Tag: disaster-movies

  • Movie Review: ‘Greenland 2: Migration’

    (L to R) Gerard Butler as John Garrity, Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity, and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Gerard Butler as John Garrity, Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity, and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    Opening in theaters on January 9 is ‘Greenland 2: Migration,’ directed by Ric Roman Waugh and starring Gerard Butler, Morena Baccarin, Roman Griffin Davis, Amber Rose Revah, William Abadie, Trond Fausa Aurvag, Sophie Thompson, Nelia Da Costa, and Tommie Earl Jenkins.

    kxa7tAxOT0rBP1wblAJg24

    Related Article: Hayley Atwell and Gerard Butler to Star in New Thriller ‘Empire City’

    Initial Thoughts

    Gerard Butler as John Garrity in 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Gerard Butler as John Garrity in ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    It’s hard to say what’s weirder: that a movie with the word ‘Greenland’ in the title is coming out right now during the current geopolitical crisis, that the movie is a sequel to a surprise COVID-era hit, or that the film it’s following is one of Gerard Butler’s better efforts.

    Nevertheless, ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ is here, and we can tell you that it’s a worthy successor to the original Ric Roman Waugh-directed action disaster movie. Gerard Butler is back, of course, with his now-perfected balance of gruff hyper-competence and jarring vulnerability, and the film is the kind of fast-moving, no-nonsense afternoon-filler that Roland Emmerich wishes he could make.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Gerard Butler as John Garrity, Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity, Amber Rose Revah as Dr. Casey Amina, and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Gerard Butler as John Garrity, Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity, Amber Rose Revah as Dr. Casey Amina, and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    2020’s ‘Greenland’ was a tense, surprisingly emotional actioner in which Butler’s John Garrity, a structural engineer, is selected along with his family for emergency sheltering when it’s learned that a comet will pancake into the Earth in two days. The clan must make their way to an underground bunker in the title country, but even though they survive, the impact of Clarke — as the comet is dubbed — wipes out most of human civilization.

    ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ picks up five years later and jiggers the continuity a little: while the first film ended on a sad but cautiously hopeful note, ‘Migration’ finds the community in the bunker running out of food and resources while pieces of Clarke still fall from the sky, causing earthquakes, lava flows, bad air, and radioactive storms. There are rumors that the original impact crater in the south of France has become not just habitable, but is flourishing (due to some wonky, hand-waving science), although reports of war between the remnants of Europe and Asia make clear information hard to come by.

    When one of those storms takes out the bunker for good, the Garritys decide to make their way to France and see if the stories about the Clarke crater are true. They and a small band of steadily dwindling survivors make their way in a boat across the Atlantic to a submerged Liverpool, and from there it’s onto London and beyond by whatever means possible. Along the way, the Garritys encounter both the best and worst of humanity on their presumed road to salvation, while we also discover that John is hiding a secret of his own.

    (L to R) Gerard Butler as John Garrity and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Gerard Butler as John Garrity and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    As with the original ‘Greenland,’ Waugh judiciously uses visual effects (some, like the submerged streets of Liverpool or a bent-over Eiffel Tower, are striking; others look a little too Volume-y) but keeps the focus on his human characters, which is what makes both movies work despite their familiar disaster movie beats. All the people in ‘Migration’ are recognizably human and doing what they think they must to survive, wrong or right. And it’s the very ordinary nature of John, his wife Allison (Morena Baccarin), and their now-teen son Nathan (Roman Griffin Davis, aging up from the first film’s Roger Dale Floyd) that keeps us engrossed in their story and fate, even as implausible as some of it seems.

    Even with the occasionally dodgy visuals and episodic script, the director consistently turns up the tension with his action set pieces, including a scary walk across a rope bridge and sudden bursts of violence from marauders, and the pace rarely flags, with the film even delivering a surprisingly moving conclusion. ‘Migration,’ like the 2020 original, knows exactly what kind of film it is, but aims a little higher nonetheless.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity, Gerard Butler as John Garrity and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity, Gerard Butler as John Garrity and Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity in ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    There isn’t a ton of character development here, but this is Gerard Butler doing what he does best, playing a beefy, working-class kind of guy who’s good at everything but not so tough that he doesn’t get scared or hurt. He’s in his element here as Garrity, and if you’re already a fan you’ll find his solid performance as comfortable as an old shoe.

    The always appealing Morena Baccarin (‘Deadpool & Wolverine’) does fine work here as the dutiful and resourceful Allison, while no one else really sticks around long enough to make much of an impression, save Sophie Thompson as a kindly friend they catch a break with in London and William Abadie as a Frenchman who comes to their aid at a critical moment.

