Current:Home > Contact‘Twisters’ tears through Oklahoma on the big screen. Moviegoers in the state are buying up tickets -AssetLink
‘Twisters’ tears through Oklahoma on the big screen. Moviegoers in the state are buying up tickets
View
Date:2025-04-18 13:03:47
MOORE, Okla. (AP) — Grace Evans lived through one of the most powerful and deadly twisters in Oklahoma history: a roaring top-of-the-scale terror in 2013 that plowed through homes, tore through a school and killed 24 people in the small suburb of Moore.
A hospital and bowling alley were also destroyed. But not the movie theater next door — where almost a decade later, Evans and her teenage daughter this week felt no pause buying two tickets to a showing of the blockbuster “Twisters.”
“I was looking for that element of excitement and I guess drama and danger,” Evans said.
Her daughter also walked out a fan. “It was very realistic. I was definitely frightened,” said Charis Evans, 15.
The smash success of “Twisters” has whipped up moviegoers in Oklahoma who are embracing the summer hit, including in towns scarred by deadly real-life tornadoes. Even long before it hit theaters, Oklahoma officials had rolled out the red carpet for makers of the film, authorizing what is likely to wind up being millions of dollars in incentives to film in the state.
In its opening weekend, the action-packed film starring Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell generated $80.5 million from more than 4,150 theaters in North America. Some of the largest audiences have been in the tornado-prone Midwest.
The top-performing theater in the country on opening weekend was the Regal Warren in Moore, which screened the film in 10 of its 17 auditoriums on opening weekend from 9 a.m. to midnight. John Stephens, the theater’s general manager, said many moviegoers mentioned wanting to see the film in a theater that survived a massive tornado.
“The people who live in Tornado Alley have a certain defiance towards mother nature,” he said, “almost like a passion to fight storms, which was depicted by the characters in ‘Twisters.’”
Lee Isaac Chung, who directed the film, considered placing the movie in Oklahoma to be critically important.
“I told everyone this is something that we have to do. We can’t just have blue screens,” Chung told the AP earlier this year. “We’ve got to be out there on the roads with our pickup trucks and in the green environments where this story actually takes place.”
The film was shot at locations across Oklahoma, with the studio taking advantage of a rebate incentive in which the state directly reimburses production companies for up to 30% of qualifying expenditures, including labor.
State officials said the exact amount of money Oklahoma spent on “Twisters” is still being calculated. But the film is exactly the kind of blockbuster Sooner State policymakers envisioned when they increased the amount available for the program in 2021 from $8 million annually to $30 million, said Jeanette Stanton, director of Oklahoma’s Film and Music Office.
Among the major films and television series that took advantage of Oklahoma’s film incentives in recent years were “Reagan” ($6.1 million), “Killers of the Flower Moon” ($12.4 million), and the television shows “Reservoir Dogs” ($13 million) and “Tulsa King” ($14.1 million).
Stanton said she’s not surprised by the success of “Twisters,” particularly in Oklahoma.
“You love seeing your state on the big screen, and I think for locals across the state, when they see that El Reno water tower falling down, they think: ‘I know where that is!’” she said.
“It’s almost as if Oklahoma was a character in the film,” she added.
In the northeast Oklahoma community of Barnsdall, where two people were killed and more than 80 homes were destroyed by a tornado in May, Mayor Johnny Kelley said he expects most residents will embrace the film.
“Some will and some won’t. Things affect people differently, you know?” said Kelley, who is a firefighter in nearby Bartlesville. “I really don’t ever go to the movies or watch TV, but I might go see that one.”
___
Follow Sean Murphy at www.x.com/apseanmurphy
veryGood! (84)
Related
- Charges: D'Vontaye Mitchell died after being held down for about 9 minutes
- Fears about Amazon and Microsoft cloud computing dominance trigger UK probe
- New technology uses good old-fashioned wind to power giant cargo vessels
- Bangladesh’s anti-graft watchdog quizzes Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus in embezzlement case
- Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
- Georgia election case defendant wants charges dropped due to alleged paperwork error
- Gunman who shot and wounded 10 riders on New York City subway to be sentenced
- 27 people hurt in University of Maryland bus crash
- Beware of giant spiders: Thousands of tarantulas to emerge in 3 states for mating season
- Kevin Spacey rushed to hospital for health scare in Uzbekistan: 'Human life is very fragile'
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Top Wisconsin Senate Republican calls on Assembly to impeach state’s top elections official
- House speaker chaos stuns lawmakers, frays relationships and roils Washington
- Cowboys' Micah Parsons is a star LB. But in high school, he was scary-good on offense.
- USA men's volleyball mourns chance at gold after losing 5-set thriller, will go for bronze
- King Charles III’s image to appear on Australian coins this year
- Coach Outlet Just Dropped a Spooktacular Halloween Collection We're Dying to Get Our Hands On
- Western countries want a UN team created to monitor rights violations and abuses in Sudan
Recommendation
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
Kevin Spacey Hospitalized After His Entire Left Arm Goes Numb
Columbus statue, removed from a square in Providence, Rhode Island, re-emerges in nearby town
Coach Outlet Just Dropped a Spooktacular Halloween Collection We're Dying to Get Our Hands On
NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
Stock market today: Asian shares rise, buoyed by Wall Street rally from bonds and oil prices
Plane crashes through roof of Oregon home, killing 2 and injuring 1
Georgia state Senate to start its own inquiry of troubled Fulton County jail