: The CGI is noticeably dated and often immersion-breaking. Buildings crumble like digital sand, and the "magma" effects lack the weight and heat needed to feel truly threatening.

: If you enjoy the specific aesthetic of low-budget disaster films—where physics are suggestions and logic is secondary—there is a certain charm to the sheer scale of the destruction attempted here. The Drawbacks

: While the leads are capable, many supporting characters feel like thin archetypes—the "skeptical official" or the "family in peril"—offering little emotional depth to make the audience care about their survival. Final Verdict Rating: 4/10

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.

: 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.

: 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 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.

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