Related: Anna Duggar Steps Out in Arkansas Amid Josh Duggar’s Prison Sentence
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It seems movie fans have been increasingly interested in apocalyptic movies lately. Last week, it was Armageddon getting the spotlight on the streaming charts, as the Ben Affleck-starring feature rose among Tubi’s rankings. Nearly a week later, another sci-fi disaster film has emerged after it found its new streaming home this month.
In the same year that Armageddon was released, Paramount Pictures and DreamWorks released Deep Impact, a movie with a similar premise. The feature starred Elijah Wood, years before he appeared in The Lord of the Rings, as well as other notable cast members, including Morgan Freeman and Jon Favreau. For those who have yet to see it, Deep Impact follows Leo Biederman (Wood), a high school student who discovers a comet heading straight towards Earth, and its impact on the planet may trigger an “Extinction-level Event.” As a last-ditch effort to save humanity, astronauts were sent into space in a mission to blow up the comet. Meanwhile, in preparation for the worst-case scenario, the government implements a last-resort plan to ensure humanity’s survival.
At the start of April, Deep Impact made Paramount+ its new streaming home, and the film ranked #10 on Paramount+’s Top 10 Movies in the United States on this weekend, sitting behind Jim Carrey‘s The Truman Show. During Deep Impact‘s theatrical release, it grossed only $140.6 million worldwide, ranking it the 6th-highest-grossing film of 1998, between A Bug’s Life and Mulan. Its reception was mediocre, earning only 45% from critics and 43% from the audience on Rotten Tomatoes. But despite its ratings, Deep Impact entering the streaming charts isn’t new — the film has earned a cult following over the years and it also appeared on Tubi’s charts back in February.
Deep Impact is one of many sci-fi disaster movies that have come out over the years, and there are other titles like it worth a watch after you finish streaming this on Paramount+. One notable example is Armageddon, which recently made waves on streaming platforms like Tubi and features an asteroid heading towards Earth, thus threatening life on the planet. What made Deep Impact stand out from Armageddon in 1998 was how it told a story about everyday people, how they would react if they knew the world was about to end, and what they would do to ensure their survival.
If you’re after an apocalyptic film that features a similar every-man premise, then Volcano is worth a watch. Released a year prior, this film follows Mike Roark (Tommy Lee Jones), who learns that a volcano is erupting in Los Angeles, so he and many emergency service members team up to redirect the lava in hopes of minimizing the damage, while also attempting to save as many lives as possible due to a new natural threat.
Deep Impact is available to stream on Paramount+. Follow Collider for more updates.
May 8, 1998
120 minutes
Mimi Leder
Michael Tolkin, Bruce Joel Rubin
Even though Anna Duggar’s seemingly picture perfect life in Arkansas was turned upside down after her husband Josh Duggar was found guilty of child pornography, she has stuck by the sex offender’s side since his conviction nearly five years ago despite her family’s objections, Us Weekly has learned exclusively.
“Anna has several family members who have strongly encouraged her to leave Josh,” a source tells Us Weekly. “It has been very difficult to have those conversations because Anna has always been so supportive of Josh, but the family felt that they had to let her know their thoughts.”
The insider notes that Anna’s loved ones “do not want to lose their relationship with her, so they try to let her know what they think while also remaining supportive family members.”
Her family’s disapproval is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to what Anna has endured since Josh’s 2021 conviction.
“It is a nightmare for Anna that she will be dealing with for many, many years to come,” the source says of the scandal’s aftermath. “The only positive thing right now is that he is out of the picture [while in jail].”
Anna — who shares children Mackynzie, Michael, Marcus, Meredith, Mason, Maryella and Madyson with her 38-year-old husband— is trying to focus on the positives in her life while Josh serves more than 12 years in prison.
“Anna has worked very, very hard to get to where she is right now,” the insider explains. “She is not living with the Duggars and has begun to set up her own life.” (Anna, 37, was reportedly living on the Duggar compound in Arkansas as recently as last year.)

