Y2K hits different nearly 25 years removed from the deflated doomsday. It’s hard not to laugh at Y2K-compliant stickers or stories about droves of suburbanites suddenly taking up off-the-grid farming. But unfounded or not, Brian Becker and Marley McDonald’s Time Bomb Y2K conjures that very real paranoia.
The clock starts ticking after President Bill Clinton discusses peace and interconnectivity through a heavily pixelated video call. The documentary relies almost entirely on archival footage. No commentary or 21st-century hindsight interrupts the countdown. The film’s restraint is immersive and diffuses (most of) the Y2K schadenfreude that could work against a piece like this.
Becker and McDonald’s editing is seamless and invisible in the best way possible. Like how The Last Dance built tension with Michael Jordan’s final season with the Chicago Bulls, Time Bomb Y2K convinces you for 80 minutes that maybe — just maybe — society could’ve collapsed.
There are a lot of personalities to attach to in this kind of documentary. But computer engineer Peter de Jager truly leads through the oblivion that could’ve been. News media calls him the “Y2K Paul Revere” as he warns businesses and legislatures that the “19” in “1900” isn’t about to flip by itself.
The film’s first act conveys how massive an undertaking it was to prepare the global infrastructure for the new millennium. It’s quick to point out that this concern wasn’t unfounded or overblown in the mid-1990s. In fact, there’s a strong chance several critical systems would’ve failed without the push to update billions of lines of corner-cutting code.
Time Bomb Y2K doesn’t shy away from how paranoia fuels militaristic fear. Doomsday prepping and militia movements go hand in hand. One scene of a convention showcases exercise swings and canned beans that last 100 years alongside walls of assault rifles and bootleg copies of The Turner Diaries. This segment is an unflinching and necessary look at the tie between mass hysteria and white nationalism.
Ironically, the paranoia ramps up as the problem itself winds down. Time Bomb Y2K doesn’t diffuse itself with this truth. After all, the general public didn’t calm down until the 11th hour. (Or really the 12th when you think about it.) Again, that’s where this doc’s power really shines through. Fear and the “behemoth of technology” is enough to uproot relatively normal people and convince the end is inevitable—even without a basic understanding of what could actually happen. We sometimes live for the apocalypse. Time Bomb Y2K is a masterful explanation of how far we’ll go to satisfy that desire.
A consistent narrator or a panel of commentators might’ve helped put some of the film into context. But that would be ultimately unnecessary. Time Bomb Y2K is informative, of course, but it’s also sensational. Its greatest strength is the uninterrupted build-up that many documentaries deploy, but very few pull off so effectively.
Time Bomb Y2K may not spur you to reevaluate your relationship with technology. However, it’s a thrilling comment on how tenuous our digital dependence can be. So, kick back and watch the ball drop. You won’t regret it.
Find more deadCenter 2023 coverage at The Cinematropolis.