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Night of the Comet

 
Movies:

Night of the Comet

  • Director: Thom Eberhardt
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Disaster Film, Sci-Fi Action
  • Themes: Post-Apocalypse, Woman In Jeopardy, Mutants
  • Main Cast: Catherine Stewart, Kelli Maroney, Robert Beltran, Geoffrey Lewis, Mary Woronov
  • Release Year: 1984
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

In this satirical sci-fi comedy, Samantha (Kelli Maroney) and Regina (Catherine Mary Stewart) are two sisters whose father was a hard-bitten Green Beret, but who've grown into typical Valley Girls. They end up spending the night in a steel-lined room just as a comet passes close to the earth, vaporizing the people in its wake. When Samantha and Regina emerge, they discover that they have the city to themselves, and they begin the shopping spree to end all shopping sprees. En route to the mall, they discover Hector (Robert Beltran), the only survivor they've found so far, and they argue over who gets the last boyfriend on Earth. However, the mall holds an unpleasant surprise -- a small army of zombified stockboys who the gals must battle using an arsenal they shoplifted along the way (while lamenting that "Daddy would have gotten us Uzis!" after a MAC-10 fails to fire). Meanwhile, a cadre of soldiers from a special military experiment have come out of hiding, but it seems that they need fresh blood to survive, and Samantha and Regina look like just the refreshment they need. Cult figure Mary Woronov also appears in a supporting role as a scientist. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

This is one of the more unusual entries into the post-apocalypse genre of the early 1980's. Instead of going for the usual Mad Max ripoff, writer/director Thom Eberhardt takes a clever tack by building the story around a pair of teenage heroines living in Los Angeles. This opens up the story for all manner of unusual takes on the usual post-apocalypse motifs: the wittiest is the girls celebrating their independence by going on a shopping spree in a deserted department store to the tune of "Girls Just Want To Have Fun." He counterbalances these light-hearted moments with a few effective moments of drama (there's a good scene where Kelli Maroney gets teary-eyed thinking about a boy who had a crush on her that she never got to meet) as well as a few shocks and some suspense. He also chose a quality cast for the film, making good use of reliable character actors Geoffrey Lewis and Mary Woronov as a pair of shady, inscrutable government scientists and also providing a nice role for Robert Beltran as a Mexican trucker who helps out the two heroines. The end result might not have enough action for those expecting a typical post-apocalyptic film but others are likely to appreciate its quirky sense of humor and its inventive knack for blending genres. In short, Night Of The Comet is a fun riff on 1980's sci-fi that is likely to appeal to cult film fans who don't normally go for this sort of genre fare. ~ Donald Guarisco, All Movie Guide

Cast

John Achorn - Oscar; Sharon Farrell - Doris; Michael Bowen - Larry; Ivan Roth - Willy; Chance Boyer - Brian; Stanley Brock - Mel; Devon Ericson - Minder; Peter Fox - Wilson; Karl Johnson - Guard No. 1; Janice Kawaye - Sarah; Lissa Layng - Davenport; Raymond Lynch - Chuck; Chris Pederson - Stock Boy; Bob Perlow - News Reporter; Marc Poppel - DMK; Bob Porter - Monster Kid; Chris Chesser - Radio Spot Announcer; Joel Levine - Guard No. 2; Anna Mathias - Party Guest; Dick Rude - Stock Boy; Wilson Camp - Party Guest; Dale E. House - Helicopter Pilot; John Stuart West - Monster Cop; Andrew Boyer - Rogers; Alex Brown - Monster in Alley

Credit

Nancy Israel - Associate Producer, Annette Benson - Casting, H. Gordon Boos - First Assistant Director, Thom Eberhardt - Director, H. Gordon Boos - Second Unit Director, John Muto - Second Unit Director, Fred Stafford - Editor, Michael Rosenblatt - Executive Producer, Thomas Coleman - Executive Producer, David Richard Campbell - Composer (Music Score), Tom Perry - Composer (Music Score), Steve Nelson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Tom Perry - Musical Direction/Supervision, Don Perry - Musical Direction/Supervision, David Brian Miller - Makeup, David Brian Miller - Makeup Special Effects, Nancy Israel - Production Designer, John Muto - Production Designer, Arthur Albert - Cinematographer, Nancy Israel - Production Manager, Wayne Crawford - Producer, Andrew Lane - Producer, David Wasco - Set Designer, John Muto - Special Effects, Steve Nelson - Sound/Sound Designer, Thom Eberhardt - Screenwriter, Robert Hazard - Featured Music

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Wikipedia: Night of the Comet
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Night of the Comet

Original 1984 theatrical poster
Directed by Thom Eberhardt
Produced by Andrew Lane
Wayne Crawford
Written by Thom Eberhardt
Starring Catherine Mary Stewart
Kelli Maroney
Robert Beltran
Music by David Richard Campbell
Cinematography Arthur Albert
Editing by Fred Stafford
Distributed by Atlantic Releasing Corporation
Release date(s) November 16, 1984 (USA)
Running time 95 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $3,000,000 (estimated) (Director has stated $700,000)
Gross revenue $14,418,922 (USA) (sub-total)

Night of the Comet is a 1984 film directed by Thom Eberhardt and starring Catherine Mary Stewart, Robert Beltran, and Kelli Maroney. It has elements of such diverse genres as science fiction, horror, zombie apocalypse, comedy, and romance.

