Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Dennis Quaid | ... | Jack Hall | |
Jake Gyllenhaal | ... | Sam Hall | |
Emmy Rossum | ... | Laura Chapman | |
Dash Mihok | ... | Jason Evans | |
Jay O. Sanders | ... | Frank Harris | |
Sela Ward | ... | Dr. Lucy Hall | |
Austin Nichols | ... | J.D. | |
Arjay Smith | ... | Brian Parks | |
Tamlyn Tomita | ... | Janet Tokada | |
Sasha Roiz | ... | Parker | |
Ian Holm | ... | Terry Rapson | |
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Nassim Sharara | ... | Saudi Delegate |
Carl Alacchi | ... | Venezuelan Delegate | |
Kenneth Welsh | ... | Vice President Becker | |
Michel 'Gish' Abou-Samah | ... | Saudi Translator (as Michael A. Samah) |
As Paleoclimatologist Jack Hall is in Antartica, he discovers that a huge ice sheet has sheared off. But what he does not know is that this event will trigger a massive climate shift that will affect the world population. Meanwhile, his son Sam is with friends in New York City to attend an event. There, they discover that it has been raining non-stop for the past three days, and after a series of weather-related disasters begin to occur all over the world, everybody realizes the world is about to enter a new Ice Age and the world population begins trying to evacuate to the warmer climates of the south. Jack makes a daring attempt to rescue his son and his friends who are stuck in New York City and who have managed to survive not only a massive wave but also freezing cold temperatures that could possibly kill them. Written by John Wiggins
I was leery of a heavy propaganda piece on "global warming," but I still saw this and found that, yeah that's what it was but it was really more of just a straight adventure story than anything else.....and not a bad one, at that. The first 50 minutes of this two-hour film have the "fun parts" where the special-effects dominate. We see all kinds of radical weather disasters that are extremely dramatic and entertaining to watch, even if they don't make a bit of sense.
After the blizzard and sub-zero, unlivable weather conditions arrive the movie settles down to a young romance and survival story with Jake Gyllenhaal, Emily Rossum and other people trapped in a library in New York City and Jake's father, played by Dennis Quaid, walking all the way from Philadelphia to rescue him. Yes, it's very, very far-fetched - the whole thing - but it's a fun adventure story with nice people. It's especially refreshing to see Hollywood portray a father as being so loving and selfless. The romance wasn't overdone and the young people were not profane and/or annoying, as so often is the case.
Except for the over-exaggerated and extremely erroneous scare tactics of this movie, and a ridiculous portrayal of the Vice Preseint of the United States, the movie works strictly as an entertaining fantasy-adventure story.