In a grand science fiction movie, "Don't Look Up" uses a disaster-movie framework as a metaphor for a reality-based crisis, with a huge comet hurtling toward Earth as a surrogate for indifference to addressing climate change. Yet this star-studded, extremely provocative satire at times veers off course itself, partially undermining its admirable qualities with the broadness of its tone.
At its core, writer-director Adam McKay (who wrote
the script with journalist/activist David Sirota) delivers a very pointed
treatise on the dysfunctional state of current politics and media, in which
everyone is so myopic as to be unable to focus on an existential threat. The
title reflects the inevitable endpoint of that, with a bury-your-head-in-the-sand
approach to impending doom.
The window into that absurdity comes when astronomy
professor Randall Mindy (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his PhD. student Kate Dibiasky(Jennifer
Lawrence) discover the comet, whose trajectory will lead to a direct collision
with Earth in a little over six months.
Understandably alarmed, their findings quickly
reach the White House, where the president (Meryl Streep, poorly served by the
ridiculousness of her character) is too preoccupied with her endangered Supreme
Court pick to focus on what Randall describes as an extinction-level event. After
fruitless back and forth, she concludes that they'll "sit tight and
assess" the situation.
From there, "Don't Look Up" is off to the
races with a scathing indictment of everything about our media and political
ecosystem, from the happy-talk news show (anchored by Tyler Perry and Cate
Blanchett, standing out as especially self-absorbed TV anchors) to websites
preoccupied with traffic and social-media memes.
McKay and Sirota deliver a spot-on attack on how
easily distracted people (especially in media) are, fixating on Kate's hair and
clothes and ignoring the substance of her message.
The attempts to make that point, however, careen
wildly in different directions, from a tech billionaire (Mark Rylance, adopting
a not-of-this-world accent) who sees opportunities to cash in on the comet's
natural resources to the president's chief of staff (Jonah Hill), who can only
see the threat in terms of how it might impact the midterm elections.
Still, "Don't Look Up" keeps getting
sidetracked, thanks in part to piling up celebrities in minor roles (witness
Timothée Chalamet's belated entrance for no particular reason) and pursuing
subplots that drag out the tension on whether these flawed leaders will find
the fortitude and sobriety to take action.
DiCaprio (whose climate-change activism included
producing the documentary (” Ice on Fire”) and Lawrence are both very good, but
many of the other bold-faced names basically serve as flashy and somewhat
unnecessary window dressing.
McKay's "The Big Short" and” Vice” represent
his most obvious antecedents in tackling major institutions in a darkly satiric
way, but the film owes a debt to "Dr. Strangelove" as well, casting
its net wider with higher (indeed, the highest) stakes. The title certainly
does a lot of heavy lifting, capturing the prevailing response to inconvenient
news.
As was clearly its intention, "Don't Look
Up" uses satire to spur a conversation about potentially ignoring a crisis
until it's too late. It's a sobering message, but one that comes barreling
toward us through the lens of an uneven movie.
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