A House, Netflix and Dynamite
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The Netflix film "A House of Dynamite" tells "a vastly different story" about U.S. ability to repel a nuclear attack than real-world testing suggests, according to an internal government memo obtained by Bloomberg.
A new internal memo wants to help Missile Defense Agency personnel "address false assumptions" stemming from 'A House of Dynamite.'
The U.S. Department of Defense says that while the events that unfurl in Netflix ’s new doomsday political thriller, A House of Dynamite, are certainly gripping on screen, they’re also inaccurate.
The Independent on MSN
A House of Dynamite director Kathryn Bigelow reacts to Pentagon ‘inaccuracy’ claims
Kathryn Bigelow has addressed the United States Department of Defense’s criticism of her latest military drama, A House of Dynamite. After the film landed on Netflix last week, it was reported that the Pentagon had sent out an internal memo, warning officials about its depiction of the U.S.’s nuclear missile defense system.
Francisco Lindor comes up quite a bit in A House of Dynamite. The film came out last month and stars Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, and more.
Kathryn Bigelow's A House of Dynamite ends not with a bang, but a silence that shakes you. As Idris Elba's President faces an impossible nuclear decision, Netflix's political thriller leaves viewers debating what really happened,
The Department of Defense and Netflix are in a clash over how accurate nuclear disaster drama A House of Dynamite truly is. Highlighting a specific major HoD plot point, an October 16 memo from officials at the Pentagon was produced with the intent to address “false assumptions” from the film.