Top 30 Nuclear Bomb Scenes in Movies

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @WatchMojo
    @WatchMojo  Месяц назад +32

    Which of these scenes still stays with you? Tell us about it in the comments.
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    • @adamhoward1408
      @adamhoward1408 Месяц назад +3

      Watchmen

    • @Salman-z6r
      @Salman-z6r Месяц назад +1

      Beautiful,,

    • @beccas.7762
      @beccas.7762 Месяц назад +5

      Definitely Sarah Connor's nightmare in Terminator 2: Judgment Day. I watched that movie when I was in middle school (mid-1990s), and it disturbed me almost as much as the scene in which that disgusting orderly licks her cheek right before she escapes from the psychiatric hospital.

    • @RebecaGonzalez-ty2gf
      @RebecaGonzalez-ty2gf Месяц назад +1

      T2

    • @jonathanhahn6955
      @jonathanhahn6955 Месяц назад

      The Avengers
      Can You Do: Top 20 Greatest Bad Guys Gone Good In Movies (Cartoon/Live-Action) & Top 30 Greatest Bounty Hunters In (Movies/TV Shows) !!!! :-)

  • @axiom666
    @axiom666 Месяц назад +174

    Classic line, "Gentlemen you can't fight in here this is the war room".

    • @frankgesuele6298
      @frankgesuele6298 Месяц назад +7

      Because that would be uncivilized😛

    • @screamindeacon
      @screamindeacon Месяц назад +9

      "We must not allow a mine-shaft gap."

    • @user-io9ie5cs8j
      @user-io9ie5cs8j 23 дня назад

      ​@@screamindeacon I don't even know wtf that's supposed to mean

    • @user-io9ie5cs8j
      @user-io9ie5cs8j 23 дня назад

      ​@@frankgesuele6298 Why yes-- yes it would be

    • @captjim007
      @captjim007 15 дней назад +1

      Dr. Strangelove, spoof on Edward Teller. Russian Premier Kissoff, spoof on Khrushchev. General Jack Ripper, Major Kong, Col. 'Bat' Guano

  • @davidponseigo8811
    @davidponseigo8811 Месяц назад +120

    My father was US Air Force Air Police attached to the Defense Atomic Support Agency from the late 1950's to 68 and was part of the command during the Cuban Missile Crisis and he said they fully expected to experience a Atomic Blast. He said we came closer than anyone really ever knows. It's a absolute miracle we are still here.

    • @Ayrshore
      @Ayrshore Месяц назад +8

      Nuclear deterrents work.

    • @MSjackiesaunders
      @MSjackiesaunders Месяц назад +6

      @davidponseigo8811 That's true. Actually, it was true twice. Dad was MP and an officer. He had a NATO-critical job when we were in Germany. In 1960 and again during Bay of Pigs, things were pretty dicey.

    • @kevinedwards6093
      @kevinedwards6093 Месяц назад +6

      Hey, so did mine. We lived 3 miles from the flight line…he said, if you hear the ‘sirens’ it’s probably over.💥

    • @user-ql9md2rj4x
      @user-ql9md2rj4x Месяц назад

      In American films, they always claim that the Russians will use nuclear weapons, and they forget that they are the only ones in human history to have used this weapon twice. This is called media misinformation, and perhaps after hundreds of years, future generations will believe that the Russians were the ones who bombed Japan, and perhaps even the Japanese themselves will believe that.

    • @user-ql9md2rj4x
      @user-ql9md2rj4x Месяц назад +2

      Your father survived but the Japanese didnt survive in ww2

  • @novtek
    @novtek Месяц назад +113

    You cut one of Sarah Connor's best lines from the scene. - "Anyone not wearing two million sunblock is gonna have a really bad day."

    • @TerminalConstipation
      @TerminalConstipation 27 дней назад +4

      Get it!?!? These videos always cut the best shit. Because they are all shit.

    • @CocoOPNY
      @CocoOPNY 10 дней назад

      @@TerminalConstipation Why on earth are you here then?

    • @TerminalConstipation
      @TerminalConstipation 9 дней назад +3

      @@CocoOPNY i'm here to downvote

    • @sardoniclysane
      @sardoniclysane 3 дня назад +1

      Bad fucking day

  • @JuliaL
    @JuliaL Месяц назад +62

    Threads scarred me as a 13 year old. The initial blast is bad enough, but the long term effects were horrific.

    • @wilobrien9731
      @wilobrien9731 27 дней назад +9

      I agree with you. Most of the movie dealt with the horrific aftermath, which was very disturbing.

    • @johnjjohningtoniii2439
      @johnjjohningtoniii2439 27 дней назад +5

      @@wilobrien9731 Best ending ever. Can you imagine people in 1984 turning that shit off to go to bed? lol

    • @minakomel
      @minakomel 17 дней назад +3

      well, it is known as one of the most horrific films ever made and it should be made watching compulsory to all world leaders along with "The Day After"...I've read that The Day After TV movie kind of changed Reagan's mind after watching it (only rumors though).

    • @MrTexasDan
      @MrTexasDan 9 дней назад

      @@minakomel Except Day After had Steve Guttenberg, who is possibly the world's worst actor, so it had a goofy comedy undertone.

    • @nelliethursday1812
      @nelliethursday1812 9 дней назад +2

      I am 58 and it scares me to the core of my soul 😢😢😢

  • @jroak
    @jroak Месяц назад +86

    Threads for the story, T2 for the representation.

    • @albertjewell1963
      @albertjewell1963 Месяц назад +4

      Perfectly said, I was gonna loose my mine if either wasn't mentioned.

    • @leoperidot482
      @leoperidot482 Месяц назад +1

      Mmmmm, how about ALIENS?

    • @Daneelro
      @Daneelro Месяц назад +10

      Whoever put this together probably didn't watch Threads... because the bomb explosions scene is nowhere near the most harrowing in the film. Threads makes the point that those who died in the initial blast were the lucky ones, and what's really bad is the after-effects. And the representation of _those_ still stands up today.

    • @chrislong3938
      @chrislong3938 Месяц назад +1

      Agreed, though I'd add the launch scenes from The Day After. Those shots from the football game scared the bejesus out of me when I first saw it in '83 and I was only 24 years old... just out of the Army!

    • @leoperidot482
      @leoperidot482 29 дней назад +1

      @@chrislong3938 Everyone thought Reagan was a war monger and they knew he was senile.

  • @Michael_Knight823
    @Michael_Knight823 Месяц назад +133

    "The Day After's" nuclear attack scene is beyond effective when it comes to nightmare fuel.

    • @jmburgess2003
      @jmburgess2003 Месяц назад +16

      That movie still holds up today. I remember watching it back when it first aired and was a 2 night event.

    • @vhagerty
      @vhagerty Месяц назад +10

      Everyone watched it and couldn't stop talking about it the next day at school. The thought of a blink of an eye death for everyone and everything you knew was the worst part about growing up in the Cold War. 😊

    • @SensationalBanana
      @SensationalBanana Месяц назад

      @@vhagertyAnd now we are back to it.
      Humanity is a sick species.

