The year is 1980. The plot of the film focuses on the nuclear aircraft carrier of the US Navy 'Nimitz', which, as a result of a rather strange and unusual phenomenon, sweeps through space and time and finds itself in the past, on the eve of the start of the bombing of the US Navy by Japanese aircraft on December 7, 1941.
The captain of the ship (Kirk Douglas) at first does not want to believe in the possibility of such a mysterious and inexplicable fact as time travel. However, later he will have to believe it when encrypted military radio messages are transmitted over the radio, Japanese Zero fighters fly in the sky, and a reconnaissance plane from Nimitz will spot the Japanese fleet near the Hawaiian Islands, which is already preparing to launch an attack on Pearl Harbor. ...
And this is where the fun begins. Actually for what this film was filmed. What decision should the captain make? Stay aside and calmly watch those bloody events of Sunday morning in December 1941, or use the full power of the nuclear aircraft carrier Nimitz, on board which, in addition to jet planes of the late 20th century, are also armed missiles with nuclear warheads.
And perhaps the main question facing the captain and the team is whether they have the right to disrupt the current course of history and, if so, what will happen after that.
A great cast of Kirk Douglas and Martin Sheen, excellent aerial scenes and a generally good plot guarantee you an hour and a half of pleasure.