Twisters (2024)

Tonight’s movie is TWISTERS, considered a stand-alone film and a follow-up, but not necessarily a sequel to the 1996 film with a similar name and which starred a passel of actors, many with recognizable faces who drew us into the world of storm chasing, particularly one kind of storm: tornados.

I can confirm that the 1996 film, TWISTER, and 2024’s TWISTERS are, for the most part, stand-alone films. While the current film casts allusions to the earlier film, they are two very different films in structure and story.

Unlike the original, the current film doesn’t give a timeframe aside from “FIVE YEARS LATER”, where most of the action of this film takes place after an opening set piece.

From my perspective, five years ago, we’re introduced to a group of Muskogee State College students who are trying to verify a theory by Kate Carter that using a certain chemical compound, the power of a tornado can be dissipated. Kate is working with four other students, including her boyfriend Jeb, and another close friend, Javi.

Kate and her team are pulling a trailer full of barrels of her chemical and a Dorothy V [five] device filled with the same sensors we saw Jo and her team use in 1996. Kate’s team locates an F1 tornado and places the barrels in the tornado’s path while Javi lingers back to launch the sensors and monitor the chemical’s reaction.  At first, it appears that the chemical works, but then suddenly, disaster strikes and the tornado becomes massive and threatens Kate and her team.

FIVE YEARS LATER, Kate is working for NOAA in New York City when she suddenly gets a visit from Javi who wants Kate to come back to Oklahoma and work with his new company and his new portable radar to 3D model a tornado to learn more about them.  At first, Kate refuses and Javi returns to Oklahoma. However, Javi sends her a news story about a town being destroyed and Kate decides to return to Oklahoma and give him and his radar a week to work.

While Javi introduces the rest of his company’s team to Kate, we are introduced to Tyler Owens, a self-described tornado wrangler and YouTube personality who does things like live-stream shooting fireworks inside an active tornado… from the inside. Seeing that Javi has brought a new person aboard, Tyler tries to get inside her head to discover which tornado she’s going to chase.

There are several parallels between this film and the 1996 film. A traumatic event spurs our heroine into action, or in Kate’s case inaction. Tyler tries to get information from Kate in the same way Jonas Miller tried to get information from Jo about her husband’s instincts about chasing. The increasing peril each tornado brings is greater than the last one.

However, the screenwriter seems to have deliberately reversed the roles we might expect. In the original “Twister,” Jo’s team was the scrappy underdog, while Jonas’s team represented the well-funded establishment. In “Twisters,” it’s Javi’s team that appears polished and professional, while Tyler’s team embodies the daredevil spirit. Still, not everything is as it appears.

Curiously, the film introduces numerous amateur storm chasers who could have served as a cautionary tale, demonstrating the dangers of inexperience. However, this potential plot point remains largely unexplored.

One major disappointment for me was the score by Benjamin Wallfisch. It lacked the energy and excitement of Mark Mancina’s original score, which would have greatly enhanced the film’s intensity. I saw the film in IMAX, but the format felt unnecessary and didn’t add much to the experience. The sound design was underwhelming, and the direction of Lee Isaac Chung was somewhat reserved.

The tornadoes themselves, which were so vividly characterized in the original TWISTER, seemed somewhat formless and less menacing in this sequel. Even the fire tornado, caused by an entire refinery exploding, failed to impress.

Interestingly, the film hints at a potential sequel through a montage of future events, suggesting that Javi, Tyler, and Kate ultimately join forces. This technique sometimes called a flashforward or a post-credits scene without the credits, offers an intriguing glimpse into the characters’ future paths.

So, you may think with all my nitpicking, that I didn’t like TWISTERS. You’d be wrong.

A few weeks ago we introduced this corollary to my mantra:

EXPECTATIONS SUBVERT ENJOYMENT.

If you’ve been following along, you know that my anticipation for TWISTERS was sky-high; it was inevitable that TWISTERS would suffer in comparison to TWISTER.

If you’ve done no research, you’d never know that Daisy Edgar-Jones is an English actress as she totally nailed her American accent.

Glen Powell continues to amaze. He is one breakthrough performance from being a major star. He’s done a lot of work recently, in different genres, and he’s one to watch. I await the one major role where you say, “Nobody else could play this role.”

