The Tomorrowland Climate Doom Movie: I watched it so you don't have to

tomorrowland-movieGuest review by John A.

Spoiler alert: This review will talk about the plot, so if you want to go and see the movie, please don’t read on.

Still here? OK.

There is a social theory amongst climate alarmists and environmentalists that the only people who deny the coming Apocalypse are those who are morally depraved by money or right-wing ideology or insanity or any combination thereof. If you think that sounds like millenarian religion, then you’re not wrong.

The problem with polarization of beliefs especially in the US, is that any topic under discussion can only be seen in one of two ways. The liberal left and right-wing conservatives describe the same phenomena in radically different ways. Or do they? I don’t think that they are deliberately being deceptive, so much as blind to their own ideologies and the weaknesses in those theories while being hypersensitive about those of their opponents.

So when people view the same movie, they come to radically different conclusions about what the movie is about. In the case of Tomorrowland, that means that the meaning of the movie must conform to stereotypes of left or right.

When I read the review of Tomorrowland on Breitbart, those preconceptions of the reviewer’s belief system obscure rather than illuminate. So when the reviewer lays out his own beliefs about climate change being a hoax of the Left to promote centralized government and then launches into this…

…Disney and director Brad Bird and star George Clooney have poured $200-plus million into a box office bomb to spread that lie — to hector and shame the skeptical mind that dares read, think, and  question Power before slavishly handing over our liberties. Worse than that, “Tomorrowland” blames the rebellious individual-thinker for getting in the way of saving a “doomed planet.”

… then I have to wonder, did he see the movie or the trailer? About no part of that paragraph reflects the movie I saw.

First I am going to tell you the plot of the story, the simplistic proposition at the core of the movie, and then why the movie doesn’t work either as a (weak) political statement or as cinematic art.

The plot goes like this:

A young boy in 1964 takes a prototype jet-pack to the Chicago World’s Fair, where he meets a mysterious young girl gives him a magic badge who helps him transit into Tomorrowland, a beautiful and enticing future utopian world where engineering has solved all problems without apparent interference from politics or religion.

A young female protagonist in the present day has an engineer father she wants to imitate, is discouraged or ignored while pessimistic views about climate, the environment or the future of peaceful society are taught as received wisdom to her and other children at school. She is also trying to prevent the demolition of the rocket pads at Cape Canaveral by sabotage, while her father is reluctantly helping the demolition of the pads as a final job before unemployment.

She then encounters a magic badge which suddenly enables to see the future Tomorrowland as a sort of all encompassing hologram. She also meets the same mysterious young girl who helps her meet the fully grown young boy, who is now played by George Clooney. Clooney tells her that the world as she knows it will end in less than 60 days and there’s nothing to be done.

Through lots of CGI and a ridiculous launch of a rocket from the Eiffel Tower, they go to Tomorrowland to confront the pessimistic President (played by Hugh Laurie), and then after more melodrama and even more unconvincing special effects, the world does not end, her dad and brother join her in Tomorrowland, and more or less The End.

Now obviously there’s a little more to the plot than that, but not much more.

But I can summarize the entire premise of the movie very succinctly:

Whatever challenges lay ahead of us, optimism and engineering science to solve problems will take us to the utopia of Tomorrowland, pessimism and rejecting scientific solutions will bring a self-fulfilling prophecy of destruction to pass

And that’s it. The entire message of the movie is in that sentence. No more and no less.

Now you don’t need to see the movie. Please send me the money you saved.

Now, back to preconceptions. Christopher Monckton has written on this blog that he is not going to see this movie because although it has George Clooney in it, its about environmentalism and global warming.

Actually it’s not.

The movie does not take a view on global warming, climate change, rising seas, ecosystem destruction or belief or disbelief thereof. It’s solely about future utopian optimism versus fatalist dystopian pessimism.

Despite all of the money poured into the special effects, and heroic efforts by George Clooney and Hugh Laurie to make this thin premise mean something deep and meaningful, at heart the movie is more about Walt Disney’s optimistic view of future in the 1960s with the EPCOT Center (this during the Space Race) versus today’s pessimistic view that problems overwhelm us on every side, and no-one cares about fixing issues because we’re all too pessimistic or fixated by money or other selfishness.

But where comes the pessimism? Certainly from environmentalism, from the doomsaying of Rachel Carson and Paul Erlich. the rise of Greenpeace, Sierra Club, the Worldwatch Institute through to the IPCC, environmental pessimism that the Earth is dying and nobody cares is rife in Western societies to the point where it is so obvious that it is not even discussed. (Certainly the overwhelming pessimism of environmentalism is exactly the target of the film’s main protagonists, something that Breitbart’s reviewer entirely missed)

That supposedly scientific magazines like Nature and New Scientist publish articles conjecturing that if humans would only disappear from the Earth, then the Earth would “heal” is a mirror image of millenarian prophecies of Apocalypse where the few would be saved to a future paradise while the Earth is destroyed. Same rapture mythology, but different desired outcome. Both stories are religious diatribes about the corruption of the Earth by the sins of mankind, but one is published as science, the other as religious extremism. To my mind, there is no difference between them.

If I look at academia at the moment, the takeover of dystopian pessimism is all but total in arts, social sciences as well as climate science. Optimism is rarer than hen’s teeth in most University common rooms. Who listens to engineers who talk about going into space any more when we have all these environmental problems yet to be solved?

But back to the movie: why doesn’t it work as cinema?

In my view, the fundamental premise of the movie is too thin to support the weight of drama placed upon it. Despite spectacular special effects (or possibly because of them) I never felt that any of the characters were in any real danger or that I cared much about any of them. The overblown special effects made the plot look even thinner than it already was. The dialogue was forgettable. The actors’ efforts, especially by the precocious Raffey Cassidy, as well as heroic efforts by Clooney and Laurie to give depth to their characters, could not in the end save a thin plot from CGI overload and a “ho hum” from the audience.

It played like a children’s morality tale about the power of hope over fear, and there was no deeper message than that. That, for me, encapsulates why Tomorrowland doesn’t work as cinematic art.

Walt Disney would have informed the writers that screenplays that win Oscars for best picture are far more important and more lucrative than ones that try for the best special effects or best costume.

Tomorrowland cost a reputed $200 million and is expected not to make a profit. That is an ironically pessimistic result from a movie trying so hard to promote optimism.


Lest you think this review is poor or biased, try this one – Anthony

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June 1, 2015 8:36 pm

Perhaps Clooney was trying push the movie with the global warming thing. While he generally is a good plot selector, money talks and he might of wanted another SciFi movie in the resume. That surely is a status badge in Hollywood now. I dislike Clooney’s useless knee jerk Obama love fest, but I generally think he does a likeable character.

Langenbahn
Reply to  Pat Ch
June 1, 2015 9:38 pm

On the whole, he’s a likeable guy, apparently.
An anecdotal story: I know a guy- in the sense of an internet acquaintance from years back. His name is Don, and he gets the occasional “extras” part in movies and TV now and then. He was in The Good German with Clooney. (He’s the guy who bites off Clooney’s ear.) At the message board we were at, he posted this story about the filming of that scene,
Clooney was having terrible back trouble. At one point they had to stop while Clooney stretched out his back. Don who is a good ten years older than Clooney, said, “Feelin’ your age, George?” Clooney didn’t miss a beat, responding, “I’m feeling *your* age, Don.” Politically, Don was miles apart from Clooney, but he couldn’t help but be charmed by the guy.
(He also got to meet Cate Blanchette – lucky dog.)

Langenbahn
Reply to  John A
June 2, 2015 6:53 am

Batman and Robin? That movie should have gotten Akiva Goldsman a lifetime ban from any profession that even tangentially involves the putting more than three words together.

ironicman
June 1, 2015 8:58 pm

Tomorrowland should do well in China, similar to other US flops.
Critiques say they are unsophisticated movie goers and their taste will mature, but I’m more inclined to think its a cultural thing, a particular genre they have sought out.