    • @Giratina575
      @Giratina575 Месяц назад +21

      The day after was pretty good. But just in my opinion, threads beats it out

    • @jamesthompson2065
      @jamesthompson2065 Месяц назад +25

      The Day After is a comedy compared to Threads.

  • @mikestanley9176
    @mikestanley9176 Месяц назад +22

    People who read The Sum of All Fears do no not acknowledge the existence of the movie.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      the book is good but overly long...the movie was better...Clancy always has to get some navy reference in there

    • @ShelleyLevyMusic
      @ShelleyLevyMusic 6 дней назад +1

      I get you but what a great first sequence

    • @minrityreprt6302
      @minrityreprt6302 5 дней назад

      I totally agree.

  • @JoshTolbertUrbana
    @JoshTolbertUrbana Месяц назад +35

    'Threads' is under-appreciated.

    • @johnjjohningtoniii2439
      @johnjjohningtoniii2439 27 дней назад +7

      Overall, Threads is the only one which captures what nuclear war would be.

    • @MrTexasDan
      @MrTexasDan 9 дней назад +1

      yep, under-appreciated by everyone who did not see it.

  • @justathought7221
    @justathought7221 Месяц назад +41

    Threads. I saw it in England in school. We were made to watch it. I was never the same.

    • @aldunlop4622
      @aldunlop4622 28 дней назад +6

      It's one of the few movies I really struggle to get through. It's thoroughly unpleasant.

    • @johnjjohningtoniii2439
      @johnjjohningtoniii2439 27 дней назад +2

      @@aldunlop4622 It has a really uplifting, happy ending though.

    • @minakomel
      @minakomel 17 дней назад +2

      people say it is one of the most horrific movies ever done...goes well with "The Day After". Now I know what surviving a nuclear holocaust is and I rather die than being in one after watching the bits I found in youtube...

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 15 дней назад +2

      We were made to watch in Scotland in the 80s too. Though I'd already seen it when it was shown on TV. Several of the girls got nauseous at parts of the film and one had to leave the room, to avoid fainting.

    • @christopherholder9925
      @christopherholder9925 10 дней назад +1

      @@johnjjohningtoniii2439 Indeed.

  • @aaronfreiboth2031
    @aaronfreiboth2031 Месяц назад +49

    The Day After was one of the most disturbing movies I saw as a young child. I was 8 when it aired on TV and still remember watching it

    • @Hushey
      @Hushey Месяц назад +6

      now watch threads. uncomparable.

    • @leoperidot482
      @leoperidot482 Месяц назад

      Everyone thought Ronald Reagan a senile trigger happy kook. He wanted China and USSR to think that too. In hindsight Reagan was senile who probably should've been relieved of duty.

    • @jboy55
      @jboy55 Месяц назад +2

      @@Hushey He's not 8 years old anymore. And its quite possible that both "Threads" and "The Day After" are both good impactful movies .

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад +2

      The Day After was more horrifying living in the States, because there was this feeling that was inevitable.

    • @556guy4
      @556guy4 23 дня назад +2

      I saw it when I was in 3rd grade and living right across the road from the Kirtland Air Force base in Albuquerque. I was scared it would happen.

  • @AndyS-A
    @AndyS-A Месяц назад +20

    Remember watching Threads when it first aired. Absolutely terrifying because of how real and mundane it was.

    • @EndingSimple
      @EndingSimple 24 дня назад +4

      also very terrifying because it went on to show what life would be like for the survivors a generation later. A life of bare medieval subsistence.

  • @MSjackiesaunders
    @MSjackiesaunders Месяц назад +55

    Terminator 2 gave me nightmares. I'm 74, so I grew up during the cold war, with sheltering under our school desks (one of the dumbest ideas EVER) as a reality. My dad was career military so I knew a lot more than the average kid, and more than most adults. It is a fear and dread that has followed me all my life. So many of these movies I avoided, but I did not realize that T2 had the scene in it. It was traumatizing for someone who actually lived through the Cold War and the Bay of Pigs.

    • @majorprofit
      @majorprofit Месяц назад +8

      Although younger than you, born in the 70s, that is what gives those images the extra twist. I live in Sweden and knew that if it happened it didn’t matter if we were in the war or not we would be dead anyway. I watched Wargames very recently and when those projectiles from ussr were shown it still had the same effect as when I first watched the movie which was a deeply unsettling feeling.

    • @trespire
      @trespire Месяц назад +3

      @@majorprofit I grew up in N.E. England in the late 70's and early 80's. If I recall, we would have had no longer than a 2 or 3 minute warning.

    • @jackstrong879
      @jackstrong879 Месяц назад

      The idea of surviving a nuclear war is truly fiction. As a officer in the Army, the unit I commanded in Germany in the early 1970's was a priority 1 target for the Soviets at the time. We used to joke that if the war actually started we would climb on top of one of the munitions storage bunkers to watch the"LIGHT SHOW". We realized that we had zero chance of survival.

    • @Acidwave88brah
      @Acidwave88brah 29 дней назад +3

      I’m 50 and that scene in t2 was like an ice cold bath of fear. I’ve never forgotten it

    • @Mechknight73
      @Mechknight73 27 дней назад +3

      I was born in the early 70s. My earliest nuclear war movie was "The Day After." It affected me, but not as much as its BBC counterpart, "Threads." That one was set in Sheffield, UK. It shows the cold hard facts of nuclear war from the perspective of the military, civil defence and ordinary citizens up to 20 years later. It has made me not want to live through a nuclear war

  • @rhondawentzell6959
    @rhondawentzell6959 Месяц назад +30

    Threads is still the most disturbing & scary movie I’ve ever seen.

  • @krgkrg1
    @krgkrg1 Месяц назад +32

    What about ‘Special Bulletin’ which came out around the same time as ‘The Day After’ and was, I thought, superior. Directed by Edward Zwick and criminally underseen and underrated.

    • @gmboy559
      @gmboy559 Месяц назад +4

      I watched that one first-run, and it was, then and now, the most horrifying cinema I've experienced. "Threads" is a close second. "The Day After" was a theater movie of little visceral impact by comparison.

    • @themagus5906
      @themagus5906 Месяц назад +3

      Tough to find today. Keep your VHS and disc players. Streaming sucks.

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад +1

      The Day After was enough for me. I was 27 and didn't know exactly what I was afraid of. Then I found out.

    • @royallison5307
      @royallison5307 Месяц назад +1

      To me, The Day After was over -hyped by ABC.

    • @garycovington9044
      @garycovington9044 Месяц назад +1

      Special Bulletin scared the hell out of me when I first saw it. Great movie!

  • @tanjirouzumaki144
    @tanjirouzumaki144 Месяц назад +91

    Honestly I would've had terminator 2 at number 1... scientists have stated it's one of the best adaptations of a nuclear bomb

    • @NewSonyWonderHappyMadisonFan
      @NewSonyWonderHappyMadisonFan Месяц назад +5

      And? Dr. Strangelove is peak cinema. Who wouldn't put it at number 1.

