A HOUSE OF DYNAMITE : A GRIPPING RACE AGAINST THE CLOCK THRILLER

The US military  and government are blindsided  by an incoming nuclear missile launched  by an unknown  source.  Remember  Katherine Bigelow  of director Oscar fame for the Hurt Locker and Point Break?     What a relief,  that A HOUSE OF DYNAMITE feels like her return  to form, a genuinely  electrifying  race against – the- clock thriller  that’s as frightening as it is gripping.

The existential terror of mutually  assured destruction  becomes  apparent  as we are subjected  to some stomach- churning statistics  regarding the Cold War escalation  of nuclear weapons,  told in a parallel  storyline of people who each have a role to play,  within the US nuclear  defence plan- from the tie-wearing decision-makers in Washington DC to the troops  on a far away  army base. If there is a protagonist  here, it’s probably  Captain Olivia Walker, played by a steely Rebecca  Ferguson,whose workday involves a normal routine  except when she arrives in the Situation Room, an intercontinental  ballistic  missile is heading  straight for Chicago.  The fate of the world  teeters on the edge of a precipice.

Noah Oppenheim, the screenwriter,  populates the narrative  with impenetrable  acronyms  and technical  terms that we adopt as the real deal.  The film is split into a triptych  of interweaving  perspectives,  each one ending with the final moments  before impact.

The excellent  ensemble make minimal acting time but most notable are Greta Lee, Jared  Harris and Gabriel Basso.

If there is an element  of Hollywood fantasy here, it’s that those in the White House  are entirely honourable.  The president  is played by Idris Elba. His characterisation  feels like a hangover from the Obama era. Bigelow  wisely  decides  not to indulge in any spectacle  of violence  and destruction  propping the audience’s anticipation of the inevitable  is far more frightening  than what she might be able to present visually. If only all cautionary tales could be this brilliantly entertaining.

Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson  and Tracy Letts do well in this immaculately  constructed nightmare that ticks down the minutes from an atomic  bombs launch to its detonation.  Maybe we prefer  to see something  for its absurdism  and satire, akin to Kubrick ‘s black comedy  Dr Strangelove. Bigelow  and Oppenheim  broach one of the most frightening  concepts  that a nuclear  war could  or will start with no one knowing who started it or who would end it.

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