New trailer for 'Don't Look Up' has us excited about Netflix's comet-impact dark comedy

The new trailer for "Don't Look Up" has us very excited.
"Another Life," "The Cloverfield Paradox" and "Io" are some of the more dire examples that have been distributed by the company, but we have thoroughly enjoyed others, including the vastly under appreciated satire "War Machine" and the epic comedy. Our guide to the best space movies and TV shows on the internet can be found here.
"Don't Look Up" has all the signs that it's going to be a well-written, very funny, deeply disturbing and beautifully observed dark comedy-cum-satire. It is a message about climate change and mockery of those who don't pay attention to the science. That could be applied to a number of things, including the Pandemic, pollution, and so on.
This is probably how it would happen, and it's probably not "Deep Impact" or "Armageddon". The credit is from the video streaming service, Netflix.

The cast of this movie includes Leonardo DiCaprio, Jen Lawrence, and the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable, the incomparable,

The writer and director behind it is the same one who gave us "The Big Short" and "Vice", Adam McKay.

The greatest close encounters of all time.

Kate Dibiasky, an astronomy graduate student, and her professor, Dr. Randall Mindy, make an astounding discovery of a comet in the solar system. It's on a direct collision course with Earth. No one cares. It's an inconvenient fact that people are warned about the size of Mount Everest.
Kate and Randall embark on a media tour that takes them from the office of an indifferent President Orlean and her sycophantic son and Chief of Staff, to the air of The Daily. With only six months until the comet makes an impact, managing the news cycle and gaining the attention of the social media obsessed public before it's too late, is it possible to get the world to look up?

"Don't Look Up" will be released in select theaters and on the internet on December 24, 2021.

Follow Scott on social media. Follow us on social media.