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2007 flick by Frank Darabont

The Mist
The Mist poster.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed past Frank Darabont
Screenplay past Frank Darabont
Based on The Mist
by Stephen King
Produced by
  • Frank Darabont
  • Martin Shafer
  • Liz Glotzer
Starring
  • Thomas Jane
  • Marcia Gay Harden
  • Laurie Holden
  • Andre Braugher
  • Toby Jones
Cinematography Rohn Schmidt
Edited past Hunter M. Via
Music past Mark Isham

Production
company

Darkwoods Productions[1]

Distributed past Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer[1] [2]
Dimension Films[1]
The Weinstein Company[2]

Release date

  • November 21, 2007 (2007-11-21)

Running time

126 minutes
State United States
Language English language
Budget $18 1000000[3]
Box office $57.3 million[2]

The Mist (also known as Stephen Rex's The Mist ) is a 2007 American science-fiction horror picture show based on the 1980 novella "The Mist" by Stephen Male monarch. The film was written and directed by Frank Darabont. Darabont had been interested in adapting "The Mist" for the big screen since the 1980s. The film features an ensemble cast, including Thomas Jane, Marcia Gay Harden, Nathan Gamble, Andre Braugher, Toby Jones, Frances Sternhagen, Buck Taylor, William Sadler, David Jensen, Sam Witwer, Alexa Davalos, Robert Treveiler, Chris Owen, Andy Stahl, and future The Walking Dead actors Jeffrey DeMunn, Laurie Holden, Melissa McBride, and Juan Gabriel Pareja.

The manager revised the ending of the film to be darker than the novella'due south ending, a change to which Male monarch was amenable. Darabont also sought unique creature designs to differentiate them from his creatures in past films. Although a monster movie, the cardinal theme explores what ordinary people are driven to do under extraordinary circumstances. The plot revolves around members of the minor town of Bridgton, Maine, who after a severe thunderstorm causes the ability to exit the night before, run into in a supermarket to pick upwardly supplies. While they struggle to survive, an unnatural mist envelops the town and conceals vicious, Lovecraftian monsters equally extreme tensions rise among the survivors.

Filming for The Mist began in Shreveport, Louisiana, in February 2007. The film was commercially released in the U.s. and Canada on Nov 21, 2007; information technology performed well at the box office and received more often than not positive reviews. Darabont has since revealed that he had "always had it in mind to shoot The Mist in black and white", a decision inspired by such films as Dark of the Living Dead (1968) and the "pre-color" piece of work of Ray Harryhausen. While the picture show'due south cinematic release was in colour, the director has described the black-and-white print (released on DVD and Blu-ray in 2008) every bit his "preferred version."[iv]

Plot [edit]

In Bridgton, Maine, artist David Drayton, his married woman Stephanie, and their 8-year-old son Billy accept shelter in the basement of their lakeside dwelling during a severe thunderstorm. While surveying the damage the next morn, they notice a thick mist advancing over the lake. David and Billy leave for town with their neighbor Brent Norton to buy supplies.

Inside the supermarket, they watch police cars speed downwards the street, and a terrified civilian, Dan Miller, runs into the store and warns of a danger lurking in the mist. Equally a siren sounds, store managers Ollie Weeks and Bud Chocolate-brown close off the supermarket, and the mist envelops the store. Confronting David'south advice, bagger Norm goes outside to fix the shop's emergency generator, only he is grabbed by a tentacled creature and dragged into the mist. David and Ollie direct the customers to battlement the storefront windows, simply one adult female leaves to go habitation to her children. Mrs.Carmody, a religious fanatic, begins preaching well-nigh an impending Armageddon, while a small group of skeptics led past Brent go out the store to seek outside aid, which results in their deaths.

David forms connections with several people in the store, including Amanda Dunfrey and Irene Reppler, two teachers who came into conflict with Mrs. Carmody over her religious zealotry. Amanda carries a revolver in her purse, and gives it to Ollie, who is a one-time regional shooting champion. Equally dark falls, enormous flying insects – attracted to the lights – swarm in front end of the store and are preyed on past pterodactyl-like creatures. I of the creatures smashes a window, assuasive the insects inside. In the ensuing panic, ii people are killed and another is burned to death in an try to incinerate the insects. Meanwhile, Mrs. Carmody is miraculously spared from an insect, leading her to proselytize more than fervently and gain followers amid the survivors.

