The Day Britain Stopped: Difference between revisions
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Between 4 and 5 December, 18 months after the [[Potters Bar rail accidents#2002|Potters Bar rail accident]], a fatal train accident near [[Edinburgh Waverley railway station|Waverley Station]] in [[Edinburgh]] leads to the [[ASLEF]] and [[National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers|RMT]] [[trade union]]s to declare a strike for 19 December due to safety concerns, forcing the heavy [[Christmas]] rail passenger traffic to use the roads instead. [[Mick Rix]]'s decision is heavily criticised by the government, particularly by Junior Transport Minister Tom Walker. |
Between 4 and 5 December, 18 months after the [[Potters Bar rail accidents#2002|Potters Bar rail accident]], a fatal train accident near [[Edinburgh Waverley railway station|Waverley Station]] in [[Edinburgh]] leads to the [[ASLEF]] and [[National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers|RMT]] [[trade union]]s to declare a strike for 19 December due to safety concerns, forcing the heavy [[Christmas]] rail passenger traffic to use the roads instead. [[Mick Rix]]'s decision is heavily criticised by the government, particularly by Junior Transport Minister Tom Walker. |
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On 19 December, a crossover accident on the [[M25 motorway]] in [[Surrey]] involving several vehicles forces Inspector Clive Turner, head of the police unit with jurisdiction over the M25, to close the motorway in both directions from the site of the accident. The resulting traffic congestion spreads at such a rate that, within minutes, the motorway is blocked at the junction with the [[M23 motorway|M23]]. Meanwhile, as British airspace runs over capacity to cope with the Christmas traffic, heavy traffic delays force the [[air traffic controller]]s to work double- and triple-shifts. Julian Galt and his family are travelling into central London en route to Heathrow Airport, for their Christmas holiday to [[Bilbao]], with their twelve-year-old son recording their adventures on a video camera. |
On 19 December, a crossover accident on the [[M25 motorway]] in [[Surrey]] involving several vehicles forces Inspector Clive Turner, head of the police unit with jurisdiction over the M25, to close the motorway in both directions from the site of the accident. The resulting traffic congestion spreads at such a rate that, within minutes, the motorway is blocked at the junction with the [[M23 motorway|M23]]. Meanwhile, as British airspace runs over capacity to cope with the Christmas traffic, heavy traffic delays force the [[air traffic controller]]s to work double- and triple-shifts. Julian Galt and his family are travelling into central London en route to Heathrow Airport, for their Christmas holiday to [[Bilbao]], with their twelve-year-old son recording their adventures on a video camera. The [[Channel Tunnel]] is also closed with all vehicles being rerouted to [[Dover]] for Ferries to [[France]]. While [[Eurostar]] Passengers use Flights instead. |
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Attempts at relieving the gridlock are hampered by a lack of coordination between police services overseeing different sections of the motorway, leading to cases of traffic being diverted onto the same roads in opposite directions. Traffic that managed to work its way through the diversion route past the Surrey accident suffers a further setback when a chemical tanker lorry [[jackknifing|jackknifes]] on the M25 near to [[Heathrow Airport]], causing a [[pile-up]] and further tailbacks, resulting in a second closure on the M25, and heavy delays on the [[M1 motorway|M1]], [[M2 motorway (Great Britain)|M2]], [[M3 motorway (Great Britain)|M3]], [[M11 motorway|M11]] and [[M20 motorway|M20]], the major artery-roads leading to [[London]]. Traffic attempts to drive through [[Central London]], without much success. |
Attempts at relieving the gridlock are hampered by a lack of coordination between police services overseeing different sections of the motorway, leading to cases of traffic being diverted onto the same roads in opposite directions. Traffic that managed to work its way through the diversion route past the Surrey accident suffers a further setback when a chemical tanker lorry [[jackknifing|jackknifes]] on the M25 near to [[Heathrow Airport]], causing a [[pile-up]] and further tailbacks, resulting in a second closure on the M25, and heavy delays on the [[M1 motorway|M1]], [[M2 motorway (Great Britain)|M2]], [[M3 motorway (Great Britain)|M3]], [[M11 motorway|M11]] and [[M20 motorway|M20]], the major artery-roads leading to [[London]]. Traffic attempts to drive through [[Central London]], without much success. |
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Charlie Watson, whose mother's car was hit in the lorry accident earlier that day, whilst travelling to [[Old Trafford]], becomes the first fatality when her gridlocked ambulance runs out of necessary medicine. |
Charlie Watson, whose mother's car was hit in the lorry accident earlier that day, whilst travelling to [[Old Trafford]], becomes the first fatality when her gridlocked ambulance runs out of necessary medicine. |
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As traffic worsens, Jerry Newell, a [[Aviator|pilot]], is |
