11.22.63 - Stephen | King 8 Part Mini Series 2016...
The plot is deceptively simple. Jake Epping (Franco) is a recently divorced teacher given a portal to 1960 by his dying friend Al (Chris Cooper). Al’s mission: stop Lee Harvey Oswald. Jake’s mission: find out if history can be rewritten.
11.22.63 arrived during the peak of "prestige TV mania" and got lost in the shuffle. It is not a conspiracy thriller. It is a meditation on grief. If you missed it in 2016, or if you only remember the hype, now is the time to go back. 11.22.63 - Stephen King 8 Part Mini Series 2016...
The result is a messy, beautiful, heartbreaking time-loop romance that deserves a second life in the streaming era. The plot is deceptively simple
Unlike the gritty desaturation of Mad Men , 11.22.63 paints 1960s Texas in saturated, Kodachrome blues and greens. The production design is a fetishist’s dream: root beer floats, old Fords, skinny ties. But it isn't nostalgia. It highlights the horror of the era—the casual racism, the domestic violence, the smell of cheap cigarettes. Jake’s mission: find out if history can be rewritten
Stephen King has written about killer clowns, possessed cars, and rabid dogs. But his scariest novel might be the one about a high school English teacher who just wants to stop a bullet. In 2016, the eight-part Hulu mini-series 11.22.63 —executive produced by J.J. Abrams and directed by Kevin Macdonald (with a crucial assist from James Franco)—attempted the impossible: adapting King’s 850-page opus about the JFK assassination into a tight, emotional thriller.