Feeling too cheerful? That can be changed. This Wednesday, on BBC4, there's a rare screening of "Threads".
If you've not heard of it, this was a landmark TV movie made by the BBC in about 1986 when the Cold War was still raging. It's a dramatised documentary about the effects of a major nuclear attack on Britain, based in and around Sheffield. It follows events from a few weeks beforehand, up to 13 years after the war.
There was a bit of a trend to these productions at the time. The US produced "The morning after" which was a big-budget affair- it was pretty good and had some memorable images in it. It also had some hope that, even though a nuclear war would be a catastrophe, there would still be hope and a new future.
"Threads", on the other hand, was a low-budget production. It was also so harrowing that it could traumatise a rock. There was one clear message- while dying in a nuclear stike would be horrible, surviving it would be far, far, worse. I have watched many horror films, and many bleak dramas, but I have still seen nothing anywhere near as relentlessly grim as "Threads".
It's essential viewing. If you want to know why us Cold War kids were so ****ed-up, just watch it.
If you've not heard of it, this was a landmark TV movie made by the BBC in about 1986 when the Cold War was still raging. It's a dramatised documentary about the effects of a major nuclear attack on Britain, based in and around Sheffield. It follows events from a few weeks beforehand, up to 13 years after the war.
There was a bit of a trend to these productions at the time. The US produced "The morning after" which was a big-budget affair- it was pretty good and had some memorable images in it. It also had some hope that, even though a nuclear war would be a catastrophe, there would still be hope and a new future.
"Threads", on the other hand, was a low-budget production. It was also so harrowing that it could traumatise a rock. There was one clear message- while dying in a nuclear stike would be horrible, surviving it would be far, far, worse. I have watched many horror films, and many bleak dramas, but I have still seen nothing anywhere near as relentlessly grim as "Threads".
It's essential viewing. If you want to know why us Cold War kids were so ****ed-up, just watch it.
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