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Pressure review โ€“ Andrew Scott and Brendan Fraser canโ€™t save lower-tier D-day drama
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๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง United Kingdomโ€ขMay 27, 2026

Pressure review โ€“ Andrew Scott and Brendan Fraser canโ€™t save lower-tier D-day drama

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Originally published byThe Guardian

A behind-the-scenes second world war drama focused on the importance of weather is too stodgy and repetitive to work as anything but a so-so TV movie

In a world of increasingly segmented audiences, the new movie Pressure cleverly brings together two adjacent demographics: weather dads and history dads. Those designations are honorifics, not gender-essentialist; spiritually dad-curious people of all ages (but, letโ€™s be real: mostly over 50) may be interested in a behind-the-scenes story set in the last few days leading up to the allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944. Because this is the largest-scale seaborne invasion ever mounted, weather is a major factor, and the movie follows military higher-ups as they work around the clock trying to figure out whether a possible incoming storm will create unfavorable or impossible conditions.

To put it in contemporary terms, this is essentially a movie about Dwight Eisenhower (Brendan Fraser) nervously refreshing his weather app to see if he needs to change his upcoming plans. The weather app is played by Andrew Scott. Scottโ€™s actual character is James Stagg, a somewhat brusque and chilly Scotsman brought in to the D-day planning as the operationโ€™s chief meteorological officer. Stagg quickly clashes with the American Irving Krick (Chris Messina), who knows that D-day is crucial and time is of the essence โ€“ and is therefore bullish about (selectively) using past data to โ€œpredictโ€ that the storms will quickly pass. Staggโ€™s analysis is far less optimistic. Anyone who has held tickets to a forecast-dependent outdoor concert will relate.

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