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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Mike
June 2, 2015 11:18 pm

Go watch it. Otherwise, be small-minded and see Avegers or Pixels. No brain. It is summer. Add sun screen. Or read stories about Bruce Jenner…carved. Are his ….parts gone or not? Otherwise “tomorrowland” asks us to INVENT and not lose hope! Be an engineer! I am. I helped buld the Hubble and Epcot. and AGW is a joke.

June 3, 2015 2:16 am

It’s a bit hard to take anyone’s opinions seriously if the author of this piece is too ashamed or too fearful to put his surname to it. Sorry, you can’t duck the basic fact that the premise of the movie is that there is a “crisis” that requires immediate resolution. This is fundamentally a Leftist perspective.

Reply to  Will Nitschke
June 3, 2015 7:56 am

Will Nitschke on June 3, 2015 at 2:16 am

– – – – – – – – –
Will Nitschke,
You may be right. I will let you know tomorrow if I concur with you because I intend to break away from my normal grandpa duty of caring for my two grandkids (one infant and one 2 yr old) to see ‘Tomorrowland’.
NOTE – I suggest ‘collectivist’ is a more fundamentally correct intellectual term that ‘leftist’.
John

Reply to  Will Nitschke
June 4, 2015 10:35 am

Will Nitschke on June 3, 2015 at 2:16 am
– – – – – – – –
Will Nitschke,
I saw the movie and provided a review at John Whitman on June 4, 2015 at 10:32 am in a new thread.
John

Reply to  Will Nitschke
June 4, 2015 1:52 pm

“Sorry, you can’t duck the basic fact that the premise of the movie is that there is a “crisis” that requires immediate resolution. This is fundamentally a Leftist perspective.”
This is nuts. Addressing crises is not fundamentally a leftist perspective.

richardscourtney
June 3, 2015 2:58 am

Will Nitschke
Please explain your non sequitur; viz.

the premise of the movie is that there is a “crisis” that requires immediate resolution. This is fundamentally a Leftist perspective.

Richard

June 3, 2015 3:46 am

It was meant for here:
Cosmic Cinema
From Sydney university

http://sydney.edu.au/news/84.html?newscategoryid=9&newsstoryid=15052

Steve from Rockwood
June 3, 2015 5:34 am

So this guy actually went out and watched the whole movie? Huh…

June 3, 2015 6:22 am

Very well stated by Steve Reddish – June 2, 2015 at 1:17 am
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).
Wow- the last thing I expected upon my return to this haven of critical thinking- cut and paste from media matters.
I’ve coached sports in Florida much of my life and spent many years as a corporate trainer for the world’s largest brokerage firm. I’ve talked to thousands of Christians with a vast gamut of education and I have never met ONE that believes the earth is 6 thousand years old or denies evolution exists. What they would argue is how life began- and they, you and everyone else would be speculating because no one has a clue…
As for me, I remain a paranostic- following the principles provided by my parents who were dedicated to truth, honesty, hard work and with a driving consideration for others. If a provable God shows up, I am open to reconsideration…
Seems to me a coin flip whether divine intelligence or one-in-a-trillion confluence is behind this remarkable matrix…
More ridiculous is the assertion regarding republicans and science. It is the democrat party that has ignored science- and in fact created a bunch of fake science- to commandeer about $250 BILLION from US taxpayers in the last 6 years from the CAGW scam. Most of this largesse ends up in the pockets of bundlers (Musk, Fisker, Solyndra,etc), activists (EPA, faux researchers), unions or local dems…
And BTW, Fox news is the only major network reporting the thousands of scientists who dispute CAGW, the failures of the hockey stick, the lies of the Gore rubbish or the destruction of peer-review in climate research by the team…

Resourceguy
June 3, 2015 7:15 am

Does this fit the ISIS view of Tommorrowland?

jclarke341
June 3, 2015 7:25 am

I saw the movie and agree with the reviewer about almost everything including his summation of the premise:
“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”
What I take exception to is his treatment of this premise as being, well, trivial.
Yes, the special effects were overdone and often disjointed, the acting, especially from the younger cast members, was also overdone. The story line resembled a Picasso panting, with a lot of things out of place. There was a lot wrong with this movie.
Still, I enjoyed this movie because of the premise! It was a blatant attack on pessimism, the leading cause of the imminent collapse of Western Civilization. In fact, the bad guy in this movie is the embodiment of the current Western philosophy. The young protagonist is playing the part of Walt Disney, brilliant, imaginative and hopelessly optimistic. That alone is worth seeing, just for the novelty of it. It made me want to cheer!
Have you ever had the desire to stand up in front of the world and say: “Look people! It’s not about climate change or peak oil or pollution or racism or the national dept or any of that stuff! It’s about your crappy attitude! That’s what’s killing us! I have just had it up the here with your freak’n whining all the time! Just shut up and go do something constructive!”

Well. that is what this movie is saying. The message is so novel, that many people who see the movie don’t see the message, and those that do see the message, don’t see how wonderful that message is! We have become a society that worships doom, with prays of complaining and choirs of 4-part whining!
Tomorrowland may not be a great movie, but its message of optimism, while literally attacking and killing pessimism, is a message that we all need to hear a lot more!

Philip Arlington
Reply to  jclarke341
June 3, 2015 8:49 am

We need changes in moral, political, and cultural values, but we don’t need any more blind faith in technology. The apparent advantages of technology are so direct and obvious, the drawbacks indirect and all too easy to ignore. Climate alarmists have blind faith in technology, they just prefer different technologies from you.
The last major technological advance that made the world a better place was probably the invention of the nuclear bomb.