Anna Duggar and Josh Duggar with six of their seven children. Courtesy of The Duggar Family/Instagram
As Anna has distanced herself from the Duggars, she is “becoming independent and gaining strength,” the source tells Us.
“She has worked very hard to be strong and to stay out of the news and rebuild her life to a degree,” the insider adds.
Unlike many of her in-laws, Anna does not have her own personal social media account, helping to keep her life as far away from the spotlight as possible.
Anna does, however, periodically post on her dog breeding business Instagram account, Golden Grove Pups.
“Meet Whitaker, Beaumont, and Harrington — three of our handsome little golden guys 🐶💛,” Anna wrote via Instagram in February, showing a video of three puppies that had been adopted and giving fans a rare glimpse at herself in the process.
As fans of 19 Kids and Counting and its spinoff, Counting On, know, Anna married Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar’s eldest child, Josh, in 2008.
The couple went on to welcome six children, before their idyllic looking life came crashing down in spring 2021. (Anna and Josh’s seventh baby was born in November 2021, just months after his arrest.)
Josh was arrested in April 2021 for receiving and possessing child pornography. While Josh has maintained his innocence, he was found guilty in December of that same year and sentenced in May 2022 to 151 months in prison. He’s scheduled to be released on December 23, 2032.
“[Anna and Josh’s kids] are her No. 1 priority and that will never change,” a source exclusively told Us in June 2022 following his conviction. “She’s with them all the time. She’s going to stand by her husband and she’s going to continue raising their kids to the best of her ability.”
Although Anna has stayed silent about her husband’s arrest and prison sentence, emails she sent her brother-in-law Joseph Duggar last month following his arrest for allegedly molesting a 9-year-old girl in 2020 offer a look into how she’s feeling about the latest Duggar scandal.
“You’ve got our prayers. We love you — however we can help, please let us know,” Anna wrote to Joseph, 31, on March 21, according to letters obtained by Us.
She also warned him, “Just remember, don’t talk about anything legal unless you are with an attorney. Everything said in these messages, phone calls and video chats are recorded and turned over to prosecutors.”
Joseph was extradited to Florida last month, where he pleaded not guilty to charges of lewd and lascivious behavior involving molestation of a victim less than 12 years old and lewd and lascivious behavior conducted by a person 18 years or older. He was released on a $600,000 bond.
If you or someone you know is experiencing child abuse, call or text Child Help Hotline at 1-800-422-4453.
Zendaya is currently experiencing one of the busiest years of her career. Not only is she starring in A24’s critically acclaimed “The Drama” alongside Robert Pattinson, but her HBO series, “Euphoria”, is set to return following a years-long hiatus. Now, the actress is opening up about the show, saying she thinks this may be the final season.

Zendaya appeared on “The Drew Barrymore Show” on April 6 to promote “The Drama” and her several other projects. During the discussion, host Drew Barrymore mentioned “Euphoria” and asked if the upcoming third season would be the final outing for the HBO drama series.
Zendaya responded, “I think so, yeah.” Barrymore then said, “I never want to ask questions like that, because it’s not my business, and yet, is this to be enjoyed knowing [it will end]?”
After that, Zendaya stated, “Yes, I think so,” before saying, “That closure is coming.” So far, HBO has neither confirmed nor denied that “Euphoria” will end after season three.

Season three of “Euphoria” has been highly anticipated, as it’s been four years since the second installment. HBO announced in December 2025 that the show would finally return on April 12. After that, the network released full-length trailers in March, following a series of teasers.
According to Variety, this season will feature a time jump, giving a look at the characters as they navigate adult life. In addition to Zendaya, the ensemble cast includesJacob Elordi, Sydney Sweeney, Colman Domingo, and more.

