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 2, 2015 6:44 am

I wasn’t going to see the film ‘Tomorrowland’ because it appeared to be just another movie of the doomsayer’s wet dream meme.
Now, after reading the reviews by John A and Matt Novak (thanks for the link Anthony), I will go to see the movie. I will do so because, although it appears not to have delivered on its premise involving optimism, it appears that at least it tried to.
John

Clay Marley
June 2, 2015 6:48 am

In the late 50’s, Disney produced several short films on the wonders of space exploration and atomic power. I saw these as a young squirt in elementary school and they did inspire excitement about the possibilities of the future. I found them on DVD and watched them again recently.
The difference I suspect with the Tomorrowland movie is that in the originals, Disney was never preachy about how technology would solve all of our problems and create some sort of utopia. The message was simply to inspire our creative side. What amazing things might we discover as we venture into space? And at a time of great fear of The Bomb, what could we do with the benefits of atomic power, nearly limitless and affordable energy?
Today Disney’s message has been infested with secular humanism, which believes as a fundamental axiom that mankind is basically good, and we only “sin” because of some need or other external tempting influence. Therefore technology that could eliminate need would also eliminate crime and violence. And ideas like hate speech laws could prevent bad ideas from infecting the good mind. Or “gun free school zones” that solve violence by eliminating the source of the violence, the guns themselves.
But this is all a false hope. Technology has raised the standard of living greatly in many parts of the world but over thousands of years of advancement, one thing has remained the same: our struggle with evil. And the sins we struggle with today are exactly the same as we struggled with thousands of years ago. Greed, lust, envy, violence and hate will follow us into tomorrowland.

Langenbahn
Reply to  Clay Marley
June 2, 2015 8:18 am

Agreed. Technology is a tool: a hammer is a poor savior. Envy is the problem at the heart of the all the others. And Hollywood is one of the great engines of envy generation. So there’s no help there.
A bit of personal theology (freely offered and probably worth what you paid for it.) : sin separates us from God (The Spiritual Problem); evil separates us from each other (The Moral Problem); death separates us from nature (The Physical Problem). The Sin problem was solved at Calvary. The Evil problem is the current one. But the Death problem must be conquered together. Only when we conquer that which separates us from each other, will we then conquer death. Not before. Until then, technology, education, the whole Humanist soteriological litany, etc… will just make some willing people able to give us death in abundance.
That is why “The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.” 1 Cor 15:26
As I say, probably worth what you paid for it.

Coach Springer
June 2, 2015 6:54 am

I wanted the movie to be “good Disney”, not “obviously just triangulated with formula, graphics and PC calculated message Disney.” Triangulated enough so that either Al Gore or Lord Monckton could picture himself as a Tomorrowland hero, but still with global warming as a great threat? But hey, it’s got to be better than Wall*E, the rare PIXAR offensive preacher. They didn’t have the courtesy or self awareness to parody themselves as they criticized Earth killing, self-serving humans as a spaceship full of people existing only to be fed and entertained. But, sabotage is for people who care and believe? Maybe cable. Maybe.
I found Brother Bear to be entertaining on first glance and then annoying for nature PC nonsense thereafter. Didn’t bother with Pocohantas at all. Disney does do environmental and other types of PC very “aromatically” from time to time.. Part of triangulation to appear current. At least they’re not claiming that banning DDT saved the bald eagle here.

Langenbahn
Reply to  Coach Springer
June 2, 2015 7:54 am

Ah, Brother Bear. A funny movie, especially when you consider that misanthropic nutter Timothy “Grizzy Man” Treadwell, who was killed and partially eaten by a Grizzly, was an adviser on it. As Mark Steyn put it: Brother Bear is the story of a man trapped inside a bear, kind of like Treadwell, except he was just passing through.

Steve P
Reply to  Coach Springer
June 2, 2015 8:00 am

In your opinion, Coach Springer, what did save the Bald Eagle & Peregrine Falcon?

temp
Reply to  Steve P
June 2, 2015 11:38 am

Same thing that saved millions of carabo in the arctic…. book keeping.

