December 26, 2016
The Atomic Cafe, a 1982 feature-length documentary co-directed by H.L. Ferguson Museum Director Pierce Rafferty, his brother Kevin Rafferty, and Jayne Loader, was one of 25 films selected by the Librarian of Congress for inclusion in the 2016 National Film Registry.


STORYLINE by topdocumentaryfilms.com

One of the defining documentaries of the 20th century, The Atomic Cafe offers a darkly humorous glimpse into mid-century America, an era rife with paranoia, anxiety, and misapprehension.
Whimsical and yet razor-sharp, this timeless classic illuminates the often comic paradoxes of life in the Atomic Age, while also exhibiting a genuine nostalgia for an earlier and more innocent nation.Narrated through an astonishing array of vintage clips and music (from military training films to campy advertisements, presidential speeches to pop songs) the film revolves around the threat (and thrill) of the newly minted atomic bomb.
Taking aim at the propaganda and false optimism of the 1950s, the film’s satire shines most vividly in the clever image splicing, such as footage of a decimated Hiroshima alongside cheerful suburban duck-and-cover routines.
More than anything else, The Atomic Cafe shows how nuclear warfare infiltrated the living rooms of America, changing the nation from the inside out.
Immensely entertaining and devilishly witty, The Atomic Cafe serves up a revealing slice of American history: the legendary decade when we learned to live in a nuclear world.
The addition of the 2016 film choices brings the National Film Registry to 700 films. According to the Library’s press release, just a “small fraction of the Library’s vast moving-image collection of 1.3 million items”.