Chilling Footage Shows What Happened When A Man Filmed Inside A Chernobyl Reactor Pit

Nearly 40 years ago, the world watched one of the worst disasters in modern history unfold.

On April 26, 1986, Reactor No. 4 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine exploded during a failed safety test. The blast sent radioactive material across Europe and caused fear far beyond the Soviet Union.

About 30 people died in the immediate aftermath of the explosion and emergency response. In the years that followed, many more people suffered from radiation exposure linked to the disaster.

For many people, Chernobyl slowly faded from daily thought over the decades. Then, in 2019, HBO and Sky brought it back into public focus with the five-part miniseries Chernobyl, created by Craig Mazin.

Critics praised the series for turning one of humanity’s darkest disasters into powerful television. Viewers responded too, and tourism to the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, which had already been growing, increased as more people wanted to see the site for themselves.

But long before the drama series aired, one piece of real footage from inside the site had already been shared online. And in many ways, it is more unsettling than anything made for TV.

Footage from inside Chernobyl’s Reactor No. 4, filmed by Sergei Koshelev and Alexander Kupny, shows a short but disturbing look at one of the most radioactive places on Earth.

 

 

What is Chernobyl like inside?

Alexander Kupny worked as a health physics technician at Reactor No. 3 in 1989. In the late 2000s, when unauthorized visits to parts of the site had become more common, he and his friend Sergei Koshelev decided to go somewhere almost no living person has ever entered: inside Reactor No. 4 itself.

Thankfully, the pair wore as much protective gear as they could get. They also filmed what they saw, leaving behind a rare record of a place most people could never safely visit.

At first, the footage looks like someone walking through a ruined basement. There are dirty walls, broken structures, old equipment, and darkness. Then the strange static across the screen starts to stand out.

The flickering and crackling interference in the image looks almost unreal, but it is not just a normal camera fault.

It is radiation physically interacting with the camera sensor in real time. Each tiny flash and speck of noise is a sign of something invisible, deadly, and still present in the ruined reactor.

When the footage later resurfaced on Reddit, people were stunned by what they were seeing. The plain, grim setting became much more disturbing once viewers understood what the static meant.

The Chernobyl Exclusion Zone was first established in the days after the disaster, with the 30-kilometer zone set up on May 2, 1986.

“Every time the camera goes over something dark, the invisible death becomes visible with all the little speckles showing on the camera,” one user wrote. “That is the radiation interacting with the sensor.”

“Crazy how it affects the camera sensor,” said another.

The exclusion zone was first established on May 2, 1986UNILAD
A third person summed up the footage in a chilling way: “You basically just see some dirty factory basement, until you realise you’re looking at one of the most hazardous places on earth and its invisible death.”

Kupny and Koshelev survived the visit and made it back out of the reactor.

Many of the workers who spent months in and around that destroyed reactor in 1986 were not so lucky. Their work helped contain the disaster, but many paid a terrible personal price.

Images from nearby Pripyat, including abandoned rooms in a kindergarten, still show how quickly normal life was left behind after the Chernobyl disaster.

A view of one of bedrooms in kindergarten in the ghost town of Pripyat near ChernobylGetty Stock Image

How the Soviets tried to cover up Chernobyl

The Soviet authorities first tried to keep the explosion quiet, since admitting the scale of the disaster would have been devastating for their global image.

They said nothing for more than 40 hours. When they finally made a public statement, they only said two people had died and that a committee had been formed. The real situation was far worse.

A radioactive cloud moved northwest into Belarus before spreading across much of Europe. Within hours, radiation was being detected hundreds of miles away, making it impossible to hide what had happened.

The plant’s chief scientist, Valery Legasov, later told international investigators that human error caused the disaster. That explanation was convenient, but it left out more than 30 known design flaws in the reactor.

Legasov died by suicide on the eve of the second anniversary of the disaster. Reports have said he had been worn down by officials refusing to act on his safety warnings.

The first Chernobyl Sarcophagus was built to cover the destroyed reactor, while the later New Safe Confinement was moved into place in 2016.

The Chernobyl Sarcophagus was built in 2016Getty Stock Images

Building Chernobyl’s Sarcophagus

With the reactor still burning and radiation levels high enough to kill, Soviet engineers had one urgent task: bury the wreckage as fast as possible.

They worked at extreme speed and under extreme danger to build a steel and concrete shell around the destroyed reactor. The job was risky, but officials saw it as the only way to contain the site.

The structure took 206 days to build and used more than 400,000 cubic meters of concrete. It became known as the sarcophagus.

That first sarcophagus was never meant to last forever. By 1988, scientists were already warning that it might only hold for 20 to 30 years.

A more permanent replacement, the New Safe Confinement, was later built and slid over the old sarcophagus in November 2016. The huge arched structure is roughly the size of the Stade de France, cost about $1.6 billion, and was designed to last 100 years.

But the structure is now facing serious problems. In February 2025, a drone strike damaged the dome, and later inspections found that its safety functions had been compromised. Temporary repairs have been made, but full restoration work is still needed to protect the site long term.

The metal framework around the destroyed fourth reactor now stands as a second layer of defense over one of the most dangerous industrial sites in the world.

The metal framework and structures surround the original sarcophagus of the destroyed fourth reactor at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power PlantGetty Stock Image

The most dangerous object on Earth: Chernobyl’s ‘Elephant’s Foot’

When Reactor No. 4 exploded during the failed steam test at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, the amount of radiation released was enormous.

The spread of radioactive material was devastating, and radiation was later detected as far away as Sweden.

Where Reactor No. 4 once stood, the area became a toxic wasteland. Out of that destruction came what many have called one of the most dangerous objects on Earth: the Elephant’s Foot.

How was the ‘Elephant’s Foot’ formed?

Uranium fuel inside the reactor core melted after the reactor overheated. When the steam explosion tore the reactor apart, heat, steam, and molten nuclear fuel mixed into a 100-ton flow of super-hot material that moved through the building and down through the concrete floor.

The mass eventually reached the basement of the facility, where it cooled and hardened. Researchers later named it the “Elephant’s Foot” because of its large, wrinkled shape.

The deadly formation was found by brave workers and volunteers who entered the reactor months after the disaster. At the time, it was still extremely hot and weighed an estimated 2.2 tons.

Archive images of the Elephant’s Foot show just how strange and unnatural the solidified mass looked inside the ruined reactor.

It was so dense that scientists reportedly had to use a Kalashnikov assault rifle to break off pieces for analysis.

It was also measured at almost 10,000 roentgens per hour. That has been compared to millions of chest X-rays in a single hour, which shows how deadly it was at the time.

Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Science magazine Nautilus described how just 30 seconds near the Elephant’s Foot could cause a person’s cells to begin hemorrhaging. After four minutes, vomiting and diarrhea could follow.

It is also believed that standing beside the toxic mass for five minutes would have left a person with only around two days to live.

What is the state of the Elephant’s Foot today?

IFLScience reports that, over time, the Elephant’s Foot has lost some of its intensity because of natural radioactive decay. That has allowed some scientists, cleanup workers, and photographers to visit the area under controlled conditions.

Still, the site is not safe in any normal sense. It is not known for certain how much radiation the mass gives off today, because it remains shielded inside the Shelter Object covering the remains of Reactor No. 4.

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