In the first episode of the series Chris takes on the tornado – braving giant fist-sized hail, high speed winds and skin-piercing rain as he risks his life to get up close to a twister as it hits the ground. Chris’s film provides a view of tornado from very different perspectives: capturing the excitement and wonder of the awestruck storm chasers and weather tourists who are drawn to their power, drama and beauty, which contrasts sharply with the fearfulness of the people living in the path of twisters that continually threaten to destroy their communities and even claim their lives.
In the second episode of the series Chris Terrill tackles the most violent, destructive and deadly of all nature’s forces – the hurricane. Despite knowing the life-threatening ferocity of these forces of nature, Chris protects himself with body armour and waterproofs his camera before stepping into the paths of hurricanes at the point when they are at their most dangerous, as they hit land, in an effort to experience first hand the true force of this incredible weather phenomenon. He meets the people living and working where they strike and the hurricane chasers who follow the storms as a hobby.
In the final part of the series, Chris heads to Southern California at the height of the fire season and witnesses a 100 foot tornado of flames, a searing blaze threatening homes and firefighters desperately racing to cut down vegetation to starve the raging fires of fuel. Chris meets the firemen who are dispatched to the front line to battle the blazes and stop the fires from spreading and destroying everything in their path. He films alongside the crew, feet away from the scorching heat, as they attempt to bring the infernos under control. To capture the firestorms on film, Chris heads to Southern California’s wildfire country where densely forested mountains are intersected by heavily populated valleys that act as funnels for strong, hot desert winds that return every autumn