L'Amérique du Nord se voit frapper par d'innombrables ouragans suite à une expérience scientifique ayant échouée. Un chercheur tente alors de mettre sa famille en sécurité avant que la situa... Tout lireL'Amérique du Nord se voit frapper par d'innombrables ouragans suite à une expérience scientifique ayant échouée. Un chercheur tente alors de mettre sa famille en sécurité avant que la situation n'empire.L'Amérique du Nord se voit frapper par d'innombrables ouragans suite à une expérience scientifique ayant échouée. Un chercheur tente alors de mettre sa famille en sécurité avant que la situation n'empire.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Specialist Tudor
- (as James Sicard)
- Science Tech #1
- (as Jeremiah Z. Wood)
- Science Tech #2
- (as Lawrence 'Law' Kruckeberg)
Avis à la une
The worst acting I have ever seen. Awful special F/X, unbelievable Storm (when it's 500mph how can a regular car escape without any troubles), weather, fire (even I can do better with AfterEffects), 3D Animations what so ever computer effects ...
My Summery: I would rather be tortured with a 24h Teletubbies Marathon than watching this movie again or be forced to watch the rest. Who ever financed that movie mus have too much money. In that case he can write me a cheque.
Regardless, then "500 MPH Storm" is a disaster at 500 mph, indeed. The CGI effects in the movie are horrible - as to be expected. And you don't really buy into this being a 500 mph storm at any given time throughout the movie.
And for some odd reason, as almost every single time, in these type of movies, the destructive forces of the natural disaster follows hard on heel in the wake of our main characters. I guess mother nature has it in for the main characters, throwing just every single bit of poorly animated CGI effect their way.
The story in "500 MPH Storm" is right out of the "let's make a disaster movie" guidebook; people have created some device that wreaks a natural disaster of grand proportions and is unable to stop it. Just who creates a machine without a failsafe shutdown system anyway? Regardless, then it is up to a small handful of people to save the world. Do they? Well, you already know the answer to that.
Yeah, this is one of those excruciatingly predictable movies!
The acting in the movie was wooden and painfully rigid. And the dialogue offered the characters in the movie didn't really help anything along in a good way either.
If you enjoy campy and cheesy movies with horrible CGI effects, then you might find some fun in "500 MPH Storm", otherwise, don't waste your time on this movie.
The special effects, such as the afore-mentioned storms personally following the family around in their car and then bearing down on some factory complex, combined with forest fires from above and at ground level were juvenile, and if you've ever wondered what it was like to wade across the Rio Grande past a floating corpse, then this movie is for you.
The chemistry between the pa, ma and junior is odd to say the least, and while at times their faces convey suitable chagrin at the sudden rain all over the Duke City, one does have to wonder how they can seem to drive all over, one scene being in the foothills, the next down by the river, and then suddenly they appear apparently up in the Sandia Mountains! I thought junior might have had the hots for his mom... strange dialog, and resentment towards dad.
Everyone they meet, which thankfully are few, are well-matched in terms of direction and acting abilities, although none of them ask "red or green"?
The wreckage they pass going up to the Tram area and elsewhere resemble newly-stripped autos more than anything from any accident, and the stray Pit Bull in one I think should have been a Prairie Dog.
Might be the only movie to start at the Albuquerque International Balloon Festival. Stick with "Breaking Bad", and "Lonely Are the Brave".
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAt 28:41 neither of the vehicles in the collision has an engine suggesting the film crew flatbedded the two junkers to the site.
- GaffesIn the final scenes, the crew is seen flying through the air in a CH-53 helicopter; when the scene changes to the view in the cockpit, it appears they are in a Bell 206/406 with a yoke from a Robinson R22; when the scene change to the missile being fired, they appear to now be in Eurocopter AS365; and, finally after landing, there is a UH-60 Blackhawk on the tarmac. Aside from the sporadic aircraft changes, none actually have the capability to fire missiles.
- Citations
Soldier: Did we already come this way?
Captain Wright: No. That was another way.
Soldier: How can you tell? It all looks the same to me.
Captain Wright: Who's wearin' the bars, private?
- ConnexionsReferences Star Wars: Épisode IV - Un nouvel espoir (1977)
- Bandes originalesLet Go That Weight
By Lisa Donnelly/Kevin Hunter/Rob Giles
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 300 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 26 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1