Cyclone (1978) Poster

(1978)

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4/10
It's all about the stars
samhill52159 January 2010
Having seen this film twice now - which some might find unbelievable or even masochistic - I felt I had to comment on it. It's easy to pan. The music is cheesy. In fact, as my wife suggested, it sounds like a porn flick. The dialog is downright juvenile if not stupid. Its runtime is way too long. I could go on but you get the idea. So why did I watch it twice? Well, one of my guilty pleasures is bad movies and I am a devoted fan of Carroll Baker and this movie fit both bills. Strangely enough the second time around I found much to like. The underwater scenes were really well done, especially those of the corals which were absolutely spectacular. The sharks were awesome, shown in all their predatory splendor and captivating ferocity. The cyclone scenes were also really cool, especially the ones of the seawall breaking and subsequent flooding. My guess is they were filming a real cyclone as these were not studio or miniature shots. And of course it starred Carroll Baker, still a knockout at 47, even without a hint of makeup. And Arthur Kennedy, at 64, in another trademark performance. Seeing him in this megalomaniac turkey was akin to a pilgrimage. To be honest, had it not been for these two actors I would not have bothered to see the film let alone review it.
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4/10
not what I had expected
Guggenheim8224 May 2021
Well, fully fallen on the snout: I thought there was a disaster here with pretty shark attacks (yes, yes, that sounds morbid - and I mean it that way!). Unfortunately, there is very, very little predator action, but really just a bunch of people bumming around on various boats. The cast of "Tornado" is quite good - among others the Mexican acting legend Hugo Stiglitz takes part -, but there is really little action. In short: lame. There were and are dozens of better films like this.
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4/10
Like "Alive", only ... Fake and with Sharks!
Coventry11 February 2008
You'd have to be a truly unscrupulous and slightly decadent Mexican trash-director in order to take a real-life human tragedy, like that of the plane crash in the Andes, and maximally exploit its storyline and horrific elements. René Cardona Sr. already directed a fairly truthful and impressive re-enactment of the real disaster in 1976 ("Survive!), but apparently his own son was jealous at the money-making concept and decided to make pretty much exactly the same film, only set in a *slightly* warmer climate and with a handful of sharks thrown in for additional menace. The result is a preposterous and severely unpleasant film that falsely aspires to be an intense drama, but actually it's just shameless excuse to depict the mental downfall of people and slowly build up towards cannibalism for the sake of survival. "Cyclone" opens with cheerful postcard images of a sunny holiday resort where tourists make boat excursions near the coastline. Then the calamity displayed in the title brutally interrupts the holiday spirit and, for several long minutes, Cardona Jr. simply edits together a compilation of random National Geographic documentary images to illustrate the harshness of the cyclone. Castaways from a tourist excursion and a fisherman's boat, as well as survivors of a sea-crashed plane gather together in a tiny sloop and face several long days of hunger, mental & physical exhaustion, desiccation, hopelessness and of course the inevitably increasing feelings of mutual hatred and competition. If all this painful human suffering isn't enough yet, the waters are also infested with bloodthirsty tiger sharks. After nearly a dozen days of despair, some of the survivors see no other option than to feed on the flesh of the deceased, but this socially sensitive suggestion really tears the group apart. Like I said, "Cyclone" is an incredibly unpleasant viewing experience and it hardly appeals to any cinematic target group. The film is far too heavy-toned for horror fanatics but simultaneously it's too uneven to please disaster-film freaks and too repulsive for admirers of dramas. The characters are bleak and the script draws their personalities rather inconsistently. Carroll Baker's character, for example, is initially portrayed as a real bitch that protects her poodle from the burning sun rather than to rescue fellow human beings, but when the climax approaches she suddenly transformed into one of the most amiable people on board. Same problem with Arthur Kennedy's priest character! At first he's comprehensive and helpful, but later it actually seems as if he wants to prevent people from saving themselves. Do not, repeat NOT, raise your expectations too much regarding the shark sub plot. The exact same shark footage is shown no less than four times and, if my memory serves me well, these scenes also already featured in Cardona's other sea-adventure "Tintorera". The last half hour of this extremely overlong (120minutes) exploitation ordeal is literally disgusting and actually discouraging for those who were still expecting a happy ending. The gore and bloodshed is shocking, indeed, but you can't possibly neglect the many moments of boredom and the overall execution of "Cyclone" is downright tasteless and sick.
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3/10
Grim but certainly not dull...
JasparLamarCrabb4 September 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Rene Cardon's grim, but not entirely terrible rip-off of JAWS, HURRICANE, AIRPORT, etc. A plane crashes and the survivors are rescued by a pleasure boat. There's too many people on board, so...it's gross and very silly. Nevermind the fact that the production values stink, it's actually kind of bizarre wondering why the great Arthur Kennedy is in this thing. Is this the same multi-Oscar nominated actor from SOME CAME RUNNING, TRIAL and LAWRENCE OF ARABIA?!? Carroll Baker appears as well(and is way too old at this point to be seen in a bathing suit). Clearly these faded stars needed a paycheck. The best that can be said is that it's better than Cardon's SURVIVE! Lionel Stander is in it too.
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3/10
Not as much fun as the other Cardona movies I've seen
bensonmum224 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Cyclone's plot features a group of people stranded at sea after a cyclone rolls through leaving them with little water or food. The movie examines the lengths these people will go through to survive. I have now seen three films directed by Rene Cardona, Jr. and Cyclone is easily my least favorite. While it has its moments of weirdness, overall it is neither as sleazy as Tintorera nor as bizarre as The Treasure of the Amazon. For the most part, it's just plain dull and nowhere near as fun as the other two Cardona movies I mentioned. Add to that some bad acting, bad special effects, bad gore, and a bad script and you've got the makings for a bad movie.

