66 of 70 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A truly frightening film, February 15, 2006
Saw this on PBS in 1983 and was terrified. The sheer graphic nature of the visual imagery remains burned into my brain -- burned people, wrecked houses, the utter hopelessness.
One of the things I remember best about this film was the bunker where the officials tried to cope with the disaster. That resonates with me today, because I am on the Emergency Operations Committee of the City of Newark, New Jersey. On 9/11, my post was at the Emergency Operations Center, working with other agencies: municipal, county, state, and federal. I had to prepare press releases and statements from the city to inform our residents on what to do and not do.
So if the bomb drops, that's where I'll be. And if the bomb drops, I'll be with those same folks, running out of food, water, power, and patience, while the world ends around me.
The officials try to figure out how to feed starving residents, and one wonders if his family has escaped the blast. He never finds out. I went through that myself...my wife was in New York on September 11, and I told her to get out, but didn't know if she'd made it. It was a chilling five hours. But she got out.
Thinking that day about "Threads," I saw myself in the same position as those city workers, studying a map, wondering if their families had survived, never finding out, and gradually being overwhelmed by the sheer hopelessness of the situation.
I remain haunted by the scene where British troops, long after the civilian government has collapsed, now little more than a uniformed mob, sift through the darkened bunker, finding everyone dead -- presumably from lack of food or radiation, or just exhaustion. The troops are only interested in food, and they sweep by the bodies, uncaring. I saw myself as one of the corpses lying on a desk in that scenario.
The final part of the picture, with Ruth and her daughter scrabbling at the diseased ground to farm, wrapped in rags, under a permanently gray sky, also haunts me. Below are spoilers, but at this point, I don't think I'm giving up the name of Orson Welles's sled.
Civilization had completely collapsed. Ruth's daughter's generation was growing up in a dreadful mix of ignorance and horror...knowing nothing but rubble, radiation, and death. With society and our social systems gone, they had no education.
I was struck by the scene where Ruth's daughter and her pals sit around a TV set, which is playing a tape, shucking corn (I think), and the tape is saying, "Cat...this is a skeleton of a cat." The TV was probably powered by a local power plant or batteries or some such, but there was no teacher. The kids were not interested in the tape.
That was what passed for education in the postwar world. No more Dickens, no more Michelangelo, no more Fermat. No universities, no high schools, no teachers. Learning had ended. Somehow, that upset the most...the idea that nuclear war would not only destroy humanity, but lobotomize the survivors.
When Ruth dies, Ruth's daughter takes her mother's bird book from her dead hands, incomprehendingly, and leaves her there. Quite probably she's never seen a bird. Family structure had broken down as well. That also resonated with me, because I thought about how important families and family rituals are in our civilized world. But in that environment, they meant nothing.
Ruth's daughter then meets and gets raped by some young men. One of the upsetting parts of this interchange was that neither party could speak properly. They were not only illiterate, but incoherent in speech...."Wozzat? Gizzum!" replacing the English language.
That was proved at the very end, when Ruth's daughter, pregnant, goes to what's left of a hospital, asking for help in delivering her baby.Actually, she yells at matron, "Babby! Come! Babby! Come!" I was struck by the idea of a woman in England -- birthplace of the language -- unable to say, "I'm having a baby, can you help me?"
I was equally struck that the cold matron, obviously older and still in possession of the English language, said, "You'll have to do it yourself, dear." There are no supplies left. Everyone is on their own.
And when Ruth delivers her daughter, it's deformed and stillborn. That's the final coda...the future of humanity. There isn't one.
And I hope that such is not the fate of my own beloved little daughter...to end up like Ruth's daughter.
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A frightening Doomsday scenario, January 21, 2007
Regrettably, "Threads" is presently unobtainable in the United States, and the only available DVDs are encoded for Europe. This is unfortunate, because "Threads" is one of the most plausible and realistic Nuclear Doomsday scenarios one is ever likely to find. This is a compelling story of what we all feared during the bad old days of the Cold War. A period of international tension and confrontation culminating in nuclear war and an unthinkable aftermath.
The film's realism is heightened by the use of actual British civil defense television clips which, in their dry pragmatism, convince the viewer that nuclear war is an all-too-real possibility.
