Characteristics The Perfect Storm is a 10mm submachine gun which is the only weapon that uses the otherwise unused Tier 4 legendary effect known as 'Incendiary,' which deals a total of 24 Fire damage over 3 seconds to the target. Witness a perfect storm within a storm, when extremely deadly fire twisters attacked Japan after an earthquake in 1923. The Lost Legions. This video is currently unavailable. December 29, 2014. English CC Audio languages. Audio languages.
The Perfect Storm | |
---|---|
Directed by | Wolfgang Petersen |
Produced by | Paula Weinstein Wolfgang Petersen Gail Katz |
Screenplay by | William D. Wittliff Bo Goldman (uncredited) |
Based on | The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger |
Starring | |
Music by | James Horner |
Cinematography | John Seale |
Edited by | Richard Francis-Bruce |
Baltimore Pictures Radiant Productions | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
| |
130 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $120 million[1] |
Box office | $328.7 million |
The Perfect Storm is a 2000 American biographicaldisasterdrama film directed by Wolfgang Petersen and based on the 1997 non-fiction book of the same name by Sebastian Junger. The film tells the story of the Andrea Gail, a commercial fishing vessel that was lost at sea with all hands after being caught in the Perfect Storm of 1991. The film stars George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, Diane Lane, John Hawkes, William Fichtner, Michael Ironside, John C. Reilly, Karen Allen and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio.[2] It was released on June 30, 2000, by Warner Bros. and grossed $328 million worldwide.
Plot[edit]
In October 1991, the commercial fishing boat Andrea Gail returns to port in Gloucester, Massachusetts, with a poor catch. Boat owner Bob Brown (Michael Ironside) ridicules and taunts Captain Billy Tyne over his recent 'cold streak'. Desperate to redeem himself, Captain Tyne convinces the Andrea Gail crew to join him for one more late-season fishing expedition. The crew heads out past their usual fishing grounds on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, leaving a developing tropical storm behind them. Initially unsuccessful, they head to the Flemish Cap, where their luck greatly improves. At the height of their fishing, the ice machine breaks down; the only way to sell their catch before it spoils is to hurry back to shore. After debating whether to sail through the building storm or to wait it out, the crew decides to risk the storm. However, between Andrea Gail and Gloucester is a confluence of two powerful weather fronts and a hurricane, which the Andrea Gail crew underestimates.
After repeated warnings from other ships, Andrea Gail loses her antenna, forcing Captain Linda Greenlaw of sister ship Hannah Boden to call in a Mayday. A New York Air National GuardHH-60 Pave Hawk rescue helicopter responds, but after failing to perform a midair refueling with an HC-130 Hercules, the helicopter crew ditch their aircraft. All but one of the Air National Guard crew members are rescued by a Coast Guard vessel, the USCGC Tamaroa.
After Andrea Gail endures various problems, with 40 foot waves crashing into the deck, a broken stabilizer ramming the side of the ship, and two crew members briefly getting thrown overboard, the crew struggles to sail through pounding waves and shrieking winds, while friends and family worry and wait for a ship that never comes home. The vessel encounters an enormous rogue wave. They attempt to drive the boat over the wave, but it crests before it can get to the top and is overturned. Billy elects to go down with his ship, the rest of the crew are trapped inside the living quarters, and only one, rookie fisherman Bobby Shatford, manages to get out. He surfaces and watches as Andrea Gail rights herself before sinking stern-first into the Atlantic. Knowing that he has no chance of survival without a lifejacket, Bobby silently says his goodbyes to his loved ones as the rapidly rising swell carries him away.
There are no survivors; Linda reads the eulogy at the memorial. Later, as she heads out to sea again, she remembers Billy soliloquizing about what it means to be a ship captain.
Cast[edit]
- George Clooney as Frank William 'Billy' Tyne, Jr., captain of Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat. Billy is a divorced father of two daughters, who is determined to undertake one last fishing trip before the end of the season to make up for a recent string of poor catches.