Animal lovers beware. Cyclone features one scene in particular that is as cruel a scene as I've ever seen. I realize that the animal probably wasn't hurt, but I found it repulsive nonetheless.
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3/10
A whirlwind of boredom
The_Void3 August 2008
René Cardona Jr made the overlong, boring and trashy shark flick Tintorerra a year before he went to make this overlong, boring and trashy disaster/survival flick with sharks thrown in. I can only imagine that the director was a real big fan of Steven Spielberg's Jaws as this is his second shark flick where sharks are not the main focus, and by rights don't actual have a real part to play in the story. I am thankful to say that he has ditched the soap opera elements of Tintorerra in favour of some more exploitative survival style elements, and it's slightly more interesting; although really the film is a mess and far to boring to entertain. The plot focuses on an airplane full of people that crashes during a storm. The survivors get themselves onto a small boat and are swept out to sea, but it's not long before hunger starts setting in, and this in turn sets off arguments between the survivors as they realise that they have to eat...something. However, their hunger isn't the only thing they are under threat from, as there's sharks in the vicinity too.

The plot actually sounded like it might lead to something decent, and I dare say it would have done in the hands of a decent director. However, René Cardona Jr is obviously not one of those and he manages to turn the whole thing on its head and ensures that nothing about the film is likable. The idea of people being forced into cannibalism is interesting; but the characters are boring and the overall atmosphere is far too impressive for the film to be enjoyable at the same time. There are some real unpleasant scenes in the film, and while this might have pleased some people; they are not done very well at all and a scene that sees a man kill a dog, for example, looks incredibly fake and stupid. The location used is just about the only successful element; as we see the people baking in the hot sun and this helps to get their desperate situation across. Anyone going into this film is liable to be extremely disappointed as there are no sharks at all for most of the film (excluding some stock footage) and they don't appear until the last ten minutes. By then, it would have taken something really special to create some excitement, but predictably; we are only served more disappointment.
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4/10
Big stars!
BandSAboutMovies22 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Rene Cardona Jr. made Survive!, a movie that gets into the cannibalism after some rugby players on Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 that had to confront the need to survive or eat their fellow players. He followed that up with this movie, also known as El Ciclon and Terror Storm. It's also kind of stolen from Hitchcock's Lifeboat.

An airplane goes down during a storm and the few survivors pile on to a small tour boat that is swept out to sea, where they have no food or fresh water. Will they decide to eat one another before the sharks eat them? Or will they be saved?

This movie is ridiculous and even more so because it has an all star cast, and by that, I mean a cast of people I would see as stars, including Arthur Kennedy (The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue), Carroll Baker (oh so many Umberto Lenzi films that I enjoy), Lionel Stander (from Hart to Hart!), Andres Garcia (Tintorera), Hugo Stiglitz (Nightmare City) and Olga Karlatos (Zombie, Murder Rock).

This movie takes things from bad to worse and it gets even rougher from there. I adore movies that put actors through horrible things and this is definitely one of those.
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"We're Going To Be Bumping Around In A Moment!"...
azathothpwiggins10 December 2019
In CYCLONE, a boat full of tourists, an airplane full of passengers, and a fishing boat are all thrust into a hellish fight for survival when they are hit by the storm of the title. Each group faces the disaster separately -though they start meeting up during the lengthy aftermath. This is all very dramatic.

Unfortunately, the storm ends at about the 30 minute mark, and the dullness ensues. Oh, there's the occasional interruption in the form of a shark attack, an act of doggy murder, human fish bait, or cannibalism, but mostly it's just waiting, bickering, and more waiting to be rescued.

