Rob Cohen cooks up perfect storm in ‘Hurricane Heist’

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LOS ANGELES, March 10, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – This year, the US Federal Reserve
will shred an estimated 5.6 billion damaged, out-of-date or just a plain
grotty banknotes worth a combined $175 billion and send them to be
incinerated.

Money gets trashed regularly and mostly no one notices — but what if a
powerful hurricane and a gang of sophisticated thieves happened to be headed
right towards where it’s kept?

That’s the premise of “The Hurricane Heist,” the latest release from
veteran director Rob Cohen, the creator of the megabucks “Fast and Furious”
franchise.

“A shoot-out is no longer just a shoot-out, a chase is no longer just a
chase. Any of the tropes of action films suddenly have to reinterpreted by
taking place in 140 mph winds and driving rain,” the 68-year-old told AFP.
“It just seemed like, what a delicious challenge to be able to create a
hurricane itself, but to create an action film within it.”

“The Hurricane Heist” stars Toby Kebbell (“Kong: Skull Island”) as Will
Rutledge, a government meteorologist tracking Hurricane Tammy, the fiercest
storm in US history, headed for coastal Alabama.

As the locals evacuate, the US mint in the fictional town of Gulfport race
against time to shred $600 million in old bills before Tammy hits — but a
gang of tech-savvy robbers have other ideas.

Extreme weather is a nightmare all too real for Cohen, who remembers a
particularly terrifying storm when he was growing up in the small commuter
town of Cornwall, an hour’s drive north of New York City.

“We got hit with a hurricane somewhere in the 1950s and all I remember is
the power going out and trees falling. You hear the trees snapping and
falling, and those banshee winds howling,” he recalls.

– ‘Hunkering down’ –

“We were on the edge of that storm, not even in the brunt of it, but I
remember I was like six or seven years old, just hunkering down, worried that
a tree was going to crush the house with me in it.”

After graduating from Harvard, Cohen got his break in Hollywood as a
reader for agent Mike Medavoy.

One day, he plucked a neglected script out of the slush pile and promised
Medavoy it was “the great American screenplay and… will make an award-
winning, major-cast, major-director film.”

After some next-level nagging, Medavoy agreed to try to sell the
screenplay but warned that if there were no takers, Cohen would be fired.

Universal bought it and it went on to win seven Oscars, including best
director and picture, and Cohen has been known ever since as “the kid who
found ‘The Sting.'”

This intuition has fuelled much of his work, balanced with an aptitude for
innovative special effects that has seen him firing cars out of moving trains
and placing his cameramen on go-karts.

Creating the storm of the century on camera is the kind of challenge the
director of high-octane blockbusters such as “xXx” and “Dragon: The Bruce Lee
Story” relishes.

An early pioneer with computer-aided animation, Cohen abandoned CGI in
favor of practical effects to show farmhouses destroyed, trucks whipped into
the air and a 20-foot tsunami crash into a garden center.

Meanwhile he used LED plates on the windows of cars to transform the red
tower roofs and stucco buildings of Sofia, Bulgaria, where the shoot took
place in the summer of 2016, into the bucolic Deep South, with its checkered
drapes and picturesque coastline.

– Crushing rain –

“I find that an audience has a real sense of when you dump 44,000 gallons
of water on a team of stuntmen, and when you pull them on wires and add the
fake water later,” Cohen said.

“There are just a million tells that tell you this isn’t real. Computers
don’t handle chaos well.”

Kebbell and Maggie Grace (“Lost,” “Twilight: Breaking Dawn”), who plays US
treasury agent Casey Corbyn, endured pummeling by crushing rain, 100 mile-
per-hour gusts of wind and routine 16-hour days on set.

You don’t have to look particularly hard to find the subtext in all this
chaos, for “The Hurricane Heist” is a movie that wears its ecology message
very much on its sleeve.

Kebbell’s Will explains at one point that the increasing frequency and
severity of hurricanes is caused by global warming and that “all due
deference to Donald Trump, there is man-made climate change.”

Cohen, it turns out, has vitriol to spare for Trump, who has described
climate change as a Chinese hoax and appointed climate change skeptic Scott
Pruitt to head the Environmental Protection Agency.

“There’s probably not a human being that hates Donald Trump more than me.
I have found a dark side of myself that I have never experienced, because I
just dream of how he can be tortured and suffer,” he says.

“I hate him, I hate everything he stands for, including on climate change.
He’s in the pocket of the oil industry, he doesn’t want to hear that fossil
fuels may in fact be poisoning the whole Earth.”

“The Hurricane Heist” was released in North America on Friday.