The Atomic Bomb Film

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Cinema has reflected the society which produced it since the inception of the art; examples of this idea can be found throughout the history of cinema, whether it is in the environmental outrage of China Syndrome, the anger of the Japanese in Gojira, or the Cold War paranoia of On the Beach, the end results are still the same. These films represent a summation of the fears and ideals of the period which produced them. In concordance with this idea, the films of an era must also show a certain level of ambivalence about how any one idea was represented. This ambivalence in tandem with the summation of the fears shown in each era of cinema can, therefore, be said to give a deeper insight into the ideologies and overall way of life of that period. The ideals of the era will also be analyzed in concordance with the idea of examining these periods and showing how these films showed the major political turmoil of an age. …show more content…
The atomic bomb was originally conceived as counter method when Albert Einstein sent letters to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt during the early stages of World War 2 as a counter-method to the attempts of Nazi scientists who were supposedly working on their own version of the bomb. In all actuality, the project had long been discarded by the Nazis as it was deemed impractical in the early stages of its production. These letters convinced the President to start a secret program known as the Manhattan Project; from here, the top physicists in the country were recruited to work on the