The Borneo Post (Sabah)

News of ‘Twister’ sequel has weather fanatics swirling with excitement

- Matthew Cappucci

A MILD obsession with the movie “Twister” is virtually a requiremen­t for a weather enthusiast. Meteorolog­ists, hobbyists or even slightly-morethan-casual cloud watchers probably have seen it at least a handful of times. Each time it airs on cable TV, it seems that half of “weather Twitter” (WxTwitter) takes to social media to alert colleagues. Now a sequel is reportedly coming - and it’s taking the weather enterprise by storm.

Twenty-six years after the release of “Twister” in 1996, the sequel will be called “Twisters,” according to Deadline, the Hollywood industry news site. Filming for the movie is to begin in the spring. Steven Spielberg reportedly “flipped” over the script, and “his enthusiasm provided the impetus for the fast-tracked film,” which will be a venture between Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainm­ent and Universal Studios. Deadline noted that Warner Bros. will be co-financing the project and that it will be produced by Frank Marshall.

According to Reader’s Digest, the film probably will not premiere until at least mid-2024, if not later.

When asked for his initial reaction to the news of a “Twister” sequel, Reed Timmer, a renowned storm chaser and former star of the long-running Discovery Channel series “Storm Chasers,” described feeling “pure excitement!”

“‘Twister’ is still one of my favorite movies,” Timmer told The Washington Post in a message. “I love the storm chaser characters in the original movie and the representa­tion of life on the road.”

Timmer, who regularly drives tens of thousands of miles annually crisscross­ing the Great Plains, Deep South and Southeast in pursuit of tornadoes, said the portrayal of the dynamic of storm chasing was spot-on in “Twister.”

“The quirky characters, camaraderi­e and competitiv­eness between the different stormchase­rs and teams as shown in the original ... is incredibly accurate and ahead of its time,” he wrote.

The original movie chronicles the adventures of Jo Thornton (played by Helen Hunt), whose family’s rural Oklahoma farm was destroyed in 1969 by an F5 tornado. Her father dies while trying to hold down the door of a storm cellar. Twenty-seven years later, Thornton is a PhD meteorolog­ist working to deploy probes in the path of violent tornadoes. She’s in the midst of a divorce from fellow scientist Bill Harding (Bill Paxton). After enduring several neardeath experience­s involving severe storms, the pair rekindle their love while conducting groundbrea­king tornado research.

“The [research] projects were an accurate look into the future of storm chasing field science - the interplay between the big mega funded field projects and the small self funded chasers trying to also make a difference,” Timmer wrote.

“Twister” was a hit, grossing nearly US$500 million at the box office.

It was not immediatel­y apparent who would star in the sequel; Deadline wrote that the hope is to bring Hunt back, according to its sources. News of the sequel comes 5 1/2 years after the death of Paxton at age 61.

After Paxton’s death on Feb. 25, 2017, scores of storm chasers took to the rural roadways of the Texas Panhandle and plains of western Oklahoma to spell out his initials, which appeared on the storm chasing “Spotter Network.”

“A TWISTER sequel without Bill Paxton? Shouldn’t be made,” tweeted Chris Evangelist­a, the editor and chief film critic at Slash Film. “I stand firm on this very important issue.”

TMZ reports that Paxton’s son has given the sequel “his seal of approval.”

“Twister” helped popularize the field of storm chasing and was among the few movies at the time that embraced scientists, and in particular nerds. It comes as no surprise that meteorolog­ists far and wide welcome the sequel.

“The original movie was highly influentia­l in fueling my love and passion for weather and tracking down tornadoes,” wrote Aaron Jayjack, a storm chaser for the MyRadar app, in a message to The Post. “I’d love to see them come out with a crew and get some real, close up action shots of actual tornadoes in the Plains!”

Despite the widespread enthusiasm, meteorolog­ists and weather enthusiast­s alike are hoping producers hew close to the science - some even advocating the use of meteorolog­ical consultant­s.

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