“Command and Control” to Screen Across Arkansas October 7-9

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COMMAND AND CONTROL, a new documentary thriller about the real events that occurred at a Titan II missle complex in Arkansas in September 1980 will have multiple screenings across the state in October. Directed by Robert Kenner (Food, Inc.) and based on the critically acclaimed book by Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation), COMMAND AND CONTROL is the opening night film for the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival on Friday, October 7. The film will also screen in Damascus at the South Side Bee Branch Fine Arts Center on Saturday, October 8th, and at the Ron Robinson Theater in Little Rock, hosted by The University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service on Sunday, October 9th. Filmmaker Robert Kenner, author and producer Eric Schlosser, and several of the Arkansas-based subjects will participate in Q&As following all three screenings. COMMAND AND CONTROL will be broadcast on AETN in early 2017.

COMMAND AND CONTROL is a minute-by-minute account of a chilling nightmare that plays out at a Titan II missile complex in Arkansas in September, 1980. A worker accidentally drops a socket, puncturing the fuel tank of an intercontinental ballistic missile carrying the most powerful nuclear warhead in our arsenal, an incident which ignites a series of feverish efforts to avoid a deadly disaster.  Putting a camera where there was no camera that night, Kenner brings this nonfiction thriller to life with stunning original footage shot in a decommissioned Titan II missile silo. Eyewitness accounts — from the man who dropped the socket, to the man who designed the warhead, to the Secretary of Defense — chronicle nine hours of terror that prevented an explosion 600 times more powerful than Hiroshima.

COMMAND AND CONTROL premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in April and will be have a limited theatrical engagement this fall.

“The events of 1980 in Damascus, Arkansas, strike close to home, especially because AETN headquarters is less than 30 miles away from the site of the disaster,” said AETN Executive Director Allen Weatherly. “I had the opportunity to read the book the film is based upon and found the history riveting. We expect the same reaction to this superb film. AETN is excited to have ‘Command and Control,’ and the American Experience team, in our state to include Arkansans in the conversation to understand the events that took place in this shocking story.”

On the evening of September 18, 1980, Airmen David F. Powell and Jeffrey L. Plumb were performing routine maintenance at the Titan II silo in Damascus, Arkansas. At the age of 21, Powell was considered a highly experienced missile technician; Plumb, who had just turned 19, was still in training. As the two stood on a platform near the top of the Titan II, a socket fell from Powell’s wrench, plummeted 70 feet and, shockingly, punctured the missile. A stream of highly explosive rocket fuel began pouring into the silo.

Nothing like this had ever happened to a Titan II before and the Air Force had no procedures in place to deal with the event. For the next eight hours, the leadership of the Strategic Air Command (SAC) frantically struggled to figure out how to prevent a massive explosion and retain control of the thermonuclear warhead — a weapon so powerful that it could destroy much of Arkansas and deposit lethal radioactive fallout across the East Coast.

Woven through the Damascus story is a riveting history of America’s nuclear weapons program, from World War II through the Cold War, much of it based on recently declassified documents. A cautionary tale, COMMAND AND CONTROL forces viewers to confront the great dilemma that the U.S. has faced since the dawn of the nuclear age: How do we manage weapons of mass destruction without being destroyed by them?

“The story of the Damascus accident is one that nobody really knows,” said Mark Samels, producer of COMMAND AND CONTROL andAmerican Experience executive producer. “Through our theatrical release and broadcast, we will share this story with audiences nationwide, but we are especially excited to bring this film ‘home’ to Arkansas.”

Friday, October 7, 2016
Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival

Opening Night Film
Ticket Required.

Saturday, October 8, 2016 at 6 pm
South Side Bee Branch Fine Arts Center
334 South Side Rd
Bee Branch, AR  72013

Free and Open to the Public.

Sunday, October 9, 2016 at 6pm
The University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service
Ron Robinson Theater
100 River Market Avenue
Little Rock, AR 72201
Free and Open to the Public. RSVP Required.

For additional information about the screenings, please visit www.commandandcontrolfilm.com/screenings.

About AETN
The Arkansas Educational Television Network is Arkansas’s statewide public television network that enhances lives by providing lifelong learning opportunities for people from all walks of life. AETN delivers local, award-winning productions and classic, trusted PBS programs aimed at sharing Arkansas and the world with viewers. AETN depends on the generosity of Arkansans and the State of Arkansas to continue offering quality programming. Additional information is available at aetn.org. AETN is broadcast on KETS (Little Rock), KEMV (Mountain View), KETG (Arkadelphia), KAFT (Fayetteville), KTEJ (Jonesboro) and KETZ (El Dorado).

About Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival
Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival, the oldest non-fiction film festival in North America, will celebrate a quarter-century of bringing top documentaries, filmmakers and personalities to Hot Springs each fall. The 25th Anniversary Celebration will include over 100 of the most compelling films of the current festival circuit as well as the addition of a past-festival tradition. An array of parties throughout the 10 days will showcase historic Hot Springs’ Central Avenue, its restaurants and venues.  HSDFF runs from October 7-16, 2016.

