Threads (television show)
- This article is about the television show. For other uses of this word, see Thread_(disambiguation).
Threads is a BBC television docu-drama film about a nuclear attack on the United Kingdom. The story focuses on Sheffield, England, starting shortly before the attack and continuing to 13 years after, as the threads that hold civilisation together slowly unravel. The plot and atmosphere of the film are extremely bleak. Like The War Game, which dealt with similar subject matter, the film mixes conventional narrative with text screens and narration. For added realism in its depiction of the nuclear attack and consequences, findings from the 1980 British Government exercise "Square Leg" were used.
During filming, the BBC reportedly got into trouble with the local police after detonating a large smoke bomb to simulate a mushroom cloud. Many residents believed there had been a real explosion.
Written by Barry Hines and directed by Mick Jackson, it was made in 1984. It was aired on the BBC in 1985 and 1987 but was not seen again on British screens until digital channel BBC Four broadcast it in November 2003. It has also been broadcast in the USA and released on video cassette and DVD.
The film follows two families and charts a steady and unremitting generational decay. In one of the most poignant scenes, a group of ragged survivors shambles past an undamaged poster depicting a happy, smiling baby. At the end of the film, the brain-damaged daughter of one of the bomb survivors becomes pregnant; in the final scene we see the look of horror on her face when she sees what she has given birth to.
See also
- The Day After, an American made-for-television film. The film critic Steve Rose has said that "Threads was to The Day After what Coronation Street was to Dynasty".
- The War Game, another nuclear war film the BBC made in 1965, banned from television until the 1980s.
- Protect and Survive, the 1970s British government information films on nuclear war.
- Final War, a Japanese film from 1960, in which nuclear war occurs after the U.S. accidentally bombs South Korea.
- Nuclear weapons in popular culture