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@fadliclas5922 күн бұрын
Jj
@fadliclas5922 күн бұрын
it.
@fadliclas5922 күн бұрын
47/59
@fadliclas5922 күн бұрын
oe
@fadliclas5922 күн бұрын
Apr
@JulieannesAnimalsAndNature Жыл бұрын
As a young teenager, I watched this on television when it first aired. The fact that not a single commercial was to be aired during the broadcast once the missiles were launched was unprecedented. Now, as a 50+-year-old, the scariest part about this movie is that it is a heavily toned-down version of the result of a nuclear war.
@charliewerchan7252 Жыл бұрын
I agree, what they show on this movie is not even close to what would really happen. What's worse is how close we are to that reality right now.
@JulieannesAnimalsAndNature Жыл бұрын
@charliewerchan7252 As an adult, the most despicable thing is the realization that the people who are most likely to survive nuclear war are the same people who provoked nuclear war in the first place
@charliewerchan7252 Жыл бұрын
@@JulieannesAnimalsAndNature A bunch of them will be. But also, they will lose alot of family and friends due to the fact they are not part of the govt infrastructure.
@XXSkunkWorksXX Жыл бұрын
As a young person born and raised in the UK, we had 'Threads' where the US had 'The Day After'. 'Threads' is many times more grim than 'The Day After' (which is a difficult enough watch anyway) - 'Threads' does not sanitize thermonuclear war nor - importantly - its aftermath. Where 'TDA' implies internal injury from radiation sickness, 'Threads' shows deformed births after rape. It shows graphic depictions of people burning to death and voiding their bowels/bladders as the firestorm rages. No sentimentality, unremitting and horrific, it remains without question the most terrifying thing I ever saw as a child and is no less impactful 40 years later when watched as an adult. Now I am become death - destroyer of worlds.
@charliewerchan7252 Жыл бұрын
@@XXSkunkWorksXX I watched both. Both show rather dismal results after the war, but both also did not show the aftermath as bad as it will be. Darkness, and death. There is no writing a script for something so utterly heinous as completely destroying the world God created for us.
@johnsmallberries3476 Жыл бұрын
It's almost impossible to overstate what a huge TV event this was. Everything stopped the night they aired this.
@dawood121derful Жыл бұрын
yes, and many local news stations came on the air afterward to have extended discussions about it because so many people were upset by it.
@mariaharrison7228 Жыл бұрын
It was brilliantly done, it shows the absolute horror.
@ukissrulez Жыл бұрын
Liar
@jeffrowisdabest Жыл бұрын
They need to have a remake/updated version of this, where the missiles launch due to the software being so outdated. It's a very real possibility it malfunctions in the coming decade, and people don't seem to care until they see the horror on the screen.
@shwmehvn Жыл бұрын
Yes everything stopped. Next day at school (jr high) there were counselors available and whole class discussions. I think it scared a whole generation.
@MrStiv138 ай бұрын
I was a junior in high school. Watched this while babysitting. The kids were already sleeping when the movie played. I distinctly remember when the movie ended, hearing John Lithgow’s character calling on a ham radio…”This is Lawrence Kansas….is anyone out there…anyone at all…”. Ted Kopple hosted a discussion after the movie. He looked at the camera and said, “Take a deep breath, look outside. It’s still there…”. Still brings me to tears after 40 years.
@rainbowwarrior26357 ай бұрын
The issue is now we're looking at global extinction in 2 years. Already 80% of life has gone extinct, and 50% of that is since 1980. So now we know it's happening and we can see in front of our eyes in slow motion.
@kd68367 ай бұрын
@@rainbowwarrior2635Sure. We will all be dead in 2 years. If there is a nuclear war due to the constant warmongering from both political “sides” then yes everything could be done. Rachel Carson said we would have a Silent Spring in 1963; we were to have an ice age by 1980, acid rain and no ozone layer in the 90’s and the oceans were supposed to be hundreds of miles inland now. Just stop with your environmental doomsday fairytale. I’ll come back in 2027 and point out we are still here, unless Zelensky, Trump, Putin, Biden and all of them take us out.
@chadjohnson4507 ай бұрын
Don't worry, the scumbag elite and their slaves will endure, miles underground with all the supplies they bought with our tax dollars. D.u.m.b. is the acronym
@garyowen90447 ай бұрын
@@rainbowwarrior2635 get a grip rainbow. So, “we’re looking at global extinction in two years”? I’ll be back in four, God willing, and the Creek don’t rise, and we’ll see how that global extinction thing worked out for you. The only threat we face, is from a global elite who fancy you living in 15-Minute Cities, desperately wondering when your next protein laden cricket meal will arrive. All this because “farms, cow flatulence, and food storage deep freezers”, are bad for the environment. Read up on Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs - a ravenously hungry population is easier to control.
@Evanw102827 ай бұрын
@@rainbowwarrior2635What?
@elgringo49182 ай бұрын
If this ever happens, I would just take a chair, sit in my front lawn and drink a nice cold beer. Nothing more I can do.
@allanjechorek4381Ай бұрын
Save a chair and a beer for me.
@gaborvoros7354Ай бұрын
I would still take my chances to survive.
@glockman61Ай бұрын
There's nothing any of us can do except anticipate the fireworks.
@jacobreisser8034Ай бұрын
You should read a book titled On the Beach, it's by Neville Shute. It's about the last days of the last survivors on earth after global nuclear war. It was written over fifty years ago by the same author who wrote A Town Called Alice.
@dziriseniorАй бұрын
pray for Allah blessings
@jamescannon220 Жыл бұрын
As a kid, this movie scared me more than any 80's horror film. Freddie, Jason and Michael Myers had nothing on this reality. And yes, I've seen Threads. This is far more realistic, has better acting and special effects.
@tomcisneros5965 Жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking. It was pretty scary, especially in those cold war days. Not even the Excorsit was as scary, and that was a terrifying movie in itself.
@Johnnymkttrains Жыл бұрын
Same
@ildona8813 Жыл бұрын
True...
@neilschroeder7854 Жыл бұрын
We were at a friends house smoking a joint watching this movie. Just before the first nuclear explosion, with all the tension, my friend tapped me on the shoulder to pass me the joint, and I nearly jumped out of my skin.
@DJhuggo Жыл бұрын
Well my friend , the terror is back !! This situation in Ucrania second me not are a good finish ! My hugs to you in Brasil my brother and , God blessed and protect we !!
@vanterry086 ай бұрын
They need to broadcast this movie again right now worldwide for free. Scared the hell out of the public when originally broadcast and now more important than ever before.
@ianashton15936 ай бұрын
World leaders should be forced to watch it, those with the authority to press the buttons. They may be safe in their bunkers short term but they’d have to come out at some point !
@Руслан-к6ы9к6 ай бұрын
Как он называется?
@vanterry086 ай бұрын
@@Руслан-к6ы9к The Day After
@insideoutsideupsidedown22186 ай бұрын
@@Руслан-к6ы9кthe movie name? “The Day After”
@burrco30866 ай бұрын
Yeap I was a kid when I seen it living in Kansas City. It scared me. But these brain dead elites seem to want a ww3. Crazy time we live in. Much luck
@jii-otombicji35797 ай бұрын
I'm from Russia. Born in the Soviet Union in the late 80s. Today my great Motherland does not exist. We ourselves are to blame for this, having trusted the traitors who destroyed our strong country. I would not wish for any country to experience the poverty, lawlessness of crime and national humiliation that we experienced in the 90s. Many foreigners will never understand this. I wish everyone peace and goodness. I sincerely hope that what is shown in this film will never happen between Americans and former Soviet people.
@vonmuschinski39357 ай бұрын
Send you peace and love from Germany. Growing up in East Germany in the 80. You are in my mind.... ❤️✌️
@donsavage-mw7gf7 ай бұрын
The USSR was a beautiful country with a rich culture. I’m sorry you had to lose it.
@axeman9997 ай бұрын
Tell your suka Putin…..
@Andrei_Akimov7 ай бұрын
@@donsavage-mw7gf , you don't history of the USSR. It was rich culture of lie and of forced labor camps.
@Andrei_Akimov7 ай бұрын
The 90s were a time of hope and freedom. Now Russia is a bloody evil empire again.
@patriciamacias37864 ай бұрын
I cried when I saw this movie back in 1983. Now in 2024, all I can do is pray so people who "rule" the world are wise enough to never deploy these weapons. May God protect us all. 😢😢
@JoeMcMorrow-k7e3 ай бұрын
"I can confirm at this time we have over 300 ICBMs inbound" still blood curdling
@senororlando23 ай бұрын
Don’t worry, Biden would sleep through the alert and trump would never attack his chums in Moscow
@stephenmarcus96013 ай бұрын
We had "rulers" in 1983, too. Reagan was a senile bag of flesh. Even a vigorous leader has always worked w/global partners. I hope you are right about corporate overlords because they like money and nukes ruin that
@karsaorlong43913 ай бұрын
You better be ready to meet God because they will be at the very least using tactile nukes in the next few years.
@pumpupjam96483 ай бұрын
God will not allow nuclear missiles to destroy our home. Psalm 104:5. Putin, started war with Ukraine in 2022. He has been threatening to use nuclear weapons of mass destruction. Other countries have them too.
@Gillan122010 ай бұрын
40 years later, this movie still hits hard.
@TheKATON1329 ай бұрын
Yea... because it has a higher probability of happening today than it did then.
