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'Dark Tower' movie gives Stephen King book series a 1980s fantasy vibe
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Walter (Matthew McConaughey) and Roland (Idris Elba) in The Dark Tower." - photo by Josh Terry
THE DARK TOWER 3 stars Idris Elba, Matthew McConaughey, Tom Taylor, Katheryn Winnick, Jackie Earle Haley; PG-13 (thematic material including sequences of gun violence and action); in general release

Based on Stephen Kings Dark Tower book series, The Dark Tower is a fun fantasy that evokes a 1980s adventure vibe, and feels like a close cousin to the popular Netflix series Stranger Things.

The films title refers to a magic tower at the center of the universe that keeps evil at bay. Its lone vulnerability is the mind power of certain gifted children, so an evil sorcerer in black named Walter (Matthew McConaughey) has been kidnapping preteens to power a weapon that will destroy the tower.

This back story leads us to Jake Chambers (Tom Taylor), a young boy in New York City who is being tormented by regular visions of the tower, as well as the Man in Black. His mother, Laurie (Katheryn Winnick), and therapist Dr. Hotchkiss (Jos Ziga) believe the visions which he illustrates and plasters all over his wallare the traumatic result of his firefighter fathers recent death. But when a pair of Walters followers try to kidnap him while posing as mental health workers, Jake realizes his visions are very real.

A quick getaway leads Jake to an old home in Brooklyn, where a secret portal transports him to a different world. There, he meets a bitter rogue named Roland Deschain (Idris Elba). Roland is the last of a line of Gunslingers, special guardians appointed to defend the Dark Tower from evil forces. Walter killed Rolands father, Steven (Dennis Haysbert), years earlier, and the Gunslinger has been seeking revenge ever since.

Eventually, Walter discovers that Jake is an especially rare case, even among other gifted children. His shine or psychic capacity is especially acute, and his purity is powerful enough to resist Walters magic powers of suggestion. So the hunt intensifies as Roland reluctantly takes Jake under his wing.

The back-and-forth chase between different worlds eventually Jake and Roland return to New York City to face Walter makes for a lot of fun action sequences that feature some entertaining special effects. Younger audiences should enjoy getting behind Jakes youthful, misfit protagonist, and older audiences will note a similar vibe to 1980s fantasy adventures like The NeverEnding Story. (Considering the first books in the series were written in the 1980s, this may not come as a surprise.)

Though the film is not meant to be a strict retelling of Kings original source material, fans of the veteran horror (or in this case, sci-fi/fantasy) writer will find numerous winking references to Kings other works, such as the name Pennywise twisted among some amusement park wreckage, or a passing background shot of an old Rita Hayworth poster. Then, of course, theres the whole shine concept.

While heavy on violent content, director Nikolaj Arcel keeps things bloodless enough to stay in PG-13 territory pretty far from your normal big screen King fare and theres just enough of a campy vibe to remind viewers that adults are probably not the primary audience here. The Dark Tower occasionally suffers from some stiff acting, and some fans may feel that McConaughey and Elba are underused, but its total product is enough fun to qualify as the escapist adventure fantasy it wants to be.

It may not be the total realization of the King series fans might want, but The Dark Tower is a nice kid-friendly action piece that will let audiences hold on to summer a little longer, at least until the evil forces of the new school year can no longer be kept at bay.

The Dark Tower is rated PG-13 for thematic material including sequences of gun violence and action; running time: 95 minutes.
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