5 Surprising Facts You Probably Didn't Know About Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer

Team FC

The run-time of Oppenheimer exceeds that of Interstellar by over 10 minutes, clocking in at more than three hours and making it Christopher Nolan’s longest film to date.

Christopher Nolan shot Oppenheimer in IMAX using some of the highest-resolution cameras in the world. Audiences can expect never-before-seen clarity and depth of image.

Oppenheimer was shot in both colour and black-and-white in order to differentiate between timelines and perspectives. The part of the film in colour represents Oppenheimer’s subjective experience, while the black-and-white conveys a different character’s point of view of the story.

The film, which promises to feature ground-breaking visuals, used minimal computer graphics. The Trinity test scene, in which the nuclear weapon was first detonated, was created without CGI.

In the days leading up to Oppenheimer’s release, PVR re-released Nolan’s greatest blockbusters in cinema halls across India. These films include The Dark Knight trilogy, Inception, Interstellar, and Dunkirk.

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