Thursday, December 17, 2020

THE STAND (Episode 1: The End) Review

 




THE STAND
Episode 1
Director: Josh Boone 
About an Hour Long
CBS ALL ACCESS (2020)

In preparation for the new mini-series of Stephen King's THE STAND, I decided to re-read the 1,200 page book. Glad I did. I first read it in the late 1980s. While I remember the story, I certainly forgot a lot of the details.

I am going to do my best NOT to compare this mini-series to the 1994 mini-series (which I loved), or to the book (as I am used to deviations in screen adaptations of Stephen King's work).

*** This Review Will Have Spoilers *** Read at Your Own Risk ***

Episode Recap


The show opens somewhere in the middle of the virus, also nicknamed Captain Trips. The story, at this point, revolves around three of the main characters. Stu Redman (James Marsden), Franny Goldsmith (Odessa Young), and Harold Lauder (Owen Teague).

Harold is working with corpse crews, collecting up the dead and dumping them into mass graves. Stu is a locked down facility. Sitting against a wall. He has (off screen) refused to comply with further medical requests until someone can give him some answers.Then the show bounces back to Franny in the backyard at her parents' house. She wants to talk with her dad, but he is not feeling well. (Straying from the book, as far as we know, she never does tell her father what is on her mind).

Focusing on Stu. We find out that a terrible virus, with about a 99% mortality rate, has quickly swept across the country. Stu's hometown of Arnett, Texas is not just under quarantine, they have been cut off from the world. No cell service. No internet. No in. No out. (Reminds me of what happens in Under the Dome).

We get a glimpse into what happened to get him locked up. Playing cards at Bill Hapscomb's Texaco Station, a car careens down the road and into the gas tanks. Inside the vehicle is Charlie Campion. He is near-dead. Pus and phlegm covering his face. Stu and his buddies drag the man safely out of the car. (In case the gas pumps decide to blow up).

Once he realizes he is somehow immune to the disease, (and that his deceased wife was a nurse), he agrees to testing. If the CDC can find a cure from taking his blood, and exams, he is all in. Unfortunately, things get worse. There was a breach in the facility where he is being held. They whisk him away to Atlanta, where the CDC has a secret location buried miles below ground. The virus has possibly penetrated the un-penetrable.

Additionally, he has weird corn-maze (or maize) dreams. There is a wolf in the dreams. They broach on the cusp of nightmares!

Harold is an oddity. A failing writer, and a high-school-ish loser. He has a thing for Franny. She was his babysitter at one point. Always encouraged him to never give up (when it comes to his writing). When the virus hits it is almost a blessing in his mind. He, apparently, is immune, as is Frannie. In his mind, the two of them should embark on a journey. Together. He convinces her that if there are people in Atlanta working on the Flu, then they had an obligation to get there. Maybe their bodies held the cure.

Both Franny and Harold also have bizarre dreams. Harold sees Sin City (Vegas), and the shadowy figure of a man (Randell Flagg - portrayed by Alexander Skarsgard). Franny has a different kind of dream. She sees the maze of corn like Stu, but instead of a wolf she meets Mother Abagail (Whoopi Goldberg). I am not a fan of Goldberg. It is my own personal opinion. In a way she ruins the character for me. She is the exact opposite of what Mother Abagail. I have a hard time getting her The Voice behavior out of my mind when I see her on screen. Admittedly, I was close to passing on watching the series just because of her. Her and Amber Heard (who plays Nadine Cross). That is all I'll say. I got it (mostly) out of my system.

Anywho, Mother Abagail wants Franny to take a journey as well. A trek. She wants Frannie to come see her in Colorado.

At the very end of the episode, we go back to the beginning (of the book), where we see Charlie Campion very much alive. He is working on a military base. A vial is broken. A virus escapes. The compound is supposed to immediately lock down in that kind of situation, but (we find out how) Campion manages to get off the base, pick up his family and start his drive from California to Arnett. (Infecting people he comes in contact with along the way - and them then infecting those they come in contact with, and so on, and so forth).

That is the re-cap. More or less.

Episode Review
Here comes Captain Trips


Not as Impacting as I would have liked, however, I am still excited. The acting was good. Very good, The pacing is also good. There was something missing by way of suspense, horror. I don't know exactly what it is, but it is missing. It is not as scary. Could it be because we are so immersed in Covid-19 that it just doesn't have the same 1994 and novel impact? Or does it fall on the direction of the scenes?

There are some cool songs played at the right times. Ozzy's Going Through Changes when Frannie and Harold plot their trip to Atlanta, and Billy Joel's The Stranger at the end leading up to Fade Out for the episode. 

Overall, the series is off to a good start, and I am anxious for the rest of the tale to unfold! I feel it could have been more compelling. The original series (and the book) had a different feel. There were less Sunny Days during the scenes, (it seemed). Less light. 

I am enjoying Marsden as Stu. He is a solid actor. He fits the role . . . right. He is not far from what I imagined for "Stu." Additionally, Teague is also perfectly cast as a creepy Harold. From his oily hair, to his skinny-skeletal body frame. I am most anxious to see Nick Andros hit the stage, as it were. I have never heard of "Henry Zaga." He is no Rob Lowe, but has, perhaps, the right look. (Rob Lowe portrayed Nick in the 1994 series and did a great job as a deaf-mute). Stu and Nick are perhaps my two favorite characters from the novel. No. They are.

As I re-read the book I envision grey. Not just grey skies, but grey everything. It is almost as if the words on the page only paint grey pictures. This is what I would expect to "feel" with such a horrific tale. But that is missing from this remake. That is what I best remember from the 1994 series as well. However, the last thing I want to do is spend 9 weeks comparing the three. And yet, here I am.

Also, I prefer chronological. The story starts in the not-so-distant future. Bounces back five months. It goes here. It goes there. It seems needlessly complicated. King wrote with two points, one in front of the other. It told a better story. Less room for confusion.

It may be because I am now re-reading the book again. The actuality is more fresh compared to the newest adaptation. 

Overall this review sounds as if I am disappointed. In some ways I am. In others, I am still happy and excited for the re-visitation. I guess my fingers are crossed. Squeezing tight. (I know I want to love this show. I just hope my desire doesn't blind me from seeing the show ... if that makes sense).

Please, leave your comments below, and subscribe to the blog so you don't miss a Recap / Review.

Phillip Tomasso
Author of the Amazon best selling horror novel, VACCINATION

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Book Review: A TIME FOR MERCY, John Grisham

 




John Grisham
A TIME FOR MERCY (Jake Brigance #3)
464 pages
Doubleday / October 2020
Crime / Legal / Thriller

Grisham returns to Ford County in Mississippi for the third (novel length) time! Attorney Jake Brigance is back. (While you do not need to read the first two in the "series"- I do highly recommend both: A Time to Kill [Grisham's first novel], and Sycamore Row. Both cases from these books are referenced throughout A Time for Mercy, but explained enough so readers who have not read them will not feel lost).

This time things are going good for Jake and Harry Rex. They have a case about to go to trial, and the money they plan to make (knowing it will settle) will be the largest settlement sum ever paid in Ford County. Case is pretty open and shut. A truck was struck by a train when the flashing lights were not properly working. Kids died. Injuries sustained . . .

But then things get turned upside down. Drew, a sixteen year old boy, shoots and kills a police officer. Jake wants nothing to do with the case. Killing a cop is bad news in Mississippi. Judge Noose, hearing the case, assigns Jake as the "public" defender. It couldn't be worse timing.

Jake has a reputation in Ford County: Getting people out of trouble who most people think should have served time. And this case was sure to garner unwanted attention. The citizens were crying for the death penalty. The gas chamber. No one could understand how or why Jake would be defending a cop killer.

The twist, the officer was a violent drunk. He beat his girlfriend, and her kids. As the case moves forward, other dark secrets are unearthed. The secrets can either hurt or help Jake's case. To make matters worse, a secret from Jake's own past creeps up and threatens the possible multi-million dollar pay out on his other case.

With everything on the line, zero money to try cases, and the town against him, Jake must do his best to not only win the case, but deliver justice in a courtroom drama to rival all of his other works.

Loved seeing Jake and the family again! Hope there will be more cases in Ford County in the future.

Another fantastic novel by one of the best legal thriller writers!

Phillip Tomasso
Author of YOU CHOOSE

Movie Review: SOUND OF METAL

 

Sound of Metal

Amazon Prime
Directer: Darius Marder
Writer: Darius Marder (Screenplay), Derek Cianfrance (Story by), Darius Marder / Abraham Marder (Written by)
1 Hour 41 Minutes / Drama

Riz Ahmed portrays Ruben -a recovering addict, and the drummer of a two-person metal band. His girlfriend, Lou (Olivia Cooke - Bates Motel), is the singer and guitar player in the band. Moments into the movie, Ruben discovers that his hearing is going.

The realization something is wrong with his hearing has him freaking out. He seeks medical advice. The doctor tells him regardless of how the issue started, the thing he needed to realize was that he would not be getting his hearing back.

In denial, Ruben searches for a solution. However, his old cravings begin returning. He has been clean four years. This news could be a major setback. Thankfully Lou makes some calls. She gets him into a program for deaf addicts. The treatment center is an old farm house in rural America, set away from the city. In this program, Joe (Paul Raci -Goliath) tells Ruben:

"As you know, everybody here shares in the belief that being deaf is not a handicap. Not something to fix."

The programs has Ruben in class with children. They are all learning sign language. At first he is embarrassed, and frustrated. He appears isolated, and in need of doing something more.

The progression of dinner scenes in the program are heartwarming, as Ruben slowly accepts his deafness and works at learning more about sign language and Deaf Culture.

One of the teachers, Diane (Lauren Ridloff -We Are the Walking Dead)  

Just as Ruben begins moving forward, connecting with the kids, the others in the program, he finds himself still faced with a very different future from the one he'd planned. The only person who can decide the road he can now go down is ... Ruben.

The movie was suggested to me by a friend. He knows I study American Sign Language and thought it would be a movie I would like. He was absolutely right. It pulled me right in. You immediately connect with Ruben. He is a flawed character forced to face readjusting dreams, relationships, and his future. You find yourself both annoyed with him, but also rooting for him. When Ruben realizes the outside world is moving ahead without him, Ruben disappoints me. Although I fully understand the WHY behind his decisions, it made the movie more  . . . real, but parts still left me feeling somewhat empty. Like Ruben says, "It's life. It's just life."

The movie tackles serious society issues when it comes to Deaf Culture, the deaf, the hearing, and the idea of Cochlear implants. Implants are a widely controversial procedure within the Deaf Community. Ruben missed the point of the treatment center, of the program. His expectations were too great. His hopes too strong. His disappointment too real. 

The very end of the film was what made it go from a good movie, to a Great movie. Ruben has to hit his own rock bottom before he can truly begin his climb. I suspect the path won't be easy. He will be faced with constant challenges. I like to believe Joe DID reach him, that his connection with the kids at the center did impact him. Fantastic film!

With 7 award nominations, and 5 winning Sunset Film Circle  awards, SOUND OF METAL is an emotionally complex film! The acting is authentic. (There is no actual music playing throughout the film, which made me think of Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler (2008). 

Phillip Tomasso
Author of the YA deaf sports novel, SOUNDS OF SILENCE