Thursday, May 28, 2015

San Andreas 3D Full Movie Download

Movie Info

Journey 2: The Mysterious Island's Brad Peyton steps into disaster movie territory with this 3D film surrounding an earthquake that hits the West Coast. Carlton Cuse provides the script. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi
Rating: PG-13 (for intense disaster action and mayhem throughout, and brief strong language)
Genre: Action & Adventure
Directed By: Brad Peyton
Written By: Chad Hayes, Carey Hayes, Allan Loeb, Carlton Cuse
In Theaters:
Runtime:
Warner Bros. - Official Site

Storyline 

Set after a devastating earthquake hits California a a rugged rescue helicopter pilot makes a perilous trip across the state to rescue his estranged daughter.
A massive quake strikes California and one man must make the treacherous journey across the state to rescue his estranged daughter.

verbatim from deadline.com on December 2, 2011

The mother of all earthquakes hits from California to Nevada first along the fault line and then beyond, leaving plenty of destruction behind. A man is forced to go on the road to reconcile with his children and his estranged wife. He travels from Los Angeles to San Francisco using unconventional transportation.




Reviews for San Andreas

It's becoming a habit. Nearly every summer, movie season means Hollywood will destroy San Francisco.
Filmmakers happily pulverized the Bay Area and its landmarks in the 2014 "Godzilla" reboot. And they sicced avenging simians on the region's pricey real estate in 2011's "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" and 2014's "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes."
Now with "San Andreas," starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson," Hollywood hammers the City by the Bay with the power of a Buster Posey grand slam. Director Brad Peyton and his special effects team work overtime at utterly and ridiculously annihilating San Francisco. They create a swarm of quakes along the San Andreas Fault that coalesce into a 9.6 behemoth and top that off with a gargantuan tsunami.

(L-R) Carla Gugino as Emma and Dwayne Johnson as Ray in 'San Andreas.' (Jasin Boland/Warner Bros.) ( Jasin Boland/Warner Bros. )
To be fair, San Francisco isn't alone here. Los Angeles and even slabs of Nevada (the Hoover Dam turns to mush) also take it on the chin in the numbskulled, snicker-worthy "San Andreas," a 3-D extravaganza with cataclysmic scoops of good-golly CGI, Cheez-Whiz dialogue and one-note characters.
Much of what happens on screen defies logic, especially the derring-do antics summoned to get our heroes out of pickles. But that doesn't matter much. What does in this genre is mayhem -- towering buildings buckling and crashing to the ground, terrorized folk running here, there and everywhere. You get more than your fill of that here.