Film Snail

The Day After Tomorrow
The Day After Tomorrow

6.5

The Day After Tomorrow

PG-13·2004·123m

Summary

After paleoclimatologist Jack Hall is largely ignored by UN officials when presenting his environmental concerns about the beginning of a new Ice Age, his research proves true when a superstorm develops, setting off catastrophic natural disasters throughout the world. Trying to get to his son, Sam, who is trapped in New York City with his friend Laura and others, Jack and his crew must travel to get to Sam before it's too late.

Crew

Director, Screenplay, Story

Roland Emmerich

Screenplay

Jeffrey Nachmanoff

Reviews

John Chard

John Chard

June 10, 2019

5

It threatened and promised to be a politically (wooly) mammoth disaster picture.

Jack Hall is certain that another ice age is imminent due to the effects of global warming, but the government just will not listen to him. Sure enough the climate changes and the world is at threat from perilous frozen weather, worse still for Jack is that his son is trapped in New York City!

Roland Emmerich was the perfect choice to direct this particular piece. There is no denying that he has no little panache when it comes to destroying and blowing things up, think Independence Day, Stargate, Universal Soldier and Godzilla. What runs true through an Emmerich picture is that he is great on the CGI money shots and knows how to whet an appetite for destruction. Sadly, what is also true is that his second halves rarely deliver on their promise, so shall it be with The Day After Tomorrow. Even allowing for the expected mawkishness that comes with disaster/survival pictures, this picture relies too much on its contrivances, thus completely losing sight of its eco-conscious heart, something that I'm sure the politically aware Emmerich set out to deliver at the start.

Packing his picture with solid and professional performers (led by the always watchable Dennis Quaid as Jack Hall), Emmerich is all too aware that his money shots are what the popcorn masses have chiefly paid to see. Tornados, floods and the subsequent freeze are all excellent moments in the piece, but now, some years later the film has to be called out for being the shallow showcase that it is, in fact the CGI looks unintentionally artificial. It's a missed opportunity to make a blockbuster with an intelligent heart, and sadly Emmerich, either through boredom or ignorance? failed to seal the deal and craft one of the better genre entries.

Just about average for the destruction sequences, but very little else to recommend here I'm afraid. 5/10

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$125,000,000.00

Revenue:

$552,639,571.00

Keywords

new york city
philadelphia, pennsylvania
saving the world
scotland
climate change
greenhouse effect
tornado
hurricane
hail
temperature drop
ice age
polar zone
barrier ice
ice melting
evacuation
flooding
rescue mission
global warming
tsunami
end of the world
snow
scientist
united nations
high school student
climatologist
freezing
frozen alive
disaster movie
snowed in
typhoon
cataclysmic storm
new york public library
global catastrophe
climate science
climate crisis
superstorm
torrential rain
mass casualties