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Collision Earth is a Canadian disaster television film directed by Paul Ziller. [1] It was released in 2011 for broadcast on the Syfy Channel and later distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment on Blu-ray.
This list of disaster films represents over half a century of films within the genre. Disaster films are motion pictures which depict an impending or ongoing disaster as a central plot feature. The films typically feature large casts and multiple storylines and focus on the protagonists attempts to avert, escape, or cope with the disaster ...
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Impact is a 2009 Canadian action disaster miniseries directed by Mike Rohl, written by Michael Vickerman and distributed by Tandem Communications, starring David James Elliott, Natasha Henstridge, Benjamin Sadler, Steven Culp, James Cromwell and Florentine Lahme as the story shows about a meteor shower which eventually sends the Moon on a collision course with Earth.
Panic in Year Zero! (1962) The Day of the Triffids (1962) This Is Not a Test (1962) La Jetée (1962) Ladybug Ladybug (1963) Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) The Time Travelers (1964) Fail-Safe (1964) The Last Man on Earth (1964) Crack in the World (1965) Daleks – Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. (1966) In ...
The film is based on the 1933 science fiction novel of the same name, co-written by Edwin Balmer and Philip Wylie. [3] The film's storyline concerns the coming destruction of the Earth by a rogue star [Note 1] called Bellus and the desperate efforts to build a space ark to transport a group of men and women to Bellus' single planet, Zyra.
Based on crater formation rates determined from the Earth's closest celestial partner, the Moon, astrogeologists have determined that during the last 600 million years, the Earth has been struck by 60 objects of a diameter of 5 km (3 mi) or more. [20] The smallest of these impactors would leave a crater almost 100 km (60 mi) across.
Beck announces the mission's failure in a television address, and that both pieces—the larger now named Wolf and the smaller named Biederman—are still headed for Earth. Wolf is on a collision course with western Canada, and its impact is expected to fill the atmosphere with dust, blocking all sunlight for two years and creating an impact ...