Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 1, Winter 2008 | Page 11

The Persistence of a Nuclear Threat 7 argues that perceptions of national identity are articulated and debated in cinematic representations of the American past, extolling “film’s ability to hold up to scrutiny and drive home the emotional meaning of the imagined community of nation and its bruising inadequacies.”5 The film texts of the 1980s suggest a meaningful societal discourse on the nature of nuclear war and the Cold War. Two of the most fascinating nuclear war texts of the 1980s are T esta m en t (1983) and R e d D a w n (1984); polarextreme films which introduce a feminist and adolescent male perspective, respectively, on the crucial topic of World War III and a nuclear holocaust. The Hollywood discourse on nuclear disaster during the Reagan era, however, began in 1979 with The C hina S y n d ro m e examining questions of safety in the nation’s nuclear power plants. Box office receipts for The C h ina S y n d ro m e were strong as, in a case of life imitating art, the film benefited from the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania. This commercial success was followed by the documentary The A to m ic C a fe (1982), in which filmmakers Joyce Loader along with Pierce and Kevin Rafferty construct an amusing tale of how the atomic bomb