- Mark Wahlberg as Robert 'Bobby' Shatford, the least experienced of the crew of Andrea Gail. Bobby is the son of Ethel Shatford, the owner of the Crow's Nest, and boyfriend to Chris Cotter. He enjoys commercial fishing, but his deepening relationship with Chris (coupled with her reluctance to let him sail again) creates conflict within himself and between the couple. Yet, he is compelled by the potential to earn more money at sea than he could make with a job on shore to sign on for one last trip.
- Diane Lane as Christina 'Chris' Cotter, girlfriend of Bobby Shatford. She does not want Bobby to go on the trip because of a bad feeling she has about it. She spends her time during the last fishing trip decorating an apartment she has rented as a surprise for Bobby to symbolize her commitment to him.
- Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as Linda Greenlaw, the captain of Hannah Boden. Linda and Billy both captain ships for the same owner and maintain a friendly rivalry. She is concerned about Billy and his crew's going out in what she considers dangerous weather. Linda is the last to speak to Andrea Gail.
- John C. Reilly as Dale 'Murph' Murphy, senior crewmember on Andrea Gail. Murph is a veteran fisherman who is divorced with a son with whom he's very involved. Murph has a rocky relationship with crewmember David 'Sully' Sullivan that is eventually resolved during the trip.
- William Fichtner as David 'Sully' Sullivan, crewmember on Andrea Gail. He signed on for the trip at the last minute when another fisherman suddenly backed out. Sully and Murph initially have an antagonistic relationship that is fueled in part by Sully's past involvement with Murph's ex-wife, although the details are not made clear in the film. The relationship is eventually resolved during the trip.
- Michael Ironside as Bob Brown, owner of Andrea Gail and Hannah Boden. Although Brown seems to harbor a deep-seated recognition of Tyne's skills at catching fish, he nevertheless pressures Tyne over the latter's recent inability to bring in larger hauls, resulting in an uneasy relationship between the two.
- Bob Gunton as Alexander McAnally III, owner of Mistral, a yacht caught in the storm.
- Karen Allen as Melissa Brown, crewmember on Mistral.
- Cherry Jones as Edie Bailey, crewmember on Mistral.
- Allen Payne as Alfred Pierre, one of the crew of Andrea Gail.
- John Hawkes as Michael 'Bugsy' Moran, a member of Andrea Gail's crew. Bugsy's somewhat comic inability to connect with women appears to change on the eve of the trip, when he meets a divorced mother at the Crow's Nest, who later comes to the dock to see him off. They hint at the prospect of a budding relationship that fatefully never materializes.
- Janet Wright as Ethel Shatford, Bobby's mother.
- Christopher McDonald as Todd Gross, a Boston meteorologist working for the WNEV-TV (the present day WHDH-TV).
- Dash Mihok as Sergeant Jeremy Mitchell, a pararescueman on the New York Air National Guard rescue helicopter.
Historical accuracy[edit]
The Andrea Gail[edit]
A ship similar to Andrea Gail, Lady Grace, was used during the filming of the movie.[3][4] Most of the names used were not changed for the fictional film, but in response two lawsuits were later filed by certain families of the crew members. The film only claims to be 'based on a true story', and differs in many ways from the book starting with the fictionalization of the material into a 'story'. The events shown in the film after the Andrea Gail's last radio contact are pure speculation, as the boat and the bodies of the crew were never found.[5]
Sls run in shed dividing wallsugars legacy stables. Contrary to the movie's storyline, Captain Linda Greenlaw says she did not place a distress call on behalf of Andrea Gail. 'Without a distress call (directly) from the imperiled vessel, the Coast Guard will not initiate a search until the vessel is five days overdue in port,' Greenlaw said.[6] She had also been 600 miles east of the Andrea Gail when she went down (not west as depicted), and stated 'They never indicated they were in trouble. They just never came back.'[7] The 1993 U.S. Coast Guard's investigative report said that Andrea Gail was experiencing 30-foot waves and winds from anywhere from 50 to 80 kn (58 to 92 mph) around the time of the last communication. The conditions, though threatening, were probably not unfamiliar to Tyne, who had been a successful fisherman for about a decade on other vessels, taking trips to the Grand Banks and fishing off Florida, the Carolinas, and elsewhere.[6]
Hurricane Grace is exaggerated in the movie when it is referred to by a weather forecaster as a 'category 5' storm, which has winds sustained at over 137 knots (≥ 157 mph).[8] In reality, the hurricane had already peaked at category 2 intensity and ocean buoy monitors recorded wind gusts at 65 knots (75 mph) around the time Andrea Gail sank.[9] In the movie, Tyne and his crew agreed to head into the dangerous storm in order to save their fish from spoiling. Greenlaw acknowledged that Tyne did mention having ice problems, but that was not unusual. 'My one gripe about [the] movie was how Warner Brothers depicted Billy Tyne and his crew as making a very conscious decision to steam into a storm that they knew was dangerous,' said Greenlaw. 'That is not what happened. Andrea Gail was three days into their steam home when the storm hit. Whatever happened to Andrea Gail happened very quickly.'[6]
An Air National Guard helicopter was dispatched from Francis S. Gabreski Air National Guard Base on Long Island, New York, but not in response to the Andrea Gail or Satori (Mistral in the movie). The helicopter departed mid-storm on a mission to help save a lone Japanese fisherman from a sinking sailboat 250 miles off the New Jersey coast. Unsuccessful and running low on fuel, the Air National Guard Sikorsky HH-60G helicopter was compelled to attempt a mid-flight refueling maneuver. The zero-visibility conditions thwarted their efforts, however, and lacking enough fuel to make the flight back to the Long Island base, the crew were forced to ditch the helicopter. After a search by Tamaroa, four of the HH-60's crew were picked up; one was never seen again. The Japanese yachtsman was later rescued by a Romanian cargo ship.[6]
When asked about the portrayal of 'Sully' in the movie, Cathy Sullivan Mustone, an older sister of David 'Sully' Sullivan, said she was disappointed. 'They made my brother's character out to be a hothead,' she said. 'I guess every movie needs a villain, but my brother was a funny guy with a loud laugh and a big smile. He had a lot of guts and he loved fishing.' In fact, David's bravery and quick thinking made headlines on a different boat—Harmony. One night during a winter fishing trip, Harmony began taking on water while tied to another boat. The crew of Harmony yelled for help, hoping to wake the nearby crew. No one woke, so David dove into the icy water, pulling himself on the ropes that tied the boats together. As a result of his bravery, Harmony's crew was saved. Mustone said, 'At least in the movie, they did represent my brother's bravery in a water rescue scene. He was a good man. And I just know he is at peace in heaven, safe with our Dad.'[6]
The Satori[edit]
The crew members of Satori (renamed Mistral in the movie) were not rescued by an Air National Guard helicopter, but rather by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter. The helicopter was changed in the film after the Air National Guard had issues consulting with the movie producers. According to the owner's son, Satori never made a 360° roll, although it had two knockdowns, during which it lay on its side for about 30 seconds.[10] In response to requests by the crew, Captain Ray Leonard permitted the two crewmembers to make a position report over radio, during which they made an unauthorized Mayday call. One of those crewmembers reported that she was so convinced that she was going to die that she wrote her name down and put it into a plastic bag duct-taped to her stomach so her body could be identified.
There is controversy over whether the Captain was drunk, as charged by the women in the book, with Leonard objecting to this characterization. Out of compassion for the expected loss of his boat, the Coast Guard did not test his blood alcohol levels at the time. The Coast Guard declared the voyage manifestly unsafe and ordered everyone off-board, including the unwilling skipper.[10] The Coast Guard first tried to take them on board via an inflatable boat, but after it was damaged when trying to approach Satori they sent a helicopter, which is a much riskier approach, as a rescue swimmer must jump into dangerous seas. The Coast Guard helicopter did not try to lower rescue gear onto the yacht (as shown in the movie, where it gets entangled with the mast), but rather asked the crew of Satori to jump overboard to meet a rescue swimmer in the water. Leonard eventually complied with the request.