@markcritic24099 ай бұрын
@@TheKATON132 my thoughts exactly. :(
@elrond37379 ай бұрын
@@TheKATON132 to true. back then leaders seemed to have some semblance of a soul. no so now
@mtsky-tc6uw8 ай бұрын
@@elrond3737 they are all insane--they have their underground shelters,rat holes..we have nothing
@ct87gn258 ай бұрын
@@TheKATON132 I was going to post the same exact thing you did........
@dorael_ Жыл бұрын
What is more scary for me than the explosion itself is the amount of effort and technology the human race is able to put in the most wrong and useless things like war and destruction. Mind blowing
@danieldevito6380 Жыл бұрын
What's even scarier is how few people are involved in actually causing the wars. Many countries and hundreds of millions may fight and die in a war, but 99.999999999% of them have a hand in causing it, or the desire to continue it. It's just a handful of evil people pulling the strings.
@villagernumber77 Жыл бұрын
Yet if you question any of it you are called undemocratic or a west hating communist.
@mkay1957 Жыл бұрын
Those "useless things", also known as military hardware, saved much of the world's population from tyranny during WW2.
@DMTEntity88 Жыл бұрын
At the end of the day, we’re just smart apes that learned to use our brain and hands to create things, We are still animals on the inside. We just need to take a Psychedelic to help us find our higher consciousness self so we can realize that war is not the answer but loving one another and advancing as a human civilization is the way towards peace and harmony...
@mkay1957 Жыл бұрын
@@DMTEntity88 I'm glad we didn't have that mindset in the era of WW2, or most of the world would have been enslaved by Imperial Japan, Nazi Germany and the USSR.
@scootdaws258 ай бұрын
I remember sitting at the dinner table during the Cuban Missle crisis and my dad wondering if we were gonna be around tomorrow. That feeling never left me. Still hasn't.
@deanpd34026 ай бұрын
Alarmism has been around a long time. Better off facing up to your own mortality. It can come anytime for many different reasons.
@danielbrown34616 ай бұрын
You should see our Southern Border at the moment.....This is why many young men....just out of High School have said they were going MIGTOW.....Never to marry and never have kids. It's not that they are weird in some way....they just think by going migtow they have a better chance at survival.
@20LookInside126 ай бұрын
@@danielbrown3461 And sadly who would want to bring a child into this world as it is now... These poor young men have been so maligned and vilified in Western culture as well. I feel bad for them, but then again, many will be better of without the sort of 'women' out there nowadays. Too many loose, sleazy and superficial girls with NO common sense or curiosity or empathy.
@Reshigekko6 ай бұрын
@@danielbrown3461what’s migtow?
@danielbrown34616 ай бұрын
@@Reshigekko Men going their own way. It's men who have often been Divorced so they have decided never to marry again and downsize their responsibilities in life. In Japan they call it..."The Herbivoure Man"...And many young men roughly ages 18-25-26 have decided never to marry and not date. They have seen what happens in Divorce courts to their Fathers and Grandfathers.
@joaopaulocatanzaro2934 ай бұрын
I watched this movie at the launch, I was 12 years old. It was one of the movies that marked me the most. That summer I watched these movies 3 times.
@dungareedave8604 Жыл бұрын
I was a senior in high school when it originally aired in November 1983. This movie is still as significant today as it was 40 years ago.
@lisawilliams2013 Жыл бұрын
Same on both points. I remember antinuclear rallies that some of our teachers invited us to. This movie scared the crap out of me then and it still hits hard. It came up in my KZbin feed seemingly out of nowhere!
@gloriaannopperman2734 Жыл бұрын
It was terrifying then and is more terrifying now. May God protect us but I know if it happens then Bear and I will be above in Heaven with my beloved Jerry and Sugar Bear.
@sergedeleon9592 Жыл бұрын
This movie that tell us how those weapons are evil
@tommiatkins3443 Жыл бұрын
More relevant now. Since Feb 22 we are living in a extended drawn out nightmare, where nuclear threats are casually made daily. That happened perhaps three times in the previous seventy years
@RandoWisLuL Жыл бұрын
yes, but with defense weapons about 100 times as powerful and smart as back then. If we could destroy the world with nukes before, now we can 100 times over plus all the other tech we have( rail guns, pulse lasers, Project Thor( nicknamed "Rods From God") tons of other things we probably don't now about.) The environment has changed pretty drastically. I thinks that's why we have gone so long without nuclear war. Besides, the west as a whole would decimate the enemy. ( with the exception of China. that would be a hard one)
@slamjam98586 ай бұрын
never forget that Soviet military officer Stanislav Petrov saved humanity from nuclear destruction on September 26, 1983 and this is a true story.
@angelocavaliere41966 ай бұрын
Questa cosa non è provata
@tubelectron16676 ай бұрын
Is it what was called the Able Arch exercise ?
@juansa8476 ай бұрын
And Vasili Arkhipov
@tomislav81936 ай бұрын
And Nickolai Volkoff 🙌
@아담몽땅6 ай бұрын
위대한 사람
@skittlesandfriends5710 Жыл бұрын
I had just joined the US Navy in September of 1983 and was in My Tech School when this movie came out, I remember watching it the “TV Room” In our Barracks with the other students. During the attack and right after it you could have heard a pin drop, everyone just sat there in silence taking it all in. This movie helped to bring home the reality that there are No Winners only losers in a Nuclear War.
@mikehutchison5002 Жыл бұрын
Ronald Reagan said a nuclear war was winnable. He didn't say who those winners would be. But he seemed to do his dumbest to start a war with Russia
@Haze_Nexus_real Жыл бұрын
wow
@Haze_Nexus_real Жыл бұрын
@@snapcutter9596 what, when did i say the emp would affect the car or what ever tf you're trying to say?
@Haze_Nexus_real Жыл бұрын
@@snapcutter9596 Oh ok...
@Haze_Nexus_real Жыл бұрын
@@snapcutter9596 Yeah, well if it does happen, I'm in Paraguay. No one cares about that country
@dermotmeuchner24162 ай бұрын
I’m 72 and we are closer now than we ever have been before. It’s mind boggling to me.
@daddyrabbit835 Жыл бұрын
What a lot of people that weren't around back then, don't understand, is that there were only 3 main channels in the U.S. and EVERYONE in the country watched the same shows. This one was horrifying growing up as a kid in the 80s.
@jeffreystreeter5381 Жыл бұрын
Channel 3 ....8.....& 30 in Hartford Connecticut....yep that was it. The skeletons gave me nightmares for a decade
@jeffreystreeter5381 Жыл бұрын
Q
@andytay5507 Жыл бұрын
Actually 4. PBS too. But your point is still valid.
@ella-vm6vf Жыл бұрын
I watched this movie when I was the mother of a small child, and I literally shook when when the missiles came out of their silos. It was too real at seeing that.
@paulsonj72 Жыл бұрын
If your market was big enough you may have had an independent station as well as PBS giving you five channels. My folks were ruffians we had a booster on our antenna allowing us to pull in Twin Cities stations as well as our in market stations
@bigchuckyinkentucky626711 ай бұрын
This movie scared the heck out of me as a kid because I knew that it could happen. It scares me now because it still can.
@johndanielsforJesus11 ай бұрын
It's inching closer......
@DarkMatterBurrito11 ай бұрын
I was 7 when this was shown on network TV. F'd me all up, lol.
@BjornJohansen-cm1sb11 ай бұрын
Live in fear? Not me I live everyday as it could be my last with some regrets but not fearful
@dr._breens_beard11 ай бұрын
Theres LESS of them now, but the fallout is still gonna significantly impact human population for decades and probably centuries to come.
@pattyamato875811 ай бұрын
I was aware of that every single day of the four years that we had a madman with this power in his hands
@DixiePokerAce Жыл бұрын
This movie was absolutely riveting. I will never forget watching this on network TV back in 1983. It makes you realize that for a nuclear attack there is absolutely no safe place to go.
@dalecastellez5416 Жыл бұрын
Or hide 🙏
@eduardomaldonado1647 Жыл бұрын
The only places to go in my opinion would be places like Latin America that always stay neutral and very far away from everyone else. Places like Argentina, Chile, they have no political, military, or economic value in a global scale. You would have to be pray you are not in direct blast when it hits and inside some kind of bunker at least 30 feet deep with enough food and water last you at least one year. 30 minute warning is nothing. Best thing to do when shit like this starts to escalate is leave the country. If you wait till the last minute no way in Hell you will be able to leave. You will have to stay inside the bunker minimum 4 weeks before it is safe to go outside. Those people that live close to an active Nuclear reactor are Shit out of luck they will never be able to go out Remember Chernobyl? that place is still not safe to live. I would not even visit if you paid me.
@Abandoned23345 Жыл бұрын
@@eduardomaldonado1647Switzerland is an option as well, they are always neutral too and have more than plenty of bunkers
@Abandoned23345 Жыл бұрын
@@eduardomaldonado1647Also, Chernobyl is safe to visit, the main rule is DON'T TOUCH ANYTHING AND FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS. The radiation level seems to be (almost) safe, but once the device is near some object or construction (especially metal), it starts to crack like crazy
@jediknightjairinaiki560 Жыл бұрын
In response to the OP's comment, Exactly, so when this happens, it's just a matter of time, there's no use in trying to run, hide, etc., just accept the end is nigh.
@paolociarpaglini13033 ай бұрын
After 42 years, it's still the most terrifying movie about a nuclear WW. This is incredible..
