The Green Mile
by Dean Kish
Can a miracle happen in one of the worst places on earth?
This is the very question posed by author Stephen King and director Frank
Darabont. The Green Mile is set in the 1920s at the height of the Depression
and where people were always looking for hope. Tom Hanks plays Paul
Edgecomb, a head prison guard assigned to the infamous "Green Mile" which is
the name of that prison's death row. Its name originates from the pale green
floor within the section. The inmates and the guards on the Green Mile care
and at times even nurture each other. I think this is why King decided to
base the story in a simpler time. Through the course of the film, Hank has
to fight a bladder infection, a vicious spoiled brat guard and a giant with
a heart of gold. It's through these conflicts that we see the story emerge.
Hank's continues his allure as one of the greatest actors of our generation
but does tug hard on keeping our attention. His conflict with the vicious
Percy Wetmore is over stretched and becomes a bore. Percy is tyrannical and
reminded me a lot of an impression of Kevin Spacey or Tim Roth instead of an
actual credible performance. To be blunt Percy's devilish nature seemed to
be staged, predictable and never really frightening. I can see the reason
for the character but he is so cliched it really bugged me. For me the
amazing performance was in the giant, John Coffey. Michael Duncan who plays
John Coffey was amazing and brilliant in his very simple role. I look
forward to seeing more of him.
Darabont's sweet tone and melodrama made me really yearn for a rough real
prison opus like BravoTV's "OZ". Death row is supposed to be bleak and the
last refuge for the convict. But when I witnessed the execution scenes, a
different view came to be. It seemed each time Hank's crew killed a man they
lost a little part of their world and that kept me in my chair. Asking the
question how much of their world will be lost to "Old Sparky"? They were
gut-wrenching scenes.
A delicate and delightful addition to the film is the world we enter when
we are introduced to "Mister Jiggles", the mouse, who makes us smile every
time he moves that spool. It's his addition that cleverly uncovers the
miracle and the depth of love within one giant's being.
A continuing debate I have around the film is the ending was it the
appropriate ending? Without ruining it for the masses write me with your
thoughts. Could it end another way?
The Green Mile is very long especially with an accompaniment of trailers
which stretch the length to 3 and a half hours. I witnessed people actually
get up and leave before the final revelation even finished. As I walked out
of the theatre I began to wonder if this film maybe should have been a
mini-series instead of a feature. Director Darabont's previous film "The
Shawshank Redemption" was another prison piece with a better message and a
better length.
(4 of 5) So Says the Soothsayer
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