As mentioned, there is no official confirmation that “Euphoria” will end with season three, despite Zendaya’s public comments. However, fans of the show are reacting, with many saying they already believed this would be the show’s final season before Zendaya’s “Drew Barrymore Show” appearance.
One person said on X, “HBO staying silent is classic corporate chess — they get the viral speculation for free while keeping the door cracked for spin-offs, movies, whatever prints money later. Smart, but it also feels like they know the lightning-in-a-bottle era is over.”
They continued, “Look, Euphoria changed television. It made us feel uncomfortable on purpose, launched half the young cast into superstardom, and gave Zendaya the kind of role most actors wait a lifetime for. But dragging it past this season risks turning it into the show that used to be great.”
Another “Euphoria” fan said, “Zendaya saying ‘I think so’ for Euphoria… yeah, that sounds like the end is near.” Lastly, someone else wrote, “lowkey gutted that season 3 is the last of ‘Euphoria.’”

One of Zendaya’s several projects released in 2026 was “The Drama,” which arrived in movie theaters on April 3. According to BoxOfficeMojo, the movie debuted at number three in the US, making $14,380,197. “The Drama” came in behind “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie” and “Project Hail Mary” in the number one and two positions, respectively.
Regarding reviews, “The Drama” currently has a 77% rating from critics and an 81% rating from audiences, making it “certified fresh” with both. This is despite TMZ having revealed the controversial twist of the movie, which is that Zendaya’s character once considered going through with a school shooting.
Because of the film’s subject matter, some critics vowed not to review it, and it also drew attention from various gun violence prevention organizations, such as March For Our Lives, according to IndieWire.

As mentioned, 2026 will be among the busiest 12 months of Zendaya’s stellar career. This is evidenced by the fact that she will have five projects released to the work before the end of the year. Following “The Drama” and “Euphoria,” she will appear in “The Odyssey” and “Spiderman: Brand New Day,” both of which are releasing in July.
After that, Zendaya will star in “Dune: Part Three,” in which her “The Drama “co-star Pattinson will also appear.
Regarding her busy schedule, Zendaya told Fandango in March 2026 that she would take a break after this year. She said, “I guess, you know, I just hope people don’t get sick of me. I really appreciate everyone who supports any of the movies or who supports my career in any kind of way.”
Zendaya went on, “I’m deeply appreciative, and like I said, I just hope you guys don’t get sick of me this year because I’ll tell you what: after this, I’m disappearing for a little bit. I’m going to have to go into hiding for just a little bit.”
“Euphoria” premieres on HBO and HBO Max on April 12.
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BBC comedies and Emmy-winning dramas are among our favo(u)rites.
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Gosling wished the Artemis II well ahead of its historic mission to the moon and back.
Former “Bachelor” contestant Ashley Iaconetti is laying into “Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” star Taylor Frankie Paul. As Paul continues to deal with the aftermath of ABC canceling her season of “The Bachelorette” two days before it was scheduled to premiere, more and more people are speaking out about what drove the network to that decision.

Speaking with Variety, Iaconetti, who is reclaiming her star as the newest cast member on Bravo’s “Real Housewives of Rhode Island,” called Paul’s situation with the network “nuanced” before sharing even more of her opinion.
“It’s a good thing they didn’t go forth with the season,” she said. However, Iaconetti said the network should’ve decided to pull Paul’s season sooner. “That was a decision that should have been made more carefully earlier on.”

As reported by The Blast, ABC canceled Paul’s season of “The Bachelorette” after a video of her appearing to assault her ex-boyfriend, Dakota Mortensen, was shared online.
Paul displayed appalling behavior in the clip, striking Mortensen, pulling his hair, wrapping her arms around his body, and later throwing metal chairs at him.
Mortensen appeared distraught in the video, crying out for Paul to stop. “This is called physical abuse. This is all you do,” he could be heard saying. “It’s the only thing you know how to do is hurt me. You think this is OK? It’s not OK. Holy sh-t.”
ABC released a statement shortly after, saying it was focusing on supporting Paul and her family at the time, but Iaconneti said there was nothing new about the released clip.
“We knew very much in detail, based on a lot of the interviews that she’s given, exactly what happened in the video and what led to the arrest,” she said. “You guys did have her on a TV show for four seasons.”

