Don't Look Up (2021) Poster

(2021)

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7/10
Someone made a meme movie out of the US
joaosantos2028 December 2021
And boy is it funny, because it's true. But it's also sad because it's true.

Its got an idiot president, idiot media, idiot citizens and some very few smart people that must fell like they ended up in the planet of the apes. Its really accurate, scary accurate.
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7/10
Yes, this is Earth and humanity now
gy-att25 December 2021
I am pretty sure once we go down we are going to go down like this. The way nowadays social media Earth is going on now and the way we handle Covid this is exactly how we are going to finish our lives on this planet. This is not a fiction, this is a documentary.
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8/10
Political satire at its best.
Sleepin_Dragon24 December 2021
Spoiler free review.

I wasn't exactly gripped by the plot, but the cast, yes please, this film boasts one impressive line up.

I thoroughly enjoyed it, it managed to mix up subtlety with brashness incredibly well, it pokes fun at modern cultures, celebrity and the absurdities of social media.

I spoke to a few people that found it rather funny, I can't say I was amused, but I certainly was entertained. The absurdity amused me, I pondered if some events would happen if the world did actually face disaster. The rich getting richer in the face of disaster.....

Merryl Street as always was first class, but for me the standout had to be Di Caprio, he was terrific throughout, that scene where he blows his top, incredible.

Thoroughly enjoyable, 8/10.
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7/10
Hits a Little Too Close to Home
witster1825 December 2021
"Don't Look Up" will divide audiences for a myriad of reasons, but personally, I found this to be a brilliant satire about the state of growing misinformation and the dangerous hypocrisies of this digital age.

It's chock full of unpleasant characters and unpleasant situations, and viewers need to go-into all of it with a coarse grain of salt. I suspect many detractors of the film might be those easily persuaded by misinformation, and those, who themselves, like to ignore science and tend-to grasp onto these social life-jackets - instead of heeding the poignant and important meaning of the film - they will focus on all the negatives.

The film is completely absurd, and it's supposed to be. The style, cast and absurdity just work together harmoniously. Everything about this ridiculous movie is probably not as far removed from reality as one might think. It is over-stylized, no doubt, but it's Running Man, Hunger Games, Total Recall disinformation-vibe rings true in today's world, and far sooner than many suspected. It's like Miracle Mile, Back to the Future 2, Deep Impact and This is the End, had a coma baby birthed-in the somber realities and fact-checks of Bright Lights Big City.

It's not perfect. The film would have benefitted from more family development, and a better soundtrack, but any low scores can be dismissed as those who took political offense and missed the point. Cast attacks can be dismissed as well - it's comedy not a drama. Don't expect The Color Purple or Bridges of Madison County here.

Good movie. Will surely find a top 25 spot for 2021. Love the extended credits. The film is clever and, imo, an important film.
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9/10
A really good movie, yet painful to watch
siderite1 January 2022
I understand why some people hate this film. It feels real in its entirety, it shows you how stupid and insignificant we are and it is extremely apropos today. Also, it was marketed as a comedy, when in fact is a dramatic film that is humorous only in its accurate portrayal of humanity. Then again some people try to "tell you" what it is about and, while it is certainly metaphoric, it isn't about anything more specific than ourselves. It is a mirror. Some people don't like what they see in it.

I found it an almost perfect film, with some deliciously carefully crafted moments and great acting. At first I thought the comedic side was actually too much and wished that someone like Steven Soderbergh made the movie instead, but as I was watching it I started to appreciate how methodical the approach was and now I believe Adam McKay was the right man for the job. I enjoyed the overall plot, I liked the characters and how things were presented, but I loved the little things like, for example, the only scene where Europe is mentioned, as a short scene of a news item when they say they are going to convene and find their own solution, resulting in absolutely nothing. I am European and sad to say it struck home. Or the meal scene at the end, which is both emotional, focusing and reminding us how even that option can be taken away by something as small as a virus.

