Decent movie but you would think they would have got the diabetes part right. It’s mostly common knowledge or a quick google search. Good grief…😂
@winsomefosterГодину тому
Tammy is a very wise woman she did right by letting Jack know what is happening
@lisaq1712Годину тому
A movie where no one talks
@winsomefosterГодину тому
Love how the people are preparing once they heard the news broadcast
@leepo0072 години тому
What’s up with the sheriffs lips
@winsomefoster2 години тому
The dog 🐕 sense danger so it barks
@frankblangeard88652 години тому
Astounding number of beautiful young blonde women in this video! They may have been cloned.
@paulstanley39892 години тому
So the film is actually called Clara, and this seems like an edited version of it.
@winsomefoster2 години тому
I love these disasters movies
@kloekleoenri57162 години тому
English subtitle please
@deenasmusicbox2 години тому
This is too weird for me…I don’t like gooey environments …I’m out.
@user-hz2lg1ld8g3 години тому
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@fr57ujf4 години тому
Natural catastrophe movies are fun, but they should at least try to be scientifically accurate. This one doesn't. The mesosphere is only 2% of the atmosphere. The ozone layer is also thin so they can't affect the temperature on the ground. Also, fast freezing prevents the formation of large ice crystals and cell damage, it doesn't cause it. And finally, the cell towers went out but the traffic cameras kept working? This flippancy about reality propagates scientific ignorance.
@lindahaydell55604 години тому
Oh no! Not the dog!
@KoolBell4AU4 години тому
By far and away the best movie I've seen in a very long time.
@bolt46945 годин тому
Dialogue too difficult to understand.
@TheMysticBohemian6 годин тому
This movie shows why you should always have a well stocked pantry and a second source of heat. Why didn't the wife and her parents close the doors in the room with the fire place and just heat that room? Hope lots of plumbers survived LOL.
@aaad23416 годин тому
no good very poor
@markmcmillan62546 годин тому
Yes, I know, it's a movie. However, The ozone layer absorbs 97% to 99% of the sun's incoming ultraviolet radiation (UV-B). This is fundamental to protecting life on Earth's surface from exposure to harmful levels of this radiation. An hole in this layer would cause extreme heat, not cold.
@redsoil58218 годин тому
How they can make movie so rediculouis. Actors from kindergarten. 1 minute was enough to go and have a good sleep.
@carlakliewer108 годин тому
And how much fossil fuel was used to keep people alive, using generators, and then to fix the problem? heheheehe
@mariusstratulat78268 годин тому
You must be a teacher to have such a beautiful girls around you. Hubble and James Webb telescopes connect many loneliness and singles hearts...we thank you NASA💘
@jitendrabiswas37478 годин тому
😮cia agent nice movie
@jennene47268 годин тому
Beautiful movie!@
@cdfdesantis6999 годин тому
A different take on saving the world from another ice age.
@sherryramirez63299 годин тому
should i enlighten them to the fact that climate change is not solely man made? its been happening since adam and eve left the garden. We are however , making it much worse.
@cA7up9 годин тому
Pretty good movie, sole survivor just fighting to find his family.. thx for the post👍
@davidnewland255610 годин тому
I hope if ever there is a disaster of some size I act better than people in disaster movies, I've never benn any where a mas of people wentino a ful ou t panic
@danielmolloy274710 годин тому
in Canada this movie is called Avengement. great movie!
@ginagigante637510 годин тому
Seriously? He goes out for medication?
@marefisher646211 годин тому
Too many unanswered questions and so dark at the end I couldn't see anything after the truck drove away. Very disappointed.
@snaidasnaida104512 годин тому
🇰🇪🇰🇪
@SydneyMoore99012 годин тому
good movie ... music is way too loud and drowns out the dialogue
@PaulAthol12 годин тому
Why is everyone blonde?
@CB1404912 годин тому
He must have been an ex convict in real life....his portrayal was very realistic
@loriengram278612 годин тому
Why use the Divergent series (Allegiant) thumbnail tho??
