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Stephen King's The Mist
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Directed by Frank Darabont.
Frequent Stephen King collaborator Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption) teams with the celebrated horror author once again for this tale of a terror based on a story originally published in King's 1985 horror anthology Skeleton Crew, and concerning a small town engulfed by a malevolent mist. When a thick fog descends upon a typical suburban community and claims the lives of anyone unfortunate enough to be caught outside, a small band of survivors seeks refuge in a local grocery store. Now trapped in a darkened cloud of pure horror, the frightened denizens of the town are forced to fend off an advancing horde of murderous monsters. Punisher star Thomas Jane heads up an ensemble cast that includes Andre Braugher and Laurie Holden. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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indieabby88indieabby88 Re:Weekly Theme for July 14: Th ...
by indieabby88 in Weekly Theme
hasn't rated it.
"I just finished watching The Mist, a movie which I think would qualify as having an angry mob. I don't want to put in any spoilers, but there is one particular scene that puts that "pissed-off masses screaming for blood" feeling right out there. If you've seen the film, you'll know what I'm talking about. Let me just say that I don't think I've yelled at characters onscreen so much in any other movie I've ever seen. The Mist is a movie that begs for knee-jerk reaction in just about every single frame. I wanted to throttle Marcia Gay Harden by the end of that thing. Then, of course, we've got the lovely musical sequence in Disney's Beauty and the Beast (I've never seen a more melodic mob) and movies like Frankenstein and the odious Van Helsing (which it inspired) These are examples (though, albeit, not all good ones--it's late, throw me a bone!) of the panicked mob acting ridiculously out of fear, some rational, some irrational. But there's the second kind of angry mob movie, too, t ... " [More]
laylorlaylor Re:How has horror scarred (yes, ...
by laylor in HORROR MOVIES 101
liked it.
"Ever since I saw Arachnophobia as a kid I have not been able to deal with bugs of any sort, especially spiders. That movie had me sleeping in my parent's bedroom for many nights. To this day I get completely scared silly when a big bug scurries around me. I watched the movie a couple of years ago and while I was able to laugh a lot of it off I still shuddered when large amounts of spiders come on screen. I think I am the only person who gets creeped out by 8 Legged Freaks and I squirmed through some of the scenes (giant flies, yargh!) in the recent The Mist. That last story in Creepshow? Forget about it! " [More]
JJ79JJ79 The Mist (2007)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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""The Mist" advertises itself as a horror film. And in some respects, it is a horror film in the conventional sense of the genre. But in others, it becomes a psychological horror film, a battle between us and them when we´re all human, thrust into a situation where no one has the magic bullet which leads to salvation. In those situations, we turn to what we feel most comfortable with. What happened after September 11? Most American turned to friends and family out of a sense of safety; others took to a hawkish war stance because they thought guns would protect them. The same dynamic is at work in Frank Daranont´s ("The Green Mile," "The Shawshank Redemption") production. Add in a third place to turn to for comfort-religion-and an powder keg is lit. Following a freak storm in a small Maine town, David Drayton (Thomas Jane), his son Billy (Nathan Gamble) and next door neighbor Brent Norton (Andre Braugher) head to the local grocery store for supplied. While there, an eerie ... " [More]
CinemaRianCinemaRian The Mist (2007, USA, Frank Dara ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"The biggest problem with The Mist is that it is not what it thinks it is. It thinks it is a deep statement with a lot of human pathos, but it's really just a monster movie. Had it realized that, I think, it could have been a really good, and more importantly, a really fun monster movie. Instead, the picture takes itself far too seriously to be entertaining but not enough to becoming ridiculous, so end up with a mediocre cinematic experience. The movie is based on a novella by Stephen King. Although it is regarded as one of the writer's best works (it won some award somewhere), I think, frankly, it kind of sucks. King clearly loves the idea of a diverse group of characters trapped in a single location fighting of forces of evil. Just counting the number of King works I am familiar with, he's used at least four times, to varying degrees of success with Maximum Overdrive (a gas station), The Langoliers (an airplane), The Regulators (a house) and with The Mist, a supermarket. As always ... " [More]
vhsparrowvhsparrow A Good Start, But A 'Missed' O ...
by vhsparrow in vhsparrow Blog
lost interest.
