![]() ![]() As far as preparation, Brendan Fehr explains, "We have about two weeks max and usually about a week before the whole thing gets rolling." So it is a very quick process from landing a role to filming. Methane apparently does not dissipate after causing cracks to the surface and can be directed by explosions. You have Alaska, on Christmas Eve, with bright green grass. You have methane gas causing people to die just by touching it. You have a father far too young to be the parent of a teenager. That being said, it has some questionable aspects. I see too many films that take themselves seriously and just end up being boring (most recent example - "Don't Let Him In"). I appreciate that they seem to know the film will be cheesy and try not to make it more than it is. But I want to say that despite all the bad things, it was still enjoyable and used far less CGI than typically seen in a SyFy film. I could make lots of complaints about this film (and will shortly). They seem to be moving, and if not stopped could cause great peril for the families on Christmas. Geysers of ice are erupting in Alaska near the city of Fairbanks. Even fans of these low rent disaster flicks should avoid it. The CGI effects are horrendous beyond belief and there's something mind-numbingly repetitive in the way the same incidents befall the same characters over and over again. The entire narrative consists of repetitive scenes of people trying to flee when the ground splits and cracks open to emit clouds of boiling methane. The characters are underwritten to the point of non-existence and there's way too much crying and screaming going on. There's not one distinguished cast member here, just a bunch of no-name actors giving boring performances. So far so ordinary for the SyFy Channel, but this one is exceptionally poor compared to most of their movies in this sub-genre. Inevitably, a scientist and his family happen to be caught up in the natural disaster and must fight to survive nature's onslaught. ICE QUAKE is an extraordinarily poor SyFy Channel disaster movie that sees a river of liquid methane causing the very landscape to split and shift in Alaska. ![]() Overall, Ice Quake has its moments but it is nothing great. The direction and pace are both uneven, there are times when the direction is tolerable but others when it is sloppy and hackneyed and in regards to the pace the middle drags and the end feels rushed, while the script is really quite poor and clichéd. The effects are rather generic, the film does have some dodgy flashlight technology and while it is not as bad as other Syfy movies there are many inconsistencies and errors, the one regarding the methane is just one of these. The acting, excepting the leads, is nothing to rave about, and I also couldn't connect to most of the characters, so much so towards the end I honestly didn't really care about whether they lived or died. ![]() However, Ice Quake isn't particularly good either. The scenery is quite striking, the story was interesting in concept and to start with, Brendan Fehr is cute, charming and does show at least a bit of charisma and the female didn't grate on me or strike me as too bland. Ice Quake isn't a terrible movie and Syfy have certainly done much worse. The ongoing heat wave that is plaguing the Pacific Northwest and melting everything from roads to mountains has made its way up to Alaska, and it's bringing with it a unique form of environmental destruction.While I do not like most of Syfy's movies, I do watch them to see if there are any decent ones or any with novelty value. Geological Survey, a 2.7 magnitude ice quake - a non-tectonic seismic event significant enough to register on the Richter scale - shook the ground in the Alaska Panhandle, about 25 miles out from Alaska's capital city of Juneau, at around 5:29 a.m.Īs abnormally high temperatures invaded the state, glaciers started to melt, causing a phenomenon known terrifyingly as an ice quake.Īccording to the U.S. That earth-shaking event, which was recorded at a depth of about 8 miles below the surface, couldn't be felt at ground level. But the fact that this is happening at all is enough to shake all of us to the core. The event, known as a glacial cryoseism, is typically the result of rapid changes in temperatures. It's not at all uncommon for ice quakes to take place over the course of winter months in Alaska and other chilly regions. ![]() According to a 2016 report in Weatherwise, these events happen "when the surface temperature undergoes a rapid cooling from above freezing to near subzero." They can also occur from unexpected heat, as appears to be the cause of Tuesday's below-surface quake. As unseasonably warm weather made its way across Alaska, glaciers started to melt, creating cracks that can cause large chunks of the dense ice to break off. ![]()
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