Monday, April 8, 2019

Release: Halo: The Fall of Reach

Halo: The Fall of Reach
Genre: Action/Sci-Fi
Director: Matt Reeves
Writer: Mo Buck & Dominic Wilkins
Based on the video game series
Prequel to Halo
Cast: Alexander Skarsgard, Robin Wright, Clive Owen, Sarah Gadon, Keri Russell, Josh Holloway, Ciaran Hinds, Lee Pace, Milla Jovovich, Letitia Wright, Chadwick Boseman



Budget: $240,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $341,239,643
Foreign Box Office: $410,894,337
Total Profit: $290,380,117

Reaction: The profits of the film are lower than some of the other entries, but it is the third highest grossing film in the Halo series (after Halo 4 and Halo 3) and is far and away the most profitable of the spin-off/side entries in the series.



"It takes a while to get going, but Halo: The Fall of Reach is vastly superior to the other side films in the series, because it realized that Master Chief IS the Halo series." - Shawn Moseby, Fresno Bee





"The Fall of Reach is definitely better than ODST and Reach, but it still falls quite a bit short of the films of the main series. It lacks the stakes and excitement of those entries and is ultimately telling a story we've already seen the outcome of." - Chris Price, Boston Herald



"While I don't think we needed to see the origins of Alexander Skarsgard's Master Chief, at least this prequel had the smarts to include the fan favorite character, which makes the film worth watching." - Perry Manson, CinemaBlend.com



Rated PG-13 for intense sci-fi action violence

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Recap: Halo Series

Recap will be a new segment where we take a look at some of the details of various film series here at Last Resort Films. The seventh film in the Halo series has just been released, Halo: The Fall of Reach, so it seemed like a good debut for Recap, so we can take a look at the series so that you know where the latest film fits in the overall series.






Halo
Director: Gareth Edwards
Writer: D.R. Cobb
Metascore: 50
Season of release: 1
Order in series: 3rd
Recurring characters featured:
Master Chief/John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard)
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Avery Johnson (Chadwick Boseman)
Jacob Keyes (Clive Owen)




Halo 2
Director: Gareth Edwards
Writer: Mo Buck
Metascore: 74
Season of release: 4
Order in series: 4th
Recurring characters featured:
Master Chief/John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard)
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Avery Johnson (Chadwick Boseman)
Prophet of Truth (Ed Harris)
Thel'Vadamee (Ben Foster)
Miranda Keyes (Margaret Qualley)
Terrence Hood (John Slattery)








Halo: ODST
Director: David Yates
Writer: Dominic Wilkins
Metascore: 60
Season of release: 5
Order in series: 5th
Recurring characters featured:
Master Chief/John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard)
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Avery Johnson (Chadwick Boseman)
Prophet of Truth (Ed Harris)




Halo 3
Director: Gareth Edwards
Writer: Mo Buck
Metascore: 75
Season of release: 7
Order in series: 6th
Recurring characters featured:
Master Chief/John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard)
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Avery Johnson (Chadwick Boseman)
Prophet of Truth (Ed Harris)
Thel'Vadamee (Ben Foster)
Miranda Keyes (Margaret Qualley)
Terrence Hood (John Slattery)




Halo: Reach
Director: Colin Trevorrow
Writer: Dominic Wilkins
Metascore: 63
Season of release: 8
Order in series: 2nd
Recurring characters featured:
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Jacob Keyes (Clive Owen)
Dr. Catherine Halsey (Robin Wright)




Halo 4
Director: Gareth Edwards
Writer: Mo Buck
Metscore: 79
Order in series: 7th
Recurring characters featured:
Master Chief/John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard)
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Dr. Catherine Halsey (Robin Wright)




Halo: The Fall of Reach
Director: Matt Reeves
Metascore: N/A
Season of release: 11
Order in series: 1st
Recurring characters featured:
Master Chief/John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard)
Cortana (Sarah Gadon)
Dr. Catherine Halsey (Robin Wright)
Jacob Keyes (Clive Owen)
Avery Johnson (Chadwick Boseman)

Now Showing: Halo: The Fall of Reach

Halo: The Fall of Reach
Genre: Action/Sci-Fi
Director: Matt Reeves
Writer: Mo Buck & Dominic Wilkins
Based on the video game series
Prequel to Halo
Cast: Alexander Skarsgard, Robin Wright, Clive Owen, Sarah Gadon, Keri Russell, Josh Holloway, Ciaran Hinds, Lee Pace, Milla Jovovich, Letitia Wright, Chadwick Boseman

Plot: In a distant future, by about thirty years before the events of Halo, a much younger Dr. Catherine Halsey (Robin Wright) presents the SPARTAN project to Lieutenant Jacob Keyes (Clive Owen), on board of the Han, a UNSC diplomatic shuttle. The human race has tried twice before, to create super-soldiers, the first one failed after the subjects died and the second tentative succeeded, but ended after they were deemed dangerous and the program was too expensive to maintain. She managed to get the financing this time, and she wants to relaunch the program, but not by taking existing soldiers, by taking young children who have a rare gene that would make them able to sustain the armor the SPARTANs wear. She said she found one of these kids, here on Eridanus II, in Elysium City. Before they leave the Han, she takes a clone by the hand, a small child and carries it with her to the outside.

