Plot:
Soviet paratroopers drop into Alaska to sabotage the oil pipeline in retaliation against a United States grain embargo... more | add synopsis
Dated But Interesting, 3 September 1999
Author: Eric-62-2 from Morristown, NJ
Thankfully, this 1982 miniseries no longer has any contemporary relevance unless you're doing a study of Cold War era movies (I won't comment on the dated aspects of the political outlook, since I've done that with other movies like "2010" and "Dr. Strangelove"). I have to wonder though if the previous reviewer is confusing Brian Keith's performance in "Meteor" with this one, because that was the film where he spoke only Russian. In this one, it was just accented English.
Rock Hudson is credible as the president, though there's really not much to brag about from the rest of the cast. I do have to give the producers credit for their metaphorical depiction of the end. Gil Melle's music accompanying the images is probably the most frightening sounding I've ever heard in a TV score. It's much more eerily effective than the graphic attempts at realism in "The Day After" (and reminiscent of the ending of "Fail Safe").
More:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084919/#commentAlso:
World War III is an ambitious if unnecessarily protracted speculative TV movie. Set in a "future December," the film prophesies an American grain embargo levied on Russia. US President Rock Hudson is entreated by the Soviet higher-ups to drop the ban; meanwhile, a group of renegade Russian military officers begin sending expeditionary forces into Alaska. While the countdown to Doomsday begins, the film insists upon cutting back to several expendable romances in both the American and Soviet camps. Boris Sagal, the original director of World War III, was killed in a freak helicopter accident while on location. To make up for lost time, the production was moved to the soundstages of Zoetrope Studios and overseen by ultra-efficient TV director David Greene. Part Two finds novice American president Rock Hudson trying to effect an honorable peace with Soviet premiere Brian Keith. But insurgent military officers endeavoring to seize the Alaska Pipeline as a bargaining chip continue to escalate the hostilities. It develops that the fate of the world may rest in the hands of American colonel David Soul. Also appearing is Cathy Lee Crosby, endearingly miscast as an intelligence officer. A heart-stopping surprise twist brings World War III to a close. While the film has its moments of genuine suspense, one can't help but feel that World War III would have been better an hour or two shorter--or at least with a few of the subplot romances removed. Originally running four hours, World War III was telecast in two parts on January 31 and February 1, 1982.
More:
http://www.answers.com/topic/world-war-iii-film-1?cat=entertainmentTrailer on YouTube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IfqZDcLEiWASee prior threads:
"What Germans? What cruise ships?' "
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=389&topic_id=3809548&mesg_id=3809548Roman Abramovich 'to drill US-Russia tunnel'
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=102&topic_id=3246299&mesg_id=3246299