Bangkok Post

WE NEED A SECOND CUT OF ‘DON’T LOOK UP’

- Ross Douthat Ross Douthat is a columnist with The New York Times.

The new movie Don’t Look Up, about a collision between a planet-killing comet and a frivolous America, is something of a critical failure but a clear cultural success. In a world where it’s hard for nonsuperhe­ro movies to make a ripple, it has broken a Netflix viewing record and launched an array of movie critic arguments and pundit takes — some of them politicall­y unpredicta­ble, including both left-leaning critiques and rightleani­ng admiration.

Officially the movie is an allegory about climate change, a conceit that its director, Adam McKay, has emphasised in online sparring with its critics. “If you don’t have at least a small ember of anxiety about the climate collapsing (or the US teetering),” McKay tweeted recently, “I’m not sure ‘Don’t Look Up’ makes any sense. It’s like a robot viewing a love story. ‘WHy ArE thEir FacEs so cLoSe ToGether?’”

Art, though, has a way of escaping the intentions of its creators. McKay’s tweets notwithsta­nding, his comet scenario is a lousy allegory for the climate challenge, for reasons painstakin­gly elaborated by New York Magazine’s Eric Levitz in one of the best responses to the movie as a would-be policy interventi­on. And ultimately Don’t Look Up is most effective when it’s just a movie about that parentheti­cal in McKay’s tweet — the idea of a “teetering” America, with the specific existentia­l threat almost incidental to the portrait of systemic failure.

This is the biggest reason, I suspect, the movie is a hit and conversati­on fodder even for people who dislike it: because it opens one of the widest lenses on American decadence.

Yet I’m still one of the critics who thought the movie failed in the end, because its impulse to indict everyone, from TV news to social media, is in tension with its desire to deliver a pious message about listening to science. The latter impulse ensures that its satire is gentlest when it takes on the expert class, the academic-industrial complex. And its plot ultimately turns on a single terrible decision by a populist president, the systemic critique sacrificed to ideologica­l point-scoring.

But since the movie is almost the comprehens­ive portrait of decadence we need, I’m going to offer some script doctoring and give you the cut of Don’t Look Up that might have been, had somebody hired me to consult. Here goes:

Act 1: The comet is discovered by amateur astronomy geeks who comb telescope footage the government collects but doesn’t bother to examine. Their findings are hyped by a mix of doomsday preppers and tech bros, while academic authoritie­s dismiss the claims as misinforma­tion and Twitter censors users who insist the comet is going to hit Earth.

Act 2: A group of Harvard astronomer­s confirms the comet’s dire trajectory, and suddenly the media turns on a dime and begins hyping the threat. But the president, a right-wing populist aiming for re-election, prefers to postpone dealing with it, so she hypes an obscure Bible college astronomer who thinks the chance of impact is under 10%.

Act 3: After protests roil the country, the president reverses course and announces a massive nuclear strike. However, the head of Nasa, a media darling, insists that blowing up the comet will rain down fragments and kill too many people, and you need a more limited strike — the subject of his own dissertati­on, as it happens — that knocks it off course. Fox News vilifies him, but the mainstream media insists his strategy is simply science and no serious person could oppose it. So the United States tries his plan — and it fails completely, because his dissertati­on was actually based on fraudulent experiment­s that never replicated outside his lab.

Act 4: Now the president orders the full blowit-up strike, but it fails as well — because most of the nukes don’t work, the military having failed to inspect its arsenal because that part of the budget was spent hiring TikTok influencer­s to do a new recruitmen­t pitch for Gen Z. In desperatio­n, the government turns to an Elon Musk-style tech wizard, whose Great Bore drill promises to deliver a warhead into the heart of the comet. Unfortunat­ely he supervises the mission himself, and it goes fatally awry when he gets distracted by a Twitter flamewar.

Act 5: Out of options, part of America pretends the comet isn’t coming, while another part joins a cult that holds mass repentance ceremonies for white patriarchy’s sins. At the last minute, a collection of Chinese drones ascends to meet the comet and dismember it, letting its pieces fall into the Pacific to be mined by Chinese deep-sea robots — but a shower “accidental­ly” hits the US, knocking out our infrastruc­ture and leaving the world’s ex superpower in the dark.

Roll credits, in Chinese. I’ll see you all at the Oscars.

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