In The Fifth Element the city of New York appears to have a perpetual layer of fog clinging to its lower levels. Presumably this fog reaches all the way to the ground, but I don't recall this being mentioned in the movie.
Is there any official information on just how deep this fog was? Was it just a few hundred feet, or was it several miles?
Answer
I'm not aware of any canonical answer to the question, since all we really have for that "universe" is the movie itself, and the movie doesn't say. Visually, there's a suggestion that the fog extends from the ground to the equivalent of skyscraper height, thus causing New Brooklyn to reach even higher to escape it.
Speculating, I would think that the fog at the lowest levels is probably downright toxic and that Corbin only descended far enough down as he needed to to hide.
If TFE had become more of a franchise, it might have been interesting to see some exploration of what, if, anything, lives at those lower levels and what part they play in the culture of that time. As it is, TFE stands alone, and all we can do is wonder!
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