The Mist
Monday April 07th 2008, 5:37 am
Filed under: cinema

When director Frank Darabont first adapted author Stephen King’s work, he gave us The Shawshank Redemption. Despite a poor box-office showing, and valid accusations of over-sentimentality, over time it managed to cement itself as a modern classic, and wormed itself into many movie fans’ top tens (this film fan included).

His next attempt was with The Green Mile, another film based on a Steven King saccharine prison-drama, proving that lightening rarely strikes twice.

Darabont’s third crack at the whip is with Steven King’s The Mist, wherein a mysterious fog (I guess the name was taken…) smothers a rural American town. With communication and power falling foul of the fog, people take refuge wherever they can as it becomes apparent that, in the words of one panicked character, there is something in the mist.

This setup makes way for a slow-burning character piece, as vastly different characters are forced to live on top of each other in the local supermarket under huge stress. Unfortunately, the characters are largely drawn from stereotypes, and so disappoint. Thomas Jane stands apart as the concerned father, but at times he too lapses into humdrum gravely-voiced snarls that jar with the material.

With such wooden, two dimensional characters, Darabont seems to quickly run out of ideas, and so much of the movie feels like mere padding. For a film that hinges on the conflict and in-fighting amongst the characters, the sense of rising tensions is handled with very little subtlety.

And though acknowledging that the theme may be regarding the dangers of the monster inside as opposed to those in the mist, the ghouls themselves are poorly-realised. Appalling CGI apart, their design is almost uniformly unimaginative and derivative. And yet with all that in mind, they are given centre-stage for perhaps a little too long.

The Mist is perhaps elevated out of absolute mediocrity by the closing act. Without divulging details, it is safe to assume that the ending will linger longer in the viewer’s mind than the film itself.



2 Comments so far

I absolutely agree, although I would be a bit stronger about the ending. I have been recommending this film to friends - people I like and whose opinions I value- warning them that the run-of-the-mill dirge that makes up the first 95% of the movie is just a set-up for one of the most amazing endings of the last 10 years.

Oh, and the film is also of note to gamers, since it was the inspiration for the story of the original Half Life.

Comment by John Kelly ITALY Mac OS X Safari 525.13 04.07.08 @ 6:32 am

Interesting tidbit there regarding Half Life…

The ending is very good, but is it enough to save the film? I would say no. Hopefully some day we will be treated to a real top-drawer movie that takes similar risks with its ending.

Comment by Brendan JAPAN Windows Vista Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.13 04.07.08 @ 6:52 am



Leave a comment
Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)