Chernobyl (HBO 5-part series)
Posted: Tue May 21, 2019 7:54 pm
I highly recommend this...
HBO and SKY created a 5-part miniseries about the 26 April 1986 disaster at the Russian Nuclear Plant.
I've told a few people - - If you think you've seen a horror movie? Well, you haven't.
This is true drama and I hope wins awards for telling a tough story.
Episode 1 titled: "1:23:45" - - begins with a scene 2 years and one minute after the exact time of the disaster as Jared Harris as Valery Legasov, Deputy Director of the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy and part of the team who responded to the Chernobyl disaster. - - HANGS HIMSELF. The episode immediately goes back in time to the accident. The men in the control room didn't even know the reactor exploded. There is fire. There is chaos. The graphite moderator used to control the nuclear reaction is laying on the ground in pieces. It is death to touch. The Cherenkov radiation (that blue glow) is visible. The men who looked into the exploded reactor are all dead.
Chaos on top of chaos.
Episode 2 titled: "Please Remain Calm" - - The Soviet bureaucratic machine begins to come to terms with the full scale of the disaster, though the danger grows as new risks are identified. Valery Legasov they scientist, is thrown together with Stellan Skarsgård as Boris Shcherbina, Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and head of the Bureau for Fuel and Energy. He is assigned by the Kremlin to lead the government commission on Chernobyl after the disaster occurred. There is a scene where a helicopter is told not to fly over the glowing blue reactor and does - it falls from the sky in pieces.
Episode 3 titled: "Open Wide, Oh Earth" continues the story and presents the tasks required to stop the reaction, evacuate the town or Pripyat and, prevent the contamination from spreading down the river system into the Black Sea. (That's not an exaggeration.) When the dead are buried in metal coffins and then the coffins encased in concrete for safety - that is horror.
The scientists begin piecing together what happened and what it will take not to occur again.
Episode 4 titled "The Happiness of All Mankind" - will be shown 5/27/2019
Episode 5 titled: "Vichnaya Pamyat" - will be shown 6/3/2019
The sets, the clothing, the trappings, the vehicles, the town are all amazingly authentic. And they actors don't use cheap-assed "pretend" Russian accents. The news reports presented are, however, in Russian with subtitles. That gives the story some authenticity because the actors focus on the drama and not their syllables.
The story is harrowing and more horrific with each episode. BTW - Episode one is difficult but worth it. It is chaotic and because no one at the time knew what happened and what the consequences could be or might be. This is the struggle of scientists to minimize the damage and the struggle of a bureaucracy to come to terms with near total disaster.
This isn't a "disaster movie" like volcanoes exploding or aliens attacking or meteors nearly hitting the earth - this is an actually disaster and its aftermath. Right now, a land area twice the size of the city of London is still a "forbidden zone" that is dangerous to anything living within it. It will be like that for 20,000 years.
HBO and SKY created a 5-part miniseries about the 26 April 1986 disaster at the Russian Nuclear Plant.
I've told a few people - - If you think you've seen a horror movie? Well, you haven't.
This is true drama and I hope wins awards for telling a tough story.
Episode 1 titled: "1:23:45" - - begins with a scene 2 years and one minute after the exact time of the disaster as Jared Harris as Valery Legasov, Deputy Director of the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy and part of the team who responded to the Chernobyl disaster. - - HANGS HIMSELF. The episode immediately goes back in time to the accident. The men in the control room didn't even know the reactor exploded. There is fire. There is chaos. The graphite moderator used to control the nuclear reaction is laying on the ground in pieces. It is death to touch. The Cherenkov radiation (that blue glow) is visible. The men who looked into the exploded reactor are all dead.
Chaos on top of chaos.
Episode 2 titled: "Please Remain Calm" - - The Soviet bureaucratic machine begins to come to terms with the full scale of the disaster, though the danger grows as new risks are identified. Valery Legasov they scientist, is thrown together with Stellan Skarsgård as Boris Shcherbina, Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and head of the Bureau for Fuel and Energy. He is assigned by the Kremlin to lead the government commission on Chernobyl after the disaster occurred. There is a scene where a helicopter is told not to fly over the glowing blue reactor and does - it falls from the sky in pieces.
Episode 3 titled: "Open Wide, Oh Earth" continues the story and presents the tasks required to stop the reaction, evacuate the town or Pripyat and, prevent the contamination from spreading down the river system into the Black Sea. (That's not an exaggeration.) When the dead are buried in metal coffins and then the coffins encased in concrete for safety - that is horror.
The scientists begin piecing together what happened and what it will take not to occur again.
Episode 4 titled "The Happiness of All Mankind" - will be shown 5/27/2019
Episode 5 titled: "Vichnaya Pamyat" - will be shown 6/3/2019
The sets, the clothing, the trappings, the vehicles, the town are all amazingly authentic. And they actors don't use cheap-assed "pretend" Russian accents. The news reports presented are, however, in Russian with subtitles. That gives the story some authenticity because the actors focus on the drama and not their syllables.
The story is harrowing and more horrific with each episode. BTW - Episode one is difficult but worth it. It is chaotic and because no one at the time knew what happened and what the consequences could be or might be. This is the struggle of scientists to minimize the damage and the struggle of a bureaucracy to come to terms with near total disaster.
This isn't a "disaster movie" like volcanoes exploding or aliens attacking or meteors nearly hitting the earth - this is an actually disaster and its aftermath. Right now, a land area twice the size of the city of London is still a "forbidden zone" that is dangerous to anything living within it. It will be like that for 20,000 years.