@josebro3522 ай бұрын
Have you seen Threads? It's just as terrifying. Also, Sarah Connor's dream scene in Terminator 2 is nightmare fuel. It's actually been cited by scholars as being an accurate interpretation of what would happen in a nuclear war.
@richgilmour59242 ай бұрын
Threads make this look like Barney the dinosaur
@dermotmeuchner24162 ай бұрын
True, Threads is absolutely brutal.
@UnearthlyChild7572 ай бұрын
Threads makes this look like The Good Life
@richgilmour59242 ай бұрын
@@UnearthlyChild757 🤣
@yurimilanchik4315 Жыл бұрын
This film should be shown to all politicians. And, more often ...
@jonnyblayze5149 Жыл бұрын
Why?
@jond4324 Жыл бұрын
Problem is a lot of them do not give a fuck. They've got their luxury bunkers fitted with just about any creature comfort you can think of. While the people are left to suffer and die on the surface. Thus paying the ultimate, final price for the personal enrichment of the officials they elected to represent and serve them. When this inevitably happens on US soil I hope I am as close to the epicenter as I can get. They will be the lucky ones
@DavidThomas-fb8bq Жыл бұрын
They've seen it. It gives them ideas.
@belladrapeau8234 Жыл бұрын
it wouldn’t do any thing they got their bomb shelters and will in them before you know what’s going on
@yurimilanchik4315 Жыл бұрын
@@jonnyblayze5149 В конце-концов,у них есть дети,родители,друзья...И,вообще,невозможно долго сидеть в убежище...Рано или поздно придётся из него вылезать...Хотя...политики = это какая-то особая категория...Они уже не люди....
@MarkJohnson-ki6qv6 ай бұрын
I was in the USAF when this came out on TV. I retired from the service in 1994. This came out in 1983. I was stationed at a SAC Minuteman missile base in South Dakota a couple of months before and we had just moved to Turkey so I didn't get to see it until my wife's parents sent it to us on VHS tape. When we returned to the states in 1985, I was stationed at the Omaha SAC Headquarters and I was on the HQ staff in the Command and Control division until SAC was deactivated in 1991, so I am very very familiar with the details of this whole movie. They cut out a few scenes in this production. Mostly very graphic scenes. There are a few other full versions of the whole movie on KZbin but they are a little bit grainy. This was more of a documentary than a dramatic movie. All of the scenes at the beginning involving SAC aircraft and the missile launch facility scenes, both above ground and below ground were real. Most of the actors were actual Air Force personnel and all of the scenes of the Airborne Command Post with the General on board were real with real people. All of this is still in play. SAC was deactivated but now it is replaced by the AF Global Strike Command. The missiles are still on alert and the B52s are still on alert as well. Everything is ready to be launched at a moments notice. The number of weapons have been reduced but they are still there.
@insideoutsideupsidedown22186 ай бұрын
3:46 US Air Force and the hidden missile silos right outside the residence halls on the KU Campus.
@MarkJohnson-ki6qv6 ай бұрын
the depiction of missiles being launched and rising into the air with contrails behind them as shown at 3:46 is meant to show what might have been visible from Lawrence, KS. The missiles being launched from silos near Whiteman AFB. Whiteman is located near Sedalia MO and is about 120 miles distant from the KU campus. Whiteman now hosts a wing of B2 bombers and has deactivated all the missiles as a result of the START treaty signed in 1991. This treaty eliminated the Minuteman II missiles in inventory which Whiteman had 150. Its probably a little doubtful that the missile launch would have been that visible from the KU campus and only the ones located close to Whiteman would have been visible at all. The missile launch facilities where located mainly to the south of Whiteman for a pretty long distance. BTW missiles were never launched for any reason since they were always on alert. The only time they would have been launched would be a a result of launch orders being issued by the president. Missiles were test launched at times by pulling randomly selected missiles without the warhead from their launch silos and transported to Vandenberg AFB located on the Pacific ocean north of Santa Barbera. These were test fired and targeted at empty atolls in the south Pacific. Since this test firing was a one way trip it was only done infrequently. There are clips in this movie of missiles being launched from Vandenberg. There were no missile silos hidden or otherwise anywhere close to the KU campus. Or any other location not on a very tightly controlled launch facility.
@uberlpn6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service to our country, I also was in the USAF stationed at Anderson AFB on Guam,
@MarkJohnson-ki6qv6 ай бұрын
@@uberlpn Thank you for your service too. When were you on Guam? My wife was there as a military brat from 1967 to 1969. She said they always watched the B52's come and go from Viet Nam and Thailand. Some were pretty shot up when they came back.
@HistoriaOrbis745 ай бұрын
Like a spectre
@williamjones71639 ай бұрын
I watched this on TV the night it broadcast. I remember this as if it were yesterday. This video brings back all the terror. The irony is that I met my boyfriend in 1985. He worked in the Airforce as a Missile launch officer. He was one on the guys that sat in the silos and turned the keys to launch the Nuclear Missiles. We were together for 33 1/3 years until he died from complications of a stroke. And the world continued.
@cybercat297 ай бұрын
Please accept my deepest condolences
@peterherrington33007 ай бұрын
How incredibly interesting. Was he tall , what did you have for lunch ?
@EastCoastGal667 ай бұрын
🙏✝️❤️
@isawit97225 ай бұрын
@@peterherrington3300Pete,if you only could get a date with a woman 😉👠
@JesseMessage29 күн бұрын
That was the plan 🎬
@woodsd44 ай бұрын
I was in the seventh grade in 1983. When this movie appeared on a Sunday night, television nationwide premiere. It was the most scariest movie that anyone had ever seen at that time. The next morning it was on every major news station across America. The aftermath of watching that movie shocked this country..
@TheLowCountryRebel5 ай бұрын
As an 18 year old watching this movie first run,it scared the hell out me. It changed me. It took months to get back to normal.
@Drobium775 ай бұрын
Watch the film Threads, it's from the British perspective, and we'd fair far worse than the States, russia would wipe us off the map 😞
@sandydiller48284 ай бұрын
@@Drobium77that gave me nightmares.
@wadedeeds17384 ай бұрын
Thats good 1st Corinthians 15;1-4..Roman's 10;9-13..Ephesians 2;8-9-10..Galatians 1;6-12 ..
@johntechwriter4 ай бұрын
Those in the know complained this TV movie was far too reined in compared with what the reality would be. Yes, the British “Threads” was more intense and realistic, showing people doing things we never thought would be allowed on TV. A few decades later, our puny attention spans have consigned global nuclear war to the archives - no longer exciting. What “Threads” brought home to me that our civilized society is three meals away from chaos.
@TheLowCountryRebel4 ай бұрын
@johntechwriter Living on the coast of South Carolina, I've witnessed first hand what you speak of ," three meals away from chaos." With an approaching hurricane thousands of miles away with a speculative forecast that may or may not bring landfall nearby, people lose their minds and empty the shelves of food and water and buy up all plywood, chainsaws and generators within a 400 mile radius. Pre-planning isn't anything near a concept for most people. I'm always prepared for many months of being without.
@packard5682 Жыл бұрын
Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet leader after Stalin, said that after a nuclear war, the living would envy the dead. There is no way that I would want to survive a nuclear war. I would rather be at ground zero than 'living' in a bunker somewhere.
@AlexGarcia-ze4yg Жыл бұрын
I would want to stick around for all the radioactive girls with 3 tits!
@Irene-iu9sj Жыл бұрын
My idea exactly.
@danw2112 Жыл бұрын
One KZbin channel has the full length version of the British nuclear apocalypse movie Threads. And that movie is more disturbing than The Day After.
@duntrolling8876 Жыл бұрын
Living in a bunker? How long for. It doesn’t matter. You will eventually be forced out by starvation and emerge into a poisoned world.
@duntrolling8876 Жыл бұрын
@@danw2112 this film is tame by comparison.
@JohnBlo766 ай бұрын
In May 1987, this film was shown in the Soviet Union on the main TV channel, and I watched it with my parents. I was 11, and the details were remembered for a long time; this film was then perceived almost as a documentary. And I’ll tell you what: no matter what they say about Gorbachev, his policies at least removed the fears of nuclear war for many years.
@free3220016 ай бұрын
Interesting. Was it to show the "defeat" of the US? What do you think was his purpose in showing it on TV.
@JohnBlo766 ай бұрын
@@free322001 No, I think that “Perestroika” had already gained momentum that year, and this film was shown on TV in order to emphasize that we need to be friends with the United States, and not fight. In those years, the Posner-Donahue “teleconferences” were already in full swing, and in general the narrative was promoted that for the sake of world peace it was necessary to establish a dialogue with the United States. This film turned out to be appropriate in the general outline of Soviet anti-war rhetoric, they say, “look, the Americans themselves made a film about the horrors of nuclear war, which is what we have always talked about.”
@free3220016 ай бұрын
@@JohnBlo76 I see. Thanks. I hate the way relations between our leaders have gotten worse as of recent.
@misterbornoof26756 ай бұрын
Горбач развалил СССР
@Xpunkpro6 ай бұрын
@@free322001Because it’s about greed. Be careful with who you call a Leader because most of them are not they are being told what to do by someone else not seen.
@AbeStephanАй бұрын
Director Nicolas Meyer made the most honest movie he could on what a nuclear war could be like .
@doorswhofan Жыл бұрын
I remember we were assigned to watch this for homework in the 8th grade. Ironic that it's even more terrifying now, 40 years later, given the present circumstances.
