fiction.wikisort.org - MovieThe Wave is a made-for-TV movie directed by Alex Grasshoff, based on The Third Wave experiment put on by teacher Ron Jones to explain to his students how the German populace could accept the actions of the Nazi regime.[1] It debuted October 4, 1981, and almost two years later as an ABC Afterschool Special. It starred Bruce Davison as the teacher Ben Ross, a character based on Jones.
American TV movie
For other uses of "The Wave", see The Wave (disambiguation).
The Wave |
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Genre | Drama |
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Based on | Account by Ron Jones |
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Screenplay by | Johnny Dawkins |
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Directed by | Alexander Grasshoff |
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Starring | Bruce Davison (Ben Ross) |
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Country of origin | USA |
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Original language | English |
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Executive producer | Virginia L. Carter |
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Producers | Fern Field Bruce Hendricks (associate producer) |
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Cinematography | Hanania Baer |
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Editor | Mario Di Mambro |
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Running time | 44 mins. |
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Production company | T.A.T. Communications Company |
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Distributor | Sony Pictures Television |
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Original network | ABC |
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Picture format | Color |
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Audio format | Mono |
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Original release |
- October 4, 1981 (1981-10-04) (location)
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Summary
Ben Ross, a school social studies teacher, shows his class a film about the Holocaust. They question how the German people would have allowed genocide to occur. Unable to explain the question for himself, Ross decides to find out through a social experiment. He begins in an innocuous fashion with advice on proper posture and a few classroom rules for better efficiency. The students take up the rules with enthusiasm. Ross continues the next day by introducing The Wave, which he describes as a youth movement with a secret salute and membership card. Robert, an unpopular student, is given the role of monitor over the other students, a position which fills him with pride.
David, a student, thinks that the Wave's rules will help his football team. With the popular football players now on board, the Wave's popularity spreads across the school. By the end of the week, Robert has developed confidence and authority and reports unorthodox behavior to Ross and the other Wave members. David's girlfriend Laurie is unnerved and Ross's wife worries that Ross has introduced a concept he cannot control.
The next day, a pep rally has turned into a Wave event. Two hundred more students join. Laurie writes an exposé for the school paper. David breaks up with her and friends reject her. Other students are bullied by members and voice concerns to parents and administrators, who in turn complain to Ross. Ross begs for enough time to complete the experiment.
The exposé is published. The Wave denounces the school paper and singles out Laurie for attack. Fearing for her, David warns her to stop speaking out, then gets violent enough to push her to the ground. David realizes now how far things have gone. David and Laurie visit Ross and beg him to speak out against the movement. Ross says he agrees the experiment is out of control. He promises them that he will put an end to it.
The following day, Ross tells students that the Wave is a real youth movement taking place in schools all over the country. The movement's leader will give a televised speech tomorrow. The eager Wave students gather to watch, only to be shown a film of Adolf Hitler leading a Nazi rally. Ross tell them that this is their leader and that the experiment proves how quickly a group can give up their individual beliefs. The stunned students throw away their armbands and leave. Robert, who has been given his first sense of belonging by the movement, is left in tears. Ross takes Robert away to comfort him.
Awards
The TV film won a 1982 Emmy for Outstanding Children's Program, and a 1981 Peabody Award and a 1981 Young Artist Award for Best Television Special - Family Enjoyment.
Writer Johnny Dawkins was nominated for a 1982 Humanitas Prize in the 60 minute category, and a 1983 Writers Guild of America Award for Best Children's Show.
Todd Strasser's novelization of the same name was released the same year. It originally appeared under Strasser's pseudonym of Morton Rhue. Ron Jones article and the TV movie's screenplay were the basis of the 2008 German film Die Welle.
