Needful Things (film)
1993 film by Fraser Clarke Heston
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Needful Things is a 1993 American horror thriller film based on Stephen King's 1991 novel of the same name. The film was directed by Fraser C. Heston (Charlton Heston's son; this is his only film without his father in the cast), and stars Ed Harris, Max von Sydow, Bonnie Bedelia, and J. T. Walsh. Needful Things was released by Columbia Pictures on August 27, 1993. The film received mixed reviews, critics praised the performances and ending, but criticized its portrayal of its story and felt it inferior to its source material, while grossing $15.2 million.
by Stephen King
| Needful Things | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Fraser C. Heston |
| Screenplay by | W. D. Richter |
| Based on | Needful Things by Stephen King |
| Produced by | Jack Cummins |
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Tony Westman |
| Edited by | Rob Kobrin |
| Music by | Patrick Doyle |
Production companies | |
| Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 120 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $15.2 million (US) |
Plot
Mysterious Leland Gaunt, claiming to be from Akron, Ohio, arrives in Castle Rock, Maine in a sinister-looking black car. He opens an antique store called "Needful Things".[1] The store sells various items of great personal worth to the residents (some are clearly supernatural). Gaunt's prices include both cash and in small "favors", usually pranks played by his customers on their neighbors. Gaunt's first customer is a boy named Brian Rusk who buys a rare baseball card featuring Mickey Mantle in exchange for 95 cents and a prank on his neighbor Wilma Wadlowski Jerzyck.[2]
Gaunt pulls pranks on the local townspeople. One victim is corrupt boat salesman and gambler Danforth Keeton who embezzled $20,000 of the town's tax money to pay his gambling debts. Sheriff Alan Pangborn tells Keeton that the residents suspect him. In turn, Keeton relays his fears to Gaunt and how he hates those who mockingly call him 'Buster' Keeton. Gaunt sells Keeton a clockwork horse-race game that predicts the outcome of any horse race, allowing him to recoup and replace the $20,000 before it can be proven that he took it. Gaunt sells Frank Jewett a first edition of Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. He also discovers the rivalry between the Catholic priest, Father Meehan, and Baptist minister, Reverend Willie Rose, when each buys something from his shop.
Gaunt's true nature becomes apparent when he has Brian throw turkey muck onto Wilma Jerzyck's freshly-laundered white sheets that are drying on the outdoor clothes lines. Wilma assumes her long-time enemy, Nettie Cobb, is responsible. She loudly accuses Nettie at her workplace, the Castle Rock diner. Brian Rusk meets Gaunt at the Lighthouse where he informs Brian he has not fully repaid his debt and expects immediate full payment. Brian returns to Wilma Jerzyck's house and throws apples at it, smashing the windows. Nettie Cobb has 'bought' a Hummel figurine from Gaunt that is identical to one her violent ex-husband had smashed in a fit of rage. In return she goes to Dan Keeton's house and places citation notices, allegedly from Deputy Sheriff Norris Ridgewick, all around the interior, accusing him of all his misdemeanors. In the meantime, Gaunt has Hugh Priest kill Nettie's dog in return for a 1950s college jacket. A violent fight erupts between Nettie and Wilma, killing them both.
Gaunt takes a personal measure towards Alan by giving his fiancée Polly Chalmers a necklace that cures her crippling arthritis. Gaunt tells Polly for it to work she must always wear it. Gaunt finds Keeton cowering in his shop with a gun. He tells Gaunt that he is thinking of killing Norris Ridgewick to stop him telling everyone about his misdemeanors. Gaunt talks him out of it and takes the gun from him. Brian witnesses the investigation at Wilma Jerzyk's house and hears the sheriff musing over where all the apples came from. Brian is shocked that his actions might in some way have caused this tragedy and tries to talk to Alan about what Gaunt had him do, but is too scared to do so. Alan later approaches Brian when he is alone at the lighthouse and asks what has got him so scared. Brian explains that Gaunt is a monster, before trying to shoot himself in the head. The gun goes off but the sheriff manages to save the boy and Brian is hospitalized. Meanwhile, Alan begins to suspect that Gaunt may not be what he seems.
Father Meehan slashes the tires on Hugh Priest's truck. Hugh Priest sees what has happened to his truck when he is thrown out of the bar for being too drunk. Alan returns from meeting with Brian and is now very suspicious of Gaunt. He tries to warn Polly and asks her to get rid of the necklace, but she is unwilling to remove it. After Alan has gone she tries prying the necklace open to see what is inside and gets an electric shock which throws the necklace across the room. Polly is immediately crippled by her arthritis and cannot reach to pick up the necklace. Gaunt appears in her bedroom and replaces the necklace on Polly's neck. He states the price for necklace will be $20 and a small prank. Polly is so grateful, she pays him immediately and is clearly mesmerized by Gaunt who then seduces her. After which he states that Alan is corrupt and has been embezzling money from the town with Keeton for years. Gaunt convinces Polly to go to Alan's yacht to look for the money. She does and sees much money strewn over her fiancé's desk. Polly phones Alan from the yacht, accuses him of the crime, and in disgust calls off the engagement.