@Anarchist86ed Жыл бұрын
It was no more a possibility then than now. It's never gonna happen as the same people who run Russia and China run us. They also run Ukraine. There's no money in nuking the world. It's a game to them and it's all for profit.
@StinkyGreenBud Жыл бұрын
Why is it more terrifying now than during the cold war? Putin won't do shit.
@tacticalpossum7090 Жыл бұрын
Too bad your generation didnt learn anything from it, eh?
@avernikas Жыл бұрын
WEF wants this for us all! Pray for God's Kingdom
@billy6pack887 Жыл бұрын
@@tacticalpossum7090 It's actually younger people more in favour of funneling arms to Ukraine, risking escalation to a nuclear war. The only old people pushing for it are the Biden's, Obama's, etc.
@ВикторДорошенко-й6п4 ай бұрын
Смотрел этот фильм в детстве. Надо чаще показывать такие фильмы. Чтобы люди понимали, как страшна война!
@grcamel48544 ай бұрын
Productive Capitalism,bank capitalism , hypertension bank capitalism, imperialism.Imperialism is war maybe nuclear war.
@grcamel48544 ай бұрын
Americans killed 2000 korean innocent people with the Turks in one month in the war of Korea.Babies children.Wasnt north and south korea this period.
@АндрейСухоносов-ы4ы4 ай бұрын
Вот так же смотрел в детстве. Сказать что ОХРЕНЕЛ будет слишком слабо
@robertemery86604 ай бұрын
I concur
@mightymike21924 ай бұрын
Hopefully our arsehole leaders on both sides will stop escalating things.
@tonyclifton26510 ай бұрын
US President Ronald Reagan watched the film more than a month before its screening on Columbus Day, October 10, 1983. He wrote in his diary that the film was "very effective and left me greatly depressed" and that it changed his mind on the prevailing policy on a "nuclear war". The film was also screened for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A government advisor who attended the screening, a friend of Meyer, told him: "If you wanted to draw blood, you did it. Those guys sat there like they were turned to stone."
@dewfall569 ай бұрын
Apparently the Soviet Premier also saw it shortly after, and came to same conclusion. They were both horrified when seeing the realities. This film played a big part in stopping nuclear war.
@STho2057 ай бұрын
That's romantic, but if a fictional TV movie/miniseries had any effect it was the exact opposite of what the producers intended. They wanted it to galvanize public support for the Democrat in the next election to defeat Reagan, who was growing more popular each year. The backfire was that people decided strength was a better defense than diplomatic appeasement (a lesson from pre WW2). Reagan won every state in 1984 except the opponent's own state and DC...a handful of electoral votes. As it turned out Reagan didn't start WW3 but diffused it, to the point that Gorbachev said so at Reagan's funeral. Remember that FDR authorized and funded nuclear bomb development. Truman had them dropped on two cities and authorized a UN war against Communist North Korea. Johnson committed US troops to fight in Vietnam. Kennedy had almost overseen a nuclear exchange over Cuba, which was armed because US missiles to target Moscow were placed in Italy and Turkey the year before...and JFKs CIA orchestrated a failed partisan invasion of Cuba in 61. This is what Americans remembered in 1983, not the whitewash of history the media later painted. As it turns out, the Hollywood prediction of what would trigger or diffuse the Cold War was exactly backwards.
@user-bl6ne3hc6n7 ай бұрын
Yep, and it didn't take long for Reagan and Gorbachev to meet, and end this cold war crap,
@user-bl6ne3hc6n7 ай бұрын
@@STho205yep you're spot on it was to go after Reagan, and Reagan turned around and threw it in their face because it wasn't that much longer that he met with Gorbachev and try to stop this cold war, and did.
@scottmatheson33467 ай бұрын
@@STho205 you know the partisan derangement has hit you hard when you feel compelled to fabricate a narrative about the movie producers' intent because you feel threatened by their presumed politics. Bonus points when you tack your fabrication onto a post that is actually conciliatory towards the politician whose side you're taking because even a conciliatory position isn't good enough for you.
@JohnRoberts-wk6rf Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this movie when it first came out on TV when I was 27. This scene sent chills down my spine. It still does.
@larvancioramos9748 Жыл бұрын
Your spine??? 👀
@vangogo6819 Жыл бұрын
Same here, I was in my twenties when it came out and it had and has the same effect on me, chills down my spine, now more than ever.
@michaela7100 Жыл бұрын
@@larvancioramos9748 hahaha
@michaela7100 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this film when it came out too. I was 13 and remember laughing so hard at how ridiculous this really was. Time has only proven that to be more so
@sandyaw3057 Жыл бұрын
I was 26 when this first came out on tv, and recently gave birth to our first daughter 3 months prior to the movie. I had no idea how realistic it was going to be or I wouldn’t have watched it. My emotions were still right at the surface and it took me weeks to be able to get through the day without crying and being hypervigilant. I actually could just barely watch this again, but I think they should show it again as I don’t think the war in Ukraine is being taken seriously enough. Putin is an extremely dangerous and evil man.
@jeremypreston5009 Жыл бұрын
I'm amazed at how authentic the acting at the missile silos was
@ukissrulez Жыл бұрын
Liar
@tomservo5347 Жыл бұрын
They just filmed actual Air Force crews doing the endless launch drills they undergo to be certified. They still do these today.
@ukissrulez Жыл бұрын
@@tomservo5347 liar
@skulldozer1462 Жыл бұрын
@@ukissrulezliar
@ukissrulez Жыл бұрын
@@skulldozer1462 liar
@laurabogue35036 ай бұрын
John Lithgow is such an underrated actor. He could play the captain of the Titanic. He is so stoic and calm. The realization there is no recall no way to stop what comes next.
@kenlompart99055 ай бұрын
And he was hilarious in 3rd Rock From The Sun, the man is one of the most diverse actors there ever was.
@burtknighten44385 ай бұрын
And he was in Harry and the Hendersons
@MarkHower-ne5zc5 ай бұрын
....and the bad guy in Dexter!
@covingtonhalltown37305 ай бұрын
He's underrated because his face doesn't match most scripts.
@kurtb84745 ай бұрын
He was in the Twilight zone movie at the same time this was made. He was far from stoic and calm.
@achyshaff565322 күн бұрын
I was 11 yo when this came out. We all watched it on one tv in my house and the next day spoke about it in class. I remember so vividly the silence in my classroom as the poor teacher attempted to explain things to us. Of course kids were talking about how it would be much worse than even the movie depicted, which made me more anxious. The scene of all the flashes of people just evaporating haunted me for so long. My 11yo brain couldn’t grasp it. I ended up having to sleep in my parents room for months. No Horror film ever got me like this made for TV movie in 1983.
@beeepizzle9 ай бұрын
For its time, the high altitude detonation for EMP and the first strike impact in scenes moments later with Robards’ character taking shelter inside his Volvo while the explosion is visible in the distant background really got the point across. May we never experience nuclear war…🙏🏻
@CurtisWhitehead-wn5bs7 ай бұрын
Amen 💯
@markzerkle18996 ай бұрын
If you time it, it is exactly 30 seconds between the EMP detonation and the arrival of the first nukes. In the movie detail, it was revealed that the EMP burst was to disable ABM facilities at nearby Whiteman AFB.
@williamhicks77365 ай бұрын
Volvo used to air commercials showing their safety features. Some even included crashes …. This movie was perhaps a part of that promotion…
@coolcat63034 ай бұрын
That EMP blast is so sinister. Imagine hearing that Nuclear missiles are on their way to you and will impact your city within minutes. And as you try to get away… your car, motorcycle, plane, helicopter, etc. won’t start. It basically sealed the fate of almost everyone in Kansas City.
@nikitapankratov50306 ай бұрын
I was born in USSR in late 70's, honestly we haven't had this kind of movies in cinemas, but a lot of documentaries and real pictures from Hiroshima were demostrated during special course of co called "civil safety" courses at scool. I remember how shocked and impressed I was, even having nightmares when I had 10-12 years. I do remember this constant feeling of possible eventual catastrophy. The problem is that we never saw the same deception of American people, which is a way of manipulation and artifical creation of enemy perception. I hope those who remember and understand that may make effort to reduce actual tension and progression to madness. We share same values of family and peaceful life, and we sould never forget that we have same uniqie home - Earth.
@plaistowbill6 ай бұрын
The Day After was played in Soviet theatres. Great comment. Thoughtful.
@paulflood58765 ай бұрын
USA and Sweden can wear this eventuality with the expansion of NATO after the Republicans Reagan and Bush promised not to for the end of the cold war. Boris Johnson, Macron add Zelensky added to the mess. Can't blame Putin only. He asked for no more sticks in his eyes. What would Biden do if Russia put sticks in Mexico?
@danobrien36955 ай бұрын
✌❤
@rustywoods4645 ай бұрын
We are all truly brothers and sisters
@jorgeherrera10755 ай бұрын
Great technology only for human destruction
@Paramedicpr835 Жыл бұрын
I was in middle school when this movie came out and it scared the shit out of me to the point of having nightmares for many days after watching it. Even now I am almost 55 years old and it makes me very uneasy rewatching it. The scariest part of all is that at any moment this can happen in real life.
@jephrokimbo9050 Жыл бұрын
yes, and with the megalomaniac vlad put-HITLER-in charge of russia as a DICTATOR FOR LIFE and his fellow russian oligarch sycophants. xi jinping in china is just as INSANE! the real problem is BRANDON who has NO IDEA what planet he is on let alone wat time of day it is!
