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.
I went blind in one eye after having false lashes fitted while wearing contact lenses
Johnny Cueto signs minor league deal with Texas. He was an All
Why vagina makeovers are booming: The five treatments you NEED to know about if you're over 40
General Motors reports strong first
Fed's preferred inflation gauge shows price pressures stayed elevated last month
Senate passes bill forcing TikTok's parent company to sell or face ban
Dominica joins other Caribbean islands in striking down laws prohibiting gay sex
Bobrovsky makes incredible save during Panthers
Sam Kerr's bid to get racially
New Mexico reaches settlement in 2017 wage
USC gives Lindsay Gottlieb a contract extension following deepest NCAA Tournament run in 30 years
Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo out for Game 2 against Pacers