Director : James Seale
Producer : Paul Hertzberg
Screenwriter : Steve Latshaw, Rebecca Morrison, Graham Winter
Starring : Mark Dacascos, Blair Hickey, Rutger Hauer, John Rhys-Davies, Mark Rolston, Rayne Marcus, Tamara Davies
Ripped from today's theater screens comes the latest direct-to-DVD knockoff,
Scorcher, a tepid reworking of The Core.
Say what you will about using lame source material, Scorcher is laughably bad
in its own right. As with Core, our meddling has caused some kind of tectonic
trouble, and if the gap between two plates opens wider than 44 centimeters
(yeah, whatever), then we will literally have "hell on earth" as earthquakes
and volcanoes sprout up all over the planet. Uh huh. And so our hero geologists
(including John Rhys-Davies, whoa nelly!), under the direction of President
Rutger Hauer(!!!), are tasked with finding a solution. Naturally, that
involves setting off a nuclear bomb somewhere. In the case of Scorcher, it
means detonating the nuke in central Los Angeles. Sounds like an improvement to
me, but whatever, after quietly evacuating the tens of millions of people who
live there, a wrench involving our military co-hero (Mark Dacascos) and a
kidnapped daughter gets thrown at us, not to mention crossed signals between
the military dudes tasked with getting the nukes set just so.
Whether it's a soldier hoisting a nuclear warhead with his bare hands or all
eyes on that count-up meter as the hole approaches 44 cm, Scorcher is a real
howler through and through. It's almost bad enough to merit watching simply for
kitsch value (did I mention President Rutger Hauer???), but not quite. In
fact, the special effects are a little too good, believe it or not, to pass for
a strict B-movie. When L.A. gets nuked, I really, truly believed it was
happening.
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" Grim "
Rating: R, 2002