Elsewhere in the interview, Iaconetti called the events of that night in 2023 “terrible” and said it was one reason Paul wasn’t the right fit for the iconic franchise.
“That wasn’t an appropriate role for her to fill,” she said, adding, “and probably was not something that she was mentally, emotionally ready to take on for many reasons—the fact that she was so intertwined with Dakota going into it being one of them.”
Paul’s rep addressed the news in a statement to Variety, thanking the public for their support.
“After years of silently suffering extensive mental and physical abuse as well as threats of retaliation, Taylor is finally gaining the strength to face her accuser and taking steps to ensure that she and her children are protected from any further harm,” their statement read.

Amid this, production on season 5 of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” was halted, according to NBC News, after Paul and Mortensen were involved in another alleged domestic dispute in February 2026.
While the details of the most recent alleged dispute have been kept under wraps, a friend of Mortensen’s called the Draper Police Department and said he was a “victim of a domestic violence assault by an ex-girlfriend at her Draper residence.”
The police department declined to share additional details, but a spokesperson confirmed there was an open investigation.
Paul shared a post on social media calling the last 40 days “hell on earth.” Despite that, Paul said she’s relied on her faith to get her through.
In another post, however, Paul admitted the way she practices her faith would look different moving forward.
“Born and raised Mormon (LDS) and I’ll always have love and respect towards it,” she said on her Instagram Stories. “I’ll even continue to go with my family at times; with that being said, it’s time to detach myself from it.”
And while Paul said she’ll always believe in Jesus Christ and God, she stated that she’s realized she can practice her faith anywhere, not just inside the physical church.
“Point being, there is more out there to learn. And I’m writing this out as a release,” Paul finished.
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The festival’s parent company insists that the rapper “has a legal right to come into the country and to perform.”
Remi Bader had a relatable fashion moment while trying on outfits.
Bader, 30, took to Instagram on Sunday, April 5, to share a potential Coachella look with her followers. “Coachella 2026! Bursting out of my pants,” she said while wearing a brown bra top and high-waisted jeans. “Why did I think this wasn’t going to happen? It always happens.”
She then put her hand in her pocket and added, “But this — also, clearly gained some weight — it’s fine!” The influencer noted that she needed a size or two bigger while showing her inspiration photo.
“I was like, ‘OK, I can copy her outfit but I’m gonna do fun, cool different pants,’” Bader explained of her floral-painted jeans. “Look what we’re working with,” she joked while putting on a cowgirl hat over her messy ponytail and accessorizing with a brown leather belt. “You know, it’s really giving a little bit of this from Coachella four years ago,” Bader joked, cutting the camera to a throwback clip of herself crying at the festival. “But worse. So I’ll see you in 2027, Coachella.”
Ariana Madix offered some words of wisdom in the comments section. “Baby this is my TWELFTH Coachella, which makes me feel like the granny of the polo fields but plz listen to your elder and just wear something comfy! ❤️❤️❤️ i hope i see you there!”
More of her followers saw the “vision” behind her outfit, but supported her wearing something more comfortable as well. “Babe, as someone who lives in Palm Springs, the high is 69 on Saturday and rain on Friday, just go for a comfy look. It’s going to be freezing cold,” one advised. A second suggested, “Do a long skirt! Would look amaze and be super comfy.”
The first weekend of Coachella takes place on April 10 through April 12, with the second weekend dated on April 17 through the 19.
By Jonathan Klotz
| Published

Science fiction is filled with incredible spaceship captains. Star Trek alone gave the world Picard, Kirk, and Janeway, Firefly has Malcolm Reynolds, Farscape’s John Crichton, and Battlestar Galactica’s Adama, all of them are fantastic characters. All are noble and inspiring figures who make their crews better.
On the other end of the spectrum is Stanley H. Tweedle, captain of the Lexx, the most powerful weapon ever created. He’s a coward, a traitor, self-centered, shallow, and the last man in existence who should have the keys to the most powerful weapon in both galaxies.