    Final Thoughts

    Gerard Butler as John Garrity in 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    Gerard Butler as John Garrity in ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    What makes the ‘Greenland’ movies work are the fact that they’re centered on a single, relatable family, and that we see how humanity can both rise and fall without resorting to horror movie extremes (not that there’s anything wrong with those). No one’s going to mistake this for high cinema, but ‘Migration’ keeps its core elements in place while expanding its scope.

    At a time when it feels like 2026 is kicking off with the world on fire (and not even a comet to get the flames going), the heartfelt sensibility of this film and its predecessor will take your mind off real world problems for a couple of hours. Not bad for a movie about the end of human civilization.

    ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ receives a score of 77 out of 100.

    A scene from 'Greenland 2: Migration'. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.
    A scene from ‘Greenland 2: Migration’. Photo Credit: Courtesy of Lionsgate.

    What is the plot of ‘Greenland 2: Migration’?

    Ten years after the Clarke interstellar comet destroyed most of Earth, the Garrity family must leave the safety of the Greenland bunker and embark on a perilous journey across the wasteland of Europe to find a new home.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Greenland 2: Migration’?

    • Gerard Butler as John Garrity
    • Morena Baccarin as Allison Garrity
    • Roman Griffin Davis as Nathan Garrity
    • Amber Rose Revah as Dr. Casey Amina
    • William Abadie as Denis Laurent
    • Nelia Da Costa as Camille Laurent
    • Susan Eljack as Julia Laurent
    • Sophie Thompson as Mackenzie Matthews
    • Trond Fausa Aurvag as Adam Shaw
    • Tommie Earl Jenkins as General Sharpe
    'Greenland 2: Migration' opens in theaters on January 9th.
    ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ opens in theaters on January 9th.

    List of Gerard Butler Action Movies:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Greenland 2: Migration’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Gerard Butler Movies on Amazon

    akMkSfcS
  • Alicia Silverstone Talks ‘The Requin’

    Alicia Silverstone in 'The Requin'
    Alicia Silverstone in ‘The Requin’

    Premiering in theaters, on digital, and On Demand beginning January 28th is the new shark movie ‘The Requin,’which was directed by Le-Van Kiet (“Furie’). The film stars Alicia Silverstone (‘Clueless,’ ‘Batman & Robin’) and James Tupper (‘Big Little Lies’) as a married couple that takes a tropical vacation to overcome a personal tragedy.

    Staying in a bungalow over the ocean, the couple soon finds themselves fighting for their lives when a storm carries their bungalow away from shore and out to sea. Lost, exhausted, injured, hungry, and in need of fresh water, they attempt to survive but that becomes even more difficult as a great white shark begins to circle them. Now, they must put their past aside and work together, if they want to survive.

    ZOLHPedN

    Moviefone recently had the chance to speak with Alicia Silverstone about her work on ‘The Requin.’ You can read the full interview with Silverstone below, or watch our interview with both her and actor James Tupper in the video player above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, you spend most of this movie either in the water or wet. Can you talk about the challenges of acting in those conditions?

    Alicia Silverstone: Well, it’s freezing and that’s miserable. Every time the dear man, who was in charge of spraying me down, would come near me, I would just say, get away from me. Please get away from me. Because they have to make you wet. I would say, we don’t have to be wet now. I’ve dried, negotiating how wet I have to be. The water was freezing. We had a freezing cold pool.

    At one point, the set medic had to pull me aside and he’d taken my temperature and it was dropping really low. He was like, “She needs a break. She has to get warm.” I’m face planted in the sand and they’re throwing a bucket of water on my face trying to give the idea that the ocean is waking me up. I’m shivering because there’s no sun, and it’s just freezing. That happened a lot.

    I got bruised, I got beaten, but I was so happy the whole time. It’s extraordinarily challenging physically, the freezing. I was even just hurting myself all the time, pulling things from the act of survival. But in the end, every single day I was just so excited to be there.

    I love Le-Van Kiet’s films. He made these Vietnamese films and two of them that I saw were so beautiful. So, I was just there for that. I was so willing to do whatever, to jump into that ocean and just see what would happen and that’s what I did. I actually was happy all the time. No matter how hurt I was, I was having fun.

    MF: Can you talk about the emotional and mental state of your character when the film begins and what a survivor she is, not only because of what she goes through in the movie, but also because of what happened to her before the film begins?

    AS: Thank you for asking that. She essentially loses her child at birth and what a traumatic experience that would be. Losing a child at any time is just the most gut-wrenching thing. So, she’s got PTSD, as you would. It’s really destroying her marriage. She’s got rage. It’s like she’s experiencing this thing, and no one can understand it. Her husband isn’t upset enough or he’s not doing it right enough, because she’s so consumed with this grief.

