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Best Episode of HBO's Chernobyl

24th Jul 2019
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Right on the heels of Game of Thrones finale, HBO, in collaboration with SKY, came out with a gem of a miniseries - Chernobyl. Within weeks after release, the show shot up to the top of IMDB's best TV shows list beating out the likes of Breaking Bad, Game of Thrones and Band of Brothers. It is hard to think of a show that is as stunning on a technical level and in terms of writing. Its portrayal of radiation as an invisible "monster" that can only be detected with dosimeters easily makes it one of the scariest shows ever to grace TV. It expertly blends horror movie elements without ever falling into the canned tropes of the genre. On the contrary, it is very respectful to the real events of the actual disaster in 1986 and is always mindful of the fact that this is a real place with real people that were, and still are, affected by the tragedy. What immediately stands out to viewers of the series is how real it seems, so much so that it could very well have been a documentary. Despite the heaviness and immense scale of the event, the show does an incredible job of focusing on the personal horrors and agonies faced by people introduced in the show - which makes it immediately more relatable. Even famous individuals, whether they be scientists or politicians, are depicted with all their foibles, concerns and worries in a viscerally real way. Arguably, the biggest success of the show is that it allowed people around the world for the first time to learn about the incredible heroism and sacrifice of the Soviet people in trying to save a continent - facts that were hidden from the public for more than 30 years.

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Best Episode of HBO's Chernobyl

Ranked by 3
Views: 2.8K
Shares: 0
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#4.

Episode 4 - The Happiness of All Mankind

4/5
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Going in to the 4th episode, we have already become accustomed to the incompetence and mismanagement and bureaucratic inertia in the Soviet response to the disaster. While this episode, does show the government hurdles impeding Ulana Khomyuk's investigation of the explosion, it focuses primarily on the courage, heroism and selflessness of the Soviet people in cleaning up the mess left behind in the wake of Chernobyl. As was probably common during that era, the solution to dealing with a problem of this magnitude was to engage and mobilize a lot of people - in this case 600,000 Liquidators. Many of them were recruited to perform relatively mundane tasks like removing the topsoil or dropping Agent Orange on the trees. Some, however, had to do the gruesome work of killing animals - and we see these events viscerally through the eyes of a young recruit working in a dog extermination squad. But the sacrifices made by these liquidators were not limited to emotional scarring. When Valery Legasov and Soviet Deputy Prime Minister Boris Shcherbina's were no longer able to use lunar/radio operated rovers to remove all of the radioactive debris on the roof of reactor 4, they turned to biorobots - 3400 Soviet soldiers each of whom had 90 seconds to perform the most harrowing work of their lives on the radioactive roof - a scene so terrifying that it might just be the highlight of the whole series.
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#4.

Episode 4 - The Happiness of All Mankind

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Going in to the 4th episode, we have already become accustomed to the incompetence and mismanagement and bureaucratic inertia in the Soviet response to the disaster. While this episode, does show the government hurdles impeding Ulana Khomyuk's investigation of the explosion, it focuses primarily on the courage, heroism and selflessness of the Soviet people in cleaning up the mess left behind in the wake of Chernobyl. As was probably common during that era, the solution to dealing with a problem of this magnitude was to engage and mobilize a lot of people - in this case 600,000 Liquidators. Many of them were recruited to perform relatively mundane tasks like removing the topsoil or dropping Agent Orange on the trees. Some, however, had to do the gruesome work of killing animals - and we see these events viscerally through the eyes of a young recruit working in a dog extermination squad. But the sacrifices made by these liquidators were not limited to emotional scarring. When Valery Legasov and Soviet Deputy Prime Minister Boris Shcherbina's were no longer able to use lunar/radio operated rovers to remove all of the radioactive debris on the roof of reactor 4, they turned to biorobots - 3400 Soviet soldiers each of whom had 90 seconds to perform the most harrowing work of their lives on the radioactive roof - a scene so terrifying that it might just be the highlight of the whole series.

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