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The Dark Half

  • 1993
  • R
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
21K
YOUR RATING
The Dark Half (1993)
Official Home Video Trailer
Play trailer1:37
2 Videos
69 Photos
Slasher HorrorHorrorMysteryThriller

A writer's fictional alter ego wants to take over his life...at any price.A writer's fictional alter ego wants to take over his life...at any price.A writer's fictional alter ego wants to take over his life...at any price.

  • Director
    • George A. Romero
  • Writers
    • Stephen King
    • George A. Romero
  • Stars
    • Timothy Hutton
    • Amy Madigan
    • Michael Rooker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    21K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George A. Romero
    • Writers
      • Stephen King
      • George A. Romero
    • Stars
      • Timothy Hutton
      • Amy Madigan
      • Michael Rooker
    • 106User reviews
    • 88Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Dark Half
    Trailer 1:37
    The Dark Half
    The Dark Half
    Trailer 1:49
    The Dark Half
    The Dark Half
    Trailer 1:49
    The Dark Half

    Photos69

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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Timothy Hutton
    Timothy Hutton
    • Thad Beaumont…
    Amy Madigan
    Amy Madigan
    • Liz Beaumont
    Michael Rooker
    Michael Rooker
    • Sheriff Alan Pangborn
    Julie Harris
    Julie Harris
    • Reggie Delesseps
    Robert Joy
    Robert Joy
    • Fred Clawson
    Kent Broadhurst
    Kent Broadhurst
    • Mike Donaldson
    Beth Grant
    Beth Grant
    • Shayla Beaumont
    Rutanya Alda
    Rutanya Alda
    • Miriam Cowley
    Tom Mardirosian
    Tom Mardirosian
    • Rick Cowley
    Larry John Meyers
    • Dr. Pritchard
    Patrick Brannan
    • Young Thad Beaumont
    Royal Dano
    Royal Dano
    • Digger Holt
    Glenn Colerider
    • Homer Gamache
    Sarah Parker
    • Wendy Beaumont…
    Elizabeth Parker
    • Wendy Beaumont…
    John Ponzio
    John Ponzio
    • Todd Pangborn
    Chelsea Field
    Chelsea Field
    • Annie Pangborn
    William Cameron
    William Cameron
    • Officer Hamilton
    • Director
      • George A. Romero
    • Writers
      • Stephen King
      • George A. Romero
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews106

    6.020.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6insomniac_rod

    Fairly good for coming out in the early 90's.

    The diabolical alliance of George A. Romero and Stephen King quietly delivered expectations but it's not certainly a great horror film.

    "The Dark Half" is pretty interesting and well directed but it's something you've seen before. There's a decent amount of gore, suspense is well crafted, an effective score and regular acting. Maybe the fact that I grew with the 80's Slasher movies made me think every minute about "Basket Case" and compare it with "The Dark Half".

    A decent horror movie with a thrilling ending. Deserves a watch.

    6/10.
    8Sabrz

    One of the Better Stephen King Movies

    The Dark Half is a very good horror movie which is not surprising considering the novel was written by Stephen King. George Romero a man who has done a wonderful job with horror movies is the man in charge of taking this from a novel to a movie and he delivers.

    The plot revolves around author Thad Beaumont. Beaumont had written several best selling novels under the pseudonym George Stark. However a law student makes the connection and threatens to reveal it to everyone. Before this can happen Beaumont goes public and tells everyone he is Stark, essentially killing off his pseudonym. Stark isn't content with being dispatched and he comes to life determined to stick around. Stark then goes around killing those responsible for his demise. Beaumont must fight Stark because only one of them can survive.

    Timothy Hutton does a spectacular job as both Beaumont and Stark. He really makes you believe the two are separate people but are tied together. The plot is suspenseful and full of unexpected twists. There are also supernatural elements such as the sparrows or bringers of the living dead.

    So to sum it up The Dark Half is one of the better adoptions to Stephen King's works. It follows the story accurately and succeeds in scaring the audience which is the aim for horror movies.
    7Quinoa1984

    Has the otherworldly, take-a-bite-out-of-your-arm sense of King's humor, with Romero at the lens

    The Dark Half is a film I wouldn't go out of my way to show to my friends for the first time like other films by George A. Romero (Living-dead pictures, and some of the obscurities), or a few choice Stephen King adaptations (The Shining and Shawshank Redemption being tops). But if it shows up on TV I tend to take a gander for a few, and end up watching it till the unusual, nerve-chilling ending. There's some part of King's writing that at times goes too much for the cheap scares, or rather, doesn't do enough to earn them. This time, however, Romero does catch enough of the smoke in the fire of King's book here; I'd love to sit down and actually read the whole book myself, to see how much was incorporated from King's often brilliant, if perpetually odd, writing, into the final project. It's also territory for Romero that isn't very new, though isn't one of his worst pictures either.

    Timothy Hutton, usually in lesser quality pictures, stars here as a writer who happens to have a certain 'alias' in his writing. Unfortunately, whenever he hears a certain calling card- being the sparrows- it sets him off into territory he's afraid to go into, especially with a wife and family. The divide between Thad Beaumont, the common garden-variety writer of Hutton's character, and George Stark, the madman writer of pulp fiction also played by Hutton, makes for the more intriguing parts to the film. Thankfully, unlike Secret Window, the sort of duality of man, or of the writer in this case, isn't saved up for some over-the-top climax. Here it's meant more as a psychological study, and it's here that Romero scores his best points in his adapting the material. Like his film Martin, he knows how to up the ante on the terror involved inside of the mind. In fact, it's scenes showing Beaumont/Stark writing ala the birds that end up becoming more chilling than those with the usual horror violence in them.

