Posted: Fri Apr 27, 2012 11:01 pm Post subject: Nuclear war
The War Game
The War Game is a 1965 television documentary-style drama depicting the effects of nuclear war on Britain. Written, directed, and produced by Peter Watkins for the BBC's The Wednesday Play anthology series, it caused dismay within the BBC and in government and was withdrawn from television transmission on 6 August 1965 (the twentieth anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing).
The Corporation said that "the effect of the film has been judged by the BBC to be too horrifying for the medium of broadcasting". It did however have some distribution in cinemas and won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1966. It remained unshown in full on British television until 1985.
Made in black-and-white with a running time of just under 50 minutes, The War Game depicts the prelude to and the immediate weeks of the aftermath to a Soviet nuclear attack against Britain.
The Day After
American TV drama from 1983 about the effects of nuclear strikes on various cities
War Games
Classic hacker movie (also from 1983) about a computer that wants to play games...
Threads
A bleak 1984 British TV drama about a nuclear bomb that's dropped on Sheffield.
When The Wind Blows
Animation from Raymond Biggs (The Snowman) about an old couple and their dignified struggle to survive fall-out
Pictures show aftermath of nuclear test in specially built ghost town
26 May 2012
When the eponymous hero stumbles on an eerie abandoned city in 2008 hit Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, it may seem like a classic piece of Hollywood exaggeration. But in fact the unbelievable scene, showing a deserted ghost town which is the site of a nuclear bomb test, is remarkably true to life.
These extraordinary pictures, most of which have never been seen before, show one of the many towns made and destroyed by the U.S. military in the Nevada desert as part of ongoing nuclear tests during the Cold War. They date from 1955, a time when the threat of nuclear war hung over much of the world and when tests like this one were almost routine in the fierce arms race between America and the Soviet Union.
But the pictures bring home the potential devastation that a nuclear bomb could have visited on a small American town. They show dummies torn in half lying amidst the debris of shattered houses - even though several of the models still have creepy smiles fixed to their faces.
The aftermath of the test, one of dozens carried out in the South-West throughout the 1950s, also shows that some people could have escaped from a nuclear attack, as some of the dummies are merely burnt without being utterly destroyed. However, these were only the early days of nuclear weapons - before the development of the much more powerful hydrogen bomb - so the effects could ultimately have been far worse even than those seen in this simulation.
It was not just the dummies who were being tested in the fake village - the government wanted to find out what effect nuclear weapons would have on the food supply and other vital necessities. When LIFE magazine first carried some of the photographs, it wrote: 'The figures were residents of an entire million-dollar village built to test the effects of an atomic blast on everything from houses to clothes to canned soup.'
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