Night of the Comet – Limited Edition Steelbook 4K Ultra HD +
Night of the Comet – Limited Edition Steelbook 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray
It’s the first comet to buzz the planet in 65 million years, and everyone seems to be celebrating its imminent arrival. Everyone, that is, except Regina Belmont (Catherine Mary Stewart, The Last Starfighter) and her younger sister Samantha (Kelli Maroney, Chopping Mall), two Valley Girls who care more about fashion trends than the celestial phenomenon. But upon daybreak, when the girls discover that they’re the only residents of Los Angeles whom the comet hasn’t vaporized or turned into a zombie, they do what all good Valley Girls do…they go shopping! But when their day of malling threatens to become a day of mauling, these gals flee with killer zombies and blood-seeking scientists in hot pursuit!
Bonus Content:
- 4K Scan of the Original Camera Negative
- In Dolby Vision (HDR 10 Compatible)
- Audio Commentary with Actors Kelli Maroney and Catherine Mary Stewart
- Audio Commentary with Director Thom Eberhardt
- Audio Commentary with Production Designer John Muto
- Valley Girls at the End of the World: Interview with Kelli Maroney and Catherine Mary Stewart
- The Last Man on Earth?: Interview with Actor Robert Beltran
- Curse of the Comet: Interview with Makeup Effects Creator David B. Miller
- Theatrical Trailer
- Galleries: Movie Stills and Behind-the-Scenes Photos
| SKU: | B0H1JT72YX |


Do you enjoy cheesy B-Grade comet related "horror" movies from the 80's?
If so, then this is the penultimate comet related “horror” movie for you. It holds up surprisingly well all these years later and captures the essence of the 1980’s perfectly from the fashion to the video games (Tempest!) to the hair styles and valley-girl mannerisms. Definitely worth the watch and if you are like me, you’ll be coming back to it every so often for a rewatch as it’s a fun ride the whole way through. Definitely worth the price of admission to add to your collection.
Nostalgie pu
Moin,
ich sage jetzt nichts zum Film. Ob es einem gefllt, muss jeder selbst entscheiden. Geschmcker sind ja bekanntlich unterschiedlich.
Bild ist bei der DVD durchgehend gut. Sogar verdammt gut, fr einen B-Movie aus den 80’s.
Das die Scheibe nur eine englische Tonspur besitzt, darauf hatte ich mich eingestellt. Wermutstropfen: Ja, ja..leider keine Untertitel. Damit meine ich wirklich berhaupt keine! Schade, denn auch mit guten englisch Kenntnissen ist es sehr schwer, dem Film zu folgen: sehr starkes amerikanisches Waschiwaschi (verschluckte Enden, etc.). Kann doch heutzutage nicht so schwer sein, Untertitel in einer DVD einzuarbeiten?!
Zudem befinden sich keine Extras auf der Scheibe. Kann nur ausgewhlt werden zwischen sofort starten oder Kapitelauswahl…Boah, ist das nicht toll?!
Aber hey! Wer den Film von frher kennt, ihn vielleicht sogar noch auf mieser VHS-Quali besitzt, wird sich freuen.
Deswege 4 von 5 von mir.
Comet and stars align for a successful B Movie Effort - Truly Outstanding!
When I’m working hard, I can’t watch a Bergman, Oliver Stone or Kurosawa movie. It takes too much effort, and it can be too much like work. I haven’t been able to watch a Woody Allen movie in probably a decade. I don’t do angst well when I’m overworked.
By way of contrast, B movies are great when my brain is tired.
Interestingly, a good B movie can be entertaining for its creativity, as well as for an assumed level of mindlessness.
Night of the Comet, released in 1984, is a great example of that. The ability of the production team to create this classic “last people on earth” science fiction effort on a budget of $500,000-700,000 is in fact quite admirable.
The premise of the film is highly tenuous, that a comet that last visited the earth at the time of the dinosaurs’ extinction 65 million years ago is now returning, and taking out life on the planet all over again. Of course, a tenuous premise is part of what makes a B movie interesting. Where can the director/writer go with this thin thread connecting the elements of the story?
Fortunately, the film’s writer and director (Thom Eberhardt) pulls off this feat quite successfully.
After the comet’s tail has basically turned almost all life on earth to calcium dust, Eberhardt captures the results in an imaginative low-budget fashion. Somewhat obviously, the highways of Los Angeles are deserted – in fact overly deserted, given that some people must have been driving the highway when the comet’s toxic tail swiped our planet. OK, we can suspend disbelief about that. (Mr. Eberhardt notoriously used his own Mercedes as one of the abandoned vehicles in the film.)
