Gus Birney as Alex and Alyssa Sutherland as Eve Copeland in the Spike TV adaptation of Stephen King’s The Mist. Chris Reardon for Spike 2017
Gus Birney as Alex and Alyssa Sutherland as Eve Copeland in the Spike TV adaptation of Stephen King’s The Mist. Chris Reardon for Spike 2017
Gus Birney as Alex and Alyssa Sutherland as Eve Copeland in the Spike TV adaptation of Stephen King’s The Mist. Chris Reardon for Spike 2017
Gus Birney as Alex and Alyssa Sutherland as Eve Copeland in the Spike TV adaptation of Stephen King’s The Mist. Chris Reardon for Spike 2017

Television adaptation of Stephen King’s The Mist comes to Netflix


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Stephen King probably doesn't even break a sweat as he crafts interdimensional monsters with razor fangs, flesh-rending tentacles and odious people-munching habits – but at the end of the day, his cautionary tales teach us that human nature is the thing we should fear the most.

In print, one of his favourite devices is to trap people together, cut off any avenue of escape – then watch them go batty and gradually turn on one another as social niceties evaporate and a brutal new pecking order emerges. Whether it's a family in a haunted hotel in The Shining or an entire town beset by alien technology in Under the Dome, it's only a matter of time until sanity goes the way of the dodo.

One of the very best of these pressure cookers is The Mist, which sees a gaggle of townsfolk trapped in a supermarket when an eerie fog full of bloodthirsty creatures engulfs their small Maine town. It first appeared as a horror novella in King's 1980 collection of short fiction, Skeleton Crew.

In 2007, Hollywood delivered a superlative, gut-wrenching film, adapted and directed by Frank Darabont, who also helmed another box-office hit from King's canon, The Green Mile (1999), and went on to bring The Walking Dead to television in 2010.

Like the seasons, everything King does comes around again, and now The Mist has been reimagined for television by Spike TV in the United States, where it premiered in June to respectable cable ratings. Its global Netflix debut is Friday.

The man behind the curtain this time is Danish writer/filmmaker Christian Torpe, who freely admits he felt the weight of adapting and expanding the work of one of the most famous authors in the world into 10 hour-long episodes. By necessity, his is a looser retelling, with new storylines and characters, set in a shopping mall, a church and more.

"The novel is 180 pages and it takes place over a very short period of time in a supermarket," says Torpe. "In order to turn it into a show, we had to change a lot of things. And at the same time we wanted to be incredibly respectful to the source material."

So the showrunner, feeling the flutter of a few butterflies, went back to the man from Bangor, Maine, to get a proper blessing to proceed.

"I sat down and wrote [King] a very, very long email about what I proposed to change and why I wanted to do it, and how I thought it spoke to something very contemporary," Torpe recently told the CinemaBlend website. "I pressed Send, I barely slept that night, and I woke up the next morning and got an email from him.

"Reading that is probably the scariest thing I've ever done. But he was just incredibly kind and generous and said as long as I didn't do anything ordinary, then he was completely on board with allowing me to fire away and do what I wanted. That was such a generous thing and so kind of him."

In Torpe's retelling, The Mist centres around a small-town family that is torn apart by a brutal crime. As they deal with the fallout, a creepy mist rolls in, suddenly cutting them off from the rest of the world, and in some cases, each other.

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Family, friends and adversaries become strange bedfellows, battling the mysterious mist and its threats, fighting to maintain morality and sanity as the rules of society break down. Anchoring the series is Morgan Spector, an actor previously best known for his portrayal of Frank Capone on the HBO series Boardwalk Empire. Here he portrays former journalist and children's book author Kevin Copeland, a man estranged from his wife Eve (Alyssa Sutherland of Vikings) and daughter Alex (newcomer Gus Birney) – and who desperately resolves to find them when the mist rolls in.

"As Christian's obviously noticed, there isn't enough [in the book] necessarily to stretch it out for a series," says Spector. "So he's taken all the weird little idiosyncratic characters and the old, tense relationships between people who have known each other their whole lives in a small town, cramming them all together in a high-pressure environment, and seeing what fissures emerge and how people crack.

