Netflix A House of Dynamite - Streaming October 24, 2025

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3.50 star(s) Rating: 3.50/5 2 Votes
Title: A House of Dynamite

Tagline: Not if. When.

Genre: Thriller, War

Director: Kathryn Bigelow

Cast: Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos, Moses Ingram, Greta Lee, Jonah Hauer-King, Jason Clarke, Willa Fitzgerald, Malachi Beasley, Aminah Nieves, Brian Tee, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Kyle Allen, Catherine Missal, Neal Bledsoe, Maria Jung, Quincy Dunn-Baker, Lynn Adrianna

Release: 2025-10-03

Runtime: 112

Plot: When a single, unattributed missile is launched at the United States, a race begins to determine who is responsible and how to respond.

 
Kathryn Bigelow..

hey arnold nicksplat GIF
 
This was one of my most anticipated movies of the year.
I LOVE Bigelow's style, especially in Zero Dark Thirty, one of those films I can watch and rewatch and never get tired of. This film is made in a very similar tone and style.

It's honestly masterfully made on all levels - the acting, the camera work, set design, direction, score etc. This film manages to keep the tension for the entire 2 freaking hours.

The only let-down and disappointment for me was the ending, which some people maybe won't mind. But I was personally quite disappointed at the moment the credits rolled.
Other than that, brilliant film with the singular flaw of it's ending. But I have to think about it some more, maybe the ending will grow on me.
 
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I didn't find it tense at all. It was pretty much a 27 minute movie replayed 4 times. I was thinking about "Wargames" the whole time I was watching this and how much better Wargames is.

When it ended I said "yeah, OK." No reason for the movie to go any further than that.
 
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I thought it was bang average also. Probably Bigelow's most ordinary film.

This type of end game WW3 type narrative has been done much much better for decades.


I didn't find it tense at all. It was pretty much a 27 minute movie replayed 4 times. I was thinking about "Wargames" the whole time I was watching this and how much better Wargames is.

When it ended I said "yeah, OK." No reason for the movie to go any further than that.
 
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A very powerful warning film without an ending, basically showing the same half hours from three POVs, ending on a cliffhanger. I actually hate that, but can understand the decision to do so. I guess the point was to show how the whole world is sitting on a, well, pile of dynamite, not even realizing the survival depends on the good will of a few in command.
Either way, another masterful movie from Kathryn Bigelow!
 
A very powerful warning film without an ending, basically showing the same half hours from three POVs, ending on a cliffhanger. I actually hate that, but can understand the decision to do so. I guess the point was to show how the whole world is sitting on a, well, pile of dynamite, not even realizing the survival depends on the good will of a few in command.
Either way, another masterful movie from Kathryn Bigelow!

@Lenny Nero
The world has been sitting on a powder keg since the Trinity Test on July 16th 1945. It's nothing new. The tentative safety of mutual assured nuclear destruction won't last for ever; it's a paper construct, balanced on a razer thin precipice, with a category five hurricane permanently tugging at the edge.

I'd say that the ending to this film, the one they didn't need to show, is a fairly obvious one. Given how volatile, barbaric, arrogant and complicity corrupt most political power structures are around the world.

Take stock because.

One way or another...It's only a matter of time unless we change.

That's the message.

As regards the film. It was okay. Felt more like a TV movie than a theatrical release. The impact didn't feel quite as devastating as say, something like the horrifying UK film 'Threads' or the US equivalent 'The Day After'
I think the ultimate proof of humanities folly needs to be shown in it's disgusting entirety. Show the absolute nature of destruction from nuclear war and its catastrophic fallout.
Modern audiences need to see that sh*t.
We're too complacent.
Yet regards mutual assured destruction, we are in a more delicate position than at any point in history.
 
Movie information in first post provided by The Movie Database