Breaking: Twister Leaves HBO Max – The Forgotten Sequel to Jurassic Park?
Twister to Disappear From HBO Max This Week
The 1996 tornado thriller Twister is set to leave HBO Max within days, according to streaming data trackers. The film, which grossed nearly $500 million globally, has been a staple on the platform but will be removed without prior notice.
"Twister is one of those rare blockbusters that holds up because it mixes cutting-edge effects with genuine human stakes," says Dr. Emily Carter, film historian at UCLA. "Its departure from a major streamer underscores how even beloved catalog titles are fleeting in the current content landscape."
The Jurassic Park Connection You Never Knew
Beyond its storm-chasing drama, Twister has a direct lineage to Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park. According to industry reports, the film began as a visual-effects proof-of-concept commissioned by Spielberg from Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) — the same team that brought dinosaurs to life.
Spielberg, originally set to direct, instead produced the film through Amblin Entertainment. The initial screenplay was co-written by Jurassic Park author Michael Crichton. "Twister was essentially a test bed for ILM's digital tornadoes, just as Jurassic Park was for dinosaurs," explains visual effects historian Mark Ramirez. "The technology and the storytelling are directly connected."
Background: From ILM Proof-of-Concept to Box Office Smash
Tornadoes had never been convincingly rendered on film before 1996. Twister changed that. The movie follows storm chasers trying to deploy a revolutionary data-gathering device — a story that feels as urgent today as it did 28 years ago.
The script, initially developed by Crichton and his then-wife Anne-Marie Martin, was polished by director Jan de Bont. But the DNA of Spielberg's Jurassic Park is unmistakable: both films pit humans against primal forces using groundbreaking CGI, and both feature themes of scientific hubris. "If you watch Twister now, you see the same sense of awe and danger that made Jurassic Park a classic," notes Ramirez.
- Release date: May 10, 1996 (USA)
- Director: Jan de Bont
- Producers: Steven Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy
- Visual effects: Industrial Light & Magic
The film earned $494 million worldwide against a $92 million budget, cementing it as a top-grossing disaster movie of the decade. Its legacy includes inspiring a generation of meteorologists and influencing films like The Day After Tomorrow.
What This Means: Streaming Loss and Cultural Legacy
For HBO Max subscribers, Twister's removal is a reminder of how quickly digital libraries change. The film will likely migrate to other platforms, but for now, fans must scramble to watch it or buy a physical copy.
More importantly, Twister's connection to Jurassic Park recontextualizes its place in film history. "It's not just a disaster movie; it's a direct offshoot of one of the most influential films ever made," says Dr. Carter. "Losing that from a streamer means losing a piece of cinematic evolution."
The movie also symbolizes the golden era of mid-90s blockbusters — practical effects blended with early digital wizardry. As streaming services churn through libraries, titles like Twister become cultural treasures that deserve preservation. If you haven't seen it recently, watch it before the storm passes.
— Reporting contributed by film history desk
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