【水世界】的前製設定與現場劇照
WATERWORLD (1995)
In celebration of today’s anniversary of this wet mess/epic. Let’s celebrate the hard work this crew put into bringing this world to life. Water movies are never easy but when it comes to this movie anytime you bring it up and a crew member from it is in earshot, the stories pour out. Not always bad, I know a AC that said he had a blast, he loved the boat rides out and all the camaraderie the crew had to have to get thru it. To all the crew that helped bring WATERWORLD to life, We salute you and thanks for the memories. I personally enjoy this hot mess of a movie, it’s one of the last ones of its kind...done practically...in a way.
let’s take a deepest of dives into WATERWORLD
The director, Kevin Reynolds, knew there would be problems before production had even started, “During pre-production. Because having never shot on water to that extent before, I didn’t really realise what I was in for. I talked to Spielberg about it because he’d gone to do Jaws, and I remember, he said to me, “Oh, I would never shoot another picture on water”.
“When we were doing the budget for the picture, and the head of the studio, Sid Sheinberg, we were talking about it and I said, “Steven told me that on Jaws the schedule for the picture was 55 days, and they ended up shooting a 155 days”. Because of the water. And he sat there for a moment and he said, “You know, I’m not sure about the days, but I do know they went a hundred percent over budget”. And so, Universal knew the potential problems of shooting on water. It’s monstrous.”
The film began with a projected budget of $100 million which had reportedly increased to $175 million by the end of production. The principle photography had overrun for at least thirty days more than originally planned due to one major decision.
Whereas today they would film in water tanks with partially built sets, employing green screens to fake the locations, back in 1995 they decided to build everything full size and shoot out on the ocean.
This causes extra logistical problems on top of those that already come with making a major action blockbuster. Cast and crew have to be transported to sets. The camera boats and sets float out of position and will have to be reset between takes taking up valuable production time.
The first draft of Waterworld was written by Peter Radar, a Harvard graduate who wanted to break into the film business. His contact in the film industry was Brad Kevoy, an assistant to the legendary director Roger Corman.
Roger Corman is best known for making films very quickly on a small budget. He also liked to give young talent a chance to direct and write their own films. Brad informed Peter that if he could write a Mad Max rip off, he would arrange to finance and let him direct the picture.
Radar came back and pitched the idea for what would become Waterworld. Kevoy took one look at him and said,
“Are you out of your mind? This would cost us three million dollars to make this movie!”
So Radar kept hold of the idea and decided to re-write the script but, this time, going wild. He wrote what he wanted to see on-screen, limited only by his imagination, not a real world production budget.
He managed to get the newly written script shown to a pair of producers with whom he had made contact with. They loved it and ironically they passed it onto Larry Gordon. He shared the enthusiasm saying it had the kind of cinematic possibilities he was looking for. A deal was signed on Christmas Eve of 1989.
As further script rewrites progressed, it became clear that Waterworld was too big for the Larry Gordon’s production company to undertake by themselves. In February 1992, a deal was signed with Universal Pictures to co-produce and co-finance the film. This was now six years after the first draft had been written.
Universal had signed director Kevin Reynolds to Waterworld. Whilst he was finishing his latest film, Rapa Nui, pre-production for Waterworld was already underway.
The decision was taken that the largest set for the film, known as the atoll, would be built full size. The atoll was the primary location for film and in the story served as the location for a small population of survivors.
The logic behind this decision was due to the high percentage of live action filming required in this location, as well as a huge action set piece. No sound stage would be big enough to incorporate this number of scenes and it was crucial that we see the mariner sail his boat into the atoll, turn around and set out again. A full-size construction was the only way to go as the use of miniature and special effects would be impractical.
The next problem was deciding where to build this huge set. After much research, Kawaihae Harbour in Hawaii was chosen as the location. The atoll could be constructed in the harbour and rotated when needed thus allowing for open sea in the background. Later towards the end of principle photography, the atoll could be towed out into the open sea for the filming of the big action sequences which would be impractical to shoot in an enclosed harbour.
