, but the fact that two movies are succeeding at the same time is notable.

    “It was a truly historic weekend and continues the positive box office momentum of 2023,” said Michael O’Leary, President & CEO of the National Association of Theatre Owners. “People recognized that something special was happening and they wanted to be a part of it.”

    And yet in the background looms disaster as Hollywood studios continue to squabble with striking actors and writers over a fair contract.

    “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” were the last films on the 2023 calendar to get a massive, global press tour. Both went right up to the 11th hour, squeezing in every last moment with their movie stars. “Oppenheimer” even pushed up its London premiere by an hour, knowing that Emily Blunt, Matt Damon and Cillian Murphy would have to leave to symbolically join the picket lines by the time the movie began.

    Without movie stars to promote their films, studios have started pushing some fall releases, including the high-profile Zendaya tennis drama “Challengers.”

    But for now, it’s simply a positive story that could even continue for weeks to come.

    “There could be a sequel next weekend,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. “The FOMO factor will rachet up because of this monumental box office event centred around the movie theatre experience.”

    Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

    1. “Barbie,” $155 million.

    2. “Oppenheimer,” $80.5 million.

    3. “Sound of Freedom,” $20.1 million.

    4. “Mission: Impossible-Dead Reckoning Part I,” $19.5 million.

    5. “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” $6.7 million.

    6. “Insidious: The Red Door,” $6.5 million.

    7. “Elemental,” $5.8 million.

    8. “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” $2.8 million.

    9. “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts,” 1.1 million.

    10. “No Hard Feelings,” $1.1 million.

    “ Barbenheimer ” didn’t just work – it spun box office gold. The social media-fueled fusion of Greta Gerwig’s “ Barbie ” and Christopher Nolan’s “ Oppenheimer ” brought moviegoers back to the theatres in record numbers this weekend, vastly outperforming projections and giving a glimmer of hope to the lagging exhibition business, amid the sobering backdrop of strikes.

    Warner Bros.’ “Barbie” claimed the top spot with a massive $155 million in ticket sales from North American theatres from 4,243 locations, surpassing “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” (as well as every Marvel movie this year) as the biggest opening of the year and breaking the first-weekend record for a film directed by a woman. Universal’s “Oppenheimer” also soared past expectations, taking in $80.5 million from 3,610 theatres in the U.S. and Canada, marking Nolan’s biggest non-Batman debut and one of the best-ever starts for an R-rated biographical drama.

    It’s also the first time that one movie opened to more than $100 million and another movie opened to more than $80 million in the same weekend. When all is settled, it will likely turn out to be the fourth biggest box office weekend of all time with over $300 million industrywide. And all this in a marketplace that increasingly curved towards intellectual property-driven winner takes all.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2′); });

    The “Barbenheimer” phenomenon may have started out as a good-natured competition between two aesthetic opposites, but, as many hoped, both movies benefitted in the end. Internationally, “Barbie” earned $182 million from 69 territories, fueling a $337 million global weekend. “Oppenheimer” did $93.7 million from 78 territories, ranking above “Barbie” in India, for a $174.2 million global total.

    ALSO READ | Barbenheimer escapes brunt of Hollywood halt

    The only real casualty was “Mission: Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part I,” which despite strong reviews and a healthy opening weekend fell 64% in weekend two. Overshadowed by the “Barbenheimer” glow as well as the blow of losing its IMAX screens to “Oppenheimer,” the Tom Cruise vehicle added $19.5 million, bringing its domestic total to $118.8 million.

    “Barbenheimer” is not merely counterprogramming either. But while a certain section of enthusiastic moviegoers overlapped, in aggregate the audiences were distinct.

    Women drove the historic “Barbie” opening, making up 65% of the audience, according to PostTrak, and 40% of ticket buyers were under the age of 25 for the PG-13 rated movie.

    “It’s just a joyous time in the world. This is history in so many ways,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros.’ president of domestic distribution. “I think this marketing campaign is one for the ages that people will be talking about forever.”

    “Oppenheimer” audiences meanwhile were 62% male and 63% over the age of 25, with a somewhat surprising 32% that were between the ages of 18 and 24.

    Both “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” scored well with critics with 90% and 94% on Rotten Tomatoes, respectively, and audiences who gave both films an A CinemaScore. And social media has been awash with reactions and “takes” all weekend – good, bad, problematic and everywhere in between – the kind of organic, event cinema, watercooler debate that no marketing budget can buy.

    “The ‘Barbenheimer’ thing was a real boost for both movies,” Goldstein said. “It is a crowning achievement for all of us.”

    “Oppenheimer” had the vast majority (80%) of premium large format screens at its disposal. Some 25 theatres in North America boasted IMAX 70mm screenings ( Nolan’s preferred format ), most of which were completely sold out all weekend — accounting for 2% of the total gross. Theaters even scrambled to add more to accommodate the demand including 1 a.m. and 6 a.m. screenings, which also sold out.

    “Nolan’s films are truly cinematic events,” said Jim Orr, Universal’s president of domestic distribution.

    IMAX showings alone made up 26% of the domestic gross (or $21.1 million) from only 411 screens and 20% of the global gross, and “Oppenheimer” will have at least a three-week run on those high-demand screens.

    “This is a phenomenon beyond compare,” said Rich Gelfond, the CEO of IMAX, in a statement. “Around the world, we’ve seen sellouts at 4:00 a.m. shows and people travelling hours across borders to see ‘Oppenheimer’ in IMAX 70mm.”

    This is the comeback weekend Hollywood has been dreaming of since the pandemic. There have been big openings and successes – “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” “Top Gun: Maverick,” and “Avatar: The Way of Water” among them, but the fact that two movies are succeeding at the same time is notable.

    “It was a truly historic weekend and continues the positive box office momentum of 2023,” said Michael O’Leary, President & CEO of the National Association of Theatre Owners. “People recognized that something special was happening and they wanted to be a part of it.”

    And yet in the background looms disaster as Hollywood studios continue to squabble with striking actors and writers over a fair contract.

    “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” were the last films on the 2023 calendar to get a massive, global press tour. Both went right up to the 11th hour, squeezing in every last moment with their movie stars. “Oppenheimer” even pushed up its London premiere by an hour, knowing that Emily Blunt, Matt Damon and Cillian Murphy would have to leave to symbolically join the picket lines by the time the movie began.

    Without movie stars to promote their films, studios have started pushing some fall releases, including the high-profile Zendaya tennis drama “Challengers.”

    But for now, it’s simply a positive story that could even continue for weeks to come.

    “There could be a sequel next weekend,” said Paul Dergarabedian, the senior media analyst for Comscore. “The FOMO factor will rachet up because of this monumental box office event centred around the movie theatre experience.”

    Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theatres, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

    1. “Barbie,” $155 million.

    2. “Oppenheimer,” $80.5 million.

    3. “Sound of Freedom,” $20.1 million.

    4. “Mission: Impossible-Dead Reckoning Part I,” $19.5 million.

    5. “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny,” $6.7 million.

    6. “Insidious: The Red Door,” $6.5 million.

    7. “Elemental,” $5.8 million.

    8. “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse,” $2.8 million.

    9. “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts,” 1.1 million.

    10. “No Hard Feelings,” $1.1 million.