Annoyingly, in these days movies from the U. S. are becoming more and more of "a color". They are not telling a story, but are taking a side. They are either democrat or republican, conservative or liberal, blue or red, flyover or coast. Don't Look Up is not a big offender, but the language and presentation was clearly on the "coast" side. Thus, it will be probably appreciated by people who already saw the world this way and ignored or at best maligned by the people on the other side. And it's a pity, because this film is meant to bring us together as a civilization and not keep us divided. I feel like it could have done a better job in that direction.

There was one detail that I think McKay got completely wrong. There is no chance in hell the president of the United States would make a public speech and use metric units like kilometers in it. If it weren't for that, I would have rated this 10 stars. Jokes aside, this is a movie you have to watch.
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22,740 years later.
TxMike1 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
This is a great movie, with an all-star cast. A bit longer than I like but at the same time I cannot think of any wasted scenes. If anyone doesn't understand my "22,740 years later" comment then you didn't watch the two scenes embedded after the credits start to roll.

The reality of our world today is, a widespread distrust of Science in many quarters. Some reject the idea that the Earth is a sphere. Many believe the Earth and the Heavens are only a few thousand years old. Some don't believe Neil Armstrong and other astronauts landed on the moon. Many believe vaccines are a hoax to control people. Many reject the idea of climate change and human negative impacts on our world.

With that reality as a backdrop, this movie was created. Part of it is a parody of the reliance on social media and the rapid way misinformation can spread. The big crisis here is two Michigan astronomers, one a professor and the other a PhD student, discover a large (5 to 9 km diameter) asteroid or comet and when they calculate the path find that it will, at a 99.72% certainty, impact the Earth in a little over six months. An extinction event.

These earnest scientists expect the US POTUS and the rest of the world to pay attention, take it seriously, and quickly start a mission to deflect the object so it will miss Earth. But they encounter just the opposite. Elections are coming up in three weeks, no need to worry the voters. And other, superficial issues.

The name of the movie derives from one group starting the slogan, to counteract misinformation, "Just look up." The skeptics counter with, "Don't look up." But when everyone does then the truth comes out.

The only sad thing about the movie is that there is too much truth to it. Viewed at home, streaming.
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6/10
Well-placed jabs at the society and world today...
paul_haakonsen29 December 2021
Initially then I wasn't really overly hooked on watching the 2021 movie "Don't Look Up" since I wasn't really won over by the movie's synopsis. Granted, I hadn't checked out the movie's trailer, so I wasn't really sure what I would be in for here. But as friends started to praise the movie, I opted to sit down and watch it.

Now, one friend said that "Don't Look Up" was a masterpiece. Well, I wouldn't go as far as to calling it a masterpiece. Sure, "Don't Look Up" was a watchable movie, and writers Adam McKay and David Sirota definitely had some good jabs at the crazy world we live in today, with the likes of a crazy president, everything being on social media, people being concerned about riches even when facing extinction and such. I found the movie to be watchable and enjoyable, sure, but it wasn't a masterpiece, nor will it become a classic movie for me.

The comedy used in "Don't Look Up", as written by Adam McKay and David Sirota wasn't really something that had me laughing. Sure, I could see the jabs at society and the ridiculing of certain aspects of the society and world we live in today, but it didn't make me laugh.

Running at 2 hours and 18 minutes, the movie feels a bit long, to be bluntly honest.

What works for "Don't Look Up" is the cast, as it has a handful of great names on the list, with the likes of Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence, Meryl Streep, Cate Blanchett, and so forth.

There is a good production value to the movie, and you are definitely in good hands throughout the course of the movie, in every aspects actually, from visual CGI effects, to storytelling, to camera work, acting performances, etc.

Sadly, then I wouldn't exactly say that "Don't Look Up" is a movie that sustains more than a single viewing, as the contents to the storyline just doesn't really seem solid enough for more than a single viewing. So I highly doubt that I will ever return to watch director Adam McKay's 2021 movie again.

