The cruel truth Christopher Nolan didn’t show in his film about Oppenheimer
Oppenheimer is a film that would be strongly marking history, since it is a film by director Christopher Nolan that touches on very sensitive issues, since it is set in times of war where the objective was the creation of an atomic bomb, but apparently, there is still a hidden truth that the director did not show on the screen.
Oppenheimer tells us about the historical moment where the atomic bomb was created, ending World War II and generating a great scientific and ethical debate between the scientific community and the government, but apparently, there is still a cruel truth that was not seen on screen and would be calling people’s attention.
A source who lived closely the experience of knowing where all the material necessary for the atomic bomb comes from revealed that he had been invited to see the film by director Christopher Nolan and although he saw many things that were reality, the director did not show a cruel truth about where the uranium comes from, material necessary for the realization of such phenomenon and which was seen in the form of marbles that scientists were filling little by little as the film progressed, and more than that how it was obtained.
The source related that coming from Katanga, Congo, an area rich in minerals, he knew where the material came from, and it was a mine 24 stories deep, in which slave men were in charge of carrying earth and stone to classify the piles of radioactive mineral with their hands, being this the cruel truth that was not shown in the film, according to the observer.