Missile Excerpts from the TV Movie "The Day After"

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • While not completely accurate in technical approach, the failure of the deterrence mission was shown in the made for ABC TV movie "The Day After" that premiered on 20 Nov 1983. The movie used scenes from the film "First Strike" to show the USAF detection and response to an ICBM attack against the U.S.
    Presented from the archives of the Association of Air Force Missileers (AAFM) www.afmissileers.org
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @user-zu5ef2vi6y
    @user-zu5ef2vi6y Год назад +221

    Pulled SAC alert for many years. Watching this always gives me the chills. We had exercises that you did not know if they were real or not until you decoded the message. The relief felt when messages were decoded can't be explained. B-52 Instructor Tail Giunner.

    • @catsandfriends5918
      @catsandfriends5918 Год назад +10

      Thank you for your service. I can't imagine the terror you felt while listening for what might well be a launch alert.

    • @seankuhl8441
      @seankuhl8441 Год назад +11

      I was part of the USAFE NATO nuclear strike commitment in The Netherlands 1997-2001. Those EAMs will get the blood pumping. I was at Andrews AFB during 9/11/2001 and we had 15 real world EAMs in under 5 minutes.

    • @sid2112
      @sid2112 Год назад

      Glad you were there, elder. Those communist bastards knew better than to mess with our boys.

    • @tonyrowland9216
      @tonyrowland9216 Год назад +1

      was at Ofutt AFB Neb. on 9-11. was told to drop trailer at the dock and unass the base. Had an SP escort all the way out. Never did find out who picked up the tlr or when.

    • @MrBubbleJet
      @MrBubbleJet Год назад +3

      may I ask you what were your orders after you did "the job"?

  • @MrGunny2009
    @MrGunny2009 Год назад +261

    I spent 4 years in SAC as a Minuteman II launch crew commander back in the 70s. This depiction of the launch actions is very accurate. Of course, they left out some of the classified details in processing the message, but, all in all, this was very accurate. Several times EVERY DAY we got coded Emergency Action Messages (EAM) that could have been real execution messages for nuclear war. As others have mentioned, we did NOT know whether these were tests/training messages until we had competed decoding and authentication procedures. That was the real test of your nerves. You never knew. I am sometimes asked if the launch crews would obey the execution messages. The answer is an unqualified YES. If the message turned out to be a valid and authentic message, keys would be turned. We believed that the EAMs would not be transmitted unless the U.S. was under attack and the sooner we got our missiles off the ground the sooner we could stop any further incoming attacks. While I count that as a valuable experience in my life, I do not miss the stress.

    • @MisterMasterShake
      @MisterMasterShake Год назад +22

      Thank you for your service!

    • @joez996
      @joez996 Год назад +4

      I too thank you for your service. I was in AF ROTC for 1 year and at least one guy had a "missile slot" upon graduation. One thing I never got an answer to. Say you DID turn the keys - the missiles fly - and your site was NOT hit. You can get out. What are your orders? Did you have any training on infrastructure repair? Training on water filtration or food gathering? I would think that one of those would be the number 1 requirement after the "unthinkable" occurred.

    • @Puzzoozoo
      @Puzzoozoo 11 месяцев назад +1

      Damn. Just wandering how long would it have taken from a real 'EAM' to the missiles going off, 5 minutes, 10, 15?

    • @johnsmith-ug5tp
      @johnsmith-ug5tp 11 месяцев назад +2

      You lucky man! Was one of my dream jobs growing up.

    • @warrenash5370
      @warrenash5370 11 месяцев назад +10

      Spent a few years in the Minot AFB Command Post in North Dakota, mostly controlling the squadron of alert B52s and KC135 tankers. When on duty, was the one to receive the message and decode it so we could launche the planes, if needed. What you see is what we practiced a few times a year. Never had to do it for real but was prepared to. Enjoyed my time in SAC. The highlight of my career! Was the first NCO certified as an Emergency Actions Controller in history at Minot AFB, ND, in the 80s.

  • @Dmiller7239
    @Dmiller7239 11 месяцев назад +36

    These scenes still give me chills 40 years later

  • @AaronDeHart
    @AaronDeHart Год назад +128

    This was terrifying as a kid in the 80s. I remember my parents deciding to let us watch it as a family so we could understand the importance of it. All that was talked about in school the entire week was this movie. They brought counselors in and everything to talk to classrooms. Crazy times

    • @TheDesertRat31
      @TheDesertRat31 Год назад +6

      For sure. My parents wouldn't let me and my brothers watch it. So, I watched it at a neighbors house when my friend invited me to sleep over. My parents were right, they said I'd get nightmares and I did. This movie is still spooky. It's especially sobering that there's still a threat of this happening. It used to be a real concern that people talked about. Now it seems it's forgotten about since the iron curtain fell.

    • @Feargal011
      @Feargal011 Год назад +7

      @@TheDesertRat31 In the 1980s, the combined nuclear arsenal was over 66 000 warheads, split between tactical battlefield/force and strategic force and city targetted weapons. Due to SALT and other negotiations, the global nuclear arsenal has reduced to about 14 000. This is still devastating, but not as terrifying as the unstable years of 1983-7. Be thankful - but be active to prevent this ever becoming reality.

    • @dillianwillamor5906
      @dillianwillamor5906 Год назад

      Looks like we are talking about it again. Things are going back to a new Cold War with current administration.

    • @aaronlechner9290
      @aaronlechner9290 Год назад +4

      Yep same for me. This movie was much more frightening to me than any horror film.

    • @fretboardmaster70
      @fretboardmaster70 Год назад +2

      We all watched it as a family and afterwards we discussed the film. My Father being ex Royal Air Force told us of the possibility of such a war. This was 1984 and during the Cold War. Both Regan and Gorbachev watched this film and the British film Threads.

  • @sdcoinshooter
    @sdcoinshooter Год назад +207

    I was in college when this movie was shown on TV, I clearly remember watching it with my friends. The scariest part for me were these scenes. Imagine watching those missiles being launched, knowing that WWIII had started and return missiles were on their way towards us. I got the chills

    • @peacefulwarrior4151
      @peacefulwarrior4151 Год назад

      How foolish we are to have such psychopaths as our leaders... our politicians are supposed to serve the people not hold them for ransom.

    • @THE-michaelmyers
      @THE-michaelmyers Год назад +29

      I live about 10 minutes from Langley AFB in Hampton Virginia. I was once asked what would I do. I said if I have time I am going to get as close to the Air Combat Command HQ building as I can and bring some beer. I have ZERO desire to live in a post-nuclear war America.

    • @sdcoinshooter
      @sdcoinshooter Год назад +13

      @@THE-michaelmyers Michael, I’ll join you my friend, I feel the same way. Could you make mine a Sprite please, I don’t drink alcohol…then again, there would never be a better time to start.

    • @KRYPTOS_K5
      @KRYPTOS_K5 Год назад

      @@sdcoinshooter Maybe it is too late. It should be better to drink now!
      We must be realists. Russia will never give up in Ukraine due to some very important geographic and historical reasons. This war is an existential war to the Russians. It has no "spiritual" relation, say, to the US Vietnam war or the Soviet war in Afghanistan and other cold war conflicts. They will never give up in this case. We need to cope with the possibility of a 10 years long war in Europe on the borders of NATO (and the USA). It will be an unreliable situation even to our (until today...) well succeeded philosophy of self deterrent thermonuclear weapons. This is a totally new situation.
      Brasil

    • @charlesphillips1468
      @charlesphillips1468 Год назад +8

      I was about 13 years old when I watched this the first nights it aired. Later, I was in the service and they wanted to send me to nuclear artillery school. Yes, there is such a thing.

  • @Visitor2Earth
    @Visitor2Earth 11 месяцев назад +12

    Fun Fact: The Brig Gen (Clarence R. Autery) in Looking Glass was an actual USAF SAC officer, and he retired as a Major General. He passed away in 2010. RIP, General.

  • @rossmyerw
    @rossmyerw Год назад +75

    I just watched this and I feel sick. I live in the Kansas City area. I remember driving by those missile silos north of Warrensburg. Those particular ones have been decommissioned since the movie came out. The movie shows Kansas City incinerated and I was living in Kansas City when the movie came out. It had an extraordinary impact on us. Dear God, I hope none of this happens for real.

