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Thursday, January 12, 2023

2012

Trying to save the world: Chiwetel Ejioforas Dr. Helmsey
2012 (2009). Director: Roland Emmerich.

Dr. Adrian Helmsley (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is a special officer of science and technology who is one of the key men dealing with a planet-wide crisis. Solar eruptions are causing the earth's crust to destabilize, causing massive earthquakes and tidal waves. Some feel this is the fulfillment of an ancient Mayan prophecy saying the world will end in 2012. All of the nations of the world have united (an unlikely development) in coming up with a plan to save as many people as possible, and anyone who endangers this very secret scheme is literally assassinated over Helmsley's objections. His chief opponent is a rather ruthless politician named Carl Anheuser (Oliver Platt). In the meantime a divorced writer named Jackson Curtis (John Cusack) tries to get his ex-wife, Kate (Amanda Peet), their two children, and Kate's boyfriend Gordon (Tom McCarthy) to one of the ships that will take the specially-chosen to safety. These turn out not to be spaceships (as in When Worlds Collide) but gargantuan arks. 

A tsunami wipes out India
2012
 obviously has a lot of material to cover, and while there are some problems with the human drama, the FX and disaster sequences are quite eye-popping and thrilling: Jackson and company driving pell mell to the airport as the city literally collapses all around them; the plane flight as California shatters and sinks into the ocean far below; the collapse of St. Peter's, destroying the faithful; a battleship smashing into the White House as Washington D.C. is engulfed in a massive, devastating tidal wave; a tsunami obliterating India along with the scientist who first figured out what was going on; and so on. 

John Cusack and Woody Harrelson
The real star of this movie is not John Cusack (whom I've always thought of as competent but strictly minor-league) but Chiwetel Ejiofor, who plays the real compassionate hero with strength and dignity. Cusack and the others seem more concerned with survival than with anything else -- not that we can necessarily blame them-- and in fact few characters display the effects of such a traumatic and catastrophic situation. Characters rarely express dismay and compassion over the deaths of millions (but then when heroic Gordon dies a terrible death, he is pretty much forgotten by the end of the movie, making the film's claims about how much we should all care for each other ring a bit hollow). 

Danny Glover as the president
Woody Harrelson offers a flavorful performance as a kind of weird doomsayer who turns out to have been right all along, and Danny Glover (of Switchback) is effective as the American president who elects to stay behind with his doomed constituents. George Segal and Blu Mankuma (playing Helmsley's father) score as two buddies who take one last cruise into oblivion, and Zlatko Buric is fine as the stereotypical Russian billionaire who, surprisingly, makes a supreme sacrifice for one of his little boys. Dean Semier's cinematography is first-rate. Roland Emmerich also directed Moonfall.

Verdict: Imperfect but exciting disaster flick with often stunning effects work. ***. 

2 comments:

  1. Great review, Bill, and I totally agree: Though flawed, this movie is exciting and watchable. Love great actors in all-star-cast disaster films!!
    -Chris

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  2. When they work well, as this one did, and have eye-popping visuals, it's time to get out the popcorn!

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