The Sky Is Falling—And So Is the Acting
If you’ve ever stared at the night sky and thought, “What if the end of humanity looked like a Windows 98 screensaver?”, then Meteor Apocalypse is the film for you. Directed by Micho Rutare and released straight to DVD (because even cable said “no thank you”), this 2010 disaster movie manages to turn one of the most exciting ideas in science fiction—a comet hurtling toward Earth—into a 90-minute slog that makes you wish it would just hurry up and finish us off.
This is the kind of movie where meteors destroy entire cities, yet the camera never leaves a single Nevada highway. It’s the apocalypse, all right—just not the one you paid to see.
Once Upon a Time in the Dollar Bin
The film begins with NASA—sorry, “the world’s space agencies”—discovering that a long-period comet is on a collision course with Earth. Naturally, every nuclear power launches its entire arsenal of ICBMs at it, which is exactly what scientists recommend when you want to turn one large problem into several smaller ones. The missiles break the comet into fragments, and now Earth is pelted with space gravel like a windshield in a hailstorm.
Enter our hero, research scientist David Dematti (Joe Lando, of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman fame). When we first meet him, he’s asleep on the job, which, in hindsight, is the most relatable thing about this movie. He’s awakened by his coworker, who’s apparently dying from drinking contaminated water. David quickly deduces that the comet has infected Lake Mead with alien toxins. How? Science, I guess. The movie certainly doesn’t bother explaining it.
From there, David sets out to find his wife Kate (Claudia Christian) and daughter Alison (Madison McLaughlin), who have been quarantined by the government. Unfortunately, the government in this movie consists of about five guys with clipboards and one helicopter sound effect.
When the World Ends, You Can Still Carpool
While fleeing quarantine, David rescues Lynn (Cooper Harris), a young woman he finds unconscious at a gas station—because nothing says “romantic subplot” like toxic drinking water and third-degree burns. The two hit the road to Las Vegas, which, in this version of the apocalypse, looks suspiciously like Burbank.
Along the way, they encounter the usual disaster-movie essentials: a preacher with questionable survival instincts, a few conveniently placed explosions, and at least three conversations about “having faith.” The only thing missing is a dog that refuses to get on the helicopter.
When they finally reach Vegas, the city is obliterated by meteorites rendered with what looks like early Xbox graphics. Casinos crumble, cars flip, and fireballs bloom—all with the visual sophistication of a screensaver named “Armageddon 3D.” You half expect Clippy from Microsoft Word to pop up and ask, “It looks like you’re trying to survive a meteor impact—need help with that?”
The Science of Nonsense
Science fiction, by definition, involves some science. Meteor Apocalypse, however, treats science like an optional extra. The comet fragments apparently release a mysterious pathogen that poisons the water supply. But somehow, an experimental antidote exists, stored conveniently close to the hero’s location, ready to fix the world with one syringe and a lot of optimism.
The cure, developed by David’s unseen colleague, is apparently a magic serum that can reverse space poisoning in seconds. Forget NASA—this guy should be curing hangovers and acne. The only explanation we get is David mumbling something about “a molecular compound designed to counteract alien amino acids.” Translation: “We made this up five minutes ago.”
Acting in a Vacuum
Joe Lando does his best to look serious while surrounded by dialogue that sounds like it was written during a fire drill. His David is the archetypal disaster-movie dad: rugged, resourceful, and emotionally constipated. Every time he delivers a line, it’s like he’s silently apologizing to his agent.
Claudia Christian, who once graced Babylon 5, spends most of the film looking concerned from a different location, occasionally radioing in to remind us she exists. Madison McLaughlin, playing their daughter, gets sick early and then vanishes from the plot like the film’s budget.
As for Cooper Harris’s Lynn, she’s introduced to provide a dose of moral support and die heroically at the most inconvenient time possible. When she finally succumbs to her illness, it’s not so much tragic as merciful. At least she got out early.
The Government That Couldn’t
No apocalyptic movie is complete without bureaucratic incompetence, and Meteor Apocalypse delivers in spades. The U.S. government, represented by a few men shouting into radios, announces a full quarantine of the water supply. Their plan? Herd civilians into Los Angeles—because if a meteor’s coming, you might as well centralize the body count.
The Secretary of Homeland Security cancels the evacuation for “resource reasons,” which is bureaucratic code for “we ran out of extras.” His subordinates disobey him, but it doesn’t matter—their rebellion is shown through a phone conversation and a montage of empty highways. You know it’s serious when even the B-roll refuses to cooperate.
The Meteoric Mess
The disaster scenes are where Meteor Apocalypse truly shines—if by “shines” you mean “flickers dimly under a wet blanket of CGI.” Fireballs rain down like someone shaking a snow globe filled with glitter and regret. Cars explode for no reason. Buildings collapse in ways that defy both physics and geometry.
At one point, a meteor hits a church mid-sermon, presumably because even God had stopped watching. It’s supposed to be poignant, but the fake fire and overdramatic slow motion make it feel like an outtake from Sharknado.
And yet, despite global catastrophe, we never see more than ten people at once. The world is ending, but apparently the apocalypse observes strict social distancing.
Love in the Time of Space Germs
Lynn and David’s dynamic tries to hint at something deeper, but their chemistry has the emotional temperature of lukewarm tap water. When Lynn dies after saving the antidote for David’s daughter, it’s played for tragedy, but the editing is so abrupt you might miss it if you blink.
David mourns her by looking off into the distance and squinting—his go-to expression for every emotion, including love, grief, and mild confusion.
He then scales a cliff (because symbolism?) to find his wife and daughter. The family reunion is heartfelt for about twelve seconds before the sky explodes again, this time taking Los Angeles with it. Honestly, the city probably thanked the comet for putting it out of its misery.
Apocalypse Wow (Not Really)
By the film’s end, David cures his daughter, the family hugs, and the camera pans to a smoking crater where Los Angeles used to be. It’s meant to be inspiring, but it feels like the movie’s way of saying, “We’re done here.”
If there’s a moral to Meteor Apocalypse, it’s that no matter how many meteors hit Earth, bad dialogue and cheap effects are indestructible.
Final Impact
Meteor Apocalypse wants to be Armageddon, but it barely qualifies as Doomsday Lite. It’s a movie about the end of the world that feels like the end of patience. Between the recycled disaster footage, incoherent science, and acting so stiff it could survive reentry, this is a film best enjoyed with heavy sedation.
If the comet didn’t kill humanity, this script just might.
Final Grade: D-
A cosmic catastrophe of bad writing, budget extinction, and special effects that belong in a museum of disappointment.