Anthony Ramos again put in Yeoman’s work as Javi and David Corenswet, James Gunn’s Superman, as Javi’s business partner, Scott does a nice counterpoint performance to his future role as a man who seems jealous of Javi’s intimacy with Kate.

Finally, Brandon Perea stands out as part of Tyler’s crew along with Katy O’Brian, Sasha Lane, and Tunde Adebimpe.

Frankly, Joseph Kosinski’s screen story and Mark L. Smith’s screenplay could have been stronger, but the actors’ performances overcame those weaknesses.

On the ten-point scale from trakt.tv that I use to rate content, I wavered between giving TWISTERS a six or a seven, but recognizing that my expectations of a movie I’ve loved for 28 years, I’m giving its spiritual sequel a seven out of ten. That’s equivalent to three and a half stars on a five-star scale.

As always:
WATCH CONTENT; FORM OPINION.
You’ve just heard mine; I’d like to hear yours.

Ciao for now!

Trailer

Mikeylito’s Matinée Review

Black Panther: WAKANDA FOREVER | M’kylito’s Matinée | M’kylito’s Multiplex

Aside from the animated What If series, the last time we saw T’Challa was at the close of 2019’s Avengers: Endgame at Tony Stark’s funeral. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (hereafter Wakanda Forever) begins with T’Challa’s funeral.

Several reviewers have complained about the run time of Wakanda Forever, even though almost everyone agreed that this film had a significant burden on its shoulders. It had to explain what has happened in Wakanda and incorporate the real-life, real-universe death of Chadwick Boseman, who played T’Challa in four previous MCU films and several episodes of the aforementioned What If series. Many also felt it needed to bring some sanity to the disjointed Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Since Endgame, several years have passed. In the intervening time, T’Challa has contracted a fast-acting disease, and Shuri (Letitia Wright), who, to this point, has been unable to re-create a synthetic Heart-Shaped Herb, is desperately trying to cure her brother. She fails, and her brother dies because she doesn’t have the Heart-Shaped Herb, artificial or natural.

This is an example of how Ryan Coogler, as director, story author, and co-screenwriter with Joe Robert Cole, avoids taking shortcuts in weaving the tapestry that is Wakanda Forever. Coogler and Cole could have easily written around the total destruction of the Heart-Shaped Herb by Killmonger. Instead, they constructed a story element that incorporated an explanation.

Queen Ramonda, who has become the reigning monarch in the wake of T’Challa’s death, implores Shuri to recreate the Heart-Shaped Herb, but Shuri is still grieving her brother’s death, and we learn she doesn’t really believe in the Ancestral Plane. Ramonda is concerned that Wakanda will be attacked by outside forces trying to obtain vibranium.

Instead, Wakanda is threatened by a civilization unbeknownst to them. Namor, the leader of an underwater society known as Talokan, appears to Ramonda and Shuri. He tells them that vibranium was not only in The Great Mound of Wakanda but also under the sea in his nation. It seems the countries of the surface are not only trying to exploit Wakanda but Talokan as well. Namor wants Wakanda to ally with Talokan against the surface worlds, but Ramonda is reluctant.

Coogler and Cole’s storytelling is enhanced by the return of several Academy Award winners. Ruth E. Carter returns as Costume Designer, and Hannah Beachler as Production Designer. Ludwig Göransson’s score is weaved with songs from Rihanna and Baaba Maal.

I think of the film as a series of chapters, each dealing with a separate part of the overall story. One section of the story introduces Dominque Thorne as Riri Williams. A second section introduces Tenoch Huerta Mejía as Namor, Mabel Cadena as Namora, Alex Livinalli as Attuma, and the people of Talokan. A third section features Martin Freeman returning as CIA agent Everett Ross and a character we know but didn’t expect, which expands upon what we know about that character. Coogler and Cole weave all of this together with stories from Wakanda onto a grand tapestry.

The opening of Wakanda Forever is a moving tribute to T’Challa and the actor who played him. However, the film’s closing moments and the mid-credits scene will absolutely rip your heart out.

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is rated PG-13 for sequences of strong violence, action, and some language. It’s playing in theatres now.

I’m not unbiased, but I rate the movie a solid 10 out of 10, the equivalent of five stars. I recommend you see it. Now, it’s up to you to decide.

Matinée Review

Trailer