How come the popularity of Chernobyl on Yea Forums didn't drive anons to watch more nuke kinos and make threads about them?
There could have been some nice threads about Threads, Testament, On the Beach, etc. Why didn't you guys decide to explore more of the comfy kino genre?
Most of them are shitty and/or postapocalyptic. Essential nuke kino with respect to Chernobyl:
>Chernobyl: Chronicle of Difficult Weeks (Vladimir Shevchenko) Filmed during the first few days of the disaster. Shevchenko died 1987 due to effects of the radiation exposure he received there. >Surviving Disaster 1x03: Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster Focuses on Valery Legasov who leaded the commission investigating the Chernobyl disaster. IMHO as of today the second most kino rendition of the disaster itself (after Chernobyl Miniseries) >Chernobyl: The Final Warning Focuses on Robert Gale, a renowned doctor who helped with palliative care of the irradiated >Moтыльки Romance, but with the most kino shot of the actual reactor explosion including fallen lumps of red-hot graphite moderator >Land of Oblivion About losing one's home and resettling to Slavutych >Raspad About the societal consequences and the Soviet policy of information scarcity >V subbotu On the inescapability of the situation
Only kino I know that really deals with actual, ongoing, total nuclear war: By Dawn's Early Light
Wyatt Hall
because /rbmk/ got hijacked from those faggot fujoshis who masturbate to their The Terror slash ships whoever made the /ternobyl/ general should be fucking beheaded
It reminds me of how the faggots ruined the general when Hannibal was airing
Jacob Richardson
Threads was genuinely upsetting. Can't remember the characters names but there's a scene where the father and mother leave the bunker and see the wreckage for the first time and the way the man says "Oh my God" stuck with me. Also the montage of things being destroyed and the baby on fire is pretty horrific.
Parker Reyes
I liked it, to some extent. But it doesn't go deep enough. I am still waiting for a proper, extremely accurate, plausible thermonuclear war scenario film that focuses on the warfare itself (from a military standpoint) and does not spend too much time discussing consequences to the population.
Elijah Cook
Why did he reject her and slap her? She's hot
Charles Perez
Thanks user
Evan Cox
Because he's not a whoreminded degenerate
Jeremiah Thompson
only pleb ass normalfaggots watched that garbage show and ofcourse people like that forget whatever they consume in mere seconds
Nathaniel Scott
Fail-Safe is so great it should be played in schools as a mandatory viewing, even better than Dr. Strangelove. Also Henry Fonda plays the best on-screen american president in cinema history, period.