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The Day After Tomorrow
The Day After Tomorrow Poster
Where will you be?
Directed By
Roland Emmerich
Written By
Roland Emmerich
Jeffrey Nachmanoff
Cast
Dennis Quaid
Jake Gyllenhaal
Ian Holm
Emmy Rossum
Sela Ward
Produced By
Roland Emmerich
Mark Gordon
Film Editing By
David Brenner
Cinematography By
Ueli Steiger
Music Composed By
Harald Kloser
Studio
Centropolis Entertainment
Lionsgate
Country
United States
Language
English
Release Date
May 28, 2004
Runtime
123 Minutes
Distributed By
20th Century Fox
Budget
$125 million
Gross
$544,272,402

The Day After Tomorrow is a 2004 American climate fiction-disaster film co-written, directed, and produced by Roland Emmerich. The film was made in Toronto and Montreal and is the highest-grossing Hollywood film to be made in Canada (if adjusted for inflation).

in this film Los Angeles was destroyed by tornadoes and New York City was destroyed and engulfed by a tidal wave and froze by the ice clouds.

Synopsis[]

The film depicts fictional catastrophic climatic effects in a series of extreme weather events that usher in global cooling and leads to a new ice age. all the people did not listen to Jack Hall and the people that did not listen to Jack Hall died because of the changing weather.

Plot[]

On an expedition in Antarctica, paleoclimatologist Jack Hall and his colleagues Frank and Jason are drilling for ice-core samples on the Larsen Ice Shelf for the NOAA when the shelf breaks off.

Later, Jack presents his findings on global warming at a United Nations conference in New Delhi, but fails to convince diplomats or Vice President of the United States Raymond Becker. However, Professor Terry Rapson of the Hedland Climate Research Centre in Scotland believes in Jack's theories. Several buoys in the North Atlantic simultaneously show a massive drop in the ocean temperature, and Rapson concludes that melting polar ice has started to disrupt the North Atlantic current. He contacts Jack, whose paleoclimatological weather model shows how climate changes caused the first Ice Age. His team, along with NASA's meteorologist Janet Tokada, builds a forecast model.

Tornado

Tornadoes destroying Los Angeles

Across the world, violent weather causes mass destruction. U.S. President Blake authorizes the FAA to suspend all air traffic due to severe turbulence after learning several tornadoes are decimating downtown Los Angeles. At the International Space Station (ISS) three astronauts see a huge storm system spanning the northern hemisphere, delaying their return home. The situation worsens when the storm system develops into three massive hurricane-like super storms with eyes holding −150 °F (−101 °C) temperatures that freezes anything it comes in contact with. The three cells are located over Canada, Siberia, and Scotland.

The weather becomes increasingly violent, causing traffic-jammed Manhattan streets to become flooded knee-deep. Jack's son Sam, visiting New York City as he is participating in an academic decathlon, calls his father, promising to be on the next train home, but flooding closes the subways and Grand Central Terminal. As the storm worsens, a massive storm surge hits Manhattan. Sam and his friends seek shelter with a large group of people in the New York Public Library, but not before his friend and love interest, Laura, gets injured.

President Blake orders the evacuation of the southern states of the United States, causing almost all of the refugees to head to Mexico. Jack and his team set out for Manhattan to find his son. Their truck crashes into a block of ice, just past Philadelphia so the group continues on snowshoes.

Most of the group taking shelter in the library leaves when the water outside freezes, leaving just Sam and a few others. They burn books to stay alive and break into a vending machine for food. While journeying to New York, Frank falls through the glass roof of a snow-covered shopping mall. As Jason and Jack try to pull him up, the glass under them continues cracking and Frank sacrifices himself by cutting the rope. Laura appears to have a cold, so Sam comforts her and confesses his feelings for her. In Mexico, Vice President Becker hears from the Secretary of State that President Blake's motorcade was caught in the super storm before it could make it to Mexico causing Vice President Becker to be sworn in as the new President.

The next morning, the group determine that Laura has blood poisoning from the cut on her leg, so Sam and two others search for penicillin in a derelict Russian cargo-ship that drifted inland. The eye of the super storm passes over the city and the three barely return to the library with the medicine in time. During the deep freeze, Jack and Jason, who fell unconscious, take shelter in an abandoned Wendy's restaurant.

Upon reaching Manhattan, Jack and Jason discover the library buried in snow, but find Sam's group alive. New York has turned into a polar, subarctic city, completely frozen over by reaching −98 °F (−72 °C). They radio this to the government-in-exile in Mexico and President Becker orders helicopters flown into New York, finding thousands more survivors. Becker orders search-and-rescue teams to look for other survivors as he gives his first address to the nation. The movie concludes with the astronauts looking down at Earth from the Space Station, showing most of the northern hemisphere covered in ice and snow, with one of the astronauts stating "Look at that....Have you ever seen the air so clear?"

