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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 ]
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
Picture taken by French satellite SPOT-1 on 1 May 1986. Evacuation began one and a half days before the accident was publicly acknowledged by the Soviet Union. In the morning of 28 April, radiation levels set off alarms at the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant in Sweden, [67] [68] over 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) from the Chernobyl Plant.
Probably early days, but if this becomes popular on Netflix, then there is a case for moving to "Chernobyl 1986)", the title Netflix uses for the film. 78.19.224.132 ( talk ) 11:57, 1 December 2021 (UTC) [ reply ]
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
Anatoly Ivanovich Rasskazov (Russian: Анатолий Иванович Рассказов; 16 January 1941 – 17 February 2010) was a staff photographer and illustrator at the Soviet Chernobyl power station. He was the first person to photograph the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster. [1] [2]
Mykola Mykolayovych Melnyk (Ukrainian: Микола Миколайович Мельник; 17 December 1953 – 26 July 2013), also known as Nikolai Melnik, was a Soviet-Ukrainian pilot and liquidator hero renowned for his high-risk helicopter mission on the dangerously-radioactive Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant building immediately after the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.