In Elysium City, Catherine, the clone and Keyes don’t lose their time, despite the jaw-dropping landscape and the wonderful, advanced city. They head straight to an elementary school, where Catherine uses a device to find a kid who looks exactly like the clone she takes with her. She finds him, a head taller than everyone, playing alone, building a sandcastle, all innocent and young. She tells the clone that he’s now called John. She orders Keyes to take the real kid with them and to leave the clone in the playground. Nobody saw anything and to leave with the real John. Halsey administers him a powerful sedative, she he won’t be a problem.

When they get back on the Han, Halsey and Keyes enter a dark room with a chair lit by a spotlight, where they sit John and wake him up. She tells Keyes that she wants to test his alleged high intellect and verbomotor skills. She tells John that he doesn’t need to panic and he doesn’t. She enters the room and she takes John’s coin. She says she’s going to flip it in the air and he has to guess on which side it will land. She flips it and John gets up his chair, catches and the coin and correctly guesses the side. Halsey congratulates him and says he can keep the coin. She looks at Keyes, smiling. She sedates John once again and they put him to bed. They are joined by Officer Frank Mendez (Josh Holloway). She presents Frank to Keyes, he’ll be the one in charge of the training of the future SPARTANS, alongside, Déjà (Keri Russell), an AI. He will teach team, courage, teamwork, skill, combat skills, athleticism and much more, no matter what the price is. If they die during the process, it’s because they were too weak and didn’t deserve their SPARTAN armor. Keyes is shocked by all of this, but he has no choice but the approve. The upside is too big to pull the plug, but anyways, it’s too late, everything is already financed.

A couple of months later, Halsey, Keyes and Mendez are back on Reach, where the SPARTAN-II program is based. She has kidnapped 75 little boys and girls for her program. In a montage, we see Mendez and Déjà training the soon-to-be SPARTANs and they don’t go easy on them, almost like a concentration camp, all of this under the watchful eye of Dr. Catherine Halsey. It’s now time for their first training mission outside the facility. They will throw them in Reach’s wild without any map and they’ll need to come back to the facility on their own. Déjà will monitor their every move, so no freestyling and no violence will be tolerated. Keyes thinks it’s almost cruel to send them out there with nothing, but he believes in Halsey Mendez to make these young kids the next race of super soldiers.

On February 3rd 2525, a mysterious ship enters the orbit of a Earth colony called Harvest, an agricultural world, the most remote Earth colony at the time of its founding, to the bafflement of the population. The authorities send three ships to initiate the first contact protocol, initiated years ago. Vice Admiral Preston Cole (Ciaran Hinds) as the honor to be the first one to initiate contact with extraterrestrials. He leaves with the Heracles, the Arabia and the Vostok. When he tries to initiate contact, the ship fires at them destroying both the Vostok and the Arabia. Preston Cole retreats with the Heracles and he makes a space jump directly to Earth, where he meets with member of the government who are less than happy with his decision to run to Earth like that. Together, they set up the Cole Protocol, which is a series of measures to make sure that we don’t give out the Earth’s location in case of contact with hostile aliens. When they are done, they give him an entire fleet with only one mission in mind, reclaim the Harvest colony and stop the Covenant advance.

During the mission, some of the kids are uncomfortable and want to give up, but under John’s leadership, they move on forward. They separate into groups and they cartograph their surroundings, until a small group spotted two Pelicans nearby. John, the de-facto leader believes it would be for the best to take the Pelicans, they already know how do pilot them, thanks to Mendez’ training. From afar, Halsey is satisfied with John’s performance and she already sees big things coming for him. The young trainees arrive at the facility unharmed, to the joy of Halsey and Mendez. Franklin sees John playing with his coin, his last remaining souvenir of his home planet. Mendez takes it, he doesn’t live in the past anymore.

