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Twister is a 1996 American disaster film directed by Jan de Bont, and written by Michael Crichton and Anne-Marie Martin. It was produced by Crichton, Kathleen Kennedy , and Ian Bryce , with Steven Spielberg , Walter Parkes , Laurie MacDonald , and Gerald R. Molen serving as executive producers .
In February 2016, Paxton was cast as Detective Frank Rourke for Training Day, a crime-thriller television series set 15 years after the events of the eponymous 2001 movie. [16] [17] It premiered a year later. [18] His final film appearance was in The Circle (2017), released two months after his death. [19]
Nearly three decades before Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell’s 2024 sequel Twisters, there was the OG 1996 film Twister starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton. Hunt and Paxton played an estranged ...
Cast members attended a "weather boot camp" to learn about tornadoes from meteorologists and storm chasers. The program was organized by meteorologist and former NOAA analyst Kevin Kelleher, a technical advisor on both Twister films. [4]: 6, 12 [17] Paxton's son, James, has a cameo as a motel guest who tries driving away from a tornado. [18] [19]
‘Saving Private Ryan’ (1998) Character Death: Captain Miller (Tom Hanks) Why It Was Devastating: In the film, Captain Miller has survived the D-Day invasion, fought his way through France, and ...
The movie stars Glen Powell and Daisy Edgar-Jones as storm chasers in the modern-day disaster flick, which is a follow-up to 1996's Twister. The cast has been careful not to call Twisters a sequel.
On 7 November 2016, actors Anil Kumar and Raghava Uday drowned in Thippagondanahalli Reservoir near Bangalore, when they took a 60-foot (18 m) plunge from a chopper while shooting the film's climax scene. A rescue motorboat scheduled to pull the actors out of the water did not start, resulting in both actors' deaths. [385] Shooter (2016).
Night of the Twisters is a 1996 made-for-television disaster film that was directed by Timothy Bond.The film premiered on The Family Channel (now Freeform) on February 11, 1996, as the cable channel's first original movie (and appeared on the channel until 2004, under its successor brands Fox Family and ABC Family).