Going to the movies over the summer has to be my favorite time of the year to catch a new release. There’s just something about taking time out of the beating sunlight with friends and family, and enjoying munching on popcorn as you watch a story unfold on the big screen. There’s actually way too many 2025 movie releases out right now than I have time to go see, but so far I’m especially happy I took the time to go out to see an underrated and atypical summer release, the new Stephen King adaptation, The Life Of Chuck.

Why? It’s what I would categorize as a life-affirming movie, and the more I think about it, those are actually really hard to come by. I seriously haven’t stopped thinking about this movie since I watched it. You can read more about my thoughts on its moving ending or why it had our staff member sobbing in a movie theater for the first time ever, but what I want to talk about here is the importance of watching movies that remind one about the beauty of living, and the journey I’m now embarking on to discover more. I get why it’s visually less appealing for movie-going audiences, but I think they are my favorite type of film.

Chiwetel Ejiofor looking over while outside with Karen Gillan in The Life Of Chuck Act 3

(Image credit: Neon)

The Life Of Chuck Is My Favorite Theatrical Experience Of The Year So Far

the twisty horror flick Companion and Ryan Coogler’s universally-acclaimed Sinners). While I didn’t necessarily realize it at the time, as I’ve had more time between seeing it almost a month ago and now, the messages of the movie continue to cycle through me in the best way.

Stephen King’s short story to deliver the message.

For those who have seen it, I can’t stop thinking about the scene where Chiwetel Ejifor and Karen Gillan are staring at the stars, or when Chuck leaves the locked room at the end of the movie. How you experience the journey with the characters themselves is what I think makes The Life Of Chuck so enduring, and I can’t wait to come back to it throughout my life, especially when I’m experiencing another phase of it.

Everything Everywhere All At Once, It’s A Wonderful Life, The Pursuit of Happyness, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Forrest Gump were some of the titles thrown out.

Upon further research I found some more to mull over and a trend started to form. IMDB for example suggests The Shawshank Redemption (which makes sense given the Stephen King of it all), Good Will Hunting, Dead Poets Society, Groundhog Day, Cast Away and Inside Out. And I can distinctly remember the first time I watched each of these movies, and the handprints that it left on me as a movie viewer. Yet oftentimes, as a viewer, I also haven’t watched many of these more than once because they made me so emotional and gave me a lot to think about, too.

The Lion King of that year, The Life Of Chuck has practically bombed at the box office, with a $6 million haul across a month. And yet, movies like this are so vital to why I love the medium in the first place.

Now I turn to you…

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