Stephen King on 'The Life of Chuck,' the end of the world and, yes, joy
[June 05, 2025]
By JAKE COYLE
NEW YORK (AP) — Stephen King ’s first editor, Bill Thompson, once said,
“Steve has a movie camera in his head.”
So vividly drawn is King’s fiction that it’s offered the basis for some
50 feature films. For half a century, since Brian De Palma’s 1976 film
“Carrie,” Hollywood has turned, and turned again, to King’s books for
their richness of character, nightmare and sheer entertainment.
Open any of those books up at random, and there’s a decent chance you’ll
encounter a movie reference, too. Rita Hayworth. “The Wizard of Oz.”
“Singin’ in the Rain.” Sometimes even movies based on King’s books turn
up in his novels. That King’s books have been such fodder for the movies
is owed, in part, to how much of a moviegoer their author is.
“I love anything from ‘The 400 Blows’ to something with that guy Jason
Statham,” King says, speaking by phone from his home in Maine. “The
worst movie I ever saw was still a great way to spend an afternoon. The
only movie I ever walked out on was ‘Transformers.’ At a certain point I
said, ‘This is just ridiculous.’”
Over time, King has developed a personal policy in how he talks about
the adaptations of his books. “My idea is: If you can’t say something
nice, keep your mouth shut,” he says.
The most notable exception was Stanley Kubrick’s “The Shining,” which
King famously called “a big beautiful Cadillac with no engine inside.”
But every now and then, King is such a fan of an adaptation that he’s
excited to talk about it. That’s very much the case with “The Life of
Chuck,” Mike Flanagan’s new adaptation of King’s novella of the same
name published in the 2020 collection “If It Bleeds.”

In “The Life of Chuck,” which Neon releases in theaters Friday
(nationwide June 13), there are separate storylines but the tone-setting
opening is apocalyptic. The internet, like a dazed prize fighter,
wobbles on its last legs before going down. California is said to be
peeling away from the mainland “like old wallpaper.”
And yet in this doomsday tale, King is at his most sincere. “The Life of
Chuck,” the book and the movie, is about what matters in life when
everything else is lost. There is dancing, Walt Whitman and joy.
“In ‘The Life of Chuck,’ we understand that this guy’s life is cut
short, but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t experience joy,” says King.
“Existential dread and grief and things are part of the human
experience, but so is joy.”
Stephen King, the humanist
It’s telling that when King, our preeminent purveyor of horror, writes
about doom times, he ends up scaling it down to a single life. While
darkness and doom have, and probably always will, mark his work, King —
a more playful, instinctual, genre-skipping writer than he’s often
credited as — “The Life of Chuck” is a prime example of King, the
humanist.
“An awful lot of people assume, because he writes so much stuff that’s
so scary, they kind of forget the reason his horror works so well is
he’s always juxtaposing it with light and with love and with empathy,”
says Flanagan, who has twice before adapted King (“Doctor Sleep,”
“Gerald’s Game”) and is in the midst of making a “Carrie” series for
Amazon.
“You forget that ‘It’ isn’t about the clown, it’s about the kids and
their friendship," adds Flanagan. “‘The Stand’ isn’t about the virus or
the demon taking over the world, it’s ordinary people who have to come
together and stand against a force they cannot defeat.”
King, 77, has now written somewhere around 80 books, including the just
released “Never Flinch.” The mystery thriller brings back King’s recent
favorite protagonist, the private investigator Holly Gibney, who made
her stand-alone debut in “If It Bleeds.” It’s Gibney’s insecurities, and
her willingness to push against them, that has kept King returning to
her.

“It gave me great pleasure to see Holly grow into a more confident
person,” King says. “She never outgrows all of her insecurities, though.
None of us do.”
“Never Flinch” is a reminder that King has always been less of a
genre-first writer than a character-first one. He tends to fall in love
with a character and follow them through thick and thin.
“I’m always happy writing. That’s why I do it so much,” King says,
chuckling. “I’m a very chipper guy because I get rid of all that dark
stuff in the books.”
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Stephen King, left, and Mike Flanagan appear at the premiere of "The
Life of Chuck" during the Toronto International Film Festival in
Toronto on Sept. 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)
 Contemporary anxieties
Dark stuff, as King says, hasn’t been hard to come by lately. The
kind of climate change disaster found in “The Life of Chuck,” King
says, often dominates his anxieties.
“We’re creeping up little by little on being the one country who
does not acknowledge it’s a real problem with carbon in the
atmosphere,” King says. “That’s crazy. Certain right wing
politicians can talk all they want about how we’re saving the world
for our grandchildren. They don’t care about that. They care about
money.”
On social media, King has been a sometimes critic of President
Donald Trump, whose second term has included battles with the arts,
academia and public financing for PBS and NPR. Over the next four
years, King predicts, “Culture is going to go underground.”
In “Never Flinch,” Holly Gibney is hired as a bodyguard by a women’s
rights activist whose lecture tour is being plagued by mysterious
acts of violence. In the afterward of the book, King includes a
tribute to “supporters of women’s right to choose who have been
murdered for doing their duty.” “I’m sure they’re not going to like
that,” King says of right-wing critics.
The original germ for “The Life of Chuck” had nothing to do with
current events. One day in Boston, King noticed a drummer busking on
Boylston Street. He had the vision of a businessman in a suit who,
walking by, can’t resist dancing with abandon to the drummer’s beat.
King, a self-acknowledged dancer (though only in private, he notes),
latched onto a story that would turn on the unpredictable nature of
people, tracing the inner life of that imagined passerby. In the
film, he’s played by Tom Hiddleston. Chuck first appears, oddly, on
a billboard that haunts and confuses a local teacher (Chiwetel
Ejiofor) who's struggling to get his students to care about
literature or education with the possible end of the world
encroaching.

Sincerity for a cynical world
It’s a funny but maybe not coincidental irony that many of the best
King adaptations, like “Stand By Me” and “The Shawshank Redemption,"
have come from the author’s more warm-hearted tales. “The Life of
Chuck,” which won the People’s Choice Award last fall at the Toronto
International Film Festival, is after a similar spirit.
When King reached out about attending the TIFF world premiere,
Flanagan was shocked. The last time King had done that for one of
his own adaptations was 26 years ago, for “The Green Mile.” That
movie, like “The Shawshank Redemption,” was a box-office
disappointments, King recalls, a fate he's hoping “The Life of
Chuck” can avoid.
“He views this movie as something that’s a bit precious,” says
Flanagan. “He’s said a few things to me in the past about how
earnest it is, how this is a story without an ounce of cynicism. As
it was being released into a cynical world, I think he felt
protective of it. I think this one really means something to him.”
The Stephen King industrial complex, meanwhile, keeps rolling along.
Coming just this year are series of “Welcome to Derry” and “The
Institute” and a film of “The Long Walk.” King, himself, just
finished a draft of “Talisman 3.”
If “The Life of Chuck” has particular meaning to King, it could be
because it represents something intrinsic about his own life.
Chuck's small, seemingly unremarkable existence has grace and
meaning because, as Whitman is quoted, he "contains multitudes” that
surprise and delight him. King's fiction is evidence — heaps of it —
that he does, too.
“There are some days where I sit down and I think, ‘This is going to
be a really good day,’ and it’s not, at all,” says King. “Then other
days I sit down and think to myself, ‘I’m really tired and don’t
feel like doing this,’ and then it catches fire. You never know what
you’re going to get.”
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