List of Disasters[]

  • Los Angeles Destroyed By Tornadoes
  • Tokyo Mini Destoyed By Hailstorm
  • New York's First Disaster Tsunami
  • New York's Second Disaster Big Freeze
    IceAgeDayAfterTomorrow

    The frozen New York City

Cast[]

  • Dennis Quaid as Professor Jack Hall
  • Jake Gyllenhaal as Sam Hall
  • Emmy Rossum as Laura Chapman
  • Ian Holm as Professor Terry Rapson
  • Sela Ward as Dr. Lucy Hall
  • Christopher Britton as Vorsteen
  • Arjay Smith as Brian Parks
  • Dash Mihok as Jason Evans
  • Jay O. Sanders as Frank Harris
  • Sasha Roiz as Parker
  • Austin Nichols as J.D.
  • Adrian Lester as Simon
  • Tamlyn Tomita as Janet Tokada
  • Glenn Plummer as Luther
  • Perry King as President Blake
  • Kenneth Welsh as Vice President (later President) Raymond Becker
  • Amy Sloan as Elsa
  • Sheila McCarthy as Judith
  • Nestor Serrano as Tom Gomez
  • Christian Tessier as Aaron

Production[]

The film was inspired by The Coming Global Superstorm, a book co-authored by Coast to Coast AM talk radio host Art Bell and Whitley Strieber. Strieber also wrote the film's novelization. The book "The Sixth Winter" written by Douglas Orgill and John Gribbin and published in 1979, follows a similar theme. So does the novel Ice!, by Arnold Federbush, published in 1978.

Cities destroyed[]

  • New York City=New York County=United States
  • Los Angeles=California=United States
  • Philadelphia, PA (offscreen)
  • Washington, DC (offscreen)
  • Tokyo=Japan
  • Halifax, Canada (offscreen)
  • Miami, Florida (offscreen)
  • Beijing=China

Reception[]

Over its four-day Memorial Day opening, the film grossed $85,807,341; however, it still ranked #2 for the weekend, behind Shrek 2's $95,578,365 4-day tally, however The Day After Tomorrow led the per-theater average chart with a four-day average of $25,053, compared to Shrek 2's four-day average of $22,633. At the end of its box office run, the film grossed $186,740,799 domestically and $544,272,402 worldwide.

The film did well at the box office, grossing $544,272,402 internationally. It is the sixth-highest grossing film not to be #1 in the United States (behind My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Alvin and the Chipmunks and its sequel, Sherlock Holmes, and Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs). However worldwide, it is third behind only Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs and Casino Royale.

The Day After Tomorrow generated mixed reviews from both the science and entertainment communities. The online entertainment guide, Rotten Tomatoes, rated the film at 45%, with an average rating of 5.3/10. The site's general consensus states that it was "A ludicrous popcorn flick filled with clunky dialogues, but spectacular visuals save it from being a total disaster."[2] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times, praised the film's special effects, giving the film three stars out of four. Environmental activist and The Guardian columnist George Monbiot called The Day After Tomorrow "a great movie and lousy science."[3]

In a USA Today editorial by Patrick J. Michaels, a Research Professor of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia who rejects the scientific evidence for global warming, Michaels called the film "propaganda," noting, "As a scientist, I bristle when lies dressed up as 'science' are used to influence political discourse."[4] In a Space Daily editorial by Joseph Gutheinz, a college instructor and retired NASA Office of Inspector General, Senior Special Agent, Gutheinz called the film "a cheap thrill ride, which many weak-minded people will jump on and stay on for the rest of their lives."

The film were nominated for numerous awards and won four. Karen E. Goulekas, Neil Corbould, Greg Strause and Remo Balcells won Best Visual Effects at the BAFTA Awards. "The destruction of Los Angeles" was named the best action sequence at the MTV Movie Awards. The film won Best Film at the Environmental Media Awards. And Harald Kloser won for Best Music at the BMI Awards.

Trivia[]

  • The river crossing scene was actually filmed on the US-Mexico border, and the extras really were crossing the Rio Grande into Mexico.
  • There was some doubts among the production team about having a major disaster hit New York, especially after 9/11. Ironically, that sensitivity did not appear to be shared by New Yorkers themselves. Whenever it played in the Big Apple, audiences whooped with delight when the city gets hit by an enormous tidal wave.
  • 20th Century Fox invited a group of scientists to preview the film, to test their reactions to the science used in the film. None of the scientists were impressed with what they saw, although most conceded that the movie was enjoyable nonsense.
  • In 2008, Yahoo! Movies listed the film as one of the Top 10 Scientifically Inaccurate Movies.
  • Roland Emmerich confided that the Statue of Liberty would be turned over by the force of the massive amount of water flowing around it but said he wanted to create a symbol of American values that stood up to the forces.
  • During the party after the first round, Sam's "Hello My Name Is..." sticker bears the name "Yoda".
  • During the filming of the tsunami scene, Jake Gyllenhaal needed to use the restroom very badly, so he went in the water tank.
  • Emmy Rossum was only 15 years old when she auditioned for the film.
  • Lindsay Lohan was in talks to play Laura and was close to signing a contract to star in the film. She had to back out last minute due to major scheduling conflicts. She was replaced by Emmy Rossum.
  • The highest grossing film to be made in Canada.
  • This is the time New York City and Los Angeles were destroyed in every film in reality both stayed intact.
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