"The Life of Chuck" is one of those rare films that is trying very earnestly to say something profound about human existence. It's a Mike Flanagan adaptation of a Stephen King novella of the same name, which has some supernatural elements but isn't particularly scary. I read the novella in anticipation of the film, and it left me puzzled. However, I think knowing how the story was going to play out helped with my processing of the film version, which is an extremely faithful adaptation. I'll try to steer clear of too many spoilers, as a big part of the experience of watching the film is working out who Chuck is and how the three acts of the film relate to each other, so I'd recommend going in with as little information as possible. I will say that I thought the film was pretty successful at what it was trying to do. I understand why some viewers came away feeling misled or manipulated, but it worked for me.
I think it might also be helpful to think of "The Life of Chuck" as an anthology film of three separate stories that happen to share a character in common. The first is a story about a group of ordinary people including school teacher Marty (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and nurse Felicia (Karen Gillan) facing an impending apocalypse. The second story is about a busker (Taylor Gordon) and a pair of dancers (Tom Hiddleston, Annalise Basso), who share a moment of spontaneous joy together. The last story is about a boy (Benjamin Pajak), who moves in with his grandparents (Mark Hamill and Mia Sara) after the deaths of his parents. The three stories happen in reverse order chronologically, with the apocalypse up first, labeled "Act Three." All are narrated by Nick Offerman, and all are told in a sort of hyperreal, heightened style reminiscent of other Stephen King films like "The Green Mile."
It's very easy to fall into the trap of trying to analyze everything in the film for hidden symbolism, or to take things too literally and focus on the mechanisms for how the universe in "Chuck" works. That sort of thing is fun, but completely beside the point. This is first and foremost a film about feelings and yearnings, and the ineffable, unexplainable parts of being human. There's not much traditional horror in the film, but a lot of it is concerned with fear and mortality and how to live with these parts of existence. The second story is the shortest of the three, but also arguably the most important, because it gives us a beautiful example of human beings living in the moment and seizing the opportunity for joy where they can.
Mike Flanagan breaks a lot of rules with "The Life of Chuck." He's got a narrator going for a lot of the time, often reading directly from the Stephen King source material. The film's tone changes completely from story to story, and so much of the film's effectiveness is dependent on that tone. There are monologues everywhere, because it's Mike Flanagan, and every theme and idea and message is underlined multiple times in the cinematic equivalent of red ink. Fortunately the cast is wonderful, with many of the players from Flanagan's regular troupe filling out the smaller roles. I want to highlight the work of Mark Hamill in particular, playing the loving, complicated grandfather, who can still be intimidating when necessary.
"The Life of Chuck" is a box office bomb, and it's a miracle that it exists at all. It's a weird outlier of a film that feels like it should have been made twenty years ago, and plenty of viewers didn't like it, didn't get it, or found it too flawed and underbaked and sentimental and cheese-infused to fulfill its huge ambitions. However, it also shows every sign of being one of those movies that's going to hit some people exactly the right way, that they'll watch at exactly the right time in their lives, and remember forever. I don't know if "The Life of Chuck" is going to be an all-timer, but I haven't been able to stop thinking about it, and I know I need to watch it again soon.
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