The Morning

July 20, 2024



Good morning. When the sequel to a movie you adore comes out, it can be an occasion to reaffirm why you love the original.

María Jesús Contreras

Plot twist

It recently came to my attention that several people I count as good friends have been engaged for decades in quietly impassioned romances with the same 1996 summer disaster movie. That movie is “Twister,” the story of a lovably eclectic band of tornado chasers who follow soon-to-be-divorced Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt right into the eye of many storms. It featured a 29-year-old Philip Seymour Hoffman, a storm-tracking device named “Dorothy” and a flying bovine, the sight of which inspires one character to get off the phone with the line: “I gotta go, Julia. We got cows.”

One friend said she watched it every single time she happened upon it on cable. Another said he engaged in an annual viewing. A third said it’s her comfort movie when she’s sick or hung over. Each was eager to extol the merits of the film: its all-killer-no-filler action, its special effects, its talented secondary cast (which, in addition to Hoffman, includes Alan Ruck, Jami Gertz, Lois Smith and the Tár director Todd Field). I rewatched “Twister” and was surprised by how much I loved it, how content I was to witness a terrifying series of disasters and still walk away with the warm feeling I’d just watched a movie with a lot of heart. As Janet Maslin wrote in The Times when the movie came out, “Somehow ‘Twister’ stays as uptempo and exuberant as a roller-coaster ride, neatly avoiding the idea of real danger.”

This week, “Twisters,” a sequel to “Twister,” directed by Lee Isaac Chung, arrived in theaters. I was nervous to see it. I didn’t have a deep-rooted relationship with the original film, but, fresh off my positive viewing experience, I didn’t feel like I needed another chapter. I wasn’t particularly curious about how today’s technology could make the tornadoes even more realistic — extreme weather and its attendant destruction isn’t a boogeyman, but a daily phenomenon. I was a little skeptical of the other phenomenon featured in the film, the actor Glen Powell, who, coming off buzzy performances in “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Anyone but You” and “Hit Man,” seems to be everywhere at once, like it or not.

Why does everything good need to be rebooted? I asked myself on the way into the theater. Why can’t we just make one good thing and then make another new thing that’s also good? Why do we keep reanimating “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”? Why does everyone have to make their own recording of “Landslide”?

Maybe it’s because I was feeling newly smitten with the original movie, or maybe it was Chung’s gorgeous depiction of the Oklahoma landscape near where he grew up, or the fact that the new movie shares the same big heart as the old one, but I fell for “Twisters.” As with the first film, I rooted for science over profit. And I rooted for Powell and Daisy Edgar-Jones’s inevitable romance as I did Paxton and Hunt’s. As Alissa Wilkinson wrote in her review, “The old-school formula feels refreshing: This is an action-adventure-disaster film filled with ordinary people trying to accomplish extraordinary things.”

I’m still not sold on the notion that a sequel or a reboot of a thing we love is always a good idea — I’m still bitter about “Arthur 2: On the Rocks,” and don’t get me started on the 2011 remake with Russell Brand. But I’ll admit to some cautious curiosity about “Freaky Friday 2,” and some real excitement about the upcoming “Spinal Tap II.” Even a sequel that’s sort of terrible can reinforce the love we have for the original thing. That protective feeling we have for works of art that we adore is lovely, a reminder of the joy we get from culture and our ability to engage wholeheartedly with the stuff that moves us.

For more

  • “He goes full-on Cracker Barrel as a former bull rider who dodges airborne farm equipment while recklessly driving straight into tornadoes. He then shoots fireworks into the funnel clouds for beer-drankin’ pals to record on video and post online.” Glen Powell is absolutely willing to play the Hollywood game.
  • Judson Jones, The Times’s resident meteorologist, joined researchers chasing tornadoes across Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
  • From 2019, “The Rise of the Summer Sequel.”
  • “The majority of remakes of classic films have been disasters, financially and artistically.” From 1977, “What Are We to Make of Remakes?

THE WEEK IN CULTURE

Emmy Awards

FX
  • “The Bear” earned 23 Emmy nominations, a record for a show in the comedy category. But some fans are asking: Is “The Bear” really a comedy?
  • The Times interviewed several nominated actors, including Jon Hamm, for both “Fargo” and “The Morning Show”; Jessica Gunning, for “Baby Reindeer”; and Elizabeth Debicki, who played Princess Diana on “The Crown.”
  • Our TV critics discussed a few shows they were excited to see on the list (““Reservation Dogs”), and others they felt were snubbed (“The Curse”). Read their chat.

