Deep Impact Movie Review
Deep Impact Review

"Deep Impact" Overview

Rating: PG
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Mimi LederProducer : David Brown,Richard Zanuck
Screenwiter : Bruce Joel Rubin,Michael Tolkin
Starring : Robert Duvall,Téa Leoni,Elijah Wood,Vanessa Redgrave,Morgan Freeman,Maximilian Schell,James Cromwell,Ron Eldard,Jon Favreau,Laura Innes,Mary McCormack
I admit it. I’m a sap for the touchy-feely business sometimes.
Deep Impact makes no apologies for being a sob-fest. I mean, how else do you
smash a comet into the earth without killing off a few hundred million people,
and breaking a few hearts in the process? As the first disaster-from-space
film of the year, Deep Impact sets the bar at an interesting level. It’s not
an action film, although it has action elements. It’s not a thriller, although
suspense is in the mix. It’s more a drama than anything else, the main story
lines being a reporter (Téa Leoni) estranged from her father, a young
astronomer (Wood) who finds he can’t abandon his girlfriend, and a codgery
astronaut (Robert Duvall) who gains acceptance among a younger crew.
Against the backdrop of a giant comet en route to the planet, it’s a surprise
that there are so many lulls in the story where there’s little to do but check
your watch. Still, ER veteran Mimi Leder directs the action with sufficient
flair to keep you interested and keep those Kleenex in action.
I’m not immune. Once you get past the urge to dismiss the whole shebang as an
unlikely bit of Hollywood trickery, there are so many sacrifices in the film
from so many characters... even a cynic like me can get a bit teary-eyed.
Overall, it’s a refreshing change of pace from the big budget extravangzas that
Tinseltown regularly trots out.
The new special collector's edition DVD includes a commentary track from Leder
and her special effects guy, plus three short featurettes about the making of
the film. The "creating the perfect traffic jam" is an amazingly instructive
vignette on parking 2,100 non-CGI automobiles.
More impact than a kick in the pants!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





