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Into the Storm

Trekker4747

Boldly going...
Premium Member
This movie has been out for a few weeks, but I got around to going to see it this evening.

It's not too bad, I'd probably grade a B- or a C+.

It's a movie that plays out the usual cliches you'd expect from a disaster movie like this and, naturally, all of these cliched plot-lines are setup in the first 20 or 30 minutes, which are pretty painful. Once the storms, and thus action, hits it's pretty good with some great visuals.

The biggest problem I have with the movie is that it tries to set itself up as one of these "Found Footage" movies but it doesn't really fully dedicate itself to the concept. There's more than a few times in the movie where the perspective shifts from the camera of character to the usual omnipotent camera of movies.

The FF stuff has certain aspects to it you have to accept, that people would continue to film this stuff well past the point it's logical to do so. (Like say when you're trapped in a storm drain and near drowning) Also most of the FF movies at least has some premise of how the footage was found, usually in the form of a recovered camera or storage medium. There's a few points in this movie where there's a BIG question of how the video was recovered a camera that was clearly destroyed or at least lost beyond any hope of recovery.

The movie seems to want it both ways, it wants the Found Footage thing, which *could* work in a tornado-chaser movie as they do carry with them cameras, have cameras mounted on their vehicles and likely would record things in dangerous situations, but there's a few other story elements and stuff in this movie where the Found Footage thing doesn't hold up as well. (Two of the characters are carrying cameras doing a video -diary for their senior class' time capsule to opened in 25 years. But there's plenty of points where they're recording past the point where it's logical. Not to mention a point where a camera is able to pick-up a sotto-voiced conversation from across a busy school lunch-room/AP room, or a conversation that'd otherwise not be audible to a typical camera's microphone.

To say nothing of the battery life of these cameras, their ability to withstand water damage, hail damage and fall damage.

And at one point a character is able to have a very clear conversation with another character's voice-mail box, even though he only is able to get one bar's worth of signal on his phone. Right.

Again, fun movie, very good visuals -wish I could've see it in 3D- and the action/tornado stuff is good once it starts. But dealing with the characters and plots playing out pretty much every disaster movie trope is sort-of annoying and the "Found Footage" angle isn't used well and is very inconsistent.
 
I have been a severe weather buff for a long time--and www.stormtrack.org is a go to site for chasers.

Some tornadoes can even have horizontal tentacles due to terrific updrafts. Up until recently, the best example of this was what is known as the Red Rock event.

In 2011's outbreak, the Tuscaloosa-Birmingham F-4 spawned many tentacle like vortices: http://www.stormtrack.org/forum/showthread.php?27601-Tornadoes-with-Tentacle-Like-External-Vortices!!

H.P. Lovecraft even had Call of Cthulhu set around the time of the Tri-State tornado--March 1925.

I would have a preternatural take to this. Are those really vortices spinning from an angry sky? Or something else?

The NWS weather radio is heard chanting:

Praise his comings and goings...
 
This movie was a lot better than I expected, in that it was not terrible :lol:

I definitely thought it was better than Twister, but I'm not really a fan of Twister.

But me, I'm a sucker for found footage films. They always suck me in.
 
I'm the opposite. I'll usually go out of my way to avoid found footage movies. The contrivances to make sure the camera is always present tend to pull me out of it.
 
My biggest problem with the movie was the idiot teenager following the girl with the rack into the abandoned factory. It was so blindingly obvious what would happen...
 
This movie was a lot better than I expected, in that it was not terrible :lol:

I definitely thought it was better than Twister, but I'm not really a fan of Twister.

But me, I'm a sucker for found footage films. They always suck me in.

Ugh no thank you. I went into this expecting a fun little romp in the vein of Twister, and I was almost bored during it. VFX work was great but the movie was terrible.

I went home and watched Twister just to get this film out of my head. IMHO, Twister is an absolute blast of a film, and one of my favorites to put on when I'm working from my house.
 
It's not too bad, I'd probably grade a B- or a C+.

I hope a found footage crew made up of Boring Oakenshield, Lori the charisma vacuum that no one cared was eaten by zombies, and the rest of his Family Bland follows you around Kansas in an armored car sleet shaming you for being even mildly okay with this atrocity of a film. This made Twister look like Citizen Kane, and The Day After Tomorrow look like a worse version of Citizen Kane. I kept hoping for a Sharknado to show up so at least something interesting would happen instead of this F5 cyclone of sucktitude.






I may be using a bit of hyperbole, but not much. ;)
 
I'm pretty forgiving when it comes to how I grade movies. A movie has to be pretty bad for me to consider giving it a flat C or lower, terrible to get into the D's and downright appalling to get an F. And for a movie to get an I (Incomplete)? Well, let's just say it's only happened once or twice, a movie has to be damn awful for me to walk out of it.

At the end of this movie I had a good time during it, enjoyed the visuals and thought the "excitement" in it was pretty decent even if the characters were stock cliches, the half-hearted and schizophrenic attempt of doing a "Found Footage" movie and the situations the characters were in/went through where common tropes to this genre of movie, though usually in made-for-TV movies and not major feature films.

I walked out of the movie having had a good time and not regretting the money I spent on it, so that gets it at the very least a C+ was just on the border of me considering it a "bad" movie. But even then it'd be a movie that's bad enough to be worth watching because it's bad.

I actually think Sarah Wayne Callies was decent in it, I like her okay as an actress but mostly hated her on The Walking Dead. Well, not her but Lori. I did have a chuckle in this movie when she's talking on the phone/Skyping with her daughter and the care-provider. I was thinking, "Dammit, Sarah! Even HERE you leave your child behind with Dale while you go and do bullshit?"

And, for the record, I like Twister, again, for what it is. But would consider it a "better" movie than this.

Day After Tomorrow? Don't get me started. That movie is complete crap, probably a C or C- for me. Jesus, that think was painful and ridiculous.
 
Oh, you don't have to justify your grade to me, I was just teasing you. I just found the movie painfully dull.
 
I felt bad for that kid. He was the Dante of the movie. He's not even supposed to be here today and then he gets sucked into a firenado and replaced by some rank amateur five seconds later.

Of course, according to the rules of disaster movies, dickhead boss/rival must pay the ultimate price for his hubris later on, even after redeeming himself. Just like the boss in Dante's Peak, the DWP guy in Volcano, Stanley Tucci in The Core, Cary Elwes in Twister...
 
Yeah, I figured that guy for dead after he wanted to bail but his buddy talked him into sticking around.

I thought it was funny the younger brother, apparently, knew how to interpret the RADAR and other weather-sensing equipment int he van almost right away. Was he even better at Lori's job than apparently she was?
 
This thread is about the excellent 2009 HBO film about Churchill during and just after WW2, right? I love that movie. The only tornadoes I remember are emotional outbursts, though.

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