The new Netflix movie, ‘Don’t Look Up’, an apocalyptic black comedy that uses the narrative of a huge meteor heading toward Earth as an allegory for climate change, seemingly has a lot going for it.
For instance, the movie, which premiered on the streaming service on December 24, boasts an impressive cast, as Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence star with Cate Blanchett, Meryl Streep, Jonah Hill, Mark Rylance, and Timothee Chalamet in supporting roles.
In addition, the movie is written and directed by Adam McKay, who has shown himself, most notably with his stellar film ‘The Big Short’, to be a clever and ambitious filmmaker.
Despite bursting at the seams with comedic potential and its bevy of formidable assets, the laughs of ‘Don’t Look Up’ unfortunately never blossom, but instead die on the vine.
The film opens with Kate Dibiasky (Jennifer Lawrence), a PhD candidate at Michigan State, discovering a mammoth comet as she does research at an observatory.
Her professor, Dr. Mindy (Leonardo DiCaprio), does the calculations and realizes that the comet is heading toward Earth and will arrive and destroy all life on the planet, in roughly six months.
From there, Dr. Mindy and Dibiasky try and warn humanity but constantly run up against the worst of mankind, from the vapid, vacuous, and venal President Orlean (Meryl Streep) to the sociopathic tech guru Peter Ishwell (Mark Rylance) and everyone in between trying to thwart them and subvert the truth.
Part of the problem with ‘Don’t Look Up’ is that it intends to be an ambitious satirical social commentary about media, big tech, social media, celebrity culture, and our politics, but how do you successfully satirize things that are already so absurd as to be parodies of themselves?