Seconds from Disaster | |
---|---|
Title card used between 2011 and 2013
|
|
Genre | Documentary |
Narrated by |
Ashton Smith Richard Vaughan Peter Guinness |
Country of origin | United States / United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 67 |
Production | |
Running time | 30/40–50 minutes |
Production company(s) |
National Geographic Society Darlow Smithson Productions |
Distributor | National Geographic Channel |
Release | |
Original network | National Geographic Channel |
Original release | July 6, 2004 | – December 29, 2012
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Seismic Seconds |
Followed by | Critical Situation |
External links | |
Website |
Seconds from Disaster is an US/UK-produced documentary television programme that investigates historically relevant man-made and natural disasters during the 20th century. Each episode aims to explain a single incident by analyzing the causes and circumstances that ultimately affected the disaster. The program uses re-enactments, interviews, testimonies, and CGI to analyze the sequence of events second-by-second for the audience.
Seconds from Disaster was first broadcast on the National Geographic Channel in 2004 and originally consisted of 45 episodes over three seasons. Following its original conclusion in 2007, the show was put on a four-year hiatus and later replaced with Critical Situation. In 2011, National Geographic revived the program and announced that it would air another 22 episodes over three seasons. Narrators of the show are Ashton Smith (American narrator for seasons 1 to 3), Richard Vaughan (British narrator for every season except 3), and Peter Guinness (British narrator for season 3).
Seconds from Disaster is characterised by an emphasis on chronological sequencing (in accordance with the show's name), the use of CGI technology and its blueprint-like CGI format. The show has little or no dialogue for the actors in the re-enactments, but instead is almost entirely dominated by the narrator.
Each episode begins with a chronological re-enactment of the disaster, which is always cut into several scenes displaying critical moments in the unfolding of the disaster with a clock appearing at the beginning of each scene. After the sequence of events, the show "winds back" the scenes to analyse the causes and events leading up to it. The series uses blueprint-formatted CGI in every episode to reveal the anatomy of the disaster and the structures involved but in season 3, the blue formatting of the CGI is not used on the background and is replaced with a white background. From season 4 onwards, they used a sepia-like background.
The show concludes with the original disaster scenes being "rewound" and played again; but this time the clock is replaced by a countdown timer and the conclusions reached from the analysis being put together with the sequence. Most often, the show finishes with a short moment of sentimentality (where those involved often speak of their emotions on the disaster) followed by the technological advances made to prevent similar disasters from happening again.