The Day After Tomorrow

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Rating: PG-13

Starring:

Dennis Quaid as Jack Hall

Jake Gyllenhaal as Sam Hall

Emmy Rossum as Laura Chapman

Dash Mihok as Jason Evans

Jay O. Sanders as Frank Harris

Sela Ward as Dr. Lucy Hall

Austin Nichols as J.D.

Arjay Smith as Brian Parks

Tamlyn Tomita as Janet Tokada

Sasha Roiz as Parker

Ian Holm as Terry Rapson

Nassim Sharara as Saudi Delegate

Carl Alacchi as Venezuelan Delegate

Kenneth Welsh as Vice President Becker

Special Features:

Commentary by director/cowriter Roland Emmerich and producer Mark Gordon

Commentary by cowriter Jeffrey Nachmanoff, director of photography Ueli Steiger, editor David Brenner, and production designer Barry Chusio

Deleted scenes

“Audio Anatomy” interactive sound demo

DVD-ROM: Over an hour of exclusive making-of footage

Other Info:

Widescreen (2.35:1)

Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound

DTS 5.1 Surround Sound

French and Spanish Language Track

Spanish Subtitles

Running Time: 123 Minutes

Synopsis:

When global warming starts interrupting the ocean’s currents, an unexpected event occurs. The weather abruptly turns violent and amid super-storms, tornadoes, hurricanes, hail, and tsunamis, a new ice age begins. Following a sudden flash freeze in the northern hemisphere, people from North America, Europe, Russia, and Asia find themselves trapped amid a new arctic environment.

Prior to this global catastrophe, climatologist Jack Hall attempted to warn the U.S. government about the impending doom. Once the freezing weather strikes, though, he finds himself racing to a frozen New York City to rescue his son and a small band of survivors who are waiting till help arrives.

The Day After Tomorrow is rated PG-13 for intense situations of peril.

The Movie:

I really wanted to see The Day After Tomorrow in theaters, but for one reason or another I missed it. Seeing it on DVD was my first time to screen the film. I was looking for a disaster flick with awesome special effects, a big cast of characters to be randomly picked off, and little plot. That’s exactly what I got. The Day After Tomorrow fits the “popcorn flick” criteria pretty well.

The strongest thing about the film is the special effects. They are incredible. The scenes of mass destruction are truly impressive. This film copies most of the recent disaster movies and notches things up a bit. It takes the tornadoes of Twister and multiplies it several times over. It takes the storm and massive waves of The Perfect Storm and makes it just a part of the destruction early on. The flash freeze at the climax of the film is also quite impressive despite the questionable Hollywood science. In fact, the whole premise of the film (i.e. an ice age occurring in days instead of years) makes it seem like the writers didn’t get past elementary school science class, but who cares? It all looks cool. About the only effect that didn’t work in the film were some poorly animated wolves.

There’s not much to say about the cast. They’re mainly there for exposition about the events and to run screaming from mass destruction. Dennis Quaid does that pretty well as Jack Hall, our intrepid scientist. The same goes for Jake Gyllenhaal as Sam Hall. He’s a pretty good “everyman” and is a likable character that the audience can identify with. TV star Sela Ward plays Dr. Lucy Hall while Perry King actually plays the President in a very brief cameo. Also look for Bilbo himself Ian Holm in another brief cameo.

About the only thing I didn’t like about The Day After Tomorrow was that it got preachy and political. The main villain in the film is the Vice President and he was obviously cast to look like Dick Cheney. It was a lame political slap. The righteous indignation of the film is also a little hard to take seriously when you have characters yelling out, “The temperature’s dropping 10 degrees every second!!!!” Really? Then it’s –600 degrees in a minute? If you’re going to preach on the evils of global warming, at least try and be realistic.

But casting logic and political preferences aside, The Day After Tomorrow is a fun disaster flick. If you liked Roland Emmerich’s film ID4 or Godzilla, you’ll probably enjoy this film as well.

The Extras:

This DVD is surprisingly weak on the bonus features. There’s also no feature on the special effects, the biggest draw of the film. Here are the highlights of what is included:

Commentary by director/cowriter Roland Emmerich and producer Mark Gordon – This is a pretty good commentary. Gordon toots Emmerich’s horn quite a bit, but there’s still a lot of good information here. They talk about all the work that went into the effects shots, what was real and what was CG, etc etc etc. It would have been nice to have had some of the actors in on the commentary, but this gets the job done.

Commentary by cowriter Jeffrey Nachmanoff, director of photography Ueli Steiger, editor David Brenner, and production designer Barry Chusio – This is another good commentary. It’s about equivalent to the previous one as far as information on the filming goes. They, too, discuss the effects, how they originally wanted the VP to propose invading Mexico, how they edited it, etc.

Deleted scenes – There are only two deleted scenes included here. The first is an alternate scene with the Japanese man getting beaned by hail. In it we see him in a phone conversation with a Wall Street businessman that gets killed later in the film. You learn the two are connected and that they are being investigated for insider trading. I guess God smote them for their unfair business practices. Take that, Martha Stewart! Yet another alternate scene is shown with Dennis Quaid just after the flash freeze. There’s some alternate dialogue, but not much else. I don’t know why they went back and reshot this. Anyway, neither scene is that great.

“Audio Anatomy” interactive sound demo – This feature shows the helicopter crash scene and it allows you to switch between audio tracks. You can listen to it with just music, dialogue, helicopter noises, etc. It makes you appreciate the sound design in the film.

The Bottom Line:

If you like disaster flicks, then you’ll enjoy The Day After Tomorrow. Fans of Emmerich’s Godzilla, ID4, and Stargate should also enjoy this.

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