Much of the cinematic focus has been on the race to prevent it, or on the apocalyptic aftermath, or on the rich metaphors that it inspires. But few movies have been able to capture what it's like to be on the cusp of nuclear armageddon with the same level of nerve-shredding intensity as Kathryn Bigelow's tense new thriller, A House of Dynamite.
My sister just gleefully confessed to me that she is having an affair with her boss.She has been bored in her marriage since her husband started being a volunteer fire fighter and been away from home more often.She isn't using protection because it "doesn't matter" if she gets pregnant or not because her husband will be excited about a baby.He has wanted to be a dad since day one and they have been trying for about four years.
I don't always have a say in the choices the character makes. And writers will initially service a plot before they stop to think, 'Would the Meredith Grey that [Ellen] built - would she make that choice?"