    • @inconnu4961
      @inconnu4961 Год назад +2

      Wow, that sounds so scary to see your city/town in this movie! I hope nothing of the sort happens like this as well. But i dont hold much hope for the sanity of our leaders!

    • @kruracing5260
      @kruracing5260 Год назад +1

      I was stationed there.. lived in Warrensburg.

    • @johnadams9995
      @johnadams9995 11 месяцев назад +1

      I lived in KC at the time too. Scared the crap out of me.

    • @stephenkoehler4051
      @stephenkoehler4051 11 месяцев назад +3

      I lived in Joplin and was going to college there at the time and my German Class went up to KC the day after this was shown. It was a pretty surreal experience riding our bus up there and back. The real creepy time was when we went by the old mining areas north of Joplin which are desolate gravel fields and piles of mine tailings. my German teacher, who had survived the bombing of Stuttgart during WW II remarked "It looks like the Day After." It wasn't the first time I felt that feeling. NBC had shown a special news documentary during the SALT talks in the 1970's featuring the Whitman missile field. US Intelligence estimated that each of the 150 silos in the field would receive two 20 Megaton warheads. That's 300 20 Megaton warheads going off. Missouri would be a plain of solid radioactive glass for millennia. The Day After was not gruesome enough. It would have been far worse if it actually had happened.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      @@stephenkoehler4051 the risk of accidental nuclear war exists as long as any of these weapons is operational -- they are not worth that risk.

  • @fr-tigerfangs7039
    @fr-tigerfangs7039 11 месяцев назад +30

    This movie, as well as the British "Threads" count for me among the short list of movies that can not possibly be watched twice. They are so well done, so terrifying and upsetting that they need only one watch to convey their extremely powerful message...

    • @Justanotherconsumer
      @Justanotherconsumer Месяц назад +1

      Grave of the Fireflies is another movie I’m glad I’ve seen but never, ever want to see again.

    • @johntechwriter
      @johntechwriter Месяц назад +1

      The commonality of Threads and this movie is, neither accurately portrays the horror of the an actual event. So say the eggheads who plan for these things.

  • @patriciam4512
    @patriciam4512 Год назад +34

    It was unauthorized I'm sure, but when my husband was an OCS instructor he would open the block on Nuclear Defence by showing the attack portion of this from the scene just before the alert to when the attack is over and the fallout is coming down. He said it never failed to produce a very shocked and attentive class.

  • @zacharyfett2491
    @zacharyfett2491 Год назад +19

    I wish they’d remake this movie. I think a lot of people today need to see it.

    • @nikoladedic6623
      @nikoladedic6623 7 месяцев назад +1

      Wouldn't be taken as seriously as back then.

    • @daveism3000
      @daveism3000 19 дней назад

      Including a whole flock of warmongering, saber-rattling world leaders who, while never getting their hands dirty of exposing themselves or their children to armed service or war, will gladly send others to their deaths for bravado or financial gain.

    • @meinfraulein380
      @meinfraulein380 14 дней назад

      needs in russian language

  • @morgandeclercque4608
    @morgandeclercque4608 Год назад +47

    I’d just gotten out of the Army when this movie came out. For those of us in the military at that time, this was the reality we faced daily.

    • @sully0001
      @sully0001 Год назад +2

      We faced this reality until the Soviet Union collapsed. I joined the Army in 87, got out in 98

    • @russgrimsby5387
      @russgrimsby5387 Год назад +2

      Our targets on the M-16 ranges were little green men with red stars. We all thought one day it would happen

    • @marshalltravis3217
      @marshalltravis3217 11 месяцев назад +3

      I do miss the Cold War,,,

    • @Rockwolf50
      @Rockwolf50 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@marshalltravis3217at least things were predictable and stable.

  • @toddw6716
    @toddw6716 Год назад +59

    This was maybe the most scary but important film ever. Todays youth should watch.

    • @dallen521
      @dallen521 Год назад +9

      There was a U.K. film called “Threads”. You should watch that one. A U.K. based film from 1984.
      Then you should RUclips “Protect and Survive” a government information film from 1976. The accompanying document is available on line. A 1986 cartoon, “When the Wind Blows” is very much another film worth watching.
      There is always “A turtle called Bert” who will teach you to “Duck & Cover”.

    • @gdiwolverinemale2745
      @gdiwolverinemale2745 Год назад

      All liberal women cheering for Ukraine should watch. Only the sight of their own annihilation will make their hysteria subside. Sadly

    • @valseyer4486
      @valseyer4486 Год назад +2

      Today's youth wouldn't understand, big generation gap homie

    • @BeardOfRiker
      @BeardOfRiker Год назад +2

      Today’s youth are worried about the very real threat of getting shot in their classroom every day. They know real fear on a level folks over 40 never will.

    • @stevegordon5689
      @stevegordon5689 Год назад +1

      Todays youth are making nuclear war videos on TikTok with rock music soundtracks!

  • @samspade3227
    @samspade3227 Год назад +59

    When this movie came out I was in the Navy. Stationed at a sub repair facility. Slept just feet away from nuclear weapons. It was taken very seriously the work we were doing.

    • @Travis1.979
      @Travis1.979 Год назад +2

      sorry for my ignorance about the subject, but what if the commandant of the vessel decided himself to launch that nuclear missile?

    • @StrayCatOrwell
      @StrayCatOrwell Год назад +6

      One man can’t launch nukes.
      On submarines, it’s five men, including the captain who have to decode the launch messages and agree they’re valid.
      If one man disagrees, the weapons don’t go.

    • @Travis1.979
      @Travis1.979 Год назад +2

      thank u@@StrayCatOrwell

    • @byronharano2391
      @byronharano2391 11 месяцев назад

      The Cold War was anything but "cold." We are again on the brink of a nuclear exchange with our nemesis the old Soviet Union alive and well in President Vladimir Putin. I appreciate your service Shipmate.

    • @byronharano2391
      @byronharano2391 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Travis1.979no! Excellent question. Thanks for asking.

  • @billadair1868
    @billadair1868 Год назад +15

    I was in West Germany when this came out so I didn't see it on AFN. Our tank unit was about an hour from the Eastern border and we knew exactly where our position was to be in case the "balloon went up." We were basically told to hold the line as long as we could. Hopefully, till the forces got there from the states. Glad we didn't have to test our training but we were ready.

    • @craiglarge5925
      @craiglarge5925 Год назад +1

      Did you ever hear about 7 Days to the Rhine ?

  • @MM-zs7ir
    @MM-zs7ir 11 месяцев назад +10

    I was 18 and expecting my oldest child when I saw the movie. I was sick for weeks and even sicker when my son was born. Praying nothing like this would ever happen. Now, I'm a grandmother, and praying it never happens.

  • @ncc74656m
    @ncc74656m Год назад +77

    My dad was given a ride by a guy after his car was destroyed in the tornado of 75 in Omaha, and they got to talking about how he'd just moved from New York. My dad grimly joked "Prime target number one." The guy replied "Son, you just moved to prime target number one," in reference to Offutt. While I'm sure that Cheyenne might've been a bigger target, it probably really didn't matter all that much in the end.

    • @crkelle
      @crkelle Год назад +7

      I lived just a few miles from Offutt. I remember asking my Mom about it. Both she and my Dad explained it wouldn't matter because we would never know in reference that we would be dead.

    • @darrellhall6622
      @darrellhall6622 Год назад +2

      ​@@crkelle it doesn't matter any more. They have enough missiles to hit all our cities three or four times plus the missiles area too.

    • @JMChladek
      @JMChladek Год назад +4

      When my dad retired from the US Army in 83, we moved to Omaha because this is where my folks grew up. So my seventh and eighth grades, plus high school had me wondering more than a few times as I went to sleep whether or not I would wake up the next morning or if it was all going to end in a fireball that night. It was an interesting feeling to have.
      I also remember when I believe it was Channel 6 had a simulation about Omaha getting hit by a nuclear warhead as you see a mushroom cloud behind the Woodman tower. That was nightmare fuel all by itself even before "The Day After" aired.

    • @inconnu4961
      @inconnu4961 Год назад +5

      @@darrellhall6622 While you are right, they dont have the means to send more than 80 at a first strike. (according to a discussion thread on TDLR Europe News; and said by people who suggest they have professional knowledge) Obviously, take everything with a grain of salt! but by how incompetent the Russian military has looked thus far, and by some accounts of people I KNOW personally who served in Russian military, it is likely fairly accurate.

    • @701CPD
      @701CPD Год назад +3

      I was always told Cincinnati, Ohio was a prime nuclear weapons target because of the General Electric (jet engines) and Cincinnati Milacron (machine tools) plants.

  • @movietella
    @movietella 2 года назад +324

    Fun fact: Nicholas Meyer claims he suffered severe flu-like symptoms throughout the making of this film. When doctors could find no reason for his illness, they eventually determined that Meyer was actually suffering from severe clinical depression, which Meyer attributes to having to face the horrors of nuclear war in such depth.

    • @Anarchist86ed
      @Anarchist86ed 2 года назад +29

      Well, if he'd have been able to play the fallout games he woulda known nuclear war is a lot of fun and you can walk around with a big iron on your hip looting mail boxes for centuries old boxes of salisbury steak.

    • @Americanpatriot-zo2tk
      @Americanpatriot-zo2tk Год назад +14

      I’ve been a registered nurse for 34 years doctors do this all the time when they cannot diagnose or find out what’s wrong with the person they simply say it’s in your head. Most times it is not.

    • @Americanpatriot-zo2tk
      @Americanpatriot-zo2tk Год назад +3

      @@Anarchist86ed?

    • @inthedarkwoods2022
      @inthedarkwoods2022 Год назад +4

      Dude you just making up stuff

    • @stevebishop9468
      @stevebishop9468 Год назад +6

      @@inthedarkwoods2022 the producers also had to lower the power of the nuclear weapons portrayed ..they said if we went with the real power of the bombs there would not be a story left to tell

  • @biggredd2008
    @biggredd2008 Год назад +26

    I can still remember watching this move when I was 12. It gave me goosebumps back then and it just gave me goosebumps watching it today as a 52 year old man. I hope and pray to God this never happens.

    • @santoshjoshi5181
      @santoshjoshi5181 Год назад

      Exactly same for me.

    • @VanderbiltMr
      @VanderbiltMr Год назад

      Same. Stressed me out.

    • @SailorGhost
      @SailorGhost 11 месяцев назад

      Same for me. Even, when I was a kid, I had nightmares about that..

  • @billbresnahan9949
    @billbresnahan9949 Год назад +49

    I remember watching this movie the first time it was aired. I worked 3 rd shift back then and had to leave for work just after the movie finished. I remember standing outside on a beautiful fall night being so happy that all the horrors that the movie portrayed hadn’t happened and everything was ok..

    • @davidlittle7418
      @davidlittle7418 Год назад

      Yes I don't think people today realise what it was like to live under the cloud of WW3, to be honest it has only receded, but it was a psychological burden to live with the threat when the Soviet Union was still an entity & the cold war was at it's height.

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад

      @@davidlittle7418
      Sounds like you suffered mentally from what you referred to as the psychological burden of the cold war. You must of lived an isolated life with nothing else to focus on other than getting you tail blown off. What a wimp, lol

  • @johnmcfarland4700
    @johnmcfarland4700 Год назад +31

    This movie should be remade as a full blown box office movie that goes to theaters. This truly is a movie that every American should watch.
    Or read the book.

    • @Michael-cf9cj
      @Michael-cf9cj Год назад +5

      Combine aspects of this movie with the British version of the movie, Threads. Threads was a more horrific portrayal of a nuclear war.

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад +4

      @@Michael-cf9cj
      Exactly. The escalation and launch scenes of The Day After combined with the aftermath of the nuclear exchange in Threads would be definitely a blast. No pun intended.

    • @mikel7145
      @mikel7145 Год назад +1

      John lithgow needs to be in it again too

    • @danyleon4870
      @danyleon4870 Год назад

      @@TS-wh4ey The best to have is a rerun of the remasterded film, or a TV series.

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад

      @@danyleon4870
      A mini series, such as a 3 night episode event, would be able to add more content to a realistic story of two superpowers engaging in an all out nuclear exchange. Much more could be added to the breakdown in dialogue and the escalation leading to what finally triggers both sides launching their arsenal. And then more could be added to the detonations and destruction scenes that is what certainly gets the most attention from the viewers. You figure those other movies are decades old now and them detonation scenes were mighty scary then, well imagine the advanced methods that filmmakers have now that could really bring out the horror. And finally there could be even more angles of realistic survival in the aftermath of what's left of a world plunged into nuclear winter. During the launch scene, I'd like to see cruise missiles launching from boomers as much as land based silos. Nevertheless, filmmakers should produce a whole new combined version of them nuclear holocaust movies that were a wake up call to the reality of what it would be like produced decades ago. And now you got 4K Ultra plus QLED and OLED tv that would be an awesome viewing experience.

  • @leonotthelion
    @leonotthelion 2 года назад +63

    These official Air force personal following procedures, the scramble to the B-52, all of it makes the reality of what's about to take place all that more TERRIFYING

    • @nitdiver5
      @nitdiver5 Год назад +1

      Yes, but more than likely after the church is removed.

    • @JMChladek
      @JMChladek Год назад

      The SAC scenes except for the crew outside the silo were filmed as part of a SAC dramatization in 1978. It's use in The Day After was VERY effective.

  • @saschaschneider9157
    @saschaschneider9157 2 года назад +42

    The most terrifing movie of my childhood.

    • @darrellmfume4020
      @darrellmfume4020 Год назад +3

      I was 15 when the day after aired in LATE 1983...it was a terrifying movie for ALL of us kids growing up in the 80's.

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад

      Check out the movie 'Threads' if you haven't already done so. Another terrifying flick on nuclear holocaust.

  • @wohl1917
    @wohl1917 Месяц назад +5

    I was at an SAC Base, just passing through, when they had an alert. The unbelievable noise of the a B-52 wing launching cannot be explained unless you've been there and done that. The silence afterwards was worse because you didn't know....

    • @shawnbegay7220
      @shawnbegay7220 27 дней назад

      I was a 7-year old boy in Phoenix in 1973. One time, we had a day or so of sunset B-52 takeoffs from Sky Harbor airport. The B-52's screamed and howled as they flew over our neighborhood. They left a lot of smoke as they flew over. I later confirmed with a Vietnam vet coworker that those B-52's came from Vietnam.

  • @drunkrumjack
    @drunkrumjack Год назад +239

    This movie depressed Reagan so badly he told director Nicholas Meyer that in no small measure that his watching this film played a factor in regards to summit talks with Gorbachev.

    • @deker0954
      @deker0954 Год назад

      Bullshit.

    • @Lights_Darks
      @Lights_Darks Год назад +8

      Whoa! Did not know that.

    • @generaldvw
      @generaldvw Год назад +23

      It's a bleak films... Along with it's companion Threads.

    • @robertmunoz7543
      @robertmunoz7543 Год назад

      More idiots have nukes in 2923 than back then!🙄
      Jman

    • @shauny2285
      @shauny2285 Год назад +23

      Maybe our current crop of Neo-Cons should also watch this?

  • @PlottingTheDownfall
    @PlottingTheDownfall Год назад +52

    I remember watching this movie as a child. The second half with no commercials, after the blast. It was terrifying as child. And I think its what made GenX cynical "slackers" with the "whatever" attitude. We all expected to die in a fireball before we grew too old.

    • @dees_good_vibes3391
      @dees_good_vibes3391 9 месяцев назад

      That might be part of it. I think it also has to do with Gen X attempting to make a difference/change things and being shut down unfortunately.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons is operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times I might ad, Regan refused to give up his space fantasy, and said no. Even though he was the only one that believed it would ever work.

  • @TS-wh4ey
    @TS-wh4ey Год назад +41

    That scene with Jason Robards driving on the highway when all the car engines died and then suddenly the distant detonations began, is the scene I always remember most. Quite a movie on the subject of nuclear holocaust for sure. This one and the movie 'Threads' are both frightening examples of nuclear holocaust.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад +1

      I found that section of Kansas highway on Google Maps. A friend of mine has a farm and from the highest hill on it, there's an air force base you can see in the distance.

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад +1

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver
      I believe it was a 4 mile stretch on K-10 between Edgerton Road Exit and the DeSoto Interchange at former K-285 (now Lexington Avenue) that was used for shooting highway scenes representing a mass exodus on interstate 70.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад

      @@TS-wh4ey I think of that scene when I look down at the air force base maybe 15 miles from the farm. I'm sure it's marked for a 500-kT.

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад +1

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver
      No doubt all visible military installations are marked targets and if it ever happens at least you'll never know what hit ya and that's probably the best way to go instead of trying to survive the aftermath and suffer a slow agonizing death from nuclear fallout.
      If I knew I had about 30 minutes before the detonations begin, I'd probably loot me a case of beer and drive directly to ground zero. Obviously I wouldn't be able to drink the whole case but I'd sure chug a few down before I got blasted. 🤣

    • @AndreaUngaro
      @AndreaUngaro Год назад +1

      @@TS-wh4eyWell, an airburst of 500 kts at 15 miles won't even break your windows, much less a surface burst. If you have a decent shelter and/or what there is of fallout (very little for an airburst) doesn't head your way, you should be fine. Unless of course you happened to look in the wrong direction at the instant of detonation; that would be bad for your eyesight. But in general that attack would be very survivable.

  • @Rick1959
    @Rick1959 Год назад +28

    I was 24 when this movie aired. It really did affect many people and in a positive way. Yet, here we are 40 years later and, perhaps more than ever, facing the same thing.....Have we progressed at all?

    • @alfredovilla8560
      @alfredovilla8560 Год назад +6

      I was 15 when I saw it, and I feel the same way you do, man..... . Humanity is led by men that are so used to having nukes around that they forgot all about Hiroshima and Nagasaki. All this stinks to high heaven.

    • @mig2720
      @mig2720 Год назад +3

      No

    • @kareystone2285
      @kareystone2285 11 месяцев назад

      Almost, totalitarianism is right on the horizon...I see 'hackable' humans in the near future
      Human 2.0

    • @PavewayJDAM
      @PavewayJDAM 11 месяцев назад

      Russia is still an asshole that threatens the rest of us with nuclear death? No Russia has not progressed at all.

    • @AnthonyJ504
      @AnthonyJ504 11 месяцев назад

      Depends on your definition of "progression". If you think we're worse off in terms of all out nuclear war than the cold war, we're not. Putin can saber rattle all he wants but he's not insane. Even if he was all his elite aren't and would stop him before he could start an unwinnable war that would lead to all their and billions of others deaths. Are we at a higher risk of an independent, non state aligned rouge single attack? Maybe...
      As horrific and tragic (and hopefully never happens) as that would be...
      This is something else entirely.

  • @chrisb2239
    @chrisb2239 11 месяцев назад +10

    This movie should be updated and remade. It served a purpose back then and the need remains today.

    • @kelmo3355
      @kelmo3355 Месяц назад

      Forgive me for asking, but why should it be remade? Isn't the message pretty clear? Somethings don't need to be "Updated" for the sake of keeping up with the kardashians. It's not been shown that much as it is for reasons.

  • @psychedelicpython
    @psychedelicpython 2 года назад +55

    I grew up close to a SAC Air Force base and married a Tech Sgt who was stationed there. After he retired we moved back to Spokane and this movie is a grim reminder that there are nuclear missiles all over Airway Heights Washington that could be deployed at anytime. It kind of gives me the willies.

    • @slickx45
      @slickx45 2 года назад +3

      Why would there be nuclear missiles in Airway Heights?

    • @psychedelicpython
      @psychedelicpython 2 года назад +2

      @@slickx45 because Fairchild is located there and it's a SAC base.

    • @wespenn7243
      @wespenn7243 2 года назад +5

      @@psychedelicpython The Atlas and Titan I missiles where deactivated in 1965.

    • @coolcat6303
      @coolcat6303 2 года назад

      It’s pretty incredible to think that there are basically a bunch of underground nuclear tipped rockets 🚀 scattered all over the NW United States. And back in the 80’s they were in the Midwest as well.

    • @Trainlover1995
      @Trainlover1995 Год назад +5

      Fairchild no longer has missiles. It doesn't even have bombers anymore. The only unit of note at Fairchild these days is 92nd Air Refueling Wing. This could, in theory, still make Fairchild a target in the event of nuclear war, so the bombers at failsafe positions can't refuel, but ICBMs and SLBMs are the bigger threats these days.

  • @robbhahn8897
    @robbhahn8897 Год назад +27

    Went through many simulated missile launches onboard the Polaris submarine I served on. We were even told once that it was not a drill and we carried on with the procedure right up to the point before actually launching our missiles. We were always ready out there and played for keeps.

    • @Travis1.979
      @Travis1.979 Год назад +2

      man, i imagine what passed through your mind when you were told it was not a drill 💀

    • @wagorides
      @wagorides Год назад +5

      I was serving on SSBNs when this movie came out. I can confirm your experience that the crew does not always know that it is a drill until a certain step in the launch procedure. Serious business for a bunch of 20-something year old men.

    • @cardinalbob1
      @cardinalbob1 11 месяцев назад

      I have a friend that was a Bubblehead for a lot of years. He never talks about this, just about being a mechanic 🛠️ and a drunken sailor.(probably for a diversion)

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons are operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full disarmament and end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times, Reagan refused the proposal !!

  • @JaxFFMedic
    @JaxFFMedic 11 месяцев назад +5

    I saw this movie as a kid and now, at 51, it has affected greatly. Now I truly understand the implications.

  • @harryh5620
    @harryh5620 11 месяцев назад +9

    one of the most terrifying movies I"ve ever seen. I was in SAC when it was broadcast and it scared the living shit out of me. My girlfriend's family kept asking me "is this real? Is this realistic" and all I can say was "yep. Heaven help us, yes"

  • @jrftworth
    @jrftworth Год назад +13

    This video brings back memories of serving in SAC and working around B-52's on the alert pad

    • @johndubose1395
      @johndubose1395 Год назад

      we had B-52s in the air constantly for 40 years

    • @Here4theComments9
      @Here4theComments9 Год назад

      OPSEC…!!! OPSEC!!!!!!!!

    • @zombiedodge1426
      @zombiedodge1426 11 месяцев назад

      This movie aired closer in time to the introduction of the B-52 than to 2023. And it's still flying!

  • @tomp8094
    @tomp8094 Год назад +58

    Approximately the 5:00 mark, great shot of a ripple launch of a pair of Minuteman II ICBMs from Vandenberg AFB CA. To my knowledge, a simultaneous launch like that has only been done one time. I believe these sorties were launched on a key turn from a single missile crew on an Airborne Platform. ICBMs launched from Vandenberg fly across the Pacific Ocean and the dummy inert warheads impact on Kwajelin Atoll which is the terminus for the Western Test Range.

    • @Americanpatriot-zo2tk
      @Americanpatriot-zo2tk Год назад +2

      Ty for info!

    • @michaeldoonan1429
      @michaeldoonan1429 Год назад +2

      I believe the duel MMIII launch was Glory Trip 119GM on 21 Dec 1987. I am pretty sure the ALCC turned keys on those two missiles. The missile crew sequence was filmed at Minot AFB, ND. A DOV crew (Evaluator - Orange scarf) relieves a DOTI (Instructor - Yellow scarf). Brought back memories.

    • @tomp8094
      @tomp8094 Год назад +1

      @Michael Doonan At Malmstrom, Instructor Crews wore black scarves - DOV wore white ones. Spent over 2.5 years in the Instructor Shop. My 10th Strategic Missile Sqadron scarf is in my retirement shadow box. Our Squadron nickname was "The First Aces". It is bright blue with a small Ace of Spades playing cards superimposed on it.

