vbhoutex wrote:bevgo wrote:Watched the day after again after many years. It is still chilling. My daughter--born in 1981--did not like it and could not understand the fear the movie evoked back when it was made (and still does to those of us that lived through the cold war and nuclear threat.
Brings back many memories, many of them unpleasant, but not so unpleasant I can't let them go. My children, in their 20's don't really understand it either.
I think now, after 9/11 and after being able to see so many disaster/terrorism/action movies like "Sum Of All Fears," "Under Siege," "Deep Impact," "Armageddon," etc., TDA probably just doesn't have the same effect for the younger generation. For us, it was one of the first movies of its kind, wasn't it? It was our first glimpse at what could happen if someone pushed "the button." Back then, there were songs about the Cold War and the nuclear thread, like "99 Red Ballooons," "Burning Heart," "1999," "Leningrad," "Russians," just to name a few. It was on a lot of our minds.
Man, how things have changed.