Director Kevin Reynolds also discussed the possibility of using the same water tank as James Cameron’s The Abyss, which had filmed there around five years ago,
“We had even entertained the notion of shooting at that big nuclear reactor facility where they had shot The Abyss, to use it for our underwater tank. But we found it in such a state of disrepair that economically it just wasn’t feasible. We didn’t have as much underwater work as they did. Most of The Abyss is interiors and underwater and model work, ours is mostly surface exterior.”
The production company had originally envisioned building the atoll by linking approximately one hundred boats together and building upon this foundation, just like the characters in the film. The production crew set out to search Hawaii and get hold of as many boats as possible.
During this search, a unique boat in Honolulu caught their attention. Upon further investigation, they discovered it was built by Navitech, a subsidiary of the famous aircraft production company, Lockheed.
They approached Lockheed with the strange request of figuring out how they could build the foundations of the atoll. Lockheed found the request unusual but didn’t shy away from the challenging. They agreed to design the atoll foundation and Navitech would construct it.
Meanwhile, an 11ft miniature model of the atoll was sent out to a model ship testing facility in San Diego. Scaled wave tanks are used to determine the effects of the open sea on large scale miniature models of new untested ship designs. This would help determine what would happen with the unusual design of the atoll when it was out of the harbour.
The atoll, when finished, was approximately ¼ mile in circumference. It took three months to construct and is rumoured to cost around $22 million. As the atoll would be used out on the open sea, it required a seafaring license. Nothing like this had been done before and after much deliberation, it was eventually classed as an unmanned vessel. This meant that all cast and crew would have to vacate the set whilst it was towed into position. By the end of production, the atoll was towed out to sea a total of five times.
Shooting out on the open sea presented a series of logistical problem as Reynolds describes,
“We had an entire navy, basically – I mean, this atoll was positioned about a mile off-shore in Hawaii, it was anchored to the bottom of the ocean so it could rotate. What you don’t think about are things like, you’re shooting on this atoll to maintain this notion that there’s no dry land, you always have to shoot out to sea. Away from the land. So we chose a location where we had about a 180 degree view of open water. Nevertheless, any time when you’re shooting, there could be a ship appear in the background, or something like that, and you had to make a choice. Do I hold up the shot, wait for the ship to move out, or do we shoot and say we’re going to incur this additional cost in post-production of trying to remove the ship from the background.
And at that time, CGI was not at the point it is now, it was a bigger deal. And so, even though if you’re shooting across the atoll and you’re shooting out onto open water, when you turn around and do the reverses, for the action, you had to rotate the entire atoll, so that you’re still shooting out to open water. Those are the kinds of things that people don’t realise.
Or something as simple as – if you’re shooting a scene between two boats, and you’re trying to shoot The Mariner on his craft, another boat or whatever, you’ve got a camera boat shooting his boat, and then the other boat in the background. Well, when you’re on open water things tend to drift apart. So you have to send lines down from each of those boats to the bottom, to anchor them so that they somewhat stay in frame. When you’ve got a simple shot on land, you set up the camera position, you put people in front of the camera and then you put background in there. But when you’re on water, everything’s constantly moving apart, drifting apart, so you have to try to hold things down somewhat.
And these are simple things that you don’t really realise when you’re looking at it on film. But logistically, it’s crazy. And each day you shoot on the atoll with all those extras, we had to transport those people from dry land out to the location and so you’re getting hundreds of people through wardrobe and everything, and you’re putting them on boats, transporting them out to the atoll, and trying to get everybody in position to do a shot. And then when you break for lunch, you have to put everybody on boats and take them back in to feed them.”
The final size of the atoll was determined by the size of the Mariners boat, the trimaran. The dimensions for the trimaran were finalised very early on in pre-production, allowing all other vehicles and sets to be sized accordingly.
Production required two trimarans boats which are so called because they have three hulls. The first was based on the standard trimaran blueprint and built for speed but also had to accommodate a secret crew below decks.
During wide and aerial shots it would have to look like Costner himself was piloting the boat. In reality, a trained crew could monitor and perform the real sailing of the boat utilising specially built controls and television monitors below deck.
The second trimaran was the trawler boat which could transform into the racer through the use of special practical effects rigs. Both of these boats were constructed in France by Jeanneau. Normally this type of vessel requires a year to construct but production needed two boats in five months!