Stanley H. Tweedle, played by Brian Downey, kicks off the events of Lexx by skipping work to the point he’s deemed a fugitive from justice by the servitors inside His Divine Shadow’s headquarters and runs into another fugitive, Zev (Eva Habermann). Taking shelter on board the organic spacecraft Lexx, the command codes embedded in Stanley’s tooth are activated, and the ship recognizes him as the Captain. It’s not the most glorious origin story for the man who would eventually, sort of, save the galaxy. It gets worse.
Technically, Stanley’s responsible for the deaths of 685 billion people. He didn’t give the order to fire, and he was being tortured, but he did give the codes to the Lexx over to a band of mercenaries, and then they sold it to His Divine Shadow, and 100 worlds ceased to exist. No other captain in sci-fi can say thay also have the title “Arch-Traitor.”

During Season 2, “Stan’s Trial,” we learn that the root of Stanley’s cowardice is his fear of death. The threat of death causes Stanley to break under the smallest bit of pressure from any of the villains, which all comes to a head in Season 3 when he actually dies and has to face the judgment of Prince from the Fire Planet, Lexx’s version of the Devil. You’d think that anyone who’s that cowardly wouldn’t be respected by his crew, and you’d be right.
The Lexx’s crew of castoffs, including both Zev and Xev (Xenia Seeberg), the undead assassin Kai (Michael McManus), and the love robot 790/791 (Jeffrey Hirschfield), don’t respect Stanley. Eventually, Xev and Kai start to have a modicum of respect, but 790, competing with Stanley for the affection of both Zev and Xev, constantly belittles and insults its captain. Even Lexx has some difficulty with Stanley, often misunderstanding what he wants, including misinterpreting the captain’s request for the coordinates to a planet of loose women.