Bruce Cobb
June 2, 2015 6:57 am

It’s “somewhere over the rainbow” all over again. Appears to have entertainment value. Probably not the staying power of the Wizard of Oz though.

Alx
June 2, 2015 7:15 am

…future utopian world where engineering has solved all problems without apparent interference from politics or religion.

What is often overlooked is that not only can religion subvert science and impede progress, but politics can as well. The term “Climate Science” is no longer proper since the science part has been subverted to political ambition and only secondarily or not at all to scientific ambition. The proper term should be “Climate Politics”.
Like politics, there is also a connection to religion. The article brings out the connection between climate and environmental doomsday alarmism and man-is-sinner and end-of-days evangelism. The difference being that for religion God is salvation and for greens the greens are the salvation. In reality, neither greens, nor science, nor politics, nor religion has been a cure for humanities moral ills or dysfunction.
Science does standout however since as a rule it has been salvation from ignorance, superstition, and fear of the unknown, allowing enormous progress and prosperity for humanity. The most notable exception to this rule of course being climate science.
[Is that the blockquote paragraph you intended? .mod]

Dan
June 2, 2015 7:16 am

Did we watch the same movie?
It was really nothing in particular to do with optimism or pessimism. The thing you need to easily understand the movie is to have watched the movie Forbidden Planet. Maybe it’s because I am a big SF fan. But didn’t you folks recognize an incarnation of the Krell Machine in the movie Tomorrowland? The thing that was going to destroy the Earth wasn’t some human-created enviro-disaster. Nor nuclear war, nor social breakdown, nor any of that. It was Hugh Laurie’s pessimism being projected through the huge sparkly-warkly machine in Tomorrowland. It was the stream of tachyons doing something or other (wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey) in a literal self-fulfilling prophesy of doom. Destroy the machine, and coincidentally Hugh Laurie, and the Earth goes back to an ordinary level of risk.

Langenbahn
Reply to  Dan
June 2, 2015 7:41 am

I have not seen the film. I have a really good turkey detector and mine was pinging no matter how much they played the “ooo, shiny!” card. A gilded turkey is still a turkey.
Your assessment of the premise sounds very interesting as far as it goes, but Hollywood has been pitching “you just gotta believe” for a long time. Doesn’t matter if they dress it up in the tenets of Quantum Mechanics. The hard part comes when some un-hip, uncool Philistine like me says,”believe in what?”

GeneDoc
June 2, 2015 7:32 am

I left a comment (http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/05/25/tommorrowland-the-only-clooney-movie-ill-probably-never-see/#comment-1944691) on a previous thread that I won’t reiterate, but it was pretty similar to John’s here.
The take home message for me was that optimism and technological solutions are necessary to counter the doom and gloom attitude that only offers a self-fulfilling prophecy of disaster. The movie’s a mess, but if seen as a kids’ movie, it can be somewhat forgiven. Two additional thoughts:
Tomorrowland is brilliant in its ability to stimulate viewers to see what they want to see. Some see a message of technology as savior, others that it’s destroying the planet. That it is able to reflect back one’s preconceived ideas and/or stimulate discussion such as this, is a mark of a good tale.
John brings up the ever-present vision of an apocalyptic future. Is preparing for some future disaster a trait of the human species that has had selective advantage? Why are we so often drawn to these stories of future (or past–e.g. The Flood) doom? It seems to be a theme of many cultures; perhaps it was advantageous for preparing for real events that could threaten early humans’ existence.

