Today, we have a guest blog from Simon Bestwick to celebrate the launch of his novel Hell's Ditch, which is available either from Amazon or direct from the publisher Snowbooks. For the next seven days you can get the hardback or the ebook at a discounted price over at the Snowbooks website.
Anyway, here be the Bestwick's post:
Soldier, Gaunt Soldier: Peter Watkins' The War Game
As a writer your work’s the sum of your experiences: all
you’ve seen and done, and the stories that have reached you. One that reached
me, and shaped my novel Hell’s Ditch, was Peter Watkins’ The War Game, a film
made for the BBC in 1965.
The War Game
was Watkins’ second British film, and his last. Its original broadcast was
cancelled by the BBC under pressure from the Ministry of Defence. Watkins,
disgusted, left the UK, first for America – where he made the equally unsparing
Punishment Park – before settling in Sweden. Despite winning the 1966 Best
Documentary Oscar, the film wasn’t shown on British TV until 1985, when it was
finally screened as part of a season commemorating the bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
So what was
so shocking?
Like
Watkins’ first film, Culloden, (1964) The War Game is shot in a documentary
style, narrated mostly by Michael Aspel, a TV presenter who became notable
hosting game shows and This Is Your Life but was, at that time, best known as a
newsreader. Its topic was nuclear war.
The film
depicts the possible consequences of a nuclear attack on Britain. There are vox
pops from men and women in the street, statements from churchmen, philosophers,
politicians, doctors and nuclear strategists on the morality, nature and
effects of nuclear war, all of this intercut with the film’s ‘live’ action:
dramatisations of the events that precipitate the attack, followed by an
unflinching portrayal of the attack itself and its effects.
The
narration is cool and clinical, never emotive. At this distance, Aspel’s voice
calmly tells us, the heat wave is sufficient to cause melting of the upturned
eyeball, third degree burning of the skin and ignition of furniture.
In contrast,
Watkins depicts the holocaust that follows in graphic detail: firestorms sweep
the bombed cities, rendering firefighters’ attempts to combat the devastation
futile. The attack’s victims suffer horrendous body burns. With doctors unable
to treat more than a fraction of cases, the worst-injured patients are placed
in a ‘holding section’ to die untreated; later, armed police officers end their
suffering with a gunshot. A glassy-eyed civil servant explains how they’re
keeping the wedding rings of the dead to identify them, showing the camera a
bucket half-full of jewellery. A doctor calmly describes the symptoms of
radiation sickness, and then those of scurvy (since most survivors, he points
out, will be unable to obtain Vitamin C.)
And it
doesn’t end there. The narration cites the aftermath of the bombings not only
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but of Hamburg, Dresden and Tokyo. Many survivors
are listless, apathetic zombies. Thousands more will suffer PTSD (as we’d call
it now) from what they’ve gone through; vastly exceeding any resources
available to treat them, most will be permanently traumatised.
But the
child survivors, staring emptily into the camera to say “I don’t want to be
nothing,” in dead, lifeless monotones, are the most chilling prospect of all:
subject to such trauma in their formative years, many may go on to develop
terrible character disorders. These are the inheritors of the world the nuclear
bomb has left.
If the
conclusion of The War Game reminds us that what we have seen has not been real,
it’s scant reassurance: It is now possible that what you have seen happen in
this film may already have taken place before the year 1980. Even knowing, as
we do now, that it didn’t, is limited comfort when you remember that those
weapons – and the possibility of their use – still exists.
Watkins set
out to show that Britain was both hopelessly ill-informed on nuclear war’s
nature, and hopelessly unprepared to cope with its effects – indeed, that its
effects would be so devastating that no preparation would prevent the
slaughter, devastation and eventual social collapse that the film shows. The
official reaction to the film showed he’d touched a real nerve.
The War Game
is up there with the similar-themed Threads as one of the most terrifying,
dread-making films I’ve seen. It probably helps if you were born before 1980
and can remember the grim Mexican stand-off of the Cold War, but I defy anyone
to watch it without a chill seeping into their bones.
The fear of
nuclear war haunted my childhood; it fed into Hell’s Ditch and the world it’s
set in. In particular, with The War Game, Watkins’ vision of the psychological
trauma wrought by the conflict helped shape the book. The world of Regional
Command Zone 7, Attack Plus Twenty Years, is a haunted one. All those who
remember the time before are surrounded with its ruins, unable to forget,
dogged by the ghosts of those they’ve lost; those who’ve grown up in the
devastation have been made cruel and pitiless by it. And there’s no way back.
Forget Saw
or Hostel, Insidious or Sinister: if you really want to be terrified, watch The
War Game.
Simon
Bestwick is the author of Tide Of Souls, The Faceless and Black Mountain. His
short fiction has appeared in Black Static and Best Horror Of The Year, and
been collected in A Hazy Shade Of Winter, Pictures Of The Dark, Let’s Drink To
The Dead and The Condemned. His new novel, Hell’s Ditch, is out on 1st
December.
You Tube clip from The War Game
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