CodeTech
Reply to  ironicman
June 1, 2015 9:07 pm

Like Jerry Lewis fans in France?

ironicman
Reply to  CodeTech
June 2, 2015 12:40 am

Bait 3D, Expendables, Need for Speed, Escape Plan, Pacific Rim, Cloud Atlas and Avatar have been popular in the Celestial Kingdom.

Langenbahn
June 1, 2015 9:16 pm

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way – in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only. – opening paragraph, A Tale of Two Cities.
That’s always been a good summation of every human age, since Christ. Ours is no different, except for how truly boring it is. Seriously, who here had to fight their way to a water or food source today, and then fight their way home? We’ve never been so secure in our persons, yet never so anxious. Walker Percy was right: man’s greatest fear is not that the Apocalypse will happen, but that it won’t.

Dave Worley
Reply to  Langenbahn
June 2, 2015 5:56 pm

We are much better when challenged.

Adam from Kansas
June 1, 2015 9:27 pm

To relegate Tomorrowland as simple climate propaganda is overly simple thinking. First off, the impending doom that the main character was being subjected to also included mass-scale warfare and was the brainchild of Tomorrowland’s dictator (the guy who shut all of the ways into his utopia and was doing what he could to prevent the real world from achieving the same fantastic level of technology and exploration).
The end of the movie likewise had nothing in the dialogue about reducing CO2 levels, just gathering together the brightest minds from around the world and showing them what they could achieve if their society became one that gave them no limits on their creativity.
This is more a movie that promotes the idea of fostering an environment where people can focus freely on developing new technologies and acquiring knowledge, because in this world there’s definitely no shortage of people who dismiss a new thing as a useless contraption, a mere gimmick, or something that can never work.

Steve Reddish
Reply to  Adam from Kansas
June 2, 2015 1:17 am

I saw the movie without realizing beforehand that it was a propaganda piece. (I don’t get out much) My first thought upon seeing it was that it was self contradictory, as it seemed to both preach about the need to avoid global warming, and to say that those who think we are doomed are the real problem.
Then I realized the screenwriters were making their point by implication instead of statement. Yes, there were flashes of images of nuclear warfare, but the most numerous and longest lasting images were of the expected ravages of global warming: forest fires, drought, and rising seas. Furthermore, the only calamity actually voiced was melting glaciers. The implication was that the warfare was a result of the expected fighting over dwindling resources in the wake of global warming, with the added chance to point out the negative uses of nasty nuclear power.
The images of the fantastic technology on display in the Tomorrowland ad presented by the Tomorrowland pin reminded me of the movies John Carter and Star Trek. The various flying vehicles seemed to be powered by the sun, as in John Carter, or perhaps by anti-matter, as in Star Trek. Anything other than fossil fuels. The implication was that a better tomorrow could be ours if we learn how to power our society without the use of fossil fuels.
Thus, in the end of the movie, when a fleet of robots was being sent out to seek free thinkers to join in the effort to save the world, it was implied that these geniuses would do so by developing revolutionary new sources of energy – such as anti-matter.
When viewed in this light, the implication is that the pessimists who doom society are those of us who say there are no available sources of energy up to the task of replacing fossil and nuclear fuels.
Note that the the Tomorrowland we are shown as a current “reality”, not an ad, appears to be mostly made of concrete, with only a few high tech devices. It is as if there is only a limited source of energy, and those at the top hoard it for themselves. The implication presented is that this will be the fate of our current society when fossil fuels run short.
SR

Reply to  Steve Reddish
June 2, 2015 5:42 am

The implication was that a better tomorrow could be ours if we learn how to power our society without the use of fossil fuels.

Hard to argue with that. Look at how much better life is since we stopped powering our society with mastodon dung.

Steve Reddish
Reply to  Steve Reddish
June 2, 2015 3:32 pm

Alan Watt, you are referring to the switch to fossil fuels, yes?
SR

Michael 2
June 1, 2015 9:30 pm

“if humans would only disappear from the Earth, then the Earth would heal”
I suggest a nuance exists; if all other humans disappeared except for myself and my support group, the Earth would heal. I see very few doomsayers showing the way; but I’ll admit that I wouldn’t see it as an inescapable outcome of them having shown the way.
I like computer generated imagery; I don’t particularly like Clooney in anything (he was pretty good in “Men Who Stare At Goats”). So, I’m not sure one way or the other if I’ll bother to see this movie.