A small group led by David goes to the neighboring pharmacy in search of medical supplies, only is attacked by giant spiders that impale two men, forcing them to retreat. Mrs. Carmody, who had opposed the trek, uses this failure to increment her influence by offering protection from divine wrath to new converts. The side by side day, post-obit the suicides of two soldiers from the local military machine base, a third soldier, Jessup, reveals that a government project to notice other dimensions was underway at the base, and that scientists may accept opened a doorway into a dimension containing the creatures invading the boondocks. Mrs. Carmody's followers offer Jessup as a cede and expel him from the supermarket, and he is immediately devoured past a giant praying mantis-like brute.

The side by side morn, David and his group prepare to go out the store, simply are stopped past Mrs. Carmody, who demands that Billy be delivered equally the next sacrifice, just for Ollie to shoot and kill her. Returning to their senses, her traumatized followers reluctantly let the group to exit. Exterior, Ollie and 2 others are devoured past the creatures and Bud runs back to the shop, while David, Billy, Dan, Amanda, and Irene attain David'south car.

Driving through the mist, David finds his home destroyed and Stephanie dead. Devastated, he drives away from boondocks, passing a jumbo six-legged brute and eventually running out of gas. With no means of escaping the mist, the resigned grouping members make up one's mind to end their lives. David shoots Baton and the other three survivors with his 4 remaining bullets before leaving the automobile to exist taken past the creatures. The mist suddenly dissipates, revealing the vanguard of a U.S. Ground forces armored column that is in the process of exterminating the creatures and restoring order. Seeing that they have also rescued those from the store, including the woman who left to get to her kids, David realizes that he killed his son and friends for cipher and that they were just moments abroad from beingness rescued, and drops to his knees screaming.

Bandage [edit]

  • Thomas Jane as David Drayton, a painter who ends upward trapped in the supermarket with his son Billy
  • Marcia Gay Harden as Mrs. Carmody, a religious fanatic who believes the mist to be the wrath of God
  • Laurie Holden as Amanda Dunfrey, a new teacher at the local schoolhouse. She carries a Colt revolver with her at all times
  • Andre Braugher as Brent Norton, a big-metropolis chaser and David'due south neighbor
  • Toby Jones as Ollie Weeks, the supermarket's assistant managing director, who is experienced with guns
  • William Sadler every bit Jim Grondin, a belligerent and weak-minded mechanic
  • Jeffrey DeMunn as Dan Miller, who takes shelter in the market place later witnessing the dangers from the mist
  • Frances Sternhagen every bit Irene Reppler, an elderly instructor and Amanda's co-worker
  • Alexa Davalos as Emerge, a cashier at the supermarket and Baton's babysitter
  • Nathan Gamble equally Billy Drayton, David's viii-year-sometime son
  • Chris Owen as Norm, a bag male child
  • Sam Witwer equally Individual Wayne Jessup, a soldier stationed at the nearby Arrowhead military base
  • Robert Treveiler as Bud Brown, the supermarket's manager
  • David Jensen as Myron LaFleur, a mechanic who works with Jim
  • Melissa McBride every bit an unnamed adult female who left her kids alone at home
  • Andy Stahl equally Mike Hatlen, one of the patrons at the supermarket who side with David's group
  • Buck Taylor as Ambrose Cornell, a mustached human being who sides with David'due south group and has a shotgun in his truck
  • Juan Gabriel Pareja as Morales, some other soldier from Arrowhead base
  • Walter Fauntleroy every bit Donaldson, another soldier from Arrowhead base
  • Brandon O'Dell as Bobby Eagleton, Joe'south brother and one of the patrons at the supermarket who side with David's group
  • Jackson Hurst as Joe Eagleton, Bobby'south blood brother, who tries to build a torch with a mop, just fails
  • Susan Watkins as Hattie Turman, a local real estate agent
  • Mathew Greer as Silas, ane of the patrons at the supermarket who sides with Brent's group
  • Kelly Collins Lintz as Stephanie Drayton, David's wife and Billy'south female parent
  • Ron Clinton Smith as Mr. Mackey, the supermarket'southward butcher

Production [edit]

Development [edit]