@timhaley345914 годин тому
This movie, Arctic Blast, as a portrayal, whereby the temperature drops so rapidly that its literally freezes people and animals in their tracks, is what happened some 4,300 years ago, in 2370 B.C.E., when the Global Deluge occurred, as seen at Genesis 6:17 in the Bible, freezing animals in their tracks. Before the Global Deluge, the earth was basically all one moderate temperature, even at the poles.(Note: palm spores have been found in Antarctica, whereby fossilized pollen and spores recovered from seabed sediment reveal that the Antarctic once supported palms and near-tropical forests and in 2019, through a microscope, University of Vermont scientist Andrew Christ looked at twigs and leaves from seabed sediment from almost a mile deep drilling in Greenland [that had been drilled by the US Army and stored in a freezer since 1966], showing that it was once covered with forests) Before the Flood, the earth was mostly land surface, with only a few seas or shallow bodies of water.(Gen 1:10) But above the earth was a hot thermal blanket of moisture that kept in the heat from the sun, like a warm blanket on a cold winter day, making for a comfortable temperature anywhere on the earth, even in Siberia, where it is completely covered in snow from November till February. There have been several examples of frozen mammoths found in Siberia, in the permafrost. One such well preserved mammoth, called the Beresovka mammoth (that was shipped back to St Petersburg, Russia, some 3,700 miles away from where it was located and was called this because of being found near the Beresovka River in Siberia) was found in 1900 with "green" buttercups in it's mouth and stomach, thus indicating that it was frozen while still grazing in a warm climate. Ivan T. Sanderson (1911-73 C.E.) a biologist and writer born in Edinburgh, Scotland, having a Masters of Arts degree in botany and ethnology, in the The Saturday Evening Post of January 16, 1960, observed concerning the Berezovka mammoth: "The list of animals that have been thawed out of this mess (in Siberia) would cover several pages........." "And there is where we get back to quick-freezing mammoths, for frozen-food experts have pointed out that to do this (or freeze an animal while alive, so that it is well preserved), starting with a healthy specimen, you would have to drop the temperature of the air surrounding it down to a point of well below minus - 150 degrees Fahrenheit (-101.1 degrees Celsius)", almost instantly. And this is exactly what happened when the Global Deluge occurred, and in which Genesis 7:11 said that "in the 600th year of Noah’s life, in the second month, on the 17th day of the month, on that day all the springs of the vast watery deep burst open and the floodgates of the heavens were opened." The massive watery vapor that surrounded the earth (perhaps in the thermosphere, where temperatures can be over 4,000 degrees F.) was now condensed and turned to sheets of rain, and in which the "floodwaters" at Genesis 6:17 literally can be rendered as "heavenly ocean" or in Hebrew., ham·mab·bul´, and remains to this day as our oceans. Temperatures plunged so rapidly at or near the poles (or within the Arctic Circle) animals became frozen almost instantly, that what was once a temperate zone where animals of all types thrived now suddenly became frozen.(Gen 7:6)
@martiansoon909215 годин тому
The problem with instant freezing is the mass of freezing material versus our bodily mass. And upper atmosphere is not that dense vs. lower one. While you may drop a very cold coin through your flesh, it has more mass than the air surrounding you. We even have some treatment for asthma at -100C temperatures... Air itself does not carry that much mass that could instantly freeze you. You will need a better carrier to do that. And more heat in the air carries more moisture aka. mass than colder one. (7% per 1C temp change). And these physical conditions makes the situation in this movie extrmely unlikely.
@copperpetals511318 годин тому
Very interesting, lone survival movie. Was definitely worth the watch.
@hartvtenfan.758119 годин тому
Jaldi se comment kr deta hu like milega😁😁😂😂
@johnryan445423 години тому
might have been a good movie had rhe main charactier not been so depressinglyi full of self-pity.
@The_Deaf_AussieДень тому
I'm lost for words. I' cried a little at the end. Absolutely beautiful film and story. This is what I crave for. To the people involved in making this film, from my heart, soul, and mind, I thank you.
@believeinpeaceДень тому
What an amazing , fantastic movie, thank you so very much!
@believeinpeaceДень тому
Thanks!
@Questor-ky2fvДень тому
Thanks for the movie. I'm a disaster movie addict and have seen this one a couple of times before. It's late at night, and I was about to have a bedtime snack when this movie showed up in my UKposts feed. I suddenly realized that I was in the mood for a disaster movie, even if I had seen it before, so I watched it again. I'm so addicted to disaster movies, I even watch foreign language ones, although I don't speak those languages. I've watched shows from around a dozen countries now. In spite of the language barrier, I am almost always able to follow the stories, and I like the challenge of doing so. Time to use the facilities and get ready for bed.🥱😴🛌🏻
@leegoldeneagle9003День тому
Good one thanks 👍👍👍👍👍
@wideawake5630День тому
Wow. What a hidden gem. Beautiful. Kudos. Thank you for this.