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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Thriller > Drama > Supernatural > Stephen King DVD Collector Set - MGM (Carrie/Misery/Dark Half/Needful Things)

Stephen King DVD Collector’s Set (MGM)

 

Picture: C+/C/C/C+     Sound: C+/C/C+/C+     Extras: B-/C-/C-/C-     Films:

 

Carrie (1976)   B

 

Misery (1990)   C+

 

The Dark Half (1991)   D

 

Needful Things (1993)   C+

 

 

As a catch-all set for those interested, MGM has issued a box of four theatrical feature films they have previously released on DVD and dubbed it the Stephen King DVD Collector’s Set.  These are actually some pretty old DVD pressings for the most part, though the films are uneven to boot.

 

The best of them is easily Brian De Palma’s original 1976 film of Carrie, one of the very best versions ever made of a King book.  Sissy Spacek plays the title character, a young lady rejected by her mean-spirited peers, stuck with a psychotic mother who takes The Bible way to far and stuck in the world alone.  After an ugly incident in gym class, some of the other girls (including Amy Irving, P.J. Soles and Nancy Allen in star-making turns) get in trouble, but decide to retarget Carrie White just the same.

 

It is her gym teacher Miss Collins (Betty Buckley) who tries to help, but even her co-workers in the administration of the school are ineffective, apathetic and are as much of the problem as a result are as complicit.  The prom is on the way and the girls plan to ignore Collins and hatch a plot including the help of a few of their male friends (including John Travolta and William Katt) to get back at Carrie.

 

Unfortunately for all of them, she has a secret connected to her coming of age and if they do not turn back their plans and self-centered hatreds in time, but they just cannot help themselves resulting in one of the most unforgettable prom nights in cinema history.

 

A big hit that could have been bigger if United Artists had given it a top-rate Exorcist or Omen type of release, it is one of the most influential films of the 1970s.  It has been imitated, ripped-off and there is even a terrible TV remake that was recently made and quickly forgotten.  Unfortunately at the time, King and De Palma were not respectable enough and the film was not the blockbuster it deserved to be.  It is a classic of its genre and has rarely been equaled since.

 

 

Rob Reiner directed Misery and though he did it with little distinction, James Caan was the right choice for author Paul Sheldon of the hit book series he has grown tired of and Kathy Bates steals the film in her remarkably consistent performance as obsessed fan Annie, who loves the book series, lands up saving Paul from a car accident and then want to “help” him until he finds out the heroine of the series will die in the last book.  She will not have that and will do what she must to make him change his mind about changing the book’s outcome.  The film becomes almost self-satire in Reiner’s indistinctive hands, making this critic always wonder what would have happened if a stronger director handled the material.

 

Many have bashed George Romero’s work on the hit anthology film Creepshow, but any problems that film has a re a picnic as compared to the commercial and critical failure of The Dark Half, a disastrous commercial follow-up to his very underrated Monkey Shines.  Like Misery, the story centers on a writer (Timothy Hutton) who wants to distance himself from his franchise of murder books and comes up with a dumb scheme to do so, which backfires when people actually start turning up dead.  Despite Hutton’s best efforts, the incoherence of the Romero and King styles really does not gel here and this becomes very tired very quickly.

 

Finally is the underrated Needful Things, a dark comedy that became the last major Castle Rock production before Turner Entertainment bought the company.  Though not perfect, the Fraser C. Heston-directed tale is about a mysterious figure (Max Von Sydow) who visits the actual Castle Rock, Maine and brings nothing but havoc in his wake, especially as the townspeople suddenly turn on each other.  The local sheriff (Ed Harris) is befuddled as to why at first, then it becomes apparent their new guest is up to something very evil.  The cast includes Bonnie Bedelia, Amanda Plummer and the late, great character actor J.T. Walsh in one of the more underrated adaptations of a King work.  This one is worth a look and some rediscovery for its daring to be dark.

 

All of these films were 1.85 X 1 theatrical releases, but are presented here in various forms.  Carrie and Needful Things are anamorphically enhanced and fare the best, though both are softer than they should be, with Needful Things having less of an excuse since it is not over 30 years old like the De Palma film.  Mario Tosi’s cinematography is particularly impressive, even against work by Barry (Misery) Sonnenfeld and the great Tony (Dark Half) Pierce-Roberts, B.S.C., while Misery is only full screen & letterboxed and Dark Half is actually only Full Screen!  It looks the worse.

 

All the films are Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo, but with very weak surrounds, except Carrie.  At the time this then-25th anniversary DVD arrived, MGM still has their great contract doing deluxe CD soundtracks with the Rykodisc label and those discs often included samples of dialogue.  Now all collectible, MGM did a 5.1 remix of the previously monophonic Carrie and used the music to fill the surrounds.  It actually lacked the warmth and fullness of PCM 2.0 Mono tracks on 12” LaserDisc releases of the film, including a Criterion Collection edition, though Pino Donaggio’s score (with pieces of Bernard Herrmann here and there) is terrific.  This will need a remix upgrade with better dialogue and sound effects sources like the Bond films when the Blu-ray arrives.

 

Extras include theatrical trailers on all four DVDs, booklets on all but Needful Things and the only other extras are on Carrie.  Though they are not all the extras from The Criterion LaserDisc, they include King biography, piece on the attempted musical version of the film, animated photo gallery and two solid documentaries on the film: Acting Carrie and Visualizing Carrie.  It’s easily the best film in the set and up there with Apt Pupil and Kubrick’s The Shining as the best adaptation of a King thriller ever set to film.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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