I was a teenager in the 80s and found the threat of nukes to be more of an abstract thought-experiment or a convenient plot-device in movies for the sake of generating suspense. Despite this or movies like Wargames or the future scenario in The Dead Zone I had my doubts that WWIII would start. It just seemed like something that was more of a pressing issue in the previous generation to mine with all the duck and cover and the Cuban missile crisis.
It's a brilliant music video, but one that I think you've completely misinterpreted. If you read the lyrics, the Cold War mentality is very much a core element as something that we need to grow beyond as we come of age, but that's anything but a statement that fear of nuclear war even in the 1980s was unfounded hysteria.For instance, this music video was in heavy rotation in MTV at the time, which sort of retroactively goofed on all of the nuke hysteria of the 50s from an 80s perspective.
Yes, I do remember World War III. The title didn't ring a bell though. But after I clicked on the link and read what it was about and who starred in it, it brought back memories.Who remembers the NBC production World War III?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_III_(miniseries)
I would say though the ending is odd, as a few of the characters you follow throughout the film just disappear or the plots go nowhere and it's like "Oh hang on, what happened to them." I had to rewind it last time I watched it as I thought I must have missed something.
As someone who was 20 when this aired - sorry, but if you were a teenager, then you weren't paying close attention to the news of the time.I was a teenager in the 80s and found the threat of nukes to be more of an abstract thought-experiment or a convenient plot-device in movies for the sake of generating suspense. Despite this or movies like Wargames or the future scenario in The Dead Zone I had my doubts that WWIII would start. It just seemed like something that was more of a pressing issue in the previous generation to mine with all the duck and cover and the Cuban missile crisis.
For instance, this music video was in heavy rotation in MTV at the time, which sort of retroactively goofed on all of the nuke hysteria of the 50s from an 80s perspective.
I think the main impulse to do The Day After and make it a national event was from the older generation at the time.
I recently discovered there's a 3-hour workprint online, that has an hour of cut footage:
In fact, you may want to read up on what happened with the NATO exercise Able Archer that also occurred in 1983:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Able_Archer_83
The main takeaway from all these productions, over three decades later, is how pervasive public anxiety about the military standoff between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. was in the 1980s.
I clearly remember the shooting down of the KAL flight, some scary stuff at the time (I was 12). I just watched this documentary the other day on the incident and Able Archer.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.