Wednesday 19 June 2019

Lately I've been watching.... Chernobyl


I remember when the Chernobyl disaster happened; I was 26.  It occurred in those days of yore before the internet gave us endless real-time footage from smartphones on social media, inside information on news sites, and ten thousand tweets demanding the truth.  I probably saw the official account on breakfast TV, and read about it in the newspaper.
 


That year, along with 1985 and 1987, many calamities took place around the world; the Heysel Stadium disaster, the Kings Cross Fire, the Bradford City Stadium Fire, the Mexico City Earthquake, to name just four.  I believe 1985 was the worst year ever for disasters, worldwide, and this seemed like just another one to add to the list.  The world was a bigger place, thirty-three years ago—however catastrophic a calamity, it doesn't hit you in the face so much when it takes place thousands of miles away.


Especially when there is no internet to tell you how bad it really is, and when the true horror is covered up by politicians.  


Some of my friends used to go down to protest at Greenham Common, and yes, of course, we all knew that nuclear anything was some seriously dangerous shit, but ... Chernobyl was in the Ukraine, and where the hell was that? Ah, in the USSR, a cold and strange place, about which the average person knew so much less than we do now, since its collapse.


This five part HBO series has certainly brought it home.  Here's the trailer:




I love watching dark stuff.  I loved the 1970s and 80s disaster movies, I can't get enough end-of-world scenarios, and I've watched my share of dramatisations of real life catastrophes, too.  But I don't think I've been so shocked by anything since watching Threads in 1984—and that hadn't even happened. 

All those poor souls who died in such agony (and I warn you, this dramatisation leaves nothing to the imagination), the residents of Pripyat who gaily went to watch the fire on the 'Bridge of Death', not knowing that they were signing away their lives for a look at some pretty colours in the sky.  The technicians who were sent to investigate whether or not the core really had disappeared, even though this meant certain death for them.  The firemen given no information about what close proximity to radiation would mean, the civilians conscripted to build around the exclusion zone.


And the more informed heroes: those who cleared the top roof ('the most dangerous place on the planet'), the three who went into the bubble tunnel, and the coal miners who dug for a month beneath the reactor so that a heat pump could be installed to stop the meltdown; by that time, these men knew the risks to themselves, but went ahead for the greater good.  


I wondered if this selflessness showed the best of the basic essence of the Russian character—tough people who experienced more hardship than most of us in the West could understand.  Maybe the tougher your life, the more philosophical a relationship you have with death, I don't know.




Aside from the expected emotions that evidence of such horrific suffering brings about, be prepared to feel open-mouthed, appalled anger about the careless use of ill-prepared technicians to run a test that caused the chain reaction, simply because of misinformation about the dangers present.  About the evil of those who tried to cover up the full extent of the catastrophe.  The blatant lies about the levels of radiation.  The initial refusal to evacuate.  Career politicians who cared more about the image of Russia in the eyes of the rest of the world, and their own people's belief in the strength of their leadership, than the deaths of many thousands, immediately or in years to come. 

'Cut the phone lines.  Contain the spread of misinformation'
  
It was only when scientist Valery Legasov, played so outstandingly by Jared Harris, made them realise that the food and water of a whole nation and beyond could be rendered poisonous for hundreds or possibly thousands of years to come, that they began to accept the truth.



'You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before'

I felt as though I was watching something truly evil.  Smothered in darkness, like I was watching a bibical depiction of Hell.  Aside from the lies and cover-up, at the expense of so much, this stands as an example of the perils of a communist regime.

Suffice to say that the series is brilliant, a 5 stars plus plus plus.  Jared Harris and Stellan SkarsgĂ„rd were utterly compelling, as were Emily Watson, who played a fictional character representative of many scientists who helped Legasov uncover the truth, Robert Emms as Leonid Toptunov, the poor lad with only 4 months' experience who was on duty on that terrible night, Adam Nagaitis as Vasily Ignatenko, one of the first responding firefighters, and Paul Ritter as Anatoly Dyatlov, who allowed the fatal test to go ahead.  But most shocking of all is the reveal that shows how the part he played wasn't even the true crime.

'Why You Should Watch HBO's Chernobyl'



HBO's Chernobyl vs Reality: Footage Comparison



Not a series for the faint-hearted, and it will stay with you for a long time.....

For some more thoughts, read This Post on Dora Reads book blog :) 


11 comments:

  1. Chernobyl does sound good!

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    1. It is, but be prepared not to stop thinking about it afterwards.

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  2. OMG it was SO good but SO terrifying! The disaster could so easily have turned the entirety of Europe into a nuclear wasteland, and that's not even an exaggeration!

    As I said in a post I wrote (not plugging, don't worry!) to me, growing up, Chernobyl was the reason Welsh farmers couldn't sell some of their livestock... it was only later that it really started to make any sort of sense to me!

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    1. I know; we didn't speak throughout all 5 hours, it was utterly gripping and horrifying, wasn't it?

      I wouldn't have minded if you were plugging, I'm not petty like that - it's relevant! Perhaps you could send me the link on Twitter?

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    2. I feel kind of awkward plugging things! Didn't want you to think that was the only reason I was commenting ;) I'll Tweet you the link but don't feel obliged to check it out! <3

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  3. Sounds like exactly my thing! What channel/service is it on?

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    1. I watched it on Amazon Prime, and it's unmissable!

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  4. It is the classic example of government cover-up. I'd link it to Brexit (well, I would) and to Trump's election. It shows that even now, with all our sophisticated monitoring devices, we can still be utterly fooled by people in authority who wish us harm.

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    1. You can link it to a hundred and one things, Carol; I believe that most of the people in authority don't give a damn about us, and try to utterly fool all of us all the time, for their own agendas.

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  5. I’ve watched several documentaries about Chernobyl. Quite terrifying enough for me. I remember it too although I was in SA when it happened. My sister claims the cloud that drifted over the UK was why she had twins. There are no twins in the families...not ever, so who knows.

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    1. I love to be terrified, Val.... but this is just such a magnificent piece of TV, subject matter aside. As for your sister, yes, indeed; who knows?

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