Attack Force Z (1982)
Movie Watch
Australian commandos (John Phillip Law, Mel Gibson, Sam Neill) rescue survivors of a downed aircraft...
Us + Them by Roger Waters
Album
As the founding member, lyricist, composer and creative force behind Pink Floyd, 'Us + Them'...
Stormy Waters (Remorques) (1941)
Movie
Andre Laurent, the captain of a tugboat, married Yvonne ten years ago. She has a heart disease but...
Bill Hader recommended The Hit (2002) in Movies (curated)
Anatomy of a Song: The Inside Stories Behind 45 Iconic Hits
Book
Songs that sell the most copies become hits, but some of those hits transcend commercial value,...
Mingming II & the Islands of the Ice
Book
Sailing his newly-created yacht Mingming II, Roger ventures into the Baring Sea and explores the...
Wayne Coyne recommended The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd in Music (curated)
Drawing Blood: Forty Five Years of Scarfe
Book
This is a truly exceptional collection of drawings from one of our most revered cultural...
Can't Stand Up for Falling Down: Rock'n'roll War Stories
Book
Now collected in a single volume for the first time, journalist Allan Jones selects his favourite...
Otway93 (567 KP) rated When the Wind Blows (1986) in Movies
Dec 28, 2019 (Updated Dec 28, 2019)
This Raymond Briggs' feature length animation tells the tale of an elderly couple (voiced by Sir John Mills and Dane Peggy Ashcroft) in the country trying to survive in the aftermath of a nuclear strike, with only the real life UK nuclear survival pamphlet "Protect and Survive" to help them.
This film is not for the faint of heart, and realistically should probably not have a PG rating, as the couples experiences with radiation sickness are rather graphic and are more than likely to upset younger audiences (it upset me, and I'm 26!).
The animation is beautiful, as it is with every Raymond Briggs' film, but with a difference as it does often mix stop-motion and classic animation to make something quite haunting and very special, with other "special sequences" reminiscent of Pink Floyd's The Wall.
And last but not least: the soundtrack. With a title track performed by David Bowie, you already know it's going to be good. But the score (written by Roger Waters of Pink Floyd) is also incredible, yet again very reminiscent of Pink Floyd's "Goodbye Blue Sky"...again from "The Wall". With additional music by Squeeze, Paul Hardcastle and Hugh Cornwell, this makes it a pleasure to listen to.
Overall, an aural, visual and emotional rollercoaster, but not for the faint hearted.
Remember those last few words, not for the faint hearted!