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Deep Impact (film)
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Deep Impact is a 1998 sci-fi-drama disaster film released by Paramount Pictures and DreamWorks SKG in the United States on May 8, 1998. The film was directed by Mimi Leder, and stars Elijah Wood, Téa Leoni, Morgan Freeman, and Robert Duvall. The plot describes the attempts to prepare for and destroy a fictional comet, which is expected to collide with the Earth and cause a mass extinction.
Another "space impact" film, Armageddon, was released about two months after Deep Impact in the United States.

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Encyclopedia
Deep Impact is a 1998 sci-fi-drama disaster film released by Paramount Pictures and DreamWorks SKG in the United States on May 8, 1998. The film was directed by Mimi Leder, and stars Elijah Wood, Téa Leoni, Morgan Freeman, and Robert Duvall. The plot describes the attempts to prepare for and destroy a fictional comet, which is expected to collide with the Earth and cause a mass extinction.
Another "space impact" film, Armageddon, was released about two months after Deep Impact in the United States. Deep Impact was lauded by astronomers as being more scientifically accurate, and was better received by critics, but Armageddon fared better at the box office.
Plot
Teenage astronomer Leo Biederman (Wood) alerts Dr. Marcus Wolf (Charles Martin Smith) to an unusual comet. Wolf realizes the comet will hit Earth but dies in an accident before he can alert the world.
12 months later, MSNBC reporter Jenny Lerner (Leoni) researches the resignation of the United States Secretary of the Treasury and his connection to an "Ellie." She discovers that "Ellie" is not a mistress but "E.L.E.", an acronym for extinction-level event. Because of Lerner's investigation, U.S. President Tom Beck (Freeman) announces the grim facts: The comet—named Wolf-Biederman—is seven miles (11 km) wide, large enough to destroy civilization if it strikes Earth. The United States and Russia plan to send the spaceship Messiah to destroy the comet, using nuclear weapons. Life changes drastically worldwide, and Leo and Lerner both become celebrities.
The Messiahs crew (Duvall and others) plants the bombs into the comet's surface, but one crew member dies and another is seriously injured. When the bombs are detonated Messiah is damaged and contact with Earth is lost. The comet is not destroyed; instead, it splits into two chunks, one smaller (about a mile wide) than the other (about 6 miles wide), but both still world-threatening.
Beck acknowledges Messiah’s failure, declares martial law, and announces that governments worldwide are building underground shelters. The United States' national refuge is in the limestone caves of Missouri. The US government conducts a lottery to select 800,000 ordinary Americans to join 200,000 pre-selected scientists, engineers, teachers, artists, soldiers, and officials. Lerner, Leo, and his family are pre-selected, but Leo's girlfriend Sarah Hotchner (Leelee Sobieski) is not. Leo marries Sarah to save her family but the Hotchners are mistakenly left off the evacuee list; Sarah refuses to leave without them.
A last-ditch effort to use Earth's missile-borne nuclear weapons to deflect the comets fails. Leo returns home to find Sarah; her parents insist that Leo take Sarah and her infant sister to high ground in the Appalachian Mountains. Meanwhile, Lerner gives up her seat in the evacuation helicopter to a coworker with a young daughter. The smaller of the two comet fragments hits the Atlantic Ocean near Bermuda, creating a megatsunami thousands of feet high. Leo and Sarah survive, but Lerner, Sarah's parents, and millions of others on America's east coast, Europe, and Africa die.
The world then braces for the impact of the larger fragment, which will strike western Canada and create a cloud of dust that will block out the sun for two years, killing all remaining plant, animal, and human life aside from those evacuated underground. Messiah—previously believed lost by Earth—arrives and enters a fissure in the fragment to blow itself up. Messiahs suicide mission breaks up the fragment into small pieces that burn up in Earth's atmosphere, saving humanity.
The film closes with Beck speaking to a large crowd in front of the under-reconstruction United States Capitol, in which he urges the nation to continue its recovery and efforts to rebuild.
Cast
Production
As it was a Paramount/DreamWorks co-production, it would be decided that one studio handle domestic rights and the other international rights. Paramount would distribute in the USA, and DreamWorks overseas. International video distribution rights were originally with Universal Studios.
In 2005, Paramount's parent company, Viacom, announced its acquisition of DreamWorks, and completed it in early 2006. Around that time, Viacom split into two companies, the other being called CBS Corporation. CBS inherited Paramount's TV operations, now called CBS Paramount Television.
Today, worldwide video and theatrical rights to Deep Impact are with Paramount, while television rights are in the hands of CBS Television Distribution.
Jenny Lerner, the character played by Tea Leoni, was originally intended to work for CNN. CNN rejected this because it would be "inappropriate". MSNBC, which was a new network at the time, is featured in the movie instead.
Reception
Deep Impact debuted at the North American box office with $41,000,000 in ticket sales. The movie grossed $140,000,000 in North America and an additional $209,000,000 worldwide for a total gross of $350,000,000. Despite competition in the summer of 1998 from the similar Armageddon, Deep Impact still made a sizable amount and was the higher opener of the two.
External links
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