@kevindavis35 Жыл бұрын
Yup me too, same age, I remember
@mariaharrison7228 Жыл бұрын
I was 19, nightmares on and off for weeks, I'm glad it showed the horror, we think it will be like the movies, nothing could be further from the truth, just seeing the skin deteriorating was horrific.
@DavidStruveDesigns Жыл бұрын
It already happened. Twice. Nagasaki and Hiroshima, remember? Only unlike in the movie there _were_ no "air raid" sirens to warn them of the bomb, not that it would have done them much good any way.
@jonnyblayze5149 Жыл бұрын
@@DavidStruveDesigns nope, they dont remember. Thats why it will happen again
@dimitriosgrigoriadis44203 ай бұрын
I was 8 years old when this movie was shown on soviet tv. Still crying on this scene
@gnorggstrandoshian95883 ай бұрын
Aha, did the Americans sell their propaganda all the way over the Iron Curtain? 🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮
@mariadubiriencastanopatin93633 ай бұрын
Los rusos la vieron ??? Pues no parece es como si cuando Putin cada rato amenaza a occidente ellos no entendieran que la final es mutua
@darkangelmichael61487 ай бұрын
This movie devoid of CGI or AI...for it's time, was very well done. It brought the horror of nuclear holocaust into everyone's living room.
@darkangelmichael61487 ай бұрын
@Don-rl1sm Hey ..we have a SCHOLAR in our midst. Bet you know how to spell masturbation real well.
@user9e42vd6 ай бұрын
Всех,кроме тех,которые до сих пор угрожают всему миру ядерной катастрофой
@silentrage89615 ай бұрын
@@user9e42vdNa.. man, it's Climate change now! Get out of the past.
@silentrage89615 ай бұрын
@@darkangelmichael6148what did they say?
@Dr.W.Krueger4 ай бұрын
It's a miracle they achieved what you see here on a tiny for-TV budget. A lot of public domain stock footage, but also some nice mushroom clouds generated in a cloud tank, combined with cel animation.
@PriceFamPrime10 ай бұрын
I was 11 when this came out on TV and we were all excited to see it because it took place in Kansas, where we were from. We gathered as a family to watch it at my grandparents house, and by the time the missiles fell and the aftermath was shown, we were horrified. I had nightmares for months of my parents being vaporized or dying slowly of radiation sickness. This was one of those moments that changed a generation.
@berndmensing87078 ай бұрын
Sorry. But nothing changed. Every generation . The same
@Dmitry-k4z8 ай бұрын
Вот вы наивная! Нечего не изменилось. Все ещё может случиться.
@muskaan5551 Жыл бұрын
This movie needs to be shown to everyone
@catherineblack2970 Жыл бұрын
It was!!!! 40 years ago along with the other movie called THREADS. We are TOO DUMB today to even care.
@Mrbimmer11 Жыл бұрын
@@catherineblack2970 And the conflict in ukrane can make this become real soon more soon than the cupa crises in the 60s
@bobgordon236 Жыл бұрын
@@Mrbimmer11 Datz fer sho sweet cakez. Dem rooskies are tuff mfers
@ahungryspiderateme Жыл бұрын
It's like the movie "don't look up." Most people will deny this outcome.
@jimnfl7134 Жыл бұрын
show it to Putin in Russia 4 times by March 10th.
@dsnowman26753 ай бұрын
I was 8 years old. I remember watching this with my parents. It's affected me till this day. I was way too young to watch a movie like this
@cjhurtado7310 ай бұрын
I remember being 9yrs old watching this. It was a huge TV event. Scared me as a kid. The UK Threads movie that came out year later was also equally chilling at this time in the 80s
@amatomic2577 ай бұрын
We NEED movies like this one and Threads. I usually don't like reboots but I wish this one would get a reboot as a warning for younger generations.
@TreyVaswal Жыл бұрын
While the whole of Threads is by far the more horrifying, the launch and ascent sequence here is the most purely terrifying scene for me of the two. A pleasant mundane afternoon and the apocalypse is beginning over there on the horizon. John Lithgow's character know's he's looking right into the abyss.
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Жыл бұрын
Part to take note in “ Threads” is towards the end of the film. Those with guns determine who gets food…
@simonwilson1237 Жыл бұрын
i saw threads when i was younger it scared the shit out of me for weeks and the teachers wonderd why no one was paying attention to school work
@Roddy55610 ай бұрын
Very well done for a TV movie. Scary as shit.
@roberttownsend33910 ай бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218and those who suffer the longest.
@mariesimbeck987510 ай бұрын
I served in the Strategic Air Command in the Air Force back in the seventies. I was stationed on missile bases. This movie was pretty spot on as to what would happen. Scary.
@cracker47068 ай бұрын
Grand Forks 80-83
@surfbum80698 ай бұрын
F E Warren 79-83
@karenlbellmont65607 ай бұрын
Thank you to silo operators. Most horrible position to have.
@karenlbellmont65607 ай бұрын
Think about all the silos going off and then think about Yellowstone blowing up. Same end.
@brendapannell33107 ай бұрын
I was born on a SAC base in the early 70s (KI Sawyer). My mom remembers them lying about there being missiles on base.
@matsu5010 Жыл бұрын
This is the type of stuff that makes me want to go back way before any advanced weaponry was ever made, especially the nuclear ones. The fact something is capable of leveling a whole city and more in a matter of moments is terrifying, and the fact that this is a very real possibility is even more so.
@JP3_C6Z Жыл бұрын
It’s rather unlikely believe it or not. The problem is, any leader can decide they want to nuke another country. It’s not up to them to push the button. Those actually in charge wouldnt want to kill all of their family and friends
@warrior6803 Жыл бұрын
Yes haw hard is to set a blaze wooden village
@explorer47422 Жыл бұрын
Or the fact that it's actually happened already, twice
@Avalon_1991 Жыл бұрын
There would be a lot more wars though. The threat of nuclear war has prevented a major European war because everyone is too afraid of the consequences.
@gerrypeet486111 ай бұрын
@@Avalon_1991 You realize that there is a major war going in Europe at the time of your comment and is still going on to this day. Your logic makes zero sense.
@alecbrinker726811 ай бұрын
I was 10 when this movie came out. Nothing before or after has scared me as much. I did not sleep for days after this. Nothing but nightmares. What a terrifying time.
@antonfarr78111 ай бұрын
I was 13 and It scared me as well. It still bothers me today knowing it could still happen!
@johnnix86210 ай бұрын
I was 24, and with my only child, on the way. The whole thing, had me speechless, and scared, for the next day. ( Not the movie. Real life ) I have not seen it, since that night, and gave me goosebumps, at 65. I'm not trying to one up, anyone commenting here. I just hope, it never happens, for real.
@Roddy55610 ай бұрын
@johnnix862 that's extra terrifying really because you can tell your kids there are no such thing as monsters or ghosts but there is now and always will be a possibility of nuclear war.
@roccomitchell-wo9qi10 ай бұрын
So did I
@whiskeykilo2h4299 ай бұрын
No those terrifying times are coming soon. Biden is pushing it.
@frankcano53010 ай бұрын
I worked the missile fields during the time this movie came out and before it did one of my worst nightmares was of working out on an LCF on a bright sunny day and suddenly on the horizon, seeing all the missiles in the wing start flying into the sky. At that moment you know that life as we know it is over.
@Roddy55610 ай бұрын
There are some hard nosed people with experience in the defense industry who have talked like an attack could be "shrugged off". I don't think you could ever model or simulate everything from the human factors to the scale of destruction. Nothing even close to a two way nuclear war has ever happened so I wouldn't doubt there are consequences no one has even thought of yet.
@markcritic24099 ай бұрын
@@Roddy556"Threads" at least touched on that. Life after nukes will be hell. Pure hell.
@Roddy5569 ай бұрын
@markcritic2409 yeah 9/11 threw the world off kilter and that would be like a few drips of water into a bathtub by comparison.
@markcritic24099 ай бұрын
@@Roddy556- nobody can imagine entire cities of million+ people entirely engulfed in the flames of a firestorm. ...then the long, cold, grey sickness and starvation if you survived it all.
@jozcarter34288 ай бұрын
Yes they litterally went back to the stone age quite frightening
@scottdunkirk81983 ай бұрын
Bad thing is too many don’t know what we all dealt with in the Cold War era
@ladysilverwynde2 ай бұрын
Young people: Let's go back to the 1980s! Me, a child of the 1980s: *laughs in Cold War PTSD*
@scottdunkirk81982 ай бұрын
@@ladysilverwynde it’s funny all the wimps crying about all the stress, they would have been locked in the crazy house in the 70s and 80s lol
@straightup7up5 ай бұрын
Special effects in this film were off the charts for that time. Mushroom clouds look so realistic
@CraigFactsareFacts4 ай бұрын
Some were real. They were taken from tests that were conducted by the military.
@latsnojokelee64344 ай бұрын
During this time computer animation wasn’t yet developed well enough to use for movies. So what you’re seeing is a lot of films that the army made when they were testing real nuclear weapons. This was really common back in the 70s and 80s… To use footage from World War II or footage from the government in regular movies and TV shows to save on the cost of special effects. In order to make special effects back then you literally had to make models, and then try to blow them up. So what they’re doing here is they film the picture of the town and then they lay on top of that footage of bombs going off probably from some old military film.
