A House, Dynamite
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A House of Dynamite ends on an ambiguous note. In the third and final act, titled "A House Filled with Dynamite," Baker finally speaks with his daughter. She asks for space, they say goodbye, and moments later, instead of boarding a helicopter to the secure Raven Rock bunker, Baker walks off the roof to his death.
Kathryn Bigelow's latest film just launched on Netflix, and already the Pentagon isn't a fan. The Missile Defense Agency (MDA) wrote up an internal memo, shared Oct. 16, addressing "A House of Dynamite,
A new internal memo wants to help Missile Defense Agency personnel "address false assumptions" stemming from 'A House of Dynamite.'
A memo shared by the Missile Defense Agency stated that the missile “ displayed a 100% accuracy rate in testing for more than a decade .” Noah Oppenheim, the writer of A House of Dynamite, spoke to MSNBC about the same:
'A House of Dynamite' screenwriter responds to Pentagon accusing nuclear doomsday film of inaccuracy
Noah Oppenheim, screenwriter of "A House of Dynamite," joins "The Weekend" to discuss the relevance of the film's depiction of America's nuclear defense systems. He also responds to the Pentagon reportedly sending an internal memo that called the film's doomsday scenario inaccurate.
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.
Netflix’s latest political thriller has a star-studded cast to tell the fictional story of a missile attack on the U.S. Here’s our breakdown of that unsettling ending.
The Defense Department & the filmmakers behind Netflix's House of Dynamite clash over how accurate the film is about America's missile defense power