Parents' Guide to

Twister

Movie PG-13 1996 113 minutes
Twister Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

By M. Faust , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 13+

'90s weather disaster movie has violence, some language.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 13+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 12+

Based on 18 parent reviews

age 12+

The effects are still impressive 23 years on!

My children are 13 and 11 and we watched this together as a family. I think the language makes it a 12. My son has seen this kind of language in films but it really depends on your child. Overall it's a great action packed film that you can watch with your kids, when many other films are too violent or have way more language issues. The effects are still as impressive as when I saw it as an 18 year old in the cinema in 1996!
age 11+

I First Saw This Movie When I Was 8

I saw this movie for the first time when I was 8 years old. It was the first pg-13 movie my dad let me watch with him. I remember enjoying the tornado chasing scenes and the action. Things I don't remember: the sex therapist, the language, the violence. The only scenes that still creep me out are the very beginning scene and the drive-in movie scene . When I was 8, the talk about the girlfriend being a sex therapist went over my head so I didn't even question that. The language was no more than what I'd heard my parents say and the violence, I dot know why, but I didn't really see it back then. Most things go over kids' heads so there's a lot of worry by parents for no reason. I think this movie is appropriate for 11 and up overall even though I was younger when I first saw it.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (18 ):
Kids say (49 ):

This film's entire point is showing off elaborate special effects that create the experience of being near and even in a tornado. And though Twister tries, a tornado isn't an easy phenomenon to build a plot around—they can't be predicted more than three minutes in advance, and they don't last very long. So it's partly forgivable that the filmmakers didn't come up with much of a story. The relationship woes and scientific rivalries only serve as filler between scenes of huge objects hurtling through the air.

The opening scene, about Jo's first experience with a twister, is both exciting and scary. After that, the filmmakers satisfy themselves with thrilling viewers rather than frightening them. They also drop so many references to The Wizard of Oz that families can make a game of counting them. It's a bit of a disappointment that scientist-turned-scriptwriter Michael Crichton didn't challenge the audience a bit more here. Still, despite being clichéd, the characters are likable. In particular, Hunt is just as great of an example of a woman working in STEM as Jodie Foster is in Contact.

Movie Details

  • In theaters: December 9, 1996
  • On DVD or streaming: August 27, 1996
  • Cast: Helen Hunt , Bill Paxton , Cary Elwes
  • Director: Jan De Bont
  • Inclusion Information: Female actors, Female writers
  • Studio: Warner Bros.
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Run time: 113 minutes
  • MPAA rating: PG-13
  • MPAA explanation: intense depiction of very bad weather
  • Last updated: August 4, 2024

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