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(2004) rt:124m
½ a star
Director: Roland Emmerich
Starring: Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, Sela Ward, Ian Holm
Tagline: Where will you be?
I seem to see about two movies a
year in the theater these days. I don't know what the hell has happened
other than my life has gotten very busy and I find that there are
very few movies out there that seem worth the time and money it takes
to get my ass in the theater. So what movie do I waste one of my two
trips on? That's right, a movie based on a book by notorious crackpot,
Art
Bell, about some giant storm that is supposed to come and wipe
out the world. And I see it on opening night at the Ziegfeld no less.
Not to mention the movie is written and directed by disaster film
expert and notorious ra-ra American cheese-master, Roland Emmerich
(who is, oddly enough, a German). The man that brought us both Godzilla
and Independence Day is not really stretching his skill set
with another big-budget, big-effects summer popcorn movie where shit
explodes, people die and the truly cheesy rise to the occasion. I
didn't walk into this movie with any expectations of it being a fine
film, but what I found defied even my standards of absurdity and hokiness.
Why the Sierra
Club thought the message about global warning in the movie was
serious enough to warrant handing out leaflets to theatergoers as
they stood in line is beyond me. After all, this movie wasn't about
the ramifications of our lackluster environmental policy, but an excuse
for the folks at whatever studio to destroy Los Angeles and New York
City in a blaze of CGI glory. The ensemble cast brings back all the
characters you loved in ID4. You even get Randy Quaid's brother,
Dennis, as the workaholic (instead of alcoholic) father who, again,
realizes that all he wants to do is make his son proud of him and
fulfill a ÏpromiseÓ he made him after spending too much time with
his work and not enough time raising his kid. And then the wackiness
starts. While on an expedition in the North Pole, Jack Hall (of course
his name is Jack) witnesses global warming first-hand as the ice shelf
he's researching literally splits in half"or something. What a coincidence.
He proceeds to go back to the world and share his findings with world
leaders, who, of course, don't believe any of his nonsense. And, truly,
neither do I. And this is where the problems start. There is absolutely
no sense of time in this movie. From what I can tell, the effects
of global warming start like two days later as giant hailstones fall
in Japan, and then tornados destroy Los Angeles, and then all hell
breaks loose"and by hell I mean silliness. Among the stupidity are
some horrible CGI artic wolves who somehow survive the giant NYC flood
to attack our heroes. Jack manages to drive from D.C. to Philadelphia
on "impassable" roads in route to rescue his son, Sam, in New York
City (of course that's his name). Jack then walks from Philly to Manhattan
in a blinding blizzard, dragging one of his injured compadres half
of the way (in a toboggan that mysteriously appears out of nowhere).
As I mentioned earlier, we have no sense of time in the movie, so
this walk seems to take about a day or two (although it's most likely
supposed to have been longer). Let's see... Our hero, Jack, sits in
just a turtleneck in a thin, little tent in the same weather that
is causing people inside a giant stone edifice to almost freeze to
death. There's some sort of bizarro weather condition in which the
eye of the giant storm opens up overhead and everything below it freezes
instantly. We actually see as the cold descends from the sky to freeze
everything in its path. This phenomenon freezes oceans and giant,
steel buildings, but can apparently be stopped by a simple wooden
door. Who knew? The US president's big plan to deal with the storm
is to evacuate the southern half of the United States to Mexico. Now
there's a plan! That, of course, leaves the northern half to freeze
to death in their homes. Luckily he doesn't have to worry about re-election
because surprisingly (!) he is the last person to be evacuated from
the White House and dies in the storm. Somehow Jack's wife leaves
a D.C. hospital hours after the president and manages to get herself
all the way down to Mexico in the back of an ambulance with a poor
cancer kid in tow. Ugh. There are so many more terrible gaps in logic
and sloppy script points, I don't have enough memory in my computer
to hold them all. Of course everything ends happy for our family and
the triumphant Americans, but nobody seems overly distraught that
about 90% of the people in the northern hemisphere are dead. Oh joy!
There is basically no plot going on here, and as is the norm these
days with a lot of Hollywood movies, the thing relies on special effects
to fool the audience into thinking somebody actually put some effort
into making a quality piece of work. The shit is sloppy and careless
and a total abomination--but if you want to see a giant tidal wave
destroy Manhattan, you could do worse. [movie theater, MF]
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