Kathryn Bigelow Responds to Pentagon Criticism of ‘A House of Dynamite’: “I Just State the Truth” (Exclusive)

The Oscar-winning filmmaker speaks with The Hollywood Reporter alongside screenwriter Noah Oppenheim about the film emerging as an instant hit on Netflix, what she learned from the debate around 'Zero Dark Thirty,' and her hopes for her harrowing new film going forward.

The Hollywood Reporter

Pentagon Disputes ‘A House Of Dynamite’ Accuracy On Missile Reliability; “Respectfully Disagree,” Says Kathryn Bigelow Drama Screenwriter
#News #Politics #AHouseofDynamite #IdrisElba #JaredHarris #KathrynBigelow #MSNBC #Netflix #NoahOppenheim #Pentagon #RebeccaFerguson #TracyLetts

https://deadline.com/2025/10/pentagon-house-of-dynamite-movie-1236599156/

Pentagon Disputes ‘A House Of Dynamite’ Accuracy On Missile Reliability; “Respectfully Disagree,” Says Kathryn Bigelow Drama Screenwriter

The Defense Department & the filmmakers behind Netflix's House of Dynamite clash over how accurate the film is about America's missile defense power

Deadline
A House of Dynamite Review - Pop Culture Maniacs

When the US is targeted with an ICBM, the military and government scramble to deal with the situation. But they only have 18 minutes until impact.

Pop Culture Maniacs
'House of Dynamite' Ending: Why the Controversial Sequence Works

Social media is angry with Kathryn Bigelow's nuclear political thriller. But its last moments are shocking and powerful

Variety
Em A House of Dynamite, Kathryn Bigelow desmonta um ataque nuclear como um puzzle moral. Três pontos de vista, o mesmo ataque, e uma pergunta que ecoa até ao fim: quem carrega o peso da culpa? - Por: Eduardo Marino

#mentecultural #houseofdynamite #kathrynbigelow #nuclear #thriller #drama #netflix #review #resenha

Review: A House of Dynamite

When you live in Chicago, a city under siege by ICE, I’m not sure, but I guess it a strong bent of masochism to watch a movie where your city gets nuked by an unknown enemy. That’s sorta how I felt when my wife and I cued up the excellent Kathryn Bigelow film, A House of Dynamite over the weekend. We debated back and forth, and decided to give it a go. I’m glad we did.

It’s certainly not an easy movie to watch, regardless of where you live. Yes, a city gets nuked. But that’s not the strength or the point of this movie. Nor should it be a spoiler at this point. The strength lies in watching otherwise steely individuals wither when their shields of confidence dissolve into vulnerable realizations as a horrible what-if scenario becomes all too real to contemplate, yet alone live through, even though they’ve contemplated them over and over again in training.

We don’t get the disaster movie special effects explosions and carnage. They aren’t necessary for this film to work. What we do get is far more terrifying. We get holes ripped through the souls of the characters we’re allowed to meet as they do their jobs. We get belief in systems and protocols developed by smart people shattered, leaving us all wondering if any of it was worth it in the end. It’s a parable of the moment.

It’s certainly not a Halloween movie, but I can’t think of a scarier film to watch as it strips away every possible security blanket and myth we might have become just too comfortable imagining, and realize just how much we’re in the hands of human beings just like us when horrible things unfold.

That’s more than frighteningly true with an utterly incompetent administration running the U.S at the moment. Noah Oppenheim’s script subtly, deceptively, and brilliantly lays that out as it carries us deeper into unfolding and inevitable danger that may be too horrible to watch, but is certainly more terrifying not to.

Bigelow and Oppenheim’s characters all seem more than capable of the sensitive jobs they hold. The filmmakers dispense with the tropes typical of these kind of disaster flicks that feature the usual array of martinets, incompetent and insufferable fools, and even heroes, sung or unsung. Sure, we see some of the personal traumas and trivia some may be dealing with as they come to work on the morning in question. But we initially watch each of these men and women of strong character knuckle down to perform when the unthinkable moment presents itself.

We then watch as they ultimately come face to face with that horrible moment of realization that there is nothing they can do to stop the inevitable. We watch as the enormous personal toll alters their breathing as they have no choice but to carry on with psychic wounds bigger than any smoldering crater before the missile even hits. Bigelow’s camera work and the cast’s strong acting gives us searing glimpses into those moments of horror and devastation as she catches her characters when each crushing realization occurs.

