The Day After



         


The Day After is a controversial made-for-television movie about the effects that a fictional full-scale nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union has on the residents of Lawrence, Kansas and Kansas City, Missouri. It was written by Edward Hume and directed by Nicholas Meyer.

The following is a chronology of the events, portrayed in The Day After, which lead to the fictional start of World War III. To this day, many military theorists have stated that the events portrayed were a very real possibility during the Cold War.

It is never made clear in the film whether it was the Soviet Union or the United States who launched nuclear weapons first. The end result is that most of America's major cities are destroyed, the military is decimated, and the United States becomes a fallout wasteland. After the death and destruction has been allowed to occur, the President of the United States declares that a ceasefire exists between the USA and USSR.

When the film was first aired, there was a great deal of stress put on educational materials to prepare audiences for the shocking imagery and the bleak story. However, critics complained that the film was not realistic enough, because it seemed to softpedal the true extent of the devastation of a nuclear war. An estimated 100 million people watched the movie when it first aired on November 20, 1983.

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