The Mist (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray]

The Mist (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray]

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The Mist (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray]

From legendary frightmaster Stephen King and 3-time Oscar-nominated director Frank Darabont* (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile) comes "one of the scariest King films since Stanley Kubrick's The Shining" (Tasha Robinson, The Onion A.V. Club). After a mysterious mist envelopes a small New England town, a group of locals trapped in a supermarket must battle a siege of otherworldly creatures...and the fears that threaten to tear them apart. Starring Thomas Jane (The Punisher) and Oscar winner* Marcia Gay Harden (Mystic River) in one of the year's most talked-about performances, The Mist is riveting, with "tension like an ever-tightening clamp" (Colin Covert, Minneapolis Star Tribune).

 

Writer-director Frank Darabont, who showcased the softer side of Stephen King in his film adaptations of The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile, turns to darker material for The Mist, his latest King adaptation about a group of ordinary townspeople trapped in a supermarket by a mysterious fogbank. Thomas Jane is top-billed as a Maine illustrator who attempts to calm the frightened shoppers, but his job is cut out for him from the get-go, first by the discovery of malevolent creatures lurking in the mist, and then by the mad mutterings of Mrs. Carmody (Marcia Gay Harden), a local eccentric who calls for Old Testament-style sacrifices to appease the supernatural forces. Darabont delivers monster movie thrills and understated social commentary with equal skill, and he's well supported by his cast (which includes Andre Braugher, Toby Jones, William Sadler and Jeffrey DeMunn) and the vivid special effects by KNB EFX, which effectively mix CGI with models and stop-motion animation (the terrific monsters were designed by legendary comic book artist Bernie Wrightson). And for those curious about how the novella's downbeat ending has translated to film, suffice it to say that Darabont's conclusion is at once different and more unsettling than King's. --Paul Gaita

 

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The Mist (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray] Reviews

I highly recommend it to anybody. Great cinematography, excellent casting, and pretty original. I didn't even know my wife was sitting next to me during the film. This movie was so worth watching, I preferred to hold my piss until the movie was finished.

I read some negative reviews here but I'm afraid this movie was actually a lot better than what I read. This is what movies are all about. Thanks Stephen King because now I want to buy it. I rent movies and easily get distracted if the movie is boring or stupid.

It's gripping, suspenseful, eerie. The ending is shocking, however, the movie has a message and not just a brainless sci-fi thriller with cool special effects. Classic film work for me.

 

The 'surprise ending' is totally predictable given the cruelty with which the storyline treats all of the characters. Thanks to Roger Ebert for my subject line. This is among the worst movies I have ever seen. I would rather have sinus surgery than sit through this miserable piece of detritus ever again. The characters are stupid and one-dimensional; the concept too absurd for any suspension of disbelief, and the story goes from dull to violent to absurdly dull.

 

Great Job. I am always devided when it comes to book to movie adaptions as alot of times they ravage the story. But overall I was plesantly surpized with this latest Stephan King story brought to celluoid. The effects are done well considering, the plot is very suspenciful (fear of the unknown), and the premise of how the mist/whats in the mist came to be is not explained but briefly suggested at and very interesting. I love movies that leave you thinking and captivated ie: 28 Days/Weeks Later and the Mist is no exception. Over all a great movie, this one will leave you captivated and looking over your shoulder and staying away from dark corners for days to come.

 

Please. Don't bother even renting it. A survival movie where the hero kills everyone but himself in the end. King sometimes delivers but this was a stinker.

 

I keep seeing in my minds eye those final moments of the film as the valiant few drive through the fog and view all the mayhem and destruction wrought by these creatures. The religious fanaticism subplot was also a little over-the-top for my tastes but it certainly wasn't enough to spoil my enjoyment of the central storyline. Cloaked within a dense, inexplicable mist that engulfs the town lurks a collection of phantasmagorical creatures ranging from what appears to be large, mutated dragonflies and spiders to enormous monstrosities that would answer to such diabolical names as Shoggoth, or Cthulhu if this film had been adapted from a H.P. The sounds of their unearthly bellowing and glimpses of unimaginable horror as they move in and out of sight within the thick mist are accentuated by the haunting soundtrack provided by Lisa Gerrard.

Synopsis: The '07 release `The Mist' unfolds like a Lovecraftian nightmare come alive in a small rural American community. Only a brave few seem willing to face the truth and plan an escape, or die trying. This is truly an unforgettable image that will stay with the viewer for quite some time. I also enjoyed the performance of Laurie Holden as the level-headed but vulnerable Amanda Dumfries and Marcia Gay Harden as the unstable religious zealot Mrs.

On the negative side I wish they hadn't done the too often repeated alien incubation sequence. Though no mention of the nefarious Necronomicon is ever mentioned surely some blasphemous occult conjuring must have been going on in that top secret military base located on the outskirts of town that released these other dimensional beings into our world. It was great in `Alien' but enough is enough. Camody. Lovecraft novel.

When all is said and done it's definitely the Lovecraft inspired monsters in the mist that capture my imagination. Thoughts and emotions run wild within their precarious refuge. Critique: `The Mist' is an exciting, harrowing film that firmly held my interest from beginning to end. . Christopher Lambert look-a-like Thomas Jane delivers a solid performance as the strong and valiant David Drayton who is forced to not only suppress his own personal fear of the incomprehensible menace outside but deal with the mounting emotional onslaught of those around him.

Some escape into denial, some fall into religious hysteria and some contemplate suicide. David Drayton (Thomas Jane) and his young son are trapped inside a supermarket with a group of terrified town residents and unfortunate travelers with a storefront wall of glass serving as their only protection from the mist and the horrors that await outside.

 
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