In three parts and an epilogue, the movie repeats the same horrible 18 minutes or so from missile detection to impact, presenting the scenarios in different government locales and viewpoints. We see a missile interception station in Alaska communicating with the White House Situation Room, the STRATCOM headquarters in Nebraska, FEMA headquarters as they have to pull out the plans for the inevitable, and the president who is attending a basketball camp event and then whisked away, while his aides work to inform him from the White House.

Those parts overlap using the much of the same dialogue presented from these different points of view via video or audio conferences as the government tries to formulate its response. The repetition of dialogue serves as a better tension builder and reminder of the time before impact than any of the countdown clocks we might see on the screen. As does the sudden departures of those who need to be taken to secure locations as events unfold.

Bigelow’s cast includes some big name actors in a cast headed by Idris Elba and Rebecca Ferguson, that also includes Anthony Ramos, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris, Jason Clarke, Greta Lee, and Tracy Letts among a host of others. Some of that host provides some of the most telling reactions on the periphery of the action as they watch their bosses try to handle the situation.

To my mind, nothing procedural happens that we haven’t seen or read about in countless Cold War thrillers of the past. With one exception. I was left with the same sort of existential dread after viewing A House of Dynamite as I was when I first read Tom Clancy’s Sum of All Fears and realized the weapon was going to explode. The only difference is that there was a hero in the Clancy novel to pick up the pieces and help us move beyond the horror.

In A House of Dynamite there are no heroes. Only humans. Trying to do their best. Not failing. But having to face the reality that sometimes your best is simply not enough in the face of madness.

You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above.

#AHouseOfDynamite #Chicago #IdrisElba #KathrynBigelow #Movies #netflix #NuclearWar #RebeccaFerguson

Warner Crocker – Medium

Read writing from Warner Crocker on Medium. Gadfly. Flying through life as a gadget geek and theatre artist...commenting along the way. Mastodon: https://mastodon.social/deck/@WarnerCrocker

Medium

Perché l'ultimo #film di #KathrynBigelow è da non perdere e sfiora il #capolavoro?

Cerco di spiegarlo con questa breve riflessione/recensione

Il ritorno #KathrynBigelow dietro la macchina da presa con il suo ultimo film #AHouseOfDynamite, è anche il film che segna il suo ritorno dopo anni di silenzio e che conferma la sua fama di regista capace di fondere azione, tensione politica e riflessione morale in un unico, esplosivo racconto

Ma vediamo di cosa si tratta
1/13

J’ai juste terminé le visionnage de "House of Dynamite", de Kathryn Bigelow. C’était très prenant. Son talent à faire monter la tension est sans équivalent! Pas un visionnage que je recommanderais aux personnes anxieuses mais une sacrée claque et une pertinence absolue. Nous vivons toutes et tous dans une maison pleine de dynamite, en plus de tout le reste.
__________
I've just finished watching Kathryn Bigelow's "House of Dynamite". It was utterly gripping. Her talent for building tension is unparalleled! Not a viewing I'd recommend to the anxious, but a proper kick in the teeth and absolutely spot on. We all live in a house full of dynamite, on top of everything else.

#KathrynBigelow #HouseOfDynamite #Netflix #Defcon

🔥 Kathryn Bigelow ha vuelto (y con ella, el miedo real).
En Una casa llena de dinamita, un misil apunta a Chicago y nadie sabe quién lo ha lanzado. 18 minutos para decidir el destino del mundo… ¿y tú qué harías? Disponible en Netflix.

👉 https://www.cinemascomics.com/critica-de-una-casa-llena-de-dinamita/?mastodon=cmc

#UnaCasaLlenaDeDinamita #KathrynBigelow #NetflixEspaña #Cinemascomics

Crítica de Una casa llena de dinamita: el thriller nuclear de Netflix que da más miedo que una película de terror

Kathryn Bigelow está de vuelta con Una casa llena de dinamita, una cuenta atrás nuclear que convierte 18 minutos en puro infarto cinematográfico. Rebecca Ferguson e Idris Elba lideran un reparto atrapado en la tensión más realista del año.

cinemascomics