"That sense of just staring for a long time at someone while they break is what Christian has taken from the story."

In character as his wife Eve, Sutherland remarks: "There's this theory that we're always just nine meals away from anarchy. Take away food. Take away water. Nine missing meals later … that's when people start doing bad things."

Other stars include: Danica Curcic as a young drug addict on the run; Okezie Morro as an Arrowhead Project soldier with amnesia; Luke Cosgrove as a high-school footballer accused of a heinous crime; Darren Pettie as his father, the town sheriff; Russell Posner as a teen misfit; Dan Butler as a modern-minded priest; and Isiah Whitlock, Jr. as manager of the local mall, who struggles to keep order in the new society.

One of the best things about The Mist, which received mixed reviews in the US, is the indomitable Frances Conroy, best known for her turn as family matriarch Ruth Fisher on the television series Six Feet Under (2001-2005), for which she won a Golden Globe. She has also received critical acclaim for playing the spine-chilling older version of the housemaid Moira O'Hara on the first season of American Horror Story.

Frances Conroy as Nathalie Raven. Matthias Cla for Spike 2017
Frances Conroy as Nathalie Raven. Matthias Cla for Spike 2017

In The Mist she has been cast in the role of Nathalie Raven, an  ecological martyr. While she is seemingly more connected to nature than most people, her instincts about her fellow humans are dead on – much like King's.

Even in his dotage, as he closes in on his 70th birthday on September 21, King remains productive and a force majeure in popular culture as he continues to captivate and engage our imaginations on a global scale, with his stories of common folk in uncommon situations.

It's been a year well-stocked with adaptations of his work, with his interdimensional saga The Dark Tower now in cinemas, with his Mr Mercedes now a David E Kelley mystery series on the Audience Network in the US, and with a remake of his evil-clown-demon masterpiece It creeping into cinemas this September.

When it came to making The Mist, Torpe says he got a kick out of finding new ways to do horrible things to people.

"Fun is a weird word, but it's a creative challenge and it's been very interesting for me," he says. "What you wouldn't necessarily know from seeing the pilot is that I come from comedy. The stuff I do back in Denmark has mostly been in the comedy and dramedy genre. This has been a very new road for me – but I've had a lot of fun doing it."

The Mist is available to stream on Netflix from August 25

Results:

6.30pm: Handicap (Turf) | US$175,000 2,410m | Winner: Bin Battuta, Christophe Soumillon (jockey), Saeed bin Suroor (trainer)

7.05pm: UAE 1000 Guineas Trial Conditions (Dirt) | $100,000 1,400m | Winner: Al Hayette, Fabrice Veron, Ismail Mohammed

7.40pm: Handicap (T) $145,000 1,000m | Winner: Faatinah, Jim Crowley, David Hayes

8.15pm: Dubawi Stakes Group 3 (D) $200,000 1,200m | Winner: Raven’s Corner, Richard Mullen, Satish Seemar

8.50pm: Singspiel Stakes Group 3 (T) $200,000 1,800m | Winner: Dream Castle, Christophe Soumillon, Saeed bin Suroor

9.25pm: Handicap (T) $175,000 1,400m​​​ | Winner: Another Batt, Connor Beasley, George Scott

THE POPE'S ITINERARY

Sunday, February 3, 2019 - Rome to Abu Dhabi
1pm: departure by plane from Rome / Fiumicino to Abu Dhabi
10pm: arrival at Abu Dhabi Presidential Airport


Monday, February 4
12pm: welcome ceremony at the main entrance of the Presidential Palace
12.20pm: visit Abu Dhabi Crown Prince at Presidential Palace
5pm: private meeting with Muslim Council of Elders at Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
6.10pm: Inter-religious in the Founder's Memorial


Tuesday, February 5 - Abu Dhabi to Rome
9.15am: private visit to undisclosed cathedral
10.30am: public mass at Zayed Sports City – with a homily by Pope Francis
12.40pm: farewell at Abu Dhabi Presidential Airport
1pm: departure by plane to Rome
5pm: arrival at the Rome / Ciampino International Airport

If you go

The flights
Emirates (www.emirates.com) and Etihad (www.etihad.com) both fly direct to Bengaluru, with return fares from Dh 1240. From Bengaluru airport, Coorg is a five-hour drive by car.

