Thirteen Days with Kevin Costner: DVD Cover
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Thirteen Days
a.k.a. 13 Days Director: Roger Donaldson Cast: Kevin Costner, Bruce Greenwood, Steven Culp, Dylan Baker

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  • DVD Release Date: 07/10/2001
  • Original Release: 2000
  • Rating: Rated PG13
  • Sales Rank: 4,935
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Scenes

Features

Commentary by Kevin Costner, director Roger Donaldson, writer David Self and executive producer Michael De Luca, Documentaries "Roots of the Cuban Missile Crisis" and "Bringing History to the Silver Screen", Visual effects scene deconstructions, Historical figures biography gallery, Deleted scenes with director commentary

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
0. Select a Scene
1. Opening Sequence: A World on the Brink [1:05]
2. Missiles Spotted in Cuba [1:50]
3. "I need to see the President, Kenny" [2:55]
4. National Security Briefing [1:51]
5. EXCOM Formed [2:24]
6. Battle Lines Drawn within EXCOM [3:11]
7. Military Options [2:17]
8. JFK Meets with Dobrynin & Gromyko [1:36]
9. JFK Keeps Appointment with Mayor Daley [2:04]
10. Quarantine or Air Strike [1:29]
11. Reston & Frankel Have the Story [2:28]
12. Defcon 3 [2:36]
13. Nation Awaits Presidential Decision [1:56]
14. Presidential Address [4:00]
15. Rules of Engagement [1:08]
16. Low-Level Cuban Fly-By [1:55]
17. Brink of Destruction [1:40]
18. Eyeball to Eyeball [:04]
19. Defcon 2 [2:04]
20. A Moral Contest [1:08]
21. Courtroom of World Opinion [1:55]
22. Enforcing the Line [1:20]
23. Back Channel Overture [:26]
24. Khrushchev's First Letter [1:06]
25. Khrushchev's Second Letter [:35]
26. Major Anderson [:51]
27. Running Out of Time [1:51]
28. Accepting the First Letter [2:26]
29. Facing the Enemy [1:54]
30. A New Dawn [:45]
31. Kennedy's Speech [1:54]
32. End Credits [2:39]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

In 1962, unbeknownst to all but a select few, the world hovered on the brink of nuclear war for nearly two weeks. That agonizingly tense period, as experienced by the leaders of our government, is dramatized superbly in the suspenseful Thirteen Days. It began with the discovery that Russian missiles were being deployed in Cuba, a development totally unacceptable to both President John F. Kennedy (Bruce Greenwood) and the Pentagon big shots already spoiling for a fight with the Soviet Union. Counseled by his brother, Attorney General Robert Kennedy (Steven Culp), and chief domestic adviser Kenny O'Donnell (top-billed Kevin Costner), JFK tries every trick at the diplomatic playbook in hopes of defusing an incendiary crisis. Director Roger Donaldson, who helmed Costner's 1987 breakout film, No Way Out, is punctilious in his re-creation of time and place, although he takes occasional liberties with the historical record -- combining characters and altering the sequence of events -- in trying to capture the essence of those extraordinarily perilous 13 days. Costner, the ostensible star, gets plenty of screen time; O'Donnell's role in the situation's management is somewhat inflated. But it's Greenwood, most frequently seen as a smooth villain, who rates the kudos for his compelling portrayal of JFK. A carefully crafted mixture of history and entertainment, Thirteen Days is an edge-of-the-seat thriller -- a remarkable achievement considering that, four decades later, we go into the movie already knowing how the crisis was resolved. Costner, Donaldson, and screenwriter David Self participate in a feature-length commentary for the DVD, which also includes deleted scenes, cast and crew bios, DVD-ROM content (including script-to-screen presentation), and historical notes on the real-life people who figured in the crisis. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Thirteen Daysby Anonymous

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May 04, 2003: The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was a tragic point in United States history. The country was the closest it has ever been to the brink of nuclear war. President Kennedy, the youngest President ever, was in office. The country’s safety lied in his hands. Thirteen Days, referring to the amount of time from the day Kennedy saw the photographs of deadly missiles on the island of Cuba to the time the crisis was resolved quite accurately followed history, showing President Kennedy’s executive committee (ExComm) diligently working to figure out the best option for action. Kennedy wanted to sacrifice the least amount of lives as possible, yet wanted to successfully remove the missiles from the island only 90 miles away. The administration had three main options: invade the island, launch air strikes, or set up a naval blockade. The film depicts how the country’s leaders felt during this tough period in time, and how nerve-wracking the entire situation was. Thirteen Days accurately shows the trials the country faced, the ships setting up the naval blockade, and the actions of the President in making sure the blockade executed its purpose properly. The movie was a very pleasing portrayal of the past (complete with an accurate setting and brilliant costume design)--one every history major will love. Even though some of the language and misuses of God's name could be omitted, it very suitably shows America in one of the biggest ordeals it has ever faced.

Thirteen Daysby Anonymous

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February 18, 2003: This movie is fantastic. Having been in the Marine Corps and seeing Guantanamo Bay, Cuba immediately after this ''Quarantine'', it brings to light the many decisions that must be made by our president in times of crisis. This would be a great movie for people to see today for an insite into what is going on in the oval office in regard to our current situation with Iraq. Great! Everyone should enjoy it.


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