    • @doctorroboto5018
      @doctorroboto5018 Месяц назад +5

      I thought so as well when I got to number 2, but then saw what number 1 was and said "Yeah, I'm down with this". Strangelove was brilliant.

    • @TalkingHands308
      @TalkingHands308 Месяц назад +8

      @@NewSonyWonderHappyMadisonFan Meh, the list is for top nuclear bomb scenes in movies. All of those clips shown in Dr. Strangelove we've all seen in documentaries and none of them really show how the bombs would look if dropped on an actual city. Terminator 2 put forth a very accurate representation of how the destruction would actually look in a city. Regardless of how you feel about the movies, I know nobody dares speak badly of classic movies like Dr. Strangelove or Citizen Kane, but I also think Terminator 2's nuclear bombing scene should have been number 1.

    • @NewSonyWonderHappyMadisonFan
      @NewSonyWonderHappyMadisonFan Месяц назад +2

      @@TalkingHands308 Now that someone explains it, I guess you're right.

    • @Whisper_292
      @Whisper_292 Месяц назад +1

      I understand what you're saying, but Dr. Strangelove showed _actual_ nuclear explosions. Real trumps adaptation every time.

  • @baladas8398
    @baladas8398 Месяц назад +19

    "Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb" (full title) was Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece from 1964. I was 12 years old and it's hard to explain the impact it had at the time. It wasn't simply grim, it was dark humor at its finest. Peter Sellers, George C. Scott.

    • @VeteranofthePsychicWars
      @VeteranofthePsychicWars 25 дней назад +1

      I prefer Failsafe. Much more realistic and heart wrenching.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@VeteranofthePsychicWars not sure that ending was believable....

  • @EddieGaster
    @EddieGaster Месяц назад +21

    Threads, The Day After, When the Wind Blows - all top-notch viewing in my opinion.

    • @jamjardj1974
      @jamjardj1974 Месяц назад

      Agreed. Alongside By Dawns Early Light.

    • @MrSlartybartfast42
      @MrSlartybartfast42 29 дней назад +2

      To me, The Day After didn't really work as you could tell that they had thrown too much money at the sfx which even for 1983 looked rubbish. This is where Threads and the much earlier The War Game worked better as both productions spent more time showing the effects and not the cause.

    • @EddieGaster
      @EddieGaster 29 дней назад +1

      @@MrSlartybartfast42 And with Threads, you get to see how the world is affected years after the attack.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад +1

      @@jamjardj1974 how about world war three...president tries his best to stop it but knows he can't...very disturbing ending...

  • @geoffk777
    @geoffk777 Месяц назад +14

    Threads has to be the scariest and most depressing nuclear war movie ever. The special effects for the blasts aren't the absolute best, but it doesn't matter. The earlier BBC show "The Wat Game" (1966) is quite frightening as well, with a boy blinded by a blast.

    • @Daneelro
      @Daneelro Месяц назад +3

      Also, I doubt the video maker really watched Threads, because the blasts aren't anywhere the most harrowing scene in that movie. The special effects for everything that comes after the blasts are just fine, even today.

    • @jo.s7993
      @jo.s7993 3 дня назад

      'The War game' won the Oscar for best documentary feature in 1967. It is an incredible piece of film making for the time.

  • @TheCatBilbo
    @TheCatBilbo Месяц назад +45

    At 13 I watched the BBC 'Threads' film. This was 1984 & the nuclear threat was horribly real. Even now, it's a difficult, dark watch.
    Next day at school you could tell other people had seen it, without asking! There was a really weird atmosphere, as if everyone had suddenly realised the horror that could happen.

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 Месяц назад +12

      Yup. That was the best of the 1980's nuke films. None of this "but our way of life shall somehow go on" bullshit.

    • @BigBubbaloola
      @BigBubbaloola Месяц назад +13

      @@wyldhowl2821 Yep, bleak simply doesn't cover it. When The Wind Blows is simply heartbreaking. Threads is simply devastating.

    • @Daneelro
      @Daneelro Месяц назад +7

      I watched it sometime in the 1990s, without knowing anything about it in advance. It was still effective. Its meticulous focus on what comes _after_ the initial destruction, and how all the plans for survival unravel, is what's really unnerving. The Day After is an optimistic film with a happy ending in comparison.

    • @MrHws5mp
      @MrHws5mp 27 дней назад +5

      Yep. Some time after that, our relentlessly optimistic "jolly hockey-sticks" biology teacher came in with a cast on her arm. Turned out that she'd hurt herself while her and her husband had been digging a fallout shelter in their garden. One of the boys asked "why?"
      "Well, in case there's a nuclear war, of course!" She replied.
      "No," he replied, "I mean, why do you want to survive it?"
      Taken aback, she asked who else in the class felt the same way. _Everybody's_ hand went up. We hadn't discussed it in advance at all: 20-odd 16-year old boys had just quietly decided for themselves that they'd rather die in the attack than face the aftermath. She went a bit quiet after that.
      Me and my equally military-tech obsessed friend used to joke that given enough warning, we'd go into the middle of the nearest city and try to identify the incoming warhead in the ultimate plane-spot...

    • @johnjjohningtoniii2439
      @johnjjohningtoniii2439 27 дней назад +7

      I think people really underrate how "real" the threat is now.

  • @JoReGr
    @JoReGr Месяц назад +42

    Threads should of been number 1

    • @lycanth1990
      @lycanth1990 Месяц назад +3

      1-10 you mean, no need for any other depiction. Truly terrifying!

    • @Puzzoozoo
      @Puzzoozoo Месяц назад +3

      The girl at the end who was born after the war has fillings in her teeth. Nice to know a NHS Dentist survived a nuclear war. lol

    • @gidbeckgidbeck7212
      @gidbeckgidbeck7212 Месяц назад +6

      I've never been able to watch the whole movie again. Nor would I want to. Sometimes I have revisited clips from the film to remind me of the abject horror; Threads is probably the most harrowing , depressing and upsetting film one might see. I once worked in a small film theatre and Threads was shown one evening, The audience sat in deathly silence throughout and I recall seeing people crying as they watched. Even remembering this film is upsetting.

    • @vernonsmithee792
      @vernonsmithee792 Месяц назад +6

      Seeing "Threads" once is more than enough. Terrifying.

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@gidbeckgidbeck7212Even thinking about it.

  • @mperronwolo
    @mperronwolo Месяц назад +7

    You left off the most nightmarish one. The beginning of the movie Dreamscape

  • @TheCommenterDragon
    @TheCommenterDragon Месяц назад +34

    Barefoot Gen is one of my all time favorite Anime films! Because it's one of the few animated film to depict Japan during war times and because the story is based on the first hand accounts of an actual Hiroshima survivor IE Keiji Nakazawa.

    • @40hup
      @40hup Месяц назад +1

      For me "grave of the fireflies" renders a better picture of an inside view of japanese society during WWII, but Barefoot Gen is also a very powerful anime.

