What is it with film critics?!? I first presented this post in 2021.
I strongly believe in science, especially when it comes to dealing with major issues such as global pandemics and climate change. But when I watch a movie, primarily in two of my favorite genres—disaster films and sci-fi—I’m doing it to escape from reality for a couple of hours, and I’m not particularly concerned with whether the scientific aspects of the story are entirely accurate. So I am rather pissed off when some of my favorite movies are panned by film critics and scientists alike for their “bad science.” Come on, folks, it is just a story! Our 3% brains should function enough to know the difference between truth and fiction.
WORST OF THE WORST?
The 2003 “science fiction/disaster film,” The Core, tops many lists of “bad science” films. Heck, in a poll taken of hundreds of scientists about bad sci-fi films, The Core was voted the worst. But did I care? Nope. I still watch it every couple of years, and I’m never bothered by the “bad science.” (See my post, “Guilty Pleasures: The Core.”) It has a solid cast (Hilary Swank, Aaron Eckhart, Stanley Tucci, Bruce Greenwood), and almost non-stop action. So what’s the problem?
Well, beginning with the improbable crash landing of the space shuttle in the Los Angeles River basin (I guess that’s “bad technology”), just about everything, according to the Goliath website article, “13 Sci-Fi Movies That Completely Ignore Science.” In the story the Earth’s core has stopped spinning, and the plan is to drill to the center of the planet and kick-start it by way of nuclear blasts, before our world becomes toast. They build a ship made of “unobtanium” (I’m not making that up!) to get there.
So, the bad science: there is no way the ship could maintain radio communication with the surface, and the pressure that far down would crush such a vessel like an eggshell. And that’s only the beginning. But I ask you: did you know those two things? I didn’t. And even if I had an inkling of those factoids, I would have written it off to the ship being constructed of that magical element, unobtanium. I just enjoyed the story.
LADY LIBERTY HAS FROSTBITE
A notch behind The Core for “bad science” is the 2004 “climate science fiction disaster film,” The Day After Tomorrow, starring Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, and Ian Holm, among others. The fact that it grossed over half a billion dollars (The Core was a box-office bomb) meant that a lot of folks were exposed to “bad science,” but somehow the Earth survived.
The Goliath article succinctly describes The Day After Tomorrow in this sentence: “Global warming basically bitch-slaps New York into a new ice age overnight.” It also stated that the film portrayed right-wing politicians dismissing climate change as a liberal hoax. At least they got that correct, ya think?
Sure, just about everything relevant to climate change is over the top in this film. One paleo-climatologist wrote that The Day After Tomorrow “…is to climate science as Frankenstein is to heart transplant surgery.” Ouch! Another reviewer called it “…a great movie and lousy science.” Yahoo Movies included it as one of its top-ten scientifically inaccurate films.
And so on, but you get the point. I could say more about this film, which is one of my absolute favorites. But it occurred to me that I have yet to write about it, so that will be rectified next week.
To reiterate what I said at the start of this post: with some movies you need to ignore the so-called “bad science” and just enjoy the story. That’s what I intend to keep on doing.
Hey, Mike. Just recently enjoyed a “science gone amok” movie called “Life.” Though heavily influenced by “Alien,” it was still enjoyable as a modern cautionary tale. Astronauts in a space station experimenting with soil samples from Mars. Worth seeing.
I’ll have to check it out, Dennis. Thanks!
Thanks, Mike, for reminding me of two “bad science” movies I enjoy. Sometime, we need to turn off our logical minds and simply have a little fun. I have watched both of these movies so often I can now come into either of them at any point and leave at any point and enjoy the time spent.
Plausible or not, I like seeing the space shuttle thundering over the sports stadium, and the look on the construction worker’s face when it comes to a stop behind him in the LA river. And having Stanley Tucci’s character get what he deserves as he’s coming to realize what a jerk he is, well, that’s fun too.
While others might disagree, the most annoying thing for me in either of these movies was the “cancer kid” subplot in “The Day After Tomorrow.” Aside from having more makeup on the poor boy than a China doll, they expect us to believe he will continue receiving his radiation and chemo treatments in a refugee camp in Mexico while the rest of the world is falling apart. Can you say “unobtanium?”
I can say “unobtanium,” Kate. I can also say who cares about bad science? Enjoy the movies!