Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Moonfall' and the art of the disaster film cliche

EUR -
AED 3.831072
AFN 72.927229
ALL 98.419269
AMD 410.271893
ANG 1.872215
AOA 957.496706
ARS 1061.692588
AUD 1.668305
AWG 1.877444
AZN 1.777282
BAM 1.955189
BBD 2.097545
BDT 124.141237
BGN 1.955855
BHD 0.391978
BIF 3071.340978
BMD 1.043024
BND 1.410859
BOB 7.178758
BRL 6.347889
BSD 1.038876
BTN 88.318423
BWP 14.358517
BYN 3.399738
BYR 20443.276614
BZD 2.088248
CAD 1.495916
CDF 2993.480167
CHF 0.932343
CLF 0.037343
CLP 1030.408256
CNY 7.610327
CNH 7.606363
COP 4547.280118
CRC 524.136339
CUC 1.043024
CUP 27.640144
CVE 110.230581
CZK 25.128859
DJF 184.992236
DKK 7.459297
DOP 63.260247
DZD 140.605096
EGP 53.072428
ERN 15.645365
ETB 129.499464
FJD 2.41674
FKP 0.826056
GBP 0.830004
GEL 2.931306
GGP 0.826056
GHS 15.271232
GIP 0.826056
GMD 75.098122
GNF 8975.197506
GTQ 8.004501
GYD 217.342135
HKD 8.109462
HNL 26.370766
HRK 7.481515
HTG 135.907563
HUF 414.018477
IDR 16867.059138
ILS 3.811566
IMP 0.826056
INR 88.607528
IQD 1360.875069
IRR 43898.289923
ISK 145.105945
JEP 0.826056
JMD 162.539247
JOD 0.739613
JPY 163.175981
KES 134.118122
KGS 90.743481
KHR 4174.696457
KMF 486.179751
KPW 938.721302
KRW 1508.651632
KWD 0.3212
KYD 0.86573
KZT 545.579643
LAK 22737.90012
LBP 93027.952144
LKR 305.004763
LRD 188.551125
LSL 19.125728
LTL 3.07978
LVL 0.630915
LYD 5.104406
MAD 10.455435
MDL 19.135025
MGA 4901.469523
MKD 61.515792
MMK 3387.702296
MNT 3544.196494
MOP 8.316603
MRU 41.315099
MUR 49.23465
MVR 16.066474
MWK 1801.337535
MXN 20.945288
MYR 4.701994
MZN 66.653144
NAD 19.125728
NGN 1616.208293
NIO 38.228063
NOK 11.807144
NPR 141.309876
NZD 1.844266
OMR 0.401355
PAB 1.038876
PEN 3.868392
PGK 4.212685
PHP 61.403232
PKR 289.16061
PLN 4.263169
PYG 8100.470639
QAR 3.787117
RON 4.976899
RSD 116.931488
RUB 107.374772
RWF 1448.147818
SAR 3.91792
SBD 8.744252
SCR 14.545014
SDG 627.382961
SEK 11.507274
SGD 1.414241
SHP 0.826056
SLE 23.784779
SLL 21871.701575
SOS 593.714613
SRD 36.642527
STD 21588.497505
SVC 9.090162
SYP 2620.630141
SZL 19.121029
THB 35.692677
TJS 11.364851
TMT 3.661015
TND 3.310266
TOP 2.442871
TRY 36.580744
TTD 7.050798
TWD 34.034966
TZS 2467.229611
UAH 43.568696
UGX 3810.81008
USD 1.043024
UYU 46.335532
UZS 13393.817798
VES 53.689938
VND 26550.18399
VUV 123.829936
WST 2.881655
XAF 655.752242
XAG 0.03535
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.818826
XDR 0.792453
XOF 655.752242
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.147252
ZAR 19.097296
ZMK 9388.474223
ZMW 28.750023
ZWL 335.853405
  • SCS

    -0.5800

    11.74

    -4.94%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    122.75

    -0.21%

  • NGG

    0.8200

    58.5

    +1.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.56

    0%

  • RBGPF

    59.9600

    59.96

    +100%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.06

    +0.91%

  • RIO

    -0.0900

    58.64

    -0.15%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.86

    +0.08%

  • AZN

    0.9100

    65.35

    +1.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.27

    -0.14%

  • BTI

    0.1131

    36.24

    +0.31%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    33.6

    +0.51%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    23.16

    +0.22%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    8.39

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    45.47

    -0.68%

  • BP

    0.1900

    28.6

    +0.66%

'Moonfall' and the art of the disaster film cliche
'Moonfall' and the art of the disaster film cliche

'Moonfall' and the art of the disaster film cliche

Director Roland Emmerich knows a thing or two about the ingredients needed for a good disaster flick, having given the world "Independence Day", "2012" and "The Day After Tomorrow".

Text size:

He is back in cinemas next week with "Moonfall" starring Halle Berry, in which the moon starts to act rather strangely.

Naturally, it's a small group of Americans that must save the world, but how closely does the film respect the other rules of the disaster genre?

- The Divorced Hero

If there is one cliche that Emmerich loves, it's the estranged couple thrown back together by the imminent destruction of the world.

The comforting reassertion of family values and parental stability is in all his big disaster flicks, right up to "Moonfall".

Emmerich is far from alone. From "Twister" to "Outbreak" to "San Andreas", there's a good chance that an exasperated woman is going to realise her new (usually rich and obnoxious) husband is not a patch on her rough diamond ex when the going gets tough.

- Generals are always wrong

In disaster movies, generals are always desperate to nuke the problem, when everyone else knows this can only make things worse.

"Moonfall" sticks solidly to this script, with a series of stony-faced old white guys who are adamant they need to blow up the moon.

- The Dog Survives

Canines are effectively immune from death in disaster movies, miraculously surviving fast-moving lava (both "Dante's Peak" and "Volcano"), asteroid strikes ("Armageddon"), alien invasions ("Independence Day") and tornadoes (on two separate occasions in "Twister").

"Moonfall" marks a significant departure from disaster film history by failing to include any house pets, invincible or otherwise.

- One Guy Knows

They are an eccentric scientist or a wacky amateur, and they tried to warn everyone and no one would listen -- and now look at the mess we're in!

In the case of "Moonfall", everyone should have been listening to conspiracy nut KC Houseman (played by "Game of Thrones" regular John Bradley) and his ridiculous ideas about the moon.

In a contemporary twist on the trope, he convinces the world to take him seriously by posting his findings on social media, which is treated in the film as a shortcut to legitimacy (perhaps the least probable element of a film about the moon falling on the Earth).

- Hollywood Science

Ben Affleck recently made the not-unreasonable point about 1998 asteroid caper "Armageddon" that it might have made more sense to train astronauts as drillers, rather than the other way around.

But it turns out there were bigger problems with their plan in the movie.

In 2019, scientists at John Hopkins University released a paper arguing that 4,000 of the most powerful nuclear explosives ever created would have to be concentrated in a single spot to disrupt a 20-kilometre-wide asteroid, and that the fragments may be pulled back together anyway by gravity.

Bad science crops up regularly in disaster films, from the ice age that emerges within three days in "The Day After Tomorrow" to the truck wheels that can drive through lava in "Dante's Peak".

And don't ask geologists about "The Core", in which scientists use an indestructible element called "Unobtanium" to drill to the centre of the Earth and restart the core with a nuclear bomb.

Without giving away any spoilers, "Moonfall" is similarly unlikely to serve as a teaching aid in any university science departments.

Y.Keller--NZN