Jacob Keyes has to leave the Reach installations to serve in the UNSC. He’s been promoted to Commander and he assumes command of the UNSC Iroquois. He leaves Halsey and Mendez with a heavy heart, but he says he trusts them to develop the next kind of super soldiers. Halsey takes Keyes out for a walk before he leaves. She says she knows their relationship is over, but they still need to discuss about their daughter’s future. She has the genes to become a SPARTAN and Catherine called her to other day, just after she graduated from military school and offered her to become a SPARTAN, but refused. She can’t believe her mother would ask something like that to her own daughter, since then she refused to talk to her. Halsey says that she could force her to do it, but she wanted to ask Jacob to ask her first. Jacob says she’s completely out of her mind and he won’t ever let her touch his their daughter again. He will place her in protection and he doesn’t want to hear about it ever again.

Some time later, Halsey signals the beginning of the augmentation procedures, where the now young teens will have their strength increased by three times, the reaction times improved, their bones rendered practically indestructible, the increase of blood flow to the eyes to allow them to see in the dark and a catalytic thyroid implant which will accelerate their development, a procedure invented and perfected by Halsey herself. She is skeptical about it though, only the strongest will survive the procedure. Over the course of next weeks, several teens are subject to the operation, about half them die, she’ll have to do with the remaining group. The only unexpected outcome of the surgery, a radical change in appearance, which makes them look much older than they really are. Halsey then takes a break and gives total control of the SPARTANs to Mendez, she needs to work on something on her own.

The space battle between the UNSC and the Covenant is completely one-sided. Even with Preston Cole’s intelligent tactics, for every Covenant ship destroyed, three UNSC are destroyed, which is far from good for the human race. The moral is at an all-time low and the UNSC loses every battle. Despite the bummed out attitude of his soldiers, Preston does everything he can to keep them on board. On his end, Keyes was going in a battle that he really thinks he can win. His heavy ship the Iroquois, against two Covenant frigates. But he was surprised to see that there was four ships when he arrived. What he did next saved the life of many. He dodged the missiles launched by two frigates and hit full speed with the missiles trailing them. Keyes launched a nuclear warhead in that appeared to be the wrong direction. He then hit the destroyer with his ship and he brutally changed his trajectory. The trailing missiles hit the destroyer instead, destroying it. Keyes used its momentum to slingshot around a planet. The nuke explodes damaging the two frigates and when he completes the orbit around the planet, he fires at the vulnerable ships to earn the first UNSC victory. The fourth ship, a carrier fled the scene. This tactic, dubbed the Keyes Loop promoted him to captain, but heavily damaged the Iroquois, prompting him to go to the nearest human colony, Reach.

Halsey is back from her hiatus. Following the rejection by Miranda, she went in a retreat and worked on something else, a new AI, she named her Cortana (Sarah Gadon). She designed her based on herself a, her knowledge and her experiences. She shaped her like her own daughter, a daughter she’ll never have thanks to Miranda’s rejection. Keyes reunites with Halsey and Mendez. They show him the rapid progress they made during his absence. They split the SPARTANs in teams, the best one is clearly the blue team, composed of John-117 (Alexander Skarsgard), James-005 (Lee Pace), Linda-058 (Letitia Wright) and Kelly-087 (Milla Jovovich). But what Keyes didn’t know is that the Covenant followed him to Reach and are now attacking the planet. The marines were able to defeat the small group of Covenants. Keyes asks Halsey and Mendez to take the SPARTANs with him to fight the war, but they refuse, stating that they aren’t ready yet. Keyes takes them with him anyway. As an act of defiance, Mendez leaves the planet. Halsey finally agrees after Jacob promises her to talk to Miranda about talking to her mother again. Halsey says Cortana is staying with her, she'll be able to communicate with John, he's the chosen one. They all board the UNSC Pillar of Autumn, the biggest ship on Reach and they leave. Halsey remains on Reach.

When the Pillar of Autumn gets in space, they are surprised by 314 Convenant ships entering the system. Keyes decides to turn back and to retreat on Reach. Keyes activates the Cole Protocol, which means that nobody can leave for Earth and that every data leading to Earth must be destroyed John-117 comes up to him, based on Cortana’s advice. He wants his team to take a smaller ship within the Pillar of Autumn, a Pelican and to go activate the auto-destroy function on the Circumference, a ship docked in a orbital station. Keyes accepts, so John, Linda, Kelly and James leave. On his end, Keyes and his crew land back on Reach to defend the installations while the Orbital Defense Platforms try to destroy the Covenant fleet. Keyes is able to destroy a couple of ships while going down, but as a hard time navigating through the falling Covenant ships destroyed by the Orbital Platform. John and the rest of Blue Team zig zag through the battlefield and try to avoid getting caught in the crossfire. As the Pillar of Autumn lands awkwardly on Reach, John crashes his Pelican on the station on which the Circumference is docked.

