AttractionsUniversal Orlando Resort

Best Worst Attraction: TWISTER… Ride It Out

Share This!

We’re so happy to bring you an article from Marc Kleinhenz this week. Marc splits his time as contributing editor at Orlando Informer and staff writer at Theme Park Tourist. Between all that and his day job, Marc will also be writing regularly for the TouringPlans blog.

Maybe you’re looking to take a foot off the (extremely) well-beaten path to get away from the crowds. Maybe you have an appreciation for the under-valued (or a defiantly contrarian attitude, generally). Or maybe it isn’t your first rodeo, and you and your family need an injection of something different and fresh at the parks.

Regardless of the reason, it’s time for you to enjoy the smaller, more neglected, and – let’s be honest here – less-polished offerings that Disney, Universal, and SeaWorld have to offer. It’s time to experience the Best Worst Attractions.

TWISTER… Ride It Out

Park: Universal Studios Florida
Location: New York
Opening date: May 4, 1998

Twister... Ride It Out concept art
Image © Universal

On paper, TWISTER… Ride It Out sounds absolutely unbelievable. Designed to emulate the Wakita, Oklahoma drive-in movie theater from the film’s most famous scene, a 25,000-square-foot soundstage is home to a mini-tornado that is created right in front of guests’ eyes. The experience is powered by 55 special effects, ranging from gouts of flame to flying debris to a tree that splits in half after being struck by “lightning,” while the titular twister is created by several dozen high-powered fans that generate winds at a steady 35 miles-per-hour, moving enough air to fill four full-sized dirigibles.

During any one show, this attraction uses 54 speakers, hundreds of xenon strobe lights, and 65,000 gallons of water (even more than a single teenager taking a shower) every six minutes every day of operation. The total power consumption for one performance is some 42,000 watts, which is enough to power, on average, five homes. To say there’s a certain level of technical impressiveness at work here would be both natural and understandable.

In person, however, TWISTER leaves a certain something to be desired. Part of the problem is inherent to any walk-through attraction, because they have a far more limited range of experiences to offer guests than their vehicular brethren, but the fact that visitors are actually stationary for the vast majority of their time in the attraction carries even more of the blame – particularly considering the two rather lengthy and oddly repetitive pre-show films. It’s easily one of the smallest experiences to be had not only in all of Universal Orlando, but all of Walt Disney World, as well.

But small doesn’t automatically equate with bad, and “limited” isn’t synonymous with “boring.” Despite the fact that guests simply stand on a platform to watch the scene reenactment play out in front of them, there is definitely a certain visceral quality that the attraction manages to create, perhaps tickling that primitive spot in the human brain that remembers being the plaything of natural forces for so many thousands of years – and the surprise jolt at the end of the show, when the floor of the platform suddenly drops just an inch or two, is an amazingly simple but effective touch.

Twister... Ride It Out's second pre-show
Image © Dan Hatfield

And while the technical achievements can be enough of a draw to get guests through the door, it’s actually a few other characteristics that TWISTER possesses that will make their time all the more worthwhile: the second pre-show, for example, is strangely, subtly effective in both its theming and in priming one for the natural disaster that is about to unfold. (The TV monitors that are impaled in the walls, as if thrown there by a “finger of God,” are simultaneously a nice touch and cheesy – which is an uncanny embodiment of the entire experience.) Bill Paxton’s wonderfully monotone delivery of his lines practically registers as an attraction in and of itself. And the fact that it rarely, if ever, has more than a 10-minute line makes it a no-brainer, particularly when one needs a break from the heavy press of Harry Potter crowds.

Still need more convincing to take the attraction for a spin? (No pun intended.) Rumors over the past year have consistently been pointing to TWISTER’s closure as Universal continues the park-wide makeover it started back in 2012, an attempt to make all of the resort be as high-class and fully-detailed as its two Wizarding Worlds.

You May Also Like...

Marc N. Kleinhenz

Marc N. Kleinhenz is the author of "Nerdism In-Depth," the Substack newsletter about every major piece of nerd culture, including Star Wars and the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He was also the editor-in-chief of Orlando Informer for several years and still is the consulting editor of Tower of the Hand, which is dedicated to George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. In addition, he's written for 32 other sites (including IGN, The Escapist, and Gamasutra), has appeared on radio and television news as a pop-culture specialist, has served as a consultant on the theming industry, and has taught English in Japan.

9 thoughts on “Best Worst Attraction: TWISTER… Ride It Out

  • So happy to see you over here, Marc! It great having some of my favorite writers on two of my favorite Orlando sites. Great article as usual. =)

    Reply
    • That is extremely nice — and, of course, flattering — for you to say, Cassy, and I can’t thank you enough for doing so.

      Of course, my wife, on the other hand, is less than thrilled, as she’s been trying to deflate my big head for the past 13 years now. 😉

      ~M.

      Reply
  • What makes this the worst-best-worst attraction for me (yes, I wrote that correctly), is the extra surprise I got the last time we went on this attraction. Thinking we were smart to get on the back row so that we could a) see better and b) get out quicker, I had a gallon of water dumped on my back from Heaven knows where! And I hate water rides. Beware the back row…

    Reply
  • This article is great. I was at Universal pretty recently and my husband and I both agreed that Twister was going to be the next one to go. It’s pretty underwhelming and in general pretty dated. I love that you pointed out Paxton’s delivery, as I could not stop thinking about that the entire time that I was watching it. But overall, I’m glad we got to see this one last time before it makes its inevitable departure into the theme park archives.

    Reply
  • I’d visit this again just to see Bill Paxton’s delivery. He’s given silly lines about storms and their energy, and they sound even more ridiculous because he has no interest in being there.

    Reply
  • Twister is a favourite of mine for nostalgia. It is basically one of the only attractions left from the older “universal” days and has a really neat vibe. I experience it at least once every time I visit. It brings me back to the back to the future, jaws, kongfrontation days and I enjoy that. I love all the newer experiences, but twister is still a special attraction to me

    Reply
  • The best thing about Twister is the Hidden Mickey. Look for flattened mouse ears smooshed on the tire of the crashed car in preshow 2.

    Reply
  • It was difficult to watch Paxton in S.H.I.E.L.D. without seeing the Twister set in my head.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Van Edwards Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *