Thirteen Days

You'll never believe how close we came.

7.0
20002h 25m

The story of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962—the nuclear standoff with the USSR sparked by the discovery by the Americans of missile bases established on the Soviet-allied island of Cuba.

Production

Logo for New Line Cinema
Logo for Beacon Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official UK Re-Release Trailer

Official UK Re-Release Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Thirteen Days Theatrical Movie Trailer (2001)

Thirteen Days Theatrical Movie Trailer (2001)

Cast

Photo of Kevin Costner

Kevin Costner

Kenneth O'Donnell

Photo of Bruce Greenwood

Bruce Greenwood

John F. Kennedy

Photo of Steven Culp

Steven Culp

Robert F. Kennedy

Photo of Dylan Baker

Dylan Baker

Robert McNamara

Photo of Michael Fairman

Michael Fairman

Adlai Stevenson

Photo of Frank Wood

Frank Wood

McGeorge Bundy

Photo of Kevin Conway

Kevin Conway

Gen. Curtis LeMay

Photo of Tim Kelleher

Tim Kelleher

Ted Sorensen

Photo of Len Cariou

Len Cariou

Dean Acheson

Photo of Bill Smitrovich

Bill Smitrovich

Gen. Maxwell Taylor

Photo of Stephanie Romanov

Stephanie Romanov

Jacqueline Kennedy

Photo of Lucinda Jenney

Lucinda Jenney

Helen O'Donnell

Photo of Caitlin Wachs

Caitlin Wachs

Kathy O'Donnell

Photo of Jon Foster

Jon Foster

Kenny O'Donnell, Jr.

Photo of Dakin Matthews

Dakin Matthews

Arthur Lundahl

Photo of Colette O'Connell

Colette O'Connell

Kenny's Assistant #2

Photo of Karen Ludwig

Karen Ludwig

Operator Margaret

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Reviews

J

John Chard

9.5/10

The art of political film making in all its glory.

"Communicate with the Soviets? We can't communicate with the Pentagon - and it's just across the goddamn river!"

October 1962, for 13 days the American government fought to avert a nuclear war when it was discovered that the Soviet Union had deployed nuclear missiles in Cuba. This is that story.

Many superlatives can be chucked at Thirteen Days, and all are viable. In simple terms it's an intelligent and gripping political thriller, superbly scripted and performed by a cast firing on all cylinders. It's a treat to find a film of this type that educates while it pitches you into a world of political intrigue, to provoke real life thoughts even as the suspense takes a hold. Yes it's talky, of course it is, but these conversations are real and riveting. And while there's not a duff performance in the acting pack, Bruce Greenwood deserves special praise. He is the leader, the fulcrum, there's not a false note by him, JFK becoming the role he was born to play.

Superlatives were invented for films like Thirteen Days. Assuredly so. 9.5/10

G

GenerationofSwine

10/10

Kevin Costner at least tried to do an accent in this movie, which probably means he got a new agent, a yes man that didn't bother to give him the advice that doing believable accents isn't his thing. It's almost like listening to your average Brit trying to sound like an American and completely overdoing it.

Do we really sound that exaggerated to them?

Who cares, ignore the above, it's still a good movie... despite Costner's accent. Or, possibly, in spite of it.

It trashes Dean Achenson, and as a historian the only thing I like to see MORE than Dean getting his just deserts is Allen Dulles getting his... and it throws a jab at that a**hole too. In 2000 that would have been seen as pure liberal honesty, but now it sort of comes across as far right. I mean the movie is literally about avoiding Nuclear War with Russia as the entire Democratic party and the progressive movement seem to want to push us closer and closer to it.

It's one of the better political films you can see, and it builds the pressure to the point where you are terrified that the world could end despite the fact it has long come and gone. And the shift from Jack and Bobby to Ken O'Donnel, a humble appointment secretary is probably one of the best approaches and best ideas any Historical Drama has ever had.

Start to finish it is one of the best political thrillers of all time.

You've reached the end.