ON SWIFT HORSES – Review

One of this weekend’s big film releases is yet another cinematic ride in Doc Brown’s DeLorean to what many believe to be a simpler, more “fun” era. Of course, last week, SINNERS dispelled such notions about the oh-so segregated 1930s (and then tossed vampires into the mix). It’s appropriate that I referenced that 1985 classic, since this new film is also set in the 1950s, those “Happy Days” referred to in the classic TV show (shessh, it’s over forty years old now). Sure, it was the birthplace of great rock and roll, but for certain minorities, it was a time to be very careful to the point of hiding in the shadows. While this film also briefly touches on race, its main focus is on sexual orientation, which could also lead to harsh punishments from all sides (including the courts). Perhaps that’s why one of the characters in this tale wants to escape the repressive era by any means available, including cars, trains, and ON SWIFT HORSES.

This story begins in 1954, not long after the end of the Korean War. Muriel (Daisy Edgar-Jones) shares her family’s home in Kansas with her long-time boyfriend (he keeps proposing), soldier-on-leave Lee (Will Poulter). He’s got big plans to move West as soon as his brother joins them. Finally, his sibling, Julius (Jacob Elordi) arrives, informing them that he has been discharged from the service, offering a vague explanation. Still, Lee is stoked that he will join the couple in California. Ah, but Julius has the “wanderlust” and, after giving Muriel some “card shark” tips, he leaves before dawn. In the following months, Lee finishes his stint in the service, and the two move West where he toils in a factory where Muriel is a waitress in a diner frequented by some fellows who “play the ponies” (she listens and makes some profitable wagers without telling her now husband). Meanwhile, Julius earns a “bankroll” from midnight poker games and as a gigolo, which soon lands him in Vegas. He gets a job in an off-strip casino watching the tables from the “rafters” and alerting the pit bosses to cheating gamblers. Soon, Julius is joined in the steamy “attic” by the dark and brooding Henry (Diego Calva). Eventually, the co-workers share an apartment and become much more than roommates, having to keep their passion very, very private. Back in San Diego, Lee and Muriel finally have enough saved (she’s still hiding most of her “winnings”) to get one of the “tract” houses in a new suburban development neighborhood. But Muriel is more interested in one of the locals, a woman with a chicken business (mainly eggs), an aspiring musician named Sandra (Sasha Calle). And soon, these two become much more than neighbors. Can Muriel keep her gambling and her Lesbian affair a secret from Lee? And what will happen when Julius and Henry try to take down the other Vegas casinos? Will the old “Kansas trio” ever reunite?


This tale of forbidden secret love is almost equally split between Muriel and Julius, though she may have the more complex conflicts. As Muriel, Edgar-Jones expertly embodies the typical steadfast supportive housewife of that time, though we can catch her eyes darting about as she formulates a way to go after her compulsion (the gambling) and desires (Sandra, mainly). We feel Muriel’s yearning to break out of her destined societial role, while wanting to shield Lee. And yet, there’s that connection with Julius, played with a dark, brooding charm by Elordi. He’s a restless spirit who never wants to be tethered down, sneaking away quickly (perhaps the ‘swiftest horse”). And then he finds his own liberation by his devotion to Henry, perhaps wanting to ‘settle down” like Muriel, but having to keep his true self hidden from the world. As his brother Lee, Poulter brings great empathy to a role that could easily be a stereotypical “clueless cuckold”, but instead is a good, loyal man trying to understand the change in the two people he adores. Calva makes Henry a fiery, spirited rebel. who wants nothing more than to be alongside Julius in their romantic “bubble”. Calle, as Sandra, has much of that same smouldering persona, coupled with a snarky line delivery, and a determination not to be the fun “side fling” for Muriel. Also of note is Don Swayze as the sneering surly casino pit boss and Kat Cumming as the bombshell blonde who fans the flames of Muriel’s liberated libido.

In just his second feature film, after decades helming “prestige” TV programs, director Daniel Minahan superbly recreates the postwar West while shattering the often “rose-colored” tint of nostalgia, reminding us that the “good ole’ days” didn’t extend to everyone. Minahan gives us the bright diners and casinos, while also giving us the clandestine gay meeting spots an aura of real danger and doom, with those secret revelers always keeping an eye out for the “morality enforcers”. The dialogue is sharp and very witty in Bryce Kass’ screenplay adaptation of the novel by Shannon Pufahl, though the romance of Muriel and Sandra feels more rushed as compared to the evolving relationship of Julius and Henry. In some ways, this feels like a companion piece to BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, with the era’s repressions and hidden affairs, though the story never quite hits the heights of that ground-breaking classic. Still, the performances are solid, and the period fashions and locales are splendid (including the “yechh” chain-smoking). ON SWIFT HORSES is a very well-crafted look at a time when expressing your true self to love was the biggest gamble.

