About Skyscraper
Skyscraper (2018) is a gripping action-thriller that delivers classic disaster movie excitement with modern stakes. The film follows Will Sawyer (Dwayne Johnson), a former FBI hostage negotiator turned security assessor, who finds his family trapped in 'The Pearl,' the world's tallest and most advanced skyscraper, after it's set ablaze by a criminal syndicate. With his wife and children held hostage 225 stories above ground, Sawyer must use every skill at his disposal to infiltrate the burning tower against impossible odds.
Dwayne Johnson delivers exactly what audiences expect from him—charismatic determination and physical prowess—while Neve Campbell provides strong support as his resourceful wife, Sarah. Director Rawson Marshall Thurber creates genuinely tense sequences, particularly the iconic scene where Johnson makes a death-defying leap between the burning tower and a construction crane. While the plot follows familiar disaster movie tropes, the execution is solid, with impressive visual effects that make the towering inferno feel terrifyingly real.
What makes Skyscraper worth watching is its straightforward commitment to delivering edge-of-your-seat entertainment. The film doesn't pretend to be anything more than a well-executed, high-concept thriller, and it succeeds on those terms. The family-in-peril storyline adds emotional weight to the spectacular action set pieces, creating a satisfying balance between spectacle and heart. For fans of Die Hard-style scenarios and Johnson's particular brand of heroic appeal, Skyscraper offers 102 minutes of solid, suspenseful entertainment with impressive production values and relentless pacing.
Dwayne Johnson delivers exactly what audiences expect from him—charismatic determination and physical prowess—while Neve Campbell provides strong support as his resourceful wife, Sarah. Director Rawson Marshall Thurber creates genuinely tense sequences, particularly the iconic scene where Johnson makes a death-defying leap between the burning tower and a construction crane. While the plot follows familiar disaster movie tropes, the execution is solid, with impressive visual effects that make the towering inferno feel terrifyingly real.
What makes Skyscraper worth watching is its straightforward commitment to delivering edge-of-your-seat entertainment. The film doesn't pretend to be anything more than a well-executed, high-concept thriller, and it succeeds on those terms. The family-in-peril storyline adds emotional weight to the spectacular action set pieces, creating a satisfying balance between spectacle and heart. For fans of Die Hard-style scenarios and Johnson's particular brand of heroic appeal, Skyscraper offers 102 minutes of solid, suspenseful entertainment with impressive production values and relentless pacing.


















