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[personal profile] eumelia
A few years ago, I must of been in my early teens, I saw a movie on television which I've never seen since.
Mainly because I could never forget it.
The movie is When the Wind Blows.
The film horrified me.
I had nightmares for days, it was like when I went to the Planetarium when I was about seven or eight years old and was convinced the sun would expand and destroy all life on earth... today.

I've always been terrified by scenarios I know can, have and will happen eventually.
I suppose it's one of the reasons I'm a sci-fi/fantasy fan.

Someone has put up When the Wind Blows in eight parts on YouTube.
Here they are for posterity.

When the Wind Blows (playlist permalink)


I will most likely not watch this movie today, or even tomorrow. But I feel that as a piece of culture it's important for me to know where to find it again.
As I said, I've never really forgotten this movie and having found it again I don't think I'll be able to stop myself from sitting down and watching and being thrown back into my early teen pre-Buffy brain and bawling like a baby at the nightmarish reality that that couple is living through.

I'm finding the coincidence of finding this movie again, right after seeing Watchmen and interesting coincidence.
Story of Watchmen takes place during a fictional Cold War reality, brinkmanship is a reality and the Doomsday Clock is only a few minutes to midnight.
In both versions a calamity descends.
And we never really see the aftermath.
When the Wind Blows is that aftermath.
At least, that's what my coincident prone brain told me.

within this car a family is burning alive.

Date: 2009-03-10 12:08 pm (UTC)
ext_2138: (dollhouse (dont_be_so_base))
From: [identity profile] danamaree.livejournal.com
Heh, that cartoon is much fluffier then Threads or The War Game. *shudder* The War Game. Have you seen that?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9v-tI7xQFo

It's trauma in the making. Yeah.

Re: within this car a family is burning alive.

Date: 2009-03-10 12:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eumelia.livejournal.com
I have.
I think there's something about a cartoon that enables one to accept the information without being traumatised as you say.

"The War Game" was a very realistic what-if thing, those are always disturbing, but it's also very for things that are realistic to lose their edge with exposure - you know, like the News, the film "The Thin Red Line", etc.

Animation brings a different level of horror, because it's dream like and what we imagine and ultimately our imagination is far more horrific than anything we can see through the lens of a camera.
Other than snuff, which I hope to never ever see.

Re: within this car a family is burning alive.

Date: 2009-03-10 12:28 pm (UTC)
ext_2138: (Default)
From: [identity profile] danamaree.livejournal.com
I wish I had of seen the cartoon when I was a kid, I think I was 10 years old when I saw The Day After, nightmares for years afterwards.

And Mum said a nuclear war was possible, I remember that when I asked for reassurance as a child. I think my generation is the last that grew up under that reality. I'm still half afraid of it.

That, and burning to death, the firestorms in Victoria really brought those memories back.

I may sound very calm with these words, but I'm shaking here a bit thinking about all these things. I'm very afraid of nuclear war.

Re: within this car a family is burning alive.

Date: 2009-03-10 12:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eumelia.livejournal.com
I can certainly relate to that fear.
I tend to talk about war and things of that nature very glibly, blase and stuff having been born where I was and living where I do (same place of course).
I mean, I grew up with missiles really falling on my head and people blowing themselves up as acts of war and resistance.
Brinkmanship is very remote in my mind and very sci-fi-ish to me, though I know it is a reality, hence being so terrified by reading and seeing post-apocalyptic dystopia.

Re: within this car a family is burning alive.

Date: 2009-03-10 03:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cbr-paul.livejournal.com
I think that animated media also tends to allow the viewer to let their guard down a little more than they would in a live action piece: "Grave of the Fireflies" is still the most powerful anti-war flim that I have ever seen, and not a single gunshot or bomb in sight!

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Eumelia

January 2020

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V and Justice

V: Ah, I was forgetting that we are not properly introduced. I do not have a name. You can call me V. Madam Justice...this is V. V... this is Madam Justice. hello, Madam Justice.

Justice: Good evening, V.

V: There. Now we know each other. Actually, I've been a fan of yours for quite some time. Oh, I know what you're thinking...

Justice: The poor boy has a crush on me...an adolescent fatuation.

V: I beg your pardon, Madam. It isn't like that at all. I've long admired you...albeit only from a distance. I used to stare at you from the streets below when I was a child. I'd say to my father, "Who is that lady?" And he'd say "That's Madam Justice." And I'd say "Isn't she pretty."

V: Please don't think it was merely physical. I know you're not that sort of girl. No, I loved you as a person. As an ideal.

Justice: What? V! For shame! You have betrayed me for some harlot, some vain and pouting hussy with painted lips and a knowing smile!

V: I, Madam? I beg to differ! It was your infidelity that drove me to her arms!

V: Ah-ha! That surprised you, didn't it? You thought I didn't know about your little fling. But I do. I know everything! Frankly, I wasn't surprised when I found out. You always did have an eye for a man in uniform.

Justice: Uniform? Why I'm sure I don't know what you're talking about. It was always you, V. You were the only one...

V: Liar! Slut! Whore! Deny that you let him have his way with you, him with his armbands and jackboots!

V: Well? Cat got your tongue? I though as much.

V: Very well. So you stand revealed at last. you are no longer my justice. You are his justice now. You have bedded another.

Justice: Sob! Choke! Wh-who is she, V? What is her name?

V: Her name is Anarchy. And she has taught me more as a mistress than you ever did! She has taught me that justice is meaningless without freedom. She is honest. She makes no promises and breaks none. Unlike you, Jezebel. I used to wonder why you could never look me in the eye. Now I know. So good bye, dear lady. I would be saddened by our parting even now, save that you are no longer the woman I once loved.

*KABOOM!*

-"V for Vendetta"

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