    • @TheCommenterDragon
      @TheCommenterDragon Месяц назад +2

      @@40hup And to think Barefoot Gen isn't the only anime film about the atomic bombings, There are others like " In This Corner of the World"

    • @40hup
      @40hup Месяц назад +1

      @TheCommenterDragon "In This Corner of the World" also has a very strong impression of the atomic bomb - it's just a bright light and a single shingle falling from the roof of the protagonists' house, and a distant view of the strange mushroom cloud some valleys away. Only later, when survivors from Hiroshima arrive, and later still when the heroine goes to Hiroshima after the war and picks up an orphaned child, do they learn the full impact of the bomb. It's all indirect impressions, not the emphasis on the blast and the radiation. A very unique and powerful perspective on the bomb.

    • @longrider42
      @longrider42 Месяц назад +1

      @@TheCommenterDragon Wow, I'm glad I am not the only one who knows about the movie "In This Corner of the World" Its a very good movie, and covers what happens till after the way.

    • @TheCommenterDragon
      @TheCommenterDragon Месяц назад +1

      @@longrider42 Well I've also seen another Anime film about the atomic bombings, Like there's one called "Nagasaki 1945 - The Angelus Bells."

  • @kennethprocak5176
    @kennethprocak5176 Месяц назад +9

    Not many would even have heard of Threads. Do yourself a favour and watch it.

  • @NavyEnto
    @NavyEnto Месяц назад +7

    Hardly ever see Miracle Mile on these lists.

    • @ortizmo
      @ortizmo День назад

      I don't think we ever saw the explosions in Miracle Mile, but we definitely saw the missile trails. That and the breakdown of society in Los Angeles were frightening enough. I watched it in '92 and still remember how much trouble I had sleeping that night.

    • @NavyEnto
      @NavyEnto День назад

      @@ortizmo yea, had trouble myself, but not as much as The Day After when it aired.

  • @40hup
    @40hup Месяц назад +15

    There is another very realistic Movie from the UK about nuclear war and its aftermath, and that's "war game" from 1966, made by Peter Watkins as a pseudo-documentary (which was his style for several later movies, like "punishment park"). War game is low budget and black and white, but it is very intense and realistic about the breakdown of society after all out nuclear war and the futility of civil defense plans. It was also banned from british Television for several years, and was released alternatively in select theaters.

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 Месяц назад +3

      BBC finally showed it in August 1985 as part of a series of programs about the 40th Anniversary of the first use of Nukes.

    • @williamanderson5437
      @williamanderson5437 7 дней назад

      1005 AGREE. Watkins only made another documentry, about the battle of Cullodon, where the Scottish Jacobite Rebellion is ended. The Battlesite is well worth a visit, 20 miles East of Inverness, take in a tour of nearby Fort George too - highly recommended,

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      some say even a small regional war would have global consequences....ala"On The Beach"

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@williamanderson5437 picture a wild Scottish charge like in Braveheart....then picture the other side with cannons...

    • @jo.s7993
      @jo.s7993 3 дня назад

      It won the 'Oscar' for best documentary feature in 1967. It was incredible, & deserved it.

  • @sgt_retiredcharlie4102
    @sgt_retiredcharlie4102 Месяц назад +7

    I was about to freak out because I didn't think you included "The Day After" but then, there it was! Absolute Masterpiece! But on visuals alone, T2!

  • @nostarg4
    @nostarg4 Месяц назад +28

    You didn't include The War Game, the original Threads that was considered too terrifying at the time for viewers and was only shown in cinemas.

    • @TheCatBilbo
      @TheCatBilbo Месяц назад

      Was about to say the same - it's of its time & they obviously didn't have the budget of others, but it's horrifying in clever ways. I know at the time it was genuinely terrifying, my Dad saw it back then.

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 Месяц назад +3

      @@TheCatBilbo The War Game was the first one I saw in early 1983, it was shown at my school. The Day After was shown in December 1983 in the UK and Threads in the September of 1984. Threads was repeated in August 1985 and the War Game was shown on TV for the first time as well.

    • @johnbeckman492
      @johnbeckman492 Месяц назад +2

      I saw it in high school film class in '77 and was depressed afterwards for several days.

    • @indigohammer5732
      @indigohammer5732 13 дней назад

      Er.... Threads was never shown in cinemas, nor was it originally released in cinemas. It was a BBC Television programme

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 13 дней назад

      @@indigohammer5732 What we are talking about is "The War Game" a 1966 BBC DocoDrama about a Nuclear Attack on the UK. The BBC management were so horrified when they saw it that it was banned from being shown on TV until the year after Threads was Broadcast. The War Game was shown in cinemas in the late 1960's.

  • @BreandanOCiarrai
    @BreandanOCiarrai Месяц назад +5

    I am beginning to agree with Jim Butcher- someone famous or powerful somewhere along the way accidentally mixed up "devastated" (total destruction) with "decimated" (destruction of only 10%), and no one wanted to correct them and instead people mimicked it, perpetuating that mix-up for decades on end.

    • @minrityreprt6302
      @minrityreprt6302 5 дней назад

      That always bugs the hell out of me as well.

  • @b.thomas8926
    @b.thomas8926 Месяц назад +3

    Threads. 😩

  • @sirbletchley
    @sirbletchley Месяц назад +11

    I thank God that I never saw Threads as a child. The Day After was bad enough for nightmare fuel. Threads details not only the horrors at the moment of impact, but also the complete breakdown of society in the aftermath.

    • @TheCatBilbo
      @TheCatBilbo Месяц назад +6

      Threads is uniquely bleak & gritty. It's fantastic in its production & like you say, follows through to a horrifying future. It's unusual in that & why I think it's so good.

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 Месяц назад +5

      @@TheCatBilbo Typical British approach to it, just pure horror to slap you in the face with.
      No "but life goes on" BS - more like "living through the attack is actually worse than dying in it".

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 Месяц назад +2

      I did, but hey I was a Gen X 80's kid, so this sort of thing was our movies, our music, our politics, everything. The Cold War ending was like no longer being held hostage.
      ... And now we're all back to that in "Cold War II - "Now It's Personal", only with a population that just doesn't get it.

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад

      ​@@wyldhowl2821I think we've had very similar experiences growing up.

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад

      ​@@wyldhowl2821We danced to
      99 Luftballoons.

  • @SC457A
    @SC457A Месяц назад +20

    The Day After gave me nightmares for years. I was 11 at the time.

    • @kymmkam73
      @kymmkam73 Месяц назад +3

      Same here! I had night terrors also and even had to leave our local fair because I was so afraid I was gonna see a mushroom cloud!

    • @vhagerty
      @vhagerty Месяц назад +4

      I just posted about the emergency sirens still giving me chills. I'm immediately taken back to being a child during the Cold War.

    • @OneofInfinity.
      @OneofInfinity. Месяц назад +3

      @@vhagerty I felt saver back then as a kid that current day with the lunatics calling the shots.

    • @jboy55
      @jboy55 Месяц назад +2

      The images of people turning into skeletons haunted my 7 year old self for weeks. Even when I first rewatched the movie 20+ years later, my heart raced.

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@jboy55You shouldn't have watched it.

