This does seem to be another year of disaster movie mania, earlier in the year we got
Pompeii which was basically
Gladiator meets
Titanic on the slopes of
Dante’s Peak, then we had Darren Aronofsky’s
Noah that of course is about the world’s first disaster story and was kind of dreadful, but now we have
Into the Storm which tops them all in the epic nature carnage category. This is the film Jan de Bont’s
Twister wanted to be.
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"Did you see Cary Elwes in there?" |
Director
Steven Quale
decided to go the “found footage” route with this disaster flick and I
must say it really makes the scenes much more visceral. What makes this
stand out from most movies of that type is that we follow multiple
sources; a group of storm chasers, redneck morons, high school kids, and
then various security and news footage to flesh it out, but then he
occasional abandons the found footage conceit for moments that would
make no sense for a camera to be recording what we are seeing. I am
totally okay with that.
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“Thunderbolt and lightning, Very, very frightening me!” |
The story, and I use the term “story” in its broadest sense of the world
here, mainly focuses on two groups of people as a massive storm front
rages across the poor town of Silverton and that is spawning tornadoes
faster than you can say “There’s no place like home.”
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"Must drive faster!" |
The Storm Chasers: Pete (
Matt Walsh)
is a documentary filmmaker who specializes in tornado footage but it’s
been a year since he got any good material and he’s about to lose his
funding. He is this film’s Captain Ahab and who believes that with his
super truck “The Titus” he can film from the inside of a tornadoes eye.
Allison (
Sarah Wayne Callies)
is the meteorologist member of the team and whose main character trait
is that she misses her daughter. They are accompanied by a small team of
cameramen and drivers whose main jobs are to either be yelled at by
Pete, get killed, or both. That the black guy survives to the end of the
film earns this movie major points.
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The Titus: Number one truck of choice for all Tornado Chasers. |
The Morris Family: Gary Morris (
Richard Armitage)
is a widower and dad to two teen-age sons. He is also the local schools
vice principle and wound up a bit too tight. Donnie Morris (
Max Deacon) is the resentful son who has become estranged from his father since the passing of their mother. Trey Morris (
Nathan Kress) is the young son who basically would like everyone to just chill out. Thrown into that mix is Kaitlyn (
Alycia Debnam Carey) the high school girl that Donnie has a crush on. Note: Disasters are amazing relationship builders.
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“So, we’ll just stand here then?” |
The film does occasionally follow a couple of moronic rednecks whose
apparent sole goal in life is to get a million YouTube hits and make
tons of money off of it. That they constantly stand in front of oncoming
tornadoes is not surprising.
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At one point a tornado rolls over a burning gas station and becomes a fiery finger of God. |
Now when it comes to tornado action this film does not mess around, it
spends just enough time with our main characters so that when the shit
does hit the fan we actually care about them. It doesn’t have rival
storm chasers in black vans working against our heroes as in some films
*cough* Twister, because when you’re talking Mother Nature’s fury laying
waste to all in her path you really don’t need a human villain to spice
things up.
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The awesome power of an F5 |
As for the films special effects I can’t praise them enough. I found
myself holding my breath during many of the sequences where the main
characters were either driving towards or fleeing the tornadoes and
their destructive power. Wherever our heroes went they found themselves
dodging tossed vehicles or various storm thrown debris but when the F5
passed through an airport and lifted jumbo jets as if they were Tinker
Toys that was incredible to behold.
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Damn! |
Now sure some of the dialogue was a bit corny at times and a couple of the characters were a tad bit
clichéd, but overall I found myself emotionally moved way beyond what I’d expect from a
popcorn disaster flick,
and there is a scene where Donnie and Kaitlynn are pretty sure their
time is up that is just damn powerful. Kudos to those young actors.
Simply put
Into the Storm was an E ticket thrill
ride that should make any fan of the genre incredibly happy. Steven
Quale has taken the found footage format and raised it to a whole new
level.
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