References
External links
ABC Afterschool Special |
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Selected episodes |
- "Last of the Curlews" (1972)
- "Fawn Story" (1975)
- "Me & Dad's New Wife" (1976)
- "My Mom's Having a Baby" (1977)
- "The Pinballs" (1977)
- "Dinky Hocker" (1978)
- "Where Do Teenagers Come From?" (1980)
- "Stoned" (1980)
- "My Mother Was Never a Kid" (1981)
- "The Color of Friendship" (1981)
- "The Woman Who Willed a Miracle" (1983)
- "The Wave" (1983)
- "Backwards: The Riddle of Dyslexia" (1984)
- "The Almost Royal Family" (1984)
- "Terrible Things My Mother Told Me" (1988)
- "Positive: A Journey Into AIDS" (1995)
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Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Children's Program |
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1950–1980 |
- Time for Beany (1950)
- Time for Beany (1951)
- No Award (1952)
- Time for Beany (1953)
- Kukla, Fran and Ollie (1954)
- Lassie (1955)
- Lassie (1956)
- No Awards (1957–1959)
- The Huckleberry Hound Show (1960)
- Young People's Concert (1961)
- New York Philharmonic Young People's Concerts with Leonard Bernstein (1962)
- Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color (1963)
- Discovery (1964)
- No Award (1965)
- A Charlie Brown Christmas (1966)
- Jack and the Beanstalk (1967)
- No Awards (1968–1969)
- Sesame Street (1970)
- Sesame Street (1971)
- Sesame Street (1972)
- ABC Afterschool Special / The Electric Company / Sesame Street / Zoom (1973)
- Marlo Thomas and Friends in Free to Be... You and Me (1974)
- Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus (1975)
- Huckleberry Finn / You're a Good Sport, Charlie Brown (1976)
- Ballet Shoes (1977)
- Halloween Is Grinch Night (1978)
- Christmas Eve on Sesame Street (1979)
- Benji at Work (1980)
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1981–2005 |
- Donahue and Kids (1981)
- The Wave (1982)
- Big Bird in China (1983)
- He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin' (1984)
- American Playhouse ("Displaced Person") (1985)
- WonderWorks ("Anne of Green Gables") (1986)
- Jim Henson's The StoryTeller ("Hans My Hedgehog") (1987)
- Hallmark Hall of Fame ("The Secret Garden") (1988)
- Free to Be... a Family (1989)
- A Mother's Courage: The Mary Thomas Story (1990)
- You Can't Go Home Again: A 3-2-1 Contact Extra (1991)
- Mark Twain and Me (1992)
- Avonlea / Beethoven Lives Upstairs (1993)
- CBS Schoolbreak Special ("Kids Killing Kids / Kids Saving Kids") (1994)
- The World Wildlife Fund Presents "Going, Going, Almost Gone! Animals in Danger" (1995)
- Peter and the Wolf (1995)
- How Do You Spell God? (1997)
- Muppets Tonight / Nick News Special Edition: What Are You Staring At? (1998)
- The Truth About Drinking: The Teen Files (1999)
- The Color of Friendship / Goodnight Moon and Other Sleepytime Tales (2000)
- The Teen Files: Surviving High School (2001)
- Nick News Special Edition — Faces of Hope: The Kids of Afghanistan (2002)
- Through a Child's Eyes: September 11, 2001 (2003)
- Happy to Be Nappy and Other Stories of Me (2004)
- Classical Baby / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: Never Again? From the Holocaust to the Sudan (2005)
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2006–2020 |
- High School Musical / I Have Tourette's but Tourette's Doesn't Have Me (2006)
- Nick News with Linda Ellerbee — Private Worlds: Kids and Autism (2007)
- Classical Baby (I'm Grown Up Now): The Poetry Show / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: The Untouchable Kids of India (2008)
- Wizards of Waverly Place / Grandpa, Do You Know Who I Am? with Maria Shriver / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee — Coming Home: When Parents Return from War (2009)
- Wizards of Waverly Place: The Movie / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee — The Face of Courage: Kids Living with Cancer (2010)
- A Child's Garden of Poetry / Nick News with Linda Ellerbee — Under the Influence: Kids of Alcoholics (2011)
- Wizards of Waverly Place / Sesame Street: Growing Hope Against Hunger (2012)
- Nick News with Linda Ellerbee — Forgotten But Not Gone: Kids, HIV & AIDS (2013)
- One Last Hug: Three Days at Grief Camp (2014)
- Alan Alda and the Actor Within You: A YoungArts Masterclass (2015)
- It's Your 50th Christmas, Charlie Brown! (2016)
- Once Upon a Sesame Street Christmas (2017)
- The Magical Wand Chase: A Sesame Street Special (2018)
- When You Wish Upon a Pickle: A Sesame Street Special (2019)
- The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance / We Are the Dream: The Kids of the Oakland MLK Oratorical Fest (2020)
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Authority control: National libraries  | |
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