  • @corymorimacori1059
    @corymorimacori1059 Месяц назад +22

    “In Japan you were a metaphor for nuclear war, but in Hollywood they left your balls in the cutting room floor!” King Kong
    Thanos: You’re a pencil pushing Terran and ho never learned to love his bomb.

  • @gjhoward
    @gjhoward Месяц назад +11

    If nuclear bomb scenes in TV shows were to make the list, Jericho and Fallout would certainly be on it. But I am glad to see that The Day After and Threads made this list. Both of which are terrifying even by today's standards. Also, T2 is one of my favorite movies ever and the nuclear dream sequence is haunting.

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 Месяц назад +2

      Jericho felt like the bastard child of The Day After.
      Fallout is some great stuff.

    • @rafaelamadeus5155
      @rafaelamadeus5155 Месяц назад +1

      Fallout is a video games, lol.

    • @gjhoward
      @gjhoward Месяц назад

      @@rafaelamadeus5155 It's also a tv series on Amazon (based on the video game). It's quite good if you haven't seen it yet.

    • @richardhoehn9922
      @richardhoehn9922 Месяц назад +3

      Yuppers, Jericho was good!

    • @richardhoehn9922
      @richardhoehn9922 Месяц назад +1

      Early in American Horror Story: Apocalypse, there's a nuke sequence...shown from a plane, as I recall.

  • @Simwebby
    @Simwebby Месяц назад +6

    The Wargame (1966) The sirens go off. Everyone knows that an attack is imminent. There's a sudden silent flash. Everyone, including children, are blinded and left with their hands to their eyes, crying in pain. So terrifying it was banned for years. Still can't forget seeing it today.

    • @themagus5906
      @themagus5906 Месяц назад +1

      "The War Game" was probably to old for most people nowadays to remember. It was a great film, and was banned from the BBC just after it was filmed for being too traumatic, until finally being shown almost 20 years later. I first saw it in 1980 at an anti-nuke church group. "Oh, where are you coming from, soldier, gaunt soldier, With weapons beyond any reach of my mind, With weapons so deadly the world must grow older And die in its tracks, if it does not turn kind?"

    • @cateclism316
      @cateclism316 Месяц назад +1

      "This is how the last three minutes of peace will look." A terrifying scene.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@themagus5906 we're still killer apes...we've just gotten better at it...

  • @scottbuckley823
    @scottbuckley823 Месяц назад +15

    Threads is the only one for the top choice. scary as hell because it's only half way through the movie.

  • @jtjr26
    @jtjr26 Месяц назад +22

    The scene in Terminator 2 is my favorite. Mainly because its not real but Sarah's nightmare and really shows her motivation for trying to stop Judgement Day. There's no fate but what we make for ourselves.

    • @davidwright8432
      @davidwright8432 Месяц назад +1

      The few make the fate; the majority suffer it.

  • @steevidrums
    @steevidrums Месяц назад +4

    I saw Threads when I was about 7 years, it prevented me from sleeping for weeks. It's probably the most scared I have ever been watching anything in my life. Bear in mind, on the news each day was the constant fear pushed on us as the Soviet Union and US and its Western allies butted heads.

  • @msardy6423
    @msardy6423 Месяц назад +6

    Just watched Threads. Unrelenting agony. What is not portrayed, your imagination fills in.

    • @fritzthedog007
      @fritzthedog007 14 дней назад

      Also, the only song on British radio was "Johnny B. Goode," apparently.

  • @djwho75
    @djwho75 Месяц назад +17

    When the wind blows>grave of the fireflies

  • @chrisjohnston6171
    @chrisjohnston6171 Месяц назад +24

    You missed the best one of all... the multiple nukes in “Silent Running” with Bruce Dern

    • @vikj1255
      @vikj1255 Месяц назад +5

      Yes!

    • @patkennedy2620
      @patkennedy2620 Месяц назад +5

      Brilliant movie

    • @Kitty-CatDaddy
      @Kitty-CatDaddy Месяц назад +4

      I was 10 or so when that movie came out. The end where the lone drone has to care for the habitat all alone had me crying my eyes out. I didn't care for the humans, but it upset me the drone was left alone without even the gimpy drone to keep him company.

    • @kurtbader9711
      @kurtbader9711 27 дней назад +2

      Huey, Duey and Louie. Saving humanity.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      nukes in space behave differently...no sound...no real blast wave....somebody forgot to tell hollywood

  • @taotaoliu2229
    @taotaoliu2229 Месяц назад +17

    The nuke scene from Terminator 2 gave me nightmares!

    • @robertbissonnette4411
      @robertbissonnette4411 Месяц назад +1

      I don't know if you ever saw the movie damnation valley it came out in 1977 it's on RUclips the movie gave a lot of people nightmares

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад

      ​@@robertbissonnette4411The scene in the command center as they tick off the cities after they're hit was just God awful. I was 11 and to this day I remember hearing "Charlotte.." and I'd never heard of it. As soon as I got home I looked it up in my encyclopedia. I thought that was a small city to bomb Now I know that each side targets every city with 100k or more. Also every state/provincial capital and every nuclear reactor plus more I don't remember. That's at least 400 MRV ICBMS and whatever each of us sends from subs. What's left? Who the hell would want to survive that?

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@scott-robertshenkman4130 "just making the rubble bounce"...Colon Powell

  • @Chris_Silverhaze
    @Chris_Silverhaze Месяц назад +14

    I'd recommend 'When The Wind Blows' a 1986 British adult animated disaster film, directed by Jimmy Murakami based on Raymond Briggs' graphic novel of the same name. The bomb dropping scene is very moving, as is the rest of the entire film tbh.

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 Месяц назад

      Basis of an epic Iron Maiden song too, I think.

    • @MrHws5mp
      @MrHws5mp 27 дней назад

      It's in the video.

    • @NatoBro
      @NatoBro 27 дней назад +2

      It's at 10:54 in this video.

  • @Jeremiah_Rivers76
    @Jeremiah_Rivers76 Месяц назад +16

    Whatever your thoughts about the fridge nuke sequence from _Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull_ are, it and _Terminator 2: Judgement Day_ have incredible nuke scenes.

    • @TheCatBilbo
      @TheCatBilbo Месяц назад +2

      Oh yes, the moment Indiana realises where he is & what all of the creepy mannequins are there for, is bottom clenching!

    • @jean-mi1825
      @jean-mi1825 Месяц назад

      I agree

    • @emergencyrapidresponseteam7181
      @emergencyrapidresponseteam7181 Месяц назад +1

      Indiana Jones could survive a nuclear explosion for he chosen wisely.

    • @Wyvernphotos
      @Wyvernphotos 23 дня назад +1

      Nuking the fridge is the new jumping the shark.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@TheCatBilbo check out "Split Second"..(TCM?)....where the bad guys decide the best place to hideout is a nuclear test site...

  • @jamesrizza2640
    @jamesrizza2640 Месяц назад +17

    The day after was perhaps the scariest movie I saw in the eighties. I think they should remake it for today. It seems we need a reminder of the horrors of this kind of war or any war for that matter.

