Even though I've worked remotely for years now, I still know a good water cooler movie when I see one. And I have a hunch Netflix's latest No. 1 movie, "A House of Dynamite," is going to be what everyone's talking about on Monday. There are two reasons I've come to that conclusion: 1) It taps straight into the anxieties that all our droomscrolling these days trudges up; and 2) Its divisive ending has some viewers pissed.

"A House of Dynamite," which premiered on Netflix on October 24, is the first film from Kathryn Bigelow, the Oscar-winning director of "Zero Dark Thirty" and "The Hurt Locker," in nearly a decade. This white-knuckle nuclear thriller is a ticking time bomb with a structural twist, chronicling the American government's panicked response to an unidentified nuclear warhead he

See Full Page