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bill1971   08-04-2012, 03:09 PM
#1
I think that movie really captures the world at night from Nightworld, where every moment is filled with danger, fear and dread.
A-dono   08-04-2012, 05:22 PM
#2
I liked that film. It was based off a short-story by Stephen King, and you're right, it is kind of reminiscent of Nightworld (other than the fact that it takes place mostly during the day).

I don't remember whether the first edition of Nightworld or King's original story was published first.
Damin J. Toell   08-04-2012, 05:53 PM
#3
A-dono Wrote:I don't remember whether the first edition of Nightworld or King's original story was published first.

THE MIST came first, published for the first time in 1980.
t4terrific   08-08-2012, 11:29 AM
#4
I liked it a lot too. The end was upsetting, but somehow great because you just don't see that sort of amazingly stupid awefulness very often.
wdg3rd   08-08-2012, 07:28 PM
#5
t4terrific Wrote:I liked it a lot too. The end was upsetting, but somehow great because you just don't see that sort of amazingly stupid awefulness very often.

Come now, it's an election year. Not a week goes by.

Oops, wrong board for that kind of comment. Oh, well.

Ward Griffiths

"Men will never be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest". -- Denis Diderot
Dave618   08-08-2012, 09:40 PM
#6
I liked the film as well upon seeing it on Cable a few years ago. Come to think of it, the world of The Mist and the Nightime World Rasalom was trying to unleash on the Earth in Nightworld are somewhat similar. The ending of the movie was definitely a shocker. I remember thinking the director (Frank Durabont, I believe) was taking a chance by leaving that in the final cut and not replacing it with some sappy Hollywood finale. But I liked that he had the guts to leave it the way King wrote it (if indeed that's how the story by King ended; I never read it).
Dave   08-09-2012, 07:11 AM
#7
Dave618 Wrote:But I liked that he had the guts to leave it the way King wrote it (if indeed that's how the story by King ended; I never read it).
No, the ending is different from the novella by a long shot. The film is much more bleak, and more definitive, and considering I loved the ending of the novella, it wasn't film friendly, and I found the film ending to work even better, IMO. Well done Frank.
Peter Lis   08-09-2012, 10:14 AM
#8
The end of the movie is a tragedy of a man who lost a hope and hurries to dead. But Nightworld's people save it - and it's completely different story which shows us a coincidence only in severad detales (mysterical anymals), but opposites in main line - psychological. Why the artist (Thomas Jane) has killed his own son - because he decided the death would be a best way for him (and for himself but bullets are gone!). In the Nightworld we have an single enemy, who stays behind all that changes, and lots of folks who are ready to fight with him not only with their hands but with their hearts. And they wins.
The Man of Fhinntmanchca   08-09-2012, 11:22 AM
#9
I've read the Mist many times, it's Nightworld that is, for me, nearly impossible to get my hands on to read. I've been searching in specialty, used book shops, and flea markets for years unsuccessfully trying to find it. Looking forward to this upcoming rerelease, maybe it'll finally be easier to come by. I'm not much for ordering, I'd rather just get out of the house, wander in to the local bookstore/s, browse around, talk to folks, find what I'm looking for, and bring it on home.

I tilt at windmills, you tilt at windmills, we tilt at windmills together.

quixotic - Caught up in the romance of noble deeds or unreachable ideals; romantic without regard to practicality.
bill1971   04-17-2017, 06:48 PM
#10
After five years I was going to post something like this, good thing I searched first. Smile
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