    • @Jeff_Vader
      @Jeff_Vader Месяц назад +3

      Have you seen "Threads"?

    • @jamesrizza2640
      @jamesrizza2640 Месяц назад +2

      Yes but something about the day after just got to me. Good movie as well.

    • @Jeff_Vader
      @Jeff_Vader Месяц назад +4

      @@jamesrizza2640 It may have got to you but if you've seen both, you know that as a film Threads is far more horrific in its portrayal from before the war starts until 12 years after. American films have to have "hope" n them because american audiences cant cope watching a film that has a nihilistic ending.

    • @leoperidot482
      @leoperidot482 Месяц назад

      I dont think that would work today. There's too many kooks that want to destroy the world or set it on fire, so all that would do is embolden them. They would see it as biblical armageddon.

    • @amkrause2004
      @amkrause2004 Месяц назад +1

      It definitely does the job for sure.

  • @DonLoco3
    @DonLoco3 Месяц назад +8

    I remember watching "The Day After" as a teenager and man did it hit hard then. Watching Threads and knowing there are missiles that contain 80mt per is all the more nightmarish.

    • @lunsmann
      @lunsmann 24 дня назад +1

      Be comforted with the knowledge there has never been a 80MT nuclear device. The largest test was the Russian 50MT. The largest deployed device was 4MT. Most modern nukes are in the 300 kilo tonne range (still 20 times more powerful than the devices used on Hiroshima and Nagasaki). However, even still it really doesn't matter as any target will be bracketed by multiple devices anyway.
      Those of us not near a target zone will still be fucked because such a war will end all fuel deliveries globally and the surviving populations won't have any food in the local shops soon after.

    • @DonLoco3
      @DonLoco3 24 дня назад +1

      @@lunsmann 50MT is half of what they were going with originally but the creator of said bomb was nervous and therefore halved the yield. The blast still far exceeded their expectations. Still the regular 10MT warheads that are cluster like per missile are more than enough to do the job. If those things start flying around, kiss it goodbye, Fallout will look like a lush paradise afterward.

    • @lunsmann
      @lunsmann 24 дня назад

      @@DonLoco3 - Yes. Aware of the Tsar Bomba story. The lead scientist halved the tritium at the last moment. You are right with the mirv warheads, up to 16 individual warheads on a single missile.
      This is why it's important to only elect sane people into government. Nobody wins a nuclear war. Maybe sub- Saharan nations will rise to the fore after because everyone who dominates now will be irradiated hellholes. I hope we never get to find out.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@lunsmann yeah, that original "Tsar Bomba" was supposed to be 100MT....but they finally decided a good portion of the blast would be lost into space so they scaled it down...nearly killed the flight crew that dropped it...scared the hell out of our people though when they realized it was deployable

  • @wilson2455
    @wilson2455 Месяц назад +2

    " A white light. Like God taking a photograph.. ". Fantastic description !

  • @brianhays1797
    @brianhays1797 Месяц назад +3

    Threads was just horrific

  • @AenesidemusOZ
    @AenesidemusOZ Месяц назад +3

    Threads and Failsafe. Nightmares.

  • @Meower68
    @Meower68 Месяц назад +20

    The little boy in "The Empire of the Sun" has done ok. His name: Christian Bale.

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 Месяц назад +11

      Empire Of The Sun, Terminator Salvation, and The Dark Knight Rises. What is it with Christian Bale and nukes?

    • @jamjardj1974
      @jamjardj1974 Месяц назад

      Witnessed three nuclear explosions too, in his career😂

    • @jamjardj1974
      @jamjardj1974 Месяц назад +1

      @@wyldhowl2821Patrick Bateman stepped up his murderous tendencies!

    • @geoffoldread7684
      @geoffoldread7684 26 дней назад

      Captain Obvious has arrived, everybody!

    • @kevinroche3334
      @kevinroche3334 25 дней назад

      @@jamjardj1974 By the way...they're not real in the movies.

  • @JugglinJellyTake01
    @JugglinJellyTake01 29 дней назад +2

    Threads, the build up, the impact and following 2nd and 3rd generation impacts was brutal. It underscored there were only losers and there would continue to be only losers.

  • @J_Stamps86
    @J_Stamps86 Месяц назад +3

    Threads has always stuck with me, mostly because I'm from Sheffield where it was set and having been born in the 80's it's the Sheffield of my childhood being hit by a nuclear strike.

    • @Ayrshore
      @Ayrshore Месяц назад

      Could cause millions of pounds of improvements.

  • @calibri1182
    @calibri1182 Месяц назад +6

    Miracle Mile (1988) a nice guilty pleasure of a film.

    • @garycovington9044
      @garycovington9044 29 дней назад

      Even though it's a great film, it doesn't show any nukes going off so I don't think that really qualifies.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 15 дней назад +1

      @@garycovington9044 On the Beach is another great nuclear war film, with no nukes seen, to watch.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      we originally had a plan to use nuclear bombs to propel spaceships...in theory it would have worked...see something like that in "Deep Impact"...another unsettling film...

  • @brianmorgan2744
    @brianmorgan2744 Месяц назад +5

    There is one movie you didn't include on this list, and that was the tv movie Special Bulletin, which aired on March 20, 1983. I remember watching it and for awhile, wondered if it were real, the way the whole movie played out. Check it out. It definitely should have been on this list!

    • @themagus5906
      @themagus5906 Месяц назад

      Tough to find nowadays, but there are copies on VHS if you have a player. I have one. Warner Brothers released it briefly on DVD; the few extant copies go for a couple hundred dollars. I always wondered why; just like the TV movie "Shadow on the Land". They seem to be deliberately buried by history.

  • @66KIMBLE
    @66KIMBLE Месяц назад +9

    Tv film Special Bulletin (1983) was pretty intense.

    • @CramwellJr
      @CramwellJr Месяц назад +3

      I dubbed that onto my first VCR. Intense and worse yet, believable.

    • @casinodelonge
      @casinodelonge 21 день назад

      @@CramwellJr really decent show that was.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@casinodelonge if you really want to see these things close up take a trip to the Air Force Museum in Dayton Ohio....many of them on display there....some in cross-section

  • @downundarob
    @downundarob Месяц назад +3

    24:12 - The Day After: When this aired in 1983, the movie played as per normal up until the attack scene, and then was uninterrupted (no commercial breaks) for the remainder.

  • @IvanAtanassov1
    @IvanAtanassov1 Месяц назад +7

    The T2 is absolute number one nuclear masterpiece, and Day After Tommorrow shocked as second.

    • @rafaelamadeus5155
      @rafaelamadeus5155 Месяц назад +7

      @@IvanAtanassov1 "The Day After" bro. The Day After Tomorrow is a disaster film taking place when the world was in "Ice Age".

    • @emergencyrapidresponseteam7181
      @emergencyrapidresponseteam7181 Месяц назад +1

      Dr Strangelove will always be Number 1. It is a timeless classic and best Nuclear War movie ever made.