About The University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service
The University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service (www.clintonschool.uasys.edu) is the nation’s first to offer a Master of Public Service (MPS) degree. Located in downtown Little Rock’s River Market entertainment and cultural district, it differs from more traditional graduate studies because a significant portion of the school’s two year curriculum is team-based, international and international direct field service work. Currently Clinton School students are involved in 45 public service projects all over the country and the world. The school’s academic program is enhanced with a renowned speaker series (www.clintonschoolspeakers.com) which brings in over 100 programs during each school year. These sessions are free and open to the public.

About the Filmmakers
Robert Kenner Films production for American Experience

Directed byRobert Kenner
Screenplay byRobert Kenner and Eric Schlosser
Story byBrian Pearle and Kim Roberts
Based on the BookCommand and Control by Eric Schlosser
Produced byRobert Kenner, Melissa Robledo, Mark Samels, and Eric Schlosser
Edited by

Directors of Photography

Music by

Kim Roberts, A.C.E.

Paul Goldsmith and Jay Redmond

Mark Adler


American Experience
 is a production of WGBH Boston

Senior ProducerSusan Bellows
Managing DirectorJames E. Dunford
Executive ProducerMark Samels


Robert Kenner
(Producer/Director/Co-Writer) has won an array of awards and garnered rave reviews for his documentary work exposing some of today’s least addressed, yet critical social and environmental issues. His film Food, Inc. was nominated for an Academy Award and won two Emmys. His most recent documentary, Merchants of Doubt, inspired by the acclaimed book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, lifted the curtain on a secretive group of pundits-for-hire who present themselves in the media as scientific authorities — yet whose contrary aim is to spread maximum confusion about well-studied public threats ranging from toxic chemicals to pharmaceuticals to climate change. Kenner received Peabody, Emmy and Grierson Awards for his American Experience film Two Days in October, an examination of two key events during the Vietnam conflict and how they shaped Americans’ views of the war. Other films for American Experience include Influenza 1918, John Brown’s Holy War and War Letters. Kenner was also co-filmmaker with Richard Pearce on The Road to Memphis for Martin Scorsese’s series The Blues. He has directed a number of specials for HBO and National Geographic, including the award-winning Don’t Say Goodbye. Kenner has also directed a number of award-winning commercials and corporate videos for eBay, Hewlett Packard, Hallmark and others.

As an investigative journalist, Eric Schlosser (Producer/Co-Writer) tries to explore subjects ignored by the mainstream media and give voice to people at the margins of society. Schlosser’s first book, Fast Food Nation (2001), helped start a revolution in how Americans think about what they eat. It has been translated into more than 20 languages and remained on The New York Times best-seller list for two years. His second book, Reefer Madness (2003), looked at America’s thriving underground economy and was also a New York Times best-seller. Command and Control (2013) was a finalist for the 2014 Pulitzer Prize (history), a New York Times Notable Book and best-seller, a Time Magazine Top 10 Nonfiction Book and won the Gold Medal Award (nonfiction) from the 2013 California Book Awards. An expanded version of Schlosser’s New Yorker article, “Break-In at Y-12,” was recently published as Gods of Metal (2015) in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia. Gods of Metal explores the risk of nuclear terrorism by telling the story of three Catholic pacifists who broke into one of the most heavily guarded nuclear weapons facilities in the world. His next book is about the American prison system.

Two of Schlosser’s plays, Americans (2003) and We the People (2007), have been produced in London. He served as an executive producer of the films Fast Food Nation (2006), There Will Be Blood (2008), Food Chains (2014) and Hanna Ranch (2014), and as a co-producer of the Oscar-nominated documentary Food, Inc.

Mark Samels(Producer/Executive Producer of American Experience). As executive producer of PBS’ flagship history series, Mark Samels conceives, commissions and oversees all American Experience films. Samels has overseen more than 120 films, expanding both the breadth of subjects and the filmmaking style embraced by the series, allowing for more contemporary topics and more witness-driven storytelling. Beginning his career as an independent documentary filmmaker, he held production executive positions at public television stations in West Virginia and Pennsylvania before joining WGBH. Samels is a founding member of the International Documentary Association and has served as a governor of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Samels holds honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degrees from Emerson College and Elizabethtown College.

About American Experience
For more than 28 years, American Experience has been television’s most-watched history series. The series has been hailed as “peerless” (The Wall Street Journal), “the most consistently enriching program on television” (Chicago Tribune) and “a beacon of intelligence and purpose” (Houston Chronicle). On air and online, the series brings to life the incredible characters and epic stories that have shaped America’s past and present. Acclaimed by viewers and critics alike, American Experience documentaries have been honored with every major broadcast award, including 30 Emmy Awards, four duPont-Columbia Awards and 17 George Foster Peabody Awards; the series received an Academy Award® nomination for Best Documentary Feature in 2015 for Last Days in Vietnam. Visit pbs.org/americanexperience and follow us on FacebookTwitterInstagram and YouTube to learn more.

Exclusive corporate funding for American Experience provided by Liberty Mutual Insurance. Major funding provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Additional funding for “Command and Control provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and public television viewers. American Experience is produced for PBS by WGBH Boston.

Additional funding for a national impact campaign for “Command and Control provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and Carnegie Corporation of New York.

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