Let's go off on that topic, actually. What are your favorite/good adaptations of King's work?
I
love the Misery movie. While it does have some cons, I think the pros outweigh them.
Cons:
- Overall the movie really tones down the violence and arguably the horror of the situation. In the book, Annie actually chops off Paul's foot with an axe (complete with lovely descriptions of the axe getting caught in bone and the sound it makes when Annie yanks it free) whereas in the movie she just breaks his ankle with a sledgehammer. Which is still completely horrifying, but not as horrifying. Annie also cuts off Paul's thumb and uses it as a candle in a cake she gives to Paul. Oh, and there's a scene where Annie runs over a state trooper with a lawn mower (hilariously, Kathy Bates was apparently pissed this scene wasn't in the movie).
- The epilogue after Paul is rescued is longer in the book, with more focus being placed on his trauma. In the movie, Paul destroys the Misery book he wrote for Annie and later writes a non-Misery book that gets rave reviews. The only implication that he has PTSD is when he hallucinates seeing Annie. Meanwhile, in the book, he publishes the Misery novel and it gets rave reviews (implying that he's been sucked back into his unfulfilling and unhappy existence as a pulp fiction author). After that, however, he's left with major writer's block and has lost the motivation to create. The very end does has him get struck with inspiration as he finally begins to write again (crying tears of joy as he does so), but it's still a bleaker and more realistic ending than the movie imo. One thing I will point out is that in the original cut Paul didn't walk with a limp in the epilogue, but test audiences hated it so they reshot the ending with James Caan hobbling with a cane.
Pros:
- Kathy Bates and James Caan did a phenomenal job. Especially Kathy. They really brought the characters to life.
- One thing I really like about the movie is that they hide Annie is a psycho until later on. In the novel, Paul immediately knows Annie is crazy and is on edge around her. This is because he had done research on mental illness for his novels and was able to peg Annie as mentally ill (because in the books, she's has much less of a mask of normalcy). Right away he realizes he's being held captive. However, in the movie, Annie first appears as a sweet, caring nurse (albeit a little eccentric) who's good at pretending to be normal until she reads about Misery's death, at which point the mask comes off.
- While I really like the claustrophobic feel of the book (where Annie and Paul are the only characters for the vast majority of the book), I also liked the addition of the sheriff looking for Paul in the movie. It sorts of adds a ticking clock element and more suspense (not to mention optimism).
Overall I love both versions of Misery. I will say that the book is scarier and more straight horror whereas the movie is more of a psychological thriller.