As traffic worsens, Jerry Newell, a [[Aviator|pilot]], is being Driven to [[Heathrow Airport]] in order to reach his flight to [[Toulouse]], But His Wife’s car stops outside a crematorium and Jerry is Forced to Walk the rest of the way to the airport. A friendly [[football (soccer)|football]] match between [[England national football team|England]] and [[Turkey national football team|Turkey]] at [[Old Trafford (football ground)|Old Trafford]] in [[Manchester]] is cancelled for low attendance, with thousands stranded on the [[M6 motorway|M6]] and [[M40 motorway|M40]], effectively shutting down Manchester and [[Birmingham]]. The message is delivered by a stunned [[Gary Lineker]] on ''[[Match of the Day]]''. |
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Meanwhile, the Galt family are held up on the M25 after the tanker crash. Numerous people try to escape the motorway in their cars or on foot, but are held back by the [[Thames Valley Police]] and told to return to the carriageway or to their vehicles. As night falls, [[hypothermia]] sets in among many of the stranded travellers. Julian's wife notices that Heathrow is less than a mile away on foot. After Julian is successfully convinced by his wife to lead the family to the airport, the group sneak past immobilised cars and police officers on motorbikes to get off the motorway, walking through farm fields in the darkness to reach a minibus waiting on a minor road. After taking his son's camera, Julian tells his family that he's going to return to the car, and that he'll catch the next flight to Bilbao in the morning. |
Meanwhile, the Galt family are held up on the M25 after the tanker crash. Numerous people try to escape the motorway in their cars or on foot, but are held back by the [[Thames Valley Police]] and told to return to the carriageway or to their vehicles. As night falls, [[hypothermia]] sets in among many of the stranded travellers. Julian's wife notices that Heathrow is less than a mile away on foot. After Julian is successfully convinced by his wife to lead the family to the airport, the group sneak past immobilised cars and police officers on motorbikes to get off the motorway, walking through farm fields in the darkness to reach a minibus waiting on a minor road. After taking his son's camera, Julian tells his family that he's going to return to the car, and that he'll catch the next flight to Bilbao in the morning. The rest of the family get to Heathrow and Board the flight to [[Bilbao]]. |
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Severe hypothermia now incapacitates numerous vulnerable motorists. The authorities realise their attempts to force people to stay with their vehicles are making the situation worse, and so Operation Gridlock, (a fictional top secret plan to deal with such a situation) is implemented, with everyone including Julian now being instructed to leave their cars. People most at risk are airlifted to tent cities being set up on fields for triage. |
Severe hypothermia now incapacitates numerous vulnerable motorists. The authorities realise their attempts to force people to stay with their vehicles are making the situation worse, and so Operation Gridlock, (a fictional top secret plan to deal with such a situation) is implemented, with everyone including Julian now being instructed to leave their cars. People most at risk are airlifted to tent cities being set up on fields for triage. |
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Air-traffic controller Nicola Evans volunteered to work late when her replacement does not turn up. Overworked, she accidentally sends an [[Aer Lingus]] jet to taxi onto a runway where a [[Czech Airlines]] cargo plane is about to |
Air-traffic controller Nicola Evans volunteered to work late when her replacement does not turn up. Overworked, she accidentally sends an [[Aer Lingus]] jet to taxi onto a runway where a [[Czech Airlines]] cargo plane is about to land. Meanwhile the [[British Airways]] flight to Bilbao is cleared for takeoff on the other runway. However, conflicting instructions are given by the other air traffic controllers in Heathrow's tower. After agonising over their choices, They issue an instruction to [[go-around]] to the Czech jet, which does so, avoiding the Aer Lingus plane, but colliding with the departing [[British Airways]] flight to Bilbao. Unaware that his family were on the British Airways flight, Julian witnesses the explosion as he makes his way back to his car, capturing footage of the disaster on his son's camera. Burning wreckage falls across much of [[Hounslow]] and the surrounding area, killing all on board, flattening streets and setting areas of the town and its surroundings on fire. |