The battle is well underway on Reach ‘s surface. The Covenant are dominating the UNSC, even with the SPARTANs, who are vastly underprepared for a real-time combat situation. Most of them are killed in action. Dr. Halsey is still running, trying to find a safe spot to hide. She finds an underground facility that nobody has ever seen before. She opens the door and descends in the tunnel. She makes sure to close the door behind her. John and the Blue Team are able to kill Covenants around the Circumference. They’re surprised to see that some Marines are already there, led by Sergeant Johnson (Chadwick Boseman). Together, they enter the Circumference after they clear the platform. They’re surprised to see that Covenant were able to enter and Linda is fatally shot in the back of the head by an enemy. They kill the entire Covenant contingent and activate the auto-destruction protocol. When they try to get out, they’re ambushed by Covenant. With the help of Cortana, John is able to find a way out, but unfortunately, not everyone is able to make it out in time, including James and Kelly. James explodes with the Circumference, but Kelly gets out at the last second. She’s unable to speak and Johnson and John think she’s dead. They get on Johnson’s ship and they go down on Reach. Kelly, the only remaining member Blue Team except John steals a Covenant ship and flies away to the unknown.

When they land on Reach, the situation isn’t looking good for the UNSC. The Covenant have the upper hand and most of the SPARTANs are dead. The Covenant managed to deactivate the Orbital Defense Platforms and now everyone is landing on Reach. Everyone gathers on the Pillar of Autumn. John is shot on his way in, so Keyes and Johnson carry him in, while Cortana fights to keep him alive. Johnson places him on a cryogenic pod to heal his wounds. Keyes removes Cortana from John’s helmet and inserts her to be the Pillar’s AI. She calculates a random itinerary and they fly away.

The Covenant continue to fight against the UNSC on Reach. Halsey is hiding on the ground. She feels the ground shaking and she holds tight to a picture of her daughter. She’s relieved to know that she found a safe place with all that chaos, or else she’d be dead. She finds a small work desk with scientific installations and she starts to work on something to send a signal to say she’s still alive.

The Pillar of Autumn finally stops traveling at the speed of light. Keyes looks ahead and doesn’t recognize where they are. He receives a message, ordering him to go back to Reach. They need to retrieve Cortana, a team is extracting her. It's a really important matter, she's too important and knows too much to be captured by the enemy. Keyes turns the ship around and once again activates hyper-speed.

Post-Credit Scene : Halsey awakens in her cell. After another séance of interrogation at the hands of the mysterious ONI man who knows too much about the SPARTAN-II program and everything immoral she did to get in underway. She’s transferred to the UNSC Infinity at the same time John is leaving the Infinity to transfer to another sector thanks to Admiral Hood (John Slattery)’s orders. When she’s escorted to her cell, she sees Sarah Palmer (Sophie Turner) and she looks at her with interest. The ship is then boarded by Jul ‘Mdama’s contingent and they manage to kidnap Halsey. Just before she boards ‘Mdama’s ship, Palmer manages to shoot her in the shoulder, tearing her arm off. ‘Mdama says they’re going to take care of her, but he needs her to help them. Halsey accepts.




Saturday, April 6, 2019

Interview: Matt Parker


In this edition of Interview, Last Resort Films president Phil Dolan sits down with writer Matt Parker (Displacement, The Stand) to discuss his return to the studio after several seasons away.

PD: The Stand is your first film since Season 4. What made you decide to come back to work for LRF?

MP: Honestly, life just got in the way. I've had some ideas brewing, but I was always too busy to ever put pen to paper on them. My schedule finally opened up a bit, so I got back to work. Simple as that.

PD: What made you decide to tackle an adaptation of Stephen King's epic novel, The Stand?

MP: It was one of my favorite books growing up. I probably read the thing five times during middle school alone. I re-read it for the first time in several years over the winter, which planted the seed. So much of King's imagery in the novel is incredibly cinematic that I felt it was a shame that it had never made it to the big screen. There was the miniseries from the 90's, which was actually my first introduction to the story as a kid, and they announced another television adaptation after I submitted my pitch to the studio, but once again it's not a proper big screen adaptation.

PD: You've heavily condensed the novel's story into one film. Can you talk about that process?

MP: I felt The Stand should be one film since it is one story with no natural stopping points like It, which has a very natural point at which to break it up to make a second film. When Josh Boone had been talking about writing and directing The Stand, he apparently wanted to make four two-hour films. That just seemed ridiculous to me. And, as much as I love the novel, there is a lot of material, especially throughout the middle sections of the book, that really have very little bearing on the overall story. So I decided to cut out a lot of that material - especially stuff about the development of the Boulder Free Zone - to try to create a tighter, faster moving narrative.