Manager Frank Darabont start read Stephen Rex'due south 1980 novella "The Mist" in the Dark Forces anthology,[five] and originally expressed interest in directing a movie adaptation for his directing debut. He instead filmed The Shawshank Redemption, also based on some other King novella.[6] In October 1994, subsequently completing The Shawshank Redemption, Darabont reiterated his involvement in filming "The Mist".[7] Darabont did non immediately follow through, instead directing the 1999 film adaptation of Stephen King'south The Dark-green Mile.[ citation needed ] Darabont eventually set a get-go-look deal for The Mist with Paramount Pictures, having been entrusted feature-moving-picture show rights past Stephen King.[6] Past December 2004, Darabont said that he had begun writing an adapted screenplay for The Mist,[viii] and by October 2006, the project moved from Paramount to Dimension Films, with Darabont attached to direct and thespian Thomas Jane in negotiations to join the bandage.[six]

Writing [edit]

"The story is less nigh the monsters outside than about the monsters within, the people you're stuck with, your friends and neighbors breaking nether the strain."
— Darabont on The Mist [9]

Manager Darabont chose to picture The Mist later filming the "straighter dramas" The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile because he "wanted to make a very direct, muscular kind of motion picture". Darabont conceived of a new catastrophe in translating the novella for the large screen. Author King praised Darabont's new ending, describing information technology every bit one that would exist unsettling for studios. King said, "The ending is such a jolt—wham! Information technology's frightening. But people who go to encounter a horror film don't necessarily want to be sent out with a Pollyanna ending."[10]

Darabont described The Mist every bit quaint in its elements of monsters and fear of the unknown compared to the contemporary popularity of films with torture porn. The director saw The Mist as a throwback to Paddy Chayefsky and William Shakespeare, explaining, "It'southward people at each other." He highlighted the element of fear in the motion-picture show in how it compelled people to behave differently. Darabont said, "How archaic exercise people get? It's Lord of the Flies that happens to take some absurd monsters in it."[5] He also drew parallels to The Twilight Zone episode "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" and the 1944 film Lifeboat.[3]

In the novella, the grapheme David Drayton—who is married—has a sexual encounter with Amanda Dumfries, who is likewise married. Darabont did not want to attempt conveying on screen the protagonist being involved in an extramarital affair. The characters in the motion picture, portrayed by Thomas Jane and Laurie Holden, instead share a more than emotional relationship. Jane explained, "Nosotros kind of class a little family unit, sort of surrogate family unit where my son and I'grand a father and she becomes the female parent to the son. We become a picayune unit of measurement as nosotros're trying to get through this nightmare together." Holden compared the nightmare to what refugees experienced at the Louisiana Superdome during Hurricane Katrina.[eleven]

While the origin of the mist in the moving-picture show is never explained in great detail, Frank Darabont did write an opening scene in a draft dated 5 Baronial 2005, in which the thunderstorm causes a malfunction at the Arrowhead Project's lab that allows the portal to another dimension to stay open too long. The scene was never filmed.

Filming [edit]

In December 2006, Jane finalized negotiations with the studio to join the bandage.[12] In January 2007, actors Andre Braugher and Laurie Holden joined Jane for the cast of The Mist.[13] Product began the following February at StageWorks of Louisiana, a sound stage and film production facility in Shreveport, Louisiana.[14] Marcia Gay Harden and Toby Jones joined the cast later in the month.[15]

William Sadler, Jeffrey DeMunn, and Brian Libby, each of whom appeared in Darabont's previous Stephen King adaptations The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile, were cast in supporting roles. Sadler had previously played Jane'south role, David Drayton, in a 1986 audiobook version of "The Mist". Darabont wanted to cast King in the supporting part that eventually went to Brian Libby, an offer that King turned down because he did not want to travel to film the part.[16]

Darabont sought to pursue "a more than fluid, ragged documentary kind of direction" with The Mist,[xi] so he contacted the camera crew from the idiot box series The Shield, subsequently having directed one episode, to use their fashion in the picture show.[17] Darabont attempted to movie The Mist digitally but institute that it "wound up looking likewise beautiful". The manager chose to film with 400 ASA from Fujifilm, which gave footage a grainy consequence.[3]

In the opening shot, David is drawing in his room. The drawing is based on King's Dark Tower serial, and was painted by film poster designer Drew Struzan. Darabont too included reproductions of Struzan's posters and illustrations for The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile, John Carpenter'southward The Thing, and Guillermo del Toro'southward Pan's Labyrinth. Struzan went on to produce a poster for The Mist, but this image was not used in the pic's marketing campaign.[xviii]

