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  1. Thirteen Days is a 2000 American historical political thriller film directed by Roger Donaldson. It dramatizes the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, seen from the perspective of the US political leadership.

  2. Jan 12, 2001 · Thirteen Days: Directed by Roger Donaldson. With Shawn Driscoll, Kevin Costner, Drake Cook, Lucinda Jenney. In October 1962, the Kennedy administration struggles to contain the Cuban Missile Crisis.

  3. Jun 21, 2023 · Starring Academy Award winner Kevin Costner (Dances with Wolves, Yellowstone, The Bodyguard) as top White House assistant Kenny O’Donnell, with Bruce Greenwood (Star Trek, I Robot) as John...

  4. Thirteen Days. President John F. Kennedy and his top advisors grapple with the threat of nuclear war during the harrowing Cuban Missile Crisis. 4,592 IMDb 7.3 2 h 25 min 2001.

  5. With the aid of his chief advisor (Kevin Costner), the administration has only a matter of days to find a plan to prevent disaster. Political thriller from the director of The...

  6. Jan 12, 2001 · The most controversial assertion of Roger Donaldson's "Thirteen Days," an intelligent new political thriller, is that the guys who blinked were not only the Soviets, but also America's own military commanders--who backed down not from Soviet ships but from the White House.

  7. Dec 16, 2000 · Thirteen days captures the urgency, suspense and paralyzing chaos of the Cuban Missile Crisis. For thirteen extraordinary days in October of 1962, the world stood on the brink of an unthinkable...

    • (124)
    • History, Drama
    • PG-13
  8. Kevin Costner stars in this inside look at how the Kennedy Administration responded to the discovery of offensive Soviet weapons in Cuba, and the pressurized tug-of-war that ensued between...

  9. Dec 25, 2000 · The story of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962the nuclear standoff with the USSR sparked by the discovery by the Americans of missile bases established on the Soviet-allied island of Cuba.

  10. In the early days of October 1962, U.S. spy planes photograph the impending installation of Soviet missile sites in Cuba. While there is widespread agreement that the missiles must not be allowed, there is no clear way to ensure that.