Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Blu-Ray/TV Series Review: 11.22.63

 


11/22/1963 is a miniseries that aired on Hulu and was an adaptation of Stephen King's novel by the same name. The premise is that an English teacher living in Maine (of course) in 2016 named Jake Epping, played by James Franco, learns from a dying friend, named Al Templeton, played by Chris Cooper, of a portal that will take him back in time. Specifically, the portal can take him back to October 21, 1960, and Templeton tells Jake that he has been trying to prevent the assassination of JFK. He tells Jake that the past does not like to be interfered with and will try to prevent him from doing anything to change the past. The bigger the event you try to interfere with the harder the past pushes back. Jake takes up the mantle and goes back to the past to surveil Lee Harvey Oswald and try to stop the assassination.

For those who have read the book, you know that it is very long, and therefore, even in an eight-episode mini-series, it had to be pared down a lot. So, there are definitely changes from the book, some big, some smaller. For example, in the book, the portal takes people back to 1958 and Jake comes back through the portal to 2016 once before going back to 1958 again, and the storyline involving the young Harry Dunning is a lot more extended in the book.

For those who get the blu-ray, the series looks and sounds great. The scenes shot in the 1960s have a very distinctive look to them, both by copying the 1960s style, but the colors of the scenes are different from those set in 2016 which gives the scenes set in the past a distinctive feel. The only extra is a 15-minute making-of documentary titled "When the Future Fights Back".

Overall, the series is good, but as is usually the case with movie or tv adaptations of novels, is not as good as the book. Franco does a good job playing Epping and the supporting cast was very good. It definitely hit all of the high points from the book and stayed pretty faithful to the book, but I do think that it suffered from skipping some of the fine details that made the book so good. Ultimately, I do think it is worth watching, regardless of whether you want to pay $20 for an eight-episode blu-ray set.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.