Rob
June 2, 2015 7:45 am

Haven’t seen the movie, but the review (and comments here) do seem to suggest it is not on the same preachy level of Avatar – which did rather well at the box office if I recall. Basically, I think Disney realised they had a bit of a stinker so tried to goose up the interest with promotional stuff linking it to a CAGW meme thinking that would get more people to watch. Hasn’t worked as by the look of things it has bombed at the box office.
On the other hand, so what. I know we who read/comment on climate blogs are quite into this here climate lark, but the rest of the world doesn’t really care all that much. Movies are really not going to change government policies (no, not even an Inconvenient Truth did that).

highflight56433
June 2, 2015 7:49 am

“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”
I suppose one could assume it is promoting technocracy, “24/7 surveillance. Smart grid controls. Carbon rationing. Technocracy, the dark plan for a resource-based economy that is being pushed by the Trilateral Commission, the UN, and other globalist institutions in order to bring about a completely managed, controlled and regulated society.”

Zeke
Reply to  highflight56433
June 2, 2015 9:07 am

Smart Cities are prisons.

Mike
June 2, 2015 9:06 am

I don’t know what the big deal is. First of all, most movies are pretty simplistic with only one theme or idea. Fast and Furious? Are you kidding? James Bond? Really? Martinis, casual sex and spies. Now that is deep.
I liked the movie. I think it was well made with the theme of dreaming, changing the world. Being an inventor ! Moving the world forward.
Yet I am a skeptic about AGW. In the movie, there was no super duper attempt to sell AGW. Yeah, they had the thing about the Earth flooding, and the wind turbines, but that was a FRACTION of the movie theme that humans are a bunch of people who love gloom and doom. We love to make war. We love to over-eat. We love to over-use our environment. We love to torture people, don’t we? Look at ISIS.
I bet no one who reads this blog knows of the time when I was a kid, when the steel mills in Chicago used to dump acid (used to clean the steel beams)…right into Lake Michigan. Then thousand of fish washing up on the beach a couple days later…stinking and rotting to high heaven. Not to mention all the other environmental damage we love to do with oil spills, plastic floating in the oceans, sinking old submarines off the coast of California with uranium reactors, now rotting and spewing.
So, you know what? Get off the anti George Clooney thing and the fact that this movie had some opinions about how we love to destroy oursleves and stop dreaming. We need more inventors and dreamers.
I liked the movie. And I think they did a hell of a job with it.
-the Sketpic (who actually does have an open mind, also)

DirkH
Reply to  Mike
June 2, 2015 11:50 am

“Get off the anti George Clooney thing”
Dreadful idea.

GeneDoc
Reply to  Mike
June 2, 2015 12:11 pm

+1
The mills in Gary, IN were impressive! And disgusting! Drove by every summer in the 60s.

Resourceguy
June 2, 2015 10:36 am

Okay, I will not bother with that waste of money. But in the movie, does it say how big the film tax credits are in the future? They already harm taxpayers now.