My rating of "Don't Look Up" lands on a six out of ten stars.
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8/10
Funny and chillingly accurate and plausible
grantss28 December 2021
Two astronomers discover a massive comet heading towards Earth. The comet will wipe out mankind in six months' time if nothing is done about it. They manage to gain an audience with the US President, land on TV talk shows and have their story printed in the media but everyone seems to have other priorities.

On the surface a disaster movie in the vein of Armageddon or Deep Impact. However, it is not just that and is far better than that.

Written and directed by Adam McKay (The Big Short, Vice, The Other Guys, Anchorman), Don't Look Up is a funny, accurate examination of the warped priorities and agendas of the people who have the largest control over our lives. Politicians care more about how something will impact their polling numbers than saving mankind, the media cares more about finding something slanderous on a person than alerting people to imminent destruction, talk shows care more about sensationalism, the personal lives of vapid pop stars and on putting on a happy face than on news that actually matters to people, corporate opportunists who use even a planet-destroying disaster to make a profit and in so doing increase the danger (and how the politicians fall in line behind them).

It is all quite chillingly accurate and plausible: from experience you can relate to the misguided, self-absorbed agendas of these institutions and individuals and the powerlessness and irritation you feel in having to deal with them and their decisions.

It is so close to home that it sometimes makes the film irritating to watch: you'd rather not be reminded how incompetent, superficial, self-servicing and nefarious the government, media etc are, how they screw up your life on a regular basis and how likely it is that they will eventually wipe out mankind.

All this makes for a film that is one part hilariously funny and another part scarily serious and confronting. Unlike some other movies I did not find this mix of comedy and drama jarring. In fact, the humour helps point out the absurdity of it all.

By the way, keep watching until the very end. There's two scenes woven into/after the credits that are worth sticking around for.
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6/10
A great drama with a spice of comedy on the side
darapjohnson21 October 2022
A movie that about shows what would happen and how humanity would react if a huge meteor was threatening to destroy the Earth and humanity (the comedy aside). Both a funny but also tragic movie towards the end. It hits deeper considering how realistic this was (taking away the small unrealistic parts). I enjoyed this but in my personal opinion, they could've removed the comedy and just made it full on drama and it would've hit much harder than it did with the comedy.

The cast was great and the plot was intriguing. I, like many, do not get the hate for this movie at all. I personally think it was enjoyable. But I guess everyone just has their own opinions at the end of the day and that's fair but i would've rated it higher if they removed the comedy completely.
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8/10
We really did have everything
nogodnomasters3 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This seems like a film about a comet headed to earth to destroy the planet. It is really a satire about society. It spoofs the social media and how politics and truth deniers argue about facts while killing the planet. If you look up into the sky, you will see the comet. The title in the mantra of those who believe the comet is a conspiracy. Tech industry leaders and talk show hosts are also satirized. It would be really funny if not so true.

Guide: f-word. Brief sex and nudity.
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6/10
A decent attempt at satire but feels a bit bloated
varun-4472425 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The film is a decent attempt at political satire on the crazy world we currently live in but as a film it drags too much in middle. Scenes like the Ariana Grande concert and the whole storyline with DiCaprios affair with blanchett are not really needed and dont add much to the story. I believe a 1 hr 40 film could have easily sufficed here to tell a more focused story.

The film is also a bit of a mess tonally, the comedy isnt funny enough to warrant being in a film about a world ending threat. The presence of the sub par comedy just makes the big "sad" ending have very little impact when it lands as the film never takes itself seriously enough. McKay should have focused less on trying to be witty and satirical and more on creating a focused narrative with characters we can care about.
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8/10
Disturbingly appropriate to the world today
summergrant28 December 2021
Leonardo DiCaprio - flawless and channelling his inner Leonard Hofstadter.

Jennifer Lawrence - also flawless. Didn't realise how much I missed watching her in films.

Everyone else - all amazing, all did a brilliant job.

The writing was spot on, though the theme was pretty dark the comedic moments came in at the right time. There were some parts where it dragged a little but it soon picked back up. There were nice little nuances throughout that captured each character.