    • @rafaelamadeus5155
      @rafaelamadeus5155 Месяц назад +1

      @@emergencyrapidresponseteam7181 Fallout is still one of the best Nuclear War sci-fi works ever made, though it's only made in the video games and the recent live-action TV adaptation.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      @@rafaelamadeus5155 believe there was a book that came out much earlier and had a nuclear war theme

  • @footballskatemom
    @footballskatemom Месяц назад +6

    Terminator 2 was striking and terrifying but the Day After gave me trauma I still carry. The bombing was the easiest part to watch.

    • @Daneelro
      @Daneelro Месяц назад +1

      You haven't seen Threads. (Nor did the WatchMojo video editor, I think.)

    • @scott-robertshenkman4130
      @scott-robertshenkman4130 Месяц назад +1

      Both are horrific and I still carry that trauma today. I still sometimes feel like any second..🔆

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 15 дней назад

      @@Daneelro British guy here and while Threads is the superior film for telling what happens for the next 20 years of aftermath, The Day After was much better at the actual explosion visuals. Combined those 2 are 'The Nuclear films'.

  • @DarylBaines
    @DarylBaines Месяц назад +2

    Threads: I will never forget the image of the woman standing in the street with two shopping bags and peeing herself in fear.

  • @welcometothemovies9157
    @welcometothemovies9157 Месяц назад +5

    That Scott Glenn in Countdown to Looking Glass

    • @ApocGuy
      @ApocGuy 28 дней назад

      Countdown to looking glass is quite disturbing for sure. I have another one (well, two, but one is more of an audio only); The last broadcast and fictionalized BBC special report

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      everybody seems to have forgotten "The Bedford incident"....and what can happen at sea

  • @kevinkunkel9444
    @kevinkunkel9444 Месяц назад +4

    In Independence Day, the aliens' explosions were far more interesting than the bomb drop.

  • @yosefvargasx
    @yosefvargasx Месяц назад +30

    No more top 10? Top 30 now

    • @blueraccoon1088
      @blueraccoon1088 Месяц назад +6

      There's always more then 10 ideas

    • @gamingnerdgirlz
      @gamingnerdgirlz Месяц назад +7

      More time, longer video, more ad revenue. 💰 enjoy the new RUclips. Videos being 15+ min. Or so. more ads. RUclips creator train. 🚂 💨

    • @Salman-z6r
      @Salman-z6r Месяц назад +3

      Nice ❤️

    • @Salman-z6r
      @Salman-z6r Месяц назад

      @@gamingnerdgirlz support me

    • @Reaperguy67
      @Reaperguy67 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@Salman-z6r about no. Quit begging for subs

  • @deeacosta2734
    @deeacosta2734 Месяц назад +4

    Threads is incredible.

  • @joshuabates7424
    @joshuabates7424 Месяц назад +4

    Empire of the Sky was one of my favorite movies as a kid, watched it dozens of times!

  • @nathannewman3968
    @nathannewman3968 Месяц назад +7

    The TV show Jericho should have gotten an honorable mention at least.

  • @zephyer-gp1ju
    @zephyer-gp1ju Месяц назад +5

    The Indiana movie and fridge. Don't explain how he got the fridge to unlock and let him out.
    In Hollywood, that scene was considered so bad the expression, "Jumping the shark" became "nuking the fridge."

    • @christopherweber4745
      @christopherweber4745 Месяц назад

      Touch of comic relief can help drama. The fridge was farce to full military power. For me this was immersion breaking. I'm forced back into a movie theater watching some escapist entertainment. But forgivable. To steal, roll, and mutilate from Abraham Lincoln ... You can please some of the people all of the time, all of the people some of the time, but never all of the people all of the time.

  • @Kitty-CatDaddy
    @Kitty-CatDaddy Месяц назад +2

    What about 'Special Bulletin'? The nuke going off in Charleston harbor was very realistic for the time.

  • @savitar_speed
    @savitar_speed Месяц назад +3

    I understand this is for movies but Jericho tv show did it well I think

    • @rafaelamadeus5155
      @rafaelamadeus5155 Месяц назад

      @@savitar_speed The new Fallout TV series, as well. It's crazy to see the fact Los Angeles was hit by the nukes during one of the scene, just like T2.

  • @allycatblues2770
    @allycatblues2770 Месяц назад +9

    Had a feeling that was gunna be #1. That scene is so iconic.

  • @jmburgess2003
    @jmburgess2003 Месяц назад +30

    There were 2 you missed. World War Z had a really good one, especially because you weren't expecting it at all.
    The second one was another made for TV movie called Special Bulletin about a terrorist bomb threat in Charleston SC. It was done War of the Worlds style through news reports until the end.

    • @DrVesuvius70
      @DrVesuvius70 Месяц назад +2

      Can't believe they missed Special Bulletin off this list. I believe it won an Emmy when it was made in 1983. It's lurking somewhere on RUclips if anyone wants to check it out.

    • @jmburgess2003
      @jmburgess2003 Месяц назад +1

      Probably because it wasn't nearly as well known as The Day After, though I think Special Bulletin is more suspenseful. Really showed the possible terrorist side to nuclear weapons.

    • @flashover2362
      @flashover2362 Месяц назад

      @@DrVesuvius70 Nominated for 7, won 4. I put a link to the IMDB article on it in my comment (before I went looking through the rest of them 🙂 )

    • @DrVesuvius70
      @DrVesuvius70 Месяц назад +2

      @@jmburgess2003 I think they could have dropped ID4 or Avengers from the list, as while there may have been nuclear explosives involved, the scenes were more about big-ass spaceships blowing up than the nukes themselves. Nice to see the BBC's Threads make what I assume is an American compiled list. Our counterpart to The Day After really captured the fear we grew up with in the shadow of the Four Minute Warning.

    • @cskiller86
      @cskiller86 Месяц назад +2

      I came to the comments to see if anyone mentions Special Bulletin. That movie really scarred me, especially the scene with the anchors crying in the studio after the bomb is detonated.

  • @zemoxian
    @zemoxian Месяц назад +1

    Threads, The Day After, Testament… All movies from my Gen-X adolescence. Growing up with the idea that civilization could end any day.

  • @kenbattor6350
    @kenbattor6350 29 дней назад +2

    I know it doesn't match the visuals of the other shows here, but I would suggest the nuclear attack on the Martians in the original War of the Worlds. I know as a child, it had an effect on me and may have been one of the first visualizations in a movie of a nuclear explosion.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      ...."The flying wing will take care of these boys!"....back when it was operational....of course it's back now.....

  • @G1Grimlock94
    @G1Grimlock94 Месяц назад +12

    Godzilla survive by the Nuke

    • @blueraccoon1088
      @blueraccoon1088 Месяц назад +3

      So can iron giant

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 15 дней назад

      @@blueraccoon1088 And Superman too but Iron Giant was the most fun.

  • @LadiesmanB007
    @LadiesmanB007 Месяц назад +3

    Godzilla Minus One has arguably one of the most accurate atomic bomb scenes. While not technically an actual bomb (it’s Godzilla’s atomic breath) the resulting explosion is basically what an atomic bomb does, complete with the back blast and devastation.