More Culture

Phyllis Kao stands behind a silver Sotheby’s lectern, gesturing to her right. She is wearing a gray suit.
Phyllis Kao, a Sotheby’s auctioneer. Sotheby's

THE LATEST NEWS

President Biden

  • Biden said he planned to return to the campaign trail next week. He is frustrated with Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi, who he believes are coordinating to push him aside.
  • Behind the scenes, his advisers are discussing the timing of an announcement if he decides to leave the race.
  • Several more House Democrats and two more Democratic senators, including Sherrod Brown of Ohio, called on Biden to drop out. Here’s what they said.
  • Pelosi told colleagues that she favors a “competitive” process to pick a new nominee if Biden drops out, rather than automatically anointing Vice President Kamala Harris.
  • In an hourlong Instagram livestream, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez warned Democrats against replacing Biden, saying they were discounting his electoral strengths and courting “enormous peril.”
  • A Democratic group urging Biden to drop out will begin airing ads in Washington and Delaware, where he’s isolating with Covid. “You saved democracy in 2020,” the ad says. “Now you have a chance to do it again.”

Donald Trump

Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Other Big Stories

Malfunctioning kiosks at San Francisco International Airport. Jim Wilson/The New York Times
  • Airlines, banks and other businesses were slowly recovering from a global technology outage. A flawed software update from the cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike caused the disruption.
  • A cease-fire deal to free Hamas-held hostages held in Gaza is close, Biden administration officials said, though it’s unlikely to happen before Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, addresses Congress next week.
  • Israel’s military is investigating how a Houthi drone evaded its air-defense systems and struck a Tel Aviv apartment building.
  • In a nonbinding opinion, the International Court of Justice said that Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem violated international law.
  • A Russian court sentenced Evan Gershkovich, a Wall Street Journal reporter, to 16 years in a penal colony on espionage charges widely considered fabricated.
  • Sheila Jackson Lee, a House Democrat from Texas who announced last month that she had pancreatic cancer, died at 74.

CULTURE CALENDAR

📚 “The Book of Elsewhere” (Tuesday): Keanu Reeves wrote a book? With the sci-fi novelist China Miéville? Excellent.

🎬 “Deadpool & Wolverine” (Friday): Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman talked to us about how playing Deadpool and Wolverine has changed their lives. While they’ve appeared in movies together, this one puts the two characters front and center. All signs indicate that they’ll be clawing, scratching, shooting and wisecracking to the top of the box office. Snikt!


REAL ESTATE

A woman sits on a bench with her head on her hand.
Sierra Nguyen in San Francisco. Marissa Leshnov for The New York Times

The Hunt: A young woman aimed to buy her first apartment in San Francisco, with a budget of less than $1 million. Which home did she choose? Play our game.

What you get for $400,000: A Tudor Revival in Oklahoma City; a condo in a converted warehouse in Mobile, Ala.; and a 1915 American Foursquare house in Omaha, Neb.


LIVING

A wallet sits under an envelope on a white chair.
Jun Michael Park for The New York Times

Lost and found: A writer lost his wallet in London, and received it in the mail in South Korea. Why is it that kind strangers go to such lengths to return wallets?

Heat wave: Summer can be a dangerous time. Here are the signs of heat exhaustion, and how to treat it.

Cookout: A grill can bring out the best in vegetables. Ali Slagle has five recipes that build on charred veggies.

Internet lingo: A once-obscene term has, almost overnight, become a common way to describe performing an activity without a buffer.


ADVICE FROM WIRECUTTER

Keep houseplants alive while you’re away

You’re about to embark on a vacation. But what about your houseplants? Wirecutter’s experts have advice for keeping them alive when you’re away, and it’s easier than you might think. Water them before you leave, but no more than you usually would. To help them retain moisture, move them a few extra feet away from sources of heat and light, like windows. They may look a little parched upon your return, but as many green-thumb newbies have learned the hard way, many houseplants prefer neglect to being overly cared for. If you’re gone longer than 10 days, though, it’s a good idea to hire some help. — Rose Maura Lorre


GAME OF THE WEEK

A man swings a golf club while standing in the sand.
Jack McDonald of Scotland hits out of a bunker at Royal Troon. Tom Shaw/R&A, via Getty Images

The Open Championship: The Open (perhaps you know it as the British Open) unfolds this weekend across the narrow fairways — or the in shrubby rough and steep bunkers — of Royal Troon in Scotland. The weather at the Open is often gray, rainy and windy, presenting a challenge for even the best golfers. But this course’s greatest test may be the green on Hole 8, which is so tiny that it’s known as the Postage Stamp. Today and tomorrow at 7 a.m. Eastern on NBC


NOW TIME TO PLAY

Here is today’s Spelling Bee. Yesterday’s pangrams were dwelling, welding and wielding.

Take the news quiz to see how well you followed this week’s headlines.

And here are today’s Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times. —Melissa

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