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After a series of small tremors in Los Angeles, Dr. Clare Winslow, a local seismologist, pinpoints the exact location and time of when the long awaited earthquake--"The Big One"--will strike southern California.
When the USGS begins detecting a series of small earthquakes around the Los Angeles area, one geologist, Dr. Claire Winslow (Kerns) alerts her bosses to the possibility of a major earthquake that will flatten Los Angeles.
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (TV Movie 1990) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
"The Big One: The Great Los Angeles Earthquake" is a chilling, well-made disaster film that was made-for-TV and aired on NBC back in the fall of 1990 as a two-part movie. Joanna Kerns (star of TV's "Growing Pains") stars as a seismologist who worries that the earthquake of the title is going to strike Los Angeles.
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (TV Movie 1990) - La Cienega Oil Fields, La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (1990) Close. 1 of 13. The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (1990) 1 of 13. The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (1990) Titles The Great Los Angeles Earthquake. Languages English.
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (TV Movie 1990) - It's hinted at throughout the movie that Clare and her colleagues had a flawed earthquake prediction theory a couple of years before the events in this movie.
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake Edit When the NBC-TV network premiered this film over two nights in November 1990, NBC News added earthquake safety tips and news information at the end of each night of the miniseries.
The Big One: The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (English) Canada. Le Grand Tremblement de Terre de Los Angeles (French, video box title) Finland. Suuri maanjäristys (video box title) 12 more All. Contribute to this page. Suggest an edit or add missing content. Top Gap.
The Great Los Angeles Earthquake (TV Movie 1990) - In her interview with reporter Kevin Conrad, Clare states that a big quake along a fault closer to the Los Angeles area could be more devastating than a quake on the San Andreas fault which at its closest junction to Los Angeles is over forty miles away.