Tomorrowland is a futuristic film about citizens who lack faith in the earth’s future [Review]

Published: 
By Melanie Leung
Listen to this article
By Melanie Leung |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

Hong Kong dazzled by temporary halo around the sun

Hong Kong’s ESF international school group eyes an average 5% fee hike

Hong Kong examination body to file police report on alleged online leak of exam paper

DSE 2024: Over 45,000 Hong Kong students take first citizenship and social development exam

SOTY 22/23: How Best Improvement winner went from bad pupil to future dentist

Female DSE candidates to receive HK$3,300 from Hong Kong’s Solina Chau

One of the best things a filmmaker can give their audience is a sense of wonder. A moment when you feel completely amazed and truly believe that anything is possible.

Brad Bird did just this in Tomorrowland, set in a futuristic place of the same name built by the world’s best scientists, engineers and artists. A hover train soars high above you, and there’s a swimming pool that defies gravity. It’s breathtaking to watch, and it’s pretty hard to beat the scene where the Eiffel Tower splits in half to launch a rocket. 

 Tomorrowland has shut itself off from the rest of the world. David Nix (Hugh Laurie), the man in charge, believes people on  Earth will destroy the planet, because nobody is actually doing anything to save it.  It’s up to disillusioned genius Frank Walker (George Clooney), the optimistic Casey Newton (Britt Robertson), and girl robot Athena (Raffey Cassidy) to bring back hope.

Every day we are bombarded with news about unrest all over the world, reports on how our environment is on the brink of collapsing … but we’re not working together to solve these problems. Humans are selfish, says Nix in a sobering monologue. It seems to be the sad truth, but there’s optimism in Tomorrowland. It welcomes those with a vision to collaborate in their efforts to build a brighter future.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment