With a rumble and a crack, it’s Burl, here
with some more 70s disaster! Yes, it’s Earthquake,
and while it wasn’t the first 70s disaster picture (Airport and The Poseidon
Adventure came first), nor the best (The Towering Inferno, released the same year is a lot better, and so is Juggernaut of course), nor the most
popular (Inferno beat it out at the
box office), nor the worst (Ha ha, I’m looking at you, When Time Ran Out!), it is in many ways the quintessence of the
form!
There are strange rumblings in the ground,
and at the Earthquake Institute, the young graduate student warns of an
impending quake, but receives only derisive laughter in return! There are
rumblings too in the marriage of Charlton Heston, the ruddyman we know from Touch of Evil and In the Mouth of Madness, and Ava Gardner, familiar from such
eccentric pictures as Pandora and the
Flying Dutchman and Tam Lin! They
don’t get along, and while Ava complains to her father, the only slightly older
Lorne Green (well known from his cameo in The Errand Boy), Charleton seeks comfort in the ropey arms of lovely Genevieve
Bujold from Dead Ringers!
That’s the soap opera part of the plot, and
we have other threads too, like dedicated uniform cop George Kennedy, in
trouble for destroying Zsa Zsa Gabor’s hedgerow; and Shaft himself, Richard
Roundtree from The Banker, as Miles, the motorcycle daredevil
who’s trying to get his spiral run right; and perm-haired creepazoid Marjoe
Gortner, from Mausoleum, as the bag
boy Jody, a weekend warrior who goes mad with power and also with lust for the
even more perm-haired Victoria Principal!
At some point the drum and shake of
Sensurround takes hold: the buildings sway, the windows shatter, the
elevators plummet, and the cows jump over the moon! Albert Whitlock’s matte
paintings of a shattered Hollywood are paraded across the screen as though he’s
been given one of those virtual gallery openings which artists must suffer in
these pestilent days; but his work is great as always! On the physical effects
side plenty of concrete rains down, chasms yawn, bridges fall, the big dam
begins to crack, Lorne Green succumbs to a heart attack of all things, and we
get all the faux destruction that Universal Studios can provide!
Amid the rubble is a veritable terrarium of
familiar faces, like John Randolph from Christmas Vacation, Donald Moffat from The Thing, Jesse Vint from Forbidden World, Kip Niven from Damnation Alley,
and, in a cameo under a name I shall not attempt to spell, and wearing an
outrageous outfit which I dare not describe, is none other than Walter Matthau
from Bigger Than Life! Ha ha, he sits
in a bar making drunken remarks, and then later, in a shelter for displaced
people, he dances a merry inebriate’s jig, then falls over to the intense
amusement of the crowd!
It’s not a good
movie, not by a long chalk, ha ha! However, it hits all the 70s disaster bases,
never gets boring despite the dumb soapy stuff, has some appealing weirdness
here and there (Matthau’s hat, ha ha!), and dares to end things on a muddy,
unexpectedly dour, tragically uxorious note! I award Earthquake one and a half truckloads of cows!
One of the most disaster-y of the 70s disaster pics, the elevator splat summing up the tone nicely.
ReplyDeleteApparently they let Matthau do whatever he wanted, hence the nonsensical dialogue, outrageous get-up and weird name he went by (he said it was his real name, but that was him being mischievous!). Also, Richard Roundtree: unsung hero, if only for his costume.
Imagine sitting behind Victoria Principal during that film! "Could you remove your hair, please, I can't see the screen!"
I think "Let Matthau do what he wants" was always the best policy on a film set! It certainly paid dividends here!
DeleteY'all have no idea! Earthquake is a great movie! A masterpiece!
ReplyDelete