After the storm, Leonard searched for the Satori, hoping to find her still afloat, but in spite of his attempts she was found a few days later washed ashore on a Maryland beach, a bag of personal belongings still on deck. Leonard paid for a 60-foot fishing vessel to drag her off the beach, helped by a channel dug by Park Rangers who had been guarding the boat. He continued to sail the boat until he sold her to a new owner in 2000.[10]
Reception[edit]
The Perfect Storm received mixed reviews from critics, with a 47% approval rating on critic site Rotten Tomatoes, based on 135 reviews, and an average rating of 5.59/10, with a consensus of, 'While the special effects are well done and quite impressive, this film suffers a lack of any actual drama or characterization. The end result is a film that offers nifty eye-candy and nothing else.'[11]Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 59 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[12]
The Perfect Storm was a box office success. On its opening weekend, it debuted with $42 million ahead of Sony's The Patriot and eventually brought in over $182.6 million in the United States, and $146.1 million around the world to a total of $328.7 million worldwide.[13]
The film was nominated for 2 Academy Awards, Best Visual Effects (Walt Conti, Stefen Fangmeier, John Frazier and Habib Zargarpour) and Best Sound (John T. Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, David E. Campbell and Keith A. Wester), but lost both to Gladiator.[14] However, it was also nominated for a Stinker Award for Most Intrusive Musical Score.[15]
Filming[edit]
The movie was partially filmed in Dedham, Massachusetts.[16][17]
Lawsuits[edit]
After the film was released, the families of two crew members sued the film makers for the fictionalization of events which happened prior to the loss of Andrea Gail.[18] In 2005, the Florida Supreme Court ruled against the family of Captain Tyne by a 6–2 vote. Some unnamed families also sued the producers in federal district court, claiming that their names were used without their permission, and that facts were changed.[19] The district court, which is also located in Florida, dismissed the case, as in their opinion the defendants' First Amendment right to freedom of speech barred the suit. The plaintiffs appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, which could not decide how to interpret the Florida law at issue and certified the question to the Florida Supreme Court. In the end, the Florida Supreme Court upheld the district court's interpretation of Florida law, and thereupon the 11th Circuit affirmed the prior decision to dismiss the case.[19]
See also[edit]
- Godless Men (1920)
- Stormswept (1923)
- Code of the Sea (1924)
- Rugged Water (1925)
References[edit]
- ^Welkos, R.W. (7 May 2000), 'Prepare for Good, Sick Fun', Los Angeles Times, p. 4, retrieved 11 August 2010
- ^Berardinelli, James, The Perfect Storm Film Review – reelviews.net, 2000 (Retrieved on 2007-01-25)
- ^'The Perfect Storm'sAndrea Gail Comes Home to Massachusetts'. Warner Bros. July 14, 2000. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
- ^Candus Thomson (June 23, 2000). 'Ocean City boat sails off to stardom'. The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
- ^'Investigation into the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the F/A Andrea Gail'(PDF). United States Coast Guard. January 28, 1994. Retrieved February 13, 2020.
- ^ abcdeTerry Weber (October 29, 2011). 'What really happened to the Andrea Gail?'(PDF). Gloucester Daily Times. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
- ^Ringle, Ken (July 4, 2000). 'Reality Gets the Heave-Ho In Not-So-Perfect 'Storm''. The Washington Post. Retrieved February 13, 2020.
- ^Collura, Chris. ''PERFECT' Storm Questions and Answers'. www.sky-chaser.com. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
- ^'Meteorologists Say 'Perfect Storm' Not So Perfect'. ScienceDaily. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
- ^ abc'Satori - Perfect Storm'. Westsail Owners Association. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ^'The Perfect Storm on RT'.
- ^https://www.metacritic.com/movie/the-perfect-storm
- ^'The Perfect Storm'.
- ^'The 73rd Academy Awards (2001) Nominees and Winners'. oscars.org. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
- ^https://web.archive.org/web/20070105221207/http://theenvelope.latimes.com/extras/lostmind/year/2000/2000st.htm
- ^'The Endicott Estate in Dedham, Massachusetts'. British Broadcasting Company. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
- ^Lichtenstein, Bill (June 12, 2012). ''The American Revolution' Documentary Film Shoots at Historic Endicott Estate - Iconic Boston Media Figures Interviewed for High-Profile Film on WBCN-FM at Dedham Mansion'. PR.com. Retrieved September 27, 2019.
