STARRING: Tom Hiddleston, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Karen Gillan, Mia Sara, Carl Lumbly, Benjamin Pajak, Jacob Tremblay and Mark Hamill, and narrated by Nick Offerman. Based on The Life of Chuck by Stephen King. Screenplay and directed by Mike Flanagan. Running time 116 minutes.
Told in reverse order this is the life of Chuck, hence the title. Told in three chapters - 'Thanks, Chuck', 'Buskers Forever' and 'I Contain Multitudes' and charting Chuck's (Tom Hiddleston) life from his death from a brain tumour to his life as an orphan living with his grandparents - Albie (Mark Hamill) and Sarah (Mia Sara) in a supposed haunted house.
Of the three chapters, the first: Thanks, Chuck is by far the most satisfying and emotional, offering up, as it does, the end of the world, but not in a Roland Emmerich stylee, this is an altogether more slow burn affair, with California slipping, unseen, into the sea, the death of the internet, massive sink holes, and the stars in the firmament literally popping out of existence, but what does that have to do mysterious billboards and TV adverts declaring "Charles Krantz: 39 Great Years! Thanks, Chuck!"? And yet, somehow rather than be depressing this sequence is genuinely touching, told from the point of view of a newly divorced couple, teacher Marty Anderson (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and nurse Felicia Gordon (Karen Gillan) who reunite to watch the world end, while other lost souls find solace in each other's company, it's rather and profoundly moving.
The second chapter follows the aforementioned accountant Chuck taking an evening off from a convention, when the music of a busker playing the drums inspires him to leap into an impromptu dance routine with a perfect stranger that nets the drummer a tidy tin of tips. Here we learn a little bit more about Chuck, before he returns to the status quo of his life and then the final chapter begins and we witness the boyhood Chuck living with his grandparents in an old Victorian town-house that may, or may not be haunted and if you've been paying attention the whole film's hidden centre reveals itself to you.
This is an emotional film, beautifully performed by the cast from a witty literate script by Mike Flanagan who also directs, from a Stephen King short story, incidentally this is his third King adaptation after Gerald's Game and Doctor Sleep. This near two hour run time flies by and engages you on a deep emotional level, you come to like these characters and feel for them, and as the ending draws near, their fates come into focus. To help us on the journey, and this film is ALL about the journey, it's narrated by the excellent Nick Offerman offering us the voice of the writer, which gives this film a whole new level and it makes you wish that more films had narration.
Playing like a 21st Century It's a Wonderful Life, this feels like a Frank Capra film to its core and the cast are exceptional, and how great to see Mark Hamill acting again, it's been too long.
Despite winning some major awards The Life of Chuck has been sadly dumped on audiences almost unannounced, too early for Oscar Season and with little or no fanfare. The chances are you won't get to see this at the cinema, which is a shame, but when it finally lands on TV do yourself a favour and watch it, it's a bitter-sweet, heart warming and life affirming film that will leave you moist eyed and smiling. Well, it did me.
10/10