La petite ville de Haven devient un foyer d'inventions toutes gérées par un étrange dispositif d'énergie verte. Toute la ville creuse quelque chose dans les bois, et seul un poète alcoolique... Tout lireLa petite ville de Haven devient un foyer d'inventions toutes gérées par un étrange dispositif d'énergie verte. Toute la ville creuse quelque chose dans les bois, et seul un poète alcoolique peut découvrir le secret des Tommyknockers.La petite ville de Haven devient un foyer d'inventions toutes gérées par un étrange dispositif d'énergie verte. Toute la ville creuse quelque chose dans les bois, et seul un poète alcoolique peut découvrir le secret des Tommyknockers.
- Nommé pour 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
Avis à la une
Believe me, if you want to know what its all about, read the book by King instead..don't waste 4hrs on the SciFi channel watching this garbage
With a good premise and a few interesting cast prospects (Jimmy Smitts, Marg Helgenberger, EG Marshall, Traci Lords), I was prepared for anything. It could have been a horrid telling of the story, or perhaps something truly surprising and brilliant. It's in the middle; it's not very brilliant nor bad at all. The Tommyknockers works, more or less, how one sees a Stephen King book (one of the really good ones) work as a story: introduce the characters, let us get to know them very well and maybe empathize with them or sympathize with their troubles (alcoholism, infidelity, superstitions) or just understand them, and then just put them through total HELL (in caps). Most of the first half is just set-up, seeing the relationship between Bobbi and Jim, who has been on the wagon until an incident that sends him in turmoil, the fractured marriage of a cop and a postal worker- the latter cheating with a sultry temptress (Lords) every day- and the little boy who wants to master, and believes, in magic.
But once the effects of the Tommyknockers spreads through the town, it gets equally interesting and hokey. Some of the acting is just terrible, as one might expect (the kid playing the would-be magician is the kind one would usually find on low-rated episodes of Are You Afraid of the Dark), and some of that green visual effects stuff is rather cheap even when nifty coming out of a lipstick container. And the writing in some scenes is silly too, and I'm not sure if that's a criticism of the movie or of King. Yet what does work is that it's a solid story, told with a degree of professionalism and some creativity that makes it worth watching. Smitts and Helgenberger give as good as they've got, which is a big boost, and some scenes like the 4th of July climax of the first half of the movie are staged in a creepy manner and style (cutting between the zombies, the dolls, the kid repeating and the telekinetic typewriter typing Tommyknockers over and over). Even the aliens are a lot of fun to watch towards the end, with the end result revealed as just a rip on what would later be seen in the Matrix.
Some of this is predictable, and silly, and its ending is equally tragic and unintentionally funny. But I was entertained and didn't want to get up or stop the DVD during its running time, and that's my two cents.
5,5/10
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe character of Becka Paulson and her adulterous husband Joe were from an original short story by Stephen King called "The Revelations of Becka Paulson." King liked the story so much he wound up writing it into the novel The Tommyknockers. The short story itself would later be filmed for an episode of the 90's updating of The Outer Limits tv series with Catherine O'Hara in the role of Becka.
- GaffesThe Nutcracker doll's knife has blood on it before it stabs Ruth.
- Citations
Roberta 'Bobbi' Anderson: [to Gard] It wasn't the plate that kept them out. It was you.
- Versions alternativesAfter the initial television broadcast, Vidmark released a cut version of the miniseries for home video. This version ran for 120 minutes, cutting out several characters and even a few sub-plots (including the romance between Ruth and Butch).
- ConnexionsFeatured in Biography: Stephen King: Fear, Fame and Fortune (2000)
- Bandes originalesThe Star-Spangled Banner
(uncredited)
Music by John Stafford Smith
Lyrics by Francis Scott Key
Performed by Joanna Cassidy
Meilleurs choix
- How many seasons does The Tommyknockers have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée
- 1h 34min(94 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1