Our Friend the Atom

1957
7.4| 1h0m| en
Details

Dr. Heinz Haber, a noted scientist in the field of atomic energy, hosts this look at the possibility of an exciting new power source. He starts by comparing atomic energy to a genie in a bottle, both of which capable of doing both good and evil, and it is up to humankind to develop safe controls over this largely unexplored science.

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Walt Disney Productions

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Reviews

Scanialara You won't be disappointed!
Teringer An Exercise In Nonsense
Quiet Muffin This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
Yazmin Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Jim Colyer This is a Disney film explaining how atomic energy can be used as a power source. Each element has a different atom. Heinz Haber shows us uranium, a radioactive element. Einstein showed that mass can be converted to energy when atoms are split. A single proton can start a chain reaction. Chain reactions can be controlled by reactors and used to make electricity. Someday our coal and oil will run out. This is Disney, and so science and fantasy are combined. A cartoon fisherman harnesses a magical genie to represent mankind harnessing atomic power. This film was made during an era when there was great enthusiasm for atomic energy. Its application has proved to be a long, arduous process. Sort of like putting a man on Mars!
henrique-grancha-leitao I watched this recently and am surprised there is only one other review here on IMDb. Disney Studios were masters in production, animation, visual effects, storyline.. This piece is really very well made. The history of the study of the atom in itself is very interesting and here it is presented very straightforwardly and in a way that is very easy to understand. Also, the artwork and effects are very far ahead of their time and still very captivating more than 50 years later. This shows how high the level Disney were at, miles away from any other competitors in the field. I think this has much to do with the man himself. However, I can't help but doubt his aims in producing this film.This piece is in fact a very nasty, horrible piece of propaganda in favor of nuclear power, with the memories of the Second World War still very fresh. It was designed to literally brainwash young children into thinking that radioactive nuclear power was a necessity and something positive. Sadly, I think it had a very high success rate in regards to that. It might be so, however the dangers and the instability of radioactive sources were already well known at the time and are now more than proved as deadly. By now, they have already altered our planet to a frightening degree. It is clear that this piece attempted and succeeded in lying to generations of young children and planted highly dangerous ideas in their head, disguised as being beneficial and necessary. It is ridiculous that only the last 5 or 10 mins of the program were dedicated to explaining the dangers of nuclear power. And always with a note that the dangers can and are easily controlled. What bull****!!! The enormous consequences of the recent Fukushima event are still unfolding and will continue to do so for a long time now. This is only a small example in the recent past, one in many in the last 50 years. 50 years!!!I think it is very important to denounce this type of fakery, which at the end it is because it announces itself as something and is actually something very different. If we are aware of it, we won't allow it to happen again in the future. And I wonder what other interests Disney may have had and how he may have used his company and its productions as a vehicle for them...
higreg So says Heinz Haber in Disneyland's "Our Friend the Atom" -- a fantastic effort at explaining atomic physics that holds up 50 years later. Like Disney's other Tomorrowland documentaries, it combines accurate science and marvelous illustration. You could show this in any high school class -- heck, it should be shown in the first class of most college-level physics 101 courses.Its descriptions of complicated applications, such as how radioactivity can be used for medicine and biology, sill hold as fairly accurate. (Note, listen carefully, he's not saying radiation will make plants and animals grow, but could be used to tag other molecules as they are processed by plants and animals -- something that HAS been a mightily useful tool in science.)It also describes the potential of commercially available atomic energy. While it might seem naive to some, this was made before the naive and irrational fear of nuclear energy took root in the United States. Don't dismiss this unique documentary as Cold War propaganda. Like Haber said, the coal and oil we use now is finite and we have better uses for them as raw materials.Also, safely ignore Leonard Maltin's apologetic introduction on the DVD (all Disney Treasures DVDs, for that matter, we don't need someone to explain to us it is wrong for Donald to use a gun!).I only wish someone could make documentaries like this again.