- ^'Court Revives 'Perfect Storm' Lawsuit'. St. Petersburg Times Online. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
- ^ abUnger, Howard M. (2002-05-31). 'Judge sinks 'Perfect Storm' lawsuit'. Sarasota Herald Tribune. Archived from the original on 2007-12-07. Retrieved 2007-11-06.
External links[edit]
Version 1 6 Perfect Storm Door
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Perfect Storm (film) |
- The Perfect Storm on IMDb
- The Perfect Storm at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Perfect Storm at Box Office Mojo
A perfect storm is an event in which a rare combination of circumstances drastically aggravates the event.[1] The term is used by analogy to an unusually severe storm that results from a rare combination of meteorological phenomena.
Origin[edit]
The Oxford English Dictionary has published references going back to 1718 for 'perfect storm', though the earliest citations use the phrase in the sense of 'absolute' or 'complete', or for emphasis, as in 'a perfect stranger'.
Synonyms for test again in English including definitions, and related words. Again its exam. In 'here we go again' it is modifying the verb 'go'. There should not be a comma between a verb and its adverb, regardless of whether it's at the end of the sentence or not. Here are some more examples: Please come again. I will do it again. Trying again was not a good idea.
The phrase appears in William Makepeace Thackeray's novel Vanity Fair:
I have heard a brother of the story-telling trade at Naples preaching to a pack of good-for-nothing honest, lazy fellows by the sea-shore, work himself up into such a rage and passion with some of the villains whose wicked deeds he was describing and inventing, that the audience could not resist it; and they and the poet together would burst out into a roar of oaths and execrations against the fictitious monster of the tale, so that the hat went round, and the bajocchi tumbled into it, in the midst of a perfect storm of sympathy.
The first use of the expression in the meteorological sense comes from Thursday May 30th 1850, when the Rev. Lloyd of Withington (Manchester, England) describes 'A perfect storm of thunder and lightning all over England (except London) doing fearful and fatal damage' when recording monthly rainfall measurements for that year. This record is kept by the UK Meteorological Office.[2] The next recorded instance is in the March 20, 1936, issue of the Port Arthur News in Texas: 'The weather bureau describes the disturbance as 'the perfect storm' of its type. Seven factors were involved in the chain of circumstances that led to the flood.'[3]
In 1993, journalist and author Sebastian Junger planned to write a book about the 1991 Halloween Nor'easter storm. Technically, this storm was an extratropical cyclone. In the course of his research, he spoke with Bob Case, who had been a deputy meteorologist in the Boston office of the National Weather Service at the time of the storm. Case described to Junger the confluence of three different weather-related phenomena that combined to create what Case referred to as the 'perfect situation' to generate such a storm:
- warm air from a low-pressure system coming from one direction
- a flow of cool and dry air generated by a high-pressure from another direction
- tropical moisture provided by Hurricane Grace
From that, Junger keyed on Case's use of the word perfect and coined the phrase perfect storm, choosing to use The Perfect Storm as the title of his book.
Junger published his book The Perfect Storm in 1997 and its success brought the phrase into popular culture. Its adoption was accelerated with the release of the 2000 feature film adaptation of Junger's book.Since the release of the movie, the phrase has grown to mean any event where a situation is aggravated drastically by an exceptionally rare combination of circumstances.[1]
NEW Microsoft Bluetooth Desktop - Matte Black. 4.3 out of 5 stars 491. Get it as soon as Fri, Jan 15. FREE Shipping by Amazon. More Buying Choices $34.13 (22 used & new offers). The Bluetooth driver stack comprises the core portion of the support provided by Microsoft for the Bluetooth protocol. With this stack, Bluetooth-enabled devices can locate each other and establish connections. Across such connections, the devices can exchange data and interact with one another through various applications. The Bluetooth driver stack uses the Status member of the BRB structure to return a Bluetooth-specific status code. For each BRB, the profile driver must allocate and initialize the appropriate corresponding structure with information about the Bluetooth operation to perform. Install bluetooth on windows laptop. Bluetooth stack for opensolaris v.1.0 This is the bluetooth stack built for opensolaris completely in user space - operational only with usb dongles and capable of transferring files with other bluetooth devices (mobile phones, pda etc). Bluetooth Driver Installer v.1.0.0.31 Get Bluetooth to. MS08-030: Vulnerability in Bluetooth stack could allow remote code execution. Content provided by Microsoft. Microsoft Security Bulletin MS08-030 has been re-released to re-offer the security update to customers who are running a 32-bit edition of Windows XP Service Pack 2.