    • @michaeldoonan1429
      @michaeldoonan1429 Год назад +1

      @tomp8094 Those were interesting color selections! Good guys wore Black. At Minot, Sqdn's wore Red(740), Green(741) and Blue(742). Was in CDB-54 class at Vandyland in 1978. Participated in GT-73GM in Feb 1980 and was on Alert both times in June 1980. Wore Green for 2 years and Yellow for 2 years. Glad I was young and single. It was a highlight of my career, but working for SAC was "challenging". Thank you for serving underground.

    • @tomp8094
      @tomp8094 Год назад +5

      @Michael Doonan Yep - the iron fist of Strategic Air Command. I'm sure you've seen drawings of the Command Crest holding a pair of male testicles vs the official one holding lightning bolts symbolizing the worldwide nuclear striking capability of the Command. I enjoyed my time on crew and wouldn't trade the memories or the commeraderie/bond I felt with my fellow missileers for anything. Peace ... is our Profession.

  • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
    @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Год назад +26

    I have spent most of my life living near prime targets. I am almost 65 years old. Saw this movie when it came out. Bought a copy when I could. Being from a military family I think is different. You live with the possibility of war and death. Like WARSAW pact kicking off in Europe, pouring through the Fulda Gap in Germany. We had drills a couple times a month at school where we would get on the floor under our desks to protect us. Being on base when an alert sounded. Gates closed, no entry or exit. Just sit in your car. Guys running around with their weapons. Sometimes aircraft taking off one after another. When Kennedy was killed my dad came home grabbed his gear disappeared for a few days. It was a way of life. So this movie while entertaining didn't really affect me.

    • @pablod6872
      @pablod6872 Год назад +4

      My dad was stationed in Germany (before I was born) when JFK was shot. They got the alert, jumped in their mechanized artillery, and hauled ass for the Czech border. After digging in and watching the border for about a week, they went back to barracks. Can't imagine what he was thinking in that first few minutes....

    • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
      @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Год назад +2

      @@pablod6872 I have read it was a DEFCON 2 alert in Europe. Never asked Dad. They weren't sure if there would be an attack.Better ready than not.

    • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
      @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Год назад +1

      @@pablod6872 Something that isn't really talked about is the posturing between the USN and the Russian Navy during the Yom Kippur war in 1973. Israel was desperate to replace lost equipment and aircraft. Russia tried to stop it by bluffing. Got a little intense briefly. Once the Russian realized their navy lacked effective air support it went quite and resupply continued. That's a good war to study. One thing stands out besides tactics and logistics, the psychology of war.

    • @jhoover8734
      @jhoover8734 Год назад +1

      Think I know what you mean.. I grew up with an Air Force dad, lived on Minot AFB, ND, and spent several years in West Germany with armed guards on our school buses too.
      Kind of a strange thing to get used to, living on the potential front line.

    • @TonyWeaving
      @TonyWeaving 11 месяцев назад

      Like you John I live at a prime target on Portsmouth England because of the Royal Navy. It is quite a frightening thing to think that we in Portsmouth are no 1 or 2 targets for President Putins Nuclear Missiles. Twice a year the Nuclear Sirens get tested in the dockyard and believe me my friend it is quite an eerie sound.

  • @martinhill486
    @martinhill486 Год назад +5

    Went to college at UCSB, we could see the test launches from Vandenburg AFB is you were out and looking right way. One day with an AF brat who had been inside the launch sites - they did the one at that time; two missile launch test. My friend's statement - 'they have never launched two at the same time' made the next 30 minutes rather tense.

  • @Bootmahoy88
    @Bootmahoy88 Год назад +24

    Damn. A young John Lithgow.

    • @zombiedodge1426
      @zombiedodge1426 11 месяцев назад +1

      He had just gotten as Oscar nomination for THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP (ironically, in a role as a transgender woman for which he'd probably get cancelled today).
      It's really weird seeing Steve Guttenberg in a dramatic role. In a way, the POLICE ACADEMY movies were the best and worst things that ever happened to him.

    • @mikegallant811
      @mikegallant811 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah that was john in his salad days.

  • @commandosolo_Danny_Secary
    @commandosolo_Danny_Secary Год назад +7

    when you see this, mark the time. you have 25-30 minutes to live. that's the amount of time it takes theirs to hit us.

  • @billd7197
    @billd7197 Год назад +8

    How terrifying this movie is and just how relevant it is in today's world.

  • @robertshiell887
    @robertshiell887 Год назад +114

    I always thought that this movie should be shown to every grade nine class in the world, followed by a screening of Schindler’s List.

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Год назад +3

      Anyone with any sense who lived through these times realized the reality of nuclear warfare between the United States and Soviet Union. A movie was only required for illiterate fools.
      Keep in mind that when the Soviet Union stood down, so did the United States. It was, unfortunately, the best available strategy.
      My leftist friends, of course, preferred unilateral disarmament. They said, with the same confidence they predict disaster from climate change, that EVERY arms race ended in war. That proved to be a mistaken notion of course, but leftists are never held responsible for their errors, mistakes and foolishness.

    • @gcaplan1
      @gcaplan1 Год назад +1

      @@SeattlePioneer here today Russia , China , are partnered and we do not have enough nukes to retaliate or first strike without them wiping us out after . We are outgunned and the world with our nation is unraveling .
      Our military light was only thing keeping dollar as reserve currency afloat this long .

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Год назад

      @@gcaplan1
      Ummm. Perhaps the greatest foreign policy achievement of Richard Nixon was dividing USSR and China. Biden's greatest foreign policy disaster may prove to be driving them together again.
      In my view, it is very likely that the United States could easily destroy Russia and China in a nuclear war. We seem to have the ability to do that even without fighting wars.
      And military power backstopped the economic and political power that allowed the American World Empire to dominate the world since WWII. The current efforts to undermine Russia over the Ukraine war and undermine the Chinese economy illustrate the reality of that power, although in neither case is a victory for the American World Empire assured at this point.

    • @gcaplan1
      @gcaplan1 Год назад

      @@SeattlePioneer interesting perspective , I always said Nixons greatest sin in retrospect was the bridge to China . Never viewed it as a way to decouple from soviets . I’m 39 so my knowledge of that era was not lived through .
      Not saying I agree with your view yet but I will think on it and may agree eventually .
      I think USA could win conflict if we had smarter leadership . As of now the president on down are kooks worried about gender and race in military more than how to kill people and break things . Even economic war will be effected by people worried about violating their college indoctrinations .

    • @markharmon4963
      @markharmon4963 Год назад

      Schindler's list always seemed like an apology for not opposing the fascists before they take over. If you want to see that in the modern age, see modern day Ukraine.
      Zelensky is under the gun, and Russia is under the gun of Putin.
      Good film. I ww

  • @BroiledSourGrapes
    @BroiledSourGrapes 2 года назад +25

    Those would of been one way flights in those B-52’s, but I guess it beats the alternative.

    • @Bootmahoy88
      @Bootmahoy88 Год назад +9

      It’s worthwhile to note that in a real scramble those B-52s would more than likely not get far before being destroyed by incoming nukes. The crewman sprinting toward the planes were sprinting for their lives. “Get airborne, get airborne now, and fly as far as you can away from base.”

    • @aliendroneservices6621
      @aliendroneservices6621 Год назад

      ​@@Bootmahoy88 Because it takes half-an-hour to get airborne?

    • @GrenadeMonkeyJ
      @GrenadeMonkeyJ Год назад +2

      To get a squadron airborne yes. Thirty minutes is conservative. Start all 8 engines, taxi, take off x 12. Most bases had more than one squadron too. The tail end Charlie’s would have trouble getting clear in 30 minutes - 15 if it’s SLBMs incoming.

    • @davem5333
      @davem5333 Год назад +1

      ​@@Bootmahoy88Someone told me that the pre-engine start cockpit check list on a B-52 was 450 items and could take 90 minutes to get through.

    • @wyganter
      @wyganter Год назад

      @@davem5333Aren’t there shorter checklists for when shit is real? I remember when on 9/11, two fighter pilots were ordered to intercept one of the hijacked airliners. The junior officer ran to her jet and started going through the long, standard checklist. Her commander looked over and radioed “WTF are you doing? Get your ass up there!”

