Duck and Cover: U.S. Civil Defense Film (1951)

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Uploaded by on Apr 16, 2011

DVD: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001L487VS/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=d... http://thefilmarchived.blogspot.com/

Duck and Cover is a civil defense film (sometimes also characterized as a social guidance film or propaganda) produced in 1951 (but first shown publicly in January 1952) by the United States federal government's civil defense branch shortly after the Soviet Union began nuclear testing. Written by Raymond J. Mauer and directed by Anthony Rizzo of Archer Productions and made with the help of schoolchildren from New York City and Astoria, New York, it was shown in schools as the cornerstone of the government's "duck and cover" public awareness campaign. The movie states that nuclear war could happen at any time without warning, and U.S. citizens should keep this constantly in mind and be ever ready.

The US government contracted with Archer to produce Duck and Cover.

The film starts with an animated sequence, showing an anthropomorphic turtle walking down a road, while picking up a flower and smelling it. A chorus sings the Duck and Cover theme: There was a turtle by the name of Bert and Bert the turtle was very alert; when danger threatened him he never got hurt he knew just what to do... He'd duck! [gasp] And cover! Duck! [gasp] And cover! (male) He did what we all must learn to do (male) You (female) And you (male) And you (deeper male) And you!' [bang, gasp] Duck, and cover!'

While this goes on, Bert is attacked by a monkey holding a string from which hangs a lit stick of dynamite. Bert ducks into his shell in the nick of time, as the dynamite goes off and blows up both the monkey and the tree in which he is sitting. Bert, however, is shown perfectly safe, because he has ducked and covered.

The film, which is about 10 minutes long, then switches to live footage, as a narrator explains what children should do "when you see the flash" of an atomic bomb. The movie goes on to suggest that by ducking down low in the event of a nuclear explosion, the children would be safer than they would be standing, and explains some basic survival tactics for nuclear war.

After nuclear weapons were developed (the first having been developed during the Manhattan Project during World War II), it was realized what kind of danger they posed. The United States held a nuclear monopoly from the end of World War II until 1949, when the Soviets detonated their first nuclear device.

This signaled the beginning of the nuclear stage of the Cold War, and as a result, strategies for survival were thought out. Fallout shelters, both private and public, were built, but the government still viewed it as necessary to explain to citizens both the danger of the atomic (and later, hydrogen) bombs, and to give them some sort of training so that they would be prepared to act in the event of a nuclear strike.

The solution was the duck and cover campaign, of which Duck and Cover was an integral part. Shelters were built, drills were held in towns and schools, and the film was shown to schoolchildren. According to the United States Library of Congress (which declared the film "historically significant" and inducted it for preservation into the National Film Registry in 2004), it "was seen by millions of schoolchildren in the 1950s."

Although duck-and-cover drills are no longer held in United States schools and most fallout shelters have been closed down or abandoned, Duck and Cover, which was shown to an entire generation of children, is referenced in television shows and movies, usually in a context implying Duck and Cover is an example of camp.

However, many schools across the United States continue to use the "Duck and Cover" sheltering style in the event of tornadoes, earthquakes, and full lockdowns among other things.

The satirical animated series South Park lampooned Duck and Cover in the first season episode Volcano, as giving instructions on how to avoid hot lava. Another parody, "Atomic Holocaust," appeared in the animated film The Iron Giant.

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Top Comments

  • lol "knock down hard" "throw you against a wall" "knock sign boards over" Try Incinerating everything it touches!!!

  • 1:24 yeah, in my school we do it all the time!

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All Comments (51)

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  • I remember these films.  No one told us that even if we survived the blast we would likely die from radiation poisoning.

  • It's kinda scary how the movie just makes a nuclear explosion look like a large, harmless flash. What about the radiation?

  • 6:18 - Good idea, Patty! Protect yourself with a thin cotton coat, and you'll be unharmed!

  • Yes kiddies! Duck and cover! When the commie menace drops its hydrogen bombs on you, hide under a desk to ensure you don't burn to a crisp! Duck and cover, good kiddies!

  • See people, the Government does not lie and always has our safety in mind. That is why we must continue to invade every country in the middle-east, because our govt. tells us it makes us safer. Ducking and covering your head with a cloth will save your life in a nuclear blast so it must also be true that attacking Islamic people will make them stop hating us. The more we bomb them the more they love us.

  • We must obey the civil defense worker.

  • those times were so cool

  • @1337BananaL33TVostok south park cpt obvious

  • same applies if you have lava flooding against you. DUCK AND COVER!

  • If only it was this easy to survive a nuke.

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