Normally once the boat had been constructed, Jeammeau would deliver it on the deck of a freighter, requiring a delivery time of around a month. This delay was unacceptable and so the trimarans were dismantled into sections and taken by a 747 air freighter to the dock Hawaii. Upon arrival, a further month was required to reassemble the boat and get them prepared for filming.
sets recreating the inside of the tanker were built using forced perspective in a huge 1000ft long warehouse which had an adjoining 2000ft field. In this field, they built the set of the oil tankers deck, again constructed using forced perspective. Using the forced perspective trick, the 500ft long set could be constructed to give the impression that it was really twice as long.
There’s more to a film than just it’s sets and filming locations. Over two thousand costumes had to be created with many of the lead actors costumes being replicated many times over due to wear and tear.
This is not an uncommon practice for film production, but due to the unique look of the people and the world they inhabit, it did create some headaches. One costume was created with so many fish scales the wardrobe department had to search the entire island of Hawaii looking for anyone who could supply in the huge quantity required.
Makeup had to use waterproof cosmetics, especially on the stunt players. As everyone had a sun burnt look, a three-sided tanning booth was setup. The extras numbering in their hundreds, with ages ranging from six to sixty-five, passed through the booth like a production line to receive their spray tan. The extras then moved onto costume before finally having their hair fixed and becoming ready for the day.
In some scenes, extras were actually painted plywood cutouts to help enhance the number of extras on the set. This can easily be seen in one particular shot on board the Deez super tanker.
Filming on the water is not only a difficult and time-consuming process but also very dangerous. It’s been reported that Jeanne Tripplehorn and Tina Majorino nearly drowned on their first day of filming.
Waterworld’s star Kevin Costner reported having a near-death experience when filming a scene in which the mariner ties himself to his catamaran to survive a storm. The pounding water caused him to black out and nearly drown.
Unbeknownst to most of the crew, Kevin Costner’s stunt double was riding his jet ski across 40 miles of open ocean between his home on Maui and the film’s set on the Big Island. When he didn’t show up for work one day, the production team phoned his wife, who informed them he had already left for work. The stunt double’s jet ski had run out of gas halfway through his “commute” and a storm had swept him farther out to sea. It took a helicopter most of the day to find him. The stunt doubles name was Laird Hamilton.
As well as the logistical problems of creating a film of this scale and on water, they also had to deal with the press who seemed intent on wanting the film to fail. Director Kevin Reynolds discusses the situation,
“It was huge, we were constantly fighting – people wanted to have bad press. That was more exciting to them than the good news. I guess the most egregious example of that that I recall was that the publicist told me that one day…we’d been out the day before and we were doing a shot where we sent two cameras up on a mast of the trimaran and we wanted to do a shot where they tilled down from the horizon down to the deck below. We’re out there, we’re anchored, we’re setting the shot up and a swell comes in, and I look over and the mast is sort of bending.
And I turned to the boatmaster and I said, “Bruno, is this safe?”. And he looks up the mast and he goes, “No”. So I said, “Okay, well, we have to get out as I can’t have two guys fall off from 40 feet up”. So, we had to break out of the set-up, and go back in a shoot something else and we lost another half-day.
Anyway, the next day the publicist is sitting in his office and he gets this call from some journalist in the States and he goes, “Okay. Don’t lie to me – I’ve had this confirmed from two different people. I want the facts, and I want to hear about the accident yesterday, we had two cameramen fall off the mast and were killed”.
And, he goes, “What are you talking about?”. And he goes, “Don’t lie to me, don’t cover this up, we know this has happened”. It didn’t happen! People were so hungry for bad news because it was much more exciting than…they just said it, and you know, it hurt us.”
Upon release, the press seemed to be disappointed that the film wasn’t the massive failure they were hoping it to be. Universal Studios told Kevin Reynolds that one critic came out of an early screening in New York and in a disappointed tone said,
“Well, it didn’t suck.”
It is true that during principle photography the slave colony set sank and had to be retrieved. However due to bad press, the rumour became much bigger and to this day when you mention the sinking set, most people assume it was the huge atoll.
During production, press nicknamed the film “Kevin’s Gate” and “Fishtar”, referring to 1980’s box office failures Heaven’s Gate and Ishtar. Heaven’s Gate failed so badly it led to the sale of United Artists Studio and has become synonymous with failure in Hollywood.
