The Day After Trinity
The Day After Trinity is a 1981 documentary film directed and produced by Jon H. Else in association with KTEH public television in San Jose, California.
Synopsis
The film tells the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the theoretical physicist who led the effort to build the first atomic bomb, tested in July 1945 at Trinity site in New Mexico. It features interviews with several Manhattan Project scientists, as well as newly declassified archival footage.The film's title comes from an interview seen near the conclusion of the documentary. Robert Oppenheimer is asked for his thoughts on Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's efforts to urge President Lyndon Johnson to initiate talks to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. "It's 20 years too late," Oppenheimer replies. After a pause, he states, "It should have been done the day after Trinity."
Interviewees
- Haakon Chevalier – writer, friend of J. Robert Oppenheimer
- Hans Bethe – Los Alamos physicist, Nobel laureate in physics
- Francis Fergusson – writer, friend of J. Robert Oppenheimer
- Robert Serber – physicist, Los Alamos
- Robert Wilson – physicist, Los Alamos
- Frank Oppenheimer – physicist, Los Alamos, brother of Robert Oppenheimer
- I.I. Rabi – Manhattan Project physicist, Nobel laureate
- Freeman Dyson – physicist, Institute for Advanced Study
- Stirling Colgate – physicist, Los Alamos
- Stan Ulam – mathematician, Los Alamos
- Robert Porton – G.I., at Los Alamos during World War II
- Françoise Ulam – writer, wife of Stanislaw Ulam
- Dorothy McKibbin – former head, Manhattan Project office, Santa Fe, New Mexico
- Robert Krohn – physicist, Los Alamos
- Jane Wilson – writer, wife of Robert Wilson
- Jon Else – filmmaker, interviewer
- Holm Bursom – rancher, Socorro, New Mexico
- Dave MacDonald – rancher, Socorro, New Mexico
- Susan Evans – resident, New Mexico
- Elizabeth Ingram – merchant, San Antonio, New Mexico
Interviewees in archival film
- J. Robert Oppenheimer
- General Leslie Groves
- President Harry Truman
- Senator Joseph McCarthy
Home media
In July 2023, after the release of Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer, the Criterion Channel streamed The Day After Trinity for free; it was one of the service's most-streamed films during that time. It is also available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive.