When reactor four at the Chernobyl nuclear plant exploded in April 1986 outside of Pripyat, Ukraine, the whole world watched in horror as tidbits of information leaked out of the tightly controlled Soviet Union. But conflicting official and scientific reports made it difficult to know the extent of the disaster.
The piecemeal accounts of how Chernobyl unfolded have made the disaster ripe for over-dramatization and under-dramatization, depending on the storyteller’s politics and attitude toward nuclear energy. But HBO’s new five-part mini-series Chernobyl stands out: it has the benefit of an extremely well-researched script that isn’t afraid to make tasteful modifications to the story to keep the viewer from getting bored and drowning in names.
In short, Chernobyl, which debuts on HBO tonight at 9pm ET, is worth the watch.
Disaster of human proportions
The series primarily follows Soviet Nuclear scientist Valery Legasov (played by Jared Harris), Soviet Deputy Prime Minister Boris Shcherbina (played by Stellan Skarsgård), and another Soviet nuclear physicist named Ulana Khomyuk (played by Emily Watson) as they investigate why reactor four exploded and decide how to respond to it.
Legasov and Shcherbina are historical figures; Khomyuk is a fictional character made to represent the dozens of scientists who helped investigate the crisis as it unfolded. This change is a welcome one, because five hour-long episodes are not enough to learn a Game of Thrones-sized cast of characters.
From the opening scene, it’s clear that the drama will be personal and political, rather than finger-wagging at, say, the hubris of man for trying to contain the power of the atom. Instead of vilifying nuclear power, Chernobyl‘s real villain is the decades of fear and scrounging ambition that warped the minds of people with the slightest shot at power under the Soviet regime.
The secrecy maintained by Soviet officials, and the reluctance of lower-rung people to tell their superiors that something terribly, terribly wrong had occurred, sent two dozen firefighters to early graves. Chernobyl doesn’t shrink from showing the audience how agonizing those deaths were.


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