PD: You also just had the first couple episodes of your LRTV show, "Gauntlet," premiere. What can you tell us about your plans for the show?


MP: I'm a big football fan, and always wanted to make a football film for the studio, but it just seemed very daunting to try to tell the story of a team's season over one film. And based on the darker aspects of professional football I wanted to cover, there was no way I was going to avoid comparisons to Oliver Stone's amazing Any Given Sunday. So once LRTV was announced, I felt like I finally had the proper outlet for my idea. I hope the series can continue past its first season since I think it would be fun to follow the team past one season and tackle subjects like the draft and free agency.

PD: What's next for you?

MP: I did write another Stephen King adaptation right around the same time I wrote The Stand, but I also wrote a couple original thrillers that hopefully received better than my last original story for the studio, Displacement. I also plan to continue writing the first season of "Gauntlet" and start thinking up ideas for a possible second season just in case it gets renewed.

Release: The Stand

The Stand
Genre: Fantasy/Horror
Director: J.J. Abrams
Writer: Matt Parker
Based on the novel by Stephen King
Cast: Taylor Kitsch, Emma Roberts, Eric Bana, Christopher Abbott, Adam Driver, Angela Bassett, Taran Killam, Michael Caine, Alice Eve, Jason Lee, Owen Teague, Jackie Earle Hayley




Budget: $80,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $101,445,382
Foreign Box Office: $104,110,323
Total Profit: $52,888,239

Reaction: A very nice way to start the season. The third Stephen King adaptation from writer Matt Parker is the highest grossing of the the three, grossing more than Salem's Lot and The Dead Zone, although the film was night quite as profitable as The Dead Zone.


"Some Stephen King fans may get annoyed by the amount of content from the massive novel left out of the film, I think that the changes have made for a crisper, more focused narrative. All of King's filler material is gone, with just the important characters and their journeys remaining. The result is a strong film with solid work from JJ Abrams and the impressive ensemble cast he has assembled." - Clark Haverford, Nerdist

"King's novel may get a lot of love from his fans, but the story really lacks the thrills and scares of works like It. Kitsch and Bana give especially strong performances, but it all adds up to an unfulfilling conclusion." - Josh Manning, NY Daily News
"Much like Dwight Gallo showed us with his adaptation of Atlas Shrugged, it is entirely possible to take an epic tome of a novel and condense it down to its important parts, making it into one strong story. I preferred this much more than the Peter Jackson approach where he took one novel in The Hobbit and made three incomplete films based on it." - Dave Vrosky, Den of Geek


Rated R for language, frightening images, sexuality, nudity, some graphic violence and drug use.

Friday, April 5, 2019

In Development

Isla Vista: Albert Brooks (Heart of Stone, Concussion) and Dacre Montgomery (Lost Planet, Tenth Circle) have joined the upcoming true crime film, Isla Vista. Brooks will play a friend of Colin Firth's character, and Montgomery will play an Australian exchange student the main character (played by Nick Robinson) befriends. Luca Guadagnino directs from a script by Alex Conn and Chad Taylor.

Bioshock: Rounding out the cast of the video game adaptation, Bioshock, will be Michael Stuhlbarg (Sweet Tooth, Sinkhole) and Brooklynn Prince (Calamity, Blood on the Moon). Stuhlbarg will play an unhinged doctor, while Prince will play the infamous Little Sisters, genetically altered young girls. Tim Miller is directing. H.G. Hansen penned the adaptation.

Newbury Street: The Matt Damon-led crime drama from director Todd Field and writer Lon Charles has added Tequan Richmond ("General Hospital", Blue Caprice), David Arquette (Once Upon a Time in Venice, Bone Tomahawk) and Mimi Rogers (Affairs of State, "Bosch"). Richmond will play the suspect in a crime, Arquette will play a detective, while Rogers will play Damon's mother-in-law.

The Kingmaker Chronicles: Tom Hardy (God of War, Crowley) has finally settled on his latest film, a medieval adventure film from writers Jack Ryder, Mo Buck and Dominic Wilkins. James Gray (Atlantic City, The Lost City of Z) has been hired to direct the film, which will feature Hardy as a medieval king who loses interest in ruling, but is having trouble picking someone to hand over the throne to. Matthew Goode (Black Dublin, Hellraiser), Christoph Waltz (Mandingos, Death and All His Friends) and Walton Goggins (October Crisis, Fevre Dream) have also joined the film. Goode will play a neighboring king, Waltz will play Hardy's most trusted advisor, while Goggins will play a commoner who finds himself in contention to take over the kingdom.

