Showing posts with label disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disaster. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
'The Burning Sea' (2021) Movie Review
With 2015’s The Wave and it’s 2018 sequel The Quake, Norway turned in two of the best disaster movies of the last decade, if not longer. It’s a feat made even more impressive that they both cost around $6 million and pulled off spectacle on a scale Hollywood hasn’t achieved recently with exponentially more money. Much of the creative team, including Quake director John Andreas Anderson, and writer Harald Rosenlow-Eeg, who penned the previous two films, are back with a new cinematic catastrophe, The Burning Sea.
Thursday, June 25, 2020
'Greenland' Trailer: Gerard Butler Fights A Planet-Killing Comet
Oh my, this is just the kind of pick me up I needed today. Given the chaotic, unstable state of the world—what with entitled assholes refusing to stay home or wear masks to prevent a global pandemic and Black people begging the police not to murder them—many may not want to watch an apocalyptic, end-of-the-world movie. I, however, say bring that shit on. Especially when it stars Gerard Butler. And in that spirit, here is the first trailer for the Gerard-Butler-fights-a-planet-killing-comet movie, Greenland. Yeah, that’s the good stuff.
Wednesday, December 12, 2018
'The Quake' (2018) Movie Review
Simply put, 2015 Norwegian import The Wave is the best disaster movie in recent years. Not only does it deliver on the spectacle such movies require, it’s also full of strong characters, legitimate emotional stakes, and deep investment. It also landed director Roar Uthaug the gig helming the latest Tomb Raider iteration. And all of this for a roughly $6 million price tag.
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
'Skyscraper' (2018) Movie Review
Why not? I’ll watch a one-legged Dwayne Johnson dangle off
of a burning building with Neve Campbell for 102 minutes. Sure, there’s more to
Skyscraper than that, but not much. And that’s all that matters
in what’s a serviceable, at times goofily over-the-top entertaining, at times
dreadful and dreary Die-Hard-meets-Towering-Inferno
riff. And I’m fairly certain the entire film was bankrolled by the Chinese duct
tape industry. Seriously, the silver-backed tape has a much more significant
presence than it has any right to.
Thursday, September 29, 2016
'Deepwater Horizon' (2016) Movie Review
As a filmmaker, Peter Berg is in love with the process of
things. He fills his films, even Battleship, with
meticulous, methodical sequences, like a helicopter refueling early on in his
latest tale of real-life disaster and heroism, Deepwater
Horizon. An affection and even tenderness washes over what amounts to
little more than a mechanical interaction between man and machine.
Monday, June 27, 2016
'Independence Day: Resurgence' (2016) Movie Review
Independence Day: Resurgence, the
long-awaited (at least in years, I’m not sure if anyone has actually been
waiting 20 years for this) sequel to Roland Emmerich’s 1996 alien invasion
disaster flick, is nonsensical shit garbage. But it’s nonsensical shit garbage
that I thoroughly enjoyed.
Thursday, May 28, 2015
'San Andreas' Movie Review: As Fun As It Is Ridiculous
If you saw the trailers and TV spots of Dwayne “The Rock”
Johnson racing a boat up the face of a tsunami and weaving a helicopter in and
out of collapsing skyscrapers, and thought to yourself, “This San Andreas movie looks pretty awesome,” then you are going to be really
happy. If you had the opposite reaction, or are looking for nuanced characters,
a unique and interesting plot, or any form of subtlety, you will not be.
San Andreas is, however, exactly the movie that’s been
advertised. This is Dwayne Johnson fighting a fucking earthquake, and as
ridiculous as it is, it’s also a gleeful epic blast.
Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Dwayne Johnson Will Save You In This 'San Andreas' Trailer
You know who I will follow blindly in the event of any major
disaster? That’s right, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. And that includes in the
aftermath of a massive earthquake, just like in the first trailer for his
upcoming San Andreas. This looks so, so dumb, but also super awesome.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Blu-Ray/DVD Review: 'Aftershock'
To lay this out right off the bat, I’ve never been a big fan
of anything Eli Roth has ever done. There are two exceptions, he’s great in
“Inglorious Basterds,” and that fake trailer he made for “Grindhouse” is pretty
fantastic. Aside from that, the “Hostel” films don’t do anything for me, and I
even found “Cabin Fever” underwhelming. I want to like his movies—sometimes I
feel like it makes me a bad horror fan that I don’t—and I appreciate how
excited and enthusiastic he always comes across about the genre, but it simply
hasn’t clicked. I keep trying, but failing to make that connection.
Friday, September 9, 2011
'Contagion' Movie Review

Friday, August 12, 2011
'Final Destination 5' Movie Review

Thursday, May 26, 2011
'The Hangover 2' Movie Review

Tuesday, May 10, 2011
DVD/Blu-ray Review: 'Blue Valentine'

Tuesday, March 8, 2011
'The Walking Dead Season One' DVD Review

Robert Kirkman's “The Walking Dead” is one of the best monthly comics in recent memory. Though it may be about zombies on the surface, like the best of the genre, the heart of the story is the human element. Kirkman uses the plague of the undead to heighten and intensify the emotions and personalities of his characters. When faced with the destruction of everything you know, you find out who people really are, and what is really important. Frank Darabont’s adaptation of “The Walking Dead” for AMC shares this outlook, was an enormous popular and critical success, and Season One has just hit DVD/Blu-ray.
Labels:
Adaptation,
Adventure,
Apocalypse,
Badass,
Comic Book,
disaster,
Drama,
DVD,
Monsters,
Splatter,
Suspense,
Thriller,
TV,
Zombies
Friday, February 4, 2011
'Sanctum' Movie Review

Monday, December 20, 2010
'2012' Movie Review

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