thedirtyporthole wrote:
Radagast wrote:
The Shining book is better than the film. I feel sorry for the main character more and the little boy is less annoying plus I don't need to look at Shelly Duvall's hideous mush.
When I was younger I loved the movie. I read the book when I was about 18 or 19 and from then on hated the movie. The book is so much better. The psychological breakdown in the movie just seemed so "simple." The book is one of my favorites. I evn liked the Steven Webber TV version from a few years ago better than the Kubrik film, because it was more like the book.
Its true the decline of Jack in the film is much more straightforward. Its almost seemed like he would have gone on a rampage of some description even without the ghosts or maybe even being isolated in the hotel. I probably preferred the ending to the film though. Maybe its just that it was written in 1977 but {ZOMG SPOILARS}
the whole "everything solved by a giant explosion" ending is such a tired cliche. I sort of liked that if anyone was to go back to the Overlook in the film they'd just find two dead guys and an empty hotel. The cliche thing also applies to the "manager" taking over Jack's body completely by the end - I preferred the idea of the evil force just driving him crazy rather than possessing him.
What I disliked most about the film in comparison to the book is the fact that the Shining itself is sort of played for a few freakouts and then dropped. We never get any sense that Danny knows whats going on and knows that his dad is going to go off the deep end sooner or later. I guess that sort of stuff would be tough to get from a 5 year old actor, but still....
Also, the film, as Brahm points out, shows that Jack's loss of sanity was almost entirely 'natural,' so I think the scene where Grady lets him out of the freezer is a bit grating next to all this. It sort of removes any possibility that there were actually no ghosts in the hotel at all.