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7/10
Would have been much better with less “westernized” cast, characters, and script. For example, the central scientist acts all surprised that soviet government be like it do, as if he just stepped off a boat from America or England. The characters just weren’t believable for anyone familiar with the time period and place. Would have been better with Slav actors speaking Russian and subtitles. |
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Yes it's not a scientific documentary. Yes it's still 10/10. Read through the archive thread and follow along through the five episodes. The biggest technical inaccuracy is in the last episode so I won't spoil it for you. It's still a good show.
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Quoted: Agreed to an extent. Some of it was over the top and unrealistic. The unborn child absorbing radiation from the mothers exposure to her firefighter husband was one such moment. Suggesting the people on the bridge all died from the fallout was bullshit- most everyone survived. OTOH the character of Ulana Komhyuk was artistic liberty and I think necessary for streamlining the story. Overall a very good series. The explanation into how the RBMK failed, as I understand it was spot on. As well as the realization the USSR knew there was a flaw in the design and hid it from everyone, even their own nuke techs operating the reactors. That’s what commies do. ETA: don’t be a fucking dick, 19’er. View Quote My father was a nuclear engineer, very well versed on what happened, and this is essentially what he said too. |
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Quoted: They openly stated that khomyuk was a composite of the many scientists that were consulting on the disaster, there was no dishonesty there, they had to compress many characters into one for the sake of telling the story. They even showed a real photograph of the group of scientists that the character was meant to represent in the closing credits....during the explanation of khomyuk's character. They were totally open about it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: For starters, the woman's character is totally made up just to add a female role. But since that wasn't SJW enough, they went even further to have her save the day. Good series otherwise. They even showed a real photograph of the group of scientists that the character was meant to represent in the closing credits....during the explanation of khomyuk's character. They were totally open about it. Agreed. All I expected from Hollywood (or HBO) was to be entertained based on actual events. I got interested enough in the horror, science, and humanitarian disaster that I did my own research to the accurate details. |
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Excellent series. Many YT videos support the accuracy, was it 100%??? No, some people were fictitious. Make sure to see the little clips at the end or beginning (I cant remember) that gives details about each episode. Watch in surround sound esp with the divers scene... Freaky AF! You feel like you're really there.
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Quoted: They only commented because there was so much backlash over it. Then they came up with some BS excuse of why a woman character solves what evil men can't and then busts her way through a 80's era Russian security perimeter because "woman power". Give me a break. When the show aired, there was no explanation, and just one article explaining her character was pure fiction. They weren't upfront about anything and I guess they found their group of scientists to cherry pick the character from in the end. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: They openly stated that khomyuk was a composite of the many scientists that were consulting on the disaster, there was no dishonesty there, they had to compress many characters into one for the sake of telling the story. They even showed a real photograph of the group of scientists that the character was meant to represent in the closing credits....during the explanation of khomyuk's character. They were totally open about it. You're way overstating what happened. It was way easier to have 1 actor portray 100 scientists in a show rather than have 100 scientists cast. She was good in her role. Historically the Soviets did have a fair amount of women scientists and such, so really...who fucking cares that they cast a woman to portray a group of scientists? Seems absurd to make a big deal about it. |
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Quoted: 7/10 Would have been much better with less “westernized” cast, characters, and script. For example, the central scientist acts all surprised that soviet government be like it do, as if he just stepped off a boat from America or England. The characters just weren’t believable for anyone familiar with the time period and place. Would have been better with Slav actors speaking Russian and subtitles. View Quote Agreed, or even slavic accents. |
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Quoted: 7/10 Would have been much better with less “westernized” cast, characters, and script. For example, the central scientist acts all surprised that soviet government be like it do, as if he just stepped off a boat from America or England. The characters just weren’t believable for anyone familiar with the time period and place. Would have been better with Slav actors speaking Russian and subtitles. View Quote I would have liked that too, but I think they would have killed off a lot of their viewership because of subtitles unfortunately. |
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Well, for those of you who want a more Russian take on events...