The hotels
The Tamara (www.thetamara.com) is located inside a working coffee plantation and offers individual villas with sprawling views of the hills (tariff from Dh1,300, including taxes and breakfast).

When to go
Coorg is an all-year destination, with the peak season for travel extending from the cooler months between October and March.

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting 

2. Prayer 

3. Hajj 

4. Shahada 

5. Zakat 

Astroworld
Travis Scott
Grand Hustle/Epic/Cactus Jack

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Iftar programme at the Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding

Established in 1998, the Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding was created with a vision to teach residents about the traditions and customs of the UAE. Its motto is ‘open doors, open minds’. All year-round, visitors can sign up for a traditional Emirati breakfast, lunch or dinner meal, as well as a range of walking tours, including ones to sites such as the Jumeirah Mosque or Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood.

Every year during Ramadan, an iftar programme is rolled out. This allows guests to break their fast with the centre’s presenters, visit a nearby mosque and observe their guides while they pray. These events last for about two hours and are open to the public, or can be booked for a private event.

Until the end of Ramadan, the iftar events take place from 7pm until 9pm, from Saturday to Thursday. Advanced booking is required.

For more details, email openminds@cultures.ae or visit www.cultures.ae

 

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Why seagrass matters
  • Carbon sink: Seagrass sequesters carbon up to 35X faster than tropical rainforests
  • Marine nursery: Crucial habitat for juvenile fish, crustations, and invertebrates
  • Biodiversity: Support species like sea turtles, dugongs, and seabirds
  • Coastal protection: Reduce erosion and improve water quality
Super 30

Produced: Sajid Nadiadwala and Phantom Productions
Directed: Vikas Bahl
Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Pankaj Tripathi, Aditya Srivastav, Mrinal Thakur
Rating: 3.5 /5

Children who witnessed blood bath want to help others

Aged just 11, Khulood Al Najjar’s daughter, Nora, bravely attempted to fight off Philip Spence. Her finger was injured when she put her hand in between the claw hammer and her mother’s head.

As a vital witness, she was forced to relive the ordeal by police who needed to identify the attacker and ensure he was found guilty.

Now aged 16, Nora has decided she wants to dedicate her career to helping other victims of crime.

“It was very horrible for her. She saw her mum, dying, just next to her eyes. But now she just wants to go forward,” said Khulood, speaking about how her eldest daughter was dealing with the trauma of the incident five years ago. “She is saying, 'mama, I want to be a lawyer, I want to help people achieve justice'.”

Khulood’s youngest daughter, Fatima, was seven at the time of the attack and attempted to help paramedics responding to the incident.

“Now she wants to be a maxillofacial doctor,” Khulood said. “She said to me ‘it is because a maxillofacial doctor returned your face, mama’. Now she wants to help people see themselves in the mirror again.”

Khulood’s son, Saeed, was nine in 2014 and slept through the attack. While he did not witness the trauma, this made it more difficult for him to understand what had happened. He has ambitions to become an engineer.

AVOID SCAMMERS: TIPS FROM EMIRATES NBD

1. Never respond to e-mails, calls or messages asking for account, card or internet banking details

2. Never store a card PIN (personal identification number) in your mobile or in your wallet

3. Ensure online shopping websites are secure and verified before providing card details

4. Change passwords periodically as a precautionary measure

5. Never share authentication data such as passwords, card PINs and OTPs  (one-time passwords) with third parties

6. Track bank notifications regarding transaction discrepancies

7. Report lost or stolen debit and credit cards immediately

How the bonus system works

The two riders are among several riders in the UAE to receive the top payment of £10,000 under the Thank You Fund of £16 million (Dh80m), which was announced in conjunction with Deliveroo's £8 billion (Dh40bn) stock market listing earlier this year.

The £10,000 (Dh50,000) payment is made to those riders who have completed the highest number of orders in each market.

There are also riders who will receive payments of £1,000 (Dh5,000) and £500 (Dh2,500).

All riders who have worked with Deliveroo for at least one year and completed 2,000 orders will receive £200 (Dh1,000), the company said when it announced the scheme.