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Movie Review: The Mist

Posted by isecore on March 13th, 2008

The Mist

Action/Horror/Scifi/Drama starring among others Thomas Jane and Marcia Gay Harden.

A strange storm descends on a small village in the northeastern USA. Immediately afterwards a thick mist envelops the town and traps a number of citizens inside a supermarket. Strange noises are heard from the mist, and people venturing into it are brutally killed. It’s discovered that strange creatures roam inside the mist, and a stand has to be made inside the supermarket by the survivors…

At first this movie seems like a very cheap knock-off of the old John Carpenter-classic The Fog. Even the title alludes to it, and it shares a lot of obvious themes with it’s predecessor. After a while it changes, and you start to assume that this will be a cheap monster-movie full of standard scares.

And that’s exactly what it is. At least at first glances.

Because, after a while the monsters become simply a backdrop to the madness that humans produce all by themselves. The movie changes gears, changes tempo, changes focus and instead become a surprisingly disturbing account of the darker nature hidden within humans. When the order around people are shattered, so is the illusion of civilization. The characters in the movie revert to a much more primitive and less coherent state of mind.

Up until that change in pace and focus I was rather bored by the whole thing. I even rolled my eyes at some of the typical Stephen King-stereotypes (since this movie is based on a novella by him) that are common both in his writings and even more so in movies based on his works.

But after the change, it became a fascinating and rather scary insight into the abyss of the human soul. Several themes work parallel to each other, but the most obvious theme is Rationality vs Religion. The rationality is represented by a continuously diminishing group of people led by David Drayton (Jane) and the Religion contingent is led by the impressively deranged Mrs. Carmody, (Harden). She is certain that the mist and it’s denizens are the wrath of god, and her unstable mentality gets the better of both her and the people she preaches to.

All during this disaster of the soul I sat thinking, wondering how Frank Darabont (the director) would wrap this all up. Would he go for a cheery Hollywood-ending where everything thanks to some Deus Ex Machina just goes away? Or, would he go for the horrible ending that was implied several times through the movie?

I don’t want to spoil this for people, but he did both of those things. The ending is horrible, not because it’s bad but because it’s a cruel and evil fate that befalls those who is damned under it. It’s beautifully gut-wrenching, and I can safely say that anyone who isn’t depressed by it must lack all forms of emotion. It’s the bleakest ending since Leaving Las Vegas.

Strongly recommended.

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3 Responses to “Movie Review: The Mist”

  1. Kristina Says:

    This film sounds good. I quite liked the ‘fog’. Good review. Thanks.

  2. Mind Says:

    This Movie was worth seeing. It was nice to see a good movie based on Stephen King for a change since almost all of the new stuff based on his stories has been crap (in the Horror/Sci-fi genre). The ending was quite depressing though, “good” but I did not feel good after I had finished seeing this film.

  3. patrick Says:

    the Mist is a thinker for sure, pretty good all around, except a lot of the character conflict was really predictable…

    is it me, or did those insect-like aliens have human teeth?

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