Said rescue is launched, and is equally boring, with naval types lethargically murmuring their lines. The dubbed dialogue doesn't help, with some of the characters speaking as if they're performing a eulogy! This goes on for many days, and the viewers face the same relentless torture as the survivors!

Recommended only for the stoutest fans of cinematic agony.

Co-stars Olga Karlatos (ZOMBIE), Arthur Kennedy (LET SLEEPING CORPSES LIE), Carroll Baker (THE DEVIL WITH SEVEN FACES), and the inimitable Hugo Stiglitz (NIGHT OF A THOUSAND CATS, NIGHTMARE CITY).

P.S.- This review is for the full, 2 hr (!) version of this movie...
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2/10
Weak Disaster Exploitation
TheExpatriate70027 March 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Cyclone is basically a mash up of two previous Rene Cardona Jr. movies, Survive and Tintorera. It takes Survive's cannibalistic struggle for survival and throws in the occasional shark attack in a vain attempt to liven things up. The plot traces a group of people who become stranded on a tourist boat after a hurricane.

This film has so many problems it is difficult to know where to begin. First of all, the hurricane in the film literally appears out of nowhere, catching the authorities and boats at sea off guard. Don't storms like that usually take days to form? Furthermore, shots of a plane crashing during the storm are unconvincing, as they were clearly taken during clear weather.

The film suffers from a serious lack of dramatic tension, as much of the film consists of people sitting around the boat and complaining. Their actions are largely reactive, giving us little investment in the characters. Even the scenes where they resort to cannibalism fall flat.

The sharks only turn up in the last ten minutes of the movie, with shark attacks just as laughable as their counterparts in Tintorera. The sharks are clearly mauling ragged clothing with some meat wrapped in it to get them to bite it.

Simply put, don't waste your time.
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10/10
Gross, but entertaining!
dmd8229 December 2004
Certainly an intense and at times campy little cult gem from Rene Cardon Jr. I'm a fan of the disaster film. Coming into this ,I wasn't quite prepared for some of what I saw. It has an interesting cast of European cult films, including Olga Karlatos from ZOMBIE. Just think of your standard disaster film with some shocking exploitation scenes. A friend told me after viewing that the filmmakers used real corpses to feed the sharks! Don't know if those folks donated there bodies to science, but even so its an entertaining obscurity. Warning to anyone with a weak stomach as this is quite out there in some scenes,in the gross-out department. As well as anybody who might own a poodle, you might like to turn away in 1 scene. All that said, CYCLONE, is much better than Cardonas other more known disaster film, SURVIVE.
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1/10
WE ARE GOING TO HAVE BAD WEATHER
nogodnomasters3 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
A plane goes down and two boats go adrift in the Caribbean after a cyclone hits. They ration food and water. Eventually they do the Donner party thing near the end. Very boring.

118 minute International version rates a punch on the hacker card.

Guide: No f-bombs, sex, or nudity.
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4/10
Good potential turning into a fairly boring mess
Vomitron_G20 January 2013
Now this one had some damn good ideas. A cyclone reeks havoc, and we follow the struggle for survival of not one, but three groups of people (initially on a plane, a tourist boat and a fishing boat), all afloat in the vast ocean waters. But somehow director René Cardona Jr manages to mess up everything he possibly can and turns it into a pretty damn bad movie. The acting is downright hilarious. And some people speaking with their mouths closed due to bad dubbing, does not help things either. But it does make it funnier. The dialogues are close to being the most stupid, idiotic and plain ridiculous things I've ever heard in a movie. Yes, there's a bit of cannibalism. Yes there's a couple of shark attacks. But nothing too explicit. And that's okay, really. Doesn't have to be. When the rest of the movie's good, at least. But it's not. It's bland and uninspired with just plain retarded characters. Too many of them, even. And learning that there's even a version of this film running no less than 118 minutes, I wonder now how redundant a movie can actually get.
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3/10
A below average survival film!!
sauravjoshi858 November 2022
Cyclone is a survival film directed by Late René Cardona Jr.. The film stars Late Arthur Kennedy, Carroll Baker, Late Lionel Stander, Andrés García, Late Mario Almada, Olga Karlatos and Late Edith González.

After a surprise cyclone hits the area, tourists become stranded on a boat in the sea, and they have to do anything in order to survive. To make matters even worse, they're joined by the survivors of a plane crash and a sinking boat.

These types of film neither excites nor disappoints. The film sounded like a b grade soft porn flick but on the contrary the film has a very limited to minimalistic of nudity. While the film has some decent scenes shot of the sea but the slow screenplay and the length of the film makes it look clumsy.