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Emergency services struggle to reach the scenes due to the clogged roads, and have to resort to using minor roads. Due to the proximity of Heathrow to the crash site, the airport's fire services are sent out to assist in the rescue efforts, but this in turn forces the airport to close, with incoming flights being diverted elsewhere, and all flights out of all UK airports are grounded after UK airspace is shut down. Jane Newell, Jerry Newell's husband, gets home to [[Shepperton]] several hours after Jerry left her car to walk to the airport, and finds news of the disaster on the television. She begins to worry and repeatedly phones anyone at all at the airport to find information about whether her husband was okay. She finds that the flight involved in the disaster was to Bilbao and is calmed. However she then receives a phone call from British Airways, telling her that Jerry's flight to Toulouse was cancelled; he instead had been called in to captain the flight to Bilbao, and was killed in the crash. Save for Julian, whose decision to return to the motorway to ensure his car wasn't taken away saved his life, the entirety of the Galt family have also died, having been allowed to board the plane as it had been delayed for an hour at the time of their arrival. |
Emergency services struggle to reach the scenes due to the clogged roads, and have to resort to using minor roads. Due to the proximity of Heathrow to the crash site, the airport's fire services are sent out to assist in the rescue efforts, but this in turn forces the airport to close, with incoming flights being diverted elsewhere, and all flights out of all UK airports are grounded after UK airspace is shut down. Jane Newell, Jerry Newell's husband, gets home to [[Shepperton]] several hours after Jerry left her car to walk to the airport, and finds news of the disaster on the television. She begins to worry and repeatedly phones anyone at all at the airport to find information about whether her husband was okay. She finds that the flight involved in the disaster was to Bilbao and is calmed. However she then receives a phone call from British Airways, telling her that Jerry's flight to Toulouse was cancelled; he instead had been called in to captain the flight to Bilbao, and was killed in the crash. Save for Julian, whose decision to return to the motorway to ensure his car wasn't taken away saved his life, the entirety of the Galt family have also died, having been allowed to board the plane as it had been delayed for an hour at the time of their arrival. A funeral for the dead is held at the Crematorium Where Jerry got out of his car to walk to the airport in the morning. |
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Nicola Evans, and two other air traffic controllers are dismissed from their jobs and eventually put on trial for multiple-[[manslaughter in English law|manslaughter]] charges for their negligence. The charges are dropped after revelations over larger issues in Heathrow's air-traffic control to do with the missed approach procedure, and the similarity in the disaster to a previous near miss (also fictitious), causing the prosecution's case to collapse in the process. The final death toll of the disaster was 87 people - All 64 passengers and crew, and 23 on the ground. There were also five deaths from hypothermia on the motorways, |
Nicola Evans, and two other air traffic controllers are dismissed from their jobs and eventually put on trial for multiple-[[manslaughter in English law|manslaughter]] charges for their negligence. The charges are dropped after revelations over larger issues in Heathrow's air-traffic control to do with the missed approach procedure, and the similarity in the disaster to a previous near miss (also fictitious), causing the prosecution's case to collapse in the process. The final death toll of the disaster was 87 people - All 64 passengers and crew, and 23 on the ground. There were also five deaths from hypothermia on the motorways, eight elsewhere and the rail strike is extended to 48 hours. |
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One year later, Julian Galt married Jane Newll and she and her daughter moved to [[Basingstoke]], the day before the wedding, they Buried Julian’s former wife and children’s ashes along with Jerry’s ashes in the garden. |
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==Cast== |
==Cast== |
Revision as of 07:09, 3 May 2021
The Day Britain Stopped | |
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Genre | Drama Docufiction Pseudo-documentary |
Written by |
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Directed by | Gabriel Range |
Narrated by | Tim Pigott-Smith |
Composer | Alan O'Duffy |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producers |
|
Producer | Simon Finch |
Editors |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | BBC Two |
Release | 13 May 2003 |
Related | |
The Man Who Broke Britain |
The Day Britain Stopped is a dramatic pseudo-documentary produced by Wall to Wall Media for the BBC. It is based on a fictional disaster on 19 December 2003, in which a train strike is the first in a chain of events that lead to a meltdown of the country's transport system. Directed by Gabriel Range, who wrote the script with producer Simon Finch, the film first aired on BBC2 in May 2003.
The drama made use of various British television news services and newsreaders (such as Sky News and Channel 4 News), foreign news channels (such as France's TF1), radio stations (Radio Five Live), real-life footage (from a train crash site, a speech by Prime Minister Tony Blair, and various stock footage of British traffic congestion), and several cameo roles by well-known British personalities. Accompanying music included excerpts from the movie soundtracks of The Shawshank Redemption and The Sum of All Fears.
