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Full Reaction - The Day After Tomorrow

This channel is dedicated to watching Awesome US Movies for the first time. I hope you enjoy some of my reactions. Thank you so much for watching. Support the channel - https://www.patreon.com/AwesomeUSMovies Buy me a cup of coffee - https://ko-fi.com/awesomeusmovies My List - https://letterboxd.com/AwesomeUS Twitter - https://twitter.com/AwesomeUSMovies Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/AwesomeUSMovies This video, and all of the reaction videos on this channel, transform the original material from entertainment into reaction based commentary. While the video does use clips from movies, many sections have been removed. Please do note the total time of this video compared to how long the original content is. If you wish to see further proof of my reaction based commentary please review my other reaction videos. This video is for commentary and criticism only and is not a replacement for watching the actual movie. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for the purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners. #reaction #firsttimewatching

Comments

Ryan Towell

James I always loved this film. I highly suggest you start looking into Jake Gyllenhaal movies, I do believe he's one of the better actors of this generation. He's got some great films and performances out there. Also, I work in the Arctic Salt water does freeze just about 8 degrees colder than Fresh water, but it does freeze. I think in the film when people were walking it was more like "sea ice" that formed. We can pick this film apart, but that's part of what makes movies so much fun is that we don't have to, it's just entertainment. As for Climate change etc. I know I'll get some smack here but I truly believe that climate has always changed, temps go up and they go down and have since the beginning. All this date that most people are comparing is mainly data from the past hundred years. How old is this planet? Some believe in like 6-8 thousand years, others believe in millions of years, Either way that's a lot of years of missing data. Like I said I work in the arctic and some years are warmer than others and some are colder than others. I've seen it get 80 degrees F. in July and the windchill drop to -130 in January. I've heard Polar Bear counts have dropped, which is untrue, I work around a lot of Biologists and the population has actually increased quite a bit over the past 20 years, so I think a lot of this is like most things in science "theory". But, this movie is a very good entertaining film and yes the effects used were really cool.

Anonymous

A great movie full of hints about the cataclysmic past of this planet. The Berezovka mammoth estimated to be 44,000 years old was found flash frozen with undigested vegetation in its stomach. Estimates suggest it froze solid within 10 hours. Both of the hip bones of the massive animal were shattered where it had been slammed back on its haunches after being buried suddenly in mud. The Greenland ice core samples that the movie references show extreme temperature shifts in Earth's past that correlate to massive sea level changes during various periods in history. Here where I live in Oregon, the Kalapuya Indians tell of floods that filled the Willamette Valley 400 feet deep leaving only the tops the highest peaks as islands where they survived until the waters receded estimated around 11,000 to 13,000 years ago, which also lines up timeline-wise to the controversial Younger-Dryas Impact Theory. Folks familiar with the recently popular Tartaria theories will appreciate the nod to the beautiful, free-energy buildings of the Old World that still exist (we call them Gothic), vs the modern-day Brutalist architecture that has built up around it. I'm curious about why they chose the Gutenberg Bible specifically, and how it was represented - protected with such a tight grip while other books were burned and left behind. Referring possibly to the burning of the Great Library of Alexandria and the proliferation of Christianity? I don't know, but there seems to be a lot of "new" info coming out that point to past civilizations that makes a person wonder if movies like this are trying to communicate something.