How in the world can something as mundane as forecasting the weather turn into something so spellbinding?
Well, if nearly 300,000 lives are at stake waiting for the excruciating go or no go decision to launch the Allied invasion of Nazi occupied Europe on June 6, 1944, then the movie Pressure is your compelling answer.
The flick focuses on the 72-hour span leading up to the D-Day invasion and the nearly impossible decision that Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower had to make as a once-in-a-century storm threatened to dismantle the entire project.
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| Brandan Fraser (left) and Andrew Scott |
But in a movie driven by both dialogue and actual history, the disparity disappears. Fraser, who won an Oscar in 2022 as the lead in The Whale, is a superior talent. Put him in a waist-length military field jacket and, presto, he's Eisenhower. It's that simple.
But the standout performance comes from Andrew Scott, who plays Group Captain James M. Stagg, a specialist in terrestrial magnetism and solar radiation. Okay. A weatherman. A meteorologist. Stagg is the person who says Operation Overlord (the code name for the D-Day invasion of France) must be postponed before it becomes one of the greatest military disasters in history.
The movie's principle conflict is drawn between Stagg and Irving Krick, Eisenhower's trusted meteorologist. Krick has correctly forecast military operations in Africa and Sicily for Ike, but he uses weather patterns from the past to draw his conclusions. Stagg, a British officer who was brought in by Ike to lead the weathermen, goes with science. He launches weather balloons and uses a network of meteorologists under his command to color his forecasts.
Scott, as the dour Stagg, gives us an exceptional performance as a man who knows he's right and who has to convince Eisenhower that he, Stagg, is right. The friction between Stagg and Krick (confidently played by Chris Messina) offers us the heart of the movie. Throw in Eisenhower, who wants answers now as the invasion clock ticks down, and the tension mounts. And it's all dialogue. Wow.
There are two other characters worth noting here. British Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery, who wants to go ahead with the invasion come hell or high water (literally), is faithfully played by Damian Lewis. Does that name sound familiar? Yep, he was Lt. Dick Winters in the exceptional Band of Brothers television series. I'm used to Lewis speaking as an American, but he was born in London and is a subject of the Crown. He speaks naturally with a British accent, which is a little unnerving if you are expecting Dick Winters. Lewis must have had a great accent coach in BofB.
And then there's Kerry Condon as Kay Summersby, who was Eisenhower's chauffeur/secretary/possible paramour during the war. She shows up in a lot of the decision-making process here, which I'm not sure happened in real life. She knows a lot. She could have been a security risk. But in the movie, she is the voice of reason that keeps the ever-building tension in balance.
As in nearly all movies like this, history is compressed. Some facts are lost or discarded because of time constraints. Missing in this narrative is Sverre Petterssen, a Norwegian meteorologist under Stagg who actually foresaw the 36-hour window in the storm that allowed D-Day to happen on June 6, not June 5 as originally planned. But in a movie that is 100 minutes long, where is his own window to appear?
As a history buff, I knew the backstory about the storm that nearly cancelled D-Day. I knew of Stagg. I never heard of Krick. It turns out the rub between the two was real. Krick, in fact, was a founding professor of the Department of Meteorology at the California Institute of Technology (1933-48). I didn't know that.
I know a movie is good when I take my wife to see it. She is not a World War II buff like myself, but she appreciates history and even more to the fact, she appreciates a well-made movie. This flick had her attention from start to finish.
In movies like this one, she is my barometer.




