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Anyone watch House of Dynamite?

I watched that this weekend on Netflix and I’m not sure I’ve ever been more frustrated over a movie. The production values were good, great cast and solid performances by everyone, and an interesting premise as well. Even the idea of telling the same story from multiple points of view was interesting. But the fact that the movie just ends, there’s no resolution, and there’s really even nothing the movie is trying to say drove me crazy. I’m not entirely sure what the point of the movie was?

If you’ve seen it what did you think?
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Not big on AI and might not make you feel any better but this is their reasoning:

Why does A House of Dynamite have no ending?

The movie A House of Dynamite has no ending because the director, Kathryn Bigelow, and screenwriter Noah Oppenheim made the deliberate choice to leave the outcome of the nuclear crisis unresolved, forcing the audience to contemplate the consequences. The film stops just as the President is about to make a decision on retaliation, with the goal of provoking thought and discussion about nuclear warfare rather than providing a satisfying conclusion.

Intentionally ambiguous: The ending is not a cliffhanger in the traditional sense, but a deliberate choice to avoid providing answers. The film cuts to black, leaving the audience to ponder what happens next and to question what they would do in the President's situation.

Focus on the dilemma: The point of the film is not to show the result of the crisis, but to highlight the impossible position of a leader who must make a life-or-death decision in minutes, a choice Oppenheim stated is "insane".

Encourages audience participation: By not providing a resolution, the filmmakers wanted to prevent the audience from feeling a neat, conclusive ending and instead wanted to encourage them to engage with the real-world implications of nuclear weapons.

Refuses to let the audience "off the hook": The creators believed that any other ending would have provided a sense of closure that would allow viewers to return to their normal lives, which would undermine the film's central message about the constant threat of nuclear war.