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Comet
Comet is about the love of two people. They come from two different universes. They fall in love with each other. Their love unravels over the course of six years in this mysterious, dazzingly original romance.
12 September 1986, New York City, New York, USA
29 April 1957, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
12 August 1997, Dallas, Texas, USA
17 July 1976, La Mirada, California, USA
2 June 1978, Fairfield, Connecticut, USA
July 02, 2015
A sense of laborious, futile strain comes off this phoney-baloney indie, which looks and sounds very much like an attempt to fashion a more amenable (and thereby saleable) version of Shane Carruth's puzzle pictures.December 04, 2014
These occasionally obnoxious, certainly neurotic young lovers have beating, sometimes broken hearts, and that, as the apostle Paul once noted, tends to trump all.December 06, 2014
Its conceits ... get in the way of its characters, making it feel fussy and convoluted when it aims for something more simple and elegant.July 02, 2015
Handsome but needlessly gimmicky.July 03, 2015
Tedious romantic dramedy with a pointless sci-fi tinge that has nothing in the least bit memorable to say about anything at all.July 10, 2015
An ambitious and striking effort.December 18, 2014
Justin Long is a fine actor, but you have to like him a lot to get through "Comet," Sam Esmail's trippy, overly mannered romance.July 02, 2015
The performances are commendable and the zippy, back-and-forth dialogue is consistently enjoyable.December 11, 2014
Watching a not-very-interesting couple break up is one thing; watching them break up and get back together numerous times in different universes and dimensions is, well ... to paraphrase "Jaws," I'm going to need a bigger popcorn bag.December 05, 2014
Yes, some of it is overwritten and a bit too clever for its own good, but more often it's an engaging character piece.June 30, 2015
Just when you think you're about to fall for this fuzzy sci-fi romance, it disappears into its own navel.June 20, 2016
There's a lot of gorgeous, sci-fi inspired cinematography here by Eric Koretz, but none seem as intriguing as the ones depicting Kimberly's face or Dell's gaze as he watches her.