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Day One

Play trailer Poster for Day One 1989 2h 25m History Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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Based on true events surrounding the creation of the atomic bomb, this drama follows the complicated relationship between physicist Leo Szilard (Michael Tucker), scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer (David Strathairn) and Gen. Leslie Groves (Brian Dennehy). Assigned to oversee the project, Groves chooses Oppenheimer to build the historic bomb. But, when World War II inspires the government to use the weapon, Szilard reconsiders his opinions about atomic warfare.

Audience Reviews

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Maxwell K If you have a wild imagination and want to save yourself some money, then just watch the trailer and imagine what it was like on the first day of the invasion. The action scenes (all shown in the trailer) were really good, but they only make up <25% of the movie. Also, even though the acting was strong, the writers did a TERRIBLE job making these characters interesting. The girl has cancer and just wants to die; but when the invasion occurs she starts fighting for her life before walking across town just to get a pizza... Then you got a guy who just popped up from a flooded subway station entrance and tags along with the girl. I am very confident the cat was only put in to draw in female viewers. It's laughable that the writers thought they could get a way with the cat actually surviving in this setting (all animals would die before the end of the first week following the invasion, simply because they are much much dumber than the idiotic humans marching in the streets the day after the invasion). The ending was awful. You leave the theater thinking: Well I learned nothing about how the world went quiet/origin of these meteors filled with death angels, and you just see the same scenario from the first scene of the prequel played out in NYC. You can find a better way to spend an hour and a half than spending ~$20 to watch this film. Krasinki deserves an apology. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 07/01/24 Full Review Audience Member Acceptable miniseries focusing on General Leslie Groves (Brian Dennehy) and his efforts to oversee the creation of the atomic bomb during WWII. Hal Holbrook, Hume Cronyn and Barnard Hughes round out a great ensemble cast in the service of the story: how Groves managed not only to get the bomb made, but kept the Manhattan Project secret, reined in and gently directed the somewhat unpredictable Robert Oppenheimer, spear-headed intelligence-gathering about possible A-bomb development in Germany, and even chose the targets in Japan. After seeing this more factual telling of the story, I recommend the Paul Newman film "Fat Man & Little Boy," for a more theatrical (read: fictional) version, focusing on the crew at Los Alamos. The only drawback is that "Day One" was filmed in 16mm or Super-16, and the graininess and lack of depth in the negative shows. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Audience Member Won an Emmy, story of the Manhattan project. The McGill building (?) shown as Columbia University early on put me off. Lots of actors in small roles: Tony Shalhoub (Fermi), Hume Cronyn, Hal Holbrook. David Strathairn as Oppenheimer, Brian Dennehy as Gen. Lesley Groves. My simplistic story line: bomb built by European Jews to stop Hitler ends up being used against the fanatical Japanese (civilians.) As a historically accurate movie, it makes me think I need to read about this. Michael Tucker played the one sympathetic character, Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard. Guess I'm waiting for the Hollywood version, where the good guys win and the bad guys die. Wait... Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member A pretty good movie. But, it gets to a point where feel like they are dragging it out too much. It's just so slow. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member As those of you who read my review of [i]Fat Man and Little Boy[/i] may recall, in my head, the role of J. Robert Oppenheimer in that film is played by David Strathairn. It isn't, of course. The role is played by Reg Barclay from various incarnations of [i]Star Trek[/i]. This, of course, is someone [i]completely[/i] different. However, in this version, he actually is. And, indeed, I think he does a better job, and I think that, in many ways, this is a more complicated and subtle film. The production values . . . well, it's made for HBO, so they aren't actually [i]bad[/i], but they aren't as good. It's hard to compare the casts. Each has a few people whom I consider among the greatest living actors--how do you decide which is the better cast, the one with David Strathairn or the one with Paul Newman? And this one was co-produced by [i]Aaron Spelling[/i]. We know the story, though this one starts with the last train out of Berlin and Nazi Germany and ends with Oppenheimer's new commitment to peace. There is less detail here about the work done and more detail about the wider implications; indeed, about the last five minutes is taken up with various of the players' reactions to the Bomb and its wider implications. We see the comments of Truman, Eisenhower, Einstein. We see Oppenheimer himself, a man who, throughout the film, has been in line with the government's goals, come to announce his desperate desire that the weapon never be used again against anyone. In time, he would lose his security clearance over his outspoken views on the subject. As I said, there's a greater subtlety to this film than the other. We see more of the uncertainty of the project, not of its physics but of its morality. We see Oppenheimer as the willing, even eager, conduit between military authority and scientific uncertainty. As in any other telling of the story, of course, there is the ridiculous governmental belief that it's possible for scientists working in isolation from one another to produce groundbreaking work. Oh, I know--you're going to cite Einstein and Galileo at me. But neither [i]did[/i] work in a scientific vacuum, and neither did the kind of applied physics that these men had to. Certainly we know that Einstein bounced ideas off other people, at least; it is less certain about Galileo, at least so far as I know. But both men had the work of others to base things on. Galileo had the work of Copernicus, for example. I refuse to get pulled into a conversation about whether the Bomb should have been dropped; I've refused for years. There's too much uncertainty on either side. I don't know where I stand on the subject, and nothing any of you say will make me certain if the historical record cannot, I promise. What I have said, what I [i]know[/i], is that I would not have wanted to be the one to make the decision to drop the Bomb, and I would not have wanted to be one of the men who built it and therefore had to bear the psychological burden of those deaths. The movie is more about those choices than the physics. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Day One

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Movie Info

Synopsis Based on true events surrounding the creation of the atomic bomb, this drama follows the complicated relationship between physicist Leo Szilard (Michael Tucker), scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer (David Strathairn) and Gen. Leslie Groves (Brian Dennehy). Assigned to oversee the project, Groves chooses Oppenheimer to build the historic bomb. But, when World War II inspires the government to use the weapon, Szilard reconsiders his opinions about atomic warfare.
Director
Joseph Sargent
Production Co
World International Network (WIN)
Genre
History, Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (DVD)
Oct 23, 2007
Runtime
2h 25m