Nuke Theatre: Off Topic but which ones do you recommend?

During the 1960's when my husband was growing up, his father took him to see Lassie one day and then 'On the Beach' the next. What a time to be growing up seeing and experiencing the realities of the 'Cold War' between the US, Russia and Cuba which leads me to start this thread in the interest of the impact and education of the realities of living in a nuclear age.

Here are a few recommendations, feel free to add any movies you are aware of with a nuclear theme whether they are educational, informational or of entertainment/fictional value:

'On the Beach' starring Gregory Peck (on netflix someone posted this comment: 'Asked at a dinner party the scariest film I'd ever seen, I cited this one. No bullets, no bombs, no bodies, but a subtly devastating impact. At its debut in the cold-war era, one reviewer called it "the film that saved the world." Future historians may well agree.'

'Desert Rose' (If you can find it! My husband is still trying to find this one. It's in color and the theme involves a fractured family who bonds in the end watching the bombs go off in the desert with hundreds of families who live there.)

'Radio Bikini'
1987 NR56 minutes
Nominated for an Academy Award, this documentary tells the eye-opening story of Bikini Atoll -- one of the most terrifying tragedies of the nuclear age. The peaceful Pacific island was the unwitting site of atomic bomb tests conducted by the United States in 1946; extraordinary archival footage reveals the stark reality of these tests, which left the island uninhabitable for 40 years and exposed thousands of sailors to heavy doses of radiation.
(while you're at it, check out the latest goings on in the Marshall Islands at:

https://marshallislands.llnl.gov/plutonium.php

https://marshallislands.llnl.gov/wbc.php

Best,
HotCaviar

~Off my menu: All Seafoods because the oceans really are a military and industrial sewer! Yes, I will miss Anchovies on my pizza, fishsticks, red snapper, tuna (even 'chicken of the sea' is no longer 'worthy,'crab, fake crab (made with Pollock, an ocean fish), clam chowder, Nori Seaweed,Caviar etc... See: http://pstuph.wordpress.com/2011/04/01/can-ocean-currents-transport-radi...
http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/3486
BRAWM Info., Common Sense, Medical Awareness and Staying Informed...

Movie: The English Surgeon (Dr. Marsh)

If anyone has Netflix or other online or DVD access, check out The English Surgeon documenting Dr. Marsh's efforts to bring modern treatment to Russia's brain tumor patients, clearly many of whom based on the date of this documentary and living in Kiev are the victims of Chernobyl's fallout however, not once is Chernobyl or any correlation made between the brain tumors of these patients and nuclear fallout. Observation of a patient's date of birth in 1986 and death in 2003 (her name was Katya and Dr. Marsh appears to be one of the few Dr's who 'Loves' his patients and their families forming a lasting bond with them no matter the outcome. I wonder if Russia is assaying these brain tumors both benign and malignant forms for fallout originating from Chernobyl and what the findings may be?

Chillingly, my husband and I agree that the fate of these brain tumor patients may be on the horizon for many in Japan and the Northern Hemisphere easily within the next 10 years.

Best,
HotCaviar

~Off my menu: All Seafoods because the oceans really are a military and industrial sewer! Yes, I will miss Anchovies on my pizza, fishsticks, red snapper, tuna (even 'chicken of the sea' is no longer 'worthy,'crab, fake crab (made with Pollock, an ocean fish), clam chowder, Nori Seaweed,Caviar etc... See: http://pstuph.wordpress.com/2011/04/01/can-ocean-currents-transport-radi...
http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/node/3486
BRAWM Info., Common Sense, Medical Awareness and Staying Informed...

'Twilight Zone' Episode:'The Old Man in The Cave'

'Twilight Zone' Episode:'The Old Man in The Cave' by Rod Serling

More about Rod Serling whose contributions to sci-fi are not to be missed:

http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article/569558/201104191405/The...