Are the Russians still working on their version of the story where everything that happened at Chernobyl was the CIA's fault? |
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Quoted: They only commented because there was so much backlash over it. Then they came up with some BS excuse of why a woman character solves what evil men can't and then busts her way through a 80's era Russian security perimeter because "woman power". Give me a break. When the show aired, there was no explanation, and just one article explaining her character was pure fiction. They weren't upfront about anything and I guess they found their group of scientists to cherry pick the character from in the end. View Quote Honestly, I didn't notice a SJW bent to the character, and she didn't really save anything, she caught that the bubbler pools were full of runoff but to me that was always a sketchy problem. The coreium wouldn't have dropped in one giant molten ball into the pool so one giant explosion seemed unlikely. Certainly not a megaton class explosion that would involve the other reactors on site. All that being said, there were divers, they did drain a full pool, so obviously the authorities were concerned. If you want to get wrapped around the axle over the fact that they chose a woman for the composite character you can. I didn't give it much thought at the time. |
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The visuals and sets were very good but the miniseries was overly dramatized and the scientific accuracy is garbage. The sequence of events and procedures in the first episode was well done, but it went down hill from there. They should have used nuclear scientists or physicists as technical advisors instead of the anti-nuclear activists that they had. It was nothing but fear-mongering the dangers of radiation and other claims like the possibility of a steam explosion in the megaton range that was off by 4 to 5 orders of magnitude.
The depiction of the soviets system was very accurately portrayed in some parts but complete nonsense in others. The basement committee meeting in the first episode and some parts of the court scene looked very realistic. Threatening to shoot or throw subordinates out of a helicopter did not happen in the 1980's. The people in the soviet union were demoralized and conditioned to follow orders without question. They would grumble and do a half assed job, but people followed orders. Scientists questioning how the system worked was especially ridiculous considering that Legasov was a high ranking leader in several academic institutions. He never would have gotten where he was unless he knew how to play politics. |
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Quoted: Yes it's not a scientific documentary. Yes it's still 10/10. Read through the archive thread and follow along through the five episodes. The biggest technical inaccuracy is in the last episode so I won't spoil it for you. It's still a good show. View Quote |
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Quoted: The visuals and sets were very good but the miniseries was overly dramatized and the scientific accuracy is garbage. The sequence of events and procedures in the first episode was well done, but it went down hill from there. They should have used nuclear scientists or physicists as technical advisors instead of the anti-nuclear activists that they had. It was nothing but fear-mongering the dangers of radiation and other claims like the possibility of a steam explosion in the megaton range that was off by 4 to 5 orders of magnitude. The depiction of the soviets system was very accurately portrayed in some parts but complete nonsense in others. The basement committee meeting in the first episode and some parts of the court scene looked very realistic. Threatening to shoot or throw subordinates out of a helicopter did not happen in the 1980's. The people in the soviet union were demoralized and conditioned to follow orders without question. They would grumble and do a half assed job, but people followed orders. Scientists questioning how the system worked was especially ridiculous considering that Legasov was a high ranking leader in several academic institutions. He never would have gotten where he was unless he knew how to play politics. View Quote new yorker article saying the exact same thing |
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Best series I’ve watched since Breaking Bad. Until now, for me personally, I like Cobra Kai better.
