Good day you dirty birdies, it’s Burl, here
to review a movie about a demented fan! No, though it does feature Lauren
Bacall from The Big Sleep, it’s not The Fan! In fact it’s Misery, a movie that, like Stand By Me, involves Rob Reiner taking
a Stephen King story and doing some of his very best work with it!
James Caan from Submarine X-1 and Elf
plays a writer called Paul, whose most famous works are a series of antebellum
soap operas featuring a Scarlett O’Hara character called Misery! But he’s the
usual Stephen King type of writer, the kind with literary ambitions buried
beneath his commercial success, which he has now exercised with a new, as yet
untitled, book about street waifs! He types the last lines of his book in his
Colorado winter resort cabin, enjoys a smoke and a glass of champagne, and sets
off in his Mustang for New York City!
But this foolish writer has not checked the
weather, and he evidently is not accustomed to winter driving, so his ‘stang
flies off the road! He’s rescued by Kathy Bates, well known for playing Gertrude
Stein in Midnight in Paris, a demented
farm lady who loves the Misery books above all else, and who sets Paul’s
shattered legs and feeds him soup, and who has a head full of cracklin' bran! When she discovers first that Paul has
written a profanity-laced, non-Misery book about street waifs, and then that
his latest Misery book kills her favourite character off, she’s not too
pleased, yo! Ha ha!
It’s not quite the two-hander it sounds as
though it might be from that synopsis: Richard Farnsworth from Into the Night plays the local lawman
Buster, who slowly pieces together the clues, and… well, ha ha, have you seen The Shining? Yes, I’m sad to report he’s
the Dick Hallorann of the piece! Frances Sternhagen from Outland plays his salty wife, and there’s even a little cameo from
J.T. Walsh, known for his appearance in Eddie Macon’s Run, as a hilariously insensitive state trooper! But it’s the Caan
and Bates show for the most part, and both of them are excellent!
It’s a marvelously crafted picture, which gets
pretty grisly in parts, but doesn’t go overboard the way it probably would if
someone made it now! It’s a little hokey the way Paul uses his tools as a
writer - stories, writing paper, a typewriter - as his weapons against his
buggy warder, but this aspect comes directly from the King book! The supporting
cast, particularly Farnsworth, Sternhagen and Bacall, is made up of the sort of
faces you just plain feel glad to see when they come on screen, and Reiner’s
direction is restrained and strong, and William Goldman’s screenplay simplifies
and externalizes only what needs to be simplified or externalized! It’s a solid
picture, which I remember enjoying in the theater and which holds up well now!
I give Misery three beloved pet pigs!
Goldman wrestled with the dilemma of living up to the violence in the book - especially whether Annie should chop off Paul's feet! Apparently Kathy Bates was sad that the scene where she runs over some guy's head with a lawnmower was cut out of the final edit (!).
ReplyDeleteBut I think Goldman and Reiner got the balance right, it's a lot more difficult to adapt King than it seems, so they deserved the praise.
Ha ha, you mean they shot the lawnmower scene? I vaguely recall it from the book, or maybe I'm just thinking of The Lawnmower Man, the story that is!
ReplyDeleteI think Goldman made the right call on the hobbling scene - it's pretty darn gruesome as it is, when you can see his foot slammed 90 degrees off his ankle! Yowch!
What you might not have noticed is how much this movie obtains from Gerard Damiano(!)'s "Memories Within Miss Aggie" (1974).
ReplyDeleteI will here and now confess that I never have noticed that!
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