Sunday, October 22, 2017

                     COMING  SOON  TO  A  GEOENGINEERING
                      GOVERNANCE  CONFERENCE NEAR YOU

At  least  it's  not  as  bad  as  Climate Hustle
Britain's The Independent is not amused by the Hollywood remake of Das Ark Prinzip,  then student filmaker Roland Emmerich's  deservedly forgotten  debut offering at the 1980 Berlin Green Film Festival:

Ah, the icy expanse between summer's blockbuster heat (not that this year's been particularly fiery) and Oscar season - the dumping ground of many a tragic misfire.
Which is precisely what Geostorm may be doomed to become, roping in Independence Day's producer Dean Devlin for a feature film debut that is predicted to flop hard at the box office.
The film sees Gerard Butler star as the architect behind an elaborate natural disaster defense system, which sees a series of climate-controlling satellites surrounding Earth, centered around the International CIimate Space Station.

But, is Geostorm truly the worst film of the year, especially with the (also) disastrously received The Snowman lurking in the shadows of cinema complexes everywhere?   Here's what the critics thought. 
Peter Debruge - Variety  Devlin’s ill-timed destruct-a-thon (already delayed more than a year from its intended March 2016 release) succeeds in being even more callously insensitive/offensive than our president’s response to your plight. Then again, the only thing more reliable than bad weather is bad movies, and in that respect, Geostorm is right on forecast.
Mike D'Angelo - AV Club - D+   In the tradition of KFC’s Famous Bowl—... “a failure pile”—comes Geostorm, which attempts to be every possible apocalyptic weather-based disaster movie at once.
Anna Smith - Time Out - 2/5  All in all, Geostorm is a watery blend of Armageddon and 24, with enough action to entertain on a basic level. It’ll probably be most appealing to scientists looking for a good laugh.A.O. Scott - The New York Times  ...discreetly installed in theaters without advance screenings, Geostorm uses digital technology to lay waste to a bunch of cities and hacky screenwriting to assault the dignity of several fine actors.
John DeFore - The Hollywood Reporter  ... Geostorm boils down to that classically annoying hail-mary bit of advice: Have you tried shutting it down and rebooting? Big, dumb and boring, it finds the co-writer of Independence Day hoping to start a directing career with the same playbook — but forgetting several rules of the game.