The best part of the film (worse for the viewers who were expecting some violence or gore) is that the film is very little explicit considering that the film has some shark attacks and cannibalism and also it didn't look effective also you can't connect yourself with the plight of the survivors.

Acting in the film is average and the dialogues of the film makes the film a laughing stock. The screenplay is dull and makes the film boring. The climax of the film is also unnecessarily stretched and makes it weary.

Overall an below par film which could've been good.
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5/10
It's not bad but it's no good either
illcodino2 March 2021
Good effect for an old movie, good cast. Bad timing 5 star for the effort and remember Mexican movie
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4/10
A disaster film with little build up and way too much after birth...
Aaron137527 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
If you have seen a disaster film of the 70's, you know the drill. You get like a half hour to 45 minutes to get to know the cast and to build emotional attachments too. Then you get a sequence where disaster strikes and some people get to show off skills as they try to escape the peril. In some circumstances there is a bit more at the close to wrap things up. Well, this one, you get five minutes to get to know the characters, maybe a ten minute storm and then you get to watch the people drift along. The film really should have been called drift, because that is the main focus of the film besides some fishing, dog eating and light cannibalism...

So we see people on a glass bottom boat, then people in a plane which has the most garish looking seats imaginable and some sailors at sea. A cyclone hits stranding the glass bottom boat, crashing the plane and causing the sailors to abandon their boat for a life raft. For reason unknown, as the plane touches down, every seat on the thing just detaches from the floor, one would think they were not even attached but just sitting there! Soon, everyone meets up and starts dying of thirst and hunger and this is the rest of the film until the sharks come and say, "Hey, we are here to add some action to all the drifting, nom, nom, nom!"

A lot of people in this film I have seen before. If you have ever seen Cardona's Bermuda Triangle there were at least three guys from that in this. I say at least three, mainly because this characters are so indistinct beyond executive who looks like the cowardly lion, uni brow kid from Bermuda and Hugo Stiglitz and Garcia also from the Bermuda Cardona film. Suffice to say, do not want to travel with Hugo and Garcia anywhere because it will end in disaster!

So, the film could have been better with some more action or perhaps another Cyclone. As it is, it has some entertaining moments, but you are not attached to these characters as they are all just a bit unlikable and weird! The conclusion is very hard to discern too, as I am unclear who got eaten and who survived when the planes arrived and it ended in a bloody mess. Meanwhile, The Cyclone gets top billing and is in the film only for a bit...must have a good agent.
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8/10
Hilarious
edgaracolby28 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I saw the DVD of this one last week -- the sight of Carrol Baker tearing at her clothes during the rain storm, that awful guy from "Hart to Hart" and a bunch of other Euro-trash actors made this a joyride of a cannibal movie. I really liked the cheesed-out score from Riz Ortolani and the fate of the little black dog. I also have to give props to this movie for featuring real sharks that are fed bundles of clothes with meat in them for the attack scenes!! I couldn't believe it! The production is very third world feeling -- just a gloss of danger to it all.

Get the new DVD (from Synapse) -- it looks great and has a bunch of stuff not on the other versions.
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8/10
Harsh and effective disaster survivalist outing
Woodyanders7 April 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A fierce cyclone storm forces a commercial plane to crash as well as a fishing vessel to sink. The survivors of both catastrophes find themselves stuck on a small boat with a bunch of other folks in the middle of the shark-infested sea. Things soon turn dire after food and water supplies begin to dwindle. Director/co-writer Rene Cardona Jr. does an expert job of crafting a strong mood of pervasive dread and groom, maintains a grim tone throughout, and wrings a good deal of tension from the unsparingly bleak premise. Moreover, Cardona Jr. presents a dark and despairing portrait of both the savage fury of unmerciful nature and the base desperation and shocking monstrousness of mankind in an increasingly hopeless life or death situation: The people stuck on the boat not only kill and eat a small dog, but also eventually resort to cannibalism to prevent death from starvation. The refreshing lack of any sappy sentiment and the overall blunt'n'basic quality of the filmmaking give this picture a certain raw impact and potency. The solid cast of familiar European exploitation faces rates as another substantial asset: Andres Garcia as a heroic ship captain, Hugo Stiglitz as the stalwart airplane pilot, Carroll Baker as a pampered rich lady, Lionel Stander as a crusty businessman, Arthur Kennedy as a selfless and disapproving priest, Olga Karlatos as a pregnant woman, and Mario Almada as a resourceful fisherman. Leon Sanchez's proficient cinematography makes the most out of the cramped and claustrophobic boat setting. Riz Ortolani's funky pulsating score hits the right-on groovy throbbing spot. Nasty stuff for sure, but still gripping and crudely satisfying just the same.
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