Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chernobyl: Abyss (Russian: Чернобыль), also titled Chernobyl 1986, is a 2021 Russian disaster film directed by and starring Danila Kozlovsky. [1] The film centres on a fictionalised firefighter who becomes a liquidator during the Chernobyl disaster . [ 2 ]
The Babushkas of Chernobyl (2015) is a documentary about three women who decided to return to the exclusion zone after the disaster. In the documentary, the Babushkas show the polluted water, their food from radioactive gardens, and explain how they manage to survive in this exclusion zone despite the radioactive levels.
Chernobyl, a 2019 TV series; Chernobyl, a novel by Frederik Pohl; Chernobyl: Abyss, a 2021 Russian disaster film; Chernobyl Diaries, a 2012 disaster horror film; Chernobyl: Zone of Exclusion, a Russian TV series; Chernobylite, a 2021 science fiction survival video game; Decay , a 1990 Soviet film; The Gateway, a 2017 film; Lost City , a 2015 film
The Chernobyl DLC for the game Spintires features a representation of the sarcophagus and an antenna array similar in appearance to Duga. The Duga radar is heavily featured in the virtual reality game Proze: Enlightenment, a suspense/puzzle game with the theory that the radar is being used by mind controlling experiments during the 1950-60s ...
Film portal; This article is within the scope of WikiProject Film.If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see lists of open tasks and regional and topical task forces.
In 1973, he moved to Pripyat, in the Ukrainian SSR, to work at the newly constructed Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. His fourteen-year experience working on naval reactors in the Soviet Far East made Dyatlov one of the three most senior managers at the Chernobyl station. [1] He was in charge of Units Three and Four. [1]
Chernobyl is a Ukrainian city, where a decommissioning Nuclear Power Plant located nearby. Chernobyl may also refer to: Chernobyl disaster, a 1986 nuclear disaster happened in the power plant nearby; Chernobyl (Hasidic dynasty), which was named after the city; Chernobyl, a 2019 American–British television series
During the past 25 years, there were more than 900 deaths and just one birth in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. The only known birth occurred on 25 August 1999, when 46-year-old Lydia Sovenko gave birth to a healthy girl. Both Lydia and her husband, Mikhailo Bedernikov had returned to Chernobyl a few months earlier.