Chernobyl : Season 1
Chernobyl is a 2019 verifiable show TV miniseries that spins around the Chernobyl debacle of 1986 and the cleanup endeavors that followed. The series was made and composed by Craig Mazin and coordinated by Johan Renck. It includes a troupe cast drove by Jared Harris, Stellan Skarsgård, Emily Watson, and Paul Ritter. The series was delivered by HBO in the US and Sky UK in the Assembled Realm.
The five-section series debuted simultaneously[b] in the US on May 6, 2019, and in the Unified Realm on May 7. It got far and wide basic approval for its cinematography, verifiable precision, exhibitions, air, tone, screenplay, and melodic score. At the 71st Early evening Emmy Grants, it got nineteen designations and won for Exceptional Restricted Series, Remarkable Coordinating, and Extraordinary Composition, while Harris, Skarsgård, and Watson got acting assignments. At the 77th Brilliant Globe Grants, the series won for Best Miniseries or TV Film and Skarsgård won for Best Supporting Entertainer in a Series, Miniseries or TV Film.[2][3]
While the series was comprehensively investigated, a few freedoms were taken for sensational purposes. The arrival of every episode was joined by a digital recording in which Mazin and NPR have Peter Sagal examine these progressions and the thinking behind them.[4] While pundits, specialists and witnesses have noted verifiable and genuine disparities in the series, the makers’ scrupulousness has been generally praised.[5][6]
Cast
Main
Jared Harris as Valery Legasov, the appointee overseer of the Kurchatov Foundation got to help cleanup endeavors.
Stellan Skarsgård as Boris Shcherbina, a Committee of Priests’ delegate director.
Emily Watson as Ulana Khomyuk, an atomic physicist from Minsk. Khomyuk is an imaginary composite person in view of the numerous researchers who explored the accident.[9]
Paul Ritter as Anatoly Dyatlov, the vice president engineer at the Chernobyl Thermal energy station.
Jessie Buckley as Lyudmilla Ignatenko, the spouse of Vasily Ignatenko.
Adam Nagaitis as Vasily Ignatenko, a Pripyat fireman and specialist on call for the Chernobyl fire.
Con O’Neill as Viktor Bryukhanov, the director of Chernobyl.
Adrian Rawlins as Nikolai Fomin, the central designer at Chernobyl.
Sam Troughton as Aleksandr Akimov, the night shift boss at Chernobyl.
Robert Emms as Leonid Toptunov, the senior architect at Chernobyl.
David Dencik as Mikhail Gorbachev, the Overall Secretary of the Socialist Faction of the Soviet Association.
Mark Lewis Jones as Vladimir Pikalov, the leader of the Soviet compound powers.
Alan Williams as Charkov, the KGB’s most memorable appointee chairman.[10]
Alex Plants as Andrei Glukhov, the mining team boss.
Ralph Ineson as Nikolai Tarakanov, the main boss of the cleanup activity.
Barry Keoghan as Pavel Gremov, a non military personnel vendor draftee.[11]
Passages Tolls as Bacho, a Georgian trooper and Soviet-Afghan Conflict veteran who trains Pavel.
Michael McElhatton as Andrei Stepashin, the investigator for the preliminary of Dyatlov, Bryukhanov, and Fomin.
Genre |
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Created by | Craig Mazin |
Written by | Craig Mazin |
Directed by | Johan Renck |
Starring |
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Composer | Hildur Guðnadóttir |
Country of origin |
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Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 5 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Sanne Wohlenberg |
Production locations |
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Cinematography | Jakob Ihre |
Editors |
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Camera setup | Single-camera |
Running time | 65–78 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network |
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Release | May 6 – June 3, 2019 |