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The Mist is one of those horror films that leaves you thinking after you've seen it. It stays with you for a few days as your mind comes back to it, remembering different events and characters as you try to process what you've seen. As you think about the movie, you tend to imagine yourself in those situations, thinking about what you would do or how you would react. Horror films don't get enough credit for being good movies because of all the garbage that gets spewed out but there are films which transcend that reputation and The Mist is one of them.
After a storm has knocked out the power to a small Maine town people flood a local grocery store to stock up on supplies. While doing so an eerie mist floods over the parking lot surrounding everyone inside just moments after a local resident rushes in bloody and yelling that there's something in the mist.
The movie does what most horror films attempt or should attempt to aspire to -- withhold the actual monsters as long as possible. And Frank Darabont does this. He gives glimpses of monsters like tentacles (after seeing them, one of the characters asks "what could those tentacles even be attached to?") and noises heard through the mist. When we finally do see some of the monsters we are shown overgrown insects and dinosaur like flying creatures but we are led to believe that these really aren't the worst or the biggest of what's out there. We get glimpses and insights into what those larger more terrifying creatures might be but we never actual see them which allows you're mind to imagine something far worse than any CGI creation could be.
On the surface, The Mist is a simple monster movie in the vein of 1950's science gone bad films like Them! or Godzilla. It's much more than that. As the story inside the supermarket unfolds, people take sides, adopt theories and eventually turn on each other. The movie is about society and the way we treat each other (or should treat each other). It's about fear and how people can react to it, opting for the simplest solutions, looking for those to blame, and singling out those who are different or weak or seen as dangerous. You could really see it, in many ways, as an allegory about the aftermath of 9/11.
The ending was the most shocking. I don't think I have ever started to cry at the end of a horror film but this really did bring tears to my eyes. I really don't want to give anything away about it but it was quite chilling and upsetting.
Good horror films are so hard to find, ones that truly do horrify but at the same time leave you with something, make you think, wonder. The best horror films really aren't about death and blood and gore but about life and people and what happens when they are faced with something terrible. This was one of them.
After a storm has knocked out the power to a small Maine town people flood a local grocery store to stock up on supplies. While doing so an eerie mist floods over the parking lot surrounding everyone inside just moments after a local resident rushes in bloody and yelling that there's something in the mist.
The movie does what most horror films attempt or should attempt to aspire to -- withhold the actual monsters as long as possible. And Frank Darabont does this. He gives glimpses of monsters like tentacles (after seeing them, one of the characters asks "what could those tentacles even be attached to?") and noises heard through the mist. When we finally do see some of the monsters we are shown overgrown insects and dinosaur like flying creatures but we are led to believe that these really aren't the worst or the biggest of what's out there. We get glimpses and insights into what those larger more terrifying creatures might be but we never actual see them which allows you're mind to imagine something far worse than any CGI creation could be.
On the surface, The Mist is a simple monster movie in the vein of 1950's science gone bad films like Them! or Godzilla. It's much more than that. As the story inside the supermarket unfolds, people take sides, adopt theories and eventually turn on each other. The movie is about society and the way we treat each other (or should treat each other). It's about fear and how people can react to it, opting for the simplest solutions, looking for those to blame, and singling out those who are different or weak or seen as dangerous. You could really see it, in many ways, as an allegory about the aftermath of 9/11.
The ending was the most shocking. I don't think I have ever started to cry at the end of a horror film but this really did bring tears to my eyes. I really don't want to give anything away about it but it was quite chilling and upsetting.
Good horror films are so hard to find, ones that truly do horrify but at the same time leave you with something, make you think, wonder. The best horror films really aren't about death and blood and gore but about life and people and what happens when they are faced with something terrible. This was one of them.