Storm of the Century
Storm of the Century | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama Horror Fantasy Thriller |
Written by | Stephen King |
Directed by | Craig R. Baxley |
Starring | Tim Daly Colm Feore Debrah Farentino Casey Siemaszko Jeffrey DeMunn |
Music by | Gary Chang |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 3 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Stephen King Mark Carliner |
Producer | Thomas H. Brodek |
Cinematography | David Connell |
Editor | Sonny Baskin |
Running time | 257 min. |
Production companies | Mark Carliner Productions Greengrass Productions |
Budget | $35,000,000[1] |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | February 14 February 18, 1999 | –
Storm of the Century, alternatively known as Stephen King's Storm of the Century, is a 1999 American horror television miniseries written by Stephen King and directed by Craig R. Baxley. Unlike many other television adaptations of King's work, Storm of the Century was not based on a novel but was an original screenplay written by the author and directly produced for television. King described the screenplay as a "novel for television".[2] The screenplay was published as a mass-market book in February 1999 prior to the TV broadcast of the miniseries.[3]
King has called Storm of the Century his personal favorite of all the TV productions related to his works.[4]
Plot
[edit]As the people of Little Tall Island, Maine prepare for a powerful blizzard in 1989, elderly resident Martha Clarendon is brutally murdered by a menacing stranger. Town manager Robbie Beals investigates, and the stranger terrifies him by relating shameful secrets from his past. Mike Anderson, a supermarket manager and part-time constable, arrests the stranger, who identifies himself as André Linoge. Linoge seems to know the names and morbid secrets of all the island's residents, and is particularly interested in Mike's son Ralphie, who has a birthmark on his nose. Yet he gives no hint of his own background, saying only, "Give me what I want, and I'll go away." While sitting in a jail cell, Linoge possesses the minds of several townspeople, causing suicides and a murder. He then escapes the jail in the form of a wizened old man and repeats his demand before disappearing into the storm.
The residents take shelter from the storm in the town hall. As they sleep, Linoge appears on the televisions as a televangelist and lectures them on the consequences of refusing to accommodate a stranger. The residents have the same dream in which authorities find the island deserted after the storm and the word "Croaton" carved on a tree. A news reporter connects the disappearance to the lost Roanoke colony. Meanwhile Mike dreams that the townspeople walk into the ocean and drown. The next day, Linoge causes three residents to vanish while everyone is watching the lighthouse collapse. Two die and the third, Angie Carver, is discovered alive but visibly aged. Ralphie goes missing and, when found in a closet, says that he was with Linoge. With each death and abduction, Linoge sends his demand again.
The town's children fall under a spell and go to sleep, dreaming that they are flying through the clouds with Linoge. That evening Mike finds Linoge inside the town hall holding a resident hostage. Amused by Mike's sympathy for the townspeople, Linoge says that they are all sinners and criminals who merely pretend to be decent. He tells Mike to arrange a town meeting at 9:00 that night and escapes again. When the meeting gathers, Linoge tells the residents that he has lived thousands of years and, having grown old, he wants a child whom he can raise to be a sorcerer like him. He cannot take a child by force, but the dream that the residents had will come true if they refuse. He leaves them to debate for half an hour. Mike urges the people to stand up to Linoge and is horrified when all of them, even his wife Molly, decide to give in. Linoge returns and presides over a lottery in which Ralphie is chosen. Taking his natural elderly form once more, Linoge contemptuously thanks the residents and warns them never to speak about what has happened. He then walks out of the town hall with Ralphie in his arms and flies into the night sky. Mike rushes outside and falls to his knees in the snow, ignoring the people who sacrificed his child for their own sakes.
In an epilogue, Mike divorces Molly, leaves Little Tall and severs ties with the people he once swore to protect and those he once called friends; he moves to California and becomes a U.S. Marshal in San Francisco. Having lost the last thing she ever loved, a thoroughly depressed Molly eventually gets remarried to Alton "Hatch" Hatcher, Mike's deputy constable whose wife died a year and a half after the Storm of the Century. After unsuccessfully attempting to convince Mike to stay in Little Tall, several other residents succumb to their guilt and commit suicide (including Robbie Beals' wife Sandra and Angie's husband Jack) over the course of nine years. Years later, Linoge and Ralphie walk past Mike in Chinatown, Ralphie having become corrupted and evil. Mike considers telling Molly what he saw, but ultimately decides it's better to stay quiet and move on.
