| Unthinkable | |
|---|---|
|   Original theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Gregor Jordan | 
| Produced by | Marco Weber Caldecot Chubb Vanessa Coifman Bill Perkins | 
| Written by | Oren Moverman Peter Woodward | 
| Starring | Samuel L. Jackson Michael Sheen Carrie-Anne Moss Brandon Routh Gil Bellows Martin Donovan Stephen Root | 
| Music by | Graeme Revell | 
| Cinematography | Oliver Stapleton | 
| Edited by | Scott Chestnut | 
| Production company | Lleju Productions Sidney Kimmel Entertainment Kimmel International ChubbCo Film Senator Entertainment Co. | 
| Distributed by | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Senator U.S. | 
| Release date | 
 | 
| Running time | 97 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
| Budget | $15 million | 
| Box office | $5.5 million | 
Unthinkable is a 2010 American thriller film directed by Gregor Jordan and starring Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Sheen and Carrie-Anne Moss. It was released direct-to-video on June 14, 2010. The film is noteworthy for the controversy it generated around its subject matter, the torture of a man who threatens to detonate three nuclear bombs in separate U.S. cities.
An American Muslim man and former Delta Force operator, Yusuf (Sheen), makes a videotape. When FBI Special Agent Helen Brody (Moss) and her team see news bulletins looking for Yusuf, they launch an investigation, which is curtailed when they are summoned to a high school, which has been converted into a black site under military command. They are shown Yusuf's complete tape, where he threatens to detonate three nuclear bombs in separate U.S. cities if his demands are not met.
A special interrogator, "H" (Samuel L. Jackson), is brought in to force Yusuf to reveal the locations of the nuclear bombs. H quickly shows his capability and cruelty by chopping off one of Yusuf's fingers with a small hatchet. Horrified, Special Agent Brody attempts to put a stop to the measures. Her superiors make it clear that the potentially disastrous consequences necessitate these extreme measures. As the plot unfolds, H escalates his methods (with Brody as the "good cop"). Brody realizes that Yusuf anticipated that he would be tortured. Yusuf then makes his demands: he would like the President of the United States to announce a cessation of support for puppet governments and dictatorships in Muslim countries and a withdrawal of American troops from all Muslim countries. The group immediately dismisses the possibility of his demands being met, citing the United States' declared policy of not negotiating with terrorists.