As well as the exaggerated set problems and other various production rumours, there were also difficulties with the script. In a risky move, the film was green lit and moved into production without a finalised script.
The final total is a reportedly thirty-six rewrites. One of the writers involved was Joss Whedon. Joss had worked on many scripts before becoming a director having being at the helm of both The Avengers and the sequel Avengers: Age Of Ultron. He described his experience on Waterworld as,
“Seven weeks of hell”
Everything came to a head just three weeks before the end of principle photography. Kevin Reynolds who was an old friend of Kevin Costner allegedly walked off set or was fired. There was no official statement on what happened.
When Reynolds left the production this event caused many changes to be made. Composer Mark Isham had already composed approximately two-thirds of the film’s score by the time Reynolds left and that event ultimately caused him to leave production. As Mark describes in this interview excerpt,
“Kevin Reynolds quit the film, which left me working for Kevin Costner, who listened to what I had written and wanted a completely different point of view. He basically made a completely different film — he re-cut the entire film, and in his meeting with me he expressed that he wanted a completely different approach to the score. And I said, “oh let me demonstrate that I can give that to you”, so I presented him with a demo of my approach to his approach, and he rejected that and fired me. What I find a lot in these big films, because the production schedules are so insane, that the directors have very little time to actually concentrate on the music.”
Rumours report that Costner took control of production. He directed the last few weeks of principle photography and edited the final cut of the film that was released in cinemas.
Reynolds discusses his surprise at discovering that one of the most famous scenes from what is known as the extended version, was left on the cutting room floor,
“…it would have differed from what you saw on the screen to some extent, and one of the things I’ve always been perplexed by in the version that was released, theatrically, although subsequently the longer version included it, and the reason that I did the film, was that at the very end of the picture, at the very end of the script, there’s a scene when they finally reach dry land and The Mariner’s sailing off and he leaves the two women behind, and in the script they’re standing up on this high point and they’re watching him sail away, and the little girl stumbles on something.
And they look down and clear the grass away and that’s this plaque. And it says, “Here, near this spot, 1953, Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary first set foot on the summit of Everest”. And that was in script and I was like, “Oh, of course! Wow, the highest point on the planet! That would have been dry land!”. And we got it! We shot that. And they left it out of the picture. And I’m like, “Whaaat?!”. It’s like the Statue of Liberty moment in Planet of the Apes. And I was like, “Why would you leave that out?”
Written by John Abbitt | Follow John on twitter @UKFilmNerd
If any the crew cares to share any of their experiences on it please comment.
Thanks for reading
If you want more deep dives visit
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nuclear transport 在 IELTS Fighter - Chiến binh IELTS Facebook 的最讚貼文
❌ 24 CHỦ ĐỀ LỚN ❌
TRONG IELTS WRITING - SIMON
>> Tiện đà, ''khoe'' luôn là cô có mấy sách hay #Simon, có ai cần không nè? :D
1. Advertising
2. Animal Rights: testing on animals, vegetarianism, zoos
3. Cities: urbanisation, problems of city life
4. Crime: police, punishments/prisons, rehabilitation, capital punishment
5. Education: studying abroad, technology in education, education in developing countries, higher education, home-schooling, bad behaviour, corporal punishment, single sex education, streaming (grouping children according to ability)
6. Environment: global warming, impact of humans on the environment, solutions to environment problems, waste/rubbish, litter, recycling, nuclear power
7. Family: family size, working parents, negative effects on children, divorce, care for old people
8. Gender: gender and education, gender and work, women’s and men’s role in the family
9. Genetic Engineering: positives, negatives, genetically modified foods
10. Global Issues: problems in developing countries, how to help developing countries, immigration, multi-cultural societies, globalisation
11. Government and Society: what governments can do, public services, censorship, video cameras in public places
12. Guns and Weapons: gun ownership and possession, police and guns, nuclear weapons, armed forces
13. Health: diet, exercise, state health systems, private healthcare, alternative medicine, stress
14. Housing and Architecture: state housing, old buildings, modern/green buildings
15. International Language: English as an international language
16. Money: money and society, consumerism
17. Personal Development: happiness, success, nature or nurture
18. Sport and Leisure: professional/competitive sport, sport salaries, sport and politics
19. Tourism: positives, negative effects on environment, future of tourism
20. Traditions and Modern Life: losing traditional skills, traditional customs
21. Transport: traffic problems and solutions, public transport, road safety
22. Television, Internet and Mobile Phones: positives and negatives, Internet compared to newspapers and books
23. Water: importance of clean water, water supply, water should be free, bottled water
24. Work: same job for life, self-employment, unemployment, work/life balance, technology and work, child labour
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Trên đây là những chủ đề lớn từ thầy Simon chia sẻ, các em nên tham khảo để học IELTS đúng hướng nhé!
