Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Date: Fri 22-May-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Playing-Impact-Freeman-Wood
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING: "Deep Impact" Has Little To None
By Trey Paul Alexander III
There was an old Hollywood adage that any movie star worth their salt does at
least one western. These days it seems that the role of president of the
United States is the one to get on your resume. With the recent arrival of
Deep Impact , the first of two summer movies about a comet hurtling towards a
panic-stricken planet Earth (the other is Armageddon , due in July), Morgan
Freeman becomes the latest actor to step into the Oval Office. But the
President isn't the main character of interest in Deep Impact , and that's
part of the problem. Despite the impression the film made on the box office in
its opening weekend (its $41.2 million set a record for the highest
non-holiday May opening ever), it is quite fulfilling as an escapist, "What
if?"-style disaster thriller.
The President doesn't have to be the main character here, but someone does.
The closest Deep Impact comes to having a central character is an MSNBC news
reporter (Tea Leoni) who breaks the story about the comet: she thinks she's on
the trail of a Congressional scandal story and ends up with a doozy of a scoop
that lands her a plum position as anchorperson. Otherwise, the movie is an
assortment of individuals ranging from the kid who spotted the comet (Elijah
Wood) to the astronauts sent to stop the comet (including Robert Duvall)...
and that doesn't include the families of all the above (and believe me,
they're all in here!).
As a disaster flick, Deep Impact details the threat of a speeding asteroid the
size of New York City heading directly towards earth. The film gives us plenty
of doom-filled forecasts on what its collision with our plant would cause:
tidal waves, clouds of dust, extinction of all plant and animal life, etc.
Thus one is made to expect the usual diet of summer movie ingredients: a
cacophony of sights (explosions, computer-generated effects, overall mayhem)
and sounds (loud, souped-up sound effects and pounding, digital soundtrack).
Instead, we're treated to a cacophony of characters in which very few gain our
sympathy and none really draw us into the drama of a predicament that puts
nearly 250 million Americans in jeopardy.
One of the criticisms of Independence Day , the flick that gave us such
mesmerizing images of destruction as the Empire State Building and the White
House splintering into millions of pieces, was it was so caught up in the joy
of its mayhem that it barely gave pause to consider the death toll it was
racking up. The opposite seems true for Deep Impact . It is so mired in a
glum, depressing tone that it's difficult to cheer on the increasing heroic
efforts mustered by the characters within the film.
Also, as directed by Mimi Leder (an "er" veteran who also helmed The
Peacemaker ), Deep Impact is surprisingly uninvolving emotionally, despite a
plethora of weeping scenes and tear-filled good-byes. There is little
substance given to what is inherently an intriguing and engrossing situation.
When the President declares a national lottery to see who gets to share in the
country's limited shelter space (and automatically excludes individuals over a
certain age), we never see the anguish such a decision must wreak on this
person, nor do we get a real sense of the outcry that would ensue after such
an announcement were made.
Too bad. Some fine actors and an interesting premise are wasted in a
misguided, if decently executed, effort. It's a shame they couldn't do it all
over again. Wait! There's always Armageddon .
Deep Impact is rated PG-13. It contains a fair amount of profanity but little
violence. The finale, however bloodless, does contain intense scenes of
massive mayhem and devastation.