HOME  women sex  Impact

Impact

Impact

Drama, Action, Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Adventure

Mike Rohl

David James Elliott, Natasha Henstridge, James Cromwell, Steven Culp

2008

Germany, Canada

Film review analysis↗

Completed

English, German, French

Argentina:

2025-02-20 02:51:26

Detailed introduction

This film (drama)Also known asImpact,is aGermany, CanadaProducerwomen sex,At2008Released in year 。The dialogue language isEnglish, German, French,Current Douban rating6.5(For reference only)。
"Impact," directed by Mike Rohl of "Supernatural," "Reaper," and "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles," is a sci-fi disaster miniseries set to air on ABC on June 21 and 28. The story primarily revolves around the catastrophic consequences following a meteor striking the moon. Much like the plot of "Armageddon," humanity dispatches an elite team to the moon in an attempt to find a last-ditch effort to save the Earth. Does this mean "Impact" is merely a cliché, dull "copy"? The answer is no. This $14 million miniseries, running 3 hours and featuring well-known actors like Natasha Henstridge, David James Elliott, James Cromwell, and Steven Culp, does have several unique highlights. Just as people are eagerly witnessing the rare giant meteor shower, a brown dwarf hidden among the meteors suddenly lunges toward the moon. The enormous impact causes a terrifying explosion, shattering parts of the moon's surface into debris. The fragments quickly fall into the Earth's atmosphere, igniting fiery chaos wherever they land. Although the losses are not catastrophic, extreme panic quickly spreads across the globe. Meanwhile, a series of anomalies occur on Earth—initially just disappearing cellphone signals, irregular electromagnetic interference, and strange tidal phenomena, all seemingly minor, but clearly, things are not that simple. The world's top scientists—Alex, Maddie, and Roland—begin gathering clues in an attempt to decipher the mysteries. However, they are astonished to discover that the moon's orbit may have been completely altered. Worse still, the anomalies on Earth have escalated to an alarming level—massive "magnetic surges" from the moon are now strong enough to interfere with Earth's gravitational pull. People, objects, and even cars in certain areas of Earth frequently fall into brief states of weightlessness for no apparent reason. These areas are randomly generated and independent of each other. After precise calculations, Alex and his colleagues confirm: in 39 days, the Earth will "collide head-on" with the moon—the end of the world, the end of humanity will come on the same day!