Thursday, November 29, 2007

The Mist

The Mist
Starring Thomas Jane, Marcia Gay Harden, Laurie Holden, Alexa Davalos & Toby Jones

"The Mist," a collaborative film based on a Stephen King short story, follows the story of one small town supermarket-goers who find themselves trapped behind cartons of milk, cash registers, and buy-one-get-one-free sales when a mysterious mist comes their way. It's not just any old fog; this is something supernatural - a killer. But what does this mist hold? As the always entertaining Marcia Gay Harden, who single-handedly holds this movie up, says, "It's death."

Of course, when a story holds a dangerous secret, like what is inside the mist - oh, don't say "fog"; the actors never do - an audience creates its own assumptions about what is killing the people of this small town Maine (of course, a King detail). Aliens? Demons? Vampires? Ghosts? Who knows! I would have loved to see nothing in the mist - not that nothing was killing the people but that there was no CGI. This could have been a great ode to old time thrillers if we didn't see the strange looking 3-D monsters. They weren't even scary. It was kind of like "Jurassic Park" meets "Jumanji."

Led by Thomas Jane, half the cast flops, while the other half pull their weight and then some. Harden is phenomenal as the Old Testament-preaching, psychopathic Mrs. Carmody who rallies against Jane's people and tries to stop everyone from leaving the supermarket. She also goes on a mission of God to find a sacrifice. This leads to bloodshed. "Infamous'" Toby Jones is very likable as is "Feast of Love's" Alexa Davalos. Other than those three, no one really shines, and Jane doesn't have a good scene until the end.

The most fascinating parts of "The Mist" were it's character struggles and debacles. Harden plays such a powerfully horrible woman that the audience cheered when she got her share of karma. Also, the last five minutes are incredibly powerful and irrevocable, allowing "The Mist" to not be lost from our memories.

Harden is a star. Jane is lackluster. And the film is fun to watch.

Grade: C+

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