Darabont collaborated with the production designer to create a mix of eras to avoid appearing every bit a period piece, only likewise non looking and then contemporary. Cell phones were used by characters in The Mist, but the military law in the film did non apparel in modern attire. While an MP also drove an onetime Jeep instead of a Humvee, other cars seen in the film are modern models.[3] The city police force cars in the offset of the motion-picture show are a 1987 Chevrolet Caprice and a 1988 Ford LTD Crown Victoria, cars that were standard police force vehicles in the belatedly 1980s, but accept not been used in force since the belatedly 1990s.

Over 100 extras from Shreveport, Louisiana, were included in The Mist. Dissimilar conventional application of extras in the background of a film, lx extras were interwoven with the film's ensemble bandage.[19] Boosted elements giving the film a local flavor include the prominence of local Louisiana brands such as Zapp's tater chips. Exterior shots of the house at the beginning were in Shreveport. Exterior shots of the supermarket were in Vivian, Louisiana. As well, if closely inspected, the shields on the side of the passing firetrucks early in the film identify them as office of the Caddo Parish fire department. This is possibly a mistake, every bit the film is allegedly set in Maine.

Music [edit]

Darabont chose to utilize music to minimal effect in The Mist to capture the "heavier feel" of the darker catastrophe he had written to supercede the i from the novella. The director explained, "Sometimes movie music feels fake. I've always felt that silent can be scarier than loud, a whisper more frightening than a bang, and we wanted to create a balance. We kept music to a minimum to go along that vérité, documentary feel." Darabont chose to overlay the song "The Host of Seraphim" by the ring Expressionless Can Dance, a spiritual piece characterized by wailing and chanting. As a fan of Dead Can Dance, Darabont thought that the vocal played "as a requiem mass for the man race."[20] The original score was equanimous by Academy Award-nominated composer Marking Isham.

Effects [edit]

Darabont hired artists Jordu Schell[21] and Bernie Wrightson to assist in designing the creatures for the film.[17] Greg Nicotero worked on the film's animate being design and brand-up effects, while Everett Burrell served as the visual-furnishings supervisor. Nicotero initially sketched out ideas for animate being design when Darabont originally expressed interest in filming The Mist in the 1980s. When the projection was greenlit, Nicotero, Burrell, and Darabont collaborated nearly the brute design at circular-table meetings at CaféFX.[eleven] The studio for visual effects had been recommended to Darabont by Guillermo del Toro later Darabont asked the director who created the visual effects for Pan'southward Labyrinth.

Due to the creatures' being described in just a few sentences in the novella, Darabont sought to conceive of new designs. The challenge was creating designs that felt unique. Nicotero, who was versed in film history and genre history, reviewed by fauna designs to avoid having similar designs.[3] When the designs were completed, Nicotero and Burrell educated the cast on the appearance of the creatures past showing puppets and the function of their eyes and mouths. The puppet demonstrations served every bit reference points for the cast, who had to respond to motion-capture dots during filming.[11]

Release [edit]

The Mist was screened at the film festival ShowEast on October 18, 2007, at which Darabont received the Kodak Award for Excellence in Filmmaking for his previous works The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile.[22]

Critical reception [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes, 71% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 147 reviews, with an boilerplate rating of 6.60/10. The site'southward critics consensus reads, "Frank Darabont'due south impressive camerawork and politically incisive script make The Mist a truly frightening experience."[23] On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 58 out of 100 based on 29 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[24] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a "C" on scale of A to F.[25]

James Berardinelli wrote of the film, "The Mist is what a horror film should be—nighttime, tense, and punctuated by just enough gore to keep the viewer's blanch reflex intact. ... Finally, afterward a long list of failures, someone has done justice in bringing one of King's horror stories to the screen. Though definitely not the feel-good picture of the flavour, this is a must-see for anyone who loves the genre and doesn't need 'torture porn' from horror."[26] Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune praised the film: "Good and creepy, The Mist comes from a Stephen King novella and is more the shape, size and quality of the recent 1408, also taken from a King story, than anything in the persistently fashionable charnel house inhabited by the "Saw" and "Hostel" franchises.[27] Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwarzbaum wrote "There's a grim mod parable to be read into the unsafe effects of the gospel-preaching local crazy lady Mrs. Carmody (brilliantly played by a hellfire Marcia Gay Harden) on a congregation of the fearful."[28] Tom Ambrose of Empire said the film was "criminally disregarded" and "one of the best horror movies of the last few years."[29]