Although the 1991 Halloween Nor'easter was a powerful storm by any measure, there have been other storms that have exceeded its strength. According to Case, the type of convergence of weather events to which he was referring, while unusual, is not exceptionally rare or unique, despite the way the phrase is commonly used.[4][5]
Version 1 6 Perfect Storm Full
Other uses[edit]
The term 'perfect storm' is nearly synonymous with 'worst-case scenario', although the latter carries more of a hypothetical connotation.
'Perfect storm' has also been used as a metaphor for a relationship such as in the popular hit songs 'Dark Horse' by Katy Perry, 'Blank Space' by Taylor Swift, 'Perfect Storm' by Brad Paisley, 'Invincible' by Kelly Clarkson, and 'Should've Been Us' by Tori Kelly.
From the beginning, the phrase was in heavy use during the financial crisis of 2007–2008, even to the point of pundits anticipating 'another perfect storm'.[6]
The phrase was awarded the top prize by Lake Superior State University in their 2007 list of words that deserve to be banned for overuse.[1]
The crew members of Satori (renamed Mistral in the movie) were not rescued by an Air National Guard helicopter, but rather by a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter. The helicopter was changed in the film after the Air National Guard had issues consulting with the movie producers. According to the owner's son, Satori never made a 360° roll, although it had two knockdowns, during which it lay on its side for about 30 seconds.[10] In response to requests by the crew, Captain Ray Leonard permitted the two crewmembers to make a position report over radio, during which they made an unauthorized Mayday call. One of those crewmembers reported that she was so convinced that she was going to die that she wrote her name down and put it into a plastic bag duct-taped to her stomach so her body could be identified.
There is controversy over whether the Captain was drunk, as charged by the women in the book, with Leonard objecting to this characterization. Out of compassion for the expected loss of his boat, the Coast Guard did not test his blood alcohol levels at the time. The Coast Guard declared the voyage manifestly unsafe and ordered everyone off-board, including the unwilling skipper.[10] The Coast Guard first tried to take them on board via an inflatable boat, but after it was damaged when trying to approach Satori they sent a helicopter, which is a much riskier approach, as a rescue swimmer must jump into dangerous seas. The Coast Guard helicopter did not try to lower rescue gear onto the yacht (as shown in the movie, where it gets entangled with the mast), but rather asked the crew of Satori to jump overboard to meet a rescue swimmer in the water. Leonard eventually complied with the request.
After the storm, Leonard searched for the Satori, hoping to find her still afloat, but in spite of his attempts she was found a few days later washed ashore on a Maryland beach, a bag of personal belongings still on deck. Leonard paid for a 60-foot fishing vessel to drag her off the beach, helped by a channel dug by Park Rangers who had been guarding the boat. He continued to sail the boat until he sold her to a new owner in 2000.[10]
Reception[edit]
The Perfect Storm received mixed reviews from critics, with a 47% approval rating on critic site Rotten Tomatoes, based on 135 reviews, and an average rating of 5.59/10, with a consensus of, 'While the special effects are well done and quite impressive, this film suffers a lack of any actual drama or characterization. The end result is a film that offers nifty eye-candy and nothing else.'[11]Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 59 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[12]
The Perfect Storm was a box office success. On its opening weekend, it debuted with $42 million ahead of Sony's The Patriot and eventually brought in over $182.6 million in the United States, and $146.1 million around the world to a total of $328.7 million worldwide.[13]
The film was nominated for 2 Academy Awards, Best Visual Effects (Walt Conti, Stefen Fangmeier, John Frazier and Habib Zargarpour) and Best Sound (John T. Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, David E. Campbell and Keith A. Wester), but lost both to Gladiator.[14] However, it was also nominated for a Stinker Award for Most Intrusive Musical Score.[15]
