Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Duck and Cover

 Duck and Cover
type
TVTItem
 Duck and Cover
label
Duck and Cover
 Duck and Cover
page
DuckAndCover
 Duck and Cover
comment
Duck and Cover (1952) is a short film (nine minutes) directed by Anthony Rizzo.It is a civil defense instructional film commissioned by the United States government, as the Cold War was getting more dangerous for Americans following the Soviet Union's successful test of a nuclear bomb in 1949. The film, which is aimed at children, is a guide on what to do in the event of nuclear attack. It opens with a short animated sequence in which a turtle named Bert is sauntering down the road. A mischievous monkey dangles from a tree and hangs a stick of dynamite over Bert's head. A quick-thinking Bert then retreats into his shell, while the theme tune says "He did what we all must learn to do...duck and cover!"The film then switches to live action. A narrator explains what to do if a nuclear bomb explodes. Scenes portray schoolchildren ducking and covering under desks, in school hallways, and under library tables. The film introduces children to the sound of a civil defense siren, then tells them what to do if there is a nuclear strike and no grown-ups are around: go into an air raid shelter if you can find one, duck into alleys or doorways or whatever cover is available, throw yourself flat on the ground if you're in the open, and try to cover yourself with whatever is at hand. The film then ends by cutting back to Bert the turtle in animation, who recaps the lesson by asking the kids what to do, and is answered by offscreen schoolchildren shouting "duck and cover!"For many years this film was shown to American schoolchildren in order to teach them what to do in case of a nuclear attack, and also probably to teach them to fear the Soviets. It has also for many years been a subject for parody.Compare The House in the Middle, a similarly bizarre documentary short from the 1950s about surviving nuclear war, but aimed at adults.
 Duck and Cover
fetched
2024-04-16T04:29:36Z
 Duck and Cover
parsed
2024-04-16T04:29:36Z
 Duck and Cover
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Duck and Cover / int_389b0e
type
Title Theme Tune
 Duck and Cover / int_389b0e
comment
Title Theme Tune: The film is obviously aimed at elementary school children, given how many times the bizarrely cheerful theme song pounds home the words "duck and cover".
 Duck and Cover / int_389b0e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_389b0e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_389b0e
 Duck and Cover / int_515eeccc
type
Sampling
 Duck and Cover / int_515eeccc
comment
Sampling: Parts of Duck and Cover's audio are used as part of the beat in Khuskan's "Atomic".
 Duck and Cover / int_515eeccc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_515eeccc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_515eeccc
 Duck and Cover / int_7426582d
type
Token Minority
 Duck and Cover / int_7426582d
comment
Token Minority: Note that in the classroom scenes there are two black children, the only nonwhites to appear in the short.
 Duck and Cover / int_7426582d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_7426582d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_7426582d
 Duck and Cover / int_85557b38
type
Reality Is Unrealistic
 Duck and Cover / int_85557b38
comment
Reality Is Unrealistic: This film has been mocked for—well, for a lot of reasons, actually, but one reason it's been mocked is because of the perceived ridiculousness of hiding under your desk or in a doorway or whatever to save yourself from a nuclear explosion. Here's the thing, though: depending on the circumstances, duck-and-cover really can work. A woman named Akiko Takamura survived the Hiroshima bomb despite being only 300 meters from the detonation, because she was inside the thick reinforced concrete walls of a bank.note She lived until 2003! Ducking-and-covering could save one from shrapnel and debris. Hiding under a desk could save one from a building collapse. Covering yourself with something as insubstantial as a newspaper really could save you from skin burns caused by thermal radiation. Bottom line: if a nuke falls directly on your head you don't have a chance in Hell, but if you have any chance, duck-and-cover can help. Wikipedia discusses this in greater depth here and here.
 Duck and Cover / int_85557b38
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_85557b38
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_85557b38
 Duck and Cover / int_86b21114
type
Badass Boast
 Duck and Cover / int_86b21114
comment
Badass Boast: More like a badass description since the subject in question cannot speak for itself, but the narrator does a pretty good job explaining what an initial nuclear detonation would look like, managing to convey the sheer power of the weapon while still keeping it simple enough for even kids to understand:
 Duck and Cover / int_86b21114
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_86b21114
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_86b21114
 Duck and Cover / int_985795ab
type
Medium Blending
 Duck and Cover / int_985795ab
comment
Medium Blending: The most famous part of the movie is the animation with Bert the turtle hiding from World War III in his shell, but the bulk of the film is live-action, as various duck-and-cover scenarios are shown.
 Duck and Cover / int_985795ab
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_985795ab
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_985795ab
 Duck and Cover / int_a7f4710f
type
Mood Dissonance
 Duck and Cover / int_a7f4710f
comment
Mood Dissonance: The light and breezy tone of the film—a short cartoon that could be an early Looney Tunes product, followed by a calm, avuncular narrator—clashes bizarrely with the actual topic, nuclear war, particularly as the narrator keeps reminding viewers that an atom bomb could strike at any time. The light tone was no doubt chosen to avoid scaring children too badly, but the result is still weird.
 Duck and Cover / int_a7f4710f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_a7f4710f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_a7f4710f
 Duck and Cover / int_abad35b4
type
Soundtrack Dissonance
 Duck and Cover / int_abad35b4
comment
Soundtrack Dissonance: Let's sing a cheery little ditty about how we should duck under our desks at school to avoid being burned to death in a nuclear strike.
 Duck and Cover / int_abad35b4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_abad35b4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_abad35b4
 Duck and Cover / int_de19c718
type
Instructional Film
 Duck and Cover / int_de19c718
comment
Instructional Film: Probably the most famous one ever made, centering on what to do during an atomic attack, and definitely the most frequently mocked.
 Duck and Cover / int_de19c718
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_de19c718
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_de19c718
 Duck and Cover / int_name
type
ItemName
 Duck and Cover / int_name
comment
 Duck and Cover / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Duck and Cover / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Duck and Cover / int_name
 Duck and Cover / int_name
itemName
Duck and Cover

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 DuckandCover
sameAs
Duck and Cover
 Duck and Cover
hasFeature
Instructional Film / int_bff7c073