Meteor
Meteor is a 1979 impact event film, one of the last attempts to maintain the disaster movie genre (although given the basic premise of two of the blockbusters of more modern times, maybe it was prophetic). An all-star cast including Sean Connery, Karl Malden and Natalie Wood work to stop a five-mile wide meteor (yes, a five-mile wide space rock is called a meteor, not an asteroid) from hitting the Earth in six days after it was detected within the asteroid belt.
And somewhere...an astronomer is crying.
Tropes used in Meteor include:
- Artistic License Astronomy: And how! (In spite of having not one, but two scientific advisors.)
- As stated above, a five-mile wide chunk of rock is called a meteor, instead of an asteroid. Meteors are technically the visible path of a meteoroid that has entered the Earth's atmosphere.
- Within two days, Challenger 2 is able to divert from its approach to Mars towards the asteroid belt, which would take several days if not weeks.
- The asteroid belt is not a jumbled mess of rocks. The asteroids are actually spread out; you could fly a ship through the asteroid belt and barely come within sight of any.
- The poster says that Orpheus is approaching at 30,000 mph and will hit in six days. In six days, it would have travelled over four million miles, nowhere near the distance from the asteroid belt. For reference, Mars is some eighty million miles from Earth.
- When Orpheus passes by, the sun is in eclipse!
- Some of the missiles launched seem to run out of fuel and fall...in space. Rockets are supposed to run out of fuel and glide to their destination.
- Captain Obvious: "It's coming apart in a million pieces!"
- Last Stand: The last chunk of Orpheus heads for New York, and manages to hit the AT&T building, as if the asteroid knew where the launch was being ordered from.
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