The Quake (film)

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The Quake
The Quake poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Andreas Andersen
Written by
  • John Kåre Raake
  • Harald Rosenløw-Eeg
Produced byAre Heidenstorm
Starring
CinematographyJohn Christian Rosenlund
Edited byChristian Siebenherz
Music byJohannes Ringen
Johan Söderqvist
Production
company
Distributed byNordisk Filmdistribusjon
Release date
  • 31 August 2018 (2018-08-31)
Running time
106 minutes
CountryNorway
LanguageNorwegian
Budget$5,879,349.54
Box office$14 million[1]

The Quake (Norwegian: Skjelvet) is a 2018 Norwegian disaster film directed by John Andreas Andersen. It is the sequel to The Wave and was released in Norwegian theaters on 31 August 2018.

Plot[]

In 2016, geologist Kristian Eikjord is hailed a hero for his actions during the tsunami in Geiranger. Three years later, his wife Idun is divorcing him and he is separated from his children, Sondre and Julia. Kristian is living in seclusion high above the mostly-rebuilt Geiranger, while his family moves to Oslo. Idun has a job as a hotel worker at the Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel. Kristian feels responsible for the 250 fatalities of the tsunami and keeps a secret room in his house dedicated to the events and the fatalities, which causes strain with his family.

Kristian hears on the news of the death of a colleague, fellow geologist Konrad Lindblom, in a collapse in the Oslofjord Tunnel. Kristian travels to Oslo with some of Konrad's research to investigate the circumstances of Konrad's death, where he meets with Konrad's supervisor, Johannes Løberg. Johannes, whose organization maintains a seismic activity monitoring system, reassures Kristian that there is nothing to worry about, and that the seismic activity that Konrad was worried about was merely construction blasting being done across the city, but Kristian doubts his claims. Kristian visits Konrad's house, where he meets Konrad's daughter Marit, and discovers Konrad's research, including core samples and a map that has recorded more serious seismic activity than Johannes was claiming. He calls Johannes about this, but Johannes mostly ignores him.

Kristian visits Idun, meets with Sondre and his new girlfriend, and is invited to Julia's ballet recital. As Kristian and Idun discuss their separation, the power goes out for the second time that week. The next day, Kristian finds more concerning research in Konrad's house, and convinces Marit to take him to the Oslofjord Tunnel, where he discovers a core sample Konrad was attempting to recover shortly before his death. While traveling back to Oslo, Kristian accidentally snaps the core sample, and realizes that the earth underneath Oslo is unusually weak. Suddenly, a seismic rift destroys the Oslo Opera House where Julia is doing her recital; Idun safely gets Julia out of the building. When Johannes and his team arrive to inspect the damage, Kristian confronts him, but Johannes claims the collapse occurred due to the opera house's deteriorating support beams. That night, Kristian visits Idun and apologizes for missing the recital, breaks down, and explains he's always looking for the next disaster. They embrace as Kristian cries, and the couple spends the night together.

The next morning, when Idun leaves for work and Sondre goes to University of Oslo, Marit discovers a video on her father's computer, showing him Kristian. Kristian looks at the video, which shows that Konrad was using rats to investigate his theories, and that those rats had died due to exposure to toxic gas, and concludes that a major earthquake, up to 8.5 on the , will arrive in Oslo, and that the collapse that killed Konrad may have been a omen. Kristian, Marit, and Julia rush to the Radisson Blu to evacuate Idun. On the way, Kristian calls Sondre to warn him, but Sondre, who is in class, ignores his calls. Kristian tries to call a hoax bomb threat to evacuate the university, but Sondre is convinced that they must leave the building after the evacuation alarm goes off.

Arriving at the hotel, Kristian finds Idun on the 34th floor, convinces her to go downstairs with him, and pulls a fire alarm to get everyone else to evacuate. Julia wanders into the building to find her father, with Marit in pursuit. Getting on an elevator with Idun, Kristian sees Julia on the other end of the room, but the elevator him and Idun are in begins to descend. Suddenly, the power goes out across the city. As Johannes evacuates his office, he notices a high amount of seismic activity on the monitoring system before the power is cut. Marit finds Julia on the balcony when the earthquake Kristian had warned about begins, destroying much of Oslo.

