Movie
Review | The Day After Tomorrow
Reviewed by: Susan
Granger
MODA MAG.COM -- As Dennis Quaid says, "This is every
disaster movie rolled into one. There are blizzards and hailstorms and
tornadoes and tidal waves." After decades of global warming
caused by pollution, it seems Earthlings are facing deadly
meteorological conditions and a new, instant ice age.
Quaid plays a climatologist who treks from Washington, D.C. to
flash-frozen New York during a global superstorm to find his
teenage son (Jake Gyllenhaal) who has taken shelter in Manhattan's
Public Library with a classmate (Emmy Rossum) after a tsunami floods
the city.
Director/co-writer Roland Emmerich ("Independence Day")
tackles the mayhem of this overwhelming environmental debacle with the
gusto of a true catastrophist. Suggested in part by the Art
Bell/Whitley Strieber apocalyptic "The Coming Global Superstorm,"
the swift climate-change concept seems exaggerated, but who knows? The
impressive CGI devastation includes a Russian freighter floating
up Fifth Avenue during a giant tidal surge, the Statue of Liberty
covered in an icy crust and the "Hollywood" sign crumpling
in a Los Angeles tornado, albeit reminiscent of "Twister,"
"The Core," "Deep Impact," "Armageddon,"
"Vertical Limit," etc..
Despite several meandering subplots, there's little character
development and the dialogue is laughably lame, although an ironic
note surfaces as Americans are forced to flee south, seeking sanctuary
in Mexico. The politically-savvy may also pick up Bush/Cheney jibes
for their veto of the Kyoto Protocol, a global treaty to reduce the
threat of global warming. On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10,
"The Day After Tomorrow" is a harrowing, scary 7, delivering
an unmistakably cautionary message. If you're into visual effects,
this is a spectacular, eye-popping disaster blast!
Grade: 7/10
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