Gary Hladik
Reply to  Michael 2
June 2, 2015 5:09 pm

“If humans would only disappear from the Earth…”
Unfortunately, we’re Gaia’s only hope of preventing the next major asteroid impact, so no.

Robert B
June 1, 2015 9:58 pm

“But where comes the pessimism? Certainly from environmentalism, from the doomsaying of Rachel Carson and Paul Erlich. the rise of Greenpeace, Sierra Club, the Worldwatch Institute through to the IPCC, environmental pessimism that the Earth is dying and nobody cares is rife in Western societies to the point where it is so obvious that it is not even discussed.”
Rubbish. I saw documentary the other night where a scientist said that if we can bring back the woolly mammoth then we can avert catastrophic climate change.
With humour like that, everything is looking rosy.

Robert B
Reply to  Robert B
June 1, 2015 10:02 pm

The doco http://www.sbs.com.au/ondemand/video/446827587602/How-To-Clone-A-Woolly-Mammoth
Sorry but I’m not watching it again to tell you at what time the comment comes up.

Langenbahn
Reply to  Robert B
June 2, 2015 7:12 am

The Left does not have a monopoly on pessimism. The Right has doomsayers too. Oh, noes! We’re drowning in debt! And Brown Peoples! And … and … and … Obama’s a gay, Muslim socialist … and he’s not even an American! And … and … Russia! ISIS! Iran! China!
But, if you can keep your head, while all about you are losing theirs, and blaming it on you …

MarkW
Reply to  Robert B
June 2, 2015 12:25 pm

I find it fascinating how those on the left automatically assume that right wingers are racists.
Nor have I ever seen anyone claim that Obama is gay.
BTW, the vast majority of racists that I have met have all been from the left side of the political spectrum.

dmh
June 1, 2015 11:32 pm

if humans would only disappear from the Earth, then the Earth would “heal”
On his first election as POTUS, Obama announced that this was the day the oceans would begin to recede and the earth to heal, So this movie is 6 years behind. Obama already staked out the high ground on this one,Course everything cam out backward from what he claimed but the mainstream
reported that,

June 1, 2015 11:49 pm

Good to know its got nothing to do with Global Warming and despite its weak plot and overdone CGI it’s probably still more convincing than Al Gore’s fantasy movie

June 2, 2015 12:11 am

Personally, I loved it. I thought that it was a celebration of individual accomplishment and independent thought. But then, I also loved “Mad Max: Fury Road” and saw nothing anti-male in it at all.

wws
Reply to  John A
June 2, 2015 6:33 am

Charlton Heston.
George Clooney is no Charlton Heston!

June 2, 2015 12:23 am

“Well it’s just a stupid argument [questioning Man’s involvement in global warming],” Clooney told reporters. “If you have 99 percent of doctors who tell you ‘you are sick’ and 1 percent that says ‘you’re fine,’ you probably want to hang out with, check it up with the 99. You know what I mean? The idea that we ignore that we are in some way involved in climate change is ridiculous. What’s the worst thing that happens? We clean up the earth a little bit?”
————
You can’t spell Clooney without LOONEY!
😉

James A Roots
June 2, 2015 12:28 am

Unfortunately I took my family to watch the movie thinking it was a feel good family movies about the future… Wow the honor! Bleh, thank God for cgi.

Patrick
June 2, 2015 12:32 am

Like DiCaprio, Blan(d)chette, I will add Clooney to the list of “artists” I will never pay to see their “work”.

Richard111
June 2, 2015 1:08 am

Leave the world in peace and it will heal, eh? Like 95% of all species that ever existed on this planet are now extinct? The likelihood of humanity creating a ‘Tomorrowland’ before extinction seems remote.

old44
June 2, 2015 1:13 am

Anthony, we need the ultimate rating for stinkers, is it better or worse than Waterworld?

old44
Reply to  John A
June 2, 2015 5:11 am

So you’re the one who saw it.

