Re: 2012 (John Cusack, Amanda Peet, Woody Harrelson) Grading & Discuss
Amazingly, I found myself disappointed by the /destruction/.
It wasn't that the LA scene wasn't incredible. But, aside from the John F. Kennedy taking out the White House (props for finding the most unlikely method yet of destroying the White House - drop an aircraft carrier on it!) I felt that they really only had one truly great sequence mapped out: LA. Aside from that, most of it felt kind of generic. More than that though, it felt disjointed. It never really felt as if the entire world was being torn apart; just a few major disasters in unrelated spots happening on the same day.
I think it was a mistake to have people mostly explaining on abstract computer screens how the continents were moving around, how super tsumanis were forming and spreading outward - the movie should have found a way to show this visually rather than explain it in dialog. Something, even one shot to tie together all the individual disasters.
I didn't mind the stuff with the Arks, and in a lot of ways, it was kind of cool. Still, a lot of it just rang hollow; lots of potential for spice and character conflicts were downplayed or kind of limp. For example - and god forgive me for asking a rational question about a movie like this - I found it empty and unbelievable that for 3 years the Arks are constructed there is not even more internal strife over the fact that only an elite picked by other elites and rich people who bought their way in, were chosen to be saved. It's not that this is unrealistically cynical. That angle is quite plausible, sadly. But for example, the President of the United States is depicted as a supremely moral and God-fearing mad, yet only at the 11th hour sez "say, maybe a lottery was a good idea after all". The scientists working on the project are not horrified and gaunt-faced about the wretched thing they're doing? Chad's character meets a normal guy and his children who are camping, knows they're some of the little people who are sure to die for being unimportant, and is even capable of speaking to them normally?
In this regard, Deep Impact was a more plausible global disaster story, in terms of how the government and human beings reacted to the situation. I was also unmoved by the attempt to frame the /fat rich bastards/ who had bought their way onto Ark 3 (the damaged one) as suddenly sympathetic refugees who should be saved at the potential cost of losing Ark 4, while billions were dying elsewhere. In the end, only the rich and powerful were saved anyway. It was, under the attempted veneer of hope and the human spirit, a very nihilistic story in the final analysis.
It would have been a more fitting irony, I think, for the scenario to have been along the lines of: the Ark project turns out to largely be a bust. Overbudget, delayed, mostly incomplete, and half of the rich cheaters who bought in are left behind and perish. We see the three surviving Arks damaged and washing up on the newly raised African continent as life boats, and discover that in parts of the world that were not hit as bad as expected by the tsunamis a great deal of the population survived and survivors from the more destroyed countries had made their way there, surviving much better than expected when put to the test. Essentially, send the message that humanity as a whole dealt with the crisis and pulled through. While the rich, powerful, and the leaders who had gotten into the habit of secretly manipulating the world while telling themselves they're doing it for the good of mankind, found their efforts were in vain. And in the end /they/ were left as the refugees to be saved by the people they abandoned.