Steve P
June 2, 2015 10:40 am

Virtually all of my gilded icons of the silver screen were formed during my youth, when I was entirely under the spell of Hollywood, which was all the more powerful back then when cast in the ornate, cavernous, dark sanctuaries of the grand, old time movie palaces.
I had seen already many movies before we got our first TV set in the early 50s, and let me tell you, those early B&W offerings on the boob tube were so incredibly cheesy, that the magic of movies was enhanced, in my view, and TV forever tainted.
I could easily escape in the dark sanctuary of a movie palace, where my mind could wander unmolested, but not sitting in front of the dismal offerings on the TV. I mean, did you ever see Captain Video? Even Star Trek oozed cheese, 15 years later, although obviously, the production values were higher, and it was in color. For some reason, there is a sentimental attachment to B&W among some photographers who think removing color information from their digital image makes it noir, but I digress.
Laughable production values aside, the great disparity in screen size between TV and the movies is significant. The emotional impact of the larger-than-life images in movies is indisputable, as even tears may flow over images projected onto the silver screen. It’s very powerful.
In addition, we humans seem to attach great value to people who can pretend to be someone else. Mostly, we like our people who are pretending to be someone else to also be beautiful, and further to have pleasant voices, and to be oh so very sincere about what they are pretending to do, so that the audience may forget that they are pretending. We humans have a great and willing capacity to suspend disbelief in order to be told a tale.
It’s a little odd, but then, we’re an odd lot. We hate phony humans, but love phony actors. No wonder we pay them big money, because good acting is very valuable.
At any rate, when the spell was still strong, I was paying a lot more attention to Grace Kelly, than I was to Cary Grant, or to Eva Marie Saint, than I was to Cary Grant, or to Audrey Hepburn, than I was to Cary Grant.
Yes, for a long time in my life, I went to the movies on a regular basis, tapering off over the long haul from several a week, to one a week, usually on Sunday evening by the 1990s, when there was a good chance of low attendance, few people talking, coming in late, gobbling food, coughing, sneezing, crinkling wrappers, moving in & out …you know the routine…along with my growing distaste for what I was seeing as excessive and gratuitous reliance on, if not outright promotion of violence.
And it’s celebrities all the way down – just too many celebrities too much of the time, many of them pedestrian schmos with nutty ideas who happen to be attractive, and that makes them visual shmoos, more commonly known as eye candy – ‘Line forms at the rear.
But there is a price to be paid for their celebrity and easy money, as movie stars sometimes must go on TV to subject themselves to the kinds of probing questions from Savannah Guthrie that prove just how honest and balanced TV coverage really is. One unintended consequence of these ordeals, of course, is the chatter & buzz created about the latest movie – cuz’ that’s what’s trending – and that will get them lining up like little duckies in row as seen on TV.
Finally, let us not overlook the fact that it takes big moola to produce a Hollywood motion picture. Those with the gold not only make the rules, they also make the movies.
Imagine if you can the kind of movies the poor might make, something like say,Todayland, which prolly wouldn’t cost that much to make; you could just get a dash cam, and drive through Detroit. Of course, nobody would pay to watch that stuff, but the burning question might arise.
Would it be art?

June 2, 2015 10:50 am

My favorite sort of BOMB! The type that bankrupts the lefties. Keep it coming folks!

Resourceguy
Reply to  Max Hugoson
June 2, 2015 1:52 pm

How do you bankrupt a subsidy that taxpayers have prefunded in a larger percentage giveaway than Tesla.

DirkH
June 2, 2015 11:46 am

The confusing sameness and differences between the critiques from Left and Right seem to indicate one thing: Tomorrowland went through Development Hell, with Focus Group induced rewrites, probably dampening the Global Warming armageddon theme because it was not appreciated by the Focus Groups.
Googling “Tomorrowland Development Hell” I find this….
http://www.giantfreakinrobot.com/scifi/disneys-tomorrowland-related-rocks-previously-announced-project.html
…so I guess it’s safe to say – and confirmed by the Box Office – that it’s a mess that pleases no one.
Haven’t seen it; hope Redlettermedia will watch it for me (and inevitably shred it to pieces).

June 2, 2015 11:54 am

There’s a trend, in the past few years, with cli-fi movies. I must confess that I am on their side, since some ideas (hopefully the real ones) are easier understood by to the larger public, mainly formed by teenagers or people who don’t read scientific blogs and so on.

Resourceguy
June 2, 2015 1:53 pm

What does Baltimore look like in the future world?

hunter
June 2, 2015 2:51 pm

You missed discussing the child sacrifice, the complacent xenocide by the denizens of utopia, the lack of coherent plot, the killer robots the utopians use to deal with those who may suspect the utopians, and the amazing arrogant hubris of the assumption that the best and brightest will devote themselves solely to building utopia.

June 2, 2015 2:56 pm

Your points would be better made without such errors as this paragraph:
“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.”
Proofreading has taken a sabbatical since auto-correct has shown its ugly face to us all!

June 2, 2015 3:08 pm

As with “The Day After Tomorrow” and “2012”, I’ll probably watch it when it airs on the the SyFi channel…as science fiction.