Rod Serling Entered A New TV Dimension With 'The Twilight Zone'
By MICHAEL MINK, FOR INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY Posted 04/19/2011 02:05 PM ET

Serling's award-winning show appeared on CBS from 1959 to 1964. AP View Enlarged Image
Rod Serling remained true to himself, no matter the obstacles.

As a young TV writer in 1950s Hollywood, Serling (1924-75) learned that censorship was part of the new medium.

Networks and sponsors worried about offending their audience even in the slightest. It made them afraid to air anything that could be controversial.

Along came Serling. He had more than just a background that included 40 straight rejections of his freelance work.

He had something to say, an attitude that would lead to his landmark show, "The Twilight Zone."

He brought a sense of humanity gained from the horrors he experienced as an Army paratrooper with the 11th Airborne Division in the Pacific during World War II. He'd watched men die in battle and was awarded a Purple Heart for wounds suffered to his knee and wrist. He also earned the Bronze Star and the Philippine Liberation Medal. His life experiences had him yearning to express himself on important subjects, and obstacles couldn't hold him back.

So he hung in there, eventually writing for the TV shows "Hallmark Hall of Fame," "Studio One," "Kraft Television Theater" and "Playhouse 90."

Trophy Magnet

Serling's Keys
Creator, executive producer and narrator of "The Twilight Zone."
" Beyond the security and the pay check is the palpable hunger of a person to have an identity of his own."
By 1959 he'd become the first TV writer to earn three Emmy awards, for "Requiem for a Heavyweight," "The Comedian" and "Patterns." He'd go on to win six in his career.

In Serling's crucial year of 1959, as his science-fiction anthology series was set to premiere, he told TV's Mike Wallace: "In 11 or 12 years of writing ... I can lay claim to at least this: I have never written beneath myself. I have never written anything that I didn't want my name attached to."

He also told Wallace that as a television writer it was "criminal that we're not permitted to make dramatic note of social evils as they exist, of controversial themes as they are inherent in our society."

"The Twilight Zone," which ran until 1964, shone the spotlight on Serling. He wrote almost 100 of the 156 episodes and brought in top-flight talent to write the others. On the show he could cloak his commentary on racism, war, hate and fear in science-fiction stories. Sponsors found that palatable.

"Rod felt a responsibility as a writer to talk about the social evils that he felt. Think of 'The Twilight Zone,' then, as a thinly veiled call to public consciousness," his wife, Carol Serling, told IBD. "There were stories, too, that dealt with the dignity of man, his treatment of his fellow man, his need for commitment and the importance of love."

"Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry said on the Rod Serling Memorial Foundation website: "No one could know Serling, or view or read his work, without recognizing his deep affection for humanity ... and his determination to enlarge our horizons by giving us a better understanding of ourselves."

As the show's narrator and on-camera presence, Serling and his speaking manner have become iconic. But he was more substance than his considerable style. Serling was the show's conscience. He shaped generations of young and old minds by challenging people to examine their moral compass.

"If there's one moral value that Rod pushes more than any other, it's humanism, that there's nothing more important than treating other people well," said Douglas Brode, who with Carol Serling wrote "Rod Serling and the Twilight Zone: The 50th Anniversary Tribute." "The way that I see the world was very much influenced by watching 'The Twilight Zone' as a kid."

Long Run

Serling said nothing he wrote would stand the test of time, but he was wrong. The original "Twilight Zone" episodes have lived on for over 50 years. Filmmakers such as Steven Spielberg and George Lucas have been influenced by Serling.

Serling was posthumously inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in 1985. In 2009, the United States Postal Service honored Serling with a commemorative stamp.

In addition to his six Emmys, Serling was the first television writer to win a Peabody Award. He also won a Sylvania Award.

"Rod had an absolute drive and ambition to succeed as a writer," Brode said.

Carol Serling agrees. "Rod felt there was a responsibility of this great new medium, television, to not only entertain, but to educate," she said. "That's why so much of his work was socially relevant to the times."

