Every now and then, usually in one of his novella collections, Stephen King offers up a story outside the borders of the horror genre for which he his known. When they're adapted into movies (as all his writing inevitably is), they often garner more acclaim than than the horror films; The Green Mile was Oscar-nominated, Stand By Me is widely loved, and The Shawshank Redemption (according to the users of IMDb) remains "the best movie ever made."
That's a long wind-up, but it's all to say that I was really interested in what Mike Flanagan, who has won me over with his work in horror, could do with a non-horror story from the "master of horror." That new movie is The Life of Chuck.
Part of the reason for the long wind-up is that I feel like I can't actually say much about the movie itself. The Life of Chuck isn't exactly a story that turns on a "twist," but I do feel like the more you know about it going in, the more of the essence of it would already be dribbling away. Suffice it to say that the title is not a misdirection. It really is the story of the life of one Chuck Krantz, divided formally into a three-act structure... but with the three acts presented in reverse order. It touches on many emotions and themes along the way, but is primarily a story about finding the joy amid hardship and loss.
Anyone who has watched those Mike Flanagan projects I linked to in my intro will know that he likes to work with the same actors again and again, always picking up new performers along the way, but staying fiercely loyal to his "repertory company." The Life of Chuck is no exception; you'll see Flanagan staples like Kate Siegel, Samantha Sloyan, and Rahul Kohli. Relative Flanagan newcomer Mark Hamill gets an especially juicy role in the last half ("act one") of the movie.
But The Life of Chuck brings many other people to the mix -- many of whom it would be great to see integrated into the "company" -- including Chiwetel Ejiofor, Karen Gillan, Jacob Tremblay, Carl Lumbly, and Matthew Lillard. Mia Sara, who had formally retired from acting, came back to work with Flanagan. A huge child talent has been brought to film in Benjamin Pajak. You get exquisite narration from Nick Offerman. And other recognizable faces are happy to turn up just for one fun scene, people like David Dastmalchian and Harvey Guillén.
And of course, you get Tom Hiddleston in the title role. Interestingly, the sprawling nature of the story -- incorporating dozens of characters and spanning many decades -- means that Hiddleston actually isn't in that much of the film. But it all absolutely turns on his performance. One scene in particular, at the very heart of the movie, is very much the make-or-break moment for the entire story. Together with scene partners Annalise Basso and Taylor Gordon, Hiddleston musters all his considerable charisma into a completely physical performance that encapsulates everything the story is about.
I enjoyed The Life of Chuck very much... though I would not say it's without faults. By the time the entire narrative has been revealed, it's unclear why the opening of the story ("act three") needed to go on quite as long as it did. I'm also not sure whether that one key scene in the middle, good as it is, can alone sell you on the notion of an entire life lived to the fullest. Still, I did find the movie joyful and uplifting. And the sprawling (and excellent) cast alone feels like reason enough to give it a try. I give The Life of Chuck a B+.