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Quoted: Quoted: 7/10 Would have been much better with less “westernized” cast, characters, and script. For example, the central scientist acts all surprised that soviet government be like it do, as if he just stepped off a boat from America or England. The characters just weren’t believable for anyone familiar with the time period and place. Would have been better with Slav actors speaking Russian and subtitles. Agreed, or even slavic accents. I read somewhere they tried having the actors all do accents but it just sounded like a bad Rocky & Bullwinkle episode with everyone sounding like they were looking for moose and squirrel. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Yes it's not a scientific documentary. Yes it's still 10/10. Read through the archive thread and follow along through the five episodes. The biggest technical inaccuracy is in the last episode so I won't spoil it for you. It's still a good show. Click To View Spoiler The power excursion all happened within about 2 1/2 ~ 3 seconds, which was after AZ5 was pressed to shut down the reactor after the test was done. 1:23:40 AZ5 was pressed 1:23:43 SCALA computer activates power excursion warning light - power level at time the warning light came on was 550MWt. 1:23:45 initial explosion. IIRC the last power level recorded was 33,000MWt as the show depicted. Dyatlov was actually reasonably sharp and not quite the bastard that the series makes him out to be. He wrote a scientific paper analyzing what happened. He states unequivocally that everything seemed stable until AZ5 was pressed. This was corroborated by other statements by the (mostly deceased) control room workers. Using AZ5 to effect a normal reactor shutdown was apparently common Soviet practice. It was noted that the power excursion warning was typical when AZ5 was used to shut down the reactor but that it was attributed to an instrumentation problem. It wasn't. If it wasn't clear from the series, there had been a less severe power excursion accident as a result of using AZ5 at a different RBMK reactors many years before, that was covered up within the soviet system. The control rod tips interacting with the conditions that were created by the crazy test caused the explosion, but it happened much faster than portrayed. The slow buildup of the power surge as depicted in the last episode was for dramatic effect. |
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I have it on my DVR, from a free HBO weekend.
Guess I need to make time to watch it. |
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I've heard from some people it ends up being anti-nuclear propaganda. Yes, no?
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Quoted: I've heard from some people it ends up being anti-nuclear propaganda. Yes, no? View Quote If the viewer is already slanted that way, I can certainly see how that viewer would interpret it as such. But objectively? It just shows how Marxist government is so pitifully inept that it thinks it can literally preempt science with ideological purity. Which comes to think of it sounds eerily familiar.... |
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Quoted: If the viewer is already slanted that way, I can certainly see how that viewer would interpret it as such. But objectively? It just shows how Marxist government is so pitifully inept that it thinks it can literally preempt science with ideological purity. Which comes to think of it sounds eerily familiar.... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I've heard from some people it ends up being anti-nuclear propaganda. Yes, no? If the viewer is already slanted that way, I can certainly see how that viewer would interpret it as such. But objectively? It just shows how Marxist government is so pitifully inept that it thinks it can literally preempt science with ideological purity. Which comes to think of it sounds eerily familiar.... And the default consumable commodity of communist systems is human lives. The default medium of exchange is lies. |
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Quoted: https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/original/001/499/932/b95.png https://i.redd.it/qnjewg1b4m531.png View Quote LOL. This scene was frightening to say the least. Chernobyl (2019) Reactor Core Meltdown Scene |
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Quoted: Historically, killing Marxists is the only thing Marxist governments are able to do efficiently. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: And the default consumable commodity of communist systems is human lives. Historically, killing Marxists is the only thing Marxist governments are able to do efficiently. I saw something the other day about the "greatest genocide in human history" in reference to the Holocaust. Kinda paused a little, not in that it wasn't a holocaust, but that the Soviets and Chinese each killed far more of their own citizens than perished in the Holocaust. I think the estimate for the Soviets is something like 100 million. Quoted: The beginning of the show felt like a horror movie The whole thing was a rolling horror movie. |
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Quoted: Although the director is a huge Marxist shitbag, I think he unintentionally made it an indictment on communism View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Not at all, I think it's anti-corruption more than anything. Although the director is a huge Marxist shitbag, I think he unintentionally made it an indictment on communism Funny how that worked out isn't it... |
