Monday, 8 June 2015

Film Review - San Andreas


Earth Fury
Film: San Andreas
Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Carla Gugino, Paul Giamatti
Directed by: Brad Peyton
Duration: 1 hr 54 mins
Rating: * * *

Every other year, there is always one big 'disaster' movie that comes from Hollywood, where mother nature unleashes it fury.  Audiences love such films, there is something about witnessing large scale devastation on the big screen and it doesn’t take much processing power of the mind either.  San Andreas is the latest in that list.

Directed by Brad Peyton, the film relies heavily on special effects where the buildings and skyscrapers of San Francisco and Los Angeles go down like a pack of cards is mighty impressive, but as far as the story goes, this draws a naught and ticks every possible box.

Dwayne Johnson, plays Ray, a rescue helicopter pilot. The film opens with a bang, he rescues a girl who car is precariously hanging on a cliff. In 'disaster' movies, the hero’s personal life is always in shambles, in this case he is going through a reluctant divorce with Emma (Carla Gugino) who has just moved in with her boyfriend who is a high flying architect. Rays daughter Blake (Alexandra Daddario of True Detective and Percy Jackson fame, who will be 30 but looks 18) is supposed to spend the weekend with him when the earthquake strikes. First, a dam breaks open, starting the many catastrophes that follow. 

First his wife and then his daughter are caught in the middle of it all giving him an excellent opportunity to rekindle his relationship with his wife and prove that he is a true family man by rescuing his daughter.  That doesn’t say a lot about him as a professional though because he is busy saving his family. Blake meanwhile finds a good guy for company when the devastation happens. If a family is getting together, even mother nature makes way for them, at least that seems to be the message, given the way they survive and meet each other. 

The trump card are the special effects, which are used liberally, in fact if one were to nitpick, it is used too liberally – so while you are impressed while watching it, there is not particular image that stays in your head after the film -too many buildings and bridges get knocked down. 

There is the odd scene where there is a nice touch, for example, people looting supermarkets and malls in the wake of tragedy.

Paul Giamatti plays a scientist who is working on prediction of earthquakes and like most characters he has played, he does this one too with style. Dwayne Johnson has a limited range of expressions but he always uses them well and there is always something very sincere about his acting that makes him likable.

On the whole, San Andreas proves that it is indeed a marvel as to what they can do with computers these days. 

Published in The Navhind Times Goa on 31st May 2015
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