Red Farm: Garrett Hedlund (Outlaw Country, Damned Ship) and rising star Florence Pugh (One for the Ages, The Tower) have signed on to headline the horror-thriller Red Farm from director F. Javier Gutierrez (Before the Fall, Rings) and writer Billy Cruder (Village of Madness, Adr1ft). Hedlund plays the leader of a group of bank robbers, while Pugh will play a young woman they kidnap while making their getaway.

Beartown: Sam Rockwell (Cosa Nostra, Nevada, Iowa), Malin Akerman (Perfect Blue, Evangelion) and Sabrina Carpenter (The Hate U Give, "Girl Meets World") have signed on to star in a film adaptation of the novel Beartown by Fredrik Backman. The film tells the story of a small Alaskan town that lives and breathes hockey that is threatened by a sexual assault accusation. Rockwell will play the general manager of the town's junior hockey team, Akerman will play his wife, and Carpenter will play their daughter who is sexually assaulted by one of the town's most promising hockey players. Lee Toland Krieger (Celeste and Jesse Forever, The Age of Adaline) has been hired to direct the film based on an adaptation by Rosie JoLove (Ubik).

Now Showing: The Stand

The Stand
Genre: Fantasy/Horror
Director: J.J. Abrams
Writer: Matt Parker
Based on the novel by Stephen King
Cast: Taylor Kitsch, Emma Roberts, Eric Bana, Christopher Abbott, Adam Driver, Angela Bassett, Taran Killam, Michael Caine, Alice Eve, Jason Lee, Owen Teague, Jackie Earle Hayley

Plot: In Arnette, Texas, Stu Redman (Taylor Kitsch) is putting gas in his pickup truck when he notices a car driving erratically that then crashes into the gas pumps. Stu quickly bursts into action and hits the emergency shut off to the pumps before an explosion can ocur. He goes over to the crashed vehicle, where he finds the people inside the car dying. Stu looks at an ID badge the driver is wearing, showing that he works at a military base just outside of town. Arnette is quickly overrun by the military who quarantine the entire town. Stu watches as everyone else in town as everyone dies of extreme flu-like symptoms. He is then taken into custody by military forces and taken to a CDC containment center in Vermont to perform tests to see why Stu is seemingly immune to the disease.

In Ogunquit, Maine, pregnant college student Frannie Goldsmith (Emma Roberts) buries her parents in the family's garden after they have succumbed to the superflu. She walks through town, and finds that the whole town has also died from the superflu. That is until she spots town delinquent Harold Lauder (Owen Teague) raiding the liquor store. He spots her and chases after her to talk to her. He tells her that before the flu killed everyone, back when they were in high school, he had a crush on her. She asks him what his plans are now that everyone's dead, and he tells her he has a plan to go to the nearest CDC facility in Stovington, Vermont, to find out what killed everyone. He asks her the same question, but she doesn't have an answer. He invites her to come along with him to Vermont.

Stu soon realizes that he is the only survivor of the superflu left at the CDC facility. He learns from one of the doctors that the army has given up coming up with a cure for the disease since Stu's blood work doesn't show any obvious reasons why he's immune. Stu realizes that now that he has outlived his usefulness to the military they will probably just kill him. Stu tries to reason with the doctor to let him go, but the doctor says he can't let anyone out of the facility. A soldier enters Stu's room, but Stu was expecting someone and quickly overpowers the soldier and takes his gun. Stu locks the soldier in the room and makes his way out of the facility.

Musician Larry Underwood (Christopher Abbott) listens to his own latest song on the radio as he shoots up heroin. After a few days shooting up in a rundown apartment in New York City, he finally heads outside and finds dead bodies all over the city. While wandering the city looking for anyone else alive, he meets a woman, Nadine Cross (Alice Eve), who tells him she's a school teacher. They seek solace with each other and become lovers, although she won't have sex with him. Nadine starts to notice that Larry routinely disappears for stretches of time. He makes several lousy excuses, but finally admits that he sneaks off to get high. She asks him what it's like, and he explains that it makes all of his worries go away for a bit. She asks to try some, and together they do heroin and pass out in Central Park.

Nick Andros (Adam Driver), a deaf and mute man, is riding his bike across the plains after encountering people dying from the superflu. He rides into the town of May, Oklahoma and stops to look for bottled water. When he walks into the local general store, he finds mannequins set up throughout the store as though they were shopping. When he exits the store, he encounters a mentally handicapped man, Tom Cullen (Taran Killam), pulling a few mannequins along the street in a wagon. Tom is really excited to see another person again and gives Nick a big hug. Nick writes out on his notepad and introduction, but Tom tells him he can't read it. Nick struggles to explain through hand gestures that he can't hear or speak, but Tom eventually understands it. Nick begins loading up his bags with food and other supplies, and Tom asks if he can come along with Nick where ever it is he's headed. Nick helps Tom pack a bag of supplies and find a bicycle to ride.