Roger Ebert wrote a mixed review, giving it two stars out of 4: "If yous have seen ads or trailers suggesting that horrible things pounce on people, and they make you retrieve you want to meet this movie, you lot will be correct. It is a competently made Horrible Things Pouncing on People movie. If you call up Frank Darabont has equaled the Shawshank and Green Mile runway record, you will be sadly mistaken."[30] Justin Chang of Variety gave a mixed review, and wrote: "Much nastier and less genteel than his best-known Stephen Male monarch adaptations (The Shawshank Redemption, The Greenish Mile), Frank Darabont's screw-loose doomsday thriller works meliorate as a gross-out B-flick than as a psychological portrait of flesh under siege, marred by one-note characterizations and a tone that veers wildly between snarky and hysterical."[31]

Accolades [edit]

Bloody Disgusting ranked the film number four on their list of the "Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade", with the article saying "The scary stuff works extremely well, but what really drives this i habitation is Darabont's focus on the split that forms between ii factions of the townspeople—the paranoid, Bible-thumping types and the more rational-minded, incomparably left-wing members of the populace. This allegorical microcosm of G. W. Bush-league-era America is spot on, and elevates an already-first-class pic to even greater heights."[32]

The film was nominated for three Saturn Awards; Best Horror Film, All-time Director, and a win for Best Supporting Actress for Harden.[33]

Box role [edit]

The motion picture was commercially released in the The states and Canada on November 21, 2007.[2] Over the opening weekend in the United States and Canada, The Mist grossed $8,931,973. As of Baronial 9, 2009, the picture grossed $25,593,755 in the United States and Canada and $27,560,960 in other territories for a worldwide full of $57,289,103.[2]

Domicile media [edit]

The Mist was released on DVD and Blu-ray on March 25, 2008. The single disc includes an sound commentary by author/director Frank Darabont, eight deleted scenes with optional commentary, and "A Conversation With Stephen King and Frank Darabont" featurette.

The two-disc edition includes the exclusive blackness-and-white presentation of the motion-picture show, too as the color version, and five featurettes ("When Darkness Came: The Making of The Mist", "Taming the Beast: Shooting Scene 35", "Monsters Among Us: A Look at the Brute FX", "The Horror of Information technology All: The Visual FX of The Mist", and "Drew Struzan: Appreciation of an Artist").

Telly series [edit]

In November 2013, Bob Weinstein revealed that Darabont and he were developing a 10-role telly series based on the film.[34] [35] In February 2016, Fasten picked up the airplane pilot.[36] In April 2016, Fasten ordered the series.[37] Emmy-winning manager Adam Bernstein directed the pilot. It premiered on June 22, 2017.[38]

See also [edit]

