10.0 Potres (2014.) -
: 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.
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. 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. : The CGI is noticeably dated and often immersion-breaking
(released in Croatia as 10.0 Potres ) is a 2014 disaster film directed by David Gidali . While it aims for the high-stakes tension of a blockbuster, it ultimately falls into the category of "guilty pleasure" B-movies typically found on the Syfy channel. Plot Overview It is best enjoyed by fans of "disaster
: 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
The story is set in Los Angeles, where a series of increasingly violent tremors begins to rock the city. Geologist Gladstone (played by Henry Ian Cusick) discovers that these aren't typical quakes; a massive "super-fault" is forming beneath the city. If a 10.0 magnitude earthquake hits, it won't just destroy buildings—it could cause the entire crust to collapse into a sea of magma. The narrative follows Gladstone and a frantic father (Cameron Dutton) trying to rescue his family before the "Big One" levels the West Coast.