Stu dreams of a woman named Mother Abagail (Angela Bassett) who lives in a corn field in Nebraska, she warmly invites him to see her at her home. In his dream, the cornfield dries up and turns to sand in a desert. He is then approached by a man, Randall Flagg (Eric Bana), as a nuclear mushroom cloud wipes out everything. Stu then wakes up in a sweat. Stu feels compelled to now head towards Nebraska to see if Mother Abagail is real or just a figment of his imagination.

Larry also has a dream of Mother Abagail and convinces Nadine to come along with him to Nebraska. While camping one night, Larry and Nadine almost have sex, but she stops it. He gets frustrated and leaves their tent. Nadine falls asleep and has a dream where she has rough, passionate sex with Randall Flagg, who encourages her to leave Larry and come be by his side in Las Vegas. Larry ends up coming back to the tent after awhile and goes to sleep. Once Larry is asleep, Nadine sneaks out of the tent and leaves Larry behind.

While on his way to Nebraska, Stu meets retired professor Glen Bateman (Michael Caine), who has nothing better to do with his retirement and joins Stu on his trip. The two quickly encounter Frannie and Harold, who tell them that they are on their way to find answers at the CDC in Vermont. Stu tells them that nobody is left alive there, but they don't believe him. He offers to show them so they can see for themselves. When they arrive at the CDC building, Harold enters the building alone. After seeing dozens of dead bodies, some dead from gunshots, Harold runs out of the building and throws as soon as he makes it out. Harold then looks up and notices Frannie and Stu talking. Harold starts feeling angry and threatened by Stu's presence as he wants Frannie's affections all for himself. Stu tells them about his dream, and the others all reveal that they have also dreamed of Abagail and Flagg. They all decide to set off to Nebraska together.

Nick and Tom are the first survivors to reach Mother Abagail's farm in Nebraska. Abagail is excited to see them, and gives them both a big hug. She then tells them that she needs to pack up her things because God has told her that they all need to head to Boulder, Colorado, where they can rebuild society. Nick and Tom help pack up an old pickup truck on her farm while Abagail makes a sign for the others on their way to go to Boulder. When they reach Boulder, they see a group of people approaching on motorcycles. It turns out to be Stu, Frannie, Glen and Harold. When they all come together, Mother Abagail greets everyone individually and thanks them for making the journey. Excited to finally have made it, Frannie kisses Stu. Much to Stu's surprise Frannie has developed a crush on him. He kisses her back. Harold witnesses and decides to tell Frannie that he loves her, but she turns him down, telling him that she's in love with Stu. Harold storms off in a rage.

Donald Elbert (Jackie Earle Hayley) sets fire to a set of tanks at an oil depot outside of Gary, Indiana. He doesn't make it far enough away and the explosion sends him flying, burning him and rendering him unconscious. While he is knocked out, Donald dreams of Randall Flagg, who invites him to Las Vegas to work for him. Donald suddenly wakes up and starts walking towards Las Vegas in a daze.

Lloyd Henreid (Jason Lee) is a petty criminal stewing in an Arizona prison cell after the superflu has wiped out all of the other inmates as well as all of the guards. Lloyd is on the brink of starvation when he sees a rat scurry by. Lloyd dives onto the rat and is about to bite into the rodent when Randall Flagg appears outside his cell. Lloyd is sure Flagg is the devil. Flagg conjures a silver key and offers to let Lloyd out of his cell, but only if he promises to serve him as his right-hand man in the days ahead. Lloyd gives Flagg his word, and Flagg opens the cell.

By the time Larry Underwood and some other survivors make it to Boulder, they find civilization rebuilding itself in the city. The dead bodies have been removed and buried and some the survivors are alreadu working at restoring electricity to the area. At her new house, Mother Abagail reveals to Stu that she is no longer hearing the voice of God, and this greatly concerns her.

Meanwhile in Las Vegas, Randall Flagg is presiding over his own rebuilding society with Lloyd Henreid as his chief lieutenant, but one that he rules as a dictator, harshly punishing anyone who goes against his word. He has made a casino penthouse his base of operations. Nadine arrives in the city, walking as though she is in a trance up to Flagg's penthouse. There they have the same rough, passionate sex she dreamed of. Afterward, he tells her to go to Harold Lauder.