Keeton becomes afraid that everyone including his wife Myrtle is out to get him, and Gaunt convinces him that he is his only ally. Gaunt also has Keeton attack deputy Norris Ridgewick at the police station. Alan manages to subdue Keeton by handcuffing Keeton to his car. Shortly after this, Keeton manages to escape Ridgewick by kicking him in the groin. He then drives home where he accuses his wife of having an affair with Norris and kills her with a hammer. The phone rings and it is Gaunt. He tells Keeton to come to see him, as he has something for him that will make him feel better. Hugh Priest goes into the bar with a shotgun and straight up to the owner, who also pulls out a shotgun from behind the bar and they shoot each other. Gaunt's pranks spread throughout the town and its citizens. Mistaken suspicion, paranoia and anger spread with it. Gaunt starts selling his customers guns, encouraging them to kill whoever wronged them, playing on their greed and fear. Gaunt has Keeton place explosives in the town's Catholic church, where Alan is inside talking to Father Meehan relaying his new suspicions that Gaunt is the Devil incarnate, but Meehan refuses to believe him. The church explodes, but Alan and Meehan manage to escape with their lives. Father Meehan believes that Reverend Willy Rose is behind the attack on the Church and leaves to fight him.
A riot sparks throughout the town, with Gaunt watching from the sidelines. Alan tries desperately to restore order. He pulls his gun on Father Meehan who is trying to behead Reverend Rose and Gaunt encourages him to shoot them. Alan fires into the air, much to Gaunt's disappointment. Getting everyone's attention, Alan convinces the townsfolk of Castle Rock to come to their senses, exposing Gaunt's true nature and his web of lies and manipulation. Everyone stops fighting and admits their pranks, but Keeton, who is despondent, walks up to Alan and Ridgewick, pointing a gun at them with a bomb strapped to himself, threatening to blow everyone up. He is talked down by Alan who turns him against Gaunt. Keeton walks up to Gaunt, who taunts him about his inadequacies and repeatedly refers to him as 'Buster'. Infuriated, Keeton tackles Gaunt through the store window, setting off the bomb and destroying Needful Things.
Defeated but completely unharmed, Gaunt emerges from the burning wreckage of his store saying that this was not his best work. Gaunt walks up to Alan and Polly, telling them they make a cute couple, and he will encounter their grandson in 2053—then departs, presumably to continue his vicious evil work elsewhere, leaving in the same black car in which he arrived.
Cast
- Ed Harris as Sheriff Alan J. Pangborn
- Max von Sydow as Leland Gaunt
- Bonnie Bedelia as Polly Chalmers
- Amanda Plummer as Netitia "Nettie" Cobb
- J. T. Walsh as Danforth "Buster" Keeton III
- Ray McKinnon as Deputy Norris Ridgewick
- Valri Bromfield as Wilma Wadlowski Jerzyck
- Duncan Fraser as Hugh Priest
- Shane Meier as Brian Rusk
- W. Morgan Sheppard as Father Meehan
- Don S. Davis as Reverend Willie Rose
- Gillian Barber as Myrtle Keeton
- Lochlyn Munro as John LaPointe
- Campbell Lane as Frank Jewett
- Frank C. Turner as Pete Jerzyck
- Robert Easton as Lester Pratt.
- Lisa Blount as Cora Rusk (uncredited)
Reception
Needful Things received mixed reviews from critics. The film holds a 32% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 28 reviews, with an average rating of 4.8/10.[3] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale.[4]
Roger Ebert gave it 1.5 out of 4 stars, saying the film "only has one note, which it plays over and over, sort of a Satanic water torture. It's not funny and it's not scary and it's all sort of depressing."[5] Janet Maslin, film and literary critic for The New York Times, gave the film a resoundingly negative review, saying that "though this is by no means the grisliest or most witless film made from one of Mr. King's horrific fantasies, it can lay claim to being the most unpleasant."[6]
Awards
At the 1993 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films Awards, Needful Things was nominated for three Saturn Awards and won one: Amanda Plummer for best supporting actress.[7]
Release
On May 22, 1996, Needful Things was aired in a four-hour timeslot on TBS. This airing included more than an hour of excised footage not included in the theatrical release, including scene extensions, abridgements, reordering, and additional scenes of character & world development, in addition to edits for language & violence.[8]
Home media
Needful Things was originally released on VHS on February 23, 1994, by New Line Home Video.[9] Afterwards, the rights to the title reverted to MGM Home Entertainment, who released it on DVD on August 27, 2002.[10]
On July 25, 2023, Kino Lorber released an Ultra HD Blu-ray edition, containing both the theatrical cut, presented in a new 4K remaster, and the full-length TV version, presented in upscaled HD from an SD master.[11]
Related film
The character of Alan Pangborn (Ed Harris) would also appear in The Dark Half, based on the 1989 novel of the same name, where he is portrayed by Michael Rooker. However, the film makes no reference to Needful Things as it is set prior to the events of Needful Things.