Written by William Goldman
Directed by Rob Reiner
Annie (to Paul): "I'm your number one fan. There's nothing to worry about. You're going to be just fine. I will take good care of you. I'm your number one fan."
Okay, if I said this was my favourite adaptation of a Stephen King novel, what would that say about me? An absolute cautionary tale in fan worship can take a hold of your senses and turn someone into something far scarier than anything a writer could come up.
This was a story about a woman named Annie Wilkes (Kathy Bates). A retired nurse, widowed and living on a farm, her life wasn't much to write home about. As she dealt with an increasingly cruel world, she at least had some literary solice with the exploits of Misery Chastain. Those books were a lifeline to Annie.
Not only just the books but the author behind them - Paul Sheldon (James Caan) was someone who Annie worshipped the ground of. Annie's literary escape and her real life collided when a snowstorm brought Paul into her life for real. Yup, he was badly busted up and who better to take care of him than Annie herself.
Okay, I'll stop. Annie might be the hero of her own story but in the book and the movie itself, she's unquestionably the villain of the piece and one of the most menacing baddies ever committed to the page and screen. To say this was one of Kathy Bates best performance would be underselling it.
Throughout the movie, Annie went from girlishly charming towards Paul to losing the absolute plot upon realising the latter had killed off her favourite character. Her violent outbursts are genuinely shocking, no more than when she decided to break Paul's ankles as a result of him sneaking out of the room.
Annie's other method of dealing with Paul was to get him to write a new Misery book that would resurrect the character. There's a scene where Annie gave Paul one of the best critiques about fairness in writing. I actually think that critique alone helped to make Paul a much better writer.
Saying that, Annie might have gotten the book she wanted all along but she didn't get to live long enough to enjoy it. That fight to the death scene with her and Paul was brutal to watch but only one of them was getting out of that place alive. The ending itself certainly show that Paul won't be forgetting Annie for the rest of his life.
- In the book, there's more details on Annie's victims, a different foot outcome and paragraphs of Misery's Return. None of these appear here.
- Annie had a sow named Misery and she really hated swearing. That didn't stop Annie from swearing itself. I also loved husband/wife duo, Sheriff Buster (Richard Farnsworth) and Deputy Virginia (Frances Sternhagen). Lauren Bacall appeared briefly as Paul's agent, Marcia Sindell.
- Paul's real life background was more in line with the Fast Cars book they Annie made him burn.
- Stephen King was so impressed with Kathy Bates performance that he wrote Dolores Claiborne for her.
- Standout music: Jr. Walker and the All Stars Shotgun and Liberace's Piano Concerto #1.
- Chronology: Paul was living in New York City but was heading to Silver Creek, Colorado before Annie got to him.
Misery (1990) to me is easily the best performance that Kathy Bates and James Caan have given in their careers. It's also the best Stephen King adaptation and one that's painfully on point about fanaticism getting out of hand.
Rating: 9 out of 10
.jpeg)




.jpeg)

.jpeg)
.jpeg)