Plot
Between 4 and 5 December, 18 months after the Potters Bar rail accident, a fatal train accident near Waverley Station in Edinburgh leads to the ASLEF and RMT trade unions to declare a strike for 19 December due to safety concerns, forcing the heavy Christmas rail passenger traffic to use the roads instead. Mick Rix's decision is heavily criticised by the government, particularly by Junior Transport Minister Tom Walker.
On 19 December, a crossover accident on the M25 motorway in Surrey involving several vehicles forces Inspector Clive Turner, head of the police unit with jurisdiction over the M25, to close the motorway in both directions from the site of the accident. The resulting traffic congestion spreads at such a rate that, within minutes, the motorway is blocked at the junction with the M23. Meanwhile, as British airspace runs over capacity to cope with the Christmas traffic, heavy traffic delays force the air traffic controllers to work double- and triple-shifts. Julian Galt and his family are travelling into central London en route to Heathrow Airport, for their Christmas holiday to Bilbao, with their twelve-year-old son recording their adventures on a video camera. The Channel Tunnel is also closed with all vehicles being rerouted to Dover for Ferries to France. While Eurostar Passengers use Flights instead.
Attempts at relieving the gridlock are hampered by a lack of coordination between police services overseeing different sections of the motorway, leading to cases of traffic being diverted onto the same roads in opposite directions. Traffic that managed to work its way through the diversion route past the Surrey accident suffers a further setback when a chemical tanker lorry jackknifes on the M25 near to Heathrow Airport, causing a pile-up and further tailbacks, resulting in a second closure on the M25, and heavy delays on the M1, M2, M3, M11 and M20, the major artery-roads leading to London. Traffic attempts to drive through Central London, without much success.
Charlie Watson, whose mother's car was hit in the lorry accident earlier that day, whilst travelling to Old Trafford, becomes the first fatality when her gridlocked ambulance runs out of necessary medicine.
As traffic worsens, Jerry Newell, a pilot, is being Driven to Heathrow Airport in order to reach his flight to Toulouse, But His Wife’s car stops outside a crematorium and Jerry is Forced to Walk the rest of the way to the airport. A friendly football match between England and Turkey at Old Trafford in Manchester is cancelled for low attendance, with thousands stranded on the M6 and M40, effectively shutting down Manchester and Birmingham. The message is delivered by a stunned Gary Lineker on Match of the Day.
Meanwhile, the Galt family are held up on the M25 after the tanker crash. Numerous people try to escape the motorway in their cars or on foot, but are held back by the Thames Valley Police and told to return to the carriageway or to their vehicles. As night falls, hypothermia sets in among many of the stranded travellers. Julian's wife notices that Heathrow is less than a mile away on foot. After Julian is successfully convinced by his wife to lead the family to the airport, the group sneak past immobilised cars and police officers on motorbikes to get off the motorway, walking through farm fields in the darkness to reach a minibus waiting on a minor road. After taking his son's camera, Julian tells his family that he's going to return to the car, and that he'll catch the next flight to Bilbao in the morning. The rest of the family get to Heathrow and Board the flight to Bilbao.
Severe hypothermia now incapacitates numerous vulnerable motorists. The authorities realise their attempts to force people to stay with their vehicles are making the situation worse, and so Operation Gridlock, (a fictional top secret plan to deal with such a situation) is implemented, with everyone including Julian now being instructed to leave their cars. People most at risk are airlifted to tent cities being set up on fields for triage.
Air-traffic controller Nicola Evans volunteered to work late when her replacement does not turn up. Overworked, she accidentally sends an Aer Lingus jet to taxi onto a runway where a Czech Airlines cargo plane is about to land. Meanwhile the British Airways flight to Bilbao is cleared for takeoff on the other runway. However, conflicting instructions are given by the other air traffic controllers in Heathrow's tower. After agonising over their choices, They issue an instruction to go-around to the Czech jet, which does so, avoiding the Aer Lingus plane, but colliding with the departing British Airways flight to Bilbao. Unaware that his family were on the British Airways flight, Julian witnesses the explosion as he makes his way back to his car, capturing footage of the disaster on his son's camera. Burning wreckage falls across much of Hounslow and the surrounding area, killing all on board, flattening streets and setting areas of the town and its surroundings on fire.
