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'Threads' (the film)
Former Member
Posts: 1,876,323 The Mix Honorary Guru
has anyone seen the film 'Threads'? it was made by the BBC in about 1985, but was banned for years and has only recently become available on video/DVD. for those of you who haven't seen it, it basically follows two sheffield families linked by an unwanted pregnancy as the UK takes a nuclear strike. theres quite alot of build-up, as they bomb goes off a good 45mins/1 hr into the film, and what it shows is just one of the scariest things i have eva seen. there is little blood & guts, so most things are psycholgical, and done very cleverly. it was the strongest thing i have eva seen - it has turned me against nuclear weapons - and i think every world leader should be forced to watch it. i cant really put it into words - it was just truly mind-blowing . . . . .
Because I want more stars.
Because I want more stars.
Post edited by JustV on
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Just imagine if you had watched it 20 years ago. I must have been terrifying.
The theme tune to it is so cold and sets the seen right at the start.
Now, have a big toke on this South African drugs-reefer-style spliff doobie.
[This message has been edited by Dan_the_man (edited 28-11-2001).]
here is the Amazon.co.uk Review for those of you who still don't know what we're talking about . . . . .
Hideously plausible when first broadcast in 1984, this BBC TV docu-drama now seems like a terrifying might-have-been, although a great deal of what it says about the probable aftermath of a nuclear attack remains horribly pertinent. Scripted by Barry Hines (author of the novel on which Ken Loach's Kes was based) and directed by Mick Jackson (who later went to Hollywood with The Bodyguard and Volcano), at the time Threads seemed like a response to the American TV movie The Day After although it stands nobly on its own. Showing the after-effects of World War III on the United Kingdom by concentrating on two Sheffield families linked by an unplanned pregnancy, it illustrates the scientific, political, medical and social consequences of the severing of the many vital connective "threads" that support a Western society. Grim in a particularly 1980s way, this is a compulsive if uncomfortable watch and accomplishes a great deal without the distraction of spectacle, picking through all the melted milk bottles and firing squad traffic wardens to find the human horror at the heart of it all.
Synopsis
Critically acclaimed but chilling story of a nuclear strike on Britain. Through the eyes of two Sheffield families we witness the immediate after-effects of the attack...the shock, grief, radiation sickness, hypothermia and starvation...
Because I want more stars.
[This message has been edited by Baby Bio (edited 29-11-2001).]
And what, you supported them before you saw the film??
I support them, it's the MAD principal. Anyway, thast for politics. You all say the film is scary, but is it any good? Is it worth buying, and if so where can I buy it from?
it is scary, not as in 'arrrrgghhhh' scary, but close to home horrific reality scary. you can buy it on VHS or DVD from amazon.co.uk
and yes, its a fucking good film. unfourtunatley, the director went downhill after that, with 'Volcano' etc <IMG alt="image" SRC="http://www.thesite.org/ubb/rolleyes.gif">
Because I want more stars.
[This message has been edited by Baby Bio (edited 30-11-2001).]
Because I want more stars.
I thought the whole thing was brilliantly done. Because it was a British city it just felt so real. And it has changed my views completely. I know that if there is a threat of war I'm joining up straight away. At least 13 years down the line I'd still have access to food, water and warm clothes.
Yep, read the book type thing, v sad.
I read the book at primary school, brill!
I was surprised by the animated WTWB, it was more powerful than the book (IMHO)