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Tuesday, 1 August 2017

‘Needful Things’ Is Both the Very Best and the Very Worst of Stephen King Adaptations

By Matthew Monagle

With ‘The Dark Tower’ hitting theaters this weekend, we look at another Stephen King adaptation to see what does (and doesn’t) work in his movie adaptations.

I currently own two copies of Stephen King’s Needful Things. One, a paperback edition of King’s 1991 novel, holds no special meaning for me; given my proclivity for leaving copies of King’s books in airplane pouches and hotel rooms around the world, this is probably the third or fourth copy of Needful Things I’ve purchased in my lifetime. The second, however, is different. It’s a first-edition copy of King’s book, still in its original plastic wrap, and the first in an ongoing series of first-edition King novels given to me by my wife as birthday gifts. Not the most expensive of King’s first-edition novels – my wife was not asked to pull a ‘harmless prank’ as part of her online checkout process – but that doesn’t matter to me. I’m just happy to own a first printing of my favorite book by my favorite author.

Everything you need to know about Stephen King as an author is present in Needful Things. His desire to set each of his novels in a shared literary universe; his expansive cast of both sympathetic and unlikable characters; the underpinnings of faith and religion that quietly comprise some of his best works. Perhaps most important, though, is King’s clear preference for men over monsters. The one word that best describes King as an author is ‘rot,’ where characters backed into corners by guilt and fear are the last to recognize the poison inside them. Never has King taken more satisfaction in watching normal people unravel with just a few gentle nudges. Reading Needful Things is like watching King construct his own horrific Rube Goldberg machine.

That’s what makes the cinematic adaptation of Needful Things such a revealing point of comparison between King’s literary work and his films. Last week, I argued that King’s legacy within Hollywood would be considerably more conflicted than his legacy as an author; movies like Needful Things do a great job of demonstrating why the same elements that make King a joy to read so often cause his adaptations to collapse (and draw mediocre talents as writers and directors). On paper, Needful Things might be the strongest of King’s non-The Shining horror canon. Not only does the film star the legendary Max von Sydow as the sole proprietor of the title shop, it also brings together an impressive assortment of character actors, including Ed Harris, Ray McKinnon, Amanda Plummer, and the late, great J.T. Walsh. King’s horror adaptations are rarely given this much talent to work with; too often, his adaptations are forced to make due with second-tier talents playing out the string.

Unlike the book, which primarily focuses on the relationship between Ed Harris’s sheriff and Bonnie Bedelia’s cafe owner, the movie adaptation of Needful Things is almost entirely the Max von Sydow and J.T. Walsh show. No movie starring Sydow as a charismatic version of the devil can be entirely bad, and there are moments early in the film – when the characters are discovering Leland Gaunt’s curio shop for the first time – where the adaptation rises to the level of its source material. Sydow gently coos at each of his broken customers, caressing their weaknesses and promising them everything their heart desires… for a token amount of money and a small favor. When Walsh’s character falls under Gaunt’s influence, the movie takes a page from Dracula and creates a power dynamic reminiscent of the vampire and his human familiar; it’s less interesting the more broadly its played, but nobody can accuse Walsh or Sydow of refusing to commit.

There is also a darkness to the film that surprises, especially given TNT’s original plans to release Needful Things as a television mini-series after its theatrical release. From the constant use of profanity to the surprising bursts of violence as residents of Castle Rock square off, Needful Things is, at the very least, not the watered down version of King’s novel that so often finds its way to the big screen. The film might fall short of some of the book’s most memorable moments – it cuts out some of the weirdest sexual elements from the novel and flinches when the moment comes to have the youthful Brian kill himself – but especially given some of the campiness present in King’s other horror films, Needful Things at least has its heart in the right place.

The article ‘Needful Things’ Is Both the Very Best and the Very Worst of Stephen King Adaptations appeared first on Film School Rejects.

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