The U.S. Department of Defense and Netflix are in a clash over how accurate the streamer’s nuclear disaster drama A House of Dynamite truly is.

Highlighting a specific major plot point in the Kathryn Bigelow-directed movie, an October 16 memo from officials at the Pentagon was produced with the intent to address “false assumptions” from the film.

The document says the failure of the military to stop a missile headed for the continental U.S. depicted in the movie is okay as “a compelling part of the drama intended for the entertainment of the audience,” but the real-world capacities “tell a vastly different story.”

In House of Dynamite, interceptor missiles are said to have a 61% success rate in taking down incoming warheads, like the enemy missile heading to wipe out the almost 10 million residents of greater Chicago as generals and officials in the Idris Elba-led administration scramble to find a solution or unleash global destruction. The Patriot PAC-3 they launch to take out the threat fails, leaving the most powerful military force in human history suddenly out of options.

As a counterpoint, the DoD’s Missile Defense Agency memo earlier this month says its multibillion-dollar hit-to-kill systems “displayed a 100% accuracy rate in testing for more than a decade.”

“The numbers tell us what is occurring and we need to know,” a well-positioned military official told Deadline today of the DoD’s assertion. “The results are very very good, with the program scheduled to grow over the next decade,” he added of the interceptors, which the U.S. has developed in the post-Star Wars eras and will deploy down the line.

The DoD reaction to A House of Dynamite, which premiered in Venice and opened in a limited theater run October 10 before hitting Netflix on Friday, was first reported by Bloomberg. Deadline has seen the document that questions how on the money HoD is in its quest to take out a bullet with a bullet, to paraphrase the language in the film that co-stars Rebecca Ferguson, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos, Jason Clarke and Gabriel Basso.

(L-R) Jared Harris, Anthony Ramos, Idris Elba, Tracy Letts, Kathryn Bigelow, Rebecca Ferguson, Greta Lee and Gabriel Basso at the A House of Dynamite red carpet in Venice

Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

On the flip side, the flick’s screenwriter Noah Oppenheim told MSNBC on Sunday thaat he would “respectfully disagree” with the Pentagon’s assessment.

Diplomatically, Oppenhiem, the former NBC News chief, also said: “I welcome the conversation. I’m so glad the Pentagon watched, or is watching, and is paying attention to it, because this is exactly the conversation we want to have.”

Bigelow has made it clear she kept the Pentagon at arm’s length to maintain independence. Both the Oscar-winning director and Oppenheim have said HoD “had multiple tech advisers who have worked in the Pentagon.”

For what it’s worth, none of those advisors were from the current administration, Oppenheim admitted on MSNBC.

Not spotlighted by the Pentagon’s memo is another narrative element of HoD where once the initial attempt to take down the enemy missile fails, the brass decided not to ty again in order to save the remainder of America’s Ground-Based Midcourse Defense system for possible further attacks. At that junction in the film, and the Defense Secretary Baker (played by Jared Harris) rages: “So, it’s a f–king coin toss? That’s what $50 billion buys us?”

An unarmed Minuteman II intercontinental ballistic missile launches from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Missile Defense Agency is expected to conduct a developmental flight test October 14, 2002, (Photo by USAF/Getty Images)

USAF/Getty Images

In real-life, the USA currently has about 44 intercepters available to launch from Fort Greely, Alaska, and Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. An update and expanded system is planned to come online in about 2028, with a first round of nearly half a dozen Next Generation Interceptors and around 40 more over time.

A fact no one argues over: There are around 12,300 nuclear weapons among the arsenals of the USA and eight other nations. A terrifying number that could destroy all life on Earth many times over.

 “I feel like nuclear weapons, the prospect of their use, has become normalized,” Bigelow told Awardsline’s Antonia Blyth recently. “We don’t think about it, we don’t talk about it. And it’s an unthinkable situation. So, my hope was to maybe move it to the forefront of our lives.”

Neither the Pentagon nor Netflix responded to Deadline’s request for comment on their assessment and the film.