On what we can make of the two opposed endings to the novel and film
versions of the same scary story.
I don’t like losing readers, even for the best of reasons; but if you
either haven’t read Steven King’s The Shining (1977) or haven’t seen Stanley Kubrick’s film version (1980) of the
novel, and are interested in checking them out sometime, you should probably
skip this post, as I’m gonna spoil the heck out of the endings to both. Because
while there are definitely stylistic and even thematic differences between the
two versions throughout, it’s really the endings where they become not only
distinct but starkly contrasting and opposed. I won’t spoil every single
detail, but suffice it to say that King’s novel ends hopefully, with notes of
redemption for its protagonist Jack Torrance and especially for his
relationship to his son and family; whereas Kubrick’s film ends with Torrance
murderously pursuing that same son with an axe and, thwarted, freezing to
death, more evil in his final moments than he has been at any earlier moment in
the film.
There are various ways we could read this striking distinction, including
connecting it to the profoundly different worldviews of the two artists (at
least as represented in their collected works): King, despite his penchant for
horror, is to my mind a big ol’ softie who almost always finds his way to a happy ending; Kubrick has a far more bleak and cynical perspective and tended to end his
films on at best ambiguous and often explicitly disturbing notes. Those different worldviews could also be connected to two longstanding
American traditions and genres, what we might call the sentimental vs. the
pessimistic romance (in that Hawthornean sense I’ve discussed elsewhere
in this space): in the former, such as in Hawthorne’s The House of the Seven Gables (1851), the darkest supernatural qualities give way by
the story’s end to more rational and far happier worlds and events; in the
latter, such as in his contemporary Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick (also 1851), the darkness is only amplified and deepened
by concluding events, leaving us adrift (literally and figuratively) in an
eternally scary world.
King’s and Kubrick’s texts, and more exactly their respective conclusions,
certainly fit into those traditions. But given that both create similarly
horrifying worlds and events right up until those endings, I would also connect
their distinct final images to the dueling yet interconnected ideas at the
heart of my current book project: dark histories and hope. Where the two versions differ most overtly, that
is, is in whether they offer their audiences any hope: in King’s novel,
Torrance finds a way through his darkest histories and to final moments of hope
for his family’s future (achieved at great personal sacrifice); in Kubrick’s
film, hope has abandoned Torrance as fully as has sanity, and both his family
and the audience can only hope that they can survive and escape his entirely
dark world. Obviously you know which I prefer; but I would also argue that,
whatever the appeal of horror for its own sake, without the possibility of hope
and redemption it’d be a pretty bleak and terrible genre.
October Recap tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think?
Scary stories you’d AmericanStudy?
Ian Wilkins writes:
ReplyDelete"This is a great conversation topic! I feel compelled to put in my two cents.
I agree with you that without the possibility of hope horror would be bleak and terrible. However, I'm not sure that the pessimism of Kubrick and Melville necessarily robs us of that sense of hope. I think that without a thorough exploration of the most desperate, desolate, despairing aspects of human existence, there would be no way to recognize that which is truly wonderful and hope-inspiring--sort of a "testing the limits" kind of thing.
Of course, in our lives we would not wish to be left adrift, but as an aesthetic experience, to put ourselves in that position I think can be hugely beneficial to the development of our thought."