  • @jmorv8866
    @jmorv8866 Год назад +2

    After you watched this movie, the take away was you pray you never saw this in real life. It was encouraged at my school to watch this movie, when it aired on TV.

  • @austinhorrorcreator4982
    @austinhorrorcreator4982 Год назад +10

    If you want to know how close we came, one of the closest is known as Able Archer 1983.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад +1

      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons are operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full disarmament and end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times, Reagan refused the proposal !!

  • @kacodemonio
    @kacodemonio Год назад +1

    Very professional. Congratulations for such a smooth operation. Now sit and enjoy the biggest show on Earth.

  • @trob0914
    @trob0914 11 месяцев назад +3

    Spent my first three years in SAC, whenever the klaxon went off, we never knew if it was actual,except a couple of occassions when the "ORI" team was found out on landing at the base!! Long live the USAF, SAC we miss you!!🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @New-tu3mn
    @New-tu3mn 11 месяцев назад

    The seamless integration in to the story flow of of Air Force informational videos really adds to the verisimilitude of the film.

  • @kentdouglas202
    @kentdouglas202 Год назад +11

    That movie scared the shit out of a lot of people, myself included.

  • @johnh2410
    @johnh2410 11 дней назад

    I was a student at the Univ of Kansas in the early 80's when they filmed this movie on my campus. Many of my friends works as extras during large scenes. I watched this with a large group of students from my dorm. The drama of this scene was pretty intense but it was broken up with shouts of, "hey, there's the football stadium!" or "that's the Med Center" and "oh, that's Wesco Hall".

  • @roceye
    @roceye Год назад +8

    I wanted this on TV as a kid and was very unnerved by the reality of the possibility that it could really happen.

  • @wcatholic1
    @wcatholic1 Месяц назад +1

    In the Army in the 80's. Trained to expect to fight in a chemical/nuclear environment. It was estimated to be about 7-10 days before chemical and/or tactical nuclear weapons would be used. Both NATO and Warsaw Pact began modernizing their conventional forces in the 70's and 80's.

  • @Nerval-kg9sm
    @Nerval-kg9sm Год назад +12

    It's strange, but when this aired and I watched it, I was 12, but it didn't disturb me. I remember kids being upset at school afterwards. I didn't understand why, because it was just a movie.

    • @jfabritz
      @jfabritz Год назад +2

      You have to be pragmatic about it. If it happens for real, there isn't much you can do about it, so getting all upset about it won't help. Whether a 12 year old can be pragmatic is another issue.

    • @mplsgordon2
      @mplsgordon2 Год назад +2

      When this movie was broadcast I was living at Grand Forks AFB. When "War Games" came out I watched it in the base movie theater. There were alert bomber and tanker crews in the back of the auditorium (in case they had to get out to their SUVs quickly). The moment, near the end, where the big white dot appears over GFAFB was fairly weird, although there was applause in the room.
      We had plans. If things got tense, we had a big box on wheels that contained everything we needed to do our unit's job. We would load it on a school bus and ride off to a gather point well away from the incoming missles and bombs. Then we would "reconstitute" the air base wherever we could. I assume there were some key locations in the plans (not shared with little old me). We did have a plan to use I-29 as a runway.
      See, the birds on the alert pad would be out and up right off. But 2/3 of the aircraft were not on alert, yet they were (mostly) ready to fly. Crews would be sent to them, and every effort made to get them off the ground before hell arrived. Those unarmed birds would circle in a "safe" area until we got the base reconstituted. And who knows? The Russian missile targeted on GFAFB might have blown up in the silo, or in the air, or the magnetic fields over the pole might have scrambled the guidance. Shoot, even the payload could have malfunctioned, and the base would have survived.

    • @gzuzsavz
      @gzuzsavz Год назад +1

      @@mplsgordon2 a well written note, thnx & thnx for your service. i was in the WiANG, 86-02, supporting the A-10 & then the F-16 as a Munitions Sys Spc. Crazy days, indeed. Right now is far crazier. Hang on to yer hat

  • @crazy71achmed
    @crazy71achmed 2 года назад +14

    ~6:06ff. Only John Lithgow playing a physicist understands the consequence.

  • @701CPD
    @701CPD Год назад +8

    Still the scariest movie I've ever seen. I'm told "Threads" is scarier, but I haven't seen that.

    • @johnmccnj
      @johnmccnj Год назад +4

      I have. "The Day After" gave me nightmares as a teenager, but it's sugar-coated Disney in comparison to "Threads".

    • @TS-wh4ey
      @TS-wh4ey Год назад +1

      'Threads' focuses alot on the aftermath of an all out nuclear exchange. A realistic insight to the slow horrible death anyone will suffer that survives all the blasts.

    • @sleech1138
      @sleech1138 Год назад +1

      Threads is terrifying. This is a laugh a minute comedy in a comparison

    • @irvan36mm
      @irvan36mm Год назад +1

      “Threads”is one of those movies you’ll only want to see once in your life because it is that terrifying.
      There is another British movie called “The War Game” that was almost as scary as Threads. It was banned by the BBC when it came out in the mid-late ‘60’s.
      Check both of those out, if you dare

    • @sleech1138
      @sleech1138 Год назад

      @@irvan36mm Yeah. "The War Game" is terrifying because its an extrapolation on what Britain suffered during WW2, scaled up for the massively increased bomb yield.

  • @justinchristoph3725
    @justinchristoph3725 Год назад +10

    I was young when I saw this. I had a neighbor who was ex-Navy who said the superpowers wouldn't do a first strike on the U.S., the Soviet Union or Communist China because of ballistic missile submarines. No matter how carefully a plan was made, those were the wild cards and mutual assured destruction (MAD) would happen because of them. He said the real problem would be terrorists with nukes.

    • @warrenash5370
      @warrenash5370 11 месяцев назад

      Or an idiot like we have now in the White House!

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons are operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full disarmament and end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times, Reagan refused the proposal !!

  • @canadadelendaest8687
    @canadadelendaest8687 2 года назад +13

    It's neat how fast they were in the silos.

  • @stephencourton3328
    @stephencourton3328 Год назад +4

    What makes this movie more scary than most doom and destruction movies is it has a real chance to one day happen.

  • @bixster2260
    @bixster2260 Год назад +5

    The commander on the doomsday plane was Maj Gen C. Reuben Autry, my boss at one time in the private sector.

    • @montewatts1642
      @montewatts1642 Год назад +3

      That’s awesome! Thanks for sharing that info!

  • @edspencer7121
    @edspencer7121 Год назад +2

    Watched this movie when it originally aired when I was a kid. Scared the hell out of me.
    Rewatching theis clip brings tears to my eyes because, as a whole, the world is so close to the reality of total inhalation with this exact scenario. 😢😢

  • @mokoarlyana1481
    @mokoarlyana1481 Год назад +13

    brings memories of my Air Force days when I commanded a Minuteman II control center.

    • @inconnu4961
      @inconnu4961 Год назад +2

      Thank you for your distinguished service!

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад

      II or III?

    • @mokoarlyana1481
      @mokoarlyana1481 Год назад +2

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver I was there for the transition from II to III

    • @mikegallant811
      @mikegallant811 11 месяцев назад

      You must have been grateful to never have to use those little brass keys in the big Red box.

  • @davidfaas58777
    @davidfaas58777 Год назад

    Thank You for Your Service from a Former Cap Cadet Air Force Auxiliary 1980

  • @bobbybates2614
    @bobbybates2614 2 года назад +20

    There was a programme on British tv called threads about nuclear war

    • @BIGBLOCK5022006
      @BIGBLOCK5022006 2 года назад +2

      Threads is just as terrifying as The Day After.

    • @172Break
      @172Break 2 года назад +3

      The BBC digitally remastered it and released it on DVD a couple of years ago. The first disc is the main film (which is still brutal to watch). The second disc has the live debate show from BBC1 that came on after the film had been shown. There is also documentary about how they made they made the film.

    • @desa415
      @desa415 2 года назад +8

      "Threads" was better.

    • @kevinvandenbreemen584
      @kevinvandenbreemen584 2 года назад +1

      @@172Break I'd love to see a documentary about the making of that film. It is still seared into my mind, probably one of the best films ever made esp on a budget. The visual effects might have been terrible but even if Michael Bay had made it his work wouldn't have held even a candle to it.

    • @Trainlover1995
      @Trainlover1995 2 года назад +2

      Threads is nothing like The Day After. The Day After was a disaster movie with a Hollywood director and Hollywood special effects. Threads was a window into another timeline, one where Andropov got bored and decided to invade Iran, and it all went from there (though I question WHY the United States decided to intervene in Iran, given that the revolution and hostage crisis had just happened a few years prior; would Reagan really risk losing his base in an election year just to humiliate the Soviets?).

  • @TAJ1977
    @TAJ1977 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great movie, Peaceful greetings from Germany

  • @SuperODST1
    @SuperODST1 Год назад +3

    The comic Bloom County had a strip made soon after this. A character simply plods away from the TV, walks outside, and looks out at a meadow, thinking "phew!"

    • @cowsagainstcapitalism347
      @cowsagainstcapitalism347 Год назад +1

      I remember that book. Used to stay up all night reading those comics. It was Opus the penguin.

  • @richardlahan7068
    @richardlahan7068 Месяц назад

    My wife and I watched this about 6 months ago. It was just as terrifying as I remember it being when I was 15.

  • @bluecollarcanuck
    @bluecollarcanuck Год назад +3

    The last thing you'd ever want to hear, especially in that scenario: *"This is not an exercise."*

  • @SilverSergeant
    @SilverSergeant Месяц назад +1

    I was a Titan II launch crew member when this movie came out. Tim Krause, one of the officers depicted, was also. I was on alert with him a few times.

  • @daskritterhaus5491
    @daskritterhaus5491 Год назад +21

    stark and frighteningly realistic, the early denial and panic, the mushroom clouds from a distance and the hell on earth we give ourselves. hopefully it caused 'sober second thoughts' in the right places about the abject insanity of MAD.

    • @thalesnemo2841
      @thalesnemo2841 Год назад

      The seeds of extinction are sown!
      Humans are quite clever but lack wisdom!

    • @gdiwolverinemale2745
      @gdiwolverinemale2745 Год назад

      I doubt. People have become extremely dumb and complacent

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Год назад +2

      >
      There was another strategy you could recommend that would have been better?

  • @ericzerkle5214
    @ericzerkle5214 11 месяцев назад +2

    This movie scared the crap out of me in 1983!!!

  • @jasonkinzie8835
    @jasonkinzie8835 Год назад +17

    The allegorical horse really gave me the chills as a child.

    • @shihanuke3683
      @shihanuke3683 Год назад +5

      Very few picked that up. Took me awhile. Good instinct.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 Год назад +1

      @@shihanuke3683 Never did till now either!

    • @701CPD
      @701CPD Год назад +6

      Death Rides A Pale Horse.

    • @lewiemcneely9143
      @lewiemcneely9143 Год назад +1

      @@701CPD Sure does but it takes a while for 2 + 2 to equal $ with me. Thanks!

    • @wonder528
      @wonder528 11 месяцев назад

      While that spooked me I think the crows taking flight hit me more, the quiet then the launches.

  • @PaulJohnson-vn7eh
    @PaulJohnson-vn7eh 11 месяцев назад +1

    We were on a U S. Air Force base in Illinois when this was broadcast. I was the only one out of the four of us that dared watch it. It was scary.

  • @anthrobug
    @anthrobug Год назад +3

    Funny, I remember the movie differently. The scene where they show SAC picking up the Soviet launches happened first. Then we launched in response. It's a bit strange how it's reversed in this video.

  • @Katracho-ot3uk
    @Katracho-ot3uk 5 месяцев назад +2

    I watched this film with my grandpa one day when I was sick with the flu and had to miss school I was a 7th grader but granted I was born in 1991 after the USSR collapsed and didn’t know much about this movie. My grandpa served in the US Army as a Vietnam Vet and he told me the scariest job in the whole military is not the guy with a gun because anyone can shoot a gun, but the individuals who have to turn the keys and push the button. Watching this film and the aftermath and the effects of Nuclear War are no joke and we must hope that this never becomes a reality.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      hopium is not enough.
      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons are operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full disarmament and end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times, Reagan refused the proposal !! That was unforgiveable.

  • @earlwyss520
    @earlwyss520 Год назад +5

    As a USAF Security Policeman, I had the misfortune of serving as a Missile Cop in the 741st MS, 91st MW at Minot AFB ND 1995-97, and that Building looks nothing like any MAF that I ever stayed at.
    Also, that helo, at the very least, is a UH-1N (although it is more than likely a Bell 212 or similar), and the ABSOLUTELY WRONG AIRCRAFT. When I arrived at Minot, our helos were HH-1Hs, and they were replaced by HH-1Ns in 1996 or so.
    In the early 1980s, when this was filmed, the UH-1F (which used the same GE T-58 as the Sikorsky HH-3 instead of the Lycoming T-53s used on other UH-1s) was being used as the Missile Field Support Helicopter.

    • @ruthgar9753
      @ruthgar9753 Год назад +2

      UH-1Ns however were used at Hill and Vandenberg AFB at this time, and I believe the MAF/LCF we see on screen is one of the Vandenberg ones, of which there are no sleeping quarters attached to them, and is essentially just a security facility topside with a garage (been a few decades since I looked at the CDCs or was actually at Vandenberg so memory is a little spotty), but it is a Minuteman Launch Control facility of some sort, it's just not built to be manned 24/7 with people sleeping there. I know during test launch prep/post launch, security personnel are there 24/7, but they're not staying the night, but headed back to their dorms/homes every night. How things go in between test launches when the LFs are being cleaned up and refurbed for the next missile test, I don't know.

    • @ChrisJones-nt1sy
      @ChrisJones-nt1sy Год назад

      Did you serve with a Michael Wigger back then? He had the same job and is a friend of mine.

    • @MarkCucchiara
      @MarkCucchiara Год назад +1

      It's called a movie. 99% of the population haven't been in the military and don't know the difference.

    • @mplsgordon2
      @mplsgordon2 Год назад +2

      I suspect they didn't get a lot of cooperation from the Air Force for this movie.

    • @ScreaminEmu
      @ScreaminEmu Год назад

      Ever meet any clowns?

  • @santoshjoshi5181
    @santoshjoshi5181 Год назад +2

    This movie gave me nightmares for many years.

  • @barrysmith1341
    @barrysmith1341 Год назад +21

    FFWD 40 years, Joey and Putin are playing nuclear checkers presuming someone would actually win.

    • @izzmus
      @izzmus Год назад

      Putin's the drunk who just lost all the bar fights, threatening to kick everyones' ass. Nobody's buying it.

    • @district5198
      @district5198 Год назад +1

      NATO/USA are pushing us closer to this point not Russia. All this could have been avoided in Ukraine had NATO/USA encouraged Ukraine to abide by Minsk agreements. Wests narrative couldn’t be farther from the truth.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад +1

      Biden has said to Putin "don't do it."

    • @socalautisticman1975
      @socalautisticman1975 Год назад

      Joey !!!! good one 😂
      Biden ain't no warrior what he know about war ! Putin is a warrior type as is the russian general mindset. We need an alpha male as President.
      Where are you when we need you ! I don't think Trump would let them "flex their muscles" so explicitly.
      For all I know Biden is in on it to have a nuclear war.

    • @siegesupreme77
      @siegesupreme77 Год назад

      @@RideAcrossTheRiverLike even a 5 year old bully on a school playground would be even the slightest bit intimated by Biden. The man can barely walk, let alone put two coherent thoughts together

  • @clarkmorrison7243
    @clarkmorrison7243 11 месяцев назад +2

    Fun fact: in the 1960s and 70s USAF nuclear missile sites were all over the country. Heavy concentrations in upstate NY, central Missouri, eastern Colorado, and the northern great plains. Today there are just three USAF missile bases left: Malmstrom AFB Great Falls, Montana; FE Warren AFB Cheyenne Wyoming; and Minot AFB in Minot North Dakota. Minot hosts a B-52 wing but the other two do not even have in-service runways. All of our ICBMs are within 150 miles or so of these three bases, well scattered out.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons are operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full disarmament and end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times, Reagan refused the proposal !! That was unforgiveable.

