Thirteen Days review

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It starts with a bang. The biggest bang, in fact, since the Big Bang. Parching the screen like an exploding sunset and swelling with terminal ferocity, the sight of a mushroom cloud in full bulge is as thoroughly incomprehensible as its very purpose. We're talking total global obliteration here and, with its opening image of a thundering atom bomb, Thirteen Days doesn't waste a moment thumping home the dramatic stakes. Win - and you save the world. Lose - and it's Earthling flambé.

It's an aggressive, explicit gesture and, thanks to a robust cast and pressure-cooker script, it's fair to say that the shockwaves pulsing from its explosive prologue resonate throughout the movie. Based on fact and shot like a thriller, had Oliver Stone tackled this, it would have been all pretense and portents. But helmer Roger Donaldson (No Way Out) collars the dramatic dynamics to craft a pacey seat-jerker hooked on how three men talked their way out of armageddon.

All The President's Men with less paper-shuffling and more desk-thumping. What could have been a bore-inspiring history lesson has been crafted into a nervy, gripping thriller that engages the brain and shreds the nerves. It's tight. It's tense. And Costner, at last, is ace.

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