An American Cinematheque retrospective shines a light on the best and worst of Stephen King film adaptations - Los Angeles Times
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An American Cinematheque retrospective shines a light on the best and worst of Stephen King film adaptations

Stephen King on the set of "The Green Mile, which was based on his book, in 1999.
(Paul Morse / Los Angeles Times)
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The massively popular novels and stories of Stephen King do not insist upon their own literariness. King’s mastery of orchestrated tension and emotional release — of story and character — is never undercut by an overly fussy sentence.

When he’s firing on all cylinders, King is not just a commercial powerhouse, but a populist storyteller in the richest sense. His approach to the macabre is unfailingly straightforward and sincere, embracing darkness without cynicism. King is a lifelong resident of small-town Maine, and his flights of fancy are grounded by a lived-in sense of mundane Americana.

The directness of King’s approach over the past four decades has made him one of Hollywood’s most dependable sources of original material; nearly every one of his novels and stories has been adapted for film and television. King has encouraged this process, making it a policy to grant the rights to his short stories to first-time directors for $1.

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The lineup for American Cinematheque’s upcoming three-week King-on-film retrospective, “The King of Horror” (and the tepid reviews for last month’s eagerly awaited “The Dark Tower”), suggests that it’s perhaps too easy to make a mediocre Stephen King movie. But over the years, many excellent filmmakers have used his stories to explore a wide variety of masculine fears and ambient hauntings, evoking unlikely emotional responses. In the movies, King has made his presence felt in two distinct genres: the horror film and the male weepie.

Idris Elba stars as the Gunslinger opposite Matthew McConaughey as the Man in Black in “The Dark Tower.”

The retrospective, which kicks off Thursday at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood and the Aero Theatre in Santa Monica, offers the chance to assess the film versions of King’s work — from the startlingly good to the outright horrific.

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King famously hated Stanley Kubrick’s blackly comic 1980 take on “The Shining,” but the film is an unequivocal masterpiece, and the King adaptation that most obviously transcends (when it doesn’t outright ignore) its source material. Kubrick re-imagines the homicidal novelist and hotel caretaker Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) as a grinning, boorish maniac given over to surreal forces, rather than the novel’s genuinely loving father turned alcoholic ax murderer.

Most of the film’s most resonant imagery — the elevator of blood, “all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy” — was invented wholesale. As the recent documentary “Room 234” suggests, Kubrick’s “The Shining” derives its otherworldly power from many potential sources, but King’s novel provided not much more than the skeleton.

Canada’s David Cronenberg is no less obsessive an auteur than Kubrick, but his 1983 adaptation of “The Dead Zone”is perhaps his least overtly Cronenbergy film. Aside from a grisly suicide, the film mostly avoids the “Videodrome” director’s emphasis on the visceral. A youthful Christopher Walken stars as a kindly schoolteacher who, after a car crash, emerges from a coma with the unwanted power of extrasensory foresight. When he has a premonition about the unlikely electoral success of a authoritarian, nuclear-war trigger happy president (Martin Sheen), he agonizes over whether to take drastic action. Cronenberg trims King’s sprawling novel into an economical psychological thriller — a morality play racked by psychic torment.

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Brian De Palma is another filmmaker with a heightened sense of the macabre, and his 1976 take on King’s first published novel, “Carrie,” starring Sissy Spacek as the telekinetic teen, is a horror classic with an operatic flair. In a film most often remembered for its bloody, intricately choreographed prom-night reckoning, De Palma invests the material with bombast and perverse humor.

The 2013 remake of “Carrie” from “Boys Don’t Cry” director Kimberly Peirce could have been a significant response, a feminist gloss on King’s rawest reckoning with adolescent sexuality. But MGM demanded major changes to Peirce’s first cut, and the version released in theaters sometimes feels like a shot-for-shot remake of De Palma’s original. Still, it deserves another look: Peirce updates the story for the social-media age, and finds new depth of feeling in Carrie’s persecution. Fans have petitioned for the release of Peirce’s director’s cut, so far to no avail.

Rob Reiner had a more harmonious relationship with King’s work. “Misery,” his 1990 film about an injured writer of genre fiction (James Caan) who is kidnapped by a deranged nurse super-fan (Kathy Bates, in an Oscar-winning performance) and forced to resurrect a beloved character, remains a crackerjack claustrophobic thriller, capitalizing on a deliciously nasty setup by emphasizing the writer’s snobbery and the kidnapper’s warped insight.

From left; Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Jerry O'Connell and Corey Feldman in 1986's "Stand by Me."
(Universal Films / Associated Press)

Reiner’s 1989 coming-of-age tearjerker “Stand by Me,” based on the novella “The Body,” helped cement King’s reputation as a nostalgist of white baby-boomer Americana. The film remains both tough and melancholy, a kid-friendly adventure of sweetness and affection that’s haunted by King’s fascination with death.

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The film that might benefit most from a theatrical screening is Frank Darabont’s “The Shawshank Redemption,” which earned its unlikely yet enduring status as an American movie touchstone — permanently entrenched atop IMDb’s user-voted top 250 films of all-time — through video rentals and wall-to-wall showings on basic cable. A sentimental, old-fashioned prison drama adapted by an unknown filmmaker from an unheralded King novella, the film was initially a box-office bomb that earned only $16 million on a $25-million budget. But in the intervening two decades this story of saintly endurance has been embraced by mass audiences as a kind of religious experience.

Morgan Freeman, left, and Tim Robbins in "The Shawshank Redemption."
(Michael Weinstein / Associated Press)

Seen today, “Shawshank” is still plagued by convenient plotting and syrupy voice-over narration — it’s a modest movie rather than a great one. But it treats male friendship with such warmheartedness and sensitivity that it still feels unique. In 1999, Darabont would attempt to repeat the trick in “The Green Mile,” another patient, quietly uplifting prison epic based on a King novel, with wobblier results.

The most powerful King adaptations take considerable liberties with the source material, either leaning into or lightly ironizing the stories’ moralistic core. But the reliable King everyman, a reluctant hero grappling with an unwanted gift that keeps him at odds with society, is now a familiar and durable archetype of the big screen.

Info box:

The King of Horror

Egyptian and Aero theaters (Hollywood and Santa Monica)

Thursday, Aug. 24, 2017 - Sunday, Sept. 17, 2017

$12

www.americancinemathequecalendar.com

(323) 466-3456

[email protected]

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