    Then when they’re on this trip, they’re really trying to save their marriage. That’s what they’re there to do. You see glimmers of it, you see where they are coming together, and it feels hopeful again. Then you see her have another PTSD moment where she goes right back in. He cuts his foot on a rock and she’s like, “Blood.” She goes crazy about the blood, and that’s all very real and present for her.

    I think that when they have to fight for their lives, somehow all that trauma melts away. Because now it’s just the new trauma. It’s a new trauma and they have to just live, and she becomes a warrior. I noticed on day one that I have no muscles. I’m working on that now. I was very soft when I arrived. I exercised a little, but I’m not a Rock-type person. I don’t exercise every day with muscles. You know what I mean?

    I like that for this movie because It might be less interesting if I had ripped muscles everywhere. Because then it’s like ‘The Terminator.’ She’s not that. She’s just a woman trying to make it. But I noticed that because they would say, “Can you do that?” I’d say, if I had muscles I think I could. But I don’t have any, so I don’t know. I would just do everything, but then I would be in pain afterwards.

    Alicia Silverstone in 'The Requin'
    Alicia Silverstone in ‘The Requin’

    MF: Finally, are you a fan of shark movies?

    AS: I am not. I’m not your normal person, because I don’t watch a lot of movies at all. So, I haven’t seen a lot of films. The genre definitely would freak me out. I don’t like anxiety. I don’t want to be stressed. I get it every day. I don’t need more. But I like acting in it. I want to also say I love sharks and I don’t think they’re so scary. I don’t want one near me, but I want them to be left alone and unharmed.

    I like to think she’s being hunted (by the shark). The director does too, because of the environmental damage that we’ve done as consumers and people in the world. They’re coming closer and closer, coming after us because they don’t have what they need. But I think that if you like shark movies or you like thrilling adventure, this is the movie for that. People love being scared, frightened and anxious. They like that. This movie does all of those things very well, I think.

    wJs4QIXpbbquGE7D0aawV5
  • Gerard Butler desperately tries to get his family to safety in the ‘Greenland’ trailer

    Gerard Butler desperately tries to get his family to safety in the ‘Greenland’ trailer

    What would happen if the world found out that meteors were about to cause an extinction-level event? And what if word got out that world leaders might be sheltering in a remote bunker?

    If you’re Gerard Butler’s character in ‘Greenland’, you’d pack your family in a pick-up and let nothing stand in your way to that bunker.

    Here’s the official synopsis:

    A family fights for survival as a planet-killing comet races to Earth. John Garrity (Gerard Butler), his estranged wife Allison (Morena Baccarin), and young son Nathan make a perilous journey to their only hope for sanctuary. Amid terrifying news accounts of cities around the world being leveled by the comet’s fragments, the Garrity’s experience the best and worst in humanity. As the countdown to global apocalypse approaches zero, their incredible trek culminates in a desperate and last-minute flight to a possible safe haven.

    ‘Greenland’ director (and former stuntman) Ric Roman Waugh previously collaborated with Butler on 2019’s ‘Angel Has Fallen.’ The film’s supporting cast includes Scott Glenn, David Denman, Hope Davis, Andrew Bachelor, Joshua Mikel.

    ‘Greenland’ is expected in theaters on August 14.

  • The 9 Best Disaster Movies of the ’90s, Ranked

    The 9 Best Disaster Movies of the ’90s, Ranked

    Paramount Pictures

    How big were disaster movies in the ’90s? Not only did they rule the box office, but there were two volcano movies going head to head in 1997, followed by two “killer comet” movies in 1998. That’s huge.

    We rank the decade’s best disaster flicks — and realize just how many of these the much-missed Bill Paxton was in. Sigh.

    9. “Daylight(1996)

    Universal Pictures

    It’s Sylvester Stallone to the rescue after a horrific explosion in the New Jersey Tunnel traps a handful of survivors in this underrated feature from “The Fast and the Furious” director Rob Cohen. Future “Lord of the Rings” star Viggo Mortensen is one of the first to go as a cocky mountaineer who thinks he can save the day. Sorry, it’s Sly’s movie. And it’s a darn good one.

    8. “Deep Impact(1998)

    Paramount Pictures

    Emmy-winning “ER” director Mimi Leder made her feature film debut here as one of the first women to be hired to helm a a big-budget movie. It’s a solid film, but a much more somber one than the other movies on this list. Bonus points for scientific accuracy … and Morgan Freeman as one of our favorite movie Presidents, although the visual effects haven’t exactly aged well.

    7. “Volcano(1997)

    20th Century Fox

    If you want extra cheese with your disaster movie, “Volcano” delivers it in spades. Let’s start with the premise that there’s a volcano under Los Angeles, add in the bubbling La Brea Tar pits as the place things first start heating up, and some truly ridiculous ways to combat lava. And don’t forget the many times it points out that if a natural disaster is big enough, it just might heal all of society’s problems. Done!