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"Now don’t get me wrong, here — ‘The Mist‘ (2007) was adequately executed, beautifully shot and well cast, but Frank Darabont ought to have done more to haul the premise of Stephen King’s novella out of the ’50’s. I used to be a King fan way, way back and read a good few of his books back in my junior HS days. I even followed some of his adaptations for a while — his adaptations from other people’s ideas and other people’s adaptations of his work — but that was before Frank Darabont started making his filmazations. From the commercials that advertised the movie last fall, it looked as though ‘The Mist’ was going to be a King-remake of John Carpenter’s ‘The Fog‘ (1980), which seemed entirely unnecessary and redundant to me, considering we’d just had a widely panned ‘Fog’ remake in 2005. Lo and behold, ‘The Mist’ was based on a 1980 novella — early, as f ... " [More]
WindbreakerWindbreaker THE MIST
by Windbreaker in Windbreaker!
is neutral about it.
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"I'm very, very irritated with Frank Darabont right now. The first half of The Mist had so much promise, but the second half turned ridiculous. And I'm not talking ridiculous in the sense of creatures lurking in an ominous mist outside the store where you're trapped -- I'm talking ridiculous in the sense of what normal people might do when faced with real terror. History tells us that mass suicide is not a likely scenario.What *really* turned me off was the phony Bible-thumping character. So much so that once her role escalated, I never recovered. I could not bring myself back to the feeling I had in the first 60 minutes -- extremely nervous due to the claustorphobic nature of the set. She was phony because Darabont didn't bother trying to make this woman 1% believable. Does ANYONE in Hollywood know a born-again Christian? Anyone?! Half of her poppycock dialogue alleged to be biblical prophesy was just wild ad-lib on Darabont's part. Bah!And the &qu ... " [More]
mercurialmercurial The Mist - Review
by mercurial in a filmblog
liked it.
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"Not entirely unfamiliar in terms of basic plot (mysterious occurrence unleashes unknown creatures that attack indiscriminately and survivors must discover the truth and try and survive), The Mist does however surprise in its performances that incredibly turn the humans into more scary monsters than the behemoth monstrosities lurking in the mist. With Marcia Gay Harden as the town loony that begins to gain a cult following after her religious tirades begin to resemble true prophecy and Toby Jones and Thomas Jane as two of the reasonably intelligent, level-headed outcasts trying to figure out a way to escape the confines of the supermarket they all find themselves trapped in, the chilling performances really strike a chord and maintain the unnervingly realistic sense of foreboding that stays with you to the final (yet ultimately predictable) conclusion. " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Another Stephen King Letdown
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
disliked it.
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"There are two reasons I completely disliked this film: the TERRIBLE cinematography (can we say "rack focus", anyone?) and the IMPLAUSIBLE actions of the characters. Let me elaborate: it is shot like episodic television, which makes sense since Frank Darabont seemed to use most of the crew he worked with on "The Shield", but for God's sake...this is a feature film! Some of the shots weren't even in focus...at all! Seriously? 18 million dollar budget and all they can come up with is this? Sad. Then we've got the character's actions themselves. Whereas the natural instinct of self-preservation would kick in to a "real" person caught in this situation (like running for your life when scary shit starts attacking you), these people seem to have little of that instinct. Instead, they seem compelled to stand and stare, scream a little, and get killed. Not only that, but SOMEONE in this small hick town ought to know that INSECTS ARE ATTRACTED TO ... " [More]
TheWorkingDeadTheWorkingDead Re:The Mist...Has Come
by TheWorkingDead in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"Ok, let me just say; you put a huge spoiler in there, and since Stephen King said he would personally hunt down and punch anyone who gave away any part of the ending, i think you might have an ass-kicking headed your way.But anyways... I'm actually glad they left the sex scene out. It worked in the story, and is completely... well... understandable isn't really the right word, but it makes sense. In the movie, you don't have his inner monologue. All you'd have is this married guy having sex with someone NOT his wife while his son sleeps nearby. Sure, they're trapped in a grocery store and have no idea whats going on outside, but it's still a hard sell when you can actually read the guy's thoughts. The whole point of the movie is that in the end, even those who seemed so righteous and pure, even the heroes, can turn out to be just as misguided as the apparent villains. If he'd immediately started having an affair before finding out what happened to hi ... " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re:The Mist...Has Come
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
hasn't rated it.