B
June 2, 2015 3:11 pm

John A. “: Personally, the behavior of Republicans towards science is part of the problem – they reject science that stands on extremely solid evidence (evolution) because it conflicts with the religious beliefs of some of their core constituents and alienate a much larger number of educated people who know fine well the Earth is more than 6000 years old, has never flooded on anything like a global scale and that dinosaurs and man never met (fortunately for us).
That was perhaps all I needed to know about your worldview. I enjoyed your take on the movie but I couldn’t help thinking you were reaching to play the middle.
By the way, I doubt if a poll were taken of all republicans that it would support your view of republicans. That is to say I am betting that a very few percent of republicans believe what you have been indoctrinated to think they believe, that the world really is only 6000 years old. I live in a very red state, so I do have clue on this. And for you to think republicans are any more anti-science than democrats, when a vast majority of Dems are all in on global warming ‘science’ as opposed to very few republicans believing in a 6000 year old earth, also tells me about where you are coming from in this review. I look forward now to paying to see the movie. I doubt I will be able to see it any less biased than you though, but it will give me another pair of glasses through which to view it.

Steve Reddish
Reply to  B
June 2, 2015 4:08 pm

B, you might find the view through another pair of glasses helpful. see:
Steve Reddish June 2, 2015 at 1:17 am
SR

Anthropic
Reply to  Steve Reddish
June 3, 2015 3:06 am

I live in the deep South and do know some folks who believe in a 6,000 year Earth because their interpretation of Genesis requires it. However, it seems to be gradually fading away as a younger generation becomes more familiar with the evidence.
But even the most backwoods young earth creationist understands the universe better than materialists do. Creationists know that neither matter nor the laws governing matter, such as gravity, created space-time, matter-energy at the beginning of the universe. Creationists know that the Earth is indeed special as home to complex technological life, humanity. (This last point was buttressed by findings of the WISE satellite showing that exactly zero galaxies showed signs of advanced civilizations in the medium infrared wavelengths.)
Creationists know that matter is not fundamental, mind (and mind’s product, information) is. Again, recent experiments with quantum mechanics support the conclusion that matter is downstream from observation, not vice-versa. And lastly, creationists believe in things all humans can’t not know, such as free will and a sense of justice. Materialists have to deny their own humanity, or live inconsistently with the logical implications of their belief system. Indeed, even their own beliefs are nothing more than determined by preceding material conditions, hence are without rational grounding, according to their own worldview.
Nope, I’m afraid that young earth creationists, mistaken as I think they are in certain areas, are still closer to reality than many of their opponents.

Peterg
June 2, 2015 3:49 pm

I think we have to recognize that science is as politically motivated as any other form of human endeavour. However we must be careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater.

George Devries Klein, PhD, PG, FGSA
June 2, 2015 5:08 pm

I don;t plan on seeing the movie and I didn’t red the entire summary here. To me, any movie by a celebrity like Mr. Clooney isn’t worth my time and attention.

June 2, 2015 5:14 pm

I watched this movie and was trying to figure out what in the heck Chris Monckton meant about it being about global warming.
At the end, after showing a nuclear detonation, there was some dialog about melting glaciers. Plus a ton of other things. So Chris’s perception was off.
Great review of this movie, by the way. You pretty much hit its high points and its many more flaws.

Alan Grey
June 2, 2015 6:24 pm

Thanks for the review. If I can recast it a little. The movie was about how the solution to the worlds problems are found entirely in an optimistic view of science.
Unfortunately, this is a woefully inadequate worldview, which seems to find more in common with the optimistic vision of communism than a real world Christian based view. It is the same nonsense that thinks of people completely unhinged from their moral foundations.

GaryM
June 2, 2015 8:08 pm

Tomorrowland is just Atlas Shrugged for progressives, with a cuter cast and better production values.

Reply to  GaryM
June 2, 2015 11:40 pm

Atlas Shrugged, while I could never get into it (liked The Fountainhead and Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, though, was about putting one’s own interests first and working for them. I’m not sure it had much to do with the wild-eyed optimism of Tomorrowland.