Cast
[edit]- Tim Daly as Constable Michael "Mike" Anderson
- Debrah Farentino as Molly Anderson
- Dyllan Christopher as Ralph Emerick "Ralphie" Anderson
- Colm Feore as Andre Linoge / Reporter / Televangelist
- Jeffrey DeMunn as Town Manager Robert "Robbie" Beals
- Nada Despotovich as Sandra "Sandy" Beals
- Spencer Breslin as Donny Beals
- Denis Forest as Kirk Freeman
- Nicky Guadagni as Jenna Freeman
- Julianne Nicholson as Katrina "Kat" Withers
- Casey Siemaszko as Alton "Hatch" Hatcher
- Soo Garay as Melinda Hatcher
- Skye McCole Bartusiak as Pippa Hatcher
- Ron Perkins as Peter Godsoe
- Becky Ann Baker as Ursula Godsoe
- Cayda Rubin as Sally Godsoe
- Nancy Beatty as Octavia Godsoe
- Richard Fitzpatrick as Jonas Stanhope
- Kathleen Chalfant as Joanna Stanhope
- Myra Carter as Cora Stanhope
- Rita Tuckett as Martha Claredon
- Christopher Marren as Henry Bright
- Tyler Bannerman as Frank Bright
- Adam Zolotin as Davey Hopewell
- Gaylyn Britton as Mary Hopewell
- Michael Rhoades as Stan Hopewell
- Steve Rankin as Jack Carver
- Torri Higginson as Angela Carver
- Stephen Joffe as Buster Carver
- Kay Tremblay as Robbie Beals' false mother
- Adam LeFevre as Ferd Andrews
- Peter MacNeill as Sonny Brautigan
- Beth Dixon as Tess Merchant
- Leif Anderson as Johnny Harriman
- Marcia Laskowski as Linda St. Pierre
- Harley English-Dixon as Heidi St. Pierre
- Gerard Parkes as Orville Boucher
- Richard Blackburn as Andy Robichaux
- Jeremy Jordan as William "Billy" Soames
- Lynne Griffin as Jane Kingsbury
- Stephen King as plaintiff attorney
Production
[edit]The screenplay for the miniseries was written by Stephen King expressly for television. The screenplay was published as a mass-market book by Pocket Books just prior to the initial airing of Storm of the Century on ABC.[3] The book included photographs of the TV miniseries. The book contains an introduction in which King describes the genesis of the idea as it occurred to him in late 1996. Beginning to write it in December 1996, he initially debated if the story should be either a novel or a screenplay. He described the result as a "novel for television".[2] A hardcover edition, written as a screenplay rather than "prose", was published concurrently by the Book of the Month Club.
Storm of the Century was filmed in Southwest Harbor, Maine and Toronto in 1998.[1]
Release and reception
[edit]Storm of the Century aired on ABC on February 14–18, 1999. It was released on DVD on June 22 the same year.[5]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 82% based on 22 reviews, with an average rating of 7.33/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Chilling performances and an even darker moral dilemma shelter Storm of the Century's somewhat long-winded tale from ever being anything less than watchable."[6]
Director Mike Flanagan has cited Storm of the Century as a major influence on his 2021 Netflix miniseries Midnight Mass.[7]
U.S. Television Ratings:
No. | Title | Original air date | U.S. viewers
(millions)[8] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Storm of the Century, Part 1 | February 14, 1999 | 19.4 |
2 | Storm of the Century, Part 2 | February 15, 1999 | 18.9 |
3 | Storm of the Century, Part 3 | February 18, 1999 | 19.2 |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Fries, Laura (February 9, 1999). "Stephen King's Storm of the Century". Variety. Retrieved 2023-08-23.
- ^ a b "Introduction", Storm of the Century, Stephen King (ISBN 978-0965796934)
- ^ a b Storm of the Century - An Original Screenplay, Pocket Books, February 1999
- ^ Eisenberg, Eric (December 15, 2020). "The Stand's Stephen King Reveals His Favorite TV Project, And It's An Unexpected Choice". CinemaBlend. Retrieved December 16, 2020.
- ^ Baxley, Craig R. (director), King, Stephen (writer) (June 22, 1999). Storm of the Century (DVD). Lions Gate. ISBN 1573625779.
- ^ "Storm of the Century: Miniseries". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 22, 2020.
- ^ "Mike Flanagan".
- ^ HAITHMAN, DIANE (1999-02-20). "Arts And Entertainment Reports From The Times, News Services And The Nation's Press". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2018-03-06.
External links
[edit]- 1999 television films
- 1999 films
- 1999 American television series debuts
- 1999 American television series endings
- 1990s American television miniseries
- Films directed by Craig R. Baxley
- Films set during snowstorms
- Saturn Award-winning television series
- Television series set on fictional islands
- Television shows set in Maine
- Television shows set in San Francisco
- Television series by Lionsgate Television
- Television series by Warner Bros. Television Studios
- Demons in television
- Television shows written by Stephen King