    Thanks to Hutton, a solid supporting cast, and an ending that does keep one guessing more than could be expected of the material, Romero has a pretty decent work here, and a King adaptation that shouldn't be as much of an embarrassment as some of the others. Individual scenes end up even being mini-masterpieces, even amidst a script that loses its energy and goes into the mundane and usual. Besides, any film with a line like this: "You always were the clumsy one, old hoss", deserves a little recognition, however minor. Under-appreciated and very watchable, though nothing wildly spectacular. 7.5/10
    TigerMann

    A film that deserves far more than it's given credit for

    Somewhere in the dark recesses of over-fluffed and processed Stephen King movie adaptations, there lies this jewel of a film: "The Dark Half."

    After having it watched it about three times, I'm still quite at a loss as to why this movie has been, more or less, forgotten or simply passed over by the horror movie community. Not only is it a fairly neat adaptation of a great King novel, but it's also directed and written by a true horror movie icon: the one and only George Romero. Isn't this the kind of "team-up" that fans would, under normal circumstances, go absolutely bananas over? I know that I did.

    Anyway ... the movie is about a writer, Thad Beaumont (Timothy Hutton), whose past - quite literally - comes back to haunt him. As a young man, he wrote pulpy crime novels (that I can only imagine were directly inspired by Richard Stark's hardboiled, master thief, Parker) that sold well ... though his literary yearnings tended to veer toward a much less marketable direction. We learn that when he was writing those pulps, his personality suffered. He drank, yelled at his wife, probably slept around, too. Having successfully exorcised that particular demon, when we meet him, Beaumont has a couple kids and an office at some New England university, teaching - you guessed it - creative writing. But when the bodies of folks close to him (i.e.: his agent, biographer) begin cropping up, the small-town police fun finger is pointed at Beaumont. But ... there's a much more sinister twist in this jet-black yarn. We learn that Beaumont indeed has a "dark half."

    The direction is perfect, the writing is perfect, the acting is perfect. What more do you want in a film? I'm not exactly certain what King's response was to this film ... I've heard rumors that if he's not directly involved in the production process, he generally scoffs at the final film product. (For example ... he's all but urinated on all the goodness that was Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of "The Shining," which not only marked a substantial turning point in horror cinema, but it's also one of my personal favorites.) Then again ... from what I understand to be true of King and Romero both ... they're friends. Hell, they made "Creepshow" together ... which is another favorite of mine, though I'm more than just a little bit guilty about it.

    "The Dark Half" also does one hell of a job at creating a genuinely creepy atmosphere. And who could listen to "Are You Lonesome Tonight" again the same way ... after hearing its soft melodies during a particularly uncomfortable dream sequence?

    All of this, compounded with the fact that Timothy Hutton is a damned fine actor (albeit sinfully unknown by most these days) ... makes "The Dark Half" an explosively well made horror/thriller. The proverbial mind meld of King and Romero made "Creepshow" an instant cult classic. So, I ask again ... why was "The Dark Half" a blink-or-you'll-miss-it flop? Maybe these horror titans just can't share the same marquee, anymore.

    I dunno.
    7lost-in-limbo

    "We all have something of a beast inside us."

    This is one strange, surreal literate piece of psychological horror pulp in the tradition of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by film-maker George Romero who adapted it from novelist Stephen King. Thad Beaumont is a successful novelist who decides to literally bury his alter ego George Stark, who he used as a pseudonym for his overly violent pulp novels. This occurs because someone tries to blackmail him. But after putting an end to this alter ego, people are starting to be killed off and these are people who are somehow tied in to seeing George Stark finish up. However the evidence at every murder scene points to Thad and something is happening to him that he hasn't experience for almost twenty years. The sparrows are calling. Underrated work from Romero, which can be atmospheric in its vivid visuals, computer effects are ably done, the jolts are nastily macabre (the graphic climax of when sparrows attack) and the steadfast narrative gradually builds up its dread-filled suspense and stinging matter with precise control. Timothy Hutton plays the dual roles with outstanding ticker. Then there is solid support by Amy Madigan, Michael Rooker and a tiny part for Robert Joy.

    "We shouldn't be writing trash."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Stephen King, the story of this film was part autobiographical as it was inspired by the events that led to him revealing his own writing pseudonym of Richard Bachman.
    • Goofs
      Near the end, when George Stark is holding Thad (Timothy Hutton)'s twins, his gun is a Colt 1911 (as he's had throughout the movie). When Thad moves closer, the gun changes to a Beretta 92FS. After Thad takes one of the twins, George's gun is again a 1911 when he tucks it in his waistband.
    • Quotes

      Man in the Hallway: What's going on?

      George Stark: Murder... You want some?

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Dark Half/Who's the Man?/Indian Summer/Boling Point/Wide Sargasso Sea (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      Are You Lonesome To-night?
      By Roy Turk & Lou Handman

      Performed by Elvis Presley

      Courtesy of the RCA Records Label of BMG Music

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 23, 1993 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • MGM
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La mitad siniestra
    • Filming locations
      • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production companies
      • Orion Pictures
      • George A. Romero Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $15,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $10,611,160
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,250,883
      • Apr 25, 1993
    • Gross worldwide
      • $10,611,160
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 2 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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