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What is the summary of Geostorm movie?
After an unprecedented series of natural disasters threatened the planet, the world’s leaders came together to create an intricate network of satellites to control the global climate and keep everyone safe. But now, something has gone wrong: the system built to protect Earth is attacking it, and it becomes a race against the clock to uncover the real threat before a worldwide geostorm wipes out everything and everyone along with it.
Geostorm/Film synopsis
What kind of movie is Geostorm?
Disaster
ActionScience fictionThriller
Geostorm/Genres
Geostorm is a 2017 American science fiction disaster film directed, co-written, and co-produced by Dean Devlin (in his feature directorial debut).
Is Geostorm worth watching?
Overall, despite a ridiculously turbulent birth, Geostorm is an honest film. Sure, it’s premise is plagued by plot inconsistencies and the characters aren’t fleshed out enough for us to care about their fates, but it’s a rollercoaster ride of special effects and disaster, which I’m not ashamed to say, I really enjoyed.
What is Geostorm rated?
PG-13
Geostorm/MPAA rating
What happens at the end of Geostorm?
Jake and the station’s commander Ute escape the station as it self-destructs, and they are rescued and brought back to Earth. Jake gets his old job back working on a new Dutch Boy, while he and Max repair their relationship.
Who made Geostorm?
Isuzu
The Storm was a small sports car, designed and constructed by Isuzu, and imported to and sold in the United States under General Motors’ Geo brand. It was available in two body styles, a classic three-door fastback and a rather odd two-door station wagon.
Is Geostorm a bad movie?
Yes, Geostorm is bad, but it’s not a stinker for the ages. In fact, given its torturous production history, it’s often strangely competent and even, in its geostorming final third, moves somewhere towards being entertaining for a movie that essentially boils down to ‘Gerry Butler versus weather’.
Who are the bad people in Geostorm?
Leonard Dekkom is the main antagonist of the 2017 American sci-fi film Geostorm. He is a U.S. Secretary of State who plans to use the Dutch Boy satellite network to decimate the other elected officials in America’s line of succession, giving him the chance to dominate the world while destroying Earth’s major cities.
Is Geostorm boring?
However, there’s a good reason why Warner Brothers barely even released ‘Geostorm’ years after completion – it’s shockingly boring. Disaster movies aren’t generally high art or defined by a subtle grasp of the dynamics of human relationships, but this one is particularly rough to sit through.
Is Geostorm a sequel?
On its much-delayed release in 2017, Geostorm received scathing reviews and tanked hard at the box office, so sadly a sequel is unlikely to ever see the light of day.
Is Geostorm appropriate for kids?
— as well as a fight, a shootout, a car chase, and a character dying after getting hit by a car — but nothing particularly bloody/graphic. There’s also occasional mild language (“s–t,” “goddamn,” etc.). Younger kids could be scared by images of people instantly freezing to death, but no suffering is conveyed.
Are Geostorms possible?
Not possible. Geostorm addresses the issue of global warming and explores what would happen if humanity failed to prevent it. However, in the film scientists have built a network of satellites called Dutch Boy that can neutralize natural disasters with one zap.
What do parents need to know about the movie Geostorm?
What parents need to know. Parents need to know that Geostorm is an action/disaster movie starring Gerard Butler and Jim Sturgess about a global superstorm that threatens to wipe out the planet.
Does “Geostorm” work?
It all sounds absolutely ridiculous but the real disappointment about “Geostorm” is that it doesn’t even work as the camp suggested by the trailer.
Where did the idea of the Geostorm come from?
But its true inspiration comes from whodunits and ’70s paranoia thrillers, as the good guys try to unravel a conspiracy before the manipulated system creates the geostorm that will end us all.
Could ‘Geostorm’ have used a sharknado?
I never dreamed that the day would come when I would say these words, but “Geostorm” is a film that really could have used a Sharknado or two to liven things up. Peter Sobczynski is a contributor to eFilmcritic.com and Magill’s Cinema Annual and can be heard weekly on the nationally syndicated “Mancow’s Morning Madhouse” radio show.