Mother Abagail tells Stu that she must leave Boulder to repair her relationship with God so that she can begin receiving his instructions clearly again. She tell Stu that she needs him to lead the survivors in Boulder in her absence. Mother Abagail then begins walking away from the town towards the wilderness. Harold Lauder walks into his house and finds a naked Nadine laying on his bed. They begin having sex, during which Harold has a vision of Randall Flagg, who tells him to construct a bomb.

Meanwhile several of the town's leaders, Stu, Nick, Glen, Larry and Frannie meet to discuss what they should do about the threat of Randall Flagg in Las Vegas. Stu comes up with the idea of sending a spy to Las Vegas to report back what is happening in Flagg's city. Nick writes out on his notepad that Tom could do it. Frannie and Larry are both hesitant about that idea since Tom could easily be tricked into revealing their own plans. Glen proposes that he could hypnotize Tom so that he wouldn't be able to reveal pertinent information to the enemy, while Nick writes that Tom is as trustworthy as they come. The group decides to attempt Glen's hypnotism idea. Glen hypnotizes Tom, giving him the instruction to ride his bicycle to Las Vegas, find out as much information as he can in a week's time and return to Boulder without being followed. They give Tom supplies and send him on his way. Nick gives Tom a big hug and tells him "Thank you" and "good luck" in sign language. Tom, under hypnosis, understands this and signs back to Nick.

While the group is sending Tom off, Harold sneaks into Nick's house where they were meeting and plants the bomb he built. The group sits back down to meet, when suddenly Nick has a vision of Mother Abagail, telling him to save the others. Nick begins pushing the others out of the house, he then jumps on top of the bomb just before it detonates, taking the brunt of the explosion and saving the lives of the others.

Harold and Nadine flee Boulder on motorcycles. They begin riding toward Las Vegas. As they ride over a pass, Harold's bike skids on an oil slick and sends him flying down into a ravine. He breaks several bones, including shattering his leg. Nadine refuses to help him and leaves him to die. Heartbroken that she would just leave him there, Harold pulls out a gun and blows his own brains out.

Mother Abagail returns to Boulder to find what remains of Nick's house still aflame. She is very weak from exposure, starvation and dehydration, and passes out in front of the burning house. Stu and Larry bring her back to her house, while Glen and Frannie follow along. Abagail explains to them that God did not spare them from the plague and bring them together to start rebuilding society. God brought them together so that they can confront Flagg. She states that God wants the three men (Stu, Glen and Larry) to go west immediately on foot without food or water. Those who survive will be brought before Flagg. She tells them that she cannot guarantee they will survive or beat Flagg, but assures them that it is God's will that these things be done. At sunrise, Mother Abagail dies.

Resigned, the three men feel they have little choice but to fulfill Abagail's final instructions. Stu kisses a very pregnant Frannie goodbye. He tells her he hopes to be back by the time the baby is born since he has a hunch it will be a boy. He then asks what she will name the baby if it's a boy, and she tells him Peter, after her father. Stu tells her he likes the name and kisses her one more time before walking off down the highway with Larry and Glen.

Along the way, Stu falls and breaks his leg. He urges the others to go on without, telling them that God will provide for him if he sees fit. Glen gives Stu the Oxycontin he takes for his back pain. He suggests Stu take a lethal dose of them if it becomes apparent that there is no hope of rescue in sight. Larry and Glen continue on down the road to Las Vegas. Once they get to the Nevada state line, they are taken prisoner by some of Flagg's men. When they are brought to Las Vegas, they are greeted by Lloyd. He offers to let Glen go if he will kneel and beg Flagg to spare his life. Glen refuses, so Lloyd shoots Glen in the head on Flagg's direct order.

Randall Flagg demands that all the residents of his city report to the street in front of his casino to witness the execution of Larry. Lloyd prepares a noose for Larry to hang from at a makeshift gallows. As Flagg prepares to execute Larry, Donald Elbert rides into the crowd with a nuclear warhead in the back of a pickup truck. Suddenly, a giant glowing, spectral hand, the proverbial Hand of God, appears and detonates the bomb, destroying the entire city and everyone in it.

Stu sees the mushroom cloud from the blast off in the distance. He prepares to take a lethal dose of Glen's pills when suddenly Tom Cullen appears. Stu asks how Tom found him, and Tom tells him that Nick showed him the way in a dream. Tom helps bring Stu back to Boulder. When they arrive, they find that Frannie has just given birth to her baby, a boy named Peter. The baby however is born with the superflu. Stu and Frannie wait up with the baby, and on the third day, the flu passes, and baby Peter survives. Stu and Frannie vow to do what they can to make the world a better place for Peter to grow up in.