![]() Tyson also mentions the differences in the scientific accuracy between 1998’s dueling giant asteroid-smashing-into-Earth films – Deep Impact and Armageddon and how while he found Deep Impact to be the more scientifically accurate of the two, he still thought Armageddon was “entertaining” but that he “couldn’t even tweet about how bad the physics was.” You can see his complete response in the video below.ĭr. “Had they actually gotten right, it would have been a vastly more interesting movie!” Tyson states, while explaining where the film got it wrong. ![]() It turns out, it’s Disney’s 1979 film The Black Hole. But it turns out he hadn’t even commented on his most hated film, in terms of scientific inaccuracy, until a TMZ camera crew caught up with him. He certainly attracted attention last winter when he turned his attentions to Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity. As a sideline to his advocacy for better science education in the United States, noted astrophysicist and television personality Neil deGrasse Tyson has sometimes called out movies that don’t get their science correct.
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