this post was submitted on 27 May 2026
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Asking Brits who saw Threads when they were in school in the 80's (I guess you're probably in your early to mid 50's now, right?).

How did you and others in your class react to the film? Did you and your peers worry much around that time?

Just finished it myself, and it was very convincing in how it depicted the effects of a nuclear attack. Some of the events detailed as precursors to nuclear war were also worryingly similar to current events.

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[–] bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world 6 points 6 days ago (1 children)

It was nice to see my home city being represented on tv.

I don't remember much about it other than thinking that a lot of people would be happy that the Town Hall extension ("egg box building") was destroyed.

I didn't watch it much past that point.

[–] mastertigurius@lemmy.world 4 points 6 days ago

🤣 Good to see that people didn't take it too seriously. The scenes that got to me the most were the ones at the pub. Moved to Norway a few years ago, and am currently missing the pub terribly. Building one in the basement as we speak.

[–] Codpiece@feddit.uk 3 points 6 days ago (1 children)

I was in primary school so didn’t see it at the time, but I did watch it again the other week as my wife hadn’t seen it.

The parallels with current events were a little worrying, especially the lack of attention paid to the news on the radio.

There are recent rumours of a modern remake.

[–] mastertigurius@lemmy.world 2 points 5 days ago

I was actually hoping there would be one while watching it. Hoping that the modern remake would make as much effort to be accurate - the list of PhD's consulting for the original is pretty impressive.

[–] fakeman_pretendname@feddit.uk 2 points 5 days ago

I didn't see it at the time, but watched it later as a repeat, maybe in my 20s (early 2000s). I think I was sort of frozen in a speechless bleakness after it. I thought about it a lot over the coming days. "All this could be lost in the blink of an eye, if these wars keep escalating" (if was probably mid Bush/Blair war). I found it deeply unsettling (in an important way).

It's lack of high budget flair just made it bleakly realistic. Also, the setting in Sheffield rather than "down south" or wherever made it far more realistic (as someone from Yorkshire) - it was "normal people with normal accents", talking about normal everyday worries, like a gritty soap opera - like watching something like Coronation Street, but then they get nuked and you watch them all die slowly of radiation poisoning.

I think it's a classic, and I think it's of great cultural importance and that everyone should watch it at some point in their lives, especially politicians.

I'm normally scared of remakes, but yeah - if they remade a 21st century equivalent and it had a similar impact on today's young people, that'd be a good thing.