NME

Daisy Edgar-Jones and Glen Powell in 'Twisters'.

Eagle-eyed movie goers were convinced that there wasn’t a flying cow in the new Twisters movie – but according to the film’s director, it was there all along.

In the original 1996 incarnation of the movie Twister, starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton, a flying cow that gets caught up in one of the tornadoes became an iconic image – so much so that filmmakers decided to pay homage to it in the follow-up, Twisters.

Starring Daisy Edgar-Jones, Glen Powell, Anthony Ramos and more, the disaster film — a stand-alone sequel to the original — centres on a group of storm chasers trying to diffuse tornadoes with sodium polyacrylate solution.

Recently, director Lee Isaac Chung said that the new film would avoid having a flying cow scene. However, he has now revealed that there is indeed a brief image of a cow up in the air in the film – and it was even one that he himself missed at first.

“My god, everybody’s been wanting a cow in this movie,” he joked with The Hollywood Reporter, confirming that the cow can be seen towards the end of the film.

He continued: “It’s the hardest thing to spot. I only spotted it because I noticed some weird marking on a piece of flying debris.

“I said, ‘Could you freeze that frame?’ I was looking at frame-by-frame shots when we’re doing VFX reviews, and sure enough, there was a cow on that thing.”

Previously, Chung told CNN: “Any time I talk to anyone about that original Twister they would say, ‘Oh yeah, the big flying cow movie.'”

“I felt like I would hate to make a movie, update it, and just hear, ‘Oh yes, you made the new flying cow movie.’ So that was it – that was the decision.”

The film has proved a runaway success at the cinema, grossing $123million at the global box office in its opening weekend. This makes it the most successful weekend ever for a disaster movie.

In a five-star review of Twisters, NME wrote: “The flick is also cleverly scripted, with Kate’s motivation slowly teased out as we learn she might just have the means of knocking the ‘nados into a cocked hat.

“The devastation wreaked by the freaky weather is evocatively explored and in this there’s a timely ecological message. Packed with heart, smarts, jaw-dropping effects and an exquisite ensemble cast (shout out to Harry Hadden-Paton’s nerdy British journalist as comic relief), Twisters will have you singing the praises of the multiplex until the cows come home.”

The post Where to find the trademark flying cow you missed in ‘Twisters’ appeared first on NME.

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