The Dark Tower (2017) [Blu-ray]
Action | Adventure | Fantasy | Horror | Sci-Fi | Western
Tagline: In a world of superheroes, there is only one gunslinger.
The Gunslinger, Roland Deschain, roams an Old West-like landscape where "the world has moved on" in pursuit of the man in black. Also searching for the fabled Dark Tower, in the hopes that reaching it will preserve his dying world.
Storyline: The last Gunslinger, Roland Deschain, has been locked in an eternal battle with Walter O'Dim, also known as the Man in Black, determined to prevent him from toppling the Dark Tower, which holds the universe together.
With the fate of the worlds at stake, good and evil will collide in the ultimate battle as only Roland can defend the Tower from the Man in Black.
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, November 7, 2017 There are certainly no shortage of movies out there that are based on books, and those movies based on books written by Stephen King tend to be better than most. Sure
some of them has flopped or settled into a decidedly "mediocre" place in the cinema history books, but many of them, be they sourced from novels or short stories -- The Shawshank Redemption, The Shining, Stand By Me, and It to
name a few -- are legitimately great films, some even masterpieces, of the cinematic realm. But perhaps King's most revered realm hails within the bountiful pages of his Dark Tower series, a collection of books quite unlike anything one of the 20th
century's (and 21st's, for that matter) most prolific writers had ever published before. Widely considered his magnum opus, the series, much like The Stand, would seem in need of significant breathing room for any screen adaptation to work, never
mind do it justice. That's not what's happened with The Dark Tower, Director Nikolaj Arcel's film that capably condenses the story down to its bare essence and into a tidy 90-minute film at that. King purists will probably run and hide, but those
looking for a fairly crafted film with some nifty ideas and good acting should find the film agreeable enough.
Jake Chambers (Tom Taylor) is a visionary, believing he's attuned to some mystical world away from, but not dissimilar to, his own. His parents, however, believe otherwise, that he's a troubled young boy in need of intensive therapy if he's ever going to
fit into the empty society around him that discourages and disbelieves his visions. When "social workers" come to take him away, he realizes that they're agents of "The Man in Black" (Matthew McConaughey), a powerful magician from Jake's own dreams who is
hellbent on destroying "The Dark Tower," the one and only thing holding the universe together and preventing it from falling into the madness the Man in Black so desperately wishes to unleash. Jake flees and finds himself drawn to, and ultimately through,
a portal to another world -- the very one from this visions, in fact -- where he meets the mythical "Gunslinger" (Idris Elba) who is the one man who stands in the way of the Man in Black's ruthless vision for the future. He's immune to MiB's magic, but as
MiB realizes that Jake is the key to bringing down the tower, he'll stop at nothing to take the boy and be rid of his archenemy once and for all.
The Dark Tower's best asset is that it's The Dark Tower. A movie can really only be as good as its source material, and even if that source material has been whittled down to its birthday suit, it's still The Dark Tower and that's
still The Gunslinger and The Man in Black up there on the screen. And it had to be one of the most unenviable tasks ever to pinch and cut and rework King's massive series into a 90 minute film, like one of those movie scenes where the airplane has to lose
a significant amount of weight if it's going to stay up in the air long enough to reach some destination, where characters are throwing everything but the engine and themselves out of whatever is left of the frame. But even at that no frills, core, basic
essential framework, the story still holds up. The Dark Tower is by no means a bad movie. It's just a grossly incomplete adaptation. What's here works well enough as a simple, casual entertainer with some passable characterization and enough action
(as insanely goofy as the final action sequence may be) and narrative direction to make it all work. As has been said, fans of the book series will probably be beside themselves with how little the film resembles the entire series, right down to its
toned-down PG-13 rating, but The Dark Tower is in itself something of an accomplishment just in how well it does play on such limited constraints.
Characterization is a little flat, expectedly, with all three primary characters -- The Gunslinger, MiB, and Jake -- largely defined by core, crude actions rather than any sort of necessary depth to really give the story meaning. That said, the characters
are enjoyable for what they are and the limitations on their construction. Roland's past is adequately fleshed out, and Jake's place in life and abilities likewise go through a crude but effective series of revelations and discoveries. The Man in Black
remains a bit more mysterious, and whether by design or necessity, that mystery serves the movie well in a "generic evil-bent villain" sort of way that makes him more a charismatic face in front of unspeakable evil that gives the character, and the story,
a bit more opportunity for him to charm and deceive before using his powers to subdue anyone and everyone who gets in his way. McConaughey's work in the film is solid, unsurprising given an actor of his credentials and capabilities. He's a good fit for
that clean, smooth, charming villain accustomed to getting his way and hiding that evil streak underneath his more approachable façade. Idris Elba is also well-cast as The Gunslinger, a gritty and gruff man who himself carries the burden of a dark past
and who is weathered and worn by his efforts to protect the tower and, now, Jake. Elba, one of the better actors working today, embraces the character and does what he can with a part that's been all but erased down to its very essence. He looks the part
and breathes life into the protagonist with a believable burden to follow through and determination to succeed. Young Tom Taylor likewise fills Jake's shoes with enough vision for the character and capably slides in next to Elba as co-hero.
The Dark Tower certainly could have been much more, and needed to be much more if it was going to somehow remain faithful to the novels that precede it. But even at a very fast 90 minutes that's more or less the story's most unadulterated,
no-frills and few-details essence, it makes for a serviceable, and even often enjoyable, surface-level entertainer. Hopefully the series will again be one day revisited, perhaps for the small screen (and please be more faithful than Under the Dome.
Thanks.), where it can truly breathe and explore. Until then, this is a solid enough facsimile that will please casuals more than King fanatics. Sony's Blu-ray offers strong video and audio presentations alongside a healthy little allotment of bonus
content. Recommended.
[CSW] -2.2- I have no idea what I just watched. From the previews I thought this was an adult movie. But without adequate explanations it was like watching a children's movie. There is no explanation about the Dark Tower, what it is, the purpose, the
cause and the effect. It does get zapped with a super beam of light but we are not told what happens. Then who is the Man in Black? We never get the Who When Where or Why about him. Essentially there is nothing to praise in this movie and there are way
too many holes to even understand what I watched. It appears that it was taken from a seven novel Dark Tower series written by Stephen King, and all seven books were condensed into one 90 minute movie. I have not read any of the novels but I can
now understand why I had no idea what I just watched. My thought is that if one had read the novel one would know all of the thing that were never explained, at all, in the movie. But I hear form others that have read the novels… this movie even messed
that up too.
[V4.5-A4.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box motion codes were available at the time of this rental although they are available now and probably would help make the nonsensical movie a little more enjoyable, like a roller-coaster ride.
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