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Desperation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Desperation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Desperation

First edition cover
Author Stephen King
Country Flag of the United States USA
Language English
Genre(s) Horror
Publication date 1996
Media type Print (Hardback)
Preceded by The Green Mile
Followed by Bag of Bones

Desperation is a horror novel by Stephen King. It was published in 1996 at the same time as its "mirror" novel, The Regulators. It was made into a TV movie starring Ron Perlman in 2006.

The two novels represent parallel universes relative to one another, and most of the characters present in one novel's world also exist in the other novel's reality, albeit in different circumstances.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Desperation is the story of several people traveling along the desolate Highway 50 in Nevada who all get abducted by Collie Entragian, the deputy of the fictional mining town of Desperation. Entragian uses various pretexts for his abductions, from an arrest for drug possession to “rescuing” a family from a nonexistent gunman.

The captives quickly realize that something is very wrong with Entragian, as his bizarre statements and mannerisms soon escalate to brutal assaults and murder. They come to understand that he is possessed by an ancient evil, a supernatural entity which calls itself Tak, that had been imprisoned in an old abandoned mineshaft until recent activity by a local mining company unearthed it. Tak has the ability to control the local desert wildlife, such as vultures, snakes, spiders, scorpions, and coyotes, and can also take more direct control of human hosts, though such manifestation causes rapid deterioration of the host's body. As such, Tak needs to frequently find new hosts to inhabit in order to travel outside of the ini, a well in an underground chamber, and Tak’s entryway into this world. The story suggests that Tak is actually a physical being trapped in another dimension, but can send its spirit into our world through this opening.

Among the travelers is a boy named David Carver, who is able to commune with and receive guidance from God. This aspect brings a philosophical, religious depth unseen in some of King's other, earlier works.

As the survivors eventually manage to escape the clutches of Entragian/Tak, their first inclination is to escape Desperation, until David reveals that it is God's will that they confront Tak and seal the ini again.

[edit] Inspiration

Stephen King was inspired to write Desperation as a result of a cross-country drive in 1991, during which he visited the small desert community of Ruth, Nevada, near U.S. 50. His first thought was that the town's inhabitants were all dead. He then wondered who had killed them, and the idea occurred to him that the town's sheriff had done so.[1] In 1994, he took another cross-country trip, this time astride his motorcycle, and heard the tale of Chinese laborers who had been trapped inside a collapsed mine near Ruth. Rather than risking the loss of would-be rescuers, the Chinese men were abandoned to their fate. This anecdote was the germ of King's plot for the novel.[2]

[edit] Release with The Regulators

The original hardcovers
The original hardcovers

Desperation was released simultaneously with the novel The Regulators (published by King under the name Richard Bachman). The two novels share many similarities, most notably the cast of characters. Although, in some instances, the ages of the similar characters are vastly different. The original hardcover versions of the novels had cover artwork by Mark Ryden that connected when the two books were placed side by side. It can be assumed that the two books are alternate realities.

[edit] Dark Tower connections

  • The term can-toi (that is, 'children of the desert') is used in the Dark Tower series to describe the Low Men in Yellow Coats.
  • In the final scene where the survivors are looking at the school photo album, the numbers '10' and '9' appear in the hopscotch diagram. 10+9=19, 19 being the infamous number of the Dark Tower world.

[edit] TV movie

Desperation
Directed by Mick Garris
Produced by Bruce Dunn
Mick Garris
Stephen King
Mark Sennet
Kelly Van Horn
Written by Stephen King
Starring Tom Skerritt
Ron Perlman
Steven Weber
Annabeth Gish
Distributed by ABC (USA)
Release date(s) May 23, 2006 (USA)
Running time 180 min. (with commercials)
Language English
Budget $12M (USD)
IMDb profile

Desperation was adapted into a television movie, written by King himself, was filmed in 2004 and broadcast in 2006. The film was directed by frequent King collaborator Mick Garris and starred Ron Perlman as Collie Entragian, Tom Skerritt, Steven Weber, and Annabeth Gish. Filming primarily took place in Bisbee, Arizona, in the nearly deserted Lowell borough, with other sequences in Old Bisbee, the outskirts of Bisbee, and in Tucson, Arizona. During filming, a set in the Tucson Convention Center (TCC) caught fire. Five people were injured. The fire destroyed everything on the set, including all production gear and equipment, and the TCC was heavily damaged.[3]

The film closely followed the plot of the novel, and received moderate reviews, including a 46 rating from Metacritic.[4] Though originally intended as a two-part miniseries, Desperation aired in its three-hour entirety on May 23, 2006, on ABC, after a red-carpet premiere screening at Tucson's historic Fox Theatre (built in 1929). ABC aired Desperation on the same time as Fox's American Idol, an action that King himself was upset with,[5] and thus did not do well at all in the ratings. Even the bemused populace of Bisbee was torn between the two programs.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Relations to works by King

  • Cynthia Smith, the drifter who gets mixed up in the events of the novel after being picked up by Steve Ames, was a resident of the shelter Daughters and Sisters from Rose Madder. She mentions sustaining a broken nose in Norman's crazed attack. There is also mention of 'a baleful rose-madder glint in the eyes of a horse drawn on the wall of the movie theatre in which the group takes shelter.
  • Tommyknockers are mentioned during Tom Billingsly's China Pit story,
  • In the film, a vision of David's shows the words "redrum dog" (reversed to: murder god) painted in red upon the wall. This is a reference to "The Shining".

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Look up Desperation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.


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