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View Quote I still wonder. That ringing... Howling sound you hear at 1:11. Is that a warning siren? Air flowing towards the fire or something else? |
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Quoted: This. It's a scathing indictment of applied Marxism. Honestly I can't believe it got made these days. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Agreed on both points, but as a drama its gets about as close to a documentary as you can get while still keeping the average Joe's attention. Most folks don't want to sit through Chernobyl Uncensored, but they'll gladly sit down for the HBO series. Its not a bad way to introduce people to the failures of the Soviet State. This. It's a scathing indictment of applied Marxism. Honestly I can't believe it got made these days. Agree completely which is why I was so shocked one of the directors said it was anti-Trump. It gave me Forrest Whittaker eye. Absolutely insane. I dug Chernobyl a lot. Enough that after watching the first ep by myself I stopped, grabbed the wife, and we watched the whole series together. The details were amazing. The gigantic meeting rooms with one small stacking chair in them. The library where you had to justify what books you were taking out because the Political Officer might not think you should read it... and on and on. |
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Quoted: I still wonder. That ringing... Howling sound you hear at 1:11. Is that a warning siren? Air flowing towards the fire or something else? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: I still wonder. That ringing... Howling sound you hear at 1:11. Is that a warning siren? Air flowing towards the fire or something else? Dramatic soundtrack. Kinda taking the warning siren sound from the hallway and making it into a fearful sound effect. |
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Only thing I didn't like was the British accents were annoying as hell. So 9/10.
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Quoted: Although the director is a huge Marxist shitbag, I think he unintentionally made it an indictment on communism View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Not at all, I think it's anti-corruption more than anything. Although the director is a huge Marxist shitbag, I think he unintentionally made it an indictment on communism He said the government's behavior in the film and hiding information was reflective of Trump (and I'm assuming muh-Russia). He freaked out when many said hey, look, a film that portrays communism the way communism worked. |
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Quoted: I still wonder. That ringing... Howling sound you hear at 1:11. Is that a warning siren? Air flowing towards the fire or something else? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: I still wonder. That ringing... Howling sound you hear at 1:11. Is that a warning siren? Air flowing towards the fire or something else? Not sure. I do know that they took the sounds within a similar nuke plant in Russia or wherever they had access to and recorded noises and then mixed them into sounds and music of the movie: 'Chernobyl' composer created entire haunting score from real power plant sounds |
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Quoted: For starters, the woman's character is totally made up just to add a female role. But since that wasn't SJW enough, they went even further to have her save the day. Good series otherwise. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Ok comrade. Any significant examples or just nitpicking? From what I understand, she was a composite of a number of scientists to simplify the plot. |
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It was good.
I don't think I'd go 10/10 good. Probably 8/10, definitely worth watching. |
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The explanation at the hearing at the end was a great presentation job that even on the first run though, allowed understanding of what happened.
Whomever wrote the script at that point should do science education or TV shows or something. |
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It’s one of my favorite series. Difficult to watch at times, and unfortunately I have seen the same mentality in American industry. There’s no shortage of people willing to bypass safety guidelines for more or cheaper production to look good to their bosses.
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Quoted: I've heard from some people it ends up being anti-nuclear propaganda. Yes, no? View Quote The anti nuke is more or less restricted to exaggerating the effects of the radiation and the initial event. |
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Quoted: Ukrainian wife said they nailed local details, the buses used, telephones in apartments, was period correct. She was singing along and impressed how well they did it. Not sure on accuracy of actual accident, we did the tour back in 2017. https://i.ibb.co/SvyvH9j/21458043-1100845536719353-6189259096065697703-o.jpg https://i.ibb.co/j5MBBsg/21414741-1100408080096432-3650124349669833675-o.jpg https://i.ibb.co/Sn76SNg/cn24.jpg https://i.ibb.co/3f1mHvM/22218306-1116279265175980-2452858600536427331-o.jpg https://i.ibb.co/3TnyShP/22219664-1116285785175328-5406438077230803463-o.jpg https://i.ibb.co/9sxPrhG/cn12.jpg View Quote Beats my 'tour' in MW4 |
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Quoted: From what I understand, she was a composite of a number of scientists to simplify the plot. View Quote |
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