Santa Fe New Mexican

‘The Day After Tomorrow’ is still chilling, literally

- BY JAY BOBBIN

Winter won’t be back for a while, but as movies go, “The Day After Tomorrow” is a good way to prepare for it early.

Currently streaming on Hulu for a 20th-anniversar­y engagement, director and co-writer Roland Emmerich’s (“Independen­ce Day”) disaster saga has been a cable-network staple since soon after its 2004 theatrical release, and it’s easy to see why. It’s a high-concept picture that poses a universal dilemma: What if mankind experience­d a global freeze-over? Though the cold-weather season will remain at bay for a while, with many people more likely to stay inside, the film will be particular­ly relevant then.

It’s part of the basic disaster-movie formula that such a project sets several personal stories against the larger backdrop of the crisis at hand. Here, those characters primarily are a climate expert and his son, played by Dennis Quaid and Jake Gyllenhaal. Dad eventually gets to say, or at least think, “I told you so” after trying to warn dismissive authoritie­s of the approachin­g problem — and he eventually sets out to retrieve his offspring, who’s stranded in a suddenly glacial New York with fellow students (including the one he has a mad crush on, portrayed by Emmy Rossum) during a school trip.

Of course, such a mission won’t be without its hiccups, and Emmerich and his team effectivel­y use their special-effects know-how to depict a world turned to ice with stunning visuals. Some are seen as long shots, with a frozen cloak of atmosphere moving across locales such as midtown Manhattan; others supply close-up flashes of horror, as when a crew member of a crashed helicopter opens the door of the vehicle and promptly gets a much colder complexion than he had mere seconds earlier.

Emmerich loaded the cast of “The Day After Tomorrow” with such other reliables as Sela Ward, Ian Holm, Jay O. Sanders and Nestor Serrano. Also notable are Perry King and Kenneth Welsh as the American president and vice president, the latter part pretty clearly drawn to mirror the image of a certain actual politician of the time.

As might be expected, “The Day After Tomorrow” folds in its share of cautionary messages ... but for the most part, those are shown rather than said and left for viewers to distill, which is not hard to do. After all, who wants the whole world to be turned into one hyper-enormous ski slope or skating rink, which is exactly the result suggested here?

However, “The Day After Tomorrow” also works at the root level as an involving adventure. And these days and nights, you can enjoy it in relatively comforting warmth.

 ?? ?? Arjay Smith, Emmy Rossum and Jake Gyllenhaal in “The Day After Tomorrow”
Arjay Smith, Emmy Rossum and Jake Gyllenhaal in “The Day After Tomorrow”

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