Batman
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- Jul 8, 2006
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AlleyAllen said:The whole Soviet threat was a real fear for me during those days. I was 10 when Reagan was sworn in the first time, and there were definitely times -- most notably following the Korean Airline crisis/fiasco -- when I believed we definitely would be nuked.
Then Red Dawn and a couple of other movies showed the other chilling possibility: A non-nuke Soviet takeover of the U.S. Unrealistic, probably, but as a young teen, I thought it seemed real.
For historical references, check out: Countdown to Looking Glass and also one called, I think, "The Children's Story." Also, the movie Fail Safe comes highly recommended by my dad, Rallen13.
Red Dawn, IIRC, did reference the use of nukes. Select cities like Kansas City and Omaha were targeted because they were communications centers. The more I've read up on military strategy and history, the more plausible the framework of Red Dawn actually becomes. I'm sure whatever invasion plan the Soviets had for the U.S. was probably pretty close to that. Same way if we ever invaded we'd have used allies in Germany or Japan.
I was 7 when The Day After came out. I remember being sent to bed at 7 p.m. -- it was still light out for chrisssakes! -- because my parents thought it'd be too scary. Yet they let me watch Friday the 13th movies at the same age. Go figure.
Finally saw it five or six years ago on AMC. At that point it wasn't scary, but rather interesting. I thought some of the aftermath stuff was pretty accurate (not everyone would die; life would be chaos; people wondering how they're going to scrape six inches of topsoil off their farmland, etc).
Oh, and Fail Safe is a forking phenomenal movie. The ending might be a little implausible, but the setup and the tension throughout are both top-notch.