  • The Fog (novel), a 1975 novel past James Herbert

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c "The Mist (2007)". American Motion-picture show Institute Catalog.
  2. ^ a b c d e "The Mist (2007)". Box Office Mojo . Retrieved December five, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e Douglas, Edward (November xvi, 2007). "An Exclusive Interview with Mr. Frank Darabont!". ShockTillYouDrop.com . Retrieved Nov xx, 2007.
  4. ^ Darabont, Frank (2008). Director's Introduction. The Mist. Harry Knowles. Archived from the original on Nov 17, 2021 – via YouTube.
  5. ^ a b Stax (July 28, 2007). "SDCC 07: Chatting in The Mist". IGN . Retrieved November 19, 2007.
  6. ^ a b c Fleming, Michael (October 18, 2006). "'Mist' envelops Dimension". Variety . Retrieved May 17, 2007.
  7. ^ McGavin, Patrick Z. (October 4, 1994). "Long Live The King". Chicago Tribune.
  8. ^ "Frank Darabont on Adapting The Mist". ComingSoon.cyberspace. May fifteen, 2004. Retrieved May 17, 2007.
  9. ^ Kent, Alexandyr (March 23, 2007). "A bad day at the marketplace". The Times.
  10. ^ Breznican, Anthony (June 20, 2007). "Stephen King adapts to Hollywood". USA Today . Retrieved November 19, 2007.
  11. ^ a b c d Murray, Rebecca (August 15, 2007). "Behind the Scenes of The Mist Based on a Stephen King Story". About.com . Retrieved Nov nineteen, 2007.
  12. ^ "The Punisher Enters The Mist". IGN. Dec 6, 2006. Retrieved May 17, 2007.
  13. ^ Kit, Borys (Jan 26, 2007). "Braugher, Holden float to 'Mist'". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on February 17, 2007. Retrieved May 17, 2007.
  14. ^ Kent, Alexandyr (January 19, 2007). "'The Mist' creeping into Shreveport". The Times.
  15. ^ Fleming, Michael (February 21, 2007). "Actors will emerge from Rex'southward 'Mist'". Diverseness . Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  16. ^ "INTERVIEW: Stephen Male monarch and Manager Frank Darabont Talk The Mist". Movieweb.com. November 13, 2007. Archived from the original on Feb sixteen, 2008. Retrieved February x, 2008.
  17. ^ a b Douglas, Edward (July 27, 2007). "Comic-Con '07: Two Clips From The Mist!". ShockTillYouDrop.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved July xxx, 2007.
  18. ^ Struzan, Drew (2007). "Affiche for "The Mist"". drewstruzan.com.
  19. ^ Kent, Alexandyr (November 18, 2007). "The core of a horror moving-picture show: 'The Mist' features dozens of local extras". The Times. Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved Nov 20, 2007.
  20. ^ Frese, David (November 17, 2007). "Frank Darabont dares to alter a Stephen King archetype: 'The Mist'". Kansas Metropolis Star. Archived from the original on November 21, 2007. Retrieved Nov xx, 2007.
  21. ^ "The Almost Realistic Grand Moff Tarkin Bosom E'er Made". At Tha Movies. January 27, 2014. Retrieved January 27, 2014.
  22. ^ DiOrio, Carl (Oct 16, 2007). "ShowEast to close high on Darabont". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on October 18, 2007. Retrieved November 20, 2007.
  23. ^ "The Mist (2007)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved Feb 13, 2021.
  24. ^ "The Mist Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  25. ^ "Search Title". Cinemascore. Archived from the original on Dec 20, 2018.
  26. ^ Berardinelli, James (2007). "Review: Mist, The". Reelviews.cyberspace.
  27. ^ Phillips, Michael (November 23, 2007). "Scary King inhabits 'The Mist'". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on August eleven, 2019.
  28. ^ Schwarzbaum, Lisa (November fourteen, 2007). "The Mist". EW.com.
  29. ^ Ambrose, Tom (June 30, 2008). "The Mist". Empire.
  30. ^ Ebert, Roger (November twenty, 2007). "The Mist". Chicago Dominicus Times.
  31. ^ Chang, Justin (November 12, 2007). "The Mist". Variety.
  32. ^ "00'south Retrospect: Bloody Disgusting's Top 20 Films of the Decade...Part 4". Bloody Disgusting. December 18, 2009. Retrieved January 3, 2010.
  33. ^ "'300' leads Saturn nominations". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved Jan 16, 2020.
  34. ^ Cieply, Michael (November 24, 2013). "The Weinstein Company, Seeking Hits, Shifts to TV". The New York Times . Retrieved Nov 30, 2013.
  35. ^ Hipes, Patrick (September 16, 2015). "'The Mist' TV Serial Emerges From Dimension & Scribe Christian Torpe". Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  36. ^ Trumbore, Dave (February 25, 2013). "Stephen Male monarch'southward 'The Mist' Television set Series Gets Airplane pilot Order at Spike". Collider . Retrieved Feb 25, 2016.
  37. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (April xiv, 2016). "'The Mist' Stephen Male monarch Tv set Adaptation Gets Series Order At Spike". Deadline.
  38. ^ Petski, Denise (May 6, 2016). "Adam Bernstein To Direct 'The Mist' On Spike". Borderline.

External links [edit]

  • The Mist at IMDb
  • The Mist at AllMovie
  • The Mist at Box Office Mojo
  • The Mist at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Mist at Metacritic
  • "Monsters in the Mist". MonsterLegacy.internet.
  • "Mist, The (2007, USA)". Cinemetrics.

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