Langenbahn
Reply to  John A
June 2, 2015 7:28 am

I saw it as well, and while it was generally asinine in both concept and execution, and incarnated every one of Hollywierd’s bugaboos, bêtes noires, night terrors, etc. it was somewhat clever, had a fairly primal allure, was too campy for any but the most devoted eco-worshippers to take seriously, and I mostly enjoyed it. Also a tanned, toned and not-yet-past-her-prime Jeanne Tripplehorn was very easy on the eyes.

MarkW
Reply to  John A
June 2, 2015 12:29 pm

The problem is that NYC was only under a couple hundred feet of water. I would guess that 60 to 70% of the earth’s land mass is well above 200 ft. Everest is about 25000 feet, so for it to be barely above water, NYC would have to be under 5 miles of water.

DirkH
Reply to  John A
June 2, 2015 12:49 pm

John A
June 2, 2015 at 1:37 am
“I enjoyed Waterworld as a movie.”
Remember kids, that’s from the guy who just posted his critique of Tomorrowland.
You should have warned us in the headpost.

June 2, 2015 1:15 am

The Leftist narrative is that mankind is doomed without brilliant government leaders’ commanding and controlling every aspect of our lives from cradle to grave…
The cost of this command and control dystopia is roughly 40~60% of GDP being confiscated by government hacks in the form of taxes, money printing, debt and rules/regulation compliance costs.
Prior to the “Progressive” era circa 1913, total Federal/State/Local spending was only around 7% of GDP: broken down by: 50% local spending, 20% State and 30% Federal spending… Imagine that.
If the pre-“Progressive” model were still in effect, total government spending (Federal/State/Local) would only be about $1 trillion/yr compared to the $6 trillion/yr being spent today (roughly $4 trillion/yr by Federal and $2 trillion/yr State and local).
Imagine the “Tomorrowland” that would exist if $5 trillion/yr were kept in the private sector; that’s roughly $50,000 per year per household with no $18 trillion national debt, no $100 trillion in unfunded liabilities, balanced state and federal budgets and no money printing. In addition, $2 trillion/yr could be saved in rules and regulation compliance costs or roughly another $20,000/yr per household in savings, for a total $70,000/yr per household….
Let’s see $70,000 x 30 years= $2,100,000…. CRAP!!!
We should be living like the Jetsons by now with warp drive and perhaps even replicators and transporters…. but, alas… we’ve got the DMV, DHS, and Obamacare instead… Oh, goody.
Beam me up, Scotty…. I’m done.

Jake J
Reply to  SAMURAI
June 2, 2015 1:51 am

You still haven’t shown me how the DOE’s electricity generation numbers are phony.

Keith Willshaw
June 2, 2015 1:36 am

Hollywood ‘environmentalists’ are perhaps the most hypocritical creatures on the planet.
While preaching about reducing the use of fossil fuels George Clooney travels pretty much exclusively by private jet and in 2014 chartered one to fly 100 cases of tequila from California to Italy for his wedding.
In comparison the stars of the 30’s and 40’s were ascetics.
The worst example is probably John Travolta who claims to be an ardent warmist but has 5 private aircraft including his own Boeing 707 and in consequence uses more fossil fuels per annum than 100 ‘ordinary’ people.

Scottish Sceptic
June 2, 2015 2:19 am

I was looking forward to another laugh at environmentalists like the “Day after tomorrow” which is so appallingly bad that it’s fun to watch.
But the plot sounds bizarre: “if things don’t work out today – go somewhere else”. That might work in a movie plot, but for everyone else – it sucks.

Scottish Sceptic
June 2, 2015 2:24 am

Richard111
“The likelihood of humanity creating a ‘Tomorrowland’ before extinction seems remote.”
Actually we are already living in “Tomorrowland”. Most people in the world have not faced death through war. Most people in the world now live a relatively healthy and free live without slavery with at least some say in government. We’ve got instantaneous communication and freedom of speech.

