Empire (UK)

THE DARK TOWER

For years, Stephen King fans have asked, “Who can bring down the Dark Tower?” Funny you should ask...

- helen O’hara

DIRECTOR Nikolaj Arcel Cast Idris Elba, Matthew Mcconaughe­y, Tom Taylor, Claudia Kim, Fran Kranz, Abbey Lee, Jackie Earle Haley

plot Jake Chambers (Taylor) is plagued with nightmares about the Man In Black (Mcconaughe­y) following the death of his father. He learns that his dreams are real, and teams up with the Gunslinger, Roland (Elba), to protect the universe from the terrifying stranger. STEPHEN KING’S SWEEPING sci-fi-fantasy-western-horror epic The Dark

Tower is full of cool lines, memorable characters and film-friendly imagery, but low on filmfriend­ly brevity. Hollywood has been tinkering with the eight-book series for a decade and has here distilled elements of several books into one brief and — for some reason — PG package. The result is more like The Neverendin­g Story than you’d expect from King’s books, with less of the (literal and figurative) weight you’d want.

As the film opens we’re told that a Dark Tower lies “at the centre of the universe”, and that “it is said that the mind of a child can bring it down”. And oh, here’s a child, Jake Chambers (Taylor), plagued with dreams of the tower since his father’s death, and also by visions of the Man In Black (Mcconaughe­y). This is a sorcerer, or science whizz, harvesting kids and using them to attack the Tower in order to end the universe and allow monsters in. Luckily the Man In Black — or Walter, as his mother named him — has a sworn enemy in the Gunslinger, Roland (Elba), denizen of a post-apocalypti­c world. He too lost a father (David Haysbert), so brace for some ‘shared experience’ bonding.

The plotting would be fine, as far as it goes, but the brutal pace of the storytelli­ng means that scenes are stripped of all but essential exposition and there’s almost no connective tissue between events. A monster breaks into our universe using images of the dead, for reasons unexplaine­d, and characters repeatedly react in unexpected ways to attacks, as if the script was originally twice as long. Elba infuses Roland with power and anguish, and Taylor does well in the slightly thankless role of Plucky Kid, but otherwise we’re left almost completely without coherent characters.

It’s especially hard on Mcconaughe­y, reduced to pantomime villain status. He swans around with ill-advised spiky hair, and pops up all over the place to order people to “stop breathing”. Since he haunts our two heroes’ nightmares, can project his image to taunt them or appear physically, you’re never sure to what extent he poses a real threat when he turns up. He should seem locked in a duel with Roland, yet he has whole teams of subordinat­es and henchmen, who wear fake skin for unclear reasons yet seem a little too colourful to work for such a tyrant. Tonally, it’s bizarre; there’s a reason the books kept things stripped down at first.

The action also disappoint­s. While Roland’s reloading skills are extraordin­arily cool and fun, the fights themselves are muddily edited and shot in a choppy, distant style that reduces the impact — probably for that rating. Jackie Earle Haley shows up for one fight that must, surely, have been longer. It’s as if this has been stripped to the bone, and while one can admire its economy the baroque swirls it excises are much of the appeal of The Dark Tower. There’s a clear love for King here — and a nod to The Shining too — but it needed more time and blood to resemble the story we know. If you’re going to sneak in ostensibly ridiculous lines like, “His shine is pure,” or, “Have a great apocalypse,” you need more human drama around them as a cushion.

VERDICT Elba is genuinely great as the tormented Roland, but the film does its best to suffocate him under a mountain of plotheavy nonsense. disappoint­ing.

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