05/30/2026
🎬As a longtime living historian, I watched Pressure with a fairly unforgiving eye. I am delighted to report that the film passed inspection far more often than it failed.
The first victory belongs to the costuming department. The uniforms possess that elusive quality so often missing from modern productions: they look inhabited. The officers carry the proper "21-Day Rumple" of men who have been living on weather reports, ci******es, coffee, interrupted sleep, and looming catastrophe. The American ribbon bars and insignia appear integrated into the uniforms rather than looking like reenactor fruit salad pinned on in the parking lot five minutes before first call. Jackets sit naturally while collars don't fight gravity. Nothing looks as though it arrived yesterday from a wardrobe warehouse..
The portrayal of Lt. Kay Summersby deserves special mention. Rather than giving us a modern actress disguised as a 1940s woman or channeling the pinup energy, the production presents a believable wartime ATS officer. Her appearance, grooming, and bearing feel lifted directly from period photographs. She is competent, intelligent, professional, and quietly elegant without ever becoming a Hollywood caricature. One gets the sense that this Kay could organize SHAEF Headquarters, locate Eisenhower's missing briefing papers, smooth over a diplomatic misunderstanding between Allied officers, and still have a fresh pot of tea ready before the next crisis arrived.
What impressed me most, however, was the treatment of the Anglo-American command relationship. Too many productions either portray the Allies as one big happy family or as participants in an endless transatlantic squabble. The reality was far more nuanced. Americans and Britons often approached problems differently, argued differently, and viewed risk differently. Pressure captures that balance remarkably well. There is friction, but it is the friction of intelligent professionals carrying the weight of history, not a team of screenwriters carrying the weight of a deadline.
The dialogue likewise feels rooted in the period. These people sound like educated officers and officials born in the late nineteenth century, not twenty-first century personalities trapped inside 1944 uniforms. There is restraint. There is formality. There is the refreshing realization that men of that generation did not process every emotion loud. Sometimes a raised eyebrow, a long pause, or a quietly spoken "Are you certain?" carried more dramatic force than an entire modern screenplay.
My only reservation concerns Brendan Fraser as Eisenhower. Fraser gives a thoughtful and respectful performance, and one can certainly feel the burden resting upon his shoulders. Yet I never completely forgot I was watching Brendan Fraser. Eisenhower possessed a uniquely American blend of Midwestern calm, quiet confidence, and understated authority that is difficult to capture. Fraser conveys the pressure. I am not entirely convinced he captures Ike.
Truth be told, I may be spoiled. After spending the last few years watching David Scott Michaels portray Eisenhower at museums, airshows, presidential libraries, and living history events, I have developed rather exacting standards. Somewhere around the halfway point I found myself thinking, "A fine performance...but, wel Dave still has the better Ike smile." That, however, is a very small criticism within a remarkably intelligent film.
What Pressure understands, perhaps better than many D-Day productions, is that Operation Overlord was not won solely on Omaha Beach or Sword Beach. Before a single landing craft touched the sand, exhausted meteorologists, British and American officers, and a Supreme Commander faced one of the most consequential decisions in modern history. The fate of thousands of ships, hundreds of thousands of men, and ultimately the liberation of Europe hinged upon a weather forecast.
History enthusiasts often say that amateurs discuss tactics while professionals study logistics.
Pressure makes a compelling case that sometimes professionals had better keep one eye on the weather report as well.- L.A.Hambly
★★★★½