3 Out of 4

ON SWIFT HORSES is now playing in select theatres

TWISTERS – Review

(From left) Lily (Sasha Lane) and Tyler (Glen Powell) in TWISTERS, directed by Lee Isaac Chung. Courtesy of Universal Pictures

It’s summer, and tornadoes might be on the news and on your mind, so if a studio is releasing a disaster film with blockbuster hopes, tornadoes and storm-chasing are a good bet. There was just such a blockbuster hit back in the ’90s, TWISTER, starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton. TWISTERS, starring the rising star of the moment, Glen Powell, and the cute Daisy Edgar-Jones, is a kind of decedent of that action thrill ride, although not exactly a remake nor a sequel but a hybrid of both. Of course, the real star is the visual effects, many generations advanced from the original, with flying objects and terrifying, unpredictable power of tornadoes. In sequel and remake mad Hollywood, you have to wonder what took them so long

The original action thriller had Helen Hunt as a research meteorological scientist chasing storms and grant-funding and Bill Paxton as her estranged husband, a researcher turned weatherman who is done with storm-chasing, plus competition from a corporate weather research company headed by a former colleague. Directed, surprisingly, by Lee Isaac Chung, the Oscar-nominated writer-director of MINARI, TWISTERS has some echoes of that original film but no academic researchers this time and a very different romance in the story. Instead, we have a professional meteorologist, Kate Carter (Daisy Edgar-Jones) working with a private company and a tornado chaser Tyler Owens (from Texas, no less – Glen Powell), who meet on the windswept plains of Oklahoma. She isn’t there for academic research but to aid an old friend, Javi (Anthony Ramos) whose private weather research company is testing some new equipment and needs her expertise. The two have different reasons for being there, different style, different methods, different equipment, but both are there to chase tornadoes.

Glen Powell plays a showboat YouTube channel sensation, who along with his motley crew, chases tornadoes for their daredevil social media show, selling tee-shirts and trinkets along the way. Daisy Edgar-Jones is a professional in meteorology, now a respected figure working out of a high-tech office in New York, but once a storm-chasing Oklahoma graduate student, until a field test of her theory on how to “kill” a tornado goes tragically wrong, a traumatic experience that we see at the opening of the film.

But she is lured back to into the field, and her native Oklahoma, by an old friend who was part of the team helping her test her theory that day. The two have not seen each other for years but he reaches out to her for her expert help testing some new equipment for his weather-data collection business, providing precise, local data on tornadoes to his paying customers. We also get the sense that he has hope to reconnect with her in hopes of kindling romance.

The meteorologists gather in a field with other storm-chasers, some serious and others not, to watch the skies for a developing front with storm potential. YouTube star … and his wild crew pull in a red pickup truck and assorted dinged up vans with music blazing and hoots, drawing a crack from one in the crowd about rednecks from Arkansas.

Personally, I prefer more science in my science fiction (which this kind of is, since it deals in the science of weather and tornadoes), but there is little actual science in this remake/sequel. Kate’s old idea for stopping a tornado is pure fiction and there is a scene with an “eye” in a tornado (that’s hurricanes, not tornadoes, folks). But for most audiences, that won’t matter because they are just there for the FX, with are present in abundance – dazzling visual effects of the power of one of the most terrifying, dangerous forces in nature, the unpredictable tornado.

And you do get those visual jaw-droppers and a visceral thrill ride, although it takes awhile for the story to get started after the early terrifying sequence that shows why Kate is afraid to go back into the field of storm-chasing. After that flashback sequence, the film flashes forward to introduce characters in the present. We get some meet-cute scenes showing the differences between the free-wheeling Tyler and the more professional Kate, and to establish some of the differences between those chasing storms for data-collection and those chasing for thrills and social media likes.

Things really get underway as both sets of storm chasers are taking a break, with Tyler and Kate taking in a local rodeo. Things pick up quickly for the excitement and the storm effects, when a surprise night-time storm hits, sending everyone scrambling.

