Testament

1983 "They never had a chance to see their children grow up. To watch each other grow old. To fix up the house, to take that vacation. Because it only took an instant to shatter their dreams."
6.9| 1h30m| PG| en| More Info
Released: 04 November 1983 Released
Producted By: Paramount
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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It is just another day in the small town of Hamlin until something disastrous happens. Suddenly, news breaks that a series of nuclear warheads has been dropped along the Eastern Seaboard and, more locally, in California. As people begin coping with the devastating aftermath of the attacks — many suffer radiation poisoning — the Wetherly family tries to survive.

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Director

Lynne Littman

Production Companies

Paramount

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Testament Audience Reviews

RipDelight This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.
Juana what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Fleur Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
Scarlet The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
TheUnknown837-1 "Testament," a bold and occasionally brilliant film about the consequences of a nuclear attack, really does have the feel and mindset of a memoir. More specifically, a memoir written by somebody who might or might not have survived a tragic event they never fully understood. One of the movie's surefire touches of genius lies in the fact that its narrating protagonist, a commonplace small-town mother very well-played by Jane Alexander, never learns who triggered the nuclear war that wrecks life as she knows it. In spite of what the movie posters would have us believe, we never see the actual attack—only a bright series of flashes near the beginning. Afterwards, we only observe the after-effects: the radiation sickness, the townspeople turned on one another, the cemeteries and backyards filling up with coffins. In many of these moments, "Testament" has some great power.However, as a memoir-mindset, it also suffers from a patchy narrative. If we want to consider it like a memoir, then it was one in which the writer only jotted down their experiences in the barest of detail and only once every few weeks. I am completely appreciative that the makers of the film never spoiled their intentions (they never tell us who is responsible for the attack) but I wanted more of the consequences. I wanted to get to know the protagonist better, I wanted to understand her relationship with her three children, I wanted more of a sense of loneliness when her missing husband never returns home. There are a number of characters who succumb to radiation poisoning (we are told several hundred) but only one death registers an emotional impact. The others certainly attempt to make us feel, but I could not stir any empathy, as I felt I had not come to know these people as human beings.Running down the casualty lists in "Testament" is like scrolling through a list of casualties from a tragic event long before you were born: I certainly felt sorry for what happened to them, but there was no particular level of sympathy from one name to the other. Maybe that says something about me as a human being, but I never really had the impression that I could imagine being in the middle of it myself. In spite of Miss Alexander's wonderful performance, there is not much of a character there. At the end of "Testament," I wanted to know about her struggles and get involved; I wanted to feel heartbroken that she waited so long and so futilely for a loved one to finally return home. Even an attempted suicide scene, something I would expect of a situation like in this movie, could not bring me to care much.To the movie's credit, it is very well-produced. Lynne Littman, the director, has a solid instinct for placing her camera and instructing actors how to move, where to stand, and how to perform. She also has a very subtle, unpretentious style: something absolutely necessary given the movie's intentions. And the cinematography by Steven Poster (artfully drab with a washed-out lens trick) is absolutely lovely to behold. It just goes to show that the camera does not need to be flourished with strobes and bright colors for a scene to be beautiful. And there are some scenes of great power: an opening moment where a father and son have a bike race, an extremely touching scene where a mother and her daughter, both of whom expect to die soon, have an honest and open conversation about sex. And the movie's occasional usage of Super 8 home-video footage is a great touch. The music by James Horner is very good (it has a haunting quality reminiscent of the soundtrack from "Blade Runner") but is not heard nearly enough. There are a number of very fine moments in which some subtle, in-the-background notes would be really appreciative, to bring the whole sequence full circle. That just might be the movie's problem: "Testament" never seems to come all the way around with its intentions. Despite its artistically restrained mindset and no matter how much I would like to have been moved and had my thoughts provoked by it, "Testament" did not register much of an emotional impact for me.
JRmf I would have to disagree with those who find this movie far more realistic than The Day After in its depiction of the consequences of nuclear war. Testament looks at such a situation at a more deeply personal level than TDA - the emotional horrors it explores are noteworthy. In Testament, nuclear war suddenly breaks out with no warning. I get the impression that this is a family used to watching TV, so there should have been some indication, some lead-up a la Cuban Missle Crisis. While they watch the warning, apparently for the first time, the house is enveloped in a nuclear flash (unlikely timing). Surely there would have been some fires or at least wilted vegetation from this? Everything outside looked quite normal.Clearly Testament was designed with a very different slant to TDA - who wants to watch a remake - but in doing so it over-softens and underemphasises the horror of such. Fortunately the world has not experienced such an event, so we are left with the results of computer simulations. Something like http://tinyurl.com/43mkwyy probably gives a realistic idea though.Darkened skies and a precipitous drop in temperature almost immediately are probable. The way Hamlin is portrayed might be possible in the first few weeks in the southern hemisphere, say Australia, but not in the US. The radiation which kills off the people comes through the vector of dust, and lots of it - "fallout" - but there is no sign of it in Hamlin. Everything looks quite normal. A crisis situation of this nature brings out the best and worst in people - the Hamlin "riots" are mild and transitory. You'd be unlucky to get a window broken. TDA has the missiles and high-tech, a gradual and realistic build-up to the event as well as the aftermath, the almost complete breakdown of civil society in horrific relief, compared to Testament's orderly, if very sad, demise.