Emergency services struggle to reach the scenes due to the clogged roads, and have to resort to using minor roads. Due to the proximity of Heathrow to the crash site, the airport's fire services are sent out to assist in the rescue efforts, but this in turn forces the airport to close, with incoming flights being diverted elsewhere, and all flights out of all UK airports are grounded after UK airspace is shut down. Jane Newell, Jerry Newell's husband, gets home to Shepperton several hours after Jerry left her car to walk to the airport, and finds news of the disaster on the television. She begins to worry and repeatedly phones anyone at all at the airport to find information about whether her husband was okay. She finds that the flight involved in the disaster was to Bilbao and is calmed. However she then receives a phone call from British Airways, telling her that Jerry's flight to Toulouse was cancelled; he instead had been called in to captain the flight to Bilbao, and was killed in the crash. Save for Julian, whose decision to return to the motorway to ensure his car wasn't taken away saved his life, the entirety of the Galt family have also died, having been allowed to board the plane as it had been delayed for an hour at the time of their arrival. A funeral for the dead is held at the Crematorium Where Jerry got out of his car to walk to the airport in the morning.
Nicola Evans, and two other air traffic controllers are dismissed from their jobs and eventually put on trial for multiple-manslaughter charges for their negligence. The charges are dropped after revelations over larger issues in Heathrow's air-traffic control to do with the missed approach procedure, and the similarity in the disaster to a previous near miss (also fictitious), causing the prosecution's case to collapse in the process. The final death toll of the disaster was 87 people - All 64 passengers and crew, and 23 on the ground. There were also five deaths from hypothermia on the motorways, eight elsewhere and the rail strike is extended to 48 hours.
One year later, Julian Galt married Jane Newll and she and her daughter moved to Basingstoke, the day before the wedding, they Buried Julian’s former wife and children’s ashes along with Jerry’s ashes in the garden.
Cast
- Eric Carte as Tom Walker
- Andy Shield as Inspector Clive Turner
- Steve North as Julian Galt
- Angelo Andreou as Tomas Galt
- Emma Pinto as Ana Galt
- Olivia MacDonald as Marina Galt
- Prue Clarke as Pauline Watkins
- Jonathan Linsley as PC Tony Foster
- Tony Longhurst as Steve Thomas
- David Holt as Dominic Steel
- Joanna Griffiths as Nicola Evans
- Alison Skot as Air Traffic Controller
- Daniel Copeland as Matt Ogden
- Nancy McClean as Jane Newell
- Rebekah Janes as a concerned woman
- Satnam Bhogal as Inesh Gunwadena
- Tim Crouch as Daniel Boyd
Tim Pigott-Smith provided the narration. Katie Derham, Charlotte Green, Philip Hayton, John Humphrys, Gary Lineker, Anna Rajan, Jon Snow and Kirsty Young appeared as themselves.
Archive footage of Prime Minister Tony Blair was used, combining parts of his statements in the House of Commons about Air France Flight 4590 and the Great Heck rail crash.
Production
The M96 motorway, a converted airfield used by the Fire Service College for training, was used as a stage for the M25.
Discrepancies
This section possibly contains original research. (December 2020) |
As the drama was filmed in late 2002 with an airdate in May 2003, there are several discrepancies with real life events.
In December 2003, the M6 Toll motorway bypassing the congested Birmingham and Wolverhampton stretches of the M6 had only just opened to traffic, although the motorway was still under construction at the time of broadcast and therefore hardly mentioned. However, during an interview, fictional Junior Transport Minister Tom Walker mentions that 'billions' had been spent on widening the M6 between Birmingham and Manchester.
Traffic is shown to be driving through Central London without any mention of the London congestion charge, which began operations in February 2003.
Traffic is mentioned to be stuck on the M6 and M40 when going to Old Trafford, but no mention is made of the much more congested M60 near the stadium itself - and an international friendly would never be played so close to the busy Christmas period, where it's not unknown for even Premier League teams to play four games in ten days (especially against a team who they had just played in a competitive game - England had played Turkey in a Euro 2004 qualifier in October 2003). Also at that time international fixtures weren't played on Friday nights nor indeed any top flight club games.
While the programme made extensive use of various news channels, several had changed their branding and presentation before December 2003.
Reception
Radio Times said: "Scarily realistic ... chilling ... a remarkable piece of reality based drama ... a credible scenario ... a wonderful piece of television ... so plausibly done that it should really have a warning flash in the corner of the screen saying 'fiction' in big red letters ... loving pastiches of news reports, corporate videos, magazine covers, press conferences - the fakery is fascinating, like looking at a forged bank note. It works as a smart riveting drama and also as a warning of the power of the financial markets".[1]
References
- ^ "The Day Britain Stopped". Wall to Wall. Retrieved 24 September 2013.