To help him, a nearby military aide pulls a three-ring binder out of a black satchel and explains its color-coded, laminated pages: They are nuclear strike options.
In A House of Dynamite, director Kathryn Bigelow’s new political thriller, the U.S. president faces the ultimate choice. A single intercontinental missile of unknown origin races toward the United States. Should the president (played by Idris Elba) order a nuclear strike against the United States’ rivals—who may have fired it—or wait until the missile possibly obliterates Chicago?
In A House of Dynamite, director Kathryn Bigelow’s new political thriller, the U.S. president faces the ultimate choice. A single intercontinental missile of unknown origin races toward the United States. Should the president (played by Idris Elba) order a nuclear strike against the United States’ rivals—who may have fired it—or wait until the missile possibly obliterates Chicago?
To help him, a nearby military aide pulls a three-ring binder out of a black satchel and explains its color-coded, laminated pages: They are nuclear strike options.
“They only had one briefing when I was sworn in,” the president laments, flipping through them. “One.”
As the fate of the country hangs in the balance, the president is unsure what to do and has fleetingly little time to act.
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