Steve Skafte This film is one of three made in fairly close succession about the possible consequences of worldwide nuclear war, and certainly the most well-realized of them. The other two range from cheesy America TV movie hype in "The Day After" to extremely dark British horror with "Threads". The latter of the two has something to offer where the first has little, but of the three it is "Testament" that tells the balanced, down-to-earth experience that the majority of us would be only too likely to experience.There's no mushroom cloud here, no special effects. Just a flash of light in the distance, and an ever-building sense of dread. The characters are written like true, believable people in other similar 1980s dramas. I cannot stress enough how real this movie feels. If you go in looking for action or thrills, this is not for you. This is a tragedy, a drama, a film of real humanity. It would survive unhindered without the horrific elements that provide the backbone of the script, because it is not interdependent on them. The characters don't exist simply to fill out the plot points. They have depth. And that's where "Testament" draws its power. This is not a disaster film, populated by varying degrees of cannon fodder. This is a true "what-if". What if my small town, the one where I've grown up and spent the bulk of my life, became the victim of nuclear fallout? I saw my childhood in this film. The young character of Scottie (played by Lukas Haas) reminds me of myself, his mother (Jane Alexander) of my own. I saw all too many hints of those I grew up with, my neighbors, my siblings in the scenes of "Testament".This film broke my heart, and if you let it, it just might do the same to you. It's the face behind killing, the human factor, the cost of collateral damage. But, most of all, it's a warm yet intensely painful story of a mother faced with the unavoidable and imminent death of her loved ones. "Testament" is a dirge, a march to the end through all the purity and life of our fading memories. It holds you close like a dying friend, hoping that an embrace will keep the soul from escaping. This is life at its most precarious.
felixoteiza I'm sorry, but most of my rating points will go here for the good intentions as Testament, in my regard, thoroughly fails to convey the intended message when it breaks one basic convention regarding human nature and behavior; that we humans are wired primarily for survival--except for psychotics, deeply depressed individuals, etc. What we see here instead is the opposite; the response of most habitants of Hamlin, when faced to the disaster, starting from that of the protagonist, is nothing short of suicidal; these are the actions of a group of people in which this instinct has been obliterated and whose first reaction in face of the catastrophe is one of complete surrender. In no way they make me evoke the behavior of a group of people in the described situation, but rather that of a group of prisoners in an extermination camp. One would think the town was surrounded by electrified barbed wire and ready--to--shoot guards. One of the most obvious examples of this surrender is given by Costner's Phil, when his wife, De Mornay's Cathy, tells the doc about her baby refusing her milk and the doc just waving his hand, incapable of giving any answer. Costner then gestures her to leave the doc alone. Days, or weeks, later we see him crying and carrying a drawer for the baby's burial. And you ask me to have any sympathy for such an idiot? had I been in his place, at the very moment the doc shows his professional impotence I would have taken her by the arm, taken her out of there; put her in my truck, van; then picked up a couple of guns, ammunition and gotten the hell out of there. I would have fled as far as possible no matter if in the future we have to live in the wild, hunting rabbits and ducks. But I wouldn't have stayed a minute in that damned city! Of course that's what they do later, when is already too late. And what about Carol, who lets the most important decision she'll have to take in her entire life in the hands of a 14-year old, what does he knows about the world? Should I show any sympathy for such simple minded woman, who lets the children at her charge die one by one and whose biggest pride at the end is of always having had at hand the necessary sheets for their burials? (And don't make any mistake about this, the filmmaker herself tells in the Features that she described the role to Alexander as "being all about sheets". Can you say Morbid Death Wish?). The general behavior is even more incredible when, if there's one country in the world crisscrossed all over with highways and doted with gas pumps that's the U.S. of A. (I didn't grow up myself under the threat of nuclear war but under that more immediate of earthquakes and believe me, people know, they prepare for it).And what about the rest of the townspeople, who scoff at and treat like a fool the only man amongst them capable of establishing communications with the outside world? And why in a city where everyone has a car, truck, nobody bothers to go scouting in every possible direction and that for months? Sorry, but this movie is way, way, too unrealistic. Free, normal, people would have never acted that way. It is as basic as this: you live, say in town A. Now, a hundred miles to the West you have a big city and the Pacific. A hundred miles to the North you have a military base. A hundred miles to the East you have an ICBM installation. Then, to the South you have the Mexican frontier. The prevailing winds are most of the time from the West. So, it is as easy as two plus two. People are not dumb, they know all the basics and they are ready to act when the crunch comes. In my imaginary case the obvious thing to do is to fill up your tank and head south as fast as you can. These people here instead, have no clue about what to do (they didn't even know the most likely targets for a nuclear attack in their state!). Instead of escaping danger—which I thought they were doing, fool me, when they were filling up at the gas station—they sit on their arses and try to go on living as if nothing had happened, as if by ignoring the disaster they would make it go away.Maybe I should say here that the acting is decent & the cinematography appropriate but the truth is, I just couldn't concentrate in the viewing, as the unlikely of it all kept popping up its ugly head, time after time. I just couldn't believe that in any modern city in that situation people would be as clueless and as lacking in means as these ones here, that they would behave in such a blind, nonsensical way. I know that the filmmakers were trying to make the point that nuclear war is ugly and that we must try to do everything to prevent, but most of it was lost to me in my complete inability to suspend my disbelief. 2/10.