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‘Oppenheimer’ Hits Nuclear-Scarred Japan, 8 Months After U.S. Premiere
2024-04-01 00:00:00.0     纽约时报-亚洲新闻     原网页

       

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       ‘Oppenheimer’ Hits Nuclear-Scarred Japan, 8 Months After U.S. Premiere

       While some viewers lamented the movie’s exclusion of scenes from Hiroshima or Nagasaki, others said they recognized that it had another story to tell.

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       A poster for “Oppenheimer” in Tokyo on Friday. The movie opened in Japan eight months after its release in the United States.Credit...Yuichi Yamazaki/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

       By Motoko Rich and Kiuko Notoya

       Motoko Rich reported from Tokyo, and Kiuko Notoya from Yokohama, Japan.

       April 1, 2024Updated 5:04 a.m. ET

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       Watching “Oppenheimer,” the Oscar-winning biopic about the father of the atomic bomb that opened in Japan on Friday, Kako Okuno was stunned by a scene in which scientists celebrated the explosion over Hiroshima with thunderous foot stomping and the waving of American flags.

       Seeing the jubilant faces “really shocked me,” said Ms. Okuno, 22, a nursery school teacher who grew up in Hiroshima and has worked as a peace and environmental activist.

       Eight months after Christopher Nolan’s film became a box office hit in the United States, “Oppenheimer” is now confronting Japanese audiences with the flip-side American perspective on the most scarring events of Japan’s history.

       The movie follows the breakthrough discoveries of J. Robert Oppenheimer and his team before the United States struck Japan with the first salvo of the nuclear age. It won seven Academy Awards last month, including for best picture.

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       Ms. Okuno, who watched the film in Tokyo on Saturday, lamented that it did not reflect the experiences of the hundreds of thousands of atomic bomb victims in Hiroshima or Nagasaki.

       “It is scary to have this film go out in the world without the proper understanding of the effects of the nuclear bomb,” she said. As for the regret that Oppenheimer expresses in the second half of the film, “if he really thought he had created technology to destroy the world,” she said, “I wish he had done something more about it.”

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       Motoko Rich is a reporter in Tokyo, leading coverage of Japan for The Times. More about Motoko Rich

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