@Jimbo80124 ай бұрын
@@latsnojokelee6434 - Oh come on. Star Wars A New Hope was 6 years before this. Star Trek The Motion Picture was 4 years before. 2001: A Space Odyssey was 15 years beforehand. All had much better special effects than The Day After because their budgets were much higher. It was well within Douglas Trumbull & Industrial Light and Magic's capability at the time to do a few mushroom clouds over a matte backdrop and make it look a million times better than this. The rest as you say would have been models blown up like in T2. Threads used old quality stock military footage of nuclear tests. The Day Today did it from scratch and it hasn't stood the test of time. The bombs are incredibly unrealistic for a start. You'd see the light and explosion of a 1 megaton nuclear explosion, but you'd only hear the sound about 48 seconds if you were 10 miles away like here.
@coolcat63034 ай бұрын
@@Jimbo8012Considering this was made in 1982, on a tv budget, i’d say the F/X were actually pretty good. They were also effective enough to scare the living crap outta millions of Americans including Ronald Reagan himself. And it’s a movie not a documentary. So there was no need to be ultra realistic about noise levels or length.
@coolcat63034 ай бұрын
@@latsnojokelee6434It’s true that they used actual WW2 footage of atomic bomb destruction. But I think the mushroom clouds were actually F/X that the filmmakers came up with.
@jeffreyhartwig4965 Жыл бұрын
I saw this in HS... couldn't sleep after... My dad RIP was in the Dutch Air Force, in the 1960's he worked for NATO in the Netherlands before we immigrated (legally) to the US. He finally told us what he did for NATO after he was 75 yo.... Miss you Papa..
@robw7205 Жыл бұрын
You're Dutch, "legally" was already assumed. 👍
@grtlover6 ай бұрын
When my ex and I watched this the first time it was aired, after huge media promotion, we stared at the TV screen for the entire movie and never said a word to each other. It was a state of shock that I have no words to describe...
@purefreedom2826 ай бұрын
The realism in this movie beats any other..back then they didn't have the technology but they sure knew how to make you feel everything was real. You can feel the sadness, the fear and realism in this movie. I remember seeing it at a cinema in the south of Italy with my family..I was 11 I think
@tomlee20085 ай бұрын
@@purefreedom282have you ever watched Threads? Now that was terrifying.
@williamramey19595 ай бұрын
So, are you saying that you are bankrolling her retirement?
@joe-nz4xz4 ай бұрын
Did she have big jugs
@t0manderson5714 ай бұрын
Same as the thirty guys in the bar I was in.
@kevinvanvechtenКүн бұрын
This movie is a constant reminder to everyone that there are no winners in a nuclear war
@davidglover2023 Жыл бұрын
Still a chilling movie 40 years ago this fall.
@markcana2917 Жыл бұрын
Mee too 😵
@chrisholland7367 Жыл бұрын
A year later, the BBC made a docu drama called Threads it was about the build-up and aftermath of nuclear strike on the northern English city of Sheffield. It depicted life before, during, and after nuclear war .It follows a group of characters, although one is waa central to the story . It pulls no punches and shows in graphic detail the horror of a nuclear strike and ten years into post-apocalyptic Britain . Nightmare fuel.
@jesjoking Жыл бұрын
Given recents events with Russia, uncomfortably contemporary.
@nghtwtchmn129 Жыл бұрын
Three years later, there was an chilling mini-series that was made in direct response to The Day After: Amerika. It was about life in the United States under Soviet occupation.
@nepntzerZer Жыл бұрын
It's a nuclear war
@planetdisco4821 Жыл бұрын
This movie frightened the absolute crap out of me as a teen… And then I saw Threads…
@nigelft Жыл бұрын
There's a review by a couple of Americans here on KZbin, comparing 'Threads' with 'The Day After'. One of them said the former made the latter look like a Disney movie ... I was 10 when 'Threads' was shown on the BBC, here in England, in 1984. My parents sent me to bed early, so I missed it, as, iiirc, it was shown at 9.30pm. But that didn't stop other kids in my class from watching it. It wasn't until a couple of decades later I bought a bootleg copy off the Internet, that I finally got to see it. It has been many years since I saw it, but some scenes are still in my memory, especially the ending ... Funny thing is, I live only a few miles from Heathrow Airport, well within the blast radius of just a 1MT warhead, though I suspect way more than one would've/would be targeted on it. Living on the 3rd floor (4th if you count Ground Floor as 1st), I'm just high enough to see the flash, before the heat, then shock wave hits. Given the likely overpressure, the remaining three floors above my flat would collapse on me ... ... or at least I hope so ... I would highly recommend 'When The Wind Blows'. Based off of a children's book, of all things, the animated version is not graphic. per-se, but it is as chilling as hell ... even that alone should be enough to make people realise that a global thermonuclear war is unwinnable ...
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Жыл бұрын
@@nigelft what i learned from “Threads” was whoever had the guns got to eat.
@DoubleOProductions Жыл бұрын
@@nigelft did you buy that bootleg copy from me? I sold a bunch on ebay... only £15 but I did author a marvelous dvd video menu screen and had extras.. even printed a good cover and disc... the extras included the protect and survive manual from the time.
@johnringoo756 Жыл бұрын
I saw threads and thought it was 😑
@TheFatesLieutenant Жыл бұрын
Threads is/was truly terrifying.
@Izzyduude5 ай бұрын
I’ve noticed that the young black girl heading into the building with her grandfather gets trampled to death in the stairwell when people are panicking from the nukes going off. You can see her body in the forefront of the scene. A very sad but noticeable detail about what happens when people panic.
@CM-jk5tf3 ай бұрын
I was 13 years old! The impact sound alone is a sound I'll never forget! They'll be nothing left to fight for. May God be with us all.
@b.aorellana60792 ай бұрын
It's not the end times yet this year and 2025
@douglee3651 Жыл бұрын
When this first aired (and this was even announced in advance several times), zero ads played after the strike. It is the only time in television history of which I am aware, that such a move was made. The impact was the point, the networks aided it, and the world heard it. Now, we just need to remember it.
@jorgevillavicencio427 Жыл бұрын
@Doug Lee I remember that distinctly. I was 23 and recently married living in NYC. It was kind of eary to see little traffic in the city and very few people around. Everyone stayed home to watch this movie. Like everyone else, we were pretty dumbfounded by the quality of it. I also remember Reagan speaking of it in a interview in which he pledged to eliminate the nuclear arsenals as long as the Soviet Union agreed to meet and speak of the consequences of a nuclear war were there will be no winners. 6 years later the Berlin Wall came down and communism was no more. There's another nuclear disaster film called Testament with Jane Alexander in the leading role. I highly recommend it if you haven't seen it.
@md-ps2hx Жыл бұрын
Looking back, from a 2020 perspective, I realise it was just FEAR porn ...
@daleviker5884 Жыл бұрын
@@md-ps2hx It was worse than fear porn. It was deliberate propaganda from left-leaning Hollywood to help stop communism from collapsing. This movie had only one purpose, and that was to cause snowflakes in the west to agitate for the US to give up their nuclear weapons. The soviet union was in its final days, and this was a way of encouraging idiots and left wing radicals to undermine the West.
@dasfx9909 Жыл бұрын
There’s actually an even more disturbing movie called “Threads”, which came out at the same time as this…1983. British version of nuclear holocaust. Very disturbing
@АрхиВладимир Жыл бұрын
Постройтесь вспоминать об этом чаще, когда отпровляете танки и бронемашины на Украину. Вы верите что Россия проиграет? Если мы почуствуем возможность проигроша у нас не будет выбора мы применим ядерное оружие по Украине и по тем кто полезет в наши внутриние разборки. Что бы чуствовали Американцы если бы у них отобрали бы Техас и еще пять штатов, которые раньше были Техасом и превратили бы их во враждебное государство. А Украина это не Техас который вы отняли у Мексики, Россию и Украину связвает гораздо более долгая история, раньше Украина называлась Малая Россия, это позже она получила название у края( не знаю поймете ли вы с автопереводчиком) Смысл названия Украина звучит на русском у края на границе России. Мы в России воспринимаем происходящие как гражданскую войну и незабудем вмешательство во внутрение разборки, "Циркон" с ядерным зарядом летит до Америки 8 мин. для подготовки к запуску американских ракет надо 40 мин. Помните об этом. Ваши ракеты могут просто быть уничтожены в шахтах. "Сармат " несет несколько термоядерных зарядов.Способен уничтожит штат средних размеров. "Пойседон" поднимает волну в пять сотен метровона пройдет в глубь континента на тысячи километров, притом вода будет радиоктивная. Прекращайте лезть во внутрение дела русского народа, не накликайте беды.
@robglennie95266 ай бұрын
This movie should play every year so Nuclear war never becomes normalized.
@air2656 ай бұрын
They should be banned and it has to be said, that there are no nukes whatsoever.
@Andy1805-y8w6 ай бұрын
Already the US is talking about using a very low yield nuclear weapon in Ukraine against Russian forces. And Poland has just agreed to host US nuclear missiles on its soil. The creatures running the show in the US are as mad as cut snakes and they will do anything to "beat" Russia... even kicking off an atomic holocaust.
@RideAcrossTheRiver4 ай бұрын
Oh, it's quite normal to Putolf and Trumpler.
@air2654 ай бұрын
@@RideAcrossTheRiver There are no nukes.
