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The Day After Tomorrow
Reviewed by Rich Drees
One has to
wonder what director Roland Emmerich has against Manhattan. In
Independence Day (1996) he pulverized the city with lasers from an
invading alien armada. In Godzilla (1998) he demolished a significant
portion of the mid-town region with the tussle between a giant lizard and
the military. Now in his latest film, the eco-disaster The Day After
Tomorrow, he submits the Big Apple to first a tidal wave that floods its
streets and then the freezing conditions of a new ice age.
Scientist
Jack Hall (Dennis Quaid) is convinced that global warming of the polar
icecaps could result in a catastrophic change in the climate. However, since
his predictions indicate that the change would probably occur not with in
the immediate future, he has problems getting anyone in the government to
listen to him. However, after a Rhode Island sized chunk of the Antarctic
shelf drops off into the Atlantic Ocean causing damage to the temperate
weather providing North Atlantic Current, Hall sees his theories coming to
frightful life. Mass storms start brewing across the northern hemisphere,
which combined with plunging temperatures, threatening to plunge North
America, Europe and Asia into a new ice age. To complicate matters, Hall’s
son Sam (Jake Gyllenhaal) is currently in Manhattan, the center of one of
the super winter storms, taking refuge with others in the Manhattan Public
Library. Determined to rescue his son, Hall and two colleagues set off on a
dangerous trek from Washington DC to New York City.
Emmerich
is no stranger to staging spectacle and there is plenty of that on display
here. The decimation of downtown Los Angeles and the flooding of Manhattan
are both visually stunning segments. (Though, perhaps in deference to 9/11,
no buildings in New York City are knocked over by the wall of water and no
bodies are seen in the aftermath of the flood.) But the spectacle isn't the
be-all of the film. In fact, with the exception of the two big disaster set
pieces mentioned above, the film's action is a little smaller and more
personal in scope. In the past Emmerich has often lost track of the human
element in his stories, allowing the events to overtake the characters' own
stories. Here, he actually allows his characters a little breathing room,
letting them exist a little more dimensionally then in his previous
features. While we're certainly not talking Merchant-Ivory style character
drama, it is an improvement.
Unfortunately, not all characters get equal service in the screenplay.
Emmerich and co-writer Jeffrey Nachmanoff, have overpopulated the screenplay
to an extent that the characters that don't get as much attention to them
come off as flatter than others. Also, some plot points, such as the fate of
the president and one character's illness brought about by an infected
injury, seem to be dealt with off screen and are only resolved through a
line or two of dialogue. There are also a few humorous moments to offset the
drama and tragedy. As with all large-scale disaster movies, The Day After
Tomorrow has one of those “message moments” where a character talks about
how the human race will endure whatever catastrophe has rained down upon
everyone for the last several reels of the film. This time, it is a rather
well done piece wherein a librarian explains why, no matter how cold the
weather would get, he would not allow anyone to burn what could very well be
the last intact Guttenberg Bible. It’s a nice combination of writing, acting
and direction that makes the scene much more powerful then the President’s
overly jingoistic “Today is our Independence Day” speech in Emmerich’s
Independence Day.
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