
"I think it was a consolation to (Oppenheimer), he kind of needed it and it provided him a lot of consolation, all his life.Welcome! This website is (quite obviously) a small text generator. "I thought it was an absolutely beautiful text, very inspiring," he said.

Murphy told Indian film critic Sucharita Tyagi ahead of the "Oppenheimer" premiere that he read the Bhagavad Gita in preparation for filming. "Should you choose to ignore this appeal it would be deemed as a deliberate assault on Indian civilisation." "We urge, on behalf of billion Hindus and timeless tradition of lives being transformed by revered Geeta, to do all that is needed to uphold dignity of their revered book and remove this scene from your film across world," he concluded. 'Oppenheimer' review: Christopher Nolan's epic is a crafty blast of nuclear doomsday dread

Mahurkar called for Nolan to remove the scene from the movie. He continued: "But this is a direct assault on religious beliefs of a billion tolerant Hindus." "We do not know the motivation and logic behind this unnecessary scene on life of a scientist." Geeta has been the inspiration for countless sanyasis, brahmcharis and legends who live a life of self-control and perform selfless noble deeds," Mahurkar wrote in a lengthy statement. "The Bhagwad Geeta is one of the most revered scriptures of Hinduism. The quote from one of Hinduism's most sacred scriptures is repeated throughout the film. "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds," the scientist reads from the text as the pair resume sex. In "Oppenheimer," Tatlock pauses in the midst of intercourse and asks Oppenheimer to read the Bhagavad Gita.

India’s Information Commissioner and Save Culture Save India Foundation founder Uday Mahurkar called the sex scene between Murphy, who plays the titular character, and Pugh, who plays his lover Jean Tatlock, a “ scathing attack on Hinduism," on social media Saturday. Robert Oppenheimer, the American physicist whose stewardship of the Manhattan Project led to the atomic bomb, the death of tens of thousands and the end of World War II. The Christopher Nolan film details the life of J.

Cillian Murphy and Florence Pugh's sex scene in " Oppenheimer" has sparked backlash in India over the use of a sacred text.
