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    Home»Art & Culture»Entertainment

    ‘A House of Dynamite’: Power, Panic and Presidential Poker

    Praveen NagdaBy Praveen Nagda
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    TOP OF THE MONTH

    Kathryn Bigelow’s A House of Dynamite is a unique and unconventional thriller that focuses less on explosions and more on the quieter detonation of power, fear, and decision-making under pressure. Stretching nineteen minutes of crisis into one hour and fifty-two minutes of nerve-shredding drama, the film keeps its audience trapped in the war-room claustrophobia of military protocol and a thousand shades of uncertainty.

    This is the story of a horrifying discovery, an unidentified missile hurtling towards the American Midwest, told from inside the White House’s Presidential Emergency Operations Center (PEOC) and U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM). While DEFCON alerts, code verifications, and missile trajectories flash across glowing screens, it’s the frail, fallible humans behind them who steal the show. Bigelow conjures an exhilarating, if slightly terrifying, portrait of the tug-of-war between technological precision and human panic.

    Idris Elba delivers a compelling turn as the President of the United States, blending authority with a disarming sense of doubt. Rebecca Ferguson, as the National Security Adviser, calms the chaos with a glare sharp enough to slice through the situation room’s tension. The cinematography oozes gritty realism, while Noah Oppenheim’s script strikes a fine balance between military jargon and moral dread.

    Bigelow, ever the master of ambiguity, toys with our faith in systems built to save us, and then pulls the rug just as we start to feel safe. The film ends without neat closure, reminding us, with an almost wicked wink, that truth usually turns up just after it’s no longer useful.

    LOOK AHEAD

    As 2025 nears its close, an interesting line-up of spectacular stories from Hollywood is poised to light up the holiday season.

    The chills arrive early with Five Nights at Freddy’s 2, set to thrill horror enthusiasts. The month then changes gear with James L. Brooks’s Ella McCay, a film that promises warmth and wit in equal measure.

    Mid-December belongs to one of the year’s biggest spectacles: Avatar: Fire and Ash, poised to once again redefine the sci-fi blockbuster, while The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants will splash screens with colour, nostalgia, and chaos in the best possible way.

    There’s a taut psychological thriller in The Housemaid arriving just before Christmas, followed by Anaconda, a high-voltage reboot guaranteed to deliver a heady mix of action, adventure, and old-school creature horror.

    And to close the year on a melodic note, Song Sung Blue, an American biographical musical drama written, produced and directed by Craig Brewer, will be humming its way into the New Year.

    Overall, December promises a vibrant cocktail of animated fun, apocalyptic drama, psychological suspense, and musical magic, a fitting cinematic send-off to 2025.

    (Praveen Nagda is festival director, KidzCINEMA and Culture Cinema Film Festivals)

    Praveen Nagda
    Praveen Nagda

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