Marit grabs Julia and runs inside as the first shockwave from the quake hits, knocking Marit unconscious. The ceiling of Sondre's lecture hall collapses, killing his professor and several other students; Sondre, his girlfriend, and many others survive after hiding under their tables, and the university is evacuated. Kristian and Idun's elevator drops down the shaft, knocking both Kristian and Idun unconscious. Sometime later, Marit wakes, finding Julia tending to one of Idun's co-workers, and they rescue her from being trapped under debris. Next to the Radisson Blu, part of the Posthuset building collapses into the side of the Radisson Blu, leaving the top floors hanging precariously over the wreckage. Following an aftershock, the building begins to tilt; the hotel worker slides out of the building and is killed, but Marit manages to hold onto the mounted bar, and she saves Julia from sliding out of the building.

Meanwhile, after coming to, Kristian and a traumatized Idun make their way out of the stuck elevator and climb maintenance ladders to get to the top floor of the elevator shaft. Debris knocked loose by aftershocks fall down the shaft and mutilate Idun's leg, forcing Kristian to carry her. They arrive at an open elevator door near the 30th story and attempt to use a severed elevator cord to swing across to the opening. Kristian succeeds, but an injured and weakened Idun falls to her death after the power goes out and the brakes on the elevator above fail. A devastated Kristian heads to the place where he last saw Julia and finds her and Marit huddling behind the mounted bar. As they are attempting to leave, a final aftershock causes Julia to lose her grip, and she slides down the floor; Kristian jumps after her and pushes her out of the way, but knocks himself out in the process. When he comes to, he finds Julia on a cracking window. Kristian manages to grab her before the window breaks, and with Marit's help, he pulls her to safety, and they leave the hotel.

After the earthquake, Marit enters her father's office to find it mostly destroyed, except for a picture of her as a child with her father. A reunited Kristian, Julia, and Sondre arrive at their old home in Geiranger by ferry. Descriptions at the end explain that Norway has the most seismic activity north of the Alps, and that a major earthquake is expected to hit Norway in the coming future, but it is unknown when it will hit.

Cast[]

  • Kristoffer Joner as Kristian Eikjord, a 44-year old experienced geologist[2]
  • Ane Dahl Torp as Idun Eikjord, Kristian's wife
  • Jonas Hoff Oftebro as Sondre Eikjord, Kristian's 20-year-old son
  • Edith Haagenrud-Sande as Julia Eikjord, Kristian's 11-year-old daughter
  • Kathrine Thorborg Johansen as Marit Lindblom

Response[]

Box office[]

The Quake grossed $6,235 in the United States and Canada and $14 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $14 million,[1] plus $374,237 with home video sales.[3]

Critical reception[]

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 85% based on 40 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A satisfyingly smart action thriller, The Quake delivers plenty of nail-biting tension without sacrificing character development or common sense."[4] On Metacritic, the film holds a rating of 70 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[5]

At the 2019 Amanda Awards, the film received The People’s Amanda and the award for Best Visual Effects.[6] In addition, the film was also nominated in the categories of Best Norwegian Film in Theatrical Release and Best Production Direction/Scenography.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "The Quake (2018)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  2. ^ Scott Roxborough (3 December 2015). "Foreign-Language Oscar Spotlight: Norway's Disaster Epic 'The Wave'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  3. ^ "Skjelvet (2018)". The Numbers, Nash Information Services, LLC. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  4. ^ "The Quake". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  5. ^ "The Quake Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  6. ^ "Amandavinnerne 2019" (Press release) (in Norwegian). The Norwegian International Film Festival Haugesund. August 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
  7. ^ "Amandanominasjonene 2019" (Press release) (in Norwegian). The Norwegian International Film Festival Haugesund. 19 June 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2019.

External links[]

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