DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Full Frame | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / DTS | $26.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $22.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / DTS | $14.99 |
| DVD - DTS | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $27.99 |
Commentary by director Roland Emmerich and producer Mark Gordon; Commentary by writer Jeffrey Nachmanoff, cinematographer Ueli Steiger, editor David Brenner, and production designer Barry Chusid. Deleted Scenes. Interactive Audio Demo. DVD Rom link to hour-long exclusive material and more!
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Main Titles
2. Giving Way
3. U.N. Conference
4. A Big Drop
5. Old Wounds
6. A Bumpy Ride
7. Bad Omens
8. The Decathlon
9. Too Fast
10. L.A.
11. Worst Case Scenario
12. Mountain of Data
13. New York City
14. Wall of Water
15. The New Ice Age
16. Contact
17. Presidential Briefing
18. A Toast
19. Life or Death
20. North and South
21. Hard Choices
22. Warming Up
23. A Good Friend Gone
24. The Age of Reason
25. Passing the Torch
26. The View From Space
27. Aboard the Ship
28. Eye of the Storm
29. Promises to Keep
30. The Last Mile
31. Moving Forward
32. End Titles
The science behind this one may be a little shaky -- the possibility of a new Ice Age sweeping the planet overnight is pretty remote. But once you can get past the basic implausibility of the premise, you'll find that The Day After Tomorrow is, well, one of the coolest pictures to come along in quite a while. It's really a throwback to those great Irwin Allen disaster movies of the '60s and '70s. Allen's 1961 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, for example, took the opposite tack and posited that Earth's atmosphere could catch fire overnight. You take a group of people with disparate backgrounds, interests, and agendas; throw them together in a life-threatening situation caused by Mother Nature; and see how many of them survive to discover a means of reversing (or escaping) the effects of the calamity. In this case, climatologist Jack Hall (Dennis Quaid), having foretold the possibility of global warming suddenly triggering a new Ice Age, gets no satisfaction from seeing his prediction come true -- because his son Sam (Jake Gyllenhaal) is trapped in New York City, which has already been swamped by a tidal wave and essentially frozen solid. As the planetary freezing moves southward, Jack heads northward to rescue Sam and others that may have survived. Director Roland Emmerich, no stranger to such apocalyptic goings-on, marshals assistance from his art director, cinematographer, and special-effects team to make this frigid farrago convincing, and it's to his credit that he succeeds admirably. Formulaic plotting and stereotypical characters aside, The Day After Tomorrow, like Jack Hill himself, plots a course and doggedly pursues it to a successful conclusion. Although the submersion of Manhattan by tidal wave was done fairly convincingly in 1933's Deluge, that film's visuals don't begin to compare to the digital magic conjured up by Emmerich's special-effects sorcerers. There probably isn't a viewer on the planet -- in hot or cold climes -- that won't feel a chill up his or her spine when the Statue of Liberty is swept under by a monster tsunami. Quaid and Gyllenhaal are appropriately stolid in their roles and more than adequately supported by Ian Holm, Sela Ward, Jay O. Sanders, and others. Relative newcomer Emmy Rossum makes a strong showing as Jake's plucky companion and (if she lives through the ordeal) probable girlfriend. Providing old-fashioned thrills served up with new-fangled technology, The Day After Tomorrow makes an ideal "popcorn movie," and one that will certainly stand the test of time with repeat viewings. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations