"Chernobyl" (Chernobyl) tells the story of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in flashback. Flashback to the occurrence of a nuclear disaster, use the first four episodes to describe the consequences of the nuclear disaster and the response of government officials. This drama records how the technicians, firefighters, medical staff, government officials, scientists and others in the nuclear power plant responded after a nuclear disaster, and how the nuclear disaster affected them personally.
The theme of the episode was originally a typical plot/historical film, but because the plot involves terrifying and invisible radiation, it looks more like a thriller. One of the most outstanding aspects of this drama is the description of the scourge of radiation. It makes good use of the invisible characteristics of radiation to highlight its terrifying aspects, which itself is also the most terrifying place of this disaster.
Radiation is colorless, tasteless, and intangible, and we basically cannot feel their existence by feeling alone. By the time our body feels its existence, we may have been deeply affected by it, and the body has already suffered from irreversible sequelae.
This drama focuses on the emergency response of technicians, firefighters, and medical personnel in nuclear power plants after a nuclear disaster. Even if we cannot see the existence of radiation in the drama, we are well aware of the intensity of radiation near nuclear power plants. And the impact they can have on the characters in the play.
We watched the firefighters get so close to the explosion place, picking up the explosives outside the nuclear power plant; regardless of the radiation, the technicians worked hard to reduce further disasters in the nuclear power plant, and we seemed to see the breath of death approaching them step by step.
Therefore, watching these scenes, we seem to be watching some thrillers and horror movies, but it is not ghosts or deadly viruses that kill invisible in the play, but radiation; and the most disturbing thing is that this is not a fictional story. , The audience knows that most of the things in the play have actually happened, and the radiation and scourges are real, and have claimed countless lives.
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