77
Metascore
15 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100VarietyNick SchagerVarietyNick SchagerBased on the harrowing book by Eric Schlosser (who not only co-wrote, but also appears in the film), this unsettling production...is equal parts history lesson, cautionary tale and nerve-rattling thriller, using all manner of nonfiction devices to elicit both horror and outrage over the precariousness of our deadliest arsenals.
- 90Screen DailyDavid D'ArcyScreen DailyDavid D'ArcyA terrifying disaster thriller.
- 90The New York TimesNeil GenzlingerThe New York TimesNeil GenzlingerThe film effectively recreates the sense of confusion over how to try to contain the leak and what might happen if the fuel ignited.
- 90Village VoiceChris PackhamVillage VoiceChris PackhamDespite the high stakes, Command and Control is morbidly fun to watch, in the manner of good suspense thrillers and disaster films.
- 80SalonAndrew O'HehirSalonAndrew O'HehirHow close did a simple maintenance mishap come to rendering at least one American state uninhabitable and killing an unknown number of people? And what does that tell us about the security and safety of the deadliest weapons ever built in human history? We don’t know the answer to the first question, and the second one raises extremely troubling issues. I don’t want to spoil the gripping and improbable details of Kenner’s film, but how the Damascus accident started is no big secret.
- 75Entertainment WeeklyJoe McGovernEntertainment WeeklyJoe McGovernThe pace of the drama is riveting, as it jumps back through the decades to place the accident in the context of the nuclear arms race.
- 75New York PostFarran Smith NehmeNew York PostFarran Smith NehmeArchival footage is combined with somewhat affected-looking re-enactments, but the film achieves its purpose: to remind us that we still have thousands of bombs, and neither they — nor we — have gotten that much smarter.
- 75Washington PostMichael O'SullivanWashington PostMichael O'SullivanFar from being a historical cautionary tale, Command and Control looks forward, not backward. Kenner’s unsettling film casts its worried gaze not at the accidents that already have taken place, but at the ones yet to happen.
- 75Boston GlobePeter KeoughBoston GlobePeter KeoughKenner and Schlosser not only remind us of a danger that never went away, but honor the men whose bravery was never recognized.
- 50Slant MagazineClayton DillardSlant MagazineClayton DillardRobert Kenner's stylistic choices amplify the film's fetishistic fascination with the nuclear weaponry itself.