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San Andreas, a Wild Ride Through Disaster
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San Andreas, a Wild Ride Through Disaster

Ray moves fast as building crumbles behind him

SAN ANDREAS poster

Especially for disaster movie fans, San Andreas delivers a thrilling feast for your eyes and ears. Brilliantly concocted with amazing visuals of destruction, the movie’s not much on storyline, but bold and brazen when it comes to explosive excitement. It may not be considered the disaster movie holy grail, but you’ll surly be entertained for the price of your admission. 3D is the choice you’ll want to take for an experience remembered way after leaving the theater. And for the ultimate rush, see it in IMAX 3D where available.

From its peril filled beginning to a finale you will not believe, San Andreas is a fun rollercoaster ride through destruction and mayhem. In the center of it all are two men; Los Angeles FD search and rescue pilot Ray Gaines (Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson) and geophysics professor at Cal Tech University Lawrence Hayes (Paul Giamatti) a noted earthquake seismologist. Both will be caught up in the biggest earthquake in the world.

Carla Gugino as Emma and Dwayne Johnson as Ray are on the run from disaster in "San Andreas"
Carla Gugino as Emma and Dwayne Johnson as Ray are on the run from disaster in “San Andreas”

Following a daring rescue, Ray returns to his small Los Angeles apartment where he’s been living since separating from his wife Emma (Carla Gugino). The two are at odds with each other since the death of one of their daughters in a river rafting accident. In the meantime scientist Hayes has been working on a sensor that can predict earthquakes. It would give the populace a chance to evacuate in areas where a quake will do the most damage. He has concentrated on the San Andreas Fault a very unstable slice in the earth that runs inland along the western coast of the United States.

Blake (Alexandra Doddario) gets trapped in a car as the earthquake continues
Blake (Alexandra Doddario) gets trapped in a car as the earthquake continues

To get a true reading, Hayes and his assistant decide to check the multiple mini quakes at Hoover Dam in Nevada tacking sensors placed inside the huge wall of the hydroelectric power producer. Just as they conclude their calculations the dam starts to crack. Within minutes an earthquake tears the dam apart. Soon Los Angeles starts to feel the wrath of the massive tremors that start to flatten the city. Seeing the buildings collapsing, Ray takes flight in his chopper on a path to find Emma and their daughter Blake (Alexandra Doddario).

Paul Giamatti as Lawrence and Archie Panjabi as Serena take shelter under a desk
Paul Giamatti as Lawrence and Archie Panjabi as Serena take shelter under a desk

The film moves along at a fast pace showing the widespread obliteration of buildings, airports, bridges, roads and a whole lot more. Bringing on the turmoil, director Brad Peyton performs his magic turning the landscape into a harrowing trail of ruin. In addition he adds the urgency of his main character to locate and save his family. The story gets extremely “Hollywood”, but after all it’s a fantasy like most films from Mad Max to Star Wars.

The one thread that holds the film together making it very creepy comes with the reality that the San Andreas Fault could indeed come apart at the seams. If it ever does it may look something like what you’ll see in the movie. That’s the beauty of disaster movies, making use of the possibility of an actual extreme event to send an audience on a wild ride, and Peyton accomplishes his goal. You’d almost think Peyton studied under Roland Emmerich the master of disaster director of the films 2012 and The Day After Tomorrow.

Emma embraces Ray in the midst of distruction
Emma embraces Ray in the midst of distruction

The Rock never changes from one extremely violent film to another. His performance in Furious 7 shows the aggressive form of acting that he brings to every action movie role. Here he turns it up a notch and makes the film work. The determined lifesaver role in San Andreas may feel like he’s typecast, but who cares, if the adventure needs a strong character why not The Rock?

The real stars of the film are the crews who bring the amazing special effects, art, sets, models and makeup for the cataclysmic events in the film. From disintegrating skyscrapers, bridges and Hoover Dam to a vast ocean producing a monstrous tsunami, this film shows the realistic collapse of an event such as this. The special effects involving the aforementioned crews with support of computer graphic imagining (CGI) has come a long way in the hands of these visual effects masters. What you will see in the trailer captures only a few minutes of the extreme wreckage depicted in the full length film. And if you choose see it in 3D IMAX it becomes even more electrifying with outstanding sights and sound.

But it doesn’t stop there as Peyton pulls off many spectacular stunts that in some cases include the actors themselves. While The Rock may be accustomed to jumping into a harness and being pulled into the air, even Carla Gugino as Emma gets into the act. In one scene, per director Peyton, she’s conveyed as if dangling from a helicopter as she’s lifted off a building that’s coming apart. And speaking of Gugino, she’s a good choice as the disconsolate housewife. She portrays well the woman who can’t come to grips with the loss of one child, only to be faced with the possibility of this disaster taking her only remaining daughter.

San Andreas has been rated PG-13 by the MPAA for intense disaster action and mayhem throughout, and brief strong language.

FINAL ANALYSIS: Recommended for disaster action film junkies that are along for a wild ride and who really don’t care too much about storylines. (B)

Additional Film Information:
Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Carla Gugino, Alexandra Daddario, Ioan Gruffudd, Archie Panjabi, Paul Giamatti, Hugo Johnstone-Burt, Art Parkinson, Will Yun Lee, Kylie Minogue.
Directed by: Brad Peyton
Genre: Disaster Films, Action, Thriller
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for intense disaster action and mayhem throughout, and brief strong language
Running Time: 1 hr. 54 min
Release Date: May 29, 2015
Distributed by: Warner Bros/New Line Cinema
Release Formats: 2D. 3D, IMAX 3D and ETX where available

SOME FACTS:

San Andreas Fault, major fracture of the Earth’s crust in extreme western North America. The fault trends northwestward for more than 800 miles (1,300 km) from the northern end of the Gulf of California through western California, U.S., passing seaward into the Pacific Ocean in the vicinity of San Francisco. Tectonic movement along the fault has been associated with occasional large earthquakes originating near the surface along its path, including a disastrous quake in San Francisco in 1906, a less serious event there in 1989, and a strong and destructive quake centered in the Los Angeles suburb of Northridge in 1994 that occurred along one of the San Andreas’s larger secondary faults- Encyclopedia Britanica
The San Andreas Fault is a continental transform fault that extends roughly 810 miles through California. It forms the tectonic boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, and its motion is right-lateral strike-slip (horizontal). The fault divides into three segments, each with different characteristics and a different degree of earthquake risk, the most significant being the southern segment, which passes within about 35 miles of Los Angeles – Wikipedia Encyclopedia
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Writer, critic, film editor John Delia, Sr. has been on all sides of the movie business from publications to film making. He has worked as a film critic with ACED Magazine for more than 20 years and other publications for a total of 40 years. He earned a Bachelor’s degree in communications from the University of Florida. John is a member of the Southeastern Film Critics Association and Critics Association of Central Florida Send John a message at jdelia@acedmagazine.com