Cue standard Thatcher's Britain 'Which one's are from after the bomb?' joke.
I remember vacant-eyed woman with roasted baby bit. Brrrr. BRRRR.
Good summary here, spoilerific mind.
http://www.btinternet.com/~pdbean/threads.htmlGovernmentYard wrote:
A good Threads-y children's book is 'Brother in the Land' which is sort of like threads with a hint of 'The Road' in it. Came out years ago.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brother_in_the_Land*shudder*
I remember reading that one, Gov. Pretty gripping opening, though I haven't read it since I was a lad. I dimly recall Z for Zacheriah too. There was a Tanith Lee short story that was simply devestating too, and that gave me nightmares. People lived in sort of plastic shrouded houses and couldn't go outside because of the radiation poisoning, and there were cullings.
What's incredible is just how scary and primal all the British nuclear stuff was. I've seen The Day After (American version predating Threads by two years) and though it has some very effective sequences such as John Lithgow seeing the missiles rising up in the distance from outside a football stadium, the general soap operaness of it all blunts the impact. Plus, the presence of stars such as Lorne Greene and, um, Steve Guttenberg mean that you can't see it as happening to ordinary peple like you and me.
However, the film is still worth watching and is more 'enjoyable' than Threads. It is also credited for swinging Regan from his hawkish first term towards a second term dedicated to detente and disarmanent, as the film had a big impact on him. He dismayed many of his generals and the secretary of defence through his new outlook. Also intersting is that Threads too was seen on PBS a few years after the BBC broadcast in America, and was also seen among certain circles in the US government.
A largely forgotten Canadian film called Countdown to Looking Glass is a tense and gripping look at the build up to nuclear war from the perspective of a 'CVN' news broadcast from USS Nimitz, an aircraft carrier and which also features a scarifying but lo-fi scene when a nuclear depth charge is used against a Russian submarine. Fascinatingly, it also features the infamous Newt Gingrich as himself. Both this and The Day After can be found on Youtube. Last I looked, anyway.
Both of these however don't really compare to Threads. What's incredible is just how scary and primal all the British nuclear stuff was. This is because dramatically the films just don't show the shell-shock and mental damage of the event in both Threads and Peter Watkin's The War Game. Possibly the most harrowing scene in The War Game is the moment when the interviewer asks a group of children what they want to be when they grow up, to which they reply emotionlessly with dead eyes, "Nothing." There's also a relentlessness of detail in British productions that escapes the US versions. In The Day After and the lesser (but childhood gripping) 'By Dawn's Early Light' the effects of nuclear attack are merely scene through big budget spectacle but the ramifications on flesh and bone passed over.
In the Ludovic Kennedy narrated Q.E.D episode of 'A Guide to Armagedoon' (1982) the effects of a one megaton bomb detonated over St. Paul's Cathedral are shown. The programme opens with a ballet dancer, special focus shown on her legs and arms. This moment concludes with the sight of the giant windows of her studio blowing in with a blizzard of glass. This soberly narrated film has many original special effects sequences, such as the cross on St. Paul's melting, a bus on fire with the sound of people screaming and the paint on metal peeling (reproduced by discordant violins) and hurricane winds whipping down shopping precincts. The effects of thermal pulse are shown on flesh by a clinical display of the different stages of a roast cooking in the oven, which is enough to put you off your Christmas dinner. Interestingly, some effects are taken from Threads. An experiment is also carried out as a family are asked to live in a home-made shelter for two weeks - 'the core of inner refuge' - to see how tolerable the experience is. Not very, is the answer.
Finally, probably the most notorious TV experience are the 'Protect & Survive' shorts fronted by Barrett's Housing / Reeves & Mortimer compere Patrick Allen. Known as 'the voice of doomsday' as he'd be the last person you'd hear over the radio, he tells you what to do if a member of the family dies in the core of inner refuge. The most frightening bit is the sound effect provided for the 'invisible' fallout, a horribly sinister electronic noodling which summarises the impressively precise and horrible evocation the BBC could achieve of nuclear war's horror.
Um, that post ran a bit longer than I intended.