by Flack » Sun Aug 18, 2024 9:41 pm
Sometimes, when a viewer is too close to the subject material, it can be difficult to separate the technical inaccuracies from the story a director is trying to tell. Sometimes, it is downright impossible. Such was the case for me with 2024's windy sequel, Twisters.
The film opens as Kate and four of her friends from college are attempting to "disrupt a tornado" by putting themselves directly in the path of one and shooting chemicals up into the funnel. The plan fails. The storm is much larger than they anticipated and as a result, three of the stormchasers are killed. Kate and her then boyfriend, Javi, part ways as she takes a much safer job with the national weather service in New York City. Back home in Oklahoma tornadoes are growing in numbers and intensity, and after five years in the big city Kate is drawn back into the world of chasing tornadoes across Oklahoma.
But in five years, so much has changed! This time around Kate and Javi find themselves competing with YouTubers and social media stars selling merchandise before each chase begins. Before the end we'll learn the bad guy wasn't all bad, the good guy wasn't all good, and it'll be up to Kate to face her fear and finally defeat a gigantic tornado.
If you've seen one of these types of movies, you've seen them all. You could easily swap the tornadoes out for surfing waves, pulling off the perfect cheer, or any of a dozen disasters and keep all the beats. Wait, the bad guy was selling merch so that he could purchase food to give away at tornado disaster sites? Who saw that coming! (Everybody.) By the time we meet the good guy and the bad guy we know they'll all be working together with Kate in the end. None of that is surprising.
What was surprising, at least to someone who lives here, is how Oklahoma -- and Oklahomans -- are portrayed. Throughout the film, people are "surprised" by tornadoes, their first warning coming from seeing one on the horizon, headed their way. In reality -- and it's been this way for decades -- we get warned sometimes days in advance. It is not uncommon here for a weatherman on Monday to warn views about "potentially tornado-producing storms" coming on Friday. Long, long before a storm produces anything that remotely looks like a tornado, the local meteorologists take over every television station for hours and hours, letting people know where the storms are, how fast they're moving, what direction they're heading, when they'll get to your area, etc. Tornadoes are a lot less like sneaky bogeymen than something like a tsunami that we track with satellites and know when they're going to arrive. In the film, stormchasers are constantly racing into cities to tell people what to do ("We've got to tell the people to find a basement!") but from the age we are in kindergarten here, kids are taught what to do when tornado sirens go off. In the film, Oklahomans are portrayed no smarter than the cattle, standing mindlessly in the path of impending disaster. Trust me, everyone who has lived in Oklahoma for more than five minutes has one or more weather apps on their phones. The thought of entire towns (and even the stormchasers) getting "surprised" by a tornado is ludicris.
Just as silly is the portrayal of the stormchasers unwinding after a big chase. In one scene, after a day's worth of chasing, hundreds of stormchasers meet in some fictitious town square. playing songs on acoustic guitars and dancing around in flannel shirts and cowboy hats and -- look, I know these people exist, somewhere, but stormchasers have way more in common with IT nerds than cowboys out trying to rope the wind. The guys in this movie set out to chase a tornado and ended up on the set of Three Amigos somehow.
As far as I know, the whole idea of distupting a tornado by launching anything up into it is bunk, but that's okay -- Twisters is no more based in reality than Jurassic Park or any other good science-fiction thriller. The fantasy parts aren't what the film gets wrong -- it's the facts they trample all over to tell their story. Stereotypes aside, Twisters is a popcorn flick that's enjoyable as long as you keep reminding yourself that's not a tornado affecting your vision... it's just your eyes rolling over and over.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wdok0rZdmx4&t=3s
Sometimes, when a viewer is too close to the subject material, it can be difficult to separate the technical inaccuracies from the story a director is trying to tell. Sometimes, it is downright impossible. Such was the case for me with 2024's windy sequel, [i]Twisters[/i].
The film opens as Kate and four of her friends from college are attempting to "disrupt a tornado" by putting themselves directly in the path of one and shooting chemicals up into the funnel. The plan fails. The storm is much larger than they anticipated and as a result, three of the stormchasers are killed. Kate and her then boyfriend, Javi, part ways as she takes a much safer job with the national weather service in New York City. Back home in Oklahoma tornadoes are growing in numbers and intensity, and after five years in the big city Kate is drawn back into the world of chasing tornadoes across Oklahoma.
But in five years, so much has changed! This time around Kate and Javi find themselves competing with YouTubers and social media stars selling merchandise before each chase begins. Before the end we'll learn the bad guy wasn't all bad, the good guy wasn't all good, and it'll be up to Kate to face her fear and finally defeat a gigantic tornado.
If you've seen one of these types of movies, you've seen them all. You could easily swap the tornadoes out for surfing waves, pulling off the perfect cheer, or any of a dozen disasters and keep all the beats. Wait, the bad guy was selling merch so that he could purchase food to give away at tornado disaster sites? Who saw that coming! (Everybody.) By the time we meet the good guy and the bad guy we know they'll all be working together with Kate in the end. None of that is surprising.
What [i]was[/i] surprising, at least to someone who lives here, is how Oklahoma -- and Oklahomans -- are portrayed. Throughout the film, people are "surprised" by tornadoes, their first warning coming from seeing one on the horizon, headed their way. In reality -- and it's been this way for decades -- we get warned sometimes days in advance. It is not uncommon here for a weatherman on Monday to warn views about "potentially tornado-producing storms" coming on Friday. Long, long before a storm produces anything that remotely looks like a tornado, the local meteorologists take over every television station for hours and hours, letting people know where the storms are, how fast they're moving, what direction they're heading, when they'll get to your area, etc. Tornadoes are a lot less like sneaky bogeymen than something like a tsunami that we track with satellites and know when they're going to arrive. In the film, stormchasers are constantly racing into cities to tell people what to do ("We've got to tell the people to find a basement!") but from the age we are in kindergarten here, kids are taught what to do when tornado sirens go off. In the film, Oklahomans are portrayed no smarter than the cattle, standing mindlessly in the path of impending disaster. Trust me, everyone who has lived in Oklahoma for more than five minutes has one or more weather apps on their phones. The thought of entire towns (and even the stormchasers) getting "surprised" by a tornado is ludicris.
Just as silly is the portrayal of the stormchasers unwinding after a big chase. In one scene, after a day's worth of chasing, hundreds of stormchasers meet in some fictitious town square. playing songs on acoustic guitars and dancing around in flannel shirts and cowboy hats and -- look, I know these people exist, somewhere, but stormchasers have way more in common with IT nerds than cowboys out trying to rope the wind. The guys in this movie set out to chase a tornado and ended up on the set of Three Amigos somehow.
As far as I know, the whole idea of distupting a tornado by launching anything up into it is bunk, but that's okay -- [i]Twisters[/i] is no more based in reality than [i]Jurassic Park[/i] or any other good science-fiction thriller. The fantasy parts aren't what the film gets wrong -- it's the facts they trample all over to tell their story. Stereotypes aside, [i]Twisters[/i] is a popcorn flick that's enjoyable as long as you keep reminding yourself that's not a tornado affecting your vision... it's just your eyes rolling over and over.