Then we witness a series of electronic timers setting off various bits of machinery that will operate for no one. And the sidewalks of the city are littered with piles of human clothing and reddish calcium dust. An inexpensive but potent way to portray the comet’s destructive impact.
As we would expect in a B-movie, there is no effort to explain why electrical power is flowing seamlessly, gasoline is available to operate vehicles driven by southern California’s few survivors, houses are not burning due to stovetops being left on, natural gas leaks are not causing explosions, nuclear power plants are not melting down, etc. The planet, complex technological infrastructure and all, is eerily quiet, and strangely intact.
Let us disregard all of this, and maintain our brains in a state of deeply relaxed and narrowly focused alertness.
Eberhardt later acknowledged that he had no idea, as a young director, how many basic rules of movie-making he was breaking. He mixed the genres of science fiction, horror and comedy as with a blender. Like Joss Whedon, Eberhardt was interested in strong female characters, and he headed up the movie with two female leads and no primary male characters.
The leading characters, Regina (Catherine Mary Stewart, originally of Edmonton, Alberta) and Samantha (Kelli Maroney, originally of Minneapolis, Minnesota) are airy California valley girls who are surprisingly resourceful (it just so happens, for example, that their mostly absent Green Beret father took them to target practice, instructing them in the use of automatic weapons).
Primarily interested in video games and cheerleading practice at the outset, the two girls turn out to have more than what it takes to confront evil, save the imperilled (including each other as needed), and basically preserve life (and orderliness) on earth.
Siskel and Ebert loved the film, and this was a significant boon in the early days of its release. Night of the Comet double-billed with Schwarzenegger’s unexpected early blockbuster, The Terminator, at drive-ins that year, garnering the better reviews of the two films. However, the hoped-for blockbuster, 1984, had to be released before the year was out, and this caused Night of the Comet to get bumped early at many theatres, despite its grossing many multiples of its modest production cost.
Other reviewers have noted that the film captures a unique era in West Coast culture (big hair and shoulder pads), but Eberhardt was in fact capturing some very capable and imaginative acting on-screen as well. This is particularly commendable, given that the film was so low budget that essentially every foot of film that was shot ended up in the final release of the movie.
I note that the film is often grouped with “Zombie” films, but I think this is a serious error in categorization. In this film, the “zombies” are people with apparent partial exposure to the comet who are just desiccating more slowly than the majority, who were killed instantly. The zombies don’t keep coming back, in fact, they are expiring rapidly with no intervention required by our heroes.
Most importantly, the film is not really about combat with the zombies at all. Nor is it about special effects. It is primarily a dialogue-based composition, and some of the dialogue is surprisingly intelligent, heartfelt, and/or clever.
Therefore, in my view, this is a classic low budget science fiction “what if” type of movie. In this case, a familiar theme, “last people on earth,” is played out with verve, irony and imagination.
As an interesting side note, the female co-lead, Kelli Maroney, has remained interested in and committed to the concept of doing further work based on the film. Trained originally at the esteemed Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis, and then schooled in Shakespeare in New York City, Ms. Maroney’s film career took her unexpectedly in this direction – primarily through her roles in the present film, and earlier, in the classic “Fast Times at Ridgemont High.”
Ms. Maroney originally sought to produce a sequel to Night of the Comet, but discovered that MGM were, at least at the time, uninterested in surrendering their franchise for the movie. Perhaps fortuitously, MGM finally got around to releasing the film in stripped-down DVD version only in the spring of this year, but fairly shortly after refusing Ms. Maroney’s request to option the rights to the original film.
Ms. Maroney has spoken openly about her love for this film, conducting interviews on many occasions over the intervening two decades, and often appearing at conventions for film buffs. Ms. Maroney acknowledges that she still keeps one of the two original cheerleading outfits in her closet, and announces proudly that it still fits her fine.
I honestly have no idea what could be done with a sequel to Night of the Comet, but it is a fun idea to play with. Hopefully, someday, somewhere, a fitting sequel might be produced. If so, let’s be sure to keep the budget (and special effects) low, and the production and acting standards high, in which case, a sequel would be a nice fit with the very imaginative and entertaining original!
P.S. I must acknowledge that I have actually been minimizing how much I like this movie because of its (quite self-aware) B-movie categorization.
On reflection, a number of my lifetime favourite movies have been low-budget projects, and this perhaps because low budget movies make demands upon the imagination, rather than upon the sensory systems.