Early on in Season 3, Stanley’s desire for women comes to a head when Prince offers to revive Maya, a gorgeous woman from the Water Planet, if he’ll use the Lexx to destroy the Water Planet. Stanley doesn’t only think about it, he spends most of the second episode actively devising ways to betray everyone. Not even Kirk, sci-fi’s most famous womanizer, would contemplate an offer like that for a single second.
Stanley H. Tweedle is both sci-fi’s worst captain and one of the most interesting characters, because he is so detestable and openly not a good guy. At all. He helped save the galaxy from thousands of years of control under His Divine Shadow, but he’s still a coward and a lech. Worst of all, we never learn what the H stands for.
The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Jessi Draper is owning up to the mistakes she said she made after two failed marriages.
“I take full ownership over all the mistakes I’ve made and all the stupid decisions I’ve made, but I am realizing I can’t just get divorced and go live a normal life,” Jessi, 33, shared via an Instagram video on Monday, April 6. “I’m having so much come to the surface right now, and I have a lot of healing to do.”
While filming a video in her car, the Hulu reality star opened up about her mindset weeks after her estranged husband, Jordan Ngatikaura, filed for divorce after five years of marriage. (She was also previously married to Zach Gish from 2014 to 2019.)
“This is such a weird experience to go through, and I know a lot of you can relate, and it’s the second divorce I’ve been through, which has been awful,” Jessi — who shares Jagger, 5, and Jovi, 3, with Jordan — explained. “They’ve both been very different and doing it with kids is very unique and different from my first situation. I just feel, like, really lost to be honest.”
When opening up to her 1.8 million Instagram followers, Jessi claimed her two marriages “were emotionally unsafe.” After navigating those two relationships for a combined 10 years, the reality star said she began to learn habits, routines, defense mechanisms “and things that keep you safe.”
“It’s crazy how getting out of that can kind of mess with your head a little bit and make you go a little bit crazy,” she claimed. “I feel like I’m going through that right now. It’s kind of like a purging and a detox of the patterns that I’m used to. I have a lot of patterns that I don’t love. I have a lot of behaviors that I don’t love either, and I’m really trying to work on that.”
Jessi confirmed she is going on a four-day therapy retreat, where she plans to mourn what she lost while also healing from her past.
“I’ve had the darkest days I’ve ever had in the last month and it’s been really rough,” she told her fans. “It’s normal to feel all over the place and misplaced and sad and then happy and then relieved and then depressed. I’ve felt all of the emotions.”
While Jessi has made headlines in recent weeks after she was allegedly spotted spending time with Marciano Brunette, she confirmed in her latest Instagram that she is single and just wants “to have fun.”
“I want to enjoy life because I haven’t in so long, but I also want to do all of this in the right way, and I want to heal and not make mistakes anymore,” she explained. “There’s no perfect way to handle divorce …. I’ve received a lot of love and support and I want to thank you for that but I’ve also received a ton of hate and it’s totally warranted. I am trying to get through this the best possible way I can.”
You can read every single novel Stephen King has written and still find yourself far off from completing his body of work, so to speak, since he’s also been prolific as a writer of novellas and short stories on top of his nearly 70 (to date) novels. Most of these are compiled in collections, of which there are a dozen official ones. Seven are more short story-focused than novella-focused, as in they’re mostly made up of short stories, rather than novellas. Skeleton Crew is one, because while it kicks off with The Mist, which is a novella (and a pretty great one), most of the tales in that 1985 collection are of the short story variety.
So, there are five works by Stephen King that can be labeled novella collections, and all of them are ranked below. Four of them only have novellas and, funnily enough, all four of those are made up of four novellas each. There’s one other here that’s made up of three novellas and two short stories, but still, more than half are novellas, and in any event, the majority of your time spent reading that one will be on novellas rather than the short stories. These are spread out quite neatly through King’s bibliography (one from the 1980s, two from the 1990s, one from the 2010s, and one from the 2020s), and they range from decent to pretty great in quality, with the best novella collection written by King being up there among his most essential works to date.
While Full Dark, No Stars might be the least interesting of all the novella collections here, it’s still not bad, and there are definitely things here that King’s constant readers will be able to appreciate. Also, people do seem to like this one a little more than some of the collections that’ll be ranked ahead of it, and maybe the stories here finding success with getting movie adaptations showcase that, to some extent. Granted, the movie adaptations haven’t been great, and were the sorts that were viewed as weaker than the source material, but still, they tried. There was interest in attempts being made.
There are also some references here to other Stephen King stories, which is always fun if you are someone very invested in everything he’s written (the guy has pretty much made his own multiverse, at this point). If you want more of a hot take than putting Full Dark, No Stars in last place, then how about this: “Fair Extension,” the shortest of the stories, is also the best one. It doesn’t waste any time and feels like vintage King. Every other novella here overstays its welcome, to some extent. “1922” doesn’t do so as drastically as the painfully drawn-out “A Good Marriage,” but both of them (and maybe “Big Driver,” too) could well have been made a little more impactful with a few words trimmed out here and there.
