
With Deep Impact, the first of the summer's Earth vs. Meteors movies arrives.
|
The first of this summer's dueling comet films, Leder's Deep Impact takes the high
road and offers up more tearful reunions than actual fireballs and more egregious,
sappy dialogue than you can shake a tsunami at. How does the world end? Not with
a bang, but with a sniffle. Leder brackets the earth's demise around three sets of
characters: Wood's 14-year-old Leo Beiderman, who first sights the offending celestial
object while out star-spotting with his high school astronomy club; Leoni's Jenny
Lerner, an ambitious MSNBC journalist with plenty of familial issues; and Duvall's
Spurgeon Tanner, the old-guard astronaut picked to head up a U.S.-Russian team sent
to intercept and possibly destroy the comet before it wipes out the summer blockbuster
season as we know it. Leder (and co-screenwriters Michael Tolkin and Bruce Joel Rubin)
move things along at a stately pace -- we're 30 minutes into the film before the world
is alerted to the impending crisis, but even then, there are still 10 months left
before impact. Deep Impact uses the time to set up a "what if?" scenario that includes
everything from the building of massive, underground bunkers that will preserve 200,000
of the best and brightest Americans (alongside an 800,000-strong lottery drawing)
to the media's reaction to the largest story of all time, and from young love blooming
in the face of overwhelming catastrophe to estranged families returning to the nest
as the Eastern seaboard is engulfed in a 2,000-mile-per-hour tidal wave that makes
James Cameron's Abyss wave look positively tedious. Still, this is a film about people
(James Horner's lush, painfully obvious score keeps reminding you of that), and as
it moves from one crisis to the next (i.e., Will Leo's newfound girlfriend make the
lottery? Will Jenny forgive her philandering father?), the sheer weight of all the
Melrose-esque storylines threatens to crush the forward momentum of the action saga
at the heart of the tale. By far and away the slowest-moving disaster film since
Irwin Allen's passing, Leder here trains her lens perhaps too closely on her characters
in lieu of the action. It doesn't help matters that despite the close, personal attention
to characterization, there's virtually no character development, or none that you
wouldn't find outside of a TV Movie of the Week. Somber and reflective, the film
seems leaden and moribund. Even Freeman's stilted, Jesse Jackson-esque speechifying
("lifeÖ will go on") is comically trite, evoking more chuckles than tears. So weighty,
so serious, so very deadly dull, Deep Impact is a panacea for all those who complained
about too many damn explosions in their summer action diet. Now you know: Be careful
what you wish for.
2.0 stars
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
Deep Impact 
Deep Impact 
Deep Impact 
Deep Impact 
Deep Impact 
Capsule Reviews
Deep Impact 
Other Films by Mimi Leder
The Peacemaker 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Sphere 
Star Trek: Insurrection 
Twelve Monkeys 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Mimi Leder at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|