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Stephen King is a big 'softie,' and 'Life of Chuck' showcases his joyful side

Stephen King is a big 'softie,' and 'Life of Chuck' showcases his joyful side

Yahoo06-07-2025
Mike Flanagan has gone to the movies with Stephen King twice in his life.
When Flanagan adapted King's 'The Shining' sequel 'Doctor Sleep' in 2019, he screened it early for King in an empty Maine movie theater near the author's Bangor home and 'it was probably deeply uncomfortable for both of us,' Flanagan says. 'He happened to love the movie, but I was staring at him the whole time, just microanalyzing everything.'
Years later, when the writer/director made a cinematic version of King's novella 'The Life of Chuck' (in theaters nationwide June 13), Flanagan just sent him an online screening link. 'He loved it. And then kept asking to see it again,' the filmmaker recalls. 'We kept refreshing Steve's link. By the sixth or seventh time, I'm like, 'He really loves this movie.''
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So much so that it led to the second time they watched a movie together, with a thousand other people for the "Chuck" premiere last year at Toronto International Film Festival. The buzzy film won the fest's prized audience award − a harbinger of Oscar consideration, considering that the past 12 winners all nabbed best picture nominations – and has earned critical acclaim (80% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes).
It's also the rare King movie that, instead of a nightmare scenario, is the life-affirming tale of a seemingly ordinary accountant (Tom Hiddleston). Flanagan kept the author's unconventional three-act structure, told in reverse chronological order, that features the end of the world, an impromptu dance sequence and Chuck's formative kid years.
Usually, King's main characters are introduced having to deal with some sort of trauma, horror and/or supernatural clown. Our man Chuck comes alive one warm Thursday afternoon when the businessman hears a busking drummer.
'He puts his briefcase down and starts to move his hips to the beat of those drums,' Hiddleston says. 'And something remarkable happens and all of his interior joy explodes out of it.'
The scene expresses 'something really profound,' the actor adds, 'which is that as we get older, perhaps our lives seem to reduce, but we still contain those infinite possibilities that we understood as children.'
The dance is King's favorite: Flanagan reports that the author frequently revisits that bit during his "Chuck" viewings. At King's core, 'he's a softie that loves people,' adds Kate Siegel, Flanagan's wife, who plays Chuck's English teacher in the movie. 'He also loves to destroy you and kill off your favorite characters."
Like many of the iconic author's Constant Readers, Flanagan has watched his share of bad Stephen King movies over the years. He freely admits that 2017's 'The Dark Tower' movie was one of them. (He's working on turning King's fantasy series into a TV show.) 'When I saw 'Dreamcatcher' opening day, I was like, 'What happened?' ' he says.
A lot of filmmakers struggle to understand King's work, but Flanagan inherently gets it, as does Frank Darabont ('The Shawshank Redemption') and Rob Reiner ('Stand By Me'): 'He's not writing horror even when he is writing horror,' Flanagan says. 'He's an optimistic humanist and he's writing about love and humanity.'
For example, 'Pet Sematary' is 'the scariest book I've ever read in my life,' Flanagan says. But 'if you're making a movie about zombies coming back reanimated by a cemetery, you're making the wrong movie. If you're making a movie about how a parent could never resist the chance to save their child, then you're making the right movie.
'What always leaps out to me is, what is he really talking about here? Because if you say 'The Shining' is about a haunted hotel, and you don't say 'The Shining' is about alcoholism, you've missed it.'
King is 'someone with enormous courage in exploring corners of life that some of us might be too frightened to explore,' Hiddleston adds. But Flanagan smartly 'doesn't pigeonhole Stephen King. He sees King's breadth and range.'
Of King's more than 60 novels – plus many short stories and novellas – Mark Hamill figures he's read at least 40. (Currently, he's deep into King's 'On Writing.') For the "Star Wars" icon, who plays Chuck's grandpa Albie, the magic of King's prose is in the language.
'It's not like adjusting to the way Charles Dickens writes, or Mark Twain. He speaks the way we speak,' Hamill says. 'You're comfortable in space and time and familiar with the characters. So when things do go wonky, he already has you in his grip."
King's writing is "timeless," says "Chuck" castmate Karen Gillan. "We're all dealing with different things at different stages of life, but ultimately, he's exploring emotions that we can all connect to."
When a new King book is released, Flanagan first digs in as a fan. 'He's always been such a visual writer that inevitably there's this imaginary movie that plays in your head when you read it,' he says.
With 'Gerald's Game,' Flanagan had that movie in his head for more than a decade before making it for Netflix. 'Doctor Sleep' was 'this incredible puzzle box' where he had to weave together conflicting aspects of King's original 'Shining' narrative and Stanley Kubrick's classic movie, 'and it was nauseating every day to try to navigate it,' he says.
And after being emotionally steamrolled by his first reading of King's "Chuck" novella – to the point of "tears on my cheeks" – Flanagan's mission was simple: "Don't mess it up. It's about taking that beautiful story and just getting it up on the screen."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: 'The Life of Chuck': New Stephen King movie digs into his humanity
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'WWE: Unreal' cracks open a door the wrestling world has kept closed — until now
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'WWE: Unreal' cracks open a door the wrestling world has kept closed — until now

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‘How did It become Pennywise?' Andy and Barbara Muschietti reveal terrifying secrets of new HBO spin-off ‘Welcome to Derry'
‘How did It become Pennywise?' Andy and Barbara Muschietti reveal terrifying secrets of new HBO spin-off ‘Welcome to Derry'

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‘How did It become Pennywise?' Andy and Barbara Muschietti reveal terrifying secrets of new HBO spin-off ‘Welcome to Derry'

Things can get spooky at Comic-Con after dark. And thanks the combination of Stephen King and the filmmaking team of and Barbara Muschietti, the It: Welcome to Derry panel delivered the scares Saturday night in San Diego. The sibling duo shared a new teaser trailer (below), played the opening scene of their upcoming HBO series, which fleshes out stories from King's sprawling 1986 novel, and explained the impetus behind the initial eight-episode season. More from Gold Derby 'Avatar: Fire and Ash' trailer drops: Everything to know about James Cameron's return to Pandora Shocking cameos, new characters, emotional tributes: 5 biggest takeaways from 'Gen V' Season 2 panel at Comic-Con "One of the most fascinating things about the book is the cryptic factor, which is, you hear the story, you know certain things, but you never get to the end of anything. At the end of the book, nobody knows what the hell It is, what does it want? Who is Bob Gray? How did it all happen? We are going to ruin all this," Andy quipped, "by unveiling some of these mysteries, but with very good taste." Here's everything we learned about the show, which will debut this October, just in time for Halloween. What's the backstory? The Muschiettis spent the better part of a decade developing and producing the blockbuster It (2017) and It Chapter 2 (2019), but, as Andy Muschietti explains, the King book, which clocks in at 1,000-plus pages, was just too expansive to cover in his two films. There was still, as King might say, meat on the bone. Apart from all the joy that the two movies brought to us, there was also a frustration for not being able to tell a larger story. So there was always this idea of somehow like going back and digging into the book. Coming out of the movies with Bill, , we had conversations. We came out exhausted, but excited about the whole experience, and we always fantasized about doing an origin story: How did It become Pennywise? Which is one of the big mysteries in the book, and there's mention of this character Bill Gray. So the conversations were about that. How do we tell the story? And for a second it was a movie, and then, we both went our ways. Years passed, but the Muschiettis just couldn't shake Pennywise. They also began to entertain the idea of a series to tease out the untapped material. "There are more opportunities with a series," says Andy. "There is a larger canvas to explore the nuances of the characters." Once the had the bones of an idea, they took it to HBO. What's the plot? While the main story of the Losers Club, as both teens and adults, was told in the two films, there were parts of King's novel, notably the sections known as the interludes, that were only hinted at. As the Losers grow up and leave Derry, one of them, Mike Hanlon, stays behind to research the tragic events that occur every 27 years. Season 1 will focus on the 1962 burning of the Black Spot, a nightclub that catered to the Black airmen at the local base. Barbara Muschietti says the plan is for three seasons and will go back further in time with each one. "We talked to Stephen King — he's the greatest, and he was very supportive — and he had the idea of actually going backwards in time, so basically hitting Pennywise's cycles backwards. And that's why our first season of TV is in '62." "There's a reason why it goes backwards, but we can't tell you yet," Andy continues. "Then we go to 1935, and then we go to 1908, in theory," presuming the show gets renewed for multiple seasons. Each season will cover the mysterious events leading up to the specific catastrophe of each era. "We we're using [each season] as a base for the big events of the interludes — the burning of the Black Spot, the massacre of the Bradley Gang and the explosion of the Kitchner Ironworks — described in the books." "If you remember the movie, Mike is talking to his granddad in the beginning of the movie. This is the story of that guy, among others," says Andy, adding that the series will also explore "all the connections with the characters seen in the movie. And some will be obvious, some will not. Some will be revealed later on ... and the way they are connected, it is part of the drama, the comedy, and the horror of the stories." The panel featured the opening of Welcome to Derry, where a young boy (Miles Ekhardt) from a troubled home is chased from a movie theater after sneaking in to watch The Music Man ("You've got trouble, right here in River City!"). The boy, who sucks on a pacifier as a coping mechanism, hitches a ride with a family who asks where he's heading. "Anywhere but Derry," he replies. But the family is not what they seem and the scene ends with the car back in Derry and the boy's pacifier floating into the familiar sewers as the title comes up. Who's in the cast? In addition to Skarsgård returning as a certain dancing clown, the ensemble includes Taylour Paige, Jovan Adepo, Chris Chalk, James Remar, Stephen Rider, Madeleine Stowe, and Rudy Mancuso. While Andy Muschietti declined to divulge everyone's roles, he did note that Chalk is playing someone familiar to all King fans. "There's another character that you might know from The Shining, which is Dick Hallorann. That's not a surprise. It's in the book. He plays a very little role as as a character in the book. He has a bigger role in this one. It's a bit of a spoiler, but I think you deserve it." Who's the creative team? In addition to the Musciettis, the series was developed by Jason Fuchs, who also wrote the teleplay for the first episode. Fuchs is also serving as co-showrunner with Brad Caleb Kane. The Muschiettis, Fuchs, Kane, Skarsgård, David Coatsworth, Shelley Meals, Roy Lee, and Dan Lin are executive producers. Andy Muschietti is also directing multiple episodes, which he describes as "basically eight movies." What's the awards history of It? The first TV adaptation of It was the acclaimed 1990 miniseries starring Tim Curry as Pennywise. That was nominated for Emmys for music composition (which it won) and editing (which it lost). It also won the People's Choice Award for Best Miniseries and an Eddie Award for best editing. While they were box-office smashes with strong reviews, the It films didn't earn any Oscar nods. The first film did receive an MTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Team for its teenaged Losers Club along with a Golden Trailer Award for Best Horror and also wound up on several year-end top 10 lists. For the sequel, Bill Hader earned a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor. Meanwhile, the previous HBO adaptation of a King work, 2020's The Outsider, earned a Best Guest Actor Emmy nomination for Jason Bateman. When and where does it air? The first of eight It: Welcome to Derry episodes will premiere in October (the network has yet to specify a date) on HBO and HBO Max, with episodes dropping weekly afterwards. Watch the first teaser: Best of Gold Derby 'Five new life forms from distant planets': Everything to know about 'Alien: Earth' as new trailer drops Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2, including the departure of Tracy Ifeachor's Dr. Collins Everything to know about 'Too Much,' Lena Dunham's Netflix TV show starring Megan Stalter that's kinda, sorta 'based on a true story' Click here to read the full article. Solve the daily Crossword

WWE star Chelsea Green leaves social media after fallout over Hulk Hogan tribute
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