Ah, The Mist. Frank Darabont, the same man who brought us The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile, decided to try his hand at horror. Instead of prison drama and uplifting speeches about hope, we got a two-hour anxiety attack in a supermarket with a cast of characters who make you root for the monsters out of sheer boredom and frustration. If Shawshank made you want to escape prison, The Mist makes you want to escape life.
The Premise: Walmart Apocalypse
A storm rolls into small-town Maine and brings with it a mysterious mist. Normally, mist just ruins your hair and makes driving slightly annoying. But this mist? This mist has monsters in it. Not just any monsters, either—Lovecraftian nightmares with tentacles, bugs the size of Buicks, and spiders that shoot acid webs. If Stephen King was trying to prove that New England weather really is the scariest part of the country, congratulations, point made.
So, everyone hides in a supermarket, because of course they do. And you know what? That’s actually not a bad idea. If I’m going to die, I’d at least like to have access to Oreos and rotisserie chicken while it happens. Unfortunately, this movie forgets it has giant monsters outside and instead spends 75% of its time showing how humans trapped in a grocery store will devolve into bickering toddlers.
The Cast of Idiots
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David (Thomas Jane): Our hero. He’s an artist who can’t stop sighing. He’s basically Discount Viggo Mortensen. He tries to keep everyone sane, which, in a Stephen King story, is as effective as handing out pamphlets about sobriety at a frat party.
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Billy (Nathan Gamble): David’s son. His job is to cry, look sad, and eventually give the audience a reason to scream “WHY, GOD, WHY?” at the finale.
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Mrs. Carmody (Marcia Gay Harden): The real villain of the film. A religious fanatic who decides that the mist is God’s punishment, and that human sacrifice is the solution. She turns into a cult leader faster than you can say “Jim Jones,” and by the end you’ll be begging one of the monsters to eat her just to shut her up.
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Brent (Andre Braugher): David’s lawyer neighbor, who spends his time loudly denying anything is wrong. He exits into the mist early, which is probably the smartest move anyone in this movie makes.
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Ollie (Toby Jones): The assistant manager with a gun and the only character with common sense. Which means, naturally, he dies.
Honestly, the monsters aren’t scary. The people are scary, but not in a good way. Watching this group squabble is like being trapped in line at Walmart behind a family arguing over coupons. You just want it to end.
The Monsters: CGI Shrimp from Hell
Let’s talk about the “cosmic horrors.” They’re supposed to be nightmare fuel—creatures from another dimension that defy human understanding. Instead, they look like rejected Pokémon. Tentacles with teeth, bugs with stingers, spiders that spit acid—okay, gross, but also hilariously fake. The CGI looks like something from a PlayStation 2 cutscene. The big “colossal creature” reveal is less Lovecraftian horror and more wow, that’s a blurry blob with legs.
If you’re going to sell me cosmic terror, at least make it look scarier than a shrimp platter left out in the sun.
The Real Horror: The Writing
Darabont wanted to explore “how people turn on each other in times of crisis.” Great idea. Unfortunately, it’s executed with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer to the groin. Characters go from calm to cult-crazy in about ten minutes. One woman prays, gets ignored, and suddenly half the supermarket is chanting with her like she’s handing out free iPhones.
Then there’s the dialogue. Gems include:
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“It’s death out there. It’s death!” (No kidding, Brenda.)
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“The monsters are out there… and they are coming for us!” (Really? I thought the giant tentacle was here to offer car insurance.)
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“We need to sacrifice the boy!” (Of course you do. Because nothing screams ‘God’s mercy’ like killing a crying child.)
It’s less cosmic horror, more community-theater Lord of the Flies.
The Ending: Pessimism with Extra Salt
Ah, the infamous ending. In Stephen King’s novella, the survivors just keep driving into the mist, unsure of what’s ahead. Spooky, ambiguous, kind of poetic. But Darabont said, “No, let’s traumatize the audience instead.”
So here’s what happens: David, out of gas and out of hope, mercy-kills his son and his friends with four bullets. Then he steps out, ready to be eaten by monsters… only for the mist to clear and the U.S. Army to arrive, flamethrowers blazing, saving everyone. Yep. Salvation comes literally thirty seconds after he shoots his kid in the face.
You can practically hear Darabont cackling: “How’s that for horror, you miserable pigs?!” It’s not scary—it’s mean. It’s like baking someone a birthday cake and, right before serving it, punting it into traffic.
Performances: Overcooked Like Gas Station Pizza
Thomas Jane gives his best “tired dad” energy, but even he looks like he wants to leave halfway through. Marcia Gay Harden, bless her, acts her heart out as Mrs. Carmody, but she’s so cartoonishly evil she makes Cruella de Vil look like a reasonable pet owner. Everyone else is either overacting or underacting, which makes sense because the script has all the depth of a wet paper bag.
Andre Braugher, a phenomenal actor, gets about twenty minutes of screen time before walking into the mist and out of the movie. Honestly, lucky him.
Cinematography: Shaky Supermarket Cam
The film was shot with hand-held cameras, allegedly to give it a documentary feel. In practice, it looks like a drunk uncle trying to film a wedding. Everything wobbles, zooms awkwardly, and cuts too quickly. Pair that with the dim lighting and fog machines, and half the time you can’t tell if you’re looking at a monster or someone just dropped a rotisserie chicken on the floor.
The Message: People Are Worse Than Monsters
Yes, we get it. Humans are the real monsters. Society collapses under fear. Faith can be twisted into cruelty. These are great themes, but the movie pounds them into your skull with all the finesse of a marching band in steel-toed boots. By the time Mrs. Carmody is calling for child sacrifice, you’re not scared—you’re rolling your eyes and hoping the cashier ghosts everyone’s credit card debt before the spiders eat him.
Final Thoughts: Foggy Logic, Clear Disappointment
The Mist had everything going for it: Stephen King source material, a talented director, a solid cast. And yet it somehow manages to be less scary than actual mist, which at least ruins your hair and your visibility without also boring you to death. The monsters aren’t frightening, the humans are irritating, and the ending is just spiteful.
It’s a movie that asks, “What if humanity fell apart in a supermarket?” but the real question is: “Why did I waste two hours watching this instead of going to an actual supermarket, which is scarier and cheaper?”
Final Rating: 1.5 out of 5 Tentacle Shrimp
Watch it if you hate yourself, your children, and any hope for mankind. Otherwise, just go stand in actual fog—it’s a better use of your time.