The effects in TWISTERS are truly thrilling, and massive things fly through the air (although no cows this time). The above sequence, and another awesome one with a movie screen, echo scenes in the original but everything is much bigger, and more impressive. However, audiences should note not to take advice from this film on what to do in a real tornado – heading for a movie auditorium is not the safe choice.

There is little science or accurate information about tornadoes in this one, and Kate’s theory on how to kill a tornado is pure fiction, but the tornado scenes do supply summer escapist thrills, if no practical advice. Also, the romance between the two leads never really takes off, unlike a number of truck and buildings, as there is little to no romantic chemistry between stars Daisy and Glen.

TWISTERS can provide some popcorn fun and summer thrills in the only safe way to encounter a tornado but movie fans hoping for a repeat of the emotional appeal of the original TWISTER likely will be disappointed, as this story is less involving. If you are just there for big visual effects, TWISTERS has thrill delights for you, particularly in a sequence in a movie theater.

TWISTERS opens Friday, July 19, in theaters.

RATING: 2 out of 4 stars

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of TWISTERS

UNIVERSAL PICTURES, WARNER BROTHERS AND AMBLIN ENTERTAINMENT PRESENT THE YEAR’S MOST EPIC THRILL-RIDE!

TWISTERS.  SEE IT. HEAR IT. FEEL IT… IN THEATERS JULY 19TH. 

RATED PG-13.

The St. Louis advance screening is at 7PM, on Tuesday, July 16th at The Galleria 6 Cine. (5:30PM or earlier Suggested Arrival)

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Please arrive early as seating is not guaranteed.

Twin Twisters, in Twisters directed by Lee Isaac Chung.

This summer, the epic studio disaster movie returns with an adrenaline-pumping, seat-gripping, big-screen thrill ride that puts you in direct contact with one of nature’s most wondrous—and destructive—forces. 

From the producers of the Jurassic, Bourne and Indiana Jones series comes Twisters, a current-day chapter of the 1996 blockbuster, Twister. Directed by Lee Isaac Chung, the Oscar® nominated writer-director of Minari, Twisters stars Golden Globe nominee Daisy Edgar-Jones (Where the Crawdads Sing, Normal People) and Glen Powell (Anyone But You, Top Gun: Maverick) as opposing forces who come together to try to predict, and possibly tame, the immense power of tornadoes.

Edgar-Jones stars as Kate Cooper, a former storm chaser haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado during her college years who now studies storm patterns on screens safely in New York City. She is lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi (Golden Globe nominee Anthony Ramos, In the Heights) to test a groundbreaking new tracking system.There, she crosses paths with Tyler Owens (Powell), the charming and reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures with his raucous crew, the more dangerous the better.

As storm season intensifies, terrifying phenomena never seen before are unleashed, and Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves squarely in the paths of multiple storm systems converging over central Oklahoma in the fight of their lives.

Twisters features an exciting new cast, including Nope’s Brandon Perea, Sasha Lane (American Honey), Daryl McCormack (Peaky Blinders), Kiernan Shipka (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), Nik Dodani (Atypical) and Golden Globe winner Maura Tierney (Beautiful Boy).

From Amblin Entertainment, Twisters is directed by Lee Isaac Chung and is produced by Oscar® nominee Frank Marshall (Jurassic and Indiana Jones franchises) and by Patrick Crowley (Jurassic and Bourne franchises). The screenplay is by Mark L. Smith, writer of the Best Picture nominee The Revenant. Twisters will be distributed by Universal Pictures domestically and by Warner Bros. Pictures internationally. 

Watch The New TWISTERS Trailer Starring Daisy Edgar-Jones And Glen Powell

This summer, the epic studio disaster movie returns with an adrenaline-pumping, seat-gripping, big-screen thrill ride that puts you in direct contact with one of nature’s most wondrous—and destructive—forces.

From the producers of the Jurassic, Bourne and Indiana Jones series comes Twisters, a current-day chapter of the 1996 blockbuster, Twister. Directed by Lee Isaac Chung, the Oscar® nominated writer-director of Minari, Twisters stars Golden Globe nominee Daisy Edgar-Jones (Where the Crawdads Sing, Normal People) and Glen Powell (Anyone But You, Top Gun: Maverick) as opposing forces who come together to try to predict, and possibly tame, the immense power of tornadoes.

https://www.twisters-movie.com/

Debuting in theaters on July 19, watch the brand new trailer now.

