No exact date is given for the movie. The tornado itself is fictional as no tornado in 1969 was rated F5.
I believe it was The Shining by Stephen King
No, dashaun did. If you listen to the scene right after the line up it tells you what happen exactly.
The twister scene from the 1939 film version of the original book by author and Oz series originator Lyman Frank Baum [May 15, 1856-May 5, 1919] still is recognized today for the perfection of the special effects that went into its making. For countless viewers, and critics, find it hard to believe that the scene wasn't filmed during an actual tornado. In fact, the scene was the costliest part of the entire film. But the less than five minutes of blowing dust, howling winds, and sudden passing are among the most impressive, most renowned, most unforgettable moments in film history, and in technological achievements.
4 minutes 12 seconds. The total length of the tornado scene, and its impact, is 4 minutes 48 seconds. The scene begins with the howling winds that are part of tornado activity, but precede the actual funnel. The funnel appears 10 seconds after the scene begins. When viewers don't see the funnel on screen, they nevertheless see the impact of its activity. The funnel and all tornado activity end 36 seconds before the end of the scene. Its passing is seen in the house settling, and the window curtains blowing back and forth and then settling in place too. The tornado-related scene ends with Dorothy looking out at Munchkinland, from the door of her displaced, but settled house.
A movie clip is a single 1-5-minute scene from a given movie. A movie is a collection of scenes that tell a story.
No. Ada is never mentioned and the only town portrayed in the movie is Wakita.
No date is given. It is only said to be June 1969. No such tornado actually occurred; it was only in the movie.
"The Wizard of Oz" (1939). "Twister" (1996). "Where the Heart Is" (2000).
I believe it was The Shining by Stephen King
There are 7 tornadoes in the movie. In order they are: 1. The F5 of the opening scene. 2. The tornado of the first chase, which destroys Jo's truck. 3/4. The F2/F3 that splits into two tornadoes and briefly envelopes Bill's truck. 5. The F3 that is show throwing debris and destroys the second Dorothy probe. 6. The F4 that destroys the drive-in theater and the town of Wakita. 7. The F5 of the end climax.
The tornado in the opening scene of Twister is stated to have have been an F5 and the titles said it was in June 1969. It does not appear to have been in Wakita and was probably closer to Hennessy. It was an entirely fictional event. No F5 tornadoes occurred in 1969. The scene itself is anachronistic. Jo's father refers to the tornado as an F5 even though the Fujita scale was not created until 1971. It could not have been an EF5 as the Enhanced Fujita scale only applies to tornadoes that occurred in 2007 or later.
No, dashaun did. If you listen to the scene right after the line up it tells you what happen exactly.
There is a scene in the movie "Elizabeth" that shows Elizabeth cutting her hair. It is, however, exactly that - a scene in a movie. As far as I am aware it is not based in truth.
Not really. Twister got some things right and some things wrong. For one thing, based on the damage observed and the stated intensities, the tornadoes in Twister were generally larger and more intense than the average tornado. None of the tornadoes appeared to have been of less than F2 intensity, putting them in the strongest 10% of recorded tornadoes. Conversely, the final chase scene actually underplays the destructive potential of an F5 tornado. The manner in which some of the tornadoes threw large objects is also rather unlikely. That the tornadoes seemed to chase the storm chasers is also somewhat unrealistic. While such things have happened occasionally, most tornadoes stay on a relatively straight path. There are other minutiae that could be discussed, but that would make this answer rather long. In the movie's favor, tornadoes similar in appearance to those that appeared in Twister have occurred. This is related to the fact that, in designing the tornadoes for the movie, the filmmakers studied footage of real tornadoes. The Fujita scale is a real thing that is used to rate tornadoes.
this is scene hair. http://media.photobucket.com/image/scene%20hair/sasha101202/scene-hair.jpg
The twister scene from the 1939 film version of the original book by author and Oz series originator Lyman Frank Baum [May 15, 1856-May 5, 1919] still is recognized today for the perfection of the special effects that went into its making. For countless viewers, and critics, find it hard to believe that the scene wasn't filmed during an actual tornado. In fact, the scene was the costliest part of the entire film. But the less than five minutes of blowing dust, howling winds, and sudden passing are among the most impressive, most renowned, most unforgettable moments in film history, and in technological achievements.
The tornado scene in "Hatchet" by Gary Paulsen is located on pages 74-78 in the book.