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Kathryn Bigelow Nuclear Thriller Stuns
TV & Streaming

Kathryn Bigelow Nuclear Thriller Stuns

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review originally ran during the 2025 Venice Film Festival. “A House of Dynamite” is now in select theaters and streaming on Netflix.

Eighteen minutes is all we have to save the country (or not) upon news of an impending nuclear missile in Kathryn Bigelow‘s horrifically gripping and cautionary “A House of Dynamite.” If we don’t do something about the lunatics in power globally, and specifically at the helm of nine countries with a nuclear stockpile (including the United States), well then, we’re fucked. Bigelow’s explosively entertaining real-time thriller, told from multiple perspectives at various levels of government from situation room deputies to POTUS (Idris Elba) himself, does not mince on hopelessness.

SPRINGSTEEN: DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE, (aka DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE), Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen, 2025. © Searchlight Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
Kris Bowers and Ben Proudfoot of the 'The Last Repair Shop' attend 96th Oscar Week Events: Live Action Short Film, Documentary Short Film, and Documentary Feature Film at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.

Here is a movie that will ruin your day. You’re welcome.

Noah Oppenheim’s rigorously researched and vividly jargonistic script (he comes from a background in broadcast news at NBC) doesn’t mince, either, on the mundanity of incompetence. The filmmaking team visited the White House Situation Room and the headquarters of U.S. Strategic Command to achieve an almost whiplash-inducing realism: The pile-up of acronyms woven even into the film’s intertitles — the GBIs, the KPAs, the JEEPS, and does it even matter what the hell they mean? — underlines how the United States’ all-scenarios plan of military response to a nuclear attack is crushingly futile in the wake of an actual missile heading toward either Louisville, Chicago, Columbus, or best-guess somewhere else in the Midwest.

Senior situation room duty officer Olivia Walker (Rebecca Ferguson) is having a normal day until U.S. intelligence reveals a likely nuclear object hurtling toward America. The film never identifies the missile’s source, though hotshot deputy national security advisor Jake Baerington (Gabriel Basso) is tasked with brokering peace with Russia and a promise not to retaliate if the U.S. government is forced to attack another nuclear-armed nation preemptively — and on a phone call in which he reveals his wife is six months pregnant. Everyone has something or someone to lose here, including Jared Harris as Secretary of Defense Reid Baker, who’s got an estranged daughter (Kaitlyn Dever) in Chicago who he knows could die.

Then, there’s Elba as the coolly serene president, who is ripped out of a PR-boosting photo opp with schoolchildren by his security details in a moment that eerily recalls George Bush being whispered to while reading “The Pet Goat” to a class of second-graders on September 11. Tracy Letts is having a whale of a time playing an almost somnambulant general who, eyes and spirit glazed over ahead of a wall of monitors displaying only bad news, matter-of-factly tells the president, “This is not insanity. It’s reality.” He says something about the “dual phenomenology” of the attack — whatever that means, but it evidently has something to do with being confirmed by both satellite and ground intelligence before a retaliation rather than with the philosophies of Edmund Husserl — with a sardonic bemusement typical of the actor and playwright. He’s capable of elevating any project he’s in and is a standout here.

Cinematographer Barry Ackroyd’s camera zigs like a documentary rig, with crash zooms on stunted faces and, combined with the talky verisimilitude of a script that amplifies the inherent ridiculousness of red-tape protocol, “A House of Dynamite” sometimes feels like a horror movie version of television’s “Veep.” Bigelow’s work is procedural to its core, and that this film is a speculative what-if is made all the more horrifying because of its banality.

A House of Dynamite
‘A House of Dynamite’Courtesy Netflix

“Surrender or suicide” is basically one of the unfortunate calls to action in a portfolio of doomsday scenarios POTUS likens to a diner menu: There are three options — “rare, medium, and well-done,” Jonah Hauer-King’s naval lieutenant commander Robert Reeves tells him — and none are good. The first lady, meanwhile, is on a safari in Africa and hard to pin down, and a moment where POTUS’ phone call with her drops out as 18 minutes turn into four and even fewer is one of an arsenal of devastating hammers Bigelow drops on you. One attempt to stop the missile spectacularly bombs, like a bullet hitting a bullet, as the military tries to intercept the missile with its own, Baker incensed by the failure of a $50-billion coin toss to land heads up.

“A House of Dynamite” moves at a whirring gradient with an ever-widening ensemble — which includes Greta Lee, Jason Clarke, and Moses Ingram as various cogs — that can be challenging to keep track of. The film essentially takes place entirely within an under-20-minute timeline, showing the same events from a shuffling deck of points of view. Bigelow’s grindingly focused direction is peerless here, with her already established as a frank and fearless chronicler of American political ambiguity in films like “The Hurt Locker” and “Zero Dark Thirty,” and with “A House of Dynamite” seemingly completing a trilogy about the collapse of the American dream in war times.

