Alexander Bayden
I don't think the portrayal of nuclear war is accurate. 1) During the nuclear strike the light is blinking. In reality it just slowly fades. There was no sound minutes after the explosion, but I guess they were not shooting that scene that long. 2) Nobody tells local authorities to warn people to stay away from the fallout. In fact, nobody does anything to stay away from radiation. If you simply do not walk outside for no good reason and stay in the basement, or at least on the first floor, as opposed to right under the roof, you will receive a significantly lower dose of radiation. 3) A lot of people would have been complaining about the lack of medication like insulin and medication to lower blood pressure. 4) Nuclear blast radiation quickly degrades after the blast. Most people would have died about 5 days after the initial exposure of GI problems or three weeks after the exposure of infectious disease. A month after the blast hardly any radiation is left. Hair will not fall out. You might still die of infectious disease. 5) No one really knew what has happened. Neural countries would have figured it out, and a guy with the radio would have learned it.
Jessica Santos L.E.
This has to be one of the most heartbreaking movies I've ever seen yet so real. This could be any of us at any moment. This could easily be our world yet we take each day for granted. Very touching and will definitely have you thinking about all sorts of stuff. Its a survival movie but it's also a love story & a story about courage, strength and all things being a mother makes you.
LadyMel
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I was in high school in the 80s when this movie was shown on PBS. We had anti nuke activists doing classroom presentations, and we were freshly terrified by ABC's The Day After, along with PBS' Threads. Testament focused on the aftermath of a nuclear conflict as it affected those who were not part of the blast zone. Sad, depressing, thought provoking, yes. Could this still happen, yes. This film is as relevant today as it was 30+ years ago.