A dangerous blizzard hits an isolated town and brings along a mysterious stranger intent on terrorizing people for his own desires.A dangerous blizzard hits an isolated town and brings along a mysterious stranger intent on terrorizing people for his own desires.A dangerous blizzard hits an isolated town and brings along a mysterious stranger intent on terrorizing people for his own desires.
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 3 wins & 10 nominations total
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First, I like long movies, second, I've never expected much from King's movies. This is best movie I've seen and it's strange, because this movie isn't like you would expect to be your favorite movie. Reserve one night to this film and watch it without interruptions, enjoy and let movie carry you along. Not like Indiana Jones, not like Hitchcock, but tense with horrible ending.
Beginning with Salem's Lot in the 1970's, there have been scads of memorable TV adaptations of prolific horror author Stephen King's books and short stories.
STORM OF THE CENTURY could very well be the best of the bunch. It excels due to King's uncanny ability to insinuate unthinkable horrors into believable small town settings. Here, he captures the life of Little Tall island, complete with its personalities and local flavor.
The characters are built up and fleshed out, so that it actually matters when bad things start happening to them. Tim Daly is quite convincing as the sheriff, as are the other residents.
Colm Feore is exceptional as the mysterious stranger, Andre Linoge, one of television's all-time greatest horror villains. His slow takeover of the town is systematic and wickedly effective.
Network TV owes a lot to Stephen King, especially in this case. The "mini-series" format is perfect for this story. It allows it to unfold in a more natural, unhurried way.
Highly recommended...
STORM OF THE CENTURY could very well be the best of the bunch. It excels due to King's uncanny ability to insinuate unthinkable horrors into believable small town settings. Here, he captures the life of Little Tall island, complete with its personalities and local flavor.
The characters are built up and fleshed out, so that it actually matters when bad things start happening to them. Tim Daly is quite convincing as the sheriff, as are the other residents.
Colm Feore is exceptional as the mysterious stranger, Andre Linoge, one of television's all-time greatest horror villains. His slow takeover of the town is systematic and wickedly effective.
Network TV owes a lot to Stephen King, especially in this case. The "mini-series" format is perfect for this story. It allows it to unfold in a more natural, unhurried way.
Highly recommended...
Castle Rock, a recent series also by Stephen King, also has a stranger in town/trouble premise, though not the only one. There's something about both shows that really makes one think, as if such horror was not quite as far away as other horror movies you might have seen, sort of eerily familiar. Anyway, that's how it bites me. Nuts and bolts is easier. The acting holds this piece above many others. It's very very good. And it's a very large cast, so hats off to casting as well. There are so many (necessary) close-ups that any hint of wooden or uncommitted performance would be tagged straight away. As that never happens, hats off to the director too, it must have been gruelling. I could only get hold of the second half, and I thought that was too long. In the third quarter the effects are brilliant, and nicely edited as well, particularly where two timelines needed to be related. The last quarter is where I docked a point. There were effects that simply did not need to exist, as if the director had an incurable soft spot for old theatre pulley effects. If ever this movie is redone that needs to be thought about. It didn't spoil the ending in any intellectual way, I enjoyed the ending, but I thought it noticeably old-fashioned. On the plus side, the storm itself is a marvel of cinematography. All up this is classic horror from a very inventive mind, and, if you are lucky enough to run across it, well worth chasing.
Stephen King created an unnerving miniseries with "Storm of the Century", about a blizzard in a Maine town bringing a stranger (Colm Feore) who tells everyone "Give me what I want and I'll go away." And this guy isn't kidding. Not only does he know everything about everyone, but he's got something ugly in store for anyone who challenges him. Some scenes in the movie are very likely to make your blood freeze. And I agree with a previous reviewer that people shouldn't complain about the ending: things can't always be sugar-coated (this is Stephen King, remember).
All in all, this is really impressive, and you're sure to like it. You may never trust anyone again after watching this. Also starring Debrah Farentino, Casey Siemaszko and Jeffrey DeMunn.
I guess that we're all little teapots in some way or other...
All in all, this is really impressive, and you're sure to like it. You may never trust anyone again after watching this. Also starring Debrah Farentino, Casey Siemaszko and Jeffrey DeMunn.
I guess that we're all little teapots in some way or other...
As a fan of Stephen King I always thought that all the movies or series except "IT" weren't really good although the books were great. As I started watching "Storm of The Century" I didn't have any expectations and thought I would give up in 30 mins or so because it lasts 4 hours + but I was wrong. Although I saw many of the cast first time act, I think most of them did a great job. The story is incredible and the surroundings fit in great. I didn't realize how the time pass and at the end of it I wished it would go on. The story itself has many things in it. Horror, drama, tragedy, crime and even romance. Definitely worth to watch and worth the time spend watching it. 9 out of 10.
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Did you know
- TriviaColm Feore took it upon himself to make friends with all the child actors, as he didn't want any of them to be genuinely scared of him.
- GoofsWhen Mike Anderson is riding in his van around dusk en route to the scene of the first murder, his beard has reached an obvious black stubble stage. A few hours later in the plot, he is clean shaven. His activities are all accounted for over this time period, and taking time out to shave was not one of them.
- Quotes
Andre Linoge: Born in lust, turn to dust. Born in sin, COME ON IN.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cinemania: Stephen King: O vasilias tou tromou (2009)
- How many seasons does Storm of the Century have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Stephen King's Storm of the Century
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 26m(86 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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