Among my all-time favourites are such works as “Happy Birthday Wanda June” (so low budget it is almost impossible to find), Alphaville (a classic Godard take on the low budget science fiction idea, much of it shot in “inter-galactic space” – in this case referring to the Ford Galaxy driven by the lead characters), Cherry 2000 (a movie about what kind of relationship you can and can’t have with a robot) and Forbidden Planet (previously discussed on this site). I have also discussed “The Searchers” recently – profoundly politically incorrect by modern sensibilities, but again, more of a treat for the imagination than for the senses. So, what is wrong with the formula – low budget, big imagination?
In fact, the story-line of Night of the Comet is a highly imaginative twist on a classic science fiction theme. The dialogue is fresh. The minimal use of props and special effects maximizes the power of the imaginative dimension of the story (in such a way as a stage production might do). The heroines are blunt, lively, appealing and ultimately admirable. And, perhaps most importantly, the acting by virtually all of the characters is entirely creditable, with just the right dose of understatement or overstatement as required by each situation.
Granted, there is a liberal dose of improbability, silliness and occasional dramatic excess, but these condiments are offered unself-consciously. I don’t think I’d be over-stating it to suggest that Night of the Comet is probably as good as any low budget movie can get. And that statement is made in recognition that low budget productions not uncommonly excel the quality of those made at many multiples of the cost of the shoestring effort.
There is something about the constraints of having next to no money that creates a “right attitude” in the production crew and cast of certain low budget films, and Night of the Comet has that (right) attitude in spades!
I have always loved this film and had worn out my old VHS ...
I have always loved this film and had worn out my old VHS copy. I decided to purchase this DVD from Music Magpie and I wasn’t disappointed. The DVD was in excellent condition as Music Magpie described. The extra’s that come with this DVD are excellent. The commentaries by both the two female leads are insightful along with the directors. The pull out that accompanies it again is riveting. It now seems so obvious, but this film influenced Joss Whedon of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and the film Serenity. This film is such a rare gem. You can count on one hand where the main characters of a film made in the 1980’s are women; which are equally strong, venerable, funny and very real. The budget for this film was only $700,000 but it doesn’t show at all. The re-mastering is excellent, but it you do not like the re-imagined cover on the DVD do not worry it is reversible and you can have the original instead. It is a fantastic movie and the only shame is that either Catherine Mary Stewart or Kelli Maroney never got a chance to display their terrific acting ability equally as well again.
I saw this film when it first was released in 1984. I would’ve dismissed it as nonsense, except Siskel & Ebert’s TV show gave it 2-thumbs-up; good advice. This is certainly a new take on the teen survivor film, and far more witty and clever than most. Some great performers here, starting with Kelli Maroney as the younger sister. She’s been in a few other films. The other main stars, Robert Beltran and Catherine Mary Stewart were fine, but I’ve never heard of them since. Thom Eberhardt crafted a great film, and I’m thrilled that it’s finally released on DVD. Unfortunately, there are no extras. It’s creepy, unsettling and no end of entertaining.Cast and crew info would’ve been really nice. Too bad this film was written off by the producers as unimportant. It also gives Mary Woronov a chance to shine, as an empathetic scientist. She’s always great. Can’t blab away the plot, but good sci-fi fantasy, with loads of humor, action, and scary stuff. Check it out!
Hadnt seen this since I was a kid in the 80s, it seemed waaaay more creepier back then but still love it and so happy to have it! The disc is in perfect shape and shipped fast!
BOTTOM LINE: Those who love a good adventure & a good laugh will doubtless enjoy this scary-lite end-of-the-world tale. The story is a refreshing take on the familiar post-apocalyptic zombie tropes and yet it’s suitable for all but the youngest family members. The film is lots of fun and very well made, giving it a high replay value, which makes it an even better purchase. 4 STARS
THE STORY (contains spoilers): A meteor – which the opening narration claims was responsible for wiping out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago – makes a return trip past the Earth. Every living thing directly exposed to the comet’s lethal rays is reduced to piles of red powder, while folks only partially exposed are turned into quasi-zombies. Film focuses on two sisters (who were both coincidentally shielded from the deadly rays) and their adventures in the post-apoc world left behind. A mysterious truck driver and a group of scientific types with questionable motivations help thicken the plot.
THOUGHTS: A fun diversion from the traditional zombie & post-apocalyptic fare. Scary situations & deadly dangers are still present to threaten our heroines & heroes, but NIGHT OF THE COMET also has an infectious sense of free-spirited fun to lighten things up. Cathrine Mary Stewart & Kelli Maroney are terrific as two teenaged sisters who battle zombies & other end-of-the-world hazards, in between bouts of giving each other stylin’ make-overs and trying on all the latest totally bitchin’ new outfits at a nearby mega mall. Like totally, fer sure! A young Robert Beltran impresses as a fast-on-his-feet trucker who chances upon the sisters at a local radio station and decides to stick with them and see what this uncertain new world has in store for them all. A simple but effective red gel overlay used on the camera lens during all the outdoor shots reminds you that things are no longer what they used to be thanks to that deadly meteor. Bummer, dude! Solid, straightforward direction from Thom Eberhardt keeps the proceedings moving along at a steady clip. A tight script with a few clever ideas keeps this from just being another doom-laden end of the world flick.