  • @madaknevarski6478
    @madaknevarski6478 Год назад +8

    "The Day After" is a mighty powerful and disturbing film.

    • @joebloggs8422
      @joebloggs8422 Год назад +4

      Watch Threads, genuinely terrifying

    • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
      @PlasmaCoolantLeak Год назад

      @@joebloggs8422 Right???

    • @joebloggs8422
      @joebloggs8422 Год назад +1

      @@PlasmaCoolantLeak ??? No idea what you’re trying to say

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Год назад

      @JoeBloggs...Ehh, pretty sure they're agreeing with you...

    • @joebloggs8422
      @joebloggs8422 Год назад

      @@codymoe4986 probably. Threads is one horrible film though

  • @w9awx1
    @w9awx1 Месяц назад

    The Missile Warning was from First Strike. Another good military TV move.

  • @keithhudson1358
    @keithhudson1358 Год назад +6

    I remember watching this TV movie. It was a very powerful movie. So powerful that then President Reagan changed his approach with the soviets on Nuclear Arms Treaty

    • @fredkitmakerb9479
      @fredkitmakerb9479 Год назад

      I don't think this movie scared Reagan into changing any approach. He continued to stand firm and ratchet up the heat on the Soviets. That despite enormous pressure from Europe and even inside the US for nuclear freeze and even nuclear disarmament. To me the most compelling explanation of what ended the Cold War was Reagan prove to the Soviets that they could not match us, and then the scientific community talking about nuclear winter. Apparently that really got Gorbachev and Regan's attention.

    • @AZ-if2mj
      @AZ-if2mj Год назад +2

      ​@@fredkitmakerb9479 The Reagan administration admitted that Mr. Reagan was profoundly affected by this film where he had a private showing in the White House. The Reagan administration admitted that the INF treaty came from Reagan being upset by this film. Reagan also tried to negotiate the total ban and disarmament of all nuclear weapons and would have agreed with Gorbachev to ban all nuclear weapons except that Gorbachev coupled STI which Mr. Reagan held on to , again due to this film. Thatcher was upset with Reagan for almost agreeing to ban all nuclear weapons because of the deep and justified fear that this film caused Reagan.

    • @rd264
      @rd264 Месяц назад

      the risk of accidental nuclear war is HIGH and exists as long as any of these weapons are operational -- they are not worth that risk yet…when offered a full disarmament and end of nuclear arms treaty by Gorbachev at the summit in Iceland, two times, Reagan refused the proposal !! That was unforgiveable.

  • @ronlucock3702
    @ronlucock3702 Год назад +2

    3:39 I like how it says "Gently" on the key console. If you're gonna start a nuclear war, do it gently.

    • @wonder528
      @wonder528 11 месяцев назад

      Break the keys, the birds don't fly. And you probably would have time to find some pliers to snag the key to turn it before you were vaporized.

  • @bacchuslax7967
    @bacchuslax7967 Год назад +4

    Was 12 when this came on. Have this in the mental Rolodex since then. Same a Jaws. Saw that in the theatre and to this day still feel there’s a shark around

  • @PsychoLama2023
    @PsychoLama2023 Год назад +2

    If I was they guy painting that wall. I’d be like well I guess I can leave this job for later.

  • @marciodr1963
    @marciodr1963 Год назад +4

    O filme mais impressionante já rodado sobre o tema. Ainda hoje, revendo essas cenas, lembro a sensação de medo e angústia que causou. Nunca o mundo se livrou dessa ameaça, mesmo tendo passado três décadas do final da Guerra Fria.

  • @gracegood3661
    @gracegood3661 Год назад +1

    Saw this on tv when was fifteen, scared the crap out me.

  • @kenlang5268
    @kenlang5268 Год назад +5

    Imagine the old fossil in the White House having to make a critical decision.

    • @exexpat11
      @exexpat11 Год назад

      Gone with my wind by The Dead Kennedy's was never more true today.

    • @sonnyd.6777
      @sonnyd.6777 11 месяцев назад

      They'll just tell him, " just tell them the codes, dumbass"😅

  • @djryan8944
    @djryan8944 Год назад +1

    I was in elementary school when my dad made us watch this… we lived near an Air Force base. Every time I heard a plane fly over I thought it was a rocket. Lost a lot of sleep.

  • @TonyLovell
    @TonyLovell Год назад +3

    Every morning, after coffee and a few donuts and such, I confirm that this is not an exercise.

    • @inconnu4961
      @inconnu4961 Год назад

      Well done! keep up the splendid work!!

  • @livetotell100
    @livetotell100 11 месяцев назад +1

    People don't realize how close this was to happening in the early 1980's. People talk about the Cuban missile crisis. But the early 80's were worse.

  • @jasc4364
    @jasc4364 Год назад +5

    I love these nuclear attack movies. It’s a pity that this topic is not used more in movies. When it is used is just a brief episode like in terminator. It’s strange because nuclear war is the ideal setting for a war movie, immense destruction and high-tech weapons, end of the world atmosphere.

    • @zombiedodge1426
      @zombiedodge1426 11 месяцев назад

      They kind of tried that with TERMINATOR: SALVATION, and, um...

  • @TheKurtsPlaceChannel
    @TheKurtsPlaceChannel 11 месяцев назад

    Great video. Thanks for posting this. Have a nice day.

  • @GeorgeVreelandHill
    @GeorgeVreelandHill Год назад +3

    It's 2023, and the reality of this is not fiction anymore.

  • @dennissvitak148
    @dennissvitak148 Год назад +2

    4:50 and 5:03, both from Vandenberg AFB, California. I was stationed there, and recognized them.

  • @dwightg405
    @dwightg405 Год назад +4

    I remember watching this on TV when I was a kid it was disturbing for sure. But I lived only a few miles away from Offutt AFB at the time, we knew that enough warheads were headed our way if something started there wasn't a hole deep enough.

  • @ChicagoDB
    @ChicagoDB Год назад +2

    This is the first time I’ve watched clips from it since it aired…
    “Gripping” is an understatement…and I have a military background.

  • @solapowsj25
    @solapowsj25 Год назад +3

    Visualize the Titanic frantically sending a series of flares while sinking, and the captain of the nearest ship 🚢, after receiving the distress code on morse signal says, "Let it go. They are celebrating. "

  • @JD57R
    @JD57R 28 дней назад

    Having served on a SAC base, yeah, that's how it was planned. Most of the guys I served with had been participants of the Vietnam war and were quite open about how much they would like to avoid this type of scene playing out.

  • @crayolascents
    @crayolascents Год назад +3

    A movie made in troubled times, and being watched in troubled times.

  • @boozypixels
    @boozypixels Год назад +2

    Between the US and UK, 1983 was a crazy year for nuclear disaster porn

    • @zombiedodge1426
      @zombiedodge1426 11 месяцев назад

      Is it weird that I feel nostalgia for a time period when I was an elementary school student absolutely terrified of nuclear war? I couldn't even watch this movie until well into the Glasnost era. (I didn't see THREADS until earlier this year!)
      1983, when we really seemed to be on the brink of WW3, was also one of the best ever years for pop music. Always wondered if there was a connection there.

  • @uel786786
    @uel786786 Год назад +6

    @6:10 Flounder will be running back to Delta House to joint Bluto, drinking as much as possible before the Russian missiles arrive.

    • @user-xz9hu4rd2v
      @user-xz9hu4rd2v Год назад +2

      He hurled right after.

    • @PolarizedMechs
      @PolarizedMechs 10 месяцев назад

      Or wondering how he got assigned to Earth from Babylon 5.

  • @kenl5290
    @kenl5290 Год назад

    This came out when I was about 10. My friend and I watched this and Threads, they were showing back to back. A somber, yet disturbing feeling ensued for the following weeks.