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Cillian Murphy Reveals Oppenheimer Doesn't Have Deleted Scenes

The final version is the director's cut across all of Christopher Nolan's films, the actor explained.

Cillian Murphy Reveals Oppenheimer Doesn't Have Deleted Scenes

Oppenheimer star Cillian Murphy warns fans not to expect any deleted scenes from the movie. The star of the film said in an interview that Christopher Nolan's latest film - like any other work by the director - will not have deleted scenes or a director's cut that will come to light.

"There are no deleted scenes in Chris Nolan's movies. That's why there are no DVD extras in his movies because the script is the movie. He knows exactly how it's going to end. He's not tinkering with it trying to change history. That's it. the movie," the actor said.

Nolan also echoed this idea in 2012 when he was promoting Batman: The Dark Knight Rises. "I often try to delete things on paper because it's very expensive to shoot things that aren't going to be on film. It also takes a lot of time and energy. There are very few deleted scenes in almost all of my films, which always disappoints DVD audiences." 

Oppenheimer has already been hailed by directors like Paul Schrader and Oliver Stone as "the greatest and best film of this century," in the director's words.

"Not a Nolan fan but this one blows doors off their hinges," Schrader wrote on Facebook. "If you see a movie in theaters this year it should be Oppenheimer."

Nolan's script was written in the first person from the perspective of atomic bomb scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer, played by Murphy. "I don't know if anyone has done it before," Nolan said of the script technique. "But the thing is, with the color sequences, which is the majority of the movie, it's all told from Oppenheimer's point of view: you're literally looking through his eyes."

Nolan added that the approach was to capture "the idea of how to get into someone's head and see how they were visualizing this radical reinvention of physics." One of the historical problems of cinema is the representation of intelligence or genius. Very often it fails to engage people."

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