Contents

Plot

The Earth is expected to pass through the tail of a rogue comet—an event which has not occurred in 65 million years, the last time coinciding with the extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs. On the night of the comet's impending mid-December passage, large crowds gather to celebrate the event.

Eighteen-year-old Regina Belmont (Catherine Mary Stewart) is an employee at a movie theater in southern California. Annoyed to find her high score on the arcade game Tempest has been beaten by someone with the initials "DMK", she then sleeps with her boyfriend, the movie theater projectionist, in the steel lined projection booth at the theater. Meanwhile, back at Regina's house, her sixteen-year-old sister Samantha (Kelli Maroney) argues with their stepmother, and Sam is punched in the face.

The next morning, a reddish haze covers everything, and there are no people, animals or other signs of life, only small piles of red dust and empty clothes where people stood and watched the comet's passage. Regina and her boyfriend wake up, unaware that anything strange has happened. The boyfriend steps out into the alley behind the theater and is immediately killed by a zombie-like creature. When Regina comes looking for her missing boyfriend, she encounters the zombie in the act of eating something. The zombie tries to attack her, but she escapes. Finding herself in the newly-empty world, she goes home and finds her sister. Sam had spent the night in a metal yard shed after the fight with her stepmother.

After figuring out what has happened, they hear a disc jockey on the radio and head to the station, only to find that it is just a recording. However, they do meet another survivor there, Hector Gomez (Robert Beltran), who spent the night in the back of his steel semi truck. When Sam speaks on air, the broadcast is heard by government researchers in an underground think tank. They call and notify her that a rescue team is on its way. The scientists note that the zombies, though less exposed to the comet, will soon disintegrate into dust themselves. Reggie tells Hector that, as military brats, she and Sam were taught self-defense techniques and how to use firearms by their father. Hector then leaves to see if any of his family survived. In true Valley Girl fashion, Reggie and Sam go shopping at a local mall. After a surprise firefight with some zombie ex-stock boys, the girls are taken prisoner, but are saved by the rescue team from the think tank.

Reggie is immediately taken back to their base. Audrey White (Mary Woronov), a dying, disillusioned scientist, offers to remain behind with Sam to wait for Hector. Another scientist who stays with them believes Sam has been exposed, and should be executed; however, Audrey realizes that Sam is actually healthy. After purportedly euthanizing Sam, she then kills the other scientist. When Hector returns, Audrey provides enough information for him and Sam to try to rescue Reggie. Audrey then gives herself a lethal injection.

The researchers had suspected and prepared for the comet's effects, but inadvertently left their ventilation system open during the comet's passage. Meanwhile, Reggie has become suspicious, escapes, and discovers that the dying scientists have hunted down healthy survivors and rendered them brain-dead, so they can harvest their untainted blood to look for a cure.

Hector and Sam free Reggie, along with a boy and a girl Reggie has rescued from being the next victims. Some of the researchers are killed in the escape, while the rest presumably perish from the comet's after-effects.

Eventually, rain washes away the red dust and the world is left in a pristine condition. The group becomes a conventional family unit, except for Sam, who feels left out. When she ignores Reggie's warning and crosses a deserted street against the still-operating signal light, she is almost run over by a sports car driven by one Danny Mason Keener, a teenager her own age. After apologizing, he invites her to go for a ride. As they drive off, the car is shown sporting the initials "DMK" on the vanity plate, implying that he is the one who beat Regina's video game score.

Cast

References in popular culture

  • In an episode of the television show Benson entitled "Last Man on Earth," Kraus has a crazy dream where she and Benson are the last survivors on Earth. The episode is a parody of Night of the Comet right down to people being reduced to red dust.
  • In an episode of the television show "Psych" entitled "Any Given Friday Night," Shawn mentions the movie "Night of the Comet" when Detective Lassiter teases Shawn that he has no witty comeback or any 'reference to some obscure 80's film.'
  • The film earned place ten in 2009 under the 10 Doomsday films at Bloody Disgusting.[1]

Home video

Night of the Comet was released on VHS cassette on August 30, 1985, and distributed by CBS/FOX Video. [2] A second US VHS printing, distributed by Goodtimes Video, was released on August 30, 1990. The film was officially released on Region 1 DVD on March 6, 2007.[3]

See also

Notes

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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