字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント This big budget, sci-fi weather-related disaster was made in Montreal, and its $544 million dollar gross makes it the highest grossing Canadian film of all time. No stranger to destroying American landmarks with outlandish destruction sequences, famed German director Roland Emmerich, who made his mark on Hollywood with pictures like "Independence Day", "Godzilla", and later "2012", tackles the issue of climate change in a ridiculously enjoyable way. Voted as one of the least scientifically accurate films every made, the plot here follows the events surrounding a father and son who attempt to survive a mammoth super-storm that is sending New York, and the rest of the northern hemisphere into a deep, lethal freeze. Dennis Quaid stars as a paleoclimatologist, who is somehow the only person on Earth who predicts the coming of a new ice-age: and even following extreme weather like tornados in Hollywood or hail in Japan, everyone is too stubborn to heed his good advice. His brave, but caring leading-man persona is familiar, but acted well. Staying exciting and tense throughout, the briskly paced 124-minute adventure adeptly meshes both the macro story of mankind dealing with extinction-level storms, and the micro events of Quaid's personal battles. Jake Gyllenhaal plays his son, who finds himself trapped in the New York public library struggling to survive with his attractive classmate, Emmy Rossum following a tidal wave of rising ocean water that quickly freezes over Manhattan. The two young leads share some passionate chemistry amidst incredible visual effects and stunningly effective CGI, lamenting to each other, "I've prepared for a future that no longer exists". "The dialogue isn't anything special, but it does enough to flesh out the characters, and drive the plot forward, even Ian Holm is able to turn in a decent performance. Commendably, this movie shares some important messages about global climate change, and respecting our planet's natural resources, else we'll slip into another ice age. Unfortunately, the gross oversimplification and extreme acceleration of these worst-case-scenario weather events nearly diminishes the effectiveness of any pro-environment message. Rather annoyingly, this picture all but glosses over the deaths of millions of humans, but spends a great deal of screen time focusing on a single child dying of cancer, which may have created an ounce of emotional resonance, had his character not been bereft of any development or dialogue. Combine that wasted sub-plot with a nonsense sequence involving escaped wolves on a Russian tanker ship, and this film could have stalled faster than a frozen helicopter. Frequently delivering harrowing thrills via liberal use of unrealistic weather dangers, like when our heroes are quite literally outrunning cold air itself, many scenes are laughably enjoyable. If you're able to forgive the dozens of meteorological inaccuracies, that compresses centuries of climate events into a week-long timeframe, this can honestly be a rather entertaining picture. Generic music, familiar thrills, but an irresistible package make this picture supremely fun: after all, who doesn't love watching New York get destroyed by weather? The Day After Tomorrow", "Amazing visual excitement, unbelievable plot." Well those were my thoughts on the picture, now lets see what you had to say in the YouTube comments. "The Day After Tomorrow"... a SIX and a SEVEN. You faulted this movie for its sub-par acting, and ridiculously unbelievable premise, but still loved the monumentally epic disaster sequences, scoring the movie a GOOD. I'm a sucker for a fun end-of-the-world escapade, and Emmerich certainly delivers once again. Shallow, absurd, and emotional empty, I still enjoyed this movie enough to rate is a COOL.
B2 中上級 あさっての日』--レビュー #JPMN (The Day After Tomorrow -- Review #JPMN) 750 23 Cyberlee Lee に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語