Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe sky is literally falling as one of the nation's leading astronomers, Madison Kelsey, believes she is tracking a huge rogue asteroid rocketing toward earth.The sky is literally falling as one of the nation's leading astronomers, Madison Kelsey, believes she is tracking a huge rogue asteroid rocketing toward earth.The sky is literally falling as one of the nation's leading astronomers, Madison Kelsey, believes she is tracking a huge rogue asteroid rocketing toward earth.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Doron Bell
- Guard Stevens
- (as Doron Gell)
Terri Anne Welyki
- Swim Beauty #1
- (as Terri-Anne Welyki)
Holly Eglinton
- Swim Beauty #2
- (as Holly Eglington)
Avis à la une
Dr. Madison Taylor (Rae Dawn Chong) at Near Earth Asteroid Tracking Society has discovered a hidden asteroid on course to destroy the world in a day's time. General Dutton (Michael Moriarty) at the US government's Project Safe Skies dismisses her. Her only hope is former air force Major Richard Donovan (Antonio Sabato Jr.) and an asteroid-destroying laser which might be no more than a government boondoggle.
This is Deep Impact without the explosive CGI or the reasonable characters. I like the idea of a government boondoggle and secret weapon. Everything else is less compelling and less well-written. The miniature budget does limit the production. I got bored with Chong and Sabato in a long back and forth. This is cheap TV with one interesting idea among a sea of weak writing and production.
This is Deep Impact without the explosive CGI or the reasonable characters. I like the idea of a government boondoggle and secret weapon. Everything else is less compelling and less well-written. The miniature budget does limit the production. I got bored with Chong and Sabato in a long back and forth. This is cheap TV with one interesting idea among a sea of weak writing and production.
On the surface, this strikes me as an oddly constructed movie. It's a stock sci-fi thriller whose hero and his friend/sidekick happen to be lovers. This fact is brought out in two bedroom scenes and is mentioned very briefly in a couple of other lines of dialog. But other than these brief, isolated moments it is never mentioned, never referred to, and it has absolutely no bearing whatever on the story as our hero battles to save the world from destruction. A standard subplot in this kind of action film is a romantic triangle of some sort, but these two lovers are in league with an extremely attractive computer jock and they never even notice him. Someday there may come a time when an action hero can be gay just because he is and it would not have any impact on the story, but we're not there yet. I'd bet good money that this movie was originally made as a standard thriller, that none of the cable services bought it, and that turning the hero gay was an afterthought accomplished by an additional day or two of shooting new footage in order to open up the gay cable network market. Whether or not the hero is in love with his buddy, the film is a decent low-budget thriller. You can see worse on the Sci-Fi Network any night of the week. Michael Moriarity is clearly having great fun as the scenery-chewing military villain and the gay moments give the producers a chance to get Antonio Sabato naked, which is never a bad thing. In short, it's definitely an enjoyable movie - just don't expect any dramatic revelations about gay action heroes.
The high point --perhaps the only point-- of this TV flick is the leisurely and soft-core lovemaking scene between Antonio Sabato and Michael Boisvert and their subsequent beefcake shots. (Sabato plays a similar scene in "Testosterone"; maybe he's carving out a little niche for himself!) As for the rest...it's the usual anti-military paranoia combined with pacifist self-righteousness of too many movies like this. I checked and found that the writer is Canadian, so that explains that! Rae Dawn Chong's character is beyond annoying. The Evil General is such a tired cartoon cliché. The pacing is bizarre. It's like an octopus on land. I got quickly to the point where I didn't really care if the "Deadly Skies" turned out to be deadly or not...
I see a lot of comments about the different versions of this movie, but nobody seems to mention the thing that most concerned me about this tolerable disaster film (nearly all these stories about giant asteroids menacing the earth have the same plot, more or less, but I tuned in anyway to see Rae Dawn Chong as the heroic scientist). Watching Michael Moriarty in his role as the general was distracting because he seemed to be having problems playing his part that had nothing to do with the script or the direction. He was walking with a stick, and in the dialogue scenes he seemed to stare straight ahead and deliver his lines with little or no animation. Was he ill? Had he had a stroke?
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAllegedly, the original film included no gay subplot or characters. However, when the production ran out of money, the only company willing to fund completion was Here TV, a cable gay network, on the condition that it become a gay-themed film. To the lead actors' surprise their characters were now gay and the film would include two love scenes.
The director re-cut the film without the gay scenes and released it on DVD overseas as "Force of Impact."
- GaffesA note is delivered in a pizza box, with the written warning 'they're listening.' Guy proceeds to read it aloud. The guy reading it aloud is narration from the character that delivered the pizza. Neither character in the scene is reading the note out loud, they're reading to themselves, the narration is delivered from off screen.
- Versions alternativesThe U.K region 2 dvd titled Ultimate Limit cuts the gay love scene between Antonio Sabato Jr. and Michael Boisvert
- ConnexionsReferences Rambo (1982)
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