This is very well done, and the actors are really good.
It's very realstic. Frankly, though, I found it gross and
depressing. It reminds me of watching movies like "The Day
After" and "Testament." This is worse, though, because it
really happened. I'm old enough to remember when it
happened (in 1986). It was truly horrible and scary. I don't
need to see the gross details, though.
There are a lot of great actors in this, like Jared
Harris, Stellan Skarsgård and Emily Watson. If seeing the
aftermath of radiation sickness and the like doesn't bother
you, then you'll probably love this miniseries. It is partly
uplifting because of the sacrifices of the people in it. I
just couldn't take it.
IVE-PART MINISERIES "CHERNOBYL," AN HBO/SKY
CO-PRODUCTION STARRING JARED HARRIS, STELLAN SKARSGÅRD
AND EMILY WATSON, WRITTEN AND CREATED BY CRAIG MAZIN,
AND DIRECTED BY JOHAN RENCK, DEBUTS MAY 6 ON HBO
Paul Ritter, Jessie Buckley, Adrian Rawlins And Con
O'Neill Also Star; Carolyn Strauss, Jane Featherstone
And Craig Mazin Executive Produce; Chris Fry And Johan
Renck Co-Executive Produce; Sanne Wohlenberg Produces
"Every lie we tell incurs a debt to the truth." --
Valery Legasov (Jared Harris)
CHERNOBYL dramatizes the 1986 nuclear accident, one
of the worst human-made catastrophes in history, and
tells the story of the brave men and women who made
incredible sacrifices to save Europe from unimaginable
disaster, all the while battling a culture of
disinformation.
Debuting MONDAY, MAY 6 (9:00-10:00 p.m. ET/PT),
followed by other episodes subsequent Mondays at the
same time, exclusively on HBO, the five-part miniseries
stars Jared Harris ("The Crown"; Emmy? nominee for "Mad
Men"), Stellan Skarsgård ("Melancholia," "Good Will
Hunting") and Emily Watson (Oscar? nominee for "Hilary
and Jackie" and "Breaking the Waves").
The miniseries will also be available on HBO NOW, HBO
GO, HBO On Demand and partners' streaming platforms.
CHERNOBYL was written, created and executive produced
by Craig Mazin ("The Huntsman: Winter's War") and
directed by Johan Renck ("Breaking Bad"); produced by
Sister Pictures, The Mighty Mint and Word Games as an
HBO/Sky co-production. Carolyn Strauss (Emmy(R) winner
for "Game of Thrones") and Jane Featherstone
("Broadchurch") executive produce; Johan Renck and Chris
Fry ("Humans") co-executive produce; Sanne Wohlenberg
("Black Mirror") produces.
On April 26, 1986, the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant
in Ukraine, Soviet Union suffered a massive explosion
that released radioactive material across Ukraine,
Belarus and Russia, and as far as Scandinavia and
western Europe.
Jared Harris portrays Valery Legasov, a leading
Soviet nuclear physicist. As part of the response team,
he is one of the first to grasp the scope of the
unparalleled disaster that has occurred.
Stellan Skarsgård plays Soviet Deputy Prime Minister
Boris Shcherbina, who is assigned by the Kremlin to lead
the government commission on Chernobyl in the hours
immediately following the accident.
Emily Watson portrays Ulana Khomyuk, a Soviet nuclear
physicist committed to solving the mystery of what led
to the Chernobyl disaster.
The miniseries also stars: Paul Ritter ("Lovesick")
as Chernobyl deputy chief engineer Anatoly Dyatlov;
Jessie Buckley ("Beast") as Lyudmilla Ignatenko, a
Pripyat resident married to a firefighter on the first
response team; Adrian Rawlins ("Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows") as Chernobyl chief engineer Nikolai
Fomin; and Con O'Neill ("Harlots") as plant director
Viktor Bryukhanov.
The cast also includes: Sam Troughton ("The Ritual"),
Adam Nagaitis ("The Terror"), Barry Keoghan ("Dunkirk"),
Ralph Ineson ("Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince"),
Mark Lewis Jones ("Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last
Jedi"), Fares Fares (HBO's "Westworld") and David Dencik
("McMafia").
Writer, creator and executive producer Craig Mazin
began researching the Chernobyl disaster in 2014, using
a wide variety of materials, including several books and
government reports from inside and outside of the Soviet
Union. He spoke to nuclear scientists to learn how a
reactor works, and interviewed former Soviet citizens to
gain a better sense of the culture in 1986.
Mazin also read a great number of first-person
accounts, which helped bring an additional layer of
authenticity and humanity to the story. He explains,
"When you're reading the personal stories of people who
were there - people who lived near the plant, people who
worked at the plant, people who were sent to Chernobyl
as part of the effort to clean it up - in those
individual accounts, that's really where the story came
alive."
Principal photography for CHERNOBYL took place in
Lithuania and Ukraine, with a creative team including:
director of photography Jakob Ihre ("Thelma");
production designer Luke Hull ("Howards End"); editors,
Jinx Godfrey ("The Theory of Everything") and Simon
Smith ("Endeavor"); costume designer Odile Dicks-Mireaux
("Brooklyn"); casting directors Nina Gold and Robert
Sterne (both two-time Emmy(R) winners for HBO's "Game of
Thrones"); and composer Hildur Gu�nad�ttir ("Trapped").
Episodes include:
Episode 1: "1:23:45"
Debut date: MONDAY, MAY 6 (9:00-10:00 p.m. ET/PT)
April 26, 1986, Ukrainian SSR. Plant workers and
firefighters put their lives on the line to control a
catastrophic 1986 explosion at a Soviet nuclear power
plant.
Written by Craig Mazin; directed by Johan Renck.
Episode 2: "Please Remain Calm"
Debut date: MONDAY, MAY 13 (9:00-10:05 p.m.)
With untold millions at risk after the Chernobyl
explosion, nuclear physicist Ulana Khomyuk (Emily
Watson) makes a desperate attempt to reach Valery
Legasov (Jared Harris), a leading Soviet nuclear
physicist, and warn him about the threat of second
explosion that could devastate the continent.
Written by Craig Mazin; directed by Johan Renck.
Episode 3: "Open Wide, O Earth"
Debut date: MONDAY, MAY 20 (9:00-10:05 p.m.)
Lyudmilla Ignatenko (Jessie Buckley), a Pripyat
resident, ignores warning about her firefighter
husband's (Adam Nagaitis) contamination; Valery Legasov
(Jared Harris) lays out a decontamination plan, complete
with human risks.
Written by Craig Mazin; directed by Johan Renck.
Episode 4: "The Happiness of All Mankind"
Debut date: MONDAY, MAY 27 (9:00-10:05 p.m.)
Valery Legasov (Jared Harris) and Soviet Deputy Prime
Minister Boris Shcherbina (Stellan Skarsgård) consider
using lunar rovers to remove radioactive debris, while
Ulana Khomyuk (Emily Watson) faces government hurdles in
determining the truth about the cause of the explosion.
Written by Craig Mazin; directed by Johan Renck.
Episode 5: "Vichnaya Pamyat" (finale)
Debut date: MONDAY, JUNE 3 (9:00-10:00 p.m.)
Valery Legasov (Jared Harris), Boris Shcherbina
(Stellan Skarsgård) and Ulana Khomyuk (Emily Watson)
risk their lives and reputations to expose the truth
about Chernobyl.
Written by Craig Mazin; directed by Johan Renck.