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Friday, April 25, 2025

April 25, 2025: EarthquakeStudying: Movies

[125 years ago this coming weekend, the first name in earthquakes, Charles Richter, was born. So in his honor I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of seismic quakes, leading up to a special post on Richter himself!]

On takeaways from three blockbuster films about catastrophic quakes.

1)      Earthquake (1974): I wrote in this post about the long history of disaster films (one of the most enduring genres of blockbusters, in fact), and there’s never been a moment more full of such movies than the 1970s. Indeed, production on Earthquake was rushed in order to try to beat a competing disaster film, The Towering Inferno, into theaters, and Earthquake did come out about a month before Inferno so mission accomplished there. But what really makes Earthquake stand out is its use of a groundbreaking (bad pun once again intended) theatrical technology, “Sensurround,” in order to help audiences truly feel the titular disaster. Given that the film features a scene (available at the first hyperlink above) set in a movie theatre during the earthquake, I can imagine that the blurring of art and reality would have gotten real complicated for at least Southern California audiences.

2)      The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (1990): In his review of this film (which he calls The Big One, an alternate title), Washington Post critic Tom Shales explicitly connected it to the 1974 film, noting that, “bad as it is, [it] does seem an improvement over the 1974 theatrical release Earthquake, which also fantasized the destruction of L.A.” But what interests me most about the 1990 film is that it was made-for-TV, and yet clearly intended to be just as much of a blockbuster as that prior theatrical release—the 1990 film cost more than $9 million, was made over a three-year period, included sequences filmed at the same Universal Studios lot where Earthquake had been filmed, and so on. There’s been a lot written in recent years, quite rightly, about the shift from film to TV (including in how films themselves get distributed and viewed), but this blockbuster TV movie from 1990 reminds us that that process has been a multi-decade one to be sure.

3)      San Andreas (2015): Hollywood was far from done with big-screen blockbuster disaster movies, of course, as reflected by this 2015 film about a catastrophic quake that hits the San Francisco Bay Area, starring blockbuster big guy Dwayne Johnson himself (among many others in an over-stuffed cast as is typical for the genre). I don’t know that there’s too much more to say about this particular film, but I’d note that, to my knowledge, there hasn’t yet been a feature film made about the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire, a real-life disaster that was (as I wrote in Monday’s post) as full of compelling stories as any imaginary one could be. I know that period pieces can be trickier, and generally are a distinct genre from disaster films—but if we’re gonna keep telling these stories, we might as well engage with the real ones.

Richter post this weekend,

Ben

PS. What do you think? Famous quakes or other natural disasters you’d analyze?

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