Hearts in Atlantis is the one title that was a little tricky to add here, since it’s made up of three novellas and two short stories. But, you know, more of a novella collection than a short story collection. But wait! Things get more complicated, because Hearts in Atlantis has some continuity between the five stories it contains, with some recurring characters and similar themes explored across all the stories, so it almost feels like a novel, or it at least comes closest to feeling like one coherent story out of all the Stephen King collections. It’s further ambitious because it tackles the Vietnam War and its aftermath, really diving into a specific historical event to a pretty dramatic extent, by King’s standards.
There are some fantastical elements, especially in the first (and best) story of the bunch, “Low Men in Yellow Coats,” which has some surprisingly direct ties to The Dark Tower series, too.
He does so decently well, even if he lays it on a bit thick at times, and does seem insecure, as a writer, about his readers not “getting” certain things. So he really goes on and on, when you’re like, “No, I get it,” but then he keeps explaining things, it can feel frustrating. When Hearts in Atlantis is working, though, it’s pretty darn good. There are some fantastical elements, especially in the first (and best) story of the bunch, “Low Men in Yellow Coats,” which has some surprisingly direct ties to The Dark Tower series, too. That novella, plus the final story here, “Heavenly Shades of Night Are Falling,” were adapted into Hearts in Atlantis, a 2001 movie, but with all the references to The Dark Tower and most of the fantastical elements pretty much taken out, which was disappointing. Oh well.
While If It Bleeds is the most recent Stephen King novella collection, it’s not his most recent collection of stories, since You Like It Darker came out in 2024. That one was mostly short stories, but it speaks to King’s productivity that they both came out in the 2020s, and so too did six other novels (and counting). The man cannot be stopped. Anyway, If It Bleeds is pretty good. None of the novellas here are 10/10-worthy, necessarily, but none entirely miss the mark, either, and they are all indeed pretty good.
“Mr. Harrigan’s Phone” is a better phone-related story than Cell, while “The Life of Chuck” is structurally interesting and perhaps a little sappy, but it works better than the (still fairly good) movie adaptation of the same name from 2024. The titular story here is the longest, and is one of many about Holly Gibney, who was introduced in the Bill Hodges trilogy, and got two novels as the protagonist post-If It Bleeds (Holly and Never Flinch). Then there’s “Rat,” which closes out the collection, and is one of many Stephen King stories about the struggles of writing. Also, like a fair few Stephen King stories, it doesn’t end ideally, but the ride before that point is engaging enough. If It Bleeds is just all-around solid. Nothing here represents King at his very best, and nothing here showcases him at his worst. It’s just pretty good. Pretty, pretty, pretty good.
Before getting to the first of Stephen King’s novella collections, here’s Four Past Midnight, which was his second overall, not to mention his second best, and his first novella collection to be generally horror-focused. Also, some of these novellas are really quite long, as some paperback editions of Four Past Midnight hover around the 1000-page mark. Take the first story, for instance: “The Langoliers.” This one is actually longer than some of Stephen King’s novels. Page counts can vary, depending on the formatting, but the audiobook version of “The Langoliers” is almost nine hours long, and the audiobook for Carrie will take you just under 7.5 hours to listen to. So…
Also, “The Langoliers” might be the highlight here, or it’s neck-and-neck with “The Library Policeman,” which is harder to read, admittedly, but incredibly effective as a work of horror. It’s the reason that Four Past Midnight can be considered up there among the most disturbing of all of King’s novels, short story collections, novella collections, you name it. “Secret Window, Secret Garden” is also good, albeit maybe a little too similar narratively to King’s novel The Dark Half, and then the final story, “Sun Dog,” is an engaging read, being one of a fair few Stephen King stories set in Castle Rock. Four Past Midnight is a strong collection overall, with all four stories ranging in quality from pretty good to pretty great.
It’s easy to single out Different Seasons as the best of Stephen King’s novella collections because of two stories here: “Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption” and “The Body.” They both inspired two all-time great film adaptations (The Shawshank Redemption and Stand by Me), and are phenomenal in their original forms, too. “Apt Pupil” is another story here, and not quite a work of horror, but one that leans more into psychological thriller territory than those other two. It also got a movie adaptation, albeit not a great one.
Things conclude with “The Breathing Method,” which is the only adaptation-less story here, and probably the closest to the horror genre of the bunch, though Different Seasons overall was something meant to showcase King’s knack for writing non-horror stories. He’d largely been known for horror up until that point, and while nowadays, the idea of a Stephen King book not belonging to the horror genre doesn’t sound too wild, it was surprising back in 1982. So, Different Seasons was instrumental in demonstrating King’s range, and has endured because it houses some of his best writing, and two of the stories here went on to be adapted into two pretty-much-perfect movies. If you only ever have time to read one Stephen King novella collection, for whatever reason, then you’re best off making it this one.
September 23, 1994
142 minutes
Frank Darabont
Frank Darabont
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