Cần thêm tài liệu gì nữa thì cứ comment cô share cho nha! (y)
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IELTS Fighter - Trung Tâm Luyện Thi IELTS Hàng Đầu Việt Nam
✦ Website: http://ielts-fighter.com
✦ Group: IELTS Fighter - Hỗ trợ học tập
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☘️☘️TỪ VỰNG IELTS CHỦ ĐỀ FAMILY STRUCTURE AND FAMILY ROLES☘️☘️
[Bên dưới Post là link tải Folder từ vựng từng chủ đề nhé cả nhà]
👉👉Tải bản PDF: https://drive.google.com/open…
Trong bài viết này, Huyền đã tổng hợp các từ vựng IELTS chủ đề Family structure and family roles theo cụm để các bạn có thể dễ dàng áp dụng vào bài viết IELTS Writing Task 2 hoặc phần thi Speaking. Các từ vựng cũng đã được dịch chi tiết để các bạn có thể áp dụng dễ dàng hơn.
• stay-at-home dads: những ông bố ở nhà (chăm con, lo việc nhà)
• family breadwinners: những trụ cột gia đình
• take childcare responsibilities: nhận lãnh trách nhiệm chăm sóc trẻ
• spend most of their time working: dành phần lớn thời gian làm việc
• have little time for their family: có rất ít thời gian cho gia đình họ
• share household chores: chia sẻ việc nhà
• live under the same roof: sống chung dưới một mái nhà
• have the chance to pursue their own career: có cơ hội theo đuổi sự nghiệp riêng của họ
• to be under enormous financial pressures: chịu áp lực tài chính nặng nề
• rely on relatives for ....: nhờ cậy họ hàng về việc gì
• the growing popularity of nuclear and single-parent families: sự phổ biến ngày càng tăng của gia đình hạt nhân và gia đình chỉ có cha/mẹ
• decide to have children later in life: quyết định có con trễ
• cope with the high cost of living: đối phó với chi phí cuộc sống cao
• the decline in traditional family structure: sự suy giảm trong cấu trúc gia đình truyền thống
• achieve/ maintain a healthy work-life balance: đạt được sự cân bằng giữa cuộc sống riêng và công việc
• family trees: gia phả
• cohabitation = sex before marriage: sống thử trước hôn nhân
• to be socially acceptable: được xã hội chấp nhận
• same sex marriage: hôn nhân đồng giới
• better couple relationships: mối quan hệ vợ chồng tốt đẹp hơn
• a dramatic rise in the number of mothers who work: một sự tăng mạnh mẽ trong số lượng những người mẹ ra ngoài làm việc
• have the chance to access better education: có được cơ hội tiếp cận với nền giáo dục tốt hơn
• experience feelings of loneliness and isolation: trải qua cảm giác cô đơn và đơn độc
TỪ VỰNG CHO MỘT SỐ CHỦ ĐỀ KHÁC
👉City life: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Environment: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Education: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Work: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Energy: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Housing and Architecture: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Crime: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Culture: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Throwaway society: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Family and Children: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Tourism: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Transport: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Technology: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Government Spending: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Health: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Business and Money: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Languages: https://drive.google.com/open…
👉Animals: https://drive.google.com/open…
nuclear transport 在 Kento Bento Youtube 的最讚貼文
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————————————————————————————————————————
[THESE EVENTS WILL HAPPEN IN ASIA BEFORE 2050]
So far on this channel, we’ve only ever talked about current or past events.
Well not anymore, because this video is about the future. We’ll be covering the major events that will happen in Asia leading up to the year 2050. Of course, predicting such events is extremely difficult, but we can always give our best estimates based the information we currently have.
