An Early Time, Presented by Physicist Edward Teller
Manhattan Project veteran Edward Teller tells the story of World War II and the Manhattan Project from his perspective. When this film was made, Edward Teller remained quite unpopular in Los Alamos due to his testimony against J. Robert Oppenheimer in 1954... among other things. Despite this, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory invited Teller to make this film. I don't know what the backstory of the film is, but I'm under the impression the Laboratory's Director at the time, Harold Agnew, hoped to rehabilitate Teller's reputation to some extent. Whatever the case may be, an Early Time is an interesting film hosted by a fascinating - and polarizing - scientist. I apologize for the rather poor video quality - I hope to acquire a better scan in the future.

An Evening with Dr. Edward Teller

Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr.: Better a Shield than a Sword

Los Alamos: The Beginning

The First 25 Years, A Documentary on Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory Hosted by Norris Bradbury

Buildup of Johnston Atoll

General Paul Tibbets - Reflections on Hiroshima

Edward Teller and the Other Martians of Science by Istvan Hargittai

Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr.: The Responsibilities of the Scientists

Death Is Not The End — Feynman Explains What Physics Says About Dying

Alan B. Carr's, 'The Elegance of Fusion: The H Bomb's Origin Story 1920-1945' (READ DESCRIPTION)

David Albert: A Masterclass on Time’s Arrow

Edward Teller - John von Neumann suggesting an implosion (76/147)

Day at Night: Edward Teller, nuclear physicist

Who Invented the Hydrogen Bomb?

Endless Energy with Dr. Edward Teller (1981)

From the archives: Robert Oppenheimer in 1965 on if the bomb was necessary

Edward Teller - Heisenberg, Bohr and the atomic bomb (34/147)

The Town that Never Was

Richard Garwin's Interview

