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Deep Impact
How can we survive? It sounds familiar because at roughly the same time another "hurtling asteroid" disaster movie came out, Armageddon. While the latter was the more successful film, I'm not sure it was the better one. Deep Impact is not a great movie. Neither of the two movies is particularly good. Of the two, Armageddon seems to have had a bigger budget. But I think Deep Impact may be the more interesting. While not as action packed or quickly paced, it takes an approach that's a bit different than the usual disaster film. It's emphasis is placed more on the people than the event. Rather than focusing on how the characters will prevent the catastrophe and save the world, it focuses more on how or if they will survive. It's fatalistic, in a sense.
Odd material for a disaster flick. The character who is dealing with preventing the event is played by Robert Duvall. Normally this would be the heroic action role. In Deep Impact however, Duvall is the senior astronaut (meaning older) sent as part of a team to stop the asteroid. While he and the other astronauts are heroic, it is nothing like the rousing way someone like a Tom Cruise or Bruce Willis character would be. Duvall and the others are very human, and their stories are more centred on who they are than on what they do. (This is true of almost every character in the film.)
It is a very odd action movie in this sense. It cares less about how strong its characters are than on how vulnerable. In fact, its the emphasis on their vulnerabilities that informs the heroism of their actions. Admirable as all this is, however, it doesn't really make for a great action film, or any other kind. Because it's essentially an action-disaster movie, its structured in a way that doesn't explore the characters very deeply. If it did, it would be another kind of film. But because it views its characters the way it does, it doesn't really have the adrenaline quality of good, fast-paced action films, or the quick intercutting between multiple (and shallow) storylines. So it ends up being neither a character study nor an action film. It gets lost between what the director finds interesting (characters) and what the genre finds interesting (action).
I like and admire the movie for this reason, but I also think it needs a structure very different than that of action movies to succeed. Still, it makes for an interesting film. You don't often see a female lead in a movie like this or, if you do, she's a woman playing what is essentially a male role (like Sigourney Weaver is Alien). You don't often see a film with a female lead who has no romantic relationship - not even an allusion to one. (At least, I can't recall any.) And you don't often see a film like this give you the ultimate consequences (Téa Leoni's storyline) so the inevitable happy ending is equivocal, conditioned by the endings of its principal characters. This is why I like this film, though I can't argue its is especially good. the DVD This is a relatively older DVD so, while its an absence of dirt, scratches etc., the image has a softer quality compared to more recent DVDs. It's colour also seems at times over-saturated - a bit blotchy. The sound, on the other hand, is quite good. As for special features, there ain't any (unless you call a teaser and a trailer "special," which I don't). On the other hand, the disc was fairly inexpensive when I bought it. So all in all it's not a bad deal, though I kept wishing the image was crisper. © 2003 Piddleville Inc. |
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