 I saw somebody online recommend this movie. I don't remember who or where I saw it. But I'm always interested in independent science fiction films, so I looked it up. It's available for download directly from the filmmaker himself for only ten bucks. I went into this knowing absolutely nothing about it, and that's exactly how you should go into movies, I think. It starts off with a group of eight D-list actors who are obviously improvising their way through a dinner party scene. This is normally the kind of thing that I would never watch. But on this particular night, there is a comet passing close to Earth. There's something unusual about the comet. They mentioned something about how the last time it came past the Earth. There were written accounts of people becoming confused, not being able to find their way home. Well anyway, the power suddenly goes out. They look outside, and they can see one house a couple blocks away that still has power. Now those of you who are real science fiction fans, you're already guessing what house that is, and you're right. At this point, I started to get much more interested. Now this review is a follow-up to the book review that I posted yesterday of William Slater's Last Universe because it had such a similar theme, and I saw it the same day that I was reading the book. And this movie has the same problem that I talked about yesterday, in that the characters start talking about quantum physics and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, and they start trying to explain the situation by telling the story of Schrodinger's cat, and they're doing it wrong. They don't know what they're talking about. It's one of those things that books and movies and TV shows do all the time, and I just shake my head. But as with the book, as the story went on, it got more interesting than I thought it was going to be. This was done in a way that I've not quite seen before, and as you know, I always appreciate surprises, and then the end of the movie came along, and I was completely surprised. I don't want to oversell it to anybody. It's just not what you're going to expect. A little independent film like this that shot over the course of a few days with a director and a handful of actors who know each other is the kind of project that can experiment with stories that Hollywood can't or won't do, and you can always have an appreciation for that even when it's not the greatest movie in the world. This is not the greatest movie in the world, but it's worth seeing for science fiction fans because it's so unusual. And again, it's only a $10 download direct from the filmmaker at the address on the screen, and I recommend it.