Twisters (2024) directed by Lee Isaac Chung
Tornado storm chaser Kate (Daisy Edgar-Jones) had a horrible experience in graduate school. She was working on her dissertation project, trying to create a way to stop tornadoes through science. She had a special chemical compound that would get sucked up into a tornado to stop it. Her team of friends helping her almost all died during an attempt to kill a twister in the Oklahoma countryside. She moved to New York City and worked at the weather service there. Five years later, the only other survivor Javi (Anthony Ramos) comes to New York with a proposal--he's been in the military and saw a new radar technology that will be able to map any storm (including tornadoes) in minute detail. He needs to prove it works and has a corporately-funded team back in Oklahoma ready for the field test. He needs her preternatural storm chasing abilities to find good storms. She reluctantly returns to Oklahoma where they run into other storm chasers, especially YouTube celebrity Tyler (Glen Powell), who has an entertaining shtick and a band of misfit chasers. She is immediately turned off by him but he is intrigued by her in a tornado-chasing-rivalry way. Their rivalry morphs as they learn more about each other and about Javi's sponsor.
This movie is quintessential dumb popcorn fun. There's the patina of science that is not at all convincing but is enough to move the plot along. There's the tragic backstory of the heroine who is estranged from her mother and her home state. There's corporate baddies. There's a charming, conceited guy who turns out to be a much better person than he is on his "This is not my first tornadeo!" t-shirts. The big, bad monsters (i.e. the tornadoes) show up at regular intervals, each time with some new revelation or different styling to make it seem even worse than before. Small children and dogs are saved from the big bad monsters. The only odd thing is the romantic subplot bring entirely backburnered until the very end of the film.
As long as you go into the movie with the proper mindset (brain shifted into neutral), this is an entertaining way to spend a couple of hours. The acting is adequate, though I wished the main characters or performances were a little more charming or endearing. Other than the special effects people, it doesn't look like anybody (actors, director, writer, cinematographer, etc.) tried very hard. There's a lot of tornadoes causing destruction and people dealing with it. The original film had more charm, this one is just adequate.
Mildly recommended.