    • @themagus5906
      @themagus5906 Месяц назад +1

      That movie rocked; even beating "Shin Godzilla". You had to see it in the theater.

    • @LadiesmanB007
      @LadiesmanB007 Месяц назад

      @@themagus5906 saw both of those in theaters

  • @Zholobov1
    @Zholobov1 26 дней назад +1

    You forgot "Twin Peaks. The Return" 2017, the famous 8th episode with the fantastic fly-through the mashroom cloud scene. One of the best nuclear blast scenes in the cinema history.

  • @Angl0sax0nknight
    @Angl0sax0nknight Месяц назад +1

    I remember as a 10 or 11 year old watching Threads. True nightmare fuel for such a young mind. Guess it left me being nihilistic

  • @daigriffiths399
    @daigriffiths399 Месяц назад +3

    Threads at no.1, When The Wind Blows at no.2. No other country in the world can make films like the Brits when it comes to showing the impact of external events on helpless people. Threads gave me nightmares for a while and When The Wind Blows made me cry with helplessness the whole way through. I'm male and not afraid to admit that. The Day After, although very good, could have done without the hopeful ending. IMO it would have been a far better film without it.
    Someone else commented that when Threads was shown on the BBC, the following day at school you could tell who'd seen it and who hadn't. He/she is not wrong, only for me in 1984 I was in full time work and the effect was the same on my work colleagues.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 6 дней назад

      "Testament" is another one that will tear at your heartstrings...people watching their kids put on a play knowing they all were going to die....having to bury them in the backyard...very sad...

  • @track1949
    @track1949 Месяц назад +4

    Threads should be #1.

  • @Daehawk
    @Daehawk 24 дня назад +1

    Independence Day.."A nupe is dropped"..wth?
    I still laugh at "Gentlemen you cant fight in here! This is the war room. :)

  • @vikj1255
    @vikj1255 Месяц назад +1

    Great list. Loved By dawns early light, Failsafe, Day after tomorrow, Threads, T2 and T3. All classics.

  • @beefyoso
    @beefyoso Месяц назад +3

    as a little kid the day after scared the absolute shit out of me.
    but I felt better when I realized that because I lived just a few miles away from a major target, if it happened I'd never know it.

    • @racing2cat
      @racing2cat Месяц назад +1

      Funny - that's exactly how I felt. Was living 1 mile outside the gate of Eglin AFB in FL and so decided (as a 14 yr old) that I didn't have to worry about it since Eglin would be sure to be hit. And again thought the same thing when I moved to Colorado and lived in the vicinity of NORAD. Weird how our minds work.

    • @amkrause2004
      @amkrause2004 Месяц назад +1

      I know the feeling. I lived at Minot AFB, where the missile crew was filmed.

    • @beefyoso
      @beefyoso Месяц назад +1

      @@racing2cat I grew up in Colorado Springs.

    • @racing2cat
      @racing2cat Месяц назад

      @@beefyoso I'm in Louisiana now and miss CO every single day

    • @racing2cat
      @racing2cat Месяц назад

      @@amkrause2004 The ND home of the Minutemen, right?

  • @MrRezRising
    @MrRezRising Месяц назад +3

    Weird coincidence, I just watched _When the Wind Blows_ with my kid yesterday. Then I watched scenes from _Threads, The Day After,_ and _Miracle Mile_ . Then you guys upload this.
    Weird.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 15 дней назад

      Sadly we are very close to it actually happening. Putin is mental, after all, and losing his little military action in Ukraine.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 5 дней назад

      when I was a kid just thought go out on the porch and enjoy the show...Nike missiles and F102's all around...nukes everywhere!...

  • @cubegamer1210
    @cubegamer1210 Месяц назад +1

    The boy in the second film is Batman 😂😂

  • @Arcturus572
    @Arcturus572 Месяц назад

    "The Michael Bayest of Michael Bay movies"... That line had me laughing hard!

  • @RedX914
    @RedX914 Месяц назад +4

    What about godzilla

  • @mercmarten1922
    @mercmarten1922 Месяц назад +3

    You could also include the self-destruct sequence from Alien. (Yes, that was a nuclear detonation.)

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 5 дней назад

      little force to a nuclear detonation in space,,,no atmosphere to conduct a shockwave.....lots of radiation though

  • @FACup-eu2dt
    @FACup-eu2dt Месяц назад +2

    Realism - Threads
    Saddest - When the wind blows
    Comedy? - Dr. Strangelove

    • @user-uc7yn6rm8b
      @user-uc7yn6rm8b Месяц назад

      Dr Strange Love Good, Fail Safe excellent

  • @johnweb7055
    @johnweb7055 25 дней назад +1

    Threads belongs at #1 whenever “nuclear bomb,” and “film” appear in the same sentence.

  • @maikkl2872
    @maikkl2872 Месяц назад +3

    Where´s Akira?

  • @dannygonzales3331
    @dannygonzales3331 Месяц назад +3

    Pacific Rim should be on this list

  • @tommiejonsson8952
    @tommiejonsson8952 Месяц назад +2

    What? No "Atomic train"? It outshines most of the entries on this list.

  • @BrokenNoah
    @BrokenNoah Месяц назад +1

    1:10 Kid Christian Bale lol

  • @MrCaerbannog
    @MrCaerbannog Месяц назад +4

    Not often that I call out something only making #2 on one of these lists rather than #1, but Terminator 2 so blatantly deserved the top spot here.

  • @wornoutwrench8128
    @wornoutwrench8128 29 дней назад +1

    Can't remember what year it was, I was working an afternoon shift. I got home sometime around 1 am, grabbed a beer and turned the TV on to relax a bit before bed.
    I had never seen Count Down to Looking Glass before, flipping through the channels and hit what I though was a news broadcast about the tensions growing.
    I thought it was real, it scared the living daylights out of me. I couldn't figure out what was going on, flipped the channels and not a single other channel had anything on about war breaking out. I must have went on for a good 10 minutes before a commercial break and they then returned to the "movie"
    As a kid in the 60's and 70's, doing all the nuke drills in school and such it was such a trigger. I didn't sleep that night, I couldn't sleep that night.
    I have done some crazy things in my 67 years but that was the most scared I think I ever was.

  • @markduffy5773
    @markduffy5773 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for pointing out Barefoot Gen. Fabulous movie that gives an excellent insight into the atomic bomb drops in Japan from a new perspective.

  • @tylergoodman3560
    @tylergoodman3560 Месяц назад +4

    I watched Oppenheimer in theaters, and I can tell you, it's the best one on this list. 💯🎉

  • @ellnats
    @ellnats Месяц назад +3

    you have become death, destroyer of lists

  • @Jolazo-Music
    @Jolazo-Music 9 дней назад

    Okay until you revealed #1, I was convinced that T2 would have been #1. But in all honesty I cannot argue with your #1 pick. It's spot on.

  • @acreARES
    @acreARES Месяц назад +2

    Barefoot Gen was on a whole different level, its anime but I still cried

  • @Rustybrockson93
    @Rustybrockson93 Месяц назад +3

    Terminator 2: Judgment Day number one🔥