Born on Christmas Day 1924 in Syracuse, N.Y., Serling was raised 70 miles south in Binghamton.

After World War II ended in 1945, he attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio.

The Write Stuff

Serling recognized what his interests really were and changed his major from physical education to English literature and drama. "I was bitter about everything and at loose ends when I got out of the service," he said, according to Contemporary Authors Online. "I think I turned to writing to get it off my chest."

After he married Carol, his college sweetheart, the couple landed in Cincinnati, where Rod wrote ads and other material for a TV station. He called it a "particularly dreamless occupation." On one occasion he was told to make up a testimonial to plug a product.

One day in 1951, Serling decided he'd had enough. With Carol's support and their first child on the way, he traded in his secure job for the uncertainty of freelance writing for TV shows.

Six months later, the Serlings moved to New York. Rod wrote 11 shows for the TV show "Lux Video Theatre" and was on his way.

"Throughout the 1950s (Serling) continued to write probing investigative dramas about serious issues," PBS.org wrote. "He was often hounded by the conservative censors for his uncompromising attention to issues such as lynching, union organizing and racism. Television dramas, including 'Requiem for a Heavyweight' and 'A Town Has Turned to Dust,' are still considered some of the best writing ever done for television."

"The Twilight Zone" represented an opportunity for Serling to have creative control over his own show. He jumped at the chance to do the series, even if it meant turning away more lucrative projects in the beginning. "I'm not nearly as concerned with the money to be made on this show as I am with the quality of it," he said.

Serling put in 10- to 14-hour days to turn out scripts for "The Twilight Zone." The story lines were filled with justice and injustice, along with ironic twists.

According to Brode, Serling's favorite episodes were "Walking Distance" and "A Stop at Willoughby."

In the former, a pained businessman, played by Gig Young, time-travels to the town of his youth. He sees he can't go home again and learns an important lesson.

In the latter, a similar character, played by James Daly, is willing to die so he can trade unhappiness for another dimension's idyllic town.

"He had a wonderful imagination. Rod was always working; he never stopped," Carol Serling said.

Strong Stand

Among the most consistent themes in Rod Serling's work was a disgust at racism. He told the graduating class at his alma mater, Binghamton Central High, in 1968:

"If you find yourself thinking words like (racial epithets), consign them to the lexicon of race haters who aren't fit to breathe the same air as you are. Make your judgment of your fellow man on what he says and what he believes and the way he acts."

He encouraged the graduates to "do the things that you believe. Don't become monuments ... Change opinions, if the change is natural and believed. But believe in something and fight for those beliefs. Honor them by your commitment. Further them by your effort. And what a wondrous and what an incredibly grand world you might build for your children."

Atomic Cafe

I watched this recently. Good semi-satire documentary but with lots of solid info.

you can watch "Atomic Cafe" here. It is chilling account

with some dark humor. But a documentary and very well done:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOUtZOqgSG8

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0225156/

Technically radiation from a meteor!

Some other titles...

"The Day After", "Threads", "Testament", "The China Syndrome", and the Showtime version of "On the Beach" are also excellent.

Not to mention, "WarGames", "The Stand", and "The Book of Eli"... and, especially, "The Road", a film to cut your wrists by, frankly.

Also, if you can find it, an early-1980s television movie called, "Special Bulletin".

Rick Cromack.
Allen, Texas

Not 'Desert Rose' but 'Desert Bloom'

Not 'Desert Rose' but 'Desert Bloom'

Plot Summary for
Desert Bloom (1986)
The story involves Rose Chismore's youth. She flashes back and remembers her coming-of-age. Her recollections are sometimes less than sweet, particularly those of her troubled and alcoholic step-father. Her memories of Robin, her first-love, are much happier and she also recalls her colorful Aunt Starr -- who's visit is fun but also detrimental to her family's health. The setting of 1950s Las Vegas' bomb testing is increasingly significant to the development of the story. Written by Melissa Portell