With such a big cast of absolute talent it felt like there was a danger the film wouldn't find the balance for all their stories, but it does and just shows the skill of the director and editors.

A poignant look at what our reactions might be to such a disaster, indeed what our reactions are right now when faced with a choice between believing scientific facts and verbal garbage from political blowhards and tech giant psychos who have no idea what they're doing.

Satire at its best.

Once the credits hit make sure you hang around. There's a clip near the start of them and one right at the end.
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7/10
All of the movie to one side, this three dialogue alone to one side
NINJA_1129 December 2022
The most beautiful, most important and accurate sentence that I have heard so far among all the movies I have seen:

Dr. Oglethorpe (Teddy) : "And is this nanotech work peer-reviewed?"

Dr. Randall Mindy : "Well, I haven't reviewed the data, but it's been modeled."

Kate Dibiasky : "Has any of this been peer-reviewed?"

Dr. Randall Mindy : "Nope"

PS : If our people can only understand the meaning of this sentence, the amount of belief in superstitions and pseudoscience in our society will decrease drastically.

Note: Until people are familiar with the way the human brain works, fallacies, scientific method and critical thinking, we should not hope to destroy stupidity in society.
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2/10
Trashy Oscar Fluff
Leonickove15 February 2022
How on earth this got nominated, i have no clue..

First of all, it is tediously long to get though at 2 hour 20 minutes of run time.

Then it begins with borderline amusement but then you keep hoping there is something interesting that might happen next but then it just goes on and on from one unfunny scene to another and you hope it ends as soon as possible.

How is this satire even considered funny?

And Jonah Hill is annoying as all hell.
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6/10
a reality check
saru20206 November 2022
A movie that almost perfectly states the reality of the current world with loads of stupidity that we all live in.

If there comes a doomsday for real, humans would also/still become extinct just like how dinosaurs did and that's a shame for the human intelligence that has evolved for so many centuries.

This film is more like a reality check of the current world we live in.

His casual act DiCaprio makes him stand out from other actors' performances.

But, the film is not that much interesting and doesn't keep you hooked till the end & all, that's the problem with it.

Yet, there could've been a lot of improvements done with some twists & turns with a better screenplay and the movie might've come out decently enough.

Overall, it's a one-time watch that gives you a reality check.
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10/10
honestly...
ops-5253525 December 2021
Spoken by a grumpy old man sitting on the edge of the grave, this was some of the awesomest hilarious cataclysmic armagheddonishly knitwoven colash of witt and comedy , and frustratingly hitting the truth with a reflectortelescopicaly astrosurgeons inscicion of dead and meat politicians, that on daily basis never tells much truth...

neither does this film, and thank god for that because its just a brilliant build up without the god and glory precursors that has ridden us in every movie made over the topic earth no more...

in fact its a ''if i live to tell'' story that has given us a new face of leonardo dicaprio, his canonade in the tv-studio is just marvelous and really reaching out for an oscar, as well as ms jennifer, they are really doing the chariots of fire in this forever and ever ending bang.

So therefore, tired and sleep fatigued after a 10 hour nightshift at the nursing home on a stomatomata stummy full of porkrib x-mas dinner before leaving the presents and my pleasants, on a high that is so high , its just a spasmodic recommend.
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7/10
Is Science Science Fiction?
whernstadt24 December 2021
As a person who attended a scientific college, this started to look interesting, but when elected officials got involved went south. Acting excellent and better than similar sci-fi film of 30 years ago, the failings of officials is not very humorous these days. Part funny, part scary but worth a Netflix watch.
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8/10
a look in the mirror
ferguson-68 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Greetings again from the darkness. What happens if Chicken Little was right, and the sky really is falling? Writer-director, and Oscar winner, Adam McKay proved with THE BIG SHORT (2015) and VICE (2018) what occurs when he turns his unique commentary towards a target. Two questions remain. Is political or social satire just too easy these days? Has insanity permeated our globe to the degree that pointing out the lunacy has become ho-hum? McKay wrote the script from journalist David Sirota's story, and it's even more extreme than his previous work, and likely meant as a wake-up call to all of us.

Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence stars as Kate Dibiasky, a student (with a Carl Sagan figurine on her desk) who discovers a large comet speeding towards earth. Oscar winner Leonardo DiCaprio stars as her professor, Dr. Randall Mindy, and we can see on his face what his calculations mean. The two head to Washington DC to inform the President of their findings. President Orlean (a nod for movie buffs) is played by Oscar winner Meryl Streep, and her Chief of Staff is Jonah Hill, who also happens to be her son. President Orlean is too concerned about her slipping rating in popularity polls to pay much heed to the scientists, opening the way for Jonah Hill to be the most Jonah Hill he's ever been. It's an outrageous scene ... yet ... it feels all too possible.

Dibiasky and Mindy are so shocked and frustrated at the blow-off, they decide to take the story to the media. Appearing on the vacuous and highly-rated morning talk show, "The Rip", they are guided to "Keep it light. Keep it fun" while on the air with the entirely too-upbeat co-hosts played by Cate Blanchett and Tyler Perry. At this point, Dibiasky is unable to control her frustration. This results in her becoming a social media meme, while Dr. Mindy becomes the "hot" astronomer - labeled an AILF. This is an obvious take on Dr. Fauci's popularity during the pandemic. Other opportunities for Mindy includes getting closer with Blanchett's talk show host, despite his wife (Melanie Lynskey) taking care of the home front.

Obviously most of these characters are a bit cartoonish, but that's the point. Once the media pressures the President into taking action, an ARMAGEDDON type mission is planned, only to be scratched at the last moment and replaced by a more profitable option. Peter Isherwell (Oscar winner Mark Rylance as a blend of Steve Jobs and Elon Musk) is a tech billionaire and President Orlean supporter, and his plan involves mining the meteor for precious metals while also saving the planet.

Although Dibiasky has dropped out of the 'spread the word' campaign, she's still tracking the approaching asteroid via her diet app as she hangs with a philosophical stoner played by Timothy Chalamet. It started as 6 months and 14 days, and we only get periodic updates on how much time remains. Instead, the focus is on the bumbling antics of those involved and the zany reactions of the general public. We even get President Orlean with a speech from the deck of a battleship in yet another dig at past politicians. Pop star Arianna Grande shifts her celebrity support from manatees to a hit duet with Kid Cudi entitled "Just Look Up", while Himesh Patel plays an opportunistic reporter-boyfriend. Also, Rob Morgan is excellent in his role as supportive scientist Dr. Oglethorpe, and Ron Perelman goes a bit off the rails as the pilot on the first mission.

It's an incredible cast and what a joy to see DiCaprio in a role so far removed from his usual characters. He even gets a NETWORK scene here, and overall he makes us understand how serious the science is, and how easily someone can go off track. Jennifer Lawrence gets the film's best recurring gag, while Jonah Hill fits right in as the impetuous benefactor of nepotism. With the abundance of tooth veneers flashed by a multitude of characters, we can assume the film's dental budget was sky high.

McKay uses the oncoming meteor as a stand-in for the global warming issue, and his tendency to lean heavily left does shine through. However, it's crucial to note that no one, no thing, no organization, and no affiliation is safe during this one. Whereas ARMAGEDDON took pride and patriotism of blue collar folks and turned them into heroes, McKay examines the other side which is all about feelings, discussions, social media, and popularity. He blends Kubrick's DR STRANGELOVE with Judge's IDIOCRACY (which has proven much too accurate), and delivers a disaster movie that uses an asteroid to point out the real danger ... which is ourselves. Is it too much? Too silly? Too angry? Too long? Simply playing to the home crowd? It's likely to be criticized for not being smart enough or clever enough, but seriously, have you looked around at society lately? McKay delivers loads of comedy here, and maybe by laughing at ourselves, we can find a way to improve things. His final scene is more grounded than the rest of the film, and quite touching on its own. Stay tuned for the credit scenes.