    6. “Twister” (1996) Warner Bros.

    Flying cows! Bill Paxton in a starring role! This heart-pumping film about tornado chasers might overdo it a bit: The angelic choir “awwwing” as the first twister is sighted? Okay, sure. And, it’s the rare disaster movie where the female lead (Helen Hunt) is the biggest risk taker. 5. “Dante’s Peak” (1997) Universal Pictures The other volcano movie from 1997 offers a satisfyingly scary eruption, panicky small-towners, and a side of romance. The disaster unfolds just as it should, with the first few signs of danger being foolishly dismissed by everyone but Pierce Brosnan, a volcanologist who’s seen “the big show” before. We learned a lot from this movie: The “frog in hot water” metaphor, don’t choose a chopper as your escape vehicle, and that if you’re James Bond, you can drive a car through flaming hot lava.

    Warner Bros.

    Flying cows! Bill Paxton in a starring role! This heart-pumping film about tornado chasers might overdo it a bit: The angelic choir “awwwing” as the first twister is sighted? Okay, sure. But, it’s the rare disaster movie where the female lead (Helen Hunt) is the biggest risk taker.

    5. “Dante’s Peak” (1997)

    Universal Pictures

    The other volcano movie from 1997 offers a satisfyingly scary eruption, panicky small-towners, and a side of romance. The disaster unfolds just as it should, with the first few signs of danger being foolishly dismissed by everyone but Pierce Brosnan, a volcanologist who’s seen “the big show” before. We learned a lot from this movie: The “frog in hot water” metaphor, don’t choose a chopper as your escape vehicle if fleeing plumes of deadly ash, and that if you’re James Bond, you can drive a car through flaming hot lava.

    4. “Armageddon(1998)

    Touchstone Pictures

    Undoubtedly the cheesiest movie on this list (for the Animal Crackers scene alone), it also gives you some of the biggest bang for your buck. We love the oil rig crew who get to save the world, from Bruce Willis to Steve Buscemi and Michael Clarke Duncan, none of whom we want to see bite the big one. And yes, we readily admit to crying over a Michael Bay film.

    3. “Independence Day(1996)

    20th Century Fox

    This eminently re-watchable blockbuster established Will Smith as a movie star, gave us another favorite movie prez (Bill Pullman), and, of course, the most iconic “landmark blowing up” scene with the destruction of the White House. Once again, a disaster brings out the best in humanity, and anyone can be a hero, even Randy Quaid’s crackpot aviator.

    2. “Apollo 13(1995)

    Universal Pictures

    Proof that “disaster” and “prestige” movies can be one and the same: Tom Hanks, stars in the real-life drama of astronauts who were stranded in space after a major malfunction. Every single NASA employee works around the clock to get him and his shipmates (Kevin Bacon and Bill Paxton) home safely. One of its 9 Oscar nominations went to Ed Harris, who anchors the film as NASA’s Gene Kranz, and gets to deliver some of the other famous lines, including: “I believe this is gonna be our finest hour.

    1. “Titanic” (1997)

    Paramount Pictures

    James Cameron‘s retelling of the fateful sinking of the most famous ship in history was the biggest box-office hit in history, until it was surpassed by Cameron himself with “Avatar.” And only 1959’s “Ben-Hur” has won as many Oscars. Whether you were in it for the doomed romance of Jack and Rose or the spectacular special effects, it was epic on all levels. If you saw it in the theater (and who didn’t?), the sound of the glass shattering on the bridge made you feel like you were right there with the poor Captain as the water came crashing in. Still gives us chills.

  • The 17 Best Disaster Movies on Netflix Right Now

    %Slideshow-290985%
    If you can’t see “San Andreas” this weekend, Netflix has plenty of disaster movies to tide you over. Sadly, there’s no “Towering Inferno” or other classic ’70s disaster films available at the moment, so why not watch Lloyd Bridges have a disaster-induced meltdown (pre-“Airplane!”) while William Shatner saves the day in 1979’s “Disaster on the Coastliner”?

    You can also root for Brad Pitt to stay one step ahead of zombies in “World War Z,” or watch LL Cool J get this close to being shark bait in “Deep Blue Sea.”

    But disaster isn’t just the realm of fiction: Acclaimed documentaries revisit the tragedies on Mount Everest, conspiracy theories about a famous plane disaster and the devastating aftermath of China’s Great Earthquake of 2008.

    And if it’s So Bad It’s Good cheesiness you’re after, we have one word for you: “Sharknado.”

    Movie availability on Netflix is subject to change without notice.