What really distinguishes this piece, however, is its depiction of the aftermath of nuclear war. Human beings are reduced to a bare minimum standard of living in a harsh, agricultural existence in which survival is by no means assured. Society effectively ends, the ecosystems are hopelessly damaged, and the future, if there is one, is unspeakably bleak.
This is a powerful and depressing film, and its graphic depiction of the effects of nuclear war are not for the squeamish. I wish very much that this film would become available on DVD here in the States.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Realistic, Plausible., Depressing and Frightening., September 14, 2005
"Threads" is a profoundly disturbing film of nuclear apocalypse that doesn't flinch from laying out the potential costs of the ultimate human stupidity. I was fortunate (I suppose) enough to see this British-made film on public television in the mid-1980's. Evidently, it has never been shown on television in the United States since. I have never forgotten it.
The theme of the film is, of course, World War III: the run-up to hostilities, the immediate impact of a nuclear attack on a the city of Sheffield, England, and its immediate environs, the after-effects of nuclear devastation on the survivors, and what "civilization" remains after the exchange of thermonuclear pleasantries.
The film is drama/documentary. There are "characters" whose fates we follow while a male voice-over that is not overly intrusive or dramatic narrates wider events and their significance. The casus belli is totally plausible (or was at the time): Iran is the focus of Soviet (remember those guys?)aggression. The rhetoric and the mobilization of military forces escalates and localized conflict begins. Meanwhile, life goes on in Sheffield, a town roughly the size Seattle and 4th or 5th largest city in the UK. No small potatoes. We're introduced to a young British couple who are expecting a baby and who are in the process of moving into a new apartment. We also meet a family living in a council townhouse: a mum and a dad, a gran and a young boy. (I recollect that this family was the pregnant woman's parents, etc.) As the conflict in the Persian Gulf heats up, people in pubs and homes, including our pregnant couple and the family, are glued to their TVs. Talking heads, "live and on the scene," describe events that are spiraling out of control. If you recall the Cuban Missile Crisis, you will probably also recall the ennervating sense of helplessness and doom that hung over everything as we faced down the Soviets. This sense of helplessness is well-captured in "Threads" -- the world as we know it, frozen in the headlights of impending catastrophe. We watch a nuclear detonation in the Persian Gulf "live" behind a TV reporter on a naval vessel. After that, it's a quick slide into a wider conflict. The Warsaw pact nukes a NATO military base near Sheffield, the mushroom cloud rising over a panicked populaton. Soon it's Sheffield's turn, as the belligerents up the ante to include civilian populations. Before the war is over, we're told by the voice-over, the UK will have absorbed 40 megatons, and more than 60% of the population will be dead or wishing they were. The effects of the attack on Sheffield, and its inhabitants is graphic and unsparing. The mum, the dad, the gran, the young boy, the husband, all perish from blast injuries, burns or radiation poisoning trapped in the wreckage of what little is left of the city. The pregnant woman survives (though clearly traumatized to her soul). Her baby is born in what's left of a barn (no Biblical reference intended, I'm sure), severely retarded from the effects of radiation.
Most of the "science" explaining the likely effects of nuclear blast, radiation, etc., comes through a calm, matter-of-factly delivered voice-over. You get the point, but you're not beaten over the head with gratuitous data.
Fast forward. The woman and her child have joined a group of other survivors. We see them hunched over crude farming implements, scraping the soild in a poisoned land, clothed in rags, bodies and eyes covered to prevent UV burns. The ozone layer has been burned off. We're informed that the population of the UK ten years after the war is equivalent to what it was in medieval times. No one's coming to save them. Who won the war? Does it matter? You're left to infer the fate of the rest of the world.
The only other film in this grim genre that even comes close to the impact of "Threads" is "The War Game" (another British docu-drama of a nuclear attack on London). Compared to "Threads," "On the Beach," "Alas, Babylon," "The Day After" are like "Gidget Goes Hawaiian." Think the threat of a nuclear wipe out is gone? Don't bet on it and Tom Cruise won't emerge from the rubble to start a new world order. If you can handle it, watch "Threads." Then commit yourself to peace.
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