Year Of The Comet
(1992)
Director:
Peter
Yates
Cast: Penelope Ann Miller, Tim Daly, Louis Jordan
Year Of The Comet was so obviously an
attempt to imitate
Romancing
The Stone that it only makes sense writing a review that
compares
what it has to offer to the same aspects found in the original:
- Romancing The Stone was written by
Diane Thomas, a first
time (and, sadly, last time) screenwriter. The story may not have been
completely original, but she injected enough fresh elements, and a
sense
of humor, so that the movie as a whole seemed fresh and original.
- Year Of The Comet was written by the
famous screenwriter
William Goldman, responsible for movies like Butch Cassidy And
The
Sundance Kid, All The President's Men, The Princess Bride, and
other movies popular with critics and audiences. He has long criticized
Hollywood for avoiding original stories, so it is very odd that he
would
write a supposedly original script that tries so hard to emulate
another
movie. (Another odd reason for his criticizing is that almost all of
his
screenplays have been based on books or people/events in the public
domain,
and not completely from his own imagination.)
- Romancing The Stone's adventures were
primarily set
in Columbia, though were actually filmed in Mexico. However, the
locations
in Mexico chosen for filming - both indoor and outdoor - convinced us
that
we were in Columbia. The jungle looked isolated and vast, the
villages
looked impoverished, the individual buildings looked (and were
probably)
real - every location looked authentic. And director Robert Zemeckis
didn't
hesitate to pull back the camera to show us all of this.
- Year Of The Comet was actually filmed
on the locations
that the events were taking place in - Scotland and the south of
France.
Unfortunately, we don't get to see enough of these beautiful locations.
While we are occasionally given a wide shot of the area before a new
scene
starts, that is about all when it comes to showing off the lands'
natural
beauty. Most of the time, whether its people talking, or an action
sequence
like an out of control helicopter, director Peter Yates zooms the
camera
in closely. One has to wonder why the movie chose these locations if
they
weren't going to exploit them, especially since the events in the movie
could be taking place pretty much anywhere in the world. The indoor
scenes
come across even worse. Filmed at Pinewood Studios (where much of the
James
Bond movies are shot), the indoor scenes take place in bland, cramped
rooms
where the camera is even closer to the action. One studio shot scene -
supposedly taking place in the middle of a fog drenched lake - is an
embarrassment
to watch, because it was so obviously filmed in a studio tank.
- The treasure in Romancing The Stone was
an emerald.
Actually, for most of the movie, we didn't know what the treasure was -
until the discovery, the fun was coming from the mystery the
protagonists
were trying to solve, and the interaction of the contrasting
characters.
Even when the treasure was discovered, the rest of the movie didn't
forget
what had made the previous part of the movie so fun.
- In Year Of The Comet, the treasure is a
three-foot tall
wine bottle from the Napoleon era that's worth millions of dollars.
Now,
I don't doubt that such a bottle in real life would be valuable. Though
for some reason, the bottle in this movie doesn't have the allure that
you'd think it would have. I think it's because for much of the movie,
the bottle is kept in a box, where you don't see it. When we do
see it, it's very dirty, with a water-stained label that's impossible
to
read. But I think the big reason why the wine bottle doesn't seem that
valuable is that the characters in the movie don't seem to regard it
with
the same awe as the characters in Romancing The Stone had
for the treasure in that movie. The characters in Year Of The
Comet
give
a lot of attention to the bottle, yes, but they don't seem that excited
about it. And since most of the movie is involved with their, ahem,
"obsession"
with the bottle, that leaves less time for stuff like humor, character
development, and character interaction.
- The female protagonist of Romancing The Stone was
played
by Kathleen Turner, in a performance that got her a Golden Globe award,
and a Lost Angeles Film Critics Association award for best actress.
(Many
people even today believe she should have gotten an Oscar.) Her
character
is a somewhat lonely, but likable, wallflower, and this personality of
hers is built up at the beginning of the movie before the action
starts.
Over the course of the movie, we - and her - slowly start to see that
she
is not as helpless as she thinks she is. In a somewhat related note,
she
has a sibling that is crucial to the plot.
- In Year Of The Comet, the heroine is
played by Penelope
Ann Miller, in a performance that's sure to never win any awards. She
looks
and acts very bland here - so bland, I have a hard time just picturing
her. Her character is apparently a shy wallflower, for that's what
we're
told by other characters - we don't really see behavior on her part
that
suggests this. She's soft-spoken, with nothing interesting to say. Only
when it's convenient to the plot does the heroine change her behavior,
such as when she unexpectedly dives into a lake to retrieve the sunken
wine bottle, or not realizing that following an especially tall villain
might be dangerous. And then afterwards, she forgets being brave in
these
activities, which helps in getting her character kidnapped near the end
of the movie. Though the beginning of the movie (poorly done as it was)
suggested that she was in store for adventures that would make her a
brave,
confident woman, she ends up needing to be rescued at the end. Oh yes,
her sibling character here seems to have no purpose in this movie,
except
to insult her.
- Michael Douglas didn't get any awards or nominations
for his performance
in Romancing The Stone, but that doesn't mean he wasn't
any
good. He gave his character a lot of energy, making him resourceful and
with a wicked sense of humor at times. He believably made the
transition
over the course of the movie that changed his character to a greedy
treasure
seeker to someone who cared very much about the heroine - because he
was
careful to suggest from the start his character had a good heart
inside.
- Let's just say that Year Of The Comet's
Tim Daly is
no Michael Douglas. He sports a Kevin Klein mustache, possibly to try
to
give him the air of a goofy romantic that Kevin Klein has perhaps
played
a bit too often. His character is obviously written to try to be
lovably
and humorously coarse as Michael Douglas was in his first few minutes
in
R.T.S.,
but when Daly is at a wine tasting gathering and asks for a Budweiser,
or tries to get a laugh by mixing two wines in the same glass, he just
comes across as coarse. We learn little about him, maybe because a
twist
at the end of the movie would seem more ludicrous than it already is.
- The action scenes in Romancing The Stone were
plentiful
and spread out through the movie. There was a lot of variety to them -
car chases, slides down a hill, falling off a waterfall, hand-to-hand
fights,
etc. All of them were well made.
- It takes about 1/3 of the way through Year Of
The Comet
before the first so-called action scene starts. It starts off with the
couple, in a helicopter, trying to find the right car with a bad guy in
it. They go from one car to the other, and keep finding the wrong car.
This goes on for several minutes. Finally, they get to another car, and
they are shot at. ("That could be him!") The crippled, out of control
helicopter
gently wiggles in the air for some time, not seeming to be headed to
the
ground. When it does crash, the crash scene is filmed in three
camera
setups, and at no time do we see all of the helicopter in the frame -
it
is very obviously attached to an off-camera crane of some kind. And
that's
the "big" action sequence of the movie. The other "action" sequences
are
either low key setups, or endless minutes of people running, driving,
flying,
rowing....
Looking at all of the above, it shouldn't come as a
surprise that there
was a big difference in the gross of the movies - Romancing The
Stone
was
a big, instant hit, while the unheralded Year Of The Comet almost
immediately died at the box office. Even the disappointing Romancing
The Stone sequel The Jewel Of The Nile was
more entertaining.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability of soundtrack on Amazon (CD)
See also: Cheyenne Warrior,
The In-Laws, Breezy
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