Both those films wrapped on woundingly open-ended notes, with an Iraq War veteran ambivalently marching off into yet another tour of duty in “The Hurt Locker” and a CIA analyst breaking down in her military transport after leading the manhunt to catch and kill Osama Bin Laden in “Zero Dark Thirty.” “A House of Dynamite” similarly ends without finishing the sentence, not with a bang or “Melancholia”-level explosion, but in silence. What happens if we stay silent?

Hardly mere agitprop due to the stylistic intensity of its filmmaking, this gun-to-your-head engrossing movie — with its eardrum-piercing and death-rattling sound design and a score by Volker Bertelmann so oppressive it could swallow you whole — also wants to shake you out of your slumber with a cataclysmic whisper of an ending. We used to duck under our desks to rehearse surviving a nuclear annihilation; now, we only duck our heads in the sand we keep shoveling over ourselves. You can’t stop what’s coming, and what’s coming is worse than you thought.

Grade: A-

“A House of Dynamite” premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival. It’s now streaming on Netflix and playing in select theaters.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Explaining the Kathryn Bigelow Movie – Hollywood Life
Celebrity News

Explaining the Kathryn Bigelow Movie – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Eros Hoagland/Netflix

A House of Dynamite hit Netflix on October 24, 2025, leaving viewers deeply unsettled by its ending. With an all-star cast telling the fictional story of an apocalyptic missile attack on the United States, the Kathryn Bigelow-directed movie unfolds over the course of 18 minutes as the military and the White House watch the impending strike on a screen.

“Eighteen minutes to decide the fate of the world and yet limited information [with] which to do so,” the director told Netflix Tudum. “We see into the halls of power, where highly competent individuals are confronted with confusion, chaos, and helplessness.”

Below, Hollywood Life explains that ambiguous ending of A House of Dynamite.

Who Is in the A House of Dynamite Cast?

As previously noted, the A House of Dynamite cast features some of Hollywood’s most recognizable names, from Jason Clarke, Rebecca Ferguson, Idris Elba, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos, Moses Ingram, Jonah Hauer-King and Greta Lee.

A House of Dynamite Movie Ending Explained

Idris’ POTUS character is rushed away from a girls’ charity basketball event, is handed the “Black Book” and is told by the nuclear football handler, Lieutenant Commander Robert Reeves (Jonah), that he must select one the retaliatory attack options. Though the film’s president seems to be a composed and empathetic leader, the country — and the world — is about to explode. Even an ideal presidential character can’t offer the audience guaranteed comfort in the face of doomsday.

In the motorcade, Russia’s foreign minister tells the American president that they were not behind the missile. Therefore, the country or terrorist organization responsible for the attack is unknown.

'A House of Dynamite' Ending Explained: Breaking Down the Kathryn Bigelow Movie
Courtesy of Netflix

Idris’ POTUS is then asked, “What are your orders, Mr. President?” to which he replies, “My orders …” then the film fades to black. The film ends there, with POTUS having to select one of the strike options.

While speaking with Netflix’s Tudum, Kathryn explained why she wanted an open-ended conclusion.

“I want audiences to leave theaters thinking, ‘OK, what do we do now?’” the Zero Dark Thirty filmmaker said. “This is a global issue, and of course, I hope against hope that maybe we reduce the nuclear stockpile someday. But in the meantime, we really are living in a house of dynamite. I felt it was so important to get that information out there, so we could start a conversation. That’s the explosion we’re interested in — the conversation people have about the film afterward.”

Will There Be A House of Dynamite 2?

No, despite the 2025 film’s chilling ending, there are no plans for a sequel to A House of Dynamite. As Kathryn said to Netflix, she wanted viewers to reflect on the world’s current “nuclear stockpile” and realize that we are all living in one large “house of dynamite.”

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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'A House of Dynamite' Star Rebecca Ferguson on Bigelow and Prep
TV & Streaming

‘A House of Dynamite’ Star Rebecca Ferguson on Bigelow and Prep

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84


‘A House of Dynamite’ Star Rebecca Ferguson on Bigelow and Prep




























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The actress tells IndieWire her meticulously researched role as senior officer in the White House Situation Room during an apocalyptic event allowed her to do the kind of work she loves — in a film that left even her speechless.

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October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Kathryn Bigelow Directs Rebecca Ferguson
TV & Streaming

Kathryn Bigelow Directs Rebecca Ferguson

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84


A House of Dynamite Trailer: Kathryn Bigelow Directs Rebecca Ferguson




























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Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos, Moses Ingram, and Jonah Hauer-King star in the Netflix film, which also features Greta Lee and Jason Clarke.

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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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