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I also disagree about your critique of Marcia Gay Harden, who did an excellent job as religious zealot. Having growing up in the town that inspired the book, "Satanic Panic" by Jeffrey Victor, I can easily see how desperate people can jump on the hysterical holy-roller band wagon.
The things that make this movie worth shelling out your $7.50 for are twofold: one, the underlying theme of how people will turn to anything or anyone for answers, if they are freaked out enough: and two: that ending. (I didn't like the ending to be frank, but I have to admit it's stuck with me for several days now.) I have to hand it the director... many movies have come close to pulling that sort of an end, but they always ended up pulling the punch at the last second. (Take a look at "Island of Terror" with Peter Cushing and Edward Judd for a prime example.) For better or worse, at least he took the risk!
Call me a purist. I have been cheated by too many Stephen King stories turned to movies that have nothing to do with the story, or mutilated by adapters/directors who thought their vision was better than the material they begged licensing for. The Mist was spot on. It was one of my favorite King stories and the atmosphere provided by Darabont was perfect. King's story showed people actually doing all of the right things, avoiding the cliches of monster flicks. They had plans, they tried their best, and went up against creatures beyond their scope of understanding. A one-sided war of attrition. The biblical aspect was always a King staple, and while Ms. Carmody was perhaps overdone, the theme was not. When faced with such a horrifying shift in our surroundings, people generally move to two camps: those that set rational expectations to beat them (whether in an attempt to prove the 'delusionists' wrong by walking into the mist, or preparing to fight or escape with what tools they have), or surrendering to rumor/conspiracy/apocolyptic conclusion. We need only to look at 9/11 for that, much as the comparison, for me, is unrealistic.
But....the ending. Again, Call me a purist. The wringer this movie put me through, even knowing what was going to happen, snapped with the ending. I am one to enjoy a ending that is not happy, because endings rarely are happy, at least not for all involved, and people need to have the strength to endure them, but I thought the ending was a bit too much. Rather than keep the short stories ending, and it's ambiguous message of 'hope', we are treated to a punch in the throat that had me struggling to suspend disbelief, more so than when I had to (with ease) at the idea of foot-wide tentacles crushing a bagboy.
That said, The Mist was absolutely specatacular.
I'm also stuck with the ending. It's very debateable.
Just wanted to post a quick note, for those of you 'purists' out there that did not care for the altered ending in the film, and prefered the original, book ending, you might be interested in a fanedit Ive created for fun...
http://www.karcreat.com/MistNovellaCut.html
...lemme know what ya think...;)
Thanks!
K