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10.5
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DVD detailsActor: David Cubitt, Kaley Cuoco, Kendall Cross, Kim Delaney, Peter Benson Brand: Lions Gate DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 165 minutes DVD Release Date: 2004-08-24 Audience Rating: Unrated Studio: Lions Gate
DVD Reviews of 10.5DVD Review: Horrible Summary: 1 StarsI am a movie-freak and can stand even the cheesiest or most bizarre movies but this movie is one of those rare ones where I can't even finish watching. It starts out as if there is information missing. I kept switching tracks and turned the disc over, but it starts out with part 1 making you feel as if there was something before that. Maybe mine is defective - but they even refer to characters as if you were supposed to know them and their story. The second awful thing about this - the camera work. I know whoever shot it felt they were being "edgy" or something, but honestly - it was ridiculous. Imagine you are holding a camcorder and you zoom in and zoom out again, over and over, and your hand shakes occasionally - that is how this one was shot. The dialogue is similar to soap opera on t.v. There are the obligatory meaningful looks, and the petty family squabbles that try to seem more important than the disasters around them. To be honest I absolutely hate soap opera, so I may be biased there. I can't review any more of this because I can't finish it, it's going into the trash tonight.
DVD Review: Good Movie Summary: 4 StarsThis is a good movie. There are a few scenes where the graphics are a bit cheaply done. But overall it is a good movie. It sure makes you think about the future.
DVD Review: If you know ANYthing about quakes, do not watch this movie. Summary: 1 StarsI barely managed to stomach the first 20 minutes or so of this movie. When they showed the Seattle Space Needle not moving at all during this allegedly major quake, then suddenly crack at the base and topple over, I knew it was about time to turn it off. When they showed the Richter magnitude on a digital readout going up, up, up that was the final straw. I'm sure seismologists wish we had that technology but we don't. Please, if you know anything at all about quakes and are fascinated by geology, don't even turn it on. It's not science fiction, it's science fantasy.
DVD Review: Does anybody screen these things before or after production? Summary: 2 StarsAfter hearing some hype about this movie, I thought it might be a good film to watch on a lazy Saturday afternoon. "Disaster" flicks were popular when I was growing up (Volcano, Dante's Peak, Asteroid, etc.), so I've learned a suspend a little disbelief over the years. This film, however, was hardly worth the time.
My first dislike was the fact that this "disaster" was scientifically impossible. Again, when it comes to disaster films, one must suspend a little disbelief, but this film blantly disregarded geological science. I'm not a geologist personally, but I've taken college-level courses in that field and know plenty of geologists who are practically crying because of the impossibility of "chain reaction" earthquakes tearing California off the coast. Yeah, okay, some may say that "nothing in science is for sure fact", but this film is basically like writing a screenplay for a "disaster" where scientific experimentation has caused gravity to intensify seven fold unless the hero can find a way to reverse one of the universe's strongest forces.
My second dislike was the acting and the dialogue. None of the characters were memorable ones. There was a dad and daughter in the forest, a wimpy president, his buddy who runs FEMA (before Katrina, clearly), some doctors, a few family members, a governor, two scientists, and state office assistants. Believe it or not, are all tied together by three degrees of separation, everyone except some ridiculous bike guy who rides around, escaping a falling city around him. None of their subplots were remarkably exciting. The only way I could distinguish them was by knowing that some had worse acting than others. There were some one-liners that I seriously wonder what agent would ever pick up a screenwriter who writes that kind of stuff (especially since I'm trying to find one myself and my writing is (I'm told) much better).
The third dislike was the action and graphics. On a scene where the Golden Gate Bridge is in trouble, the cars perched on there are clearly Matchbox cars, without a doubt in the world. Watching them fall into the water had me laughing myself to tears. The Seattle Space Needle collapse was poorly done through use of computer-aided graphics. Even the cracks that formed from the quakes were too fake to let pass. Granted, it was a low budget flick, but seriously.
This movie made the classic movie mistake of overdoing the action sequences and underfilming them. There are at least four scenes where the same 4-second shot is taken from different cameras to expand the time used to 16 seconds. Additionally, some action sequences were occurring that weren't necessary. For example, is it really necessary to show 15 car crash sequences when an earthquake occurs? Wouldn't only 3 or 4 happen and then all drivers would be stopped? Furthermore, how is it possible that all these scientists have such little time to solve the problem, but can create these amazing graphical presentations with flashing map images and beeping sounds?
To summarize, most disaster flicks require one to suspend disbelief. Some of these flicks, such as "The Day After Tomorrow", are reaches that could be assumed to happen if conditions were really, really bad. This movie, however, was produced by someone who never consulted a geologist or even a first-year college student who took a mandatory geology course. Coupled with weak actors, poor dialogue, and dry action sequences, 10.5 flops on its face. If you're someone who likes campy 4-hour disaster movies and don't care if the science is accurate or not, then this would probably be a decent movie for you. For the rest of us, you're better off spending that time doing something else. I only give it 2 stars (vs. 1) because, as a writer, I can see that this script originally had hope and, had its screenwriting, dialogue, and actor choice been changed, it would have been much more successful.
DVD Review: 8.5 out of 10.5 Summary: 4 Stars Watching this a second time, two things struck me:
1) It didn't have the usual 5 soap stories going on, the stock everybody characters, but mainly one that was nice and concise, with the ever reliable John Schneider, and his daughter, and less the wife. plus a bit of a couple of others. So, main characters were the Earthquake experts, and the ideal President, with their everincreasing dilemma.
2) The best time to watch this is after a C grade movie that left me wanting, lacking tension (mine was Fire Serpent). In contrast 10.5 was good and clever. It always had tension with always something going on. Despite a gaping but entertaining fault or two, ha. But who hasn't got faults?
Well ok, 3 then) And this film can technically be classed as science fiction - meaning it's about science but a fantasy. No problem with an unreal event then. IF it is. And it's easy to ignore the main problem that the budget seemed to have run out at the end, with neverending scenes of people running about in varous modes of slow mo, go mo, jerk mo (18 frames p/s), and stop sound, in the earthquaking desert. That was the most disappointing part of the film, that part of the climax.
3) Once again, it showed me the viewer's attitude or state can change a movie experience. A factor rarely read in our stars.
Description of 10.5An earthquake reaching a 10.5 magnitude on the richter scale strikes the west coast of the u.S. And canada. A large portion of land falls into the ocean and the situation is worsened by aftershocks and tsunami. Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 02/06/2007 Starring: Beau Bridges Kim Delaney Run time: 165 minutes Dismissed by seismologists and roasted by critics, 10.5 offers everything you'd expect from a cheesy camp-classic disaster flick. Originally broadcast on May 2 and 3, 2004, this $20 million NBC sweeps-week miniseries achieved its ratings goal (20 million viewers) by promising a respectable cast and spectacular digital effects to simulate "the Big One"--a series of fault-ripping earthquakes that re-shape the entire West Coast of the United States. The first quake hits Seattle, toppling the Space Needle in a ridiculous opening sequence, and within minutes deep-fault expert Kim Delaney (no doubt regretting her departure from NYPD Blue) is busy convincing the President (Beau Bridges) and his geological advisor (Fred Ward) that only a series of nuclear blasts will "heal the rift" in the shifting tectonic plates. With John Schneider and The West Wing's Dul? Hill in thankless supporting roles, 10.5 deliberately strives for supreme badness, leaving no clich? unturned and cursing its cast with the worst dialogue in miniseries history. It's gloriously awful and uproariously entertaining. 10.5 may not rock your world, but natural disasters were never this much fun. --Jeff Shannon
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