Fat Man and Little Boy is a 1989 film that reenacts the Manhattan Project, the secret Allied endeavor to develop the first nuclear weapons during World War II. The film is named after the nuclear weapons known by the code names "Fat Man" and "Little Boy". The code names can be taken for joking references to the project director, stout Gen. Leslie Groves and the slim scientific director, Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, but in fact the original nicknames were Fat Man and Thin Man from characters in the works of Dashiell Hammett. The film focuses much attention on the frequently strained... relationship between the two men. The two code names also refer to the shapes of the two bombs although no mention is made of this comparison with the exception of a brief scene showing the two weapons suspended side by side against a sunset. The film was directed by Roland Joffe and written by Joffe and Bruce Robinson. In September 1943, U.S.
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| Release date: | October 20, 1989 |
| Directed by: | Roland Joffé |
| Rated: |  |
| Runtime: | 127 Minutes |
| Producer: | Tony Garnett |
| Editor: | Françoise Bonnot |
| Music by: | Ennio Morricone |
| Cinematography: | Vilmos Zsigmond |
| Screenplay by: | Roland Joffé, Bruce Robinson |