
Behind 800+ Hollywood films lies a shocking truth: the Pentagon and CIA secretly shape what you watch. "National Security Cinema" exposes how government agencies rewrite scripts, turning entertainment into propaganda while hiding in plain sight. Even "Zero Dark Thirty" wasn't immune.
Matthew Alford and Tom Secker are investigative researchers and co-authors of National Security Cinema: The Shocking New Evidence of Government Control in Hollywood, a groundbreaking exposé on the intersection of geopolitics and entertainment.
Alford, a British academic and author of Reel Power: Hollywood Cinema and American Supremacy, specializes in analyzing how military and intelligence agencies shape media narratives. Secker, an independent journalist and FOIA expert, brings decades of research into national security and terrorism.
Their collaboration unveils how the Pentagon and CIA have covertly influenced over 800 films and 1,000 TV shows, from blockbusters like Transformers to documentaries, often censoring themes like CIA drug trafficking and 9/11 failures. Alford’s prior works, including Hollywood Propaganda, and their documentary Theaters of War (2022), further dissect media militarization.
Translated into multiple languages, National Security Cinema draws on thousands of declassified documents to reveal systemic propaganda in modern entertainment.
National Security Cinema exposes the US Department of Defense and CIA’s extensive influence over Hollywood, revealing how they shape scripts, censor critical content, and promote pro-military narratives in films like Iron Man, Transformers, and Argo. Drawing on 800+ movies and 1,100+ TV shows documented via FOIA requests, authors Alford and Secker argue this collaboration amounts to systemic propaganda disguised as entertainment.
This book is essential for film students, media scholars, and political science enthusiasts interested in government-media collusion. It offers critical insights for readers analyzing Hollywood’s role in perpetuating militarism, with case studies on blockbusters like Avatar and TV series like 24.
Yes—it provides unprecedented evidence of Pentagon and CIA script revisions, backed by declassified documents. The book’s analysis of films like Enemy of the State and Forrest Gump challenges perceptions of Hollywood as politically neutral, making it vital for understanding modern propaganda.
The Pentagon and CIA grant filmmakers access to military equipment/locations in exchange for script approvals, often removing scenes depicting war crimes or corruption. For example, Transformers scripts were altered to align with Defense Department messaging, while projects critical of the military (like Counterpart) faced rejection.
Yes—it critiques blockbusters like Iron Man (framing weapons manufacturers as heroes) and Argo (whitewashing CIA actions). Conversely, it praises films like Platoon and Starship Troopers for resisting government interference.
Alford argues that Hollywood serves as a “soft power” extension of the national security state, normalizing militarism through entertainment. By coopting popular franchises, agencies like the Pentagon embed pro-war ideologies in cultural narratives.
A standout analogy compares military propaganda to product placement: “Showing the U.S. military as defenders of justice is no different from showcasing a Coke can on screen”.
Some note repetitive passages and minor typos, but reviewers widely praise its groundbreaking research. The Los Angeles Times called it “an unsettling exposé of Hollywood’s hidden censors”.
Alford holds a PhD in government-Hollywood relations, authored Reel Power: Hollywood Cinema and American Supremacy, and co-produced the documentary Theaters of War based on this research.
With ongoing debates about AI-generated propaganda and military recruitment via VR, the book’s warnings about entertainment as a tool for “reality manufacturing” remain urgent. Its 2022 documentary adaptation further solidified its impact.
While Reel Power analyzes Hollywood’s broader political subservience, National Security Cinema focuses specifically on FOIA-revealed Pentagon/CIA manipulations, offering concrete examples like script edits to Top Gun.
Alford advocates for public awareness and supports filmmakers like Oliver Stone who bypass Pentagon influence. He emphasizes transparency through FOIA requests as a tool for accountability.
The assertion that “every major studio film involving the military is functionally a recruitment ad” challenges perceptions of Hollywood as apolitical, drawing criticism from defense contractors and conservative media.
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지식을 흥미롭고 예시가 풍부한 인사이트로 전환
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재미있고 매력적인 방식으로 책을 즐기세요
National Security Cinema is one of the most effective propaganda systems ever devised.
Movie studios are gigantic engines of propaganda.
Terrorists watch TV too.
The Pentagon's script changes consistently serve ideological purposes.
The CIA actively shaped its public image through film from its inception.
National Security Cinema의 핵심 아이디어를 이해하기 쉬운 포인트로 분해하여 혁신적인 팀이 어떻게 창조하고, 협력하고, 성장하는지 이해합니다.
National Security Cinema을 빠른 기억 단서로 압축하여 솔직함, 팀워크, 창의적 회복력의 핵심 원칙을 강조합니다.

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Ever wondered why American military forces always seem so heroic on screen? Since 1947, the Pentagon has maintained Entertainment Liaison Offices specifically designed to shape film narratives, with the CIA establishing its own Hollywood office in 1996. Their combined influence is staggering: over 2,500 entertainment products have received direct government assistance, fundamentally altering how Americans perceive their military and intelligence agencies. This isn't just creative storytelling-it's calculated influence hiding in plain sight at your local theater. The relationship works through a simple exchange: filmmakers get access to equipment, locations, and personnel that would otherwise cost millions, while the Pentagon gets script approval rights. The scale is breathtaking-814 films and 1,133 television titles have received Pentagon support, from obvious war films to surprising productions like "American Idol" and "Cupcake Wars." Even seemingly trivial changes serve ideological purposes: for "Jurassic Park III," the Pentagon leveraged a dinosaur battle scene request to secure a "nice military rescue" ending and change a military character to a civilian.