We will cover the following:
- Pyeongchang Winter Olympics 2018
- JAXA's Mercury mission
- Japanese Emperor Akihito's abdication
- Saudi Arabia's Jeddah Tower (tallest building in the world)
- Transcontinental bridge from Middle East to Africa (Yemen to Djibouti / Saudi Arabia to Egypt) - the Bridge of Horns
- Holographic TVs
- Tokyo Summer Olympics 2020
- UAE's Hope Probe to Mars + First city on Mars
- Beijing Winter Olympics 2022
- Rising sea levels affect Maldives (global warming)
- China's large particle accelerator (twice the circumference of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN)
- Southeast Asia unified by transport links (Sunda Strait Bridge & Malacca Strait Bridge)
- Bangkok, Thailand is sinking
- Borneo's rainforests will be wiped out at current rate of deforestation
- Russia will become a global food superpower (melting permafrost and retreating ice caps opening up North Asia & Siberia for arable land (farming & crop production)
- Japan connected to the mainland & Russia with Sakhalin-Hokkaido Tunnel
- China's first astronauts on the moon
- India's economic rise
- Japan connected to mainland & South Korea with Japan-Korea Tunnel
- Major volcanic eruption of Sakurajima
- Decline in homosexual discrimination particularly Middle East
- 100th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima & Nagasaki
- Japan's population drops below 100 million due to low birth rate
- Pakistan and India celebrate 100th anniversary of independence
- One Country Two Systems agreement for Hong Kong & Macau expires
- North Korea celebrates 100th anniversary of founding
- Dead Sea drying up
- Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Disaster will be successfully decommissioned
- Biggest refugee crisis in history in Southeast Asia
- Robots will be commonplace
- Asia connected to the world via Bering Strait Bridge & Transglobal Highway

nuclear transport 在 JeaenのYouTube再生リスト Youtube 的最佳解答
本動画を含む、常磐線上野~仙台乗り継ぎレポは http://jeaen-days.blogspot.jp/2015/02/41.html 2015年1月31日、東日本大震災による福島第一原発事故で帰還困難区域を含むJR常磐線竜田駅~原ノ町駅間に初の公共交通機関として代行バスが運転を開始しました。本動画は運転開始翌日である2015年2月1日の朝に竜田駅を発車して原ノ町駅までの下り1便前面展望車載動画です。乗車車両:いわき22 か572(元JRバス関東土浦支店H651-00406)主な再生位置おおよその目安
1:08 カメラ落下のため12秒ほどカットしています。 常磐線渡ったあと左折で福島県道244号小塙上郡山線に入る
1:32 竜田駅裏側を走行 415系電車が停車しているのが見える
3:47 雪で倒竹 バスの屋根を擦る
4:00 福島県道244号小塙上郡山線から国道6号に連絡する町道へと入っていく
5:00 上繁岡交差点を右折して国道6号に入る
6:28 富岡町に入る
8:31 正面右側に海が見える
11:00 富岡駅右1kmの交差点 富岡町中心部
12:27 常磐線ガードをくぐる この先常磐線は左側(山側)に
13:50 富岡消防署付近で本動画撮影時点での帰還困難区域に入る
14:56 左に夜ノ森駅と案内標識
16:22 大熊町に入る
21:40 福島第一原発入口の夫沢交差点
23:33 双葉町に入る
28:19 左に常磐線の青い橋梁が見える
28:40 浪江町に入る
28:52 浪江フローラ付近 本動画撮影時点での帰還困難区域を出る
29:30 浪江町中心部
32:36 南相馬市に入る
33:50 東日本大震災時に押し寄せた津波浸水区域に入る
34:25 桃内駅左と案内標識あり
39:04 ミラー左側に小高駅跨線橋が小さく見える
41:08 右に海が少し見える
44:11 津波ここまでという旨の標識
47:43 国道6号から斜めに左折し福島県道262号小浜字町線に入る
48:43 常磐線ガードを超す
51:46 いったん原ノ町駅を通り過ぎる(原ノ町駅前でバス回転できないため市街地を回って原ノ町駅へ)
53:26 相馬方から線路沿いに原ノ町駅方向に向かう
53:42 原ノ町駅構内に415系と651系特急スーパーひたちが留置されているのを見ることができる
54:28 やっと原ノ町駅に到着
反対方向、原ノ町駅→竜田駅の代行バス運転初日午後便前面展望は以下のURLにて
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVSyfKo1bWI
国道6号線帰還困難区域(富岡消防署付近→浪江フローラ付近)再開通初日2014年9月15日朝の私が運転した車載動画は以下のURLにて
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFfiwaLVNVM
本動画を含むいわき→宮城県亘理町までの前面展望・車載動画・車窓プレイリスト(本動画は4本目です)
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvojjRs3hFzoudjheamUELONdvc4LPIyB
31.Jan.2015 Public transport was opened for the first time bus after the 11.Mar.2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station 20km distance.
