Twister 2 vs. Independence Day 2

Nader Elhefnawy
3 min readAug 15, 2024

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As a decades-later follow-up to a “disaster movie” blockbuster from the summer of 1996, Twisters 2 (Twisters) invites comparison to Independence Day 2 (Independence Day: Resurgence).

Of course, the Independence Day sequel was a big flop back in the summer of 2016. Where the first movie made $300 million domestically and $700 million globally in 1996, the sequel made just $100 million domestically and under $400 million globally two decades later — which worked out to a gross of under a quarter of the original’s domestic take, and about a third of its global take, in real terms. Extremely underwhelming in relation to its sensationally received predecessor (a Top Gun 2/Barbie-caliber summer hit within the context of 1996, whether one is thinking in terms of inflation-adjusted numbers or pop cultural impact), it was also underwhelming by run-of-the-mill summer blockbuster standards, given that one generally aims for a lot more than $390 million when they put up a $165 million budget for a movie, which is why the Independence Day 3 for which the movie was a clear set-up has yet to happen.

Right now Twisters seems likely to do a bit better domestically — but a lot worse internationally. The result is that I see the film finishing up with $300 to $350 million globally — just 60 to 70 percent of the half billion the Independence Day sequel grossed in today’s terms, on what is probably a similar budget (Twisters’ $200 million bill for the production almost as much as the $220 million Independence Day 2 cost in 2024 terms).

No one hesitated to call Independence Day 2 a flop — but the press is treating the much lower-performing Twisters as a hit. There is a real gap in attitude here — partly a matter of the American entertainment press paying inflation little mind as a general rule, and naturally paying more attention to the domestic than the foreign gross, while being eager for any good news about Hollywood’s efforts, all while grading on a curve reflecting the tougher post-pandemic cinematic market getting Twisters more favorable treatment. However, there are other factors involved — alas, political factors. While there is no disputing that Independence Day 2 was a massive disappointment commercially (and probably did not generate very much audience affection), the press was eager to beat up on it for the same reason it beat up on the same year’s Matt Damon movie The Great Wall — shabby anti-Chinese sentiment. (Thus did Vanity Fair spare a whole article for the ways in which the movie “pandered” to the Chinese audience.)

By contrast, the media is now trying very hard to push the narrative that Twisters is a matter of Hollywood finding success by appealing to the conservative sensibilities they equate with “real” Americans, as in Brooks Barnes’ latest at the Times. It isn’t a very interesting narrative — quite frankly a repeat of a very tired line, perniciously mixing the stoking of culture war with the promotion of pop cultural crapola. But then Hollywood’s courtiers in the press are probably too stupid to realize how little respect they show for the intelligence of their audience.

Originally published at https://raritania.blogspot.com.

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Nader Elhefnawy

Nader Elhefnawy is the author of the thriller The Shadows of Olympus. Besides Medium, you can find him online at his personal blog, Raritania.