10.0 Earthquake is a standard-issue disaster flick that doesn't bring anything new to the genre. It is best enjoyed by fans of "disaster porn" who can overlook shaky visual effects and a thin plot in favor of watching Los Angeles get digitally demolished. It’s a perfectly functional way to spend 90 minutes if you go in with low expectations and a bowl of popcorn.
: Henry Ian Cusick ( Lost ) brings a level of sincerity and gravitas to the role of Gladstone that the script arguably doesn't deserve. He manages to make the pseudo-scientific dialogue sound urgent and believable. 10.0 Potres (2014.)
: The film wastes very little time. It jumps straight into the seismic activity, maintaining a brisk "race against time" energy that keeps the story moving despite its predictable beats. : Henry Ian Cusick ( Lost ) brings
: As the title suggests, the science is pure fiction. The concept of a "10.0" quake and the ground dissolving into lava is designed for melodrama rather than realism. It jumps straight into the seismic activity, maintaining