Peter Watkins, the British filmmaker whose 1965 nuclear war drama “The War Game” was deemed too disturbing to broadcast by the BBC, died Oct. 30 in Bourganeuf, France.
He was 90. His wife announced his death on his website.
Watkins built his career on politically charged docudramas and mockumentaries that challenged audiences and authorities alike, according to Parade. His most famous work, “The War Game,” depicted a nuclear attack on England and its aftermath with such stark realism that the BBC and government considered it “too horrifying” to air, according to his obituary published by the New York Times.
The film was shelved for 20 years, though it found audiences elsewhere.
It won a special award at the 1966 Venice Film Festival and took home the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, Parade noted. Watkins resigned from the BBC over the decision and never forgave the network for what he called “political censorship,” the outlet added. The film finally aired on the BBC on July 31, 1985.
Born in Surrey on Oct. 29, 1935, to George and Peggy Watkins, he served in the National Service with the East Surrey Regiment before studying acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He began his career as an assistant producer of short TV films and commercials, becoming director of documentaries at the BBC in 1962.
His first BBC film, “Culloden,” released in 1964, depicted the 1746 Battle of Culloden using the style of modern TV war reporting and non-professional actors. The approach marked a breakthrough in presenting historical events through contemporary documentary techniques, Parade said.
After leaving the BBC, Watkins created films and television shows internationally, including “Punishment Park,” “La Commune,” “Privilege,” “The Gladiators,” “Edvard Munch,” “Evening Land” and “Resan.” He taught film courses at Columbia University in the 1970s and in 2004 wrote “Media Crisis,” examining media control and the development of audiovisual media forms, according to Parade.
Watkins spent the final quarter of his life in France, where he died in a hospital.
He is survived by his wife, Vida Urbonavičius; two sons, Patrick and Gerard, from his first marriage to Françoise Letourneur; his brother Paul; and two grandchildren.
This story was written with the assistance of AI.
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