Filming[edit]
The movie was partially filmed in Dedham, Massachusetts.[16][17]
Lawsuits[edit]
After the film was released, the families of two crew members sued the film makers for the fictionalization of events which happened prior to the loss of Andrea Gail.[18] In 2005, the Florida Supreme Court ruled against the family of Captain Tyne by a 6–2 vote. Some unnamed families also sued the producers in federal district court, claiming that their names were used without their permission, and that facts were changed.[19] The district court, which is also located in Florida, dismissed the case, as in their opinion the defendants' First Amendment right to freedom of speech barred the suit. The plaintiffs appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, which could not decide how to interpret the Florida law at issue and certified the question to the Florida Supreme Court. In the end, the Florida Supreme Court upheld the district court's interpretation of Florida law, and thereupon the 11th Circuit affirmed the prior decision to dismiss the case.[19]
See also[edit]
- Godless Men (1920)
- Stormswept (1923)
- Code of the Sea (1924)
- Rugged Water (1925)
References[edit]
- ^Welkos, R.W. (7 May 2000), 'Prepare for Good, Sick Fun', Los Angeles Times, p. 4, retrieved 11 August 2010
- ^Berardinelli, James, The Perfect Storm Film Review – reelviews.net, 2000 (Retrieved on 2007-01-25)
- ^'The Perfect Storm'sAndrea Gail Comes Home to Massachusetts'. Warner Bros. July 14, 2000. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
- ^Candus Thomson (June 23, 2000). 'Ocean City boat sails off to stardom'. The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
- ^'Investigation into the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the F/A Andrea Gail'(PDF). United States Coast Guard. January 28, 1994. Retrieved February 13, 2020.
- ^ abcdeTerry Weber (October 29, 2011). 'What really happened to the Andrea Gail?'(PDF). Gloucester Daily Times. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
- ^Ringle, Ken (July 4, 2000). 'Reality Gets the Heave-Ho In Not-So-Perfect 'Storm''. The Washington Post. Retrieved February 13, 2020.
- ^Collura, Chris. ''PERFECT' Storm Questions and Answers'. www.sky-chaser.com. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
- ^'Meteorologists Say 'Perfect Storm' Not So Perfect'. ScienceDaily. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
- ^ abc'Satori - Perfect Storm'. Westsail Owners Association. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
- ^'The Perfect Storm on RT'.
- ^https://www.metacritic.com/movie/the-perfect-storm
- ^'The Perfect Storm'.
- ^'The 73rd Academy Awards (2001) Nominees and Winners'. oscars.org. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
- ^https://web.archive.org/web/20070105221207/http://theenvelope.latimes.com/extras/lostmind/year/2000/2000st.htm
- ^'The Endicott Estate in Dedham, Massachusetts'. British Broadcasting Company. Retrieved 2006-11-29.
- ^Lichtenstein, Bill (June 12, 2012). ''The American Revolution' Documentary Film Shoots at Historic Endicott Estate - Iconic Boston Media Figures Interviewed for High-Profile Film on WBCN-FM at Dedham Mansion'. PR.com. Retrieved September 27, 2019.
- ^'Court Revives 'Perfect Storm' Lawsuit'. St. Petersburg Times Online. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
- ^ abUnger, Howard M. (2002-05-31). 'Judge sinks 'Perfect Storm' lawsuit'. Sarasota Herald Tribune. Archived from the original on 2007-12-07. Retrieved 2007-11-06.
External links[edit]
Version 1 6 Perfect Storm Door
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Perfect Storm (film) |
- The Perfect Storm on IMDb
- The Perfect Storm at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Perfect Storm at Box Office Mojo
A perfect storm is an event in which a rare combination of circumstances drastically aggravates the event.[1] The term is used by analogy to an unusually severe storm that results from a rare combination of meteorological phenomena.
Origin[edit]
The Oxford English Dictionary has published references going back to 1718 for 'perfect storm', though the earliest citations use the phrase in the sense of 'absolute' or 'complete', or for emphasis, as in 'a perfect stranger'.