This movie was released in the first the front landscape for the first time of public transportation to YouTube in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station 20km area.

nuclear transport 在 JeaenのYouTube再生リスト Youtube 的精選貼文
本動画を含む、常磐線上野~仙台乗り継ぎレポは http://jeaen-days.blogspot.jp/2015/02/41.html 2015年1月31日、東日本大震災による福島第一原発事故で帰還困難区域を含むJR常磐線竜田駅~原ノ町駅間に代行バスが運転を開始しました。本動画は運転開始初日である2015年1月31日の夕方に原ノ町駅16時50分発車して竜田駅に18時15分着予定ダイヤの上り4便前面展望車載動画です。乗車車両:いわき22 か572(元JRバス関東土浦支店H651-00406)運行開始初日とあってガイドさんの放送による説明がありました。主な再生位置おおよその目安
1:54 バス案内放送
5:05 国道6号に入る
7:08 走行している地点付近、東日本大震災時津波が押し寄せた旨の放送
9:50 磐城太田駅付近 太田川橋 道路空いている放送
14:38 南相馬市小高区の紹介放送
19:19 桃内駅付近
20:14 片側2車線となる
20:58 片側1車線となる
21:11 浪江町に入る
23:50 浪江町の紹介放送
25:40 浪江フローラ付近高瀬スクリーニング場 ここから本動画撮影時点での帰還困難区域に入る
25:56 双葉町に入る
26:09 右に常磐線線路が見える
30:00 片側2車線となる
30:28 片側1車線となる
31:15 大熊町に入る
31:30 大熊町長者原付近 左に福島第一原発が見える旨の放送
32:30 大熊町の紹介放送
37:13 大熊町熊町付近の紹介放送
38:15 富岡町に入る
38:31 夜ノ森付近の紹介放送
41:10 富岡消防署を通過 ここで本動画撮影時点での帰還困難区域を出る
42:00 この付近、震災直後は牛が闊歩していたとの放送 今はイノシシが出るとのこと
42:45 前方に赤い灯りがチカチカするのは福島第二原発との放送
42:50 常磐線ガードをくぐる この先は常磐線の位置は進行方向左側(海側)に
44:25 富岡駅は左側に位置するとの放送
45:54 建設中の除染焼却場の放送
46:22 福島第二原発の放送
48:25 福島第二原発入口の放送 このあたり左側に常磐線金山信号場跡あり
49:05 片側2車線となる
49:46 楢葉町に入る 片側1車線となる 楢葉町の紹介放送
50:39 広野火力発電所の案内放送 広野は童謡『汽車』発祥の地と放送あり
52:33 国道6号と別れ左折
55:51 早着の放送
56:18 竜田駅到着放送
経路的には上り竜田駅行きのほうが下りより距離が短いと思われます。
反対方向、竜田駅→原ノ町駅の代行バス前面展望は以下のURLにて
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQK1cXeuHSs
国道6号線帰還困難区域の私が運転した浪江フローラ→富岡町夜ノ森付近までの2014.9.15開通初日撮影車載動画は以下のURLにて
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9h_GU1UCsw
本動画を含む宮城県亘理町→福島県いわき市までの福島県浜通り地域前面展望・車載動画・車窓プレイリスト(本動画は4本目です)
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvojjRs3hFzoO408qOzJewhCPc63iLpYw
31.Jan.2015 Public transport was opened for the first time bus after the 11.Mar.2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station 20km distance.
This movie was released in the first the front landscape for the first time of public transportation to YouTube in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station 20km area.
