
Editorâs Note: This review contains spoilers.
âDonât Look Upâ uses satire to magnify the outrageous responses of fictional U.S. politicians, media, corporations and the population to a fictional comet that is about to collide with Earth and wipe out all life. But how it is any different than how real-life politicians have failed to address an impending climate catastrophe that can cost us our lives?
Leonardo DiCaprio effectively plays astronomist âDr. Randall Mindy,â mentoring younger female doctoral student âKate Dibiasky,â played by Jennifer Lawrence. Mindy is portrayed as a typically dull and bland scientist type, with a dull and bland wife and family life. This reflects the stereotype of scientists being boring and uninteresting, and helps to set up for the drastic change Mindy undergoes later in the film when he is exposed to the limelight.

Dibiasky on the other hand is the stereotypical hip, loner Geek Girl, rapping along with Wu Tang Clanâs âWu-Tang Clan Ainât Nuthinâ Ta Fâ Wit,â while she scours the stars in her schoolâs observatory and ends up discovering the comet. But, as brilliant as she is, Dibiasky is portrayed as socially awkward and unsophisticated, with a demeanor that is actually direct, especially considering the circumstances, but is characterized as sullen and snarky, and used against her later in the film.
As the scientistsâ discovery is brought to the attention of the president of the United States, played with wacky deviousness by Meryl Streep, their warnings are dismissed and spun in ridiculous ways. But when we consider how real-life politicians approach policyâand even scienceânot from a people-centered approach, but with a primary focus on polling and elections, the scenes depicting the president with her advisors and cabinet members arenât so ridiculous after all.
The film also takes a very pointed jab at the media; vapid morning talk shows, in particular. Even those that are allegedly political, with their focus on keeping the banter and topics light, rather than focusing on whatever existential crisis humanity is facing, and there are lots of them, but in this case the impending extinction-level collision of a comet with Earth. But print media is not spared, as the lack of journalistic integrity is critiqued when a major print newspaper also goes with the narrative that polls well, rather than the truth of the story leaked to them that the talk news shows and the government ignored.
The stereotype of the sex-crazed, airhead talk-show personality is played boozily by Cate Blanchette, throwing herself at the (arguably) sexy male scientist, Mindy, while insisting that the serious Dibiasky never return to the show. But, in truth, too many female television personalities do play the role of the pretty, bleached-blond giggler anchoring ânewsâ shows that millions watch every day, without delivering an ounce of real, truthful news about any of the issues that impact those peopleâs lives. And the film presents the misinformation those regular people receive from politicians and the media effectively in rabid âDonât Look Upâ advocates convinced that the comet is a tool being used by âthemâ to make people live in fear.
Meanwhile, Tyler Perry portrays Blanchetteâs male co-anchor. He plays just as much of an airhead as his female colleague, refusing to deal with the seriousness of the comet, but he does so with a strain of vindictiveness as he makes jokes about the comet destroying his ex-wifeâs house. I think thereâs something to be said for the lengths some Black people will go to maintain the status quo, even when the lives of others are at stake and they know it. Particularly in the media.
Even citizen activism is touched on in the movie, with the fervent efforts to educate and inform people are drowned out by powerful politicians, the media and the military. And even celebrity advocacy is skewered for the feel-good-but-oftentimes-vanity project that it usually is.

Corporations are not spared in this pointed satire, as a creepy/robotic/absentminded professor/evil genius-like tech company CEO with a cult-like following named Peter Isherwellâplayed by English actor Mark Rylanceâfloats a truly diabolical idea to the president on how to deal with the comet. Isherwellâs company, BASH Cellular, is an obvious portrayal of the tech behemoths Apple, Google and Facebook have become. BASH is so ubiquitous, the fictional tech company is able to detect peopleâs moods and present them with visual content to help them feel better. That isnât out of the realm of reality, because who doesnât enjoy a great cat video right now? I sure do. But that the government capitulated to him isnât ridiculous at all in light of the current corporate control of the real-life U.S. government, and viewers should not miss the filmâs condemnation of the illogical, insane, life-threatening capitalist greed in the whole plan. What people may miss is the implied imperialism when the fictional U.S. government breaks a treaty with China and Russia, and the coincidental (not at all) mysterious (not at all) disaster that befalls the aforementioned countriesâ plan.
It is true that the film is co-written by David Sirota, former-Clintonite-turned-progressive. But Sirota and his crew are spot on with much of the political commentary. Where it misses is the film is very⊠Eurocentric, with only a lone Indigenous dancer near the end, which might signify the people nobody listened to. But Iâm not quite sure. That scene honestly seemed like an afterthought.
Otherwise, âDonât Look Upâ is a funny film because the responses of the fictional politicians, media figures and regular folks are so utterly and breathtakingly ridiculous and portrayed so well by the cast. But I think it also is a horror movie because we know every depiction of the real-life people and institutions those actors play is absolutely true.
Jacqueline Luqman is a radical activist based in Washington, D.C.; as well as co-founder of Luqman Nation, an independent Black media outlet that can be found on YouTube (here and here) and on Facebook; and co-host of Radio Sputnikâs âBy Any Means Necessary.â
Source: Towardfreedom.org