Synonyms for test again in English including definitions, and related words. Again its exam. In 'here we go again' it is modifying the verb 'go'. There should not be a comma between a verb and its adverb, regardless of whether it's at the end of the sentence or not. Here are some more examples: Please come again. I will do it again. Trying again was not a good idea.
The phrase appears in William Makepeace Thackeray's novel Vanity Fair:
I have heard a brother of the story-telling trade at Naples preaching to a pack of good-for-nothing honest, lazy fellows by the sea-shore, work himself up into such a rage and passion with some of the villains whose wicked deeds he was describing and inventing, that the audience could not resist it; and they and the poet together would burst out into a roar of oaths and execrations against the fictitious monster of the tale, so that the hat went round, and the bajocchi tumbled into it, in the midst of a perfect storm of sympathy.
The first use of the expression in the meteorological sense comes from Thursday May 30th 1850, when the Rev. Lloyd of Withington (Manchester, England) describes 'A perfect storm of thunder and lightning all over England (except London) doing fearful and fatal damage' when recording monthly rainfall measurements for that year. This record is kept by the UK Meteorological Office.[2] The next recorded instance is in the March 20, 1936, issue of the Port Arthur News in Texas: 'The weather bureau describes the disturbance as 'the perfect storm' of its type. Seven factors were involved in the chain of circumstances that led to the flood.'[3]
In 1993, journalist and author Sebastian Junger planned to write a book about the 1991 Halloween Nor'easter storm. Technically, this storm was an extratropical cyclone. In the course of his research, he spoke with Bob Case, who had been a deputy meteorologist in the Boston office of the National Weather Service at the time of the storm. Case described to Junger the confluence of three different weather-related phenomena that combined to create what Case referred to as the 'perfect situation' to generate such a storm:
- warm air from a low-pressure system coming from one direction
- a flow of cool and dry air generated by a high-pressure from another direction
- tropical moisture provided by Hurricane Grace
From that, Junger keyed on Case's use of the word perfect and coined the phrase perfect storm, choosing to use The Perfect Storm as the title of his book.
Junger published his book The Perfect Storm in 1997 and its success brought the phrase into popular culture. Its adoption was accelerated with the release of the 2000 feature film adaptation of Junger's book.Since the release of the movie, the phrase has grown to mean any event where a situation is aggravated drastically by an exceptionally rare combination of circumstances.[1]
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Although the 1991 Halloween Nor'easter was a powerful storm by any measure, there have been other storms that have exceeded its strength. According to Case, the type of convergence of weather events to which he was referring, while unusual, is not exceptionally rare or unique, despite the way the phrase is commonly used.[4][5]
Version 1 6 Perfect Storm Full
Other uses[edit]
The term 'perfect storm' is nearly synonymous with 'worst-case scenario', although the latter carries more of a hypothetical connotation.
'Perfect storm' has also been used as a metaphor for a relationship such as in the popular hit songs 'Dark Horse' by Katy Perry, 'Blank Space' by Taylor Swift, 'Perfect Storm' by Brad Paisley, 'Invincible' by Kelly Clarkson, and 'Should've Been Us' by Tori Kelly.
From the beginning, the phrase was in heavy use during the financial crisis of 2007–2008, even to the point of pundits anticipating 'another perfect storm'.[6]
The phrase was awarded the top prize by Lake Superior State University in their 2007 list of words that deserve to be banned for overuse.[1]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ abcAndrew Stern (2008-01-01). 'Wordsmiths, avoid these words'. Reuters. Retrieved 2008-06-19.
- ^The Met Office, UK
- ^'The Grammarphobia Blog: The imperfect storm'. Grammarphobia.com. 2008-05-08. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
- ^(2000, June 29). '[https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/06/000628101549.htm Meteorologists Say 'Perfect Storm' '(Not So Perfect)', Science Daily
- ^West, James. (2000, July 6). '[https://www.usatoday.com/weather/movies/ps/psname.htm The naming of ('The Perfect Storm'), USA Today
- ^'Prepare for another perfect stormArchived 2010-07-27 at the Wayback Machine'
External links[edit]
Look up perfect storm in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |