A Personal
Response to Misery
Misery was a film adaptation of the Stephen King novel of the same name. It was released in theatres in 1990 and was directed by Rob Reiner. The film follows the character Paul Sheldon (played by James Caan), a writer who finds himself saved by his biggest fan (a character name Annie Wilkes who is played by Kathy Bates). Over the course of the film, it is slowly revealed that Annie is not the saviour she appears to be and a psychological thriller ensues.
For me, the film Misery was disappointing. The main reasons I
found it to be disappointing (which I shall be discussing) were its handling of
tension, its over use of tropes and its (in my opinion) poor ending.
There were several aspects of the film which could’ve been
expanded upon to create greater depth - such as the pig named Misery, which
could’ve been utilised more as a metaphor for the Misery books and Paul
Sheldon’s relationship to them, Annie Wilkes relationship to the character
Misery, or the emotion of misery itself. But no, instead the pig seems to be
used only to tell the audience that Annie Welks is childish and lives on the
farm, a fact that can already be inferred by watching the previous scenes.
The inherent weakness and vulnerability of sleep and from
being drugged could have been utilised a lot more, especially since a lot of
scenes with Paul Sheldon begin with him waking up. I feel there would have been
more psychological horror for the audience to experience if sleep itself was an
element of the horror – which brings me to my next point.
I personally only felt tension in two scenes of the film.
This is not a good thing for me. The film could have manipulated the
information the audience was giving to lull them into a false sense of security
and then shock them later but no; watching the film as a whole, I noticed that
when the characters were expressing signs of tension, I was not tense – if I
was, I was certainly not feeling as much tension as they were intending for me
to and this disappointed me.
Also, a lot more could have been done surrounding the burning
of manuscripts. Instead of being a representation of letting go or a
representation of loss in general, the burning of manuscripts is shown just to
let the audience know that Annie is a bad person and that she likes the Misery
books – even this is a plot point that is supposed to link the beginning to the
end. Again, this is a fact that can be inferred by watching the rest of the
film.
When Paul Sheldon’s manuscripts are originally burnt, Annie
Wilkes burns them over a barbeque; the fact a barbeque was used led me to
believe she was going to feed the book to Paul and I was mistaken. This
would’ve made the film more horrific and work much better in my opinion as I
feel that the threat of Annie Wilkes wasn’t established well, that is until she
randomly pulls out a gigantic weapon seemingly out of nowhere to brutalise
someone. Even when brutalising someone, there is not enough time given for the
audience to really feel the tension or debilitation of it: Paul keeps on
writing as he once did and even gets a comedic middle finger out of his
hobbling, and the sheriff gets hidden away without any reaction of his wife and
friends he left behind.
The death of the Sheriff marks the beginning of a rushed and
poor ending to the film. This point suddenly changes character motives to try
to tie the plot into a neat bow. For example, Annie Welks – seemingly built up
to be either a usurper of Paul Sheldon or lover of his writing – suddenly
wishes to kill both her and Paul which is not at all what the film felt like it
was leading to for me.
During the final fight, several tropes of horror are used.
The main one used is the ‘not quite dead’ villain trope. Although the pacing of
the ending is too quick for these tropes to really bear any weight on the plot,
just like the rest of the ending... WHOOPS DID I JUST SAY THAT OUTLOUD?!
But seriously, the
ending was rushed and this normally stops there from being any emotional weight
put on the audience until the final scene, so I’m glad they really put in a
good emotionally impactful ending... wait what? No they didn’t. I hated the
ending to this film – I can’t say otherwise. For one it’s comedic so doesn’t
reflect the tone of the film and since when did movies actually become good
from having silly one liners put in the end of films, especially in a supposed
horror film? It just seemed tonally jarring and really left a bad taste in my
mouth.
Also, I feel like the idea of this film being an interesting
gender role reversal in cinema is wrong. Looking at it deeply with
gender-vision turned on, you can see it is a film about a woman trying to
become more powerful than a man and no matter how hard she tries, she is still
overcome (and also murdered) by a man. Although she did kill that old man on
screen, but then again gender-vision will show you that he obviously (heavy
sarcasm is heavy) deserved it because he wasn’t sexually satisfying his wife
enough.
To avoid being over critical I’d like to discuss what the
filmmakers did excellently – setting up and its use of detail. Every shot and
every line of dialogue could be seen as set up for what was to come; my issue
is just that the pay off from the majority of this was unfulfilling. The filmmakers
also used visual cues to tell the audience key parts of the story without using
the ever frustrating exposition Hollywood seems to love recently. The actors
also gave magnificent performances, often not having to speak to convey
emotions and responses to actions.
To say a film is
disappointing, to me, does not make it bad film. In fact, I think misery is
actually a very good film; it just left me wanting more. Whether it being
overhyped by fans of the film or just my own experience with cinema and storytelling,
I felt that a lot more could have been done with the film.