

The Day After Tomorrow novelisation by Whitley Strieber from a screenplay by Roland Emmerich and Jeffrey Nachmanoff 01/07/2004 . Source: Geoff Willmetts 
pub:Gollancz. 249 page paperback. Price: £ 6.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-575-07603-8. Buy from Amazon US - Buy from Amazon UK nb: US titles may only be available from Amazon US, and UK titles from Amazon UK. check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk
Novelisations
are invariably written while the film is still in production, often
off an early version of the script or certainly before the final
edit that tweaks it for general release. As such, it’s always hard
to attribute blame for where faults lie in a story between scriptwriter
and noveliser and what’s seen on the screen.
Essentially, this is a disaster movie brought into
words. As I haven’t seen the film, my comments are solely based
on the written page. Paleoclimatologist expert and maverick Jack
Hall’s prediction on rapid global change happens just in time for
the reality to sink in and take place.

Early indications when the gulf stream vanishes and
the northern hemisphere enters a new ice age with blizzards and
all that ‘fun stuff’ of the end of the world as we know it. Into
this mix, we see what happens to a sampling of people as either
survivors or victims. Jack Hall’s son could be either as he and
his friends are trapped in New York and after briefing the President,
Hall and a couple members of his team go off to rescue them.
Scientifically, some of the things here can happen
from global warming, although this reviewer wonders if they’d be
quite so fast or wide-spread. We only see the effects across the
US and a little touches in places like the UK, even if it's centred
on rescuing royalty. Maybe they figure Russia will survive cos they’re
used to such weather changes or won’t be seeing the film there?
I find it odd that temperatures are noted in Fahrenheit
when Centigrade is the measure of choice in the scientific community.
Consider this as well: Over thirty foot of snow has fallen over
New York and yet ships are floating in this and don’t appear to
have said amount of snow on their decks and hidden in the snowy
depths. Such mistakes for the sake of making a film look good, not
to mention the optimistic ending that mankind would survive a real
sub-zero temperature drop is ludicrous.
If films about global warming are going to be turfed
out by Hollywood then one can only hope that others will be closer
to what would really happen and avoid such ‘humanisations’ or tacking
on conventional story to make you feel for characters. The film
went for visuals and the novelisation doesn’t have a film stills
insert to make you appreciate the effort if even that end of the
film.
From the noveliser’s perspective, maybe it’s me,
but I failed to get a decent visual of just how old Jack’s son was
or even of a tramp being what he was. Whether this was Strieber’s
fault or the script is debatable. You’re carried along with the
events in the story but when you analyse it afterwards, the use
of the idea is overall shallow when a lot more effort could have
been done to make a much stronger film to remind people that humans
are only caretakers of this planet and we’re making a damn mess
of doing it.
GF Willmetts
Correction (via Stephen): It's been pointed out by a kindly Nest reader that this book is the novel the film was actually based upon, rather than a piece of work-for-hire based on the movie screenplay. E.g. the book came first, not the film. I suspect Geoff would have been even more faint in his praise if he had realised this fact. 
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