Opening in theaters on December 10, 2021 and streaming on Netflix beginning December 24, 2021.
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6/10
Brevity is the soul of wit
gsmalz50427 October 2022
Someone once said and it's a lesson this movie should have taken to heart. It's a black comedy that doesn't go dark enough and it's just soooooooooo loooooooooong. I'm a firm believer that for a comedy film to hit it needs to compact-anything over 90 minutes is too long and you're straying into dramedy territory. And you can't be too earnest which I think this film also suffers from-there's a gravity lurking below each performance and it's distracting. Great cast though and appreciate the attempt to draw attention the greenhouse effect as it's a serious issue-albeit one we should have addressed decades ago.
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10/10
Quality of the film is entirely irrelevant
gowertours26 December 2021
Excellent, gripping, watchable, boring or rubbish. All of the above apply depending on your perspective. None of them matter.

We not watching this movie, we're all IN IT!!

Whether it's a comet or climate change or nuclear war or anything else, we're all being led to the edge of the cliff, by entrenched invested elites in every country in the world whose wild versions of the truth are multiplied to the power of n by individuals equally invested in their own micro beliefs on social media pedalling at best fake information and at worst outlandish conspiracies.

The rest of the sane world which is probably the vast majority feels powerless to respond as we walk inexorably towards that cliff led by our elites and with the escape route to the rear blocked by the insanity of the keyboard warriors on social media.

56% on rotten tomatoes. Wake up and smell the coffee. It's a no brainer 100% because it's the subject of the movie that's all important.

Forget best actor, Director, cgi, sound or costumes or whether you liked it or not, just wake up and judge it on its message.
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Results of not taking things seriously
vivianla25 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Wow this star-studded cast was amazing. Kate and Dr. Mindy discover that a comet is going to hit the earth in six months. They try to bring this to the attention of NASA and the white house. We watch them struggle through the politics and idiocy. Mindy has an affair with the news reporter and Kate meets Yule, played by Timothee Chalamet. They have a romantic kiss scene. There is a "just look up" movement and a "don't look up" movement. Ariana Grande plays a singer who sings live her song Just Look Up as Jennifer Lawrence and Leo DiCaprio watch which was breathtaking. Kate and Mindy eventually actually see the comet coming in the sky. They go home to Mindy's family's home and Mrs. Mindy forgives Mr. Mindy for having sex with someone else. She admits she had sex with a guy with the last name Tran in college. They hold hands around the table and try to talk casually as their surroundings shake. The comet hits and everything turns into ashes. We see that the president and the third richest guy in the world along with about 2000 others arrived on earth. They are all nude and they were frozen. They come out of the airship nude and look at their surroundings. As predicted, the president is killed by an animal. Later we see after the credits that the president's son is still alive. He has to do a livestream with his phone, of course.
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6/10
Don't Look Up - Could have been better.
Biwoks20 January 2023
Written and directed by Academy Award winner Adam McKay (The Big Short), Don't Look Up is the much talked about comedy from the stellar cast (Leonardo DiCaprio, Jennifer Lawrence, Meryl Streep, Cate Blanchett) which tells the story of two humble astronomers who find involved in a huge media tour with the intention of warning humanity of a grave danger: the approach of a comet on a collision course with the Earth.

Since its release, the film has severely divided audiences in two, receiving as much praise as it has dissensions. It is clear that McKay intended to make the audience reflect - on climate change and the need to act as soon as possible to preserve our planet - by telling a plausible story that leads to the extreme ridiculousness of the actions of the characters and the evolution of the story. But the ridiculous-parodic element, which inevitably arouses bitter laughter in the viewer, fails to balance itself perfectly with the drama of the plot. So, despite the spectacular cast and worthy morals, overall Don't Look Up fails to withstand the high expectations that are created at the beginning of the vision, concluding with an ending that does not honor the director's noble intent.
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9/10
I laughed. I cried. I loved it.
Her-Excellency12 December 2021
This film is yet another reminder to me of how very little 'critic's' "opinions" ought to matter, or are actually worth, in terms of steering anyone toward second-guessing their viewing choices.