Edgar-Jones stars as Kate Cooper, a former storm chaser haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado during her college years who now studies storm patterns on screens safely in New York City. She is lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi (Golden Globe nominee Anthony Ramos, In the Heights) to test a groundbreaking new tracking system. There, she crosses paths with Tyler Owens (Powell), the charming and reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures with his raucous crew, the more dangerous the better.

As storm season intensifies, terrifying phenomena never seen before are unleashed, and Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves squarely in the paths of multiple storm systems converging over central Oklahoma in the fight of their lives.

Twisters features an exciting new cast, including Nope’s Brandon Perea, Sasha Lane (American Honey), Daryl McCormack (Peaky Blinders), Kiernan Shipka (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), Nik Dodani (Atypical) and Golden Globe winner Maura Tierney (Beautiful Boy).

(from left) Kate (Daisy Edgar-Jones), Javi (Anthony Ramos), and Tyler (Glen Powell), in Twisters directed by Lee Isaac Chung.

Get Ready For The Return Of The Disaster Movie In Epic New Trailer For TWISTERS

This summer, the epic studio disaster movie returns with an adrenaline-pumping, seat-gripping, big-screen thrill ride that puts you in direct contact with one of nature’s most wondrous—and destructive—forces.

From the producers of the Jurassic, Bourne and Indiana Jones series comes TWISTERS,
a current-day chapter of the 1996 blockbuster, Twister. Directed by Lee Isaac Chung, the Oscar® nominated writer-director of Minari, TWISTERS stars Golden Globe nominee Daisy Edgar-Jones (Where the Crawdads Sing, Normal People) and Glen Powell (Anyone But You, Top Gun: Maverick) as opposing forces who come together to try to predict, and possibly tame, the immense power of tornadoes.

The trailer debuted during Super Bowl 2024.

Edgar-Jones stars as Kate Cooper, a former storm chaser haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado during her college years who now studies storm patterns on screens safely in New York City. She is lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi (Golden Globe nominee Anthony Ramos, In the Heights) to test a groundbreaking new tracking system. There, she crosses paths with Tyler Owens (Powell), the charming and reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures with his raucous crew, the more dangerous the better.

As storm season intensifies, terrifying phenomena never seen before are unleashed, and Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves squarely in the paths of multiple storm systems converging over central Oklahoma in the fight of their lives.

TWISTERS features an exciting new cast, including Nope’s Brandon Perea, Sasha Lane (American Honey), Daryl McCormack (Peaky Blinders), Kiernan Shipka (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), Nik Dodani (Atypical) and Golden Globe winner Maura Tierney (Beautiful Boy).

From Amblin Entertainment, TWISTERS is directed by Lee Isaac Chung and is produced by Oscar® nominee Frank Marshall (Jurassic and Indiana Jones franchises) and by Patrick Crowley (Jurassic and Bourne franchises). The screenplay is by Mark L. Smith, writer of the Best Picture nominee The Revenant. Twisters will be distributed by Universal Pictures domestically and by Warner Bros. Pictures internationally.

(from left) Kate (Daisy Edgar-Jones), Javi (Anthony Ramos), and Tyler (Glen Powell), in Twisters directed by Lee Isaac Chung.

Twin Twisters, in Twisters directed by Lee Isaac Chung.

(from left) Lily (Sasha Lane) and Tyler (Glen Powell), in Twisters directed by Lee Isaac Chung.

WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING – Review

Kya (Daisy Edgar-Jones) finds a feather in Columbia Pictures’ WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING.

So now we’re at the mid-point of the cinematic “travel-palooza” that has taken up most of the spots at the nation’s multiplexes this Summer. Since the Marvel heroes have taken us to distant worlds and maniacal multiverses, how about something a bit closer to home, say the East Coast of the US? Oh, and for this flick let’s turn to a mainstay of movies, namely an adaptation of a very popular (still on those lists) literary best seller. To be honest I wasn’t familiar with the source material and thought it was in the “young adult” category, much like those HUNGER GAMES novels. Ah, but this is more of an “all ages” page-turner, maybe more of a “beach read” now made into a “watch”. It certainly seems to have “something for everyone” in this torrid tale of late 60’s love and murder set in North Carolina. As the story’s heroine tells us, that’s WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING (though it’s not an animated musical).

