The Mist

Started by Aiellowriter, March 29, 2008, 11:23:09 AM

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Aiellowriter

I missed "The Mist" (ha) in the theaters when it came out and I'm kinda glad I did. Last night I watched what was can be assumed was Frank Darabont's directors cut, which was redone entirely in black and white. It was great!! In Darabont's intro into the film he expressed how much he wanted to release "The Mist" in B&W but infortunately the studio did not. So now through the miracle of DVD he did.

Not just taking the film and laying a B&W filter over it, Darabont went back in and recalibrated every scene, shot by shot to insure it was the truest B&W representation possible. I am so glad I did not see the color version in the theater, this other version just feels right. The creatures, I was told previously, looked really bad because the CG was sub par I suppose. In the B&W version the creatures actually belong in the scenes. The lack of color actually allowed them to blend in better with their real life co-stars. Speaking of stars, Thomas Jane did a great job IMHO. So did everyone else. Marcia Gay Harden will make you want to rip her eyeballs from their sockets. And without giving anything away...the ending will piss you off in the most unbelievable way imaginable, but in a good "I can't believe this movie did that to me" way!

The Mist ranks right up there with Shawshank and Green Mile in it's emotional content and I highly recommend it!

Gareee

While the Mist is pretty good, we both dislike the ending here so much that I doubt it'll get many rewatches.

JMichaelRoddy

Give the Mist another shot in Black and White. It really feels like something from the 50's.
"Soon the Moon will rise and I'll turn into an animal..."
"You and twenty million other guys"

kklloo

  The ending was great. It left me in awe! I loved this film and wish other director's would have the guts to pull an ending like this off.   

poseablemonster

I've heard a lot of good stuff about this movie, so I went ahead and picked up the deluxe version with both versions on it.  I really liked it, although the ending was tough to watch.  It is a very good film, but as others have said, I probably couldn't watch it again for some time. 

Gareee

My wife said that if we watch it again, she'd rather skip the ending completely.

Note she even said IF... the ending bothers her more then me, but when we develop attachments to characters in a story, it's a pretty hard pill to swallow when they are dealt with like that.

I'm kind of surprised they didn't do audience screenings, and change the ending.

(Of course I Am Legend's original ending really sucked as well, and most people agree the new alternate ending is much better story resolution.)

Tom Smith Monsternut

The Mist did have the original ending of the book in it. It was when the drive off into the mist after escaping the supermarket. It ended just like the Birds ..Unknown.
Darbont added the deaths at the end himself .. WHY ? The book's ending is soooo much better.
Best..
tom


Tom Smith " Dr. Deadly"

Gareee

Well, I'm glad I didn't post spoilers....

Anyway, that's exactly what we were thinking of doing next rewatch.. just stop the movie after they drive off into the mist.

I'm kinda surprised King would let them do a major change to the ending like that.

poseablemonster

I'll say this much; it was a bold move for Darbont to use that ending.  I would have preferred the orignal story ending, but I guess he had his reasons for doing it the way he did.  Maybe the DVD extras have some info on that?  I'll have to check it out when I get some time.

raycastile

I haven't seen The Mist, but I know enough about the ending that you should stop reading now if you don't want spoilers.

It seems to me that Darabont's ending was influenced by Bradbury's The Illustrated Man as much as King's was influenced by The Birds. Perhaps Darabont was trying to make a point about facing the future instead of running from hardship.
Raymond Castile

poseablemonster

Yes, the film is FULL of political and/or social references and I am sure that the ending was meant to make another such statement, I'm just not 100% sure what the statement is.

Gareee

Always keep 5 bullets?

poseablemonster


Crazy1van

The ending is tragic, making this a genuine horror movie to me.  How many times do the heroes overcome unimagnable odds to save the day?  Well, here's one less to keep track of.  If monsters really did roam the Earth, I suspect endings like this one would be much more common than the usual Hollywood feel-goods.
Homo homini lupus
"Man is a wolf to man"

http://www.pjfarmer.com/woldnewton/Talbot.pdf

Minion

QuoteI'm kinda surprised King would let them do a major change to the ending like that.

Stephen King loves that ending and said if he would have thought of it himself that's how the book would have ended too.