When a discredited L.A. Seismologist warns of an impending 12.7 earthquake, no one takes her seriously. Now on her own, she races desperately to get her family to safety before the earthquake breaks Los Angeles apart
There is little doubt that San Andreas will be my wife's favorite film of 2015. The film is a $100 million earthquake melodrama. I'm sure regular readers know this about my wife, but just in case, she is a hardcore disaster porn junkie. She has watched
San Andreas may wind up being a gloomy, dreadful disaster movie, the kind of pessimistic apocalypse porn that this weekend's would-be blockbuster Tomorrowland specifically called out for ruining, well, everything. But no matter what the movie itself
In the film, opening this Friday, a previously unknown fault near the Hoover Dam in Nevada ruptures and jiggles the San Andreas. Southern California is rocked by a powerful magnitude-9.1 quake followed by an even stronger magnitude-9.6 in Northern
Dwayne Johnson stars in San Andreas, the new disaster film from the director of Cats & Dogs: The Revenge Of Kitty Galore. In the movie, Johnson plays Ray, a helicopter pilot who basically takes it upon himself to save the