THE BLU-RAY: The hi-def transfer for NIGHT OF THE COMET looks & sounds great. Video portion features a good picture, with only minimal artifacting, pixelation and crush (video noise). Solid blacks & mid-tones. No edge enhancement or overuse of DNR to ruin the look of the film. Audio is strong and the soundmix is level & clean. In short, this is a really good release. Bonus goodies include new on-camera interviews with the three principle actors, a full-length audio commentary with most of the cast, the original theatrical trailer and more.
Night of the Comet is quite possibly the most entertaining horror film I have ever laid my eyes on. Of course, by entertaining I mean good for laughs and ridiculous fun.
If you haven’t seen this movie (or in some sad cases haven’t heard of it), do yourself a favor and take the opportunity to get your hands on this little gem. What the DVD lacks (no special features whatsoever, soundmix is only 2.0 stereo), the movie makes up for ten-fold. With a beautiful 1.85:1 widescreen, remastered transfer, Night of the Comet is finally given the due it deserves.
Night of the Comet starts off with a lot of fun and excitement as the 80s welcomes the return of a comet not seen in millions of years. But the next day, all have disappeared and only few (VERY few) are left on Earth. While some of those few desperately search for answers to this strange phenomenon, others have undergone a very frightening change.
Catherine Mary Stewart, Kelli Maroney, and Robert Beltran carry this movie so well and with such great comfort that you’ll want to watch this over and over again. While the movie is no oscar-winner, the lines have that great “80s feel” to them, and the styles are a solid reminder of what is long-gone (thankfully).
The best part about this movie, aside from the entertaining jokes and fun, is that the story is really pretty solid! This easily could’ve been a nightmarish, apocalyptic horror film because of its smart story and passable sci-fi ideas.
I highly recommend Night of the Comet for its fantastic rewatchability factor. The laughs (and even a few scares!) never get old!
First off, this is one of the most interesting films I’ve seen from the 80s. I was about to find some sad excuse to return my copy at first. My first assessment is that it was a romantic comedy verging into the musical genre, disguised as a horror/sci-fi film, in an all too literal sense, which seemed unfair. I could smell a distant scent of other things they call this sort of genre and I wont mention here: at some point, the sky and the whole atmosphere was to pink-ish and dawn-like for my taste, if you follow. As a hopeless horror addict, in contrast, the lack of zombie, graphic violence was what turned me off for the the most part. However, like it’s usually the case in a significant chunk of the catalogue, this movie is about what the living and, like it was beautifully put in one of George A. Romero’s masterpieces, what the zombies don’t. The scientist bunker element provided a perfect metaphor that the places for those who feel better than the rest end up crumbling, outweighed by the flow of life itself. Coupled with the visual cues of the shades worn by those who become contaminated, which I figure would turn the sky a different color, as well, this is what I get from it. Initially, I perceived the casting of the great Robert Beltrn as an identity statement along the lines of… romantic comedies, and Mexican soap operas, and so on… However, the fact is, in my opinion, that Mexican and Chicano (or Latindio, as Beltrn defines himself) actors are usually very serious about their craft and, despite the low-rider cars and cumbias that get on the way by whoever was able to make the choices here, his character comes to life in his skin, with a palette that goes beyond pink and whatever card whoever made the choices was trying to play. Same goes for the “it’s cute to have multiple sex partners, especially if my sister is into them” element, which from my initial perspective was just overplaying a sibling rivalry that was already too obvious. Literally, in the end and if you watch very closely, that plays wonderfully with the protagonist’s addiction to video games (as opposed to rooted in reality): the hero/heroine rides into the dawn on the best car available, probably to keep riding on another 20 or so. Overall, that light-red sky, the nightmarish zombie cops and the “shady” characters, among many other very welcome nuances, make this for a clever, intriguing but, most of all, original cult cinema experience, if somewhat too beautified. There are romantic comedies with nothing but weddings and no funerals, which is not my idea of a satisfying ending in a horror flick, but then, there are 80s romantic comedies… as it seems to be the rule in this case, and just for starters, the soundtrack is unforgettable… captures the feel of when the “west coast,” “yacht” sound was transitioning to something more electronic…