And it opens with said murder, as a group of bicycling pre-teens finds a body at the foot of a massive fire tower on a hazy evening way back in 1969. The town sheriff and his deputy make the ID. It’s Chase Andrews (Harris Dickinson) former high school football star and part of a rich prominent family. A note wasn’t found, so the death is thought to be “foul play”. The local gossip leads them to seek out the “Marsh Girl”, Kya Clark (Daisy Edgar-Jones) resulting in a speedboat pursuit ending in her arrest. As she waits in the local jail cell, Kya reflects on her life. She’s part of a family that’s lived deep in the woods, almost “hidden away” in a rickety shack. Pa Clark (Garret Dillahunt) was a boozy fisherman/trapper who pummeled his family when he wasn’t “hoisting” a bottle. His violent temper drove his wife away along with most of his kids. Finally, Kya was the only one left until he took a hike, leaving her to fend for herself. Luckily a kind local boy named Tate would visit (not knowing she was alone). And thanks to the caring couple who ran a dockside general store, she decided to try and attend the nearby grade school. But her lack of footwear earned her the March Girl label. The humiliation inspired her to hide away from the locals until now teenaged Tate (Taylor John Smith) found her and offered to mentor her. While teaching her the “three R’s”, they fell in love. When Tate was accepted into college, he promised Kya that he’d return to her. Years passed as the broken promise haunted her. So much so, that she entered into an affair with the surly Chase. When she hears of his engagement, Kya rebukes him leading to Chase stalking her and viciously attacking her. So, will she be found guilty of his death or can the “out of retirement” defense lawyer Tom Milton (David Strathairn) convince the jury of her innocence?

At the film’s center, doing a splendid job of juggling the cliches and making the overheated dialogue bearable is the talented Ms. Edgar-Jones (another Brit carrying on the tradition of Vivian Leigh by doing a “pitch perfect” Southern belle accent). She expertly conveys the “floating on air” joy of first love and the soul-crushing sorrow of heartbreak. But she also imbues Kya with a determined dignity, even as the townspeople gawk and whisper, never staying silent when the mockery begins. Smith has the thankless role of the “dream beau”, a golden-haired sensitive lad who seems plucked from the latest CW teen drama. Yes, he makes her swoon, but his flaws do help put the main mystery in motion (his excuses are pretty weak, though). The juicer role may be Chase, played with a perpetual sneer by Dickinson, the dark-haired flipside of the noble Tate. We know he’s the worst type of “break-up back-up’, but Kya is somehow unable to see it until his inner monster bares its fangs. As for the veteran co-stars, Dillahunt makes for a most menacing patriarch, but he somehow injects some humanity into Pa when he’s touched by Kya’s gift to him (perhaps this prompts his departure, trying not to snuff out her kindness). And that kindness just flows from Strathairn as the underdog lawyer we’ve seen go against the powerful in countless dramas. It’s a testament to his talent that he steers Milton away from parody and cartoonishness.

It’s a pity that the film itself quickly submerges under the murky water of Southern-fried gothic satire. We’ve led astray almost immediately as the local’s descriptions make us think that the “Marsh Girl” is a riff on the Wolf Gal of the classic Lil’ Abner newspaper comic strip, with bushy eyebrows, strategic facial smudges, and verbal skills that make NELL sound like a Havard grad. No, she’s mostly seen in simple sundresses without shoes. Speaking of costuming, her lawyer Milton is mainly seen in crisp light-colored linen suits ala Mr. A Finch, though I’m surprised he wasn’t saddled with suspenders, in order to pluck them as she says, “Now, yore’ Honor, ‘ahm jes’ a simple country defendor…”. Just a nod to many tropes including the couple running the country store who often veer dangerously into “magical minority” territory. It’s certainly a step down for screenwriter (adapting the book by Delia Owens) Lucy Alibar who gave us the really imaginative bayou fable BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD. In her second feature directing effort, Oliva Newman is able to sprinkle in a few visual flourishes that occasionally elevate this from being a “super-budget” Lifetime Cable TV tear-jerker. The glorious forest and swamp settings and the recreations of 60’s Americana (Ah, Western Auto and Piggly Wiggly) are done with skill, but then some ridiculous sequence will tarnish those bits of artistry. To put it succinctly, this is an over-heated, sudsy, soapy mess, but it can provide some amusement for those in the right frame of mind. Outside the theatre, I threw out alternate ideas and plot twists that would’ve made those 125 minutes zoom by (I imagined an Agatha Christie big courtroom reveal). The book’s readers may appreciate this, but for those who don’t get a “camp” kick out of this tale, it’s a sure bet they won’t be eager to revisit WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING. Oh, and we never hear the critters, but we know where they hang out.

One Out of Four

WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING is now playing in theatres everywhere