The Top 5 Longreads of the Week
Today we are featuring stories about the decimation of a national park, the survival of Texas Monthly magazine, how a couple escaped slavery in Boston, choosing when to die, and the future of jelly. 1. In a Famed Kenyan Game Park, the Animals Are Giving Up Georgina Gustin | Undark | January 4, 2023 | […]
https://longreads.com/2023/01/20/the-top-5-longreads-of-the-week-449/
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BASED UPON THE NOVEL BY
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Fun fact every Stephen King story has at least half of these:
A writer
Absent parents
The protagonist having a problem with smoking / drinking
A Christian villain
An ancient Indian burial ground
A small town in Maine
Teenagers as protagonist (we’re not even gonna talk about how creepy this man is towards kids- )
LITERALLY. Next time you watch/read something Stephen king take notice BECAUSE THESE ARE ALWAYS THERE
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me seeing the bad men get their karma in Mr Harrigan’s Phone (2022):
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why can't all book-to-movie adaptations be like Mr. Harrigan's Phone
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📽️ Mr. Harrigan’s Phone (2022)
The trailer, along with knowing it was based on a Stephen King story, made this movie look promising. I’m usually a fan of thriller, especially with a creepy supernatural element like a dead guy calling someone. Unfortunately, this movie didn’t hit that mark. I kept waiting for something good to happen or for there to be some action, but nothing happened. It ended up being a boring movie with an anticlimactic ending. This movie was disappointing.
Sex/nudity: 1/10 (male in the shower, no genitalia shown)
Language: 3/10 (one f-word, relatively little else)
Violence: 4/10 (nothing crazy, several deaths with not much shown, kid gets beat up with some blood shown)
Overall rating: 3/10
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🎃 31 Days of Halloween 🎃
Day 6
Mr. Harrigan’s Phone
“Craig, a young boy, befriends the elderly billionaire John Harrigan. Craig then gives him a mobile phone. However, when the man dies, Craig discovers that he can communicate with his friend from the grave.”
Mr. Harrigan’s Phone is adapted from a short story written by Stephen King. I would describe this movie as ominous yet touching. Sad and scary. There were many elements to this story. Because of this, Mr. Harrigan’s Phone was more than just a ghost story. It was a story of grief and loneliness. A story of two people who lead completely different lives but who are not so different after all & how they are connected in both life & death. To me, it was more about the power of grief, the strong hold it can have on you, and the importance of letting go.
Let me know your interpretation.
Edit
Someone asked me more about the horror side of this movie without spoiling it. That was very hard to do but I tried.
Even the “scary” parts weren’t really scary. It was really more of King’s tamer stories and honestly, it felt more like a Stand By Me or a coming of age film. The horror aspect is used more as a teaching device for the main character. It has an ominous and suspenseful feel but even then, this horror movie isn’t really horror to me. It is more of an emotional film. There was little substance to the horror side of things. I enjoyed it but not as a horror film. It would be a good movie for people who don’t like horror but like suspense. To really see what I mean, you will probably have to watch it. To tell you the horror portion would mean just telling you flat out what happens. Don’t go into it expecting horror though. I feel they marketed this entirely wrong for the actual story.
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"Sono convinto che senti scattare qualcosa non nella testa, ma direttamente nell'anima, quando scopri il posto al quale appartieni davvero. Puoi ignorarlo, però, sul serio, perché dovresti? "
Stephen King, Il telefono del signor Harrigan
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AAAAAAAAAA YES
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Didn't know this was a Stephen King's story. The plot may be quiet and slow, but the subject matter is so relevant. The thrill and horror slowly creep around the main character and all the people surrounding him right when Mr. Harrigan dies. Jaeden Martell oddly chooses this kind of character on screen, correct me if I'm wrong, which is okay because he's very convincing to be one. The ending might not give answers to some questions haunting the viewers since Mr. Harrigan dies, for me, it satisfyingly gives chills and shocks that are aligned to the theme and subject of the movie.
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Day 5--Mr. Harrigan's Phone--2022-- A young boy befriends a wealthy recluse. When the old man dies, the boy discovers that his friend is still just a phone call away... Not a horrible movie. An interesting idea, full of Stephen King's trademark warmth and humanity-- though it would probably work better as a part of an anthology (as opposed to a feature length film).
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i loved mr harrigans phone as well!! do you think mr. harrigan was actually alive killing the people or just his spirit?
i took it as a supernatural/paranormal occurrence! i think that’s way cooler anyways
i honestly never even considered the interpretation of him not being dead. i’m not sure how it would be possible?
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