@RideAcrossTheRiver4 ай бұрын
@@air265 Wow, your type is stupid.
@relaxer375 ай бұрын
The population of the world needs to see this and everything to educate us. The danger is very close and we need to be scared now.
@niklasra669Ай бұрын
This movie needs a remake and it should be mandatory for every human on earth to watch it
@develynseether4426Ай бұрын
Why? It won't change anything
@colettewilliams357510 ай бұрын
This is, without a doubt, the scariest movie I've ever seen.
@uskyutah9 ай бұрын
along with Threads, the UK version
@taraelizabethdensley94758 ай бұрын
Threads was even more disturbing
@uskyutah8 ай бұрын
@@taraelizabethdensley9475 because Threads showed the aftermath without makeup, and on longer term
@shirleytracz82987 ай бұрын
I had a 2 year old when this aired. It tore my heart out to see the little child suffering from radiation sickness😢
@thevikingwarrior6 ай бұрын
Better than being barbequed alive.
@kenlompart99055 ай бұрын
@@thevikingwarrior Wrong, dying from radiation sickness is a much worse fate than instant death, if you have any doubts just watch the mini series Chernobyl.
@ladysilverwynde2 ай бұрын
@@thevikingwarriorThat's the merciful way to exit a nuclear war.
@toddmiller5884 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this when I was in high school. At the part where the missiles launch my stepsister ran upstairs to her room screaming in terror. I don't blame her. Bear in mind that 1983 was right after the death of Leonid Brezhnev and a nuclear war with the Soviets was a distinct possibility. We had no idea at that time that the whole Soviet system would come crashing down eight years later.
@GreatPolishWingedHussars Жыл бұрын
That was the time when the fear of a nuclear war was commonplace in Europe. Is it that time again soon?
@elisecooper1942 Жыл бұрын
Scary at that time I was just graduating High School. It's still scary to think it can happen sooner than we know. It's about to get real.
@kennethtilton6137 Жыл бұрын
The Soviet system thankfully failed via the “peace through strength@ doctrine of Ronald Reagan. No revisionist history can change that.
@Xariama Жыл бұрын
Especially after Able Archer 83 nearly freaked the Soviets out enough to push that button in the first place.
@travis7277 Жыл бұрын
It sort of reminds me of the part of the movie, where the farmer's wife is more worried about making the bed and her daughters wedding, so her husband has to restrain her and escort her into the basement. Meanwhile her denial turns into sheer panic, and lets out the worst scream.
@tkreign56845 күн бұрын
I repeat THIS IS NOT A EXCERCISE
@ActiveAussie2024 Жыл бұрын
That scene on the highway looking back towards the city and the blast is incredible.
@user-qs7qz2cf4l Жыл бұрын
No movie has ever demonstrated such authentic raw material, being followed by our worst thoughts and feelings in case of a nuclear attack. 40 years have passed and I'm astonished like the first time for the realism i watch. A unique documentary film like no other!
@albertoandrade9807 Жыл бұрын
You should see the British equivalent, the name is "threads" I'm dead serious that TDA looks like a Disney movie by comparison
@user-qs7qz2cf4l Жыл бұрын
@@albertoandrade9807 I have just watched it, truly apocalyptic and raw thank you for the answering.
@drivingschool1110 ай бұрын
@@albertoandrade9807 I agree
@roquefortfiles9 ай бұрын
All the visuals are just lifted stock footage of nuclear test detonations.
@drivingschool119 ай бұрын
War is business, and this type of movies will drop the price of shares related to war. Get real.
@jeanaleigh1677 Жыл бұрын
I was 12 years old when this aired on TV. I begged my parents to watch with them, but they knew how scared I usually got with horror movies, so they said no. I snuck up the stairs and watched around the corner. I had nightmares for months, and was terrified everyday back then, that this would happen to us. Always listen to your parents!!
@YuckFoutube-e1z10 ай бұрын
Good story. Needs more dragons.
@bbb81823 ай бұрын
I was a kid back then and nuclear war was always in the back of my mind. When Gorbachev allowed the Berlin Wall to come down I breathed easier for the first time.
@artemicionkupo4367 Жыл бұрын
Wow... I got chills. Felt like 9/11 when the whole world stopped and went silent. Instead of people going outside like in this film, it was televised and people were near the TVs. Crazy memory to have. I can't ever forget that feeling. I don't think anyone can for those who remember that time.
@nyanates5 ай бұрын
I remember the local churches hosting the initial screening of this as a way to lessen its emotional impact in our neighborhoods. My church showed it and hosted a lengthy Q&A discussion afterward. I was more frightened from the discussion than I was the actual movie. The pucker-factor was great with this one.
@dethray10004 ай бұрын
here we are today--so damn close--scott ritter,ex marine command and intel officer says we are miliseconds away...ugh,big ugh
@ChestonU Жыл бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="470">7:50</a> - This little panic sequence was filmed on the Square in my hometown, where I still live. I was very small at the time, and I remember my parents stopping by with me just outside the cordoned off area while they were filming. Hearing the yelling, cars honking, and general running about. Bear in mind, we had nuclear missile silos just a few miles outside of town. People in this movie would have absolutely seen the missiles being launched, just like it was depicted. Even to this day, when I see this movie, seeing the places I know and grew up with, it hits even harder. But for the grace of God, and perhaps even in no small part to the popular impact of this movie, the events depicted did not become our reality.
@soulerflare7 Жыл бұрын
Wasn't this in Lawrence , Kansas ?
@ChestonU Жыл бұрын
@@soulerflare7 The story is set in Lawrence KS, but filming was done there, in Kansas City, and also in my hometown.
@rrrt01 Жыл бұрын
@@ChestonU A lot of this was also filmed right in Lawrence. The downtown part of the city, on Mass street was almost entirely used as a set. I was a senior at Lawrence High at the time. We had noticed several different locations around town that were used as well.
@westcoast9651 Жыл бұрын
May God and Putin hear you 🙏
@jacobpeters5458 Жыл бұрын
the irony that in the movie the Russians cut off West Berlin, but today it's NATO sanctioning Russia and sending aid to a country that has nothing to do with it. NATO is the new USSR
@tommy9656 ай бұрын
And even so, 80's was the decade registering the highest music composition creation and the best decade in terms of music, singers, styles, etc. That confirms that human beings reach its peak point when they're stepping in the razor edge. Any day could be the last one. Amazing.
@samwheat83487 ай бұрын
People don't understand how close we are right now to this breaking out at any moment.
@EphemeralProductions7 ай бұрын
😐😔 its so damn scary and sad
@simunator7 ай бұрын
hardly, nukes are strategic weapons. no one is dumb enough to use them and they have so many failsafes in place that the only way to launch them is for an entire echelon to desire the extinction of humanity unanimously, simultaneously
@peterherrington33007 ай бұрын
You were great in ghost . Especially when you died , I liked that bit
@EphemeralProductions7 ай бұрын
@@peterherrington3300 lol
@willembass7 ай бұрын
Lets get it over with. Humanity is done on this planet. Too many People.
@Uncommonsenses10 ай бұрын
I remember being terrified after this aired when I was in third grade. My step father tried to calm me down by telling me that nobody in charge would be dumb enough to start a nuclear war. That was the first time I ever saw him in context as a person. We both knew that human beings are stupid enough to destroy ourselves. We both knew there was nothing we could do about it. I was crying about a reality that he knew and accepted. We stood under the madness of the bomb together and I stopped my crying. Live as well as you can until the fools take it all away.
@dre45348 ай бұрын
You still close with your stepdad?
@Kazilikaya2 ай бұрын
This is the best nuclear attack scene in cinematic history. It shows graphically how awesomely destructive nuclear weapons are.
@marysueeasteregg2 ай бұрын
I'm not sure I wouldn't rank Threads's version of an actual attack over this one. Certainly, for the horror of the long-term aftermath, Threads exceeds The Day After. But Threads covers a much longer time period.
@MA-iv7olАй бұрын
@@marysueeasteregg I've seen threads, it's laughable at best. The UK would have few survivors after an attack like this. In The Day After nearly everyone dies in the United States, you really think there would be that many survivors on a tiny island nation like the UK, lol. They did a decent attack scene in Threads, that's where it ends.
@KazilikayaАй бұрын
@@marysueeasteregg Threads didn't have a particular good attack scene. The explosions in threads were silent. American movies have the best special effects hands down.
@marysueeastereggАй бұрын
@@Kazilikaya For what you are talking about -- "attack" in the sense of impact/blast -- I agree with you very strongly, The Day After is superior. When I said "attack," I meant the effect of nuclear war-in-general, the long term effects. I did not make myself clear enough.
@dwslar4ever10 ай бұрын
I've seen this movie several times and it still gives me chills....
@ThePaleGuy0110 ай бұрын
I see the reality and it gives me chills.
@floydbrennan9789 Жыл бұрын
"Threads" may have been more intense as far as the depiction of the aftermath. However, "The Day After" will always be THE NUKE FILM that contains the BEST depiction of the very frightening build up to the attack, as well as the very terrifying attack scenes themselves.
@steveb7429 Жыл бұрын
I watched this in 1983 as a teenager, and I remember thinking that I would want to be one of the people who died instantly, rather than go through the horrible suffering that came afterwards.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Жыл бұрын
I heard a mother say they hoped her young son got sucked into a DC-10 jet when 9 got pulled out of the plane. Over just being thrown out into nothing. There were 2 or 3 in the engine. They couldn't tell.