Reply to  jclarke341
June 3, 2015 9:35 pm

jclarke341,
Right on. I posted (below) before seeing your post.

Philip Arlington
June 3, 2015 8:42 am

I am neither a liberal nor a conservative.
Conservativism is an attitude to change. It is entirely contextual. Whatever one believes on specific issues, whether one favours the status quo or change depends on the current state of affairs.
Liberalism is a nineteenth century rebuttal of early modern authoritarianism. Take it out of that context and it becomes a cause of muddled thinking and confusion because its original causes and purposes do not apply.
It is time to move on. It is impossible to account for the fact that the leaders of the Conservative, Liberal Democrat, and Labour parties here in the UK all support climate alarmism (or for a hundred other apparent anomalies here and elsewhere) by thinking in terms of “Liberal” vs. “Conservative” or “Left” vs. “Right”. We need new schema based on current realities.

Reply to  Philip Arlington
June 3, 2015 9:01 am

Philip Arlington on June 3, 2015 at 8:42 am
– – – – – – – –
Philip Arlington,
I suggest to instead use more intellectually fundamental terms. Use the terms ‘collectivist’ versus ‘individualist’. I think using them focuses unambiguously on the essential issue.
John

Zeke
June 3, 2015 12:15 pm

“It’s solely about future utopian optimism versus fatalist dystopian pessimism.”
What someone needs to determine is the truth of this statement.
It does not count as optimism when the solution for future problems involves Prince Charles telling young people to get along with far less and to refrain from using fossil fuels (which is basically the use of combustion, or fire) and to refrain from eating meat. It is not optimism to say that this “challenge” from world empire activists was accepted and new smart cities were built. The outcome is the same. Either way, people are penned into small living quarters in smart cities in a rationed, cashless society.
What is optimistic about young people accepting green directives about what can be accomplished, and how it can be done?
To be human is to think of a goal yourself, and to use your rationality, effort, organization, and will to accomplish that goal. These creepy green optimists are trying to re-define ingenuity and optimism as carrying out their UN mandates for sustainable living. Really I would rather die by beheading than by these people who pat you on the head and say, there there. “You are so smart you will figure out how to live without coal, trucks, and agriculture, because we have an international five year plan to shift the paradigm and phase those out.”

June 3, 2015 1:54 pm

Rats, now I have to go see it.

June 3, 2015 8:41 pm

John A.
Apparently you weren’t paying attention…
We enjoyed the movie but agree it was schmaltzy and overly Disneyfied. Many scenes looked like a set up for a theme park ride.
The theme of the movie was along the lines of a car crash. where you are more likely to hit an object if you continue to stare at it as you careen along.
The movie did a great job of contrasting two separate cultures: the optimistic culture of 1965 that believed technology could improve the world; and the alleged culture of 2015 where universal pessimism was driven by fear of war, civil strife, pollution, disease and yes climate change. The 2015 culture was actively disassembling the icons of the optimistic culture symbolized by the NASA launch tower.
The people living in the trans-dimensional and titular “Tomorrowland” had created a machine that modelled the future and broadcast this forecast back into the real world, thus creating a self fulfilling prophesy of doom and gloom. It was the broadcast that was creating the pessimism that would lead to the end of the world as we know it. By focusing the world’s attention on only the doomsday scenario the collective car was sure to hit it. These were the classroom scenes that accentuated the message of doom. Climate change played a very minor role in re-enforcing this message, some pictures of glaciers calving.
The hero of the story saved the world by interrupting the broadcast and distracting the world from the on-coming doom thus allowing optimism the opportunity to grow again and restore both worlds.
Who in the world today models the future and forecasts doom and gloom? The IPCC amongst others.
Who in the world broadcasts this message of gloom and doom? The main stream media.
Who are the hero’s in this reality? Anthony Watt et al.
Go watch the movie again.
Jeff

Resourceguy
June 4, 2015 6:35 am

Unfortunately, Tomorrowland is Greece, with its unsustainable debt and collective, overpromised benefits to themselves. Ben Franklin nailed this one a long time ago and that particular quote is the one that should be most prominent in school lessons today. That is, if schools have time for such founding father history lessons any more.

June 4, 2015 10:32 am

Will Nitschke on June 3, 2015 at 2:16 am

Will Nitschke,
I saw ‘Tomorrowland’ yesterday.
The primary premise of the movie is that there are numerous earth/life shattering and immanent crises; of the crises it posits, global warming appears to me to be the most prominently depicted / emphasized.
The plot of the movie is that those controlling the message about the crises (in the movie it turns out in the end to be Tomorrowland’s Governor Nix** ) are causing the earth / humankind to be doomed because they are impeding the optimistic achievers who are the necessary and sufficient means to prevent the crises.
I did not like the movie’s characterization depth and development. The depiction of ‘Tomorrowland’ looked very amateurish in a comic bookish way.
There were a handful of very enjoyable scenes that occurred in settings on earth.
I would recommend the movie not as entertainment, but as a valuable lesson for independent and critical intellectuals to learn on how Hollywood currently attempts rationalization in support of the doomsayer meme.
**Gov. Nix is portrayed by actor Hugh Laurie (who I loved as Dr. House in the TV series ‘House’)
John