The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 02, 2025
Today: April 02, 2025

‘Twisters’ spins out from the original but has all the weight of a stiff breeze

'Twisters' spins out from the original but has all the weight of a stiff breeze
July 17, 2024
Brian Lowry - CNN

(CNN) — Landing somewhere between sequel and reboot, “Twisters” introduces new characters and an extra letter to the 1996 disaster movie but not much else, leaving its stars stranded in a vehicle with roughly the weight of a stiff breeze. Impressive visual effects only go so far, though they at least provide a necessary distraction to the heightened awareness of climate change baked into the premise.

After “Anyone But You” and “Hit Man,” Glen Powell serves as the biggest marketing come-on beyond the chance to see wanton destruction, but despite opportunities to flash that million-dollar smile, it’s not really his movie. The core story, rather, belongs to Daisy Edgar-Jones (“Where the Crawdads Sing”), playing the brilliant scientist lured back into the storm-chasing game after a tragic setback.

Edgar-Jones’ Kate Carter has taken refuge in New York after pursuing potentially groundbreaking research for the Tornado Tamer Project, an attempt to do the original movie’s premise one better by actually employing state-of-the-art technology to reduce massive tornadoes.

Those perilous efforts have lain dormant, however, when she’s approached by former colleague Javi (Anthony Ramos), who has found well-heeled sponsorship for his own storm-measuring device, flanked by an associate (“Superman”-to-be David Corenswet) who gives off a decided “Don’t trust that dude” vibe.

Back in the field, Kate encounters Tyler Owens (Powell), a rambunctious tornado “wrangler” who cashes in chasing storms and posting the content he films to his popular YouTube channel. Yet while there’s tension between her altruistic focus on science and his commodification of disasters, underscored by the neophytes with whom they cross paths, in this kind of movie handsome clouds tend to have silver linings.

After earning well-deserved praise for the character-driven independent film “Minari,” director Lee Isaac Chung tackles this major-studio assignment without bringing anything particularly distinctive to it, relying a little too much on how good his leads look wet and sweaty. That extends to the posse of supporting players in Kate/Javi and Tyler’s respective camps, which try to match the zany daredevil antics associated with the earlier film but generally fall short.

Indeed, the notably clever moments prove few and far between, from a reference to “The Wizard of Oz” to a sequence involving a movie theater, which a cynic might see as a metaphor for the stormy state of the industry.

As noted, the most salient wrinkle isn’t particularly helpful in viewing the movie as light escapism – namely, illustrating the devastating impact of tornadoes on communities, and an increase in extreme weather that has become more alarming and dire as filtered through our news-saturated culture. (“Twister,” it’s worth noting, premiered the same year that Fox News and MSNBC signed on.)

Frankly, this “Twister” revisitation might have been better served by following the old title with an exclamation point instead of an “S.” Either way, the assignment of replicating the first movie’s appeal would have presented a challenge, but “Twisters” makes that task harder due to headwinds entirely of its own making.

“Twisters” premieres July 19 in US theaters. It’s rated PG-13.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Related Articles

Gene Hackman tributes pour in from Francis Ford Coppola, Viola Davis, Bill Murray and more ‘Goonies’ cast reunites to honor Ke Huy Quan ‘Kiss of the Spider Woman’ musical with Jennifer Lopez dazzles at Sundance Video shows Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively’s outtakes on the set of ‘It Ends With Us’
Share This

Popular

Arts|Entertainment|Sports

At 89, Fred Costello plays the organ on opening day in Rochester just like he has since 1977

At 89, Fred Costello plays the organ on opening day in Rochester just like he has since 1977
Arts|Celebrity|Entertainment

'The Friend': When the star of the movie is a very good boy

'The Friend': When the star of the movie is a very good boy
Arts|Business|Entertainment|Technology

Ghibli effect: ChatGPT usage hits record after rollout of viral feature

Ghibli effect: ChatGPT usage hits record after rollout of viral feature
Arts|Crime|US

Stolen painting of President George Washington recovered after burglary

Stolen painting of President George Washington recovered after burglary

Entertainment

Arts|Entertainment|Sports

At 89, Fred Costello plays the organ on opening day in Rochester just like he has since 1977

At 89, Fred Costello plays the organ on opening day in Rochester just like he has since 1977
Arts|Celebrity|Entertainment

'The Friend': When the star of the movie is a very good boy

'The Friend': When the star of the movie is a very good boy
Arts|Business|Entertainment|Technology

Ghibli effect: ChatGPT usage hits record after rollout of viral feature

Ghibli effect: ChatGPT usage hits record after rollout of viral feature
Celebrity|Entertainment

Jack Black dropped both his pants and some info on ‘The Tonight Show’

Jack Black dropped both his pants and some info on ‘The Tonight Show’