@bluekhalifatm9131 Жыл бұрын
😥
@silentopinion Жыл бұрын
I saw this years later. I felt the same way.
@michaelcoyen1714 Жыл бұрын
I too would like to be at ground zero.
@ohwell94 Жыл бұрын
Yup just give me a general direction where its going to hit because I want to get as close to the blast as I can
@georgiaredding5435Ай бұрын
This movie scared the crap out of me when it came out. I was 13. I was raised in small town Kansas, and went to school at KU
@heru-deshet359 Жыл бұрын
This was a TV movie I first saw in 1983. It was galvanizing, depressing and very scary. It brought understanding of what the aftermath of a nuclear strike would do to civilization and no one liked it. Until then, Hollywood had a rule of always having a happy ending in movies. This production changed all that.
@djinn5658 Жыл бұрын
This was the first time I ever felt depression and had no idea what it was or what to call it. I remember feeling that life was pointless and hopeless and it was inevitable that the Soviets would kill us all and this was how it would play out. I think I was in 2nd or 3rd grade?
@5roundsrapid263 Жыл бұрын
It wasn’t the first movie to end in nuclear war. “Dr. Strangelove” did 20 years before.
@anthonymarino7718 Жыл бұрын
The actual...much worse
@bernieburawski1446 Жыл бұрын
@@5roundsrapid263 I think Dr. Strangelove was meant as a dark comedy and not supposed to be a realistic depiction of nuclear war.
@rapatacush3 Жыл бұрын
No nuclear winter
@b.thomas8926 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this as a kid and going, "Damn, nuclear war sucks." As an adult and I learned more, I realized that this show didn't even come close to how bad it would be.
@paulboger3101 Жыл бұрын
Threads was much closer to the reality. This is still scary enough.
@David-yo5re Жыл бұрын
This movie scared the hell out of me. I was 13 years old and I had nightmares about dying from a nuclear attack. I would wake up screaming.
@b.thomas8926 Жыл бұрын
@@David-yo5re The 80's, right? Rubik cubes, Atari, and nuclear war.
@Raven.flight Жыл бұрын
@@paulboger3101 Yeah, the Day After is the fluffy nice sweet 'most people live happily ever after' Hollywood version of nuclear war. Threads is 'hold my beer'.
@johnwelch5132 Жыл бұрын
The War Game was also harrowing. To such an extent the BBC wouldn’t show it for 40 years. They all show the futility of such a conflict.
@PPGGORILLA Жыл бұрын
I was 12 years old when this movie came out. It scared me more than any horror movie I've ever seen. It still scares me 40 years later.
@marklassanske271611 ай бұрын
Says in the Bible that man will beg to die but won't be able too
@gerardiovine435010 ай бұрын
I was 15 and it scared the heck out of me then still does now as well
@crow00123 ай бұрын
Watched this movie in primary school for a lesson Never forget
@datmeme8967 Жыл бұрын
Who else remembers the psychological impact this had on people in the 80s?
@michaelellams9105 Жыл бұрын
It did me as an Aussie and still does today.
@odysseusrex5908 Жыл бұрын
I remember it had little to none. There was a lot of hype leading up to the broadcast about how utterly traumatizing it would be and would change the political landscape of the nation. It didn't happen.
@datmeme8967 Жыл бұрын
@@odysseusrex5908 I didn't ask if it had a political impact. Gun violence is utterly traumatizing to people but politicians continue to do nothing. The two things are often disconnected.
@odysseusrex590811 ай бұрын
@@sail027li Oh, I'd say by the next day.
@richardunger217711 ай бұрын
Yup..I was in the military....terrifying times.I remember the feeling from 40 yrs ago because I feel it now more than ever
@GreatWhiteShark759 ай бұрын
To this very day, it is STILL the number 1 most watched televised made for TV movie in history.
@ChildovGhad7 ай бұрын
And it will always remain so. We will never have only 4 TV channel options (including public television) ever again. At least, not until we nuke ourselves back to the stone age and eventually rebuild back to where we rediscover how to make TV again in another 15,000 years, anyway.
@CaesarInVa10 ай бұрын
I came off 3 years active duty in the US Navy in 1982, and a little later this movie came out. Let me tell you, this movie sums up things pretty well. We were eyeball-to-eyeball with the Soviets in the early 1980s and were ready for the balloon to go up at literally any moment. My brother was an MP in Germany and they were expecting a Spetsnaz commando attack at any time. I remember coming home for leave, Christmas, 1981. The night before I flew back to the West Cost, where my carrier was homeported (USS Ranger), I made it a point to take one last, long walk around my neighborhood and its environs as I honestly wasn't sure if it, or I, or either of us, would be around in six months when I was to be discharged in the summer (we lived just outside Washington, DC, about 8 miles like of sight from the US Capitol, so if things went south, it was a pretty good bet that DC would end up a smoldering hole in the ground).
@getit90669 ай бұрын
I'll bet you scoured a lot of toilets.
@Osmonic749 ай бұрын
Just one year later it almost happened.
@WayneBotto8 ай бұрын
I was in the RAF during the 80's/90's/00's. To me, the cold war, although we were toe to toe, made the world seem a much safer place than it is now. i spent most of the 80's in Germany - front line cold war. the UK was actually seen as our training area! it sounds crazy but it was a great time to serve!!
@Fabulousprofound1688 ай бұрын
Do these silos and missiles still exist and on standby?
@yanni21128 ай бұрын
I had just joined and was at PT Loma Subase San Diego, kinda hit close to home cause we worked on the Subs and knew what they carried. MM2 12 yrs 3 ships
@DanielMcGillis-f3w2 күн бұрын
If anybody is wondering why they didn't show the "Key Turn" during the launch sequence it is because that was footage taken from an Air Force film called first strike. In the film, they never got the key turned in time before getting hit and taken out.
@Argelius111 ай бұрын
This movie holds up remarkably well, 40 years later.
@insanimal25 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="166">2:46</a> expression on that kids face is just perfection, what an actor!
@RideAcrossTheRiver4 ай бұрын
You see a nurse doing that a moment later.
@yxeaviationphotog Жыл бұрын
That air burst explosion over the city was just eerie as hell.
@jonathanmoore4054Ай бұрын
I remember this movie well. I was too young to understand the impact. But I was born and raised in Lawrence Ks where some of the movie was filmed. Still live there today some 40 years later. To my knowledge, it’s the only film ever for Lawrence Ks.
@jonathanmoore4054Ай бұрын
I’ve watched it later in life and recognize a lot of the scenes and where they’re being filmed.
@philipmason3218 Жыл бұрын
After all these years, this, and the British film Threads, are still truly frightening.
@bobgordon236 Жыл бұрын
Dem rooskys r tuff mf'ers fo sho sweet cakez. Day be finz in daz hoood.
@danw2112 Жыл бұрын
I haven't seen The Day After since the first airing in 1983. But I saw Threads last fall, Fall 2022, and I think Threads was more disturbing, most real, and less Hollywood than The Day After
@whatmouth Жыл бұрын
@@danw2112 would a fire extinguisher save your life in this situation obviously I mean one filled with foam
@merseydave1 Жыл бұрын
Threads was a B.B.C. t.v. documenty drama
@johnbernard671910 ай бұрын
I was 17 when this movie came out. I had a fear of nuclear war since the 70’s. This movie left me depressed at the time.
@patriotcrusader3597 ай бұрын
I had a teacher who described the end of the world ..she mentioned 2000. It gave me the shock of my life....including films like this. Thank God its 2024 already. Growing old, I learned to accept whatever it is the God permitted to happen. I no longer fear Nucs. With lots of bad guys everywhere in this world...what else can we do. Earth is dying to. The only thing to make life in earth start over again...is to Reboot it. It's just the same outcome even without Nucs. We exist today... tomorrow we will no longer be remembered, only the few dedicated historians will think about us 👍👍👍
@mariepanimdim43033 ай бұрын
I watched this as a teenager with my whole family including aunts uncles and cousins. We were all very quiet leaving that night. I can't remember what conversation happened after
@julieelkin7583 Жыл бұрын
Watched this as a film back in the80’s. Most frightening thing I have seen, never forgotten.
@GregoryMarone3 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing this out again.
@WaleedHiggins3 ай бұрын
Thanks. It's a redux version.
@horuslupercal9936 Жыл бұрын
I was 14 years old and our school briefed us the day of the show not to watch it. Of course that just made me watch it. It freaked me out. I became obsessed with reading anything I could about nuclear war.
@Sugarsail1 Жыл бұрын
that was their goal...welcome to propaganda land, it starts young.
@singjazzy6697 Жыл бұрын
@@Sugarsail1 I don't know if it was propaganda then but i do see the propaganda now in USA. A whole lotta things have gone REAL weird. people from other countries are laughing at Americans now. Not admiration.
@thamesironworkers36 Жыл бұрын
I was also 14 at the time and from the UK. Our school videotaped it and we watched it in school the next day. As well as the English BBC version Threads
@daleviker5884 Жыл бұрын
@@Sugarsail1 The propaganda was all about scaring the west to give up their weapons. You only have to look at this thread to see how scared it made people. The only ones who might have gained by this was the communist soviet union, which was losing the cold war, which is why left-wing sympathizers in Hollywood put this together. But the soviets were in so much turmoil they collapsed only a couple of years later. If they hadn't, this propaganda film might have enabled the left to persuade the West to give up its weapons, and we'd all be speaking Russian or Chinese today.