Don't Look Up starts out just a bit slowly, but it surprisingly grows and develops into a richly poignant picture of humanity in all its hilarity and horribleness.

It is so good, I laughed, I cried, I loved it.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Months later, I still think about it sometimes, too.

There are times when I am sitting in my living room watching as my husband furrows his brow when listening to an interesting news story; when the mailman waves as he drives away; when our 156 lb. Cane Corso waddles over to me; when I use my iPhone to turn our lights on and off; while I click "purchase" on that online site which will now send me a pair of high-heel pink Manolo Blahniks; when I savor the rich caramel in my Caramel Macchiato; as I am taking the turkey, which gave its life so that I can celebrate with family, out of the oven ... Don't Look Up comes to mind, because WE REALLY DO HAVE IT ALL.
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6/10
Worth a look up
TheLittleSongbird13 February 2023
The biggest appeal for me was the cast, having enjoyed the work of Jennifer Lawrence, Leonardo DiCaprio, Meryl Streep, Cate Blanchett and Mark Rylance elsewhere. Another big selling point was Adam McKay as director, having liked enormously 'Vice' and especially 'The Big Short'. The subject matter left me a bit mixed, it was intriguing and part of me admired it satirising relevant serious themes, but part of me was also worrying how they would be executed.

'Don't Look Up' was a bit of a mixed bag and not an easy film to rate and review, certainly liked it more than my parents did while being after viewing very unsure as to what my overall feelings were. There is quite a lot to enjoy, most of the performances are fine and really did appreciate what it tried to do. But at the same time the execution of many of its elements was very uneven (with nothing being disastrous) and it would have benefitted from trying to do less. Can totally understand the mixed reviews and the reasons on both sides.

By all means, a lot is done well. Lawrence and DiCaprio are very engaging in the lead roles and have the most interesting and well-rounded characters (with DiCaprio having the toughest role). The supporting cast on the whole are enormous fun, Streep, Blanchett and Jonah Hill enjoy themselves enormously and are all very amusing. McKay directs assuredly on the whole.

It looks great and very polished, especially the editing which has a nice amount of flash while not being too much. The music has a good deal of character and energy and fits with the broad tone. There are a lot of very amusing moments and sharp, cutting dialogue and while the themes and issues here are executed in a way that is not very insightful and reinforces what most know already what is said is suitably uncomfortable in how relevant and truthful everything said is.

Having said all of that, Don't Look Up' is easy to criticise. To me, the story is over-stuffed and does too little with too many subplots, a couple like Mindy's family subplot adding nothing. The film could have been tighter in pace, with it taking a while to get going and the final act especially suffering from the bloated feel.

Some of the satire doesn't quite come off, with a lot of what is satirised being executed very heavy handedly and smugly as well as too surface level. It also works much better when it's straightforward and not broad, all the amusing moments are when the former approach is taken while the heavy handedness and exaggeration come from when the film goes the broad route. There is a casting disappointment and that is Rylance, absolutely love him as an actor but here his performance is just bizarre and actually rather annoying. Bizarre is a word to describe the very end too and saw absolutely no point to it.

Overall, interesting but an odd mixed bag that is going to divide opinions and has done. 6/10.
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4/10
Great plot and potential but a let down
ashleylaguna-9285611 February 2023
Seriously a let down for me. The plot is great and I love a good dark comedy but the direction was so bad.

Main problem was the flow, editing, and direction of the movie. Felt slow at times, rushed at others, scenes flew past your head, weird pointless transitions with stock looking footage, and amazing actors with decent lines that just fell flat.

I would have loved to say this movie was great because I think the idea of it was genius. Great satire. But it all just came together horrendously. Ariana grandes character was really badly written as well. The ending was sweet, though, and the movie had a lot of heart. Wish it could have been something greater.
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