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- <text id=94TT0607>
- <title>
- May 09, 1994: Television:Slouching Toward Vegas
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/TELEVISION, Page 83
- Slouching Towards Vegas
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The Stand, Stephen King's apocalyptic novel, becomes an often
- gripping, occasionally overblown mini-series
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> Like the vampires, ghouls, rabid dogs and other monsters that
- populate his fiction, Stephen King seems practically unstoppable.
- New novels appear with almost supernatural speed, take a choke
- hold on the best-seller lists, and are transformed into movies
- that typically make a quick blitz at the box office before settling
- into a long, lucrative life on the video shelves. For an impressive
- array of filmmakers, from Brian De Palma to Rob Reiner, King
- has made an ideal collaborator: he provides the sprawling, imaginative
- raw material; they bring the cinematic compression and sometimes
- (as in Stanley Kubrick's The Shining) the resonance of art.
- </p>
- <p> Television, however, handles King clumsily. ABC's four-hour
- version of It (childhood friends battle nameless evil, personified
- by Tim Curry as a malevolent clown) was bloated and out of control,
- while The Tommyknockers (more nameless evil, this time chasing
- Jimmy Smits) seemed derivative and halfhearted. Still, both
- were big hits in the ratings. At a time when TV is awash in
- docudramas and uplifting moral tales, King's dark, fanciful
- (though still moralistic) stories seem liberating.
- </p>
- <p> The Stand, airing on ABC next week, is the biggest TV serving
- of King yet. Based on his 800-page 1978 novel (to which the
- author restored 400 previously cut pages in 1990), it spans
- four nights and eight hours and portrays nothing less than the
- end of the world as we know it. King's horrors, as usual, are
- firmly rooted in the everyday. The opening scene sets the tone.
- At a government lab nestled in a quiet California desert community,
- a security guard gets a panicked alarm: the containment of a
- deadly experimental virus has been breached. Instead of triggering
- the security system, the guard races across the manicured lawns,
- grabs his wife and baby and bolts off in a car before the area
- can be quarantined.
- </p>
- <p> He is the unwitting carrier of a germ that causes flulike symptoms
- and sudden, grisly death in almost everyone who comes in contact
- with it. A simple cough and sniffle are the homely signs of
- doom. In a series of short, effective scenes that hopscotch
- around the country--a small town in East Texas, a disease-control
- lab in Vermont, the streets of New York City--the plague spreads,
- causing death, panic, chaos. Practically all that remains of
- civilization is talk-radio etiquette. A radio host (Kathy Bates),
- enraged about the "superflu" cover-up, takes calls from panicked
- listeners who tell of dying babies and mass body burnings. Says
- one caller: "First of all ((cough)), I just want to tell you
- that I love your show..."
- </p>
- <p> The first two hours of The Stand, which Mick Garris directed
- from a screenplay by King, are as gripping as anything in recent
- TV memory. But after the cities have been cleaned out, the mini-series
- mutates into a more tepid apocalyptic soap opera. The narrative
- coalesces around a few disparate survivors (who have an unexplained
- immunity to the flu), among them an easygoing Texan (Gary Sinise),
- a pregnant young woman from Maine (Molly Ringwald), a rock singer
- (Adam Storke) and an angelic deaf-mute (Rob Lowe). The few people
- left are mystically drawn into two camps: one led by a messiah-like
- black woman (Ruby Dee), the other by a satanic "dark man" (a
- leonine Jamey Sheridan).
- </p>
- <p> This allegory of good and evil has a '60s counterculture mind-set.
- The military hides the truth about the deadly plague and strong-arms
- the populace like Nazi storm troopers. The whole disaster is
- portrayed as an environmental corrective to the evils unleashed
- by the military-scientific complex. (It can be no accident that
- the villain's name is Flagg.) The good people make their stand
- in bucolic Boulder, Colorado; the bad guys set up headquarters
- in Las Vegas. Characters periodically remind each other about
- the perils of remaking society--"trying to re-create the world
- that damn near choked the human race to death," as one puts
- it.
- </p>
- <p> When it comes to gore, The Stand is more restrained than most
- King horror shows, but its metaphysical flights are prodigal.
- Dreams and visions abound, and the demonic villain has supernatural
- powers of indeterminate nature. King can't resist throwing everything
- into the pot. A TV movie about the apocalypse can get away with
- quoting Eliot ("This is the way the world ends, not with a bang
- but a whimper") or Yeats ("What rough beast...slouches towards
- Bethlehem?"), but probably not both. Still, even when The Stand
- skirts tedium and pretentiousness, King is a rough beast that
- TV is lucky to have.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-