Growing up in the Midwest, filmmaker Lee Isaac Chung developed both a healthy fear of tornadoes and a reverence for Jan de Bont’s 1996 disaster film “Twister.” He saw the movie in the theater with his family when he was a teenager.
“I remember thinking, ‘I didn’t know you could chase after these things,’” Chung said. “That, to me, was very mind-blowing.”
These were forces of nature he and his schoolmates in rural Arkansas, near the Oklahoma border, were being taught how to safely hide from. And here’s Helen Hunt, Bill Paxton, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Alan Ruck driving towards them. Intentionally.
Candice Swanepoel stuns in a form
Community housing developments stall as government funding not guaranteed
Harris blames Trump for abortion ban in Arizona
Some Auckland train services cancelled
Mohammad Mokhber: Who is Iran’s acting president?
Judith Collins picks up raft of ministerial positions in new government
'More than safe passage, a destination'
Dozens of jobs set to be axed at Commerce Commission
Verona confirms Serie A status for another year after beating Salernitana
Biden surveys collapsed Baltimore bridge, pledges help