Richard111
Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
June 2, 2015 5:36 am

Scottish Sceptic
Good to know you have confidence in our present world. All this instantaneous communication and freedom of speech seems more like a Tower of Babel, much shouting and limited listening, but it is fast. 🙂

RobRoy
Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
June 2, 2015 6:12 am

Like it says in the Carly Simon song: “These are the good old days”.
What malevolence would cause children to doubt this fact?
What malevolence would foment fear of the future?
What malevolence would deny the less fortunate a chance to enjoy today’s blessings?
What malevolence would have poor persons freeze amid energy abundance?
What malevolence would attack those who disagree with their doomsday prophesying?

June 2, 2015 2:30 am

F.W.I.W. Here is the review that I wrote of Tomorrowland:
I enjoyed the trailers and thought that it looked like a good film. As usual I try my level best to ignore any hype about films as it can either ruin a film by building it up to a level it can’t live up to. Or ruin it by far too many spoilers. Because of this, I was unaware about certain “issues” with the film.
The film is well made, visually a treat, and there are certain “wow” factors in it. A number of times you have to suspend disbelief, but like any future/fantasy films this is the norm.
The casting was good, the concept not that far out, but my oh my. The film is blatant brain washing / PR for man is killing not only our planet but our future. The message in this film is full on in your face. There is even a whole scene of exposition to spell it out for the terminally stupid.
Those who are sceptical of man mad climate change (CAGW) will be furious because of this. But I would also point out that the film cites war, environmental damage and a very anti nuclear message within it.
As far as entertainment goes, it fills out two hours and ten minutes very well. If you agree with the points made you will think that it is doing a great job.
My son and I came out from the film having enjoyed it. But the more I thought on it, the more it annoyed me.
On the plus side, because there are several: Most will come out of the cinema with a good feeling that one person *can* make a difference. That the future doesn’t have to be so grim. So in that respect it is a winner.
If you like Disney films, you will love this. If you are sceptical of CAGW/AGW you might enjoy the film for what it is, but you may well get very angry with its blatant, in your face “man is killing the planet/future” message.
So there you have it, a film of two halves wrapped in a wafer thin veneer of “what if”.

Richard111
Reply to  Sean P Chatterton
June 2, 2015 5:46 am

Thanks for the review and the trailer link. Might go see it if it reaches my neck of the woods.

June 2, 2015 2:47 am

What is the consensus view of a “perfect world?”
I wish someone would offer a description so we could know our goal. (Perhaps a topic of its own, sometime. … or for a survey.)

Markington
June 2, 2015 2:50 am

Thanks for the review, I’m glad to see that Disney have not yet embraced a doom laden view of the future. To be honest this film sounds like a remix of “Meet the Robinsons”, even the city skyline looks the same in both movies.
“Keep Moving Forward” is a fine motto.

Mike Flynn
June 2, 2015 3:37 am

And if I don’t like it, can I get a refund?
Didn’t think so!

Reply to  Mike Flynn
June 2, 2015 6:28 am

Why not try it?
If you try it every time you’ll be out on your ear.
But it’s obviously good salesmanship to respond to a complaint. If the film is advertised as good for your demographic but isn’t then you do have a case.

June 2, 2015 3:52 am

Yes, that’s exactly my interpretation of the movie. Not a great film, but a good message and a typical live-action Disney cartoon.

LarryFine
June 2, 2015 3:59 am

The movie is about how science and big government want to save us from a supposed imminent global disaster, and people who are skeptical are portrayed as dangerously wrong. That’s so close to the whole CAGW movement that I don’t think it qualifies as a metaphor. Metaphors need to be more different from the things they allude to than this.

David Smith
June 2, 2015 4:51 am

Despite being in this awful movie, Hugh Laurie is an oustanding comic actor. His portrayal of the ‘dead behind the eyes’ completely thick Prince Regent in Blackadder the Third is inspired (hope this embeded link works):
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOSYiT2iG08&w=640&h=390%5D