Netflix, A House and Dynamite
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‘House of Dynamite’ Writer Tells Pentagon Claiming Inaccuracies: “We Respectfully Disagree”
What we show in the movie is accurate,” Noah Oppenheim said after Kathryn Bigelow’s Netflix thriller captured a U.S. government response.
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.'
Sinners, shot by Autumn Durald Arkapaw, Hamnet, photographed by Łukasz Żal, and F1, lensed by Claudio Miranda, are among the bigger titles competing for the Golden Frog this year at the world’s leading festival devoted to the art of cinematography.
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:
Let's break down the real science behind Netflix's new movie "A House of Dynamite," which imagines a nuclear attack on the U.S.
Some praised realistic elements like the depiction of the White House situation room. But others said parts of the plot didn't ring true.
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.