"I agree with you Froggy, one of the pivotal scenes in the book was the sex scene because that is what started ole crazy to say that they have sinned and they must kill the sinners. I too was pretty depressed after it and had to watch a comedy when I got home just to feel better...sigh. Anyway, it was good and Thomas Jane is still as hot as ever in my book. whew... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Cynics like to claim that there are no new stories to be told, but even if that argument holds some amount of truth, who's to say that we can't find exciting new ways to recycle the old ones? Essentially Night of the Living Dead set in a small-town grocery store instead of a farmhouse -- and substituting Lovecraftian creatures from another dimension for flesh-eating ghouls -- Frank Darabont's adaptation of Stephen King's apocalyptic dirge is nothing new in the grand scheme of things, but that's not to say it's ineffective by any means. In addition to highlighting how the monster that dwells within man can easily outweigh any perceived external threat, Darabont's unforgiving frightener dives headlong into the abyss with a grim denouement that's sure to spark debate. It's no secret that Darabont is a die-hard King fan (his association with the prolific author goes as far back as the 1983 short The Woman in the Room), so when fans found out that the filmmaker was abandoning the drama of The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile in favor of out-and-out horror, the hype was understandably justified. Over the years, it has become painfully obvious just how important it is to have a director who understands King's unique sensibilities when adapting the author's works for the screen, and here, as before, Darabont proves that he is more than up to the task. Perhaps the most striking aspect of The Mist is how distinctly different it feels from Darabont's previous King adaptations; whereas The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile both felt meticulously crafted and remarkably earnest, this bleak look at a decidedly supernatural disaster instead comes off as intimate, urgent, and even somewhat reckless at times. Of course, much of this shift in tone can be attributed to the fact that while his previous King adaptations were unabashedly cinematic thanks in large part to the visual contributions of cinematographers David Tattersall and Roger Deakens, this time out Darabont has instead opted to work with the same crew he bonded with during his work on The Shield. While at no point does The Mist ever even come close to being as depressingly bland as the average Stephen King miniseries, it does feel more like a large-scale television production than a feature horror film at times, right down to the repeated fade-to black between scenes. Also elevating The Mist above that of your typically uninspired King adaptation is some truly smart writing by Darabont, and the ace cutting skills of The Shield editor Hunter M. Via (the latter's handling of an early tentacle attack is particularly effective). There's no doubt the creepy crawlies that emerge from the titular vapor will give arachnophobes and entomophobes alike a solid scare -- and the sheer variety of the creatures alone is enough to steer the imagination toward the unthinkable horrors of Cthulu and his minions -- but the computer animation occasionally borders on hokey, leaving Darabont to pick up the slack by ratcheting up the human drama. As in any effective siege film, human interaction plays a pivotal role in the outcome of the story, and this is the area where Darabont the screenwriter truly begins to shine. When the old Mrs. Carmody (Marcia Gay Harden) becomes convinced that she is the true vessel of God and begins barking fire and brimstone to the frightened prisoners of The Mist, things shift from just supernatural scary to real-world terrifying. An enthusiastic but harmless zealot at the onset, Mrs. Carmody eventually manages to make even spiky-tentacled monstrosities from another dimension look like they might be kind of cuddly by comparison. It's fascinating to see how the alliances unfold as the situation grows increasingly tense, and Darabont handles the growing division and animosity among the fractured survivors with the kind of skill that really draws the viewer in. There's no question that Gay Harden almost single-handedly steals the show as Mrs. Carmody, her wild eyes blazing as she casts down the judgment of the almighty. It's hard to come off more vicious than a inner-dimensional nightmare beast with the face of a human and the body of a pit-bull-sized scorpion/tarantula hybrid, but thankfully for the audience she manages to pull off the "Cooper" role (see Night of the Living Dead) with the kind of relish that can coax an entire theater into despising her. On the complete opposite end of the spectrum, Thomas Jane is square-jawed perfection as perhaps the most devoted father in the history of modern horror. Alternately nurturing and completely bad-ass, Jane only rings false during the final, crucial moments of the film (though, to be fair, it is difficult to tell how anyone would react under such circumstances). Standouts among the supporting players include William Sadler as a class-conscious local whose mind proves a bit to small to process the horrors around him, and Toby Jones as the meek check-out counter clerk who could teach even Dirty Harry a thing or two about getting a clean shot. When all is said and done, one would be hard-pressed to cite The Mist as a truly ground-breaking horror film, though as with much of Stephen King's written work, it does get the job done amicably while successfully getting under the viewer's skin in a number of ways. Add to that an ending that might just prove too hard-hearted for some, and the result is a rare beast -- a horror film that somehow manages to rob all hope from the viewer, and then send them out into the daylight with a swift kick in the teeth. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
 



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TheWorkingDead
TheWorkingDead
loved it.
The1TheOnlyJP
The1TheOnlyJP
loved it.
Mully
Mully
loved it.
erico_77375
erico_77375
disliked it.
JakeStevens
JakeStevens
disliked it.
lopezdash
lopezdash
is not interested.