The Day After Tomorrow
The Day After Tomorrow | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roland Emmerich |
Written by | Roland Emmerich |
Produced by | Roland Emmerich |
Starring | Dennis Quaid Jake Gyllenhaal Sela Ward Ian Holm |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Running time | 124 min. |
The Day After Tomorrow is a 2004 apocalyptic science fiction film that dramatically and inaccurately depicts catastrophic effects of global warming and boasts high-end special effects as a strong point.
See below for analysis of the science in the movie.
The Day After Tomorrow premiered in Mexico City on May 17, 2004 and was released worldwide from May 26 to May 28 except in South Korea and Japan where it was released June 4 and June 5, respectively.
Cast
Actor | Role |
Dennis Quaid | Jack Hall |
Jake Gyllenhaal | Sam Hall |
Emmy Rossum | Laura Chapman |
Dash Mihok | Jason Evans |
Jay O. Sanders | Frank Harris |
Sela Ward | Dr. Lucy Hall |
Arjay Smith | Brian Parks |
Ian Holm | Terry Rapson |
Synopsis
Global destruction by three massive "global superstorms" caused by global warming that results in an ice age for the northern hemisphere. The movie follows Jack, a paleoclimatologist for NOAA; his son Sam, a high school student; and his wife Lucy, a doctor.
Plot
Template:Spoiler The movie is based on the idea that an ocean current that supplies warm water to the Northern Hemisphere (i.e. the North Atlantic drift) is disrupted by the melting of the polar ice caps. This leads to a severe change in climate for the Earth. At first the predictions are that this will take some six to eight weeks to take effect, but then three massive storms appear across the globe. These combine over the space of a week to form a huge planet-wide storm. The eyes of the storms are able to suck extremely cold air from the upper atmosphere to the ground causing flash freezing to anything caught in it.
The story follows Jack Hall, a paleoclimatologist, who has forecasted such an event, though he expects it to happen much more slowly (on the order of 100 or 1,000 years). The movie opens with Jack, in Antartica, with two collegues, Frank & Jason, drilling for ice core samples for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The concentration of "greenhouse gases" (e.g., carbon dioxide) contained in the cores is used in a presentation he makes to a United Nations conference held in New Delhi on global warming. Present at this conference is Dr. Rapson of the Hedland Climate Research Center in Scotland. After the conference, Jack and Dr. Rapson meet for a cup of tea to discuss Jack's findings, which establishes a relationship between the two that will be needed later.
Shortly after Dr. Rapson arrives back in Scotland from the conference three weather bouys are showing a 13 degree drop in water temperature. Dr. Rapson concludes that the polar ice melting has disrupted the north Atlantic current and calls Jack to see if his paleoclimatological weather model could be used.
In Los Angeles, the beginnings of the superstorm begin to show. With numerous tornadoes devastating the city (including the destruction of the Hollywood sign), Jack approaches his boss, Tom, at NOAA for time on the mainframe to run his paleoclimatological weather model with Dr. Rapson's data. The results show the global climate will change in 6-8 weeks.
Sam, Jack's son, with his friends Laura Chapman and Brian Parks are attending an academic decathlon in Manhattan. After severe weather also hits Manhattan, Sam calls his father. (According to the DVD commentary, the woman on the other side of Sam from the phone is Kirsten Dunst.) Jack convinces Sam to head back to Washington, D.C. via train the following morning. In the meantime, Sam, Laura and Brian stay at J.D.'s, a fellow decathlon, apartment in Manhattan. While in the apartment, the raining continues and floods the train terminal, which changes their plans to driving. Their plans change once again when flooding continues and car transportion is no longer an option.
Stranded in Manhattan, and with a waist-high level of water, the group seeks a higher location: the New York Public Library. The impending storm over North America drastically raises the water level in the Atlantic Ocean, which then floods Manhattan. (Although the height of the water is shown to be up to the armpit of the Statue of Liberty, which is approximately 225 feet (69 meters), the height of the water in the city appears to be substantially less.) In their race to the library, Laura cuts her leg, which will result in blood poisoning later.
Trapped in the library (with many others) with no power, Sam attempts to call his father on a payphone about what to do. Jack tells Sam about the superstorm and its flash freezing; tells Jack to stay in the library and burn anything to stay warm; and wait for Jack to come to Sam. While waiting, a Russian ship floats down the street and stops just past the library.
Prior to Jack leaving for Manhattan, he advises the President to evacuate the southern half of the country to Mexico, which he does. Jack's wife, Lucy, however, stays behind to care for a boy with cancer that she is treating until an ambulance arrives. It later does, after everyone leaves, and Lucy and the boy make it to Mexico. As the superstorm approaches, the rain turns to snow and the water freezes. Most of the people in the library leave at seeing others in Manhattan leaving despite Sam telling them of the flash freezing. The only people left in the library are Sam, Laura, Brian, J.D., Judith the librarian, a man named Jeremy, a woman named Elsa, and homeless man Luther with his dog Buddha.
In order for the group to survive the flash freezing, Sam convinces them to burn books. Despite the eye of the superstorm approaching (where the flash freezing occurs), Sam (with Brian and J.D.) adventures out to the Russian ship to get Penicillin for Laura's blood poisoning. After a bout with wolves, Sam makes it back to the library before the eye flash freezes him.
The mass evacuation of the southern half to Mexico results in a political drama after Mexico closes the border. In order to get Mexico to open the border, the President agrees to forgive all Latin American debt. Hall finally reaches New York and finds that his son and the rest of their group have survived. The movie ends with people emerging onto the roofs of skyscrapers to be rescued and Jack (with the library group) picked up by a helicopter.
Background
The movie was inspired by The Coming Global Superstorm, a book co-authored by Whitley Strieber and Art Bell, which explores the possibility of such a storm actually occurring.
Shortly before and during the release of the movie, members of environmental groups and former Vice President Al Gore distributed pamphlets to movie-goers describing what they believe to be the possible effects of global warming, which generally did not agree with the film.
Science analysis
It should be noted that there is little if any meteorological or climatological science in the actual events of the movie. Many scientists believe the "global superstorm" depicted in the movie is extremely implausible, if not impossible.
The initial idea - that an increase in freshwater could cause a slow down or stop of the thermohaline circulation - has some probability say scientists, but would be more likely to cause regional rather than global cooling, and would probably operate on timescales of decades or more. Other aspects of the "science" in the film - that descending stratospheric air would be cold, for example - are considered by some to be blatantly wrong. George Monbiot called The Day After Tomorrow "a great movie and lousy science" [1].
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution provides some more detailed analysis of the flaws in the science of the movie [2].
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DVD release
It was first released on DVD in the USA on October 12, 2004 in both widescreen and full screen versions.