Overview: In this extraordinary story of an ordinary man, Charles \'Chuck\' Krantz experiences the wonder of love, the heartbreak of loss, and the multitudes contained in all of us.
Release Date: 2025-06-05
Runtime: 111
Genres: Fantasy, Drama
Language: EN
Company: Intrepid Pictures, Red Room Pictures, QWGmire, FilmNation Entertainment
Status: Released
About The Life of Chuck
Writer: Stephen King, Mike Flanagan
Director: Mike Flanagan
Producer: Mike Flanagan, Trevor Macy
Vote Average: 7.348
Vote Count: 572
Country: United States of America
Trailer
Cast
Actor
Character
Tom Hiddleston
Charles 'Chuck' Krantz
Benjamin Pajak
Charles 'Chuck' Krantz (pre-teen)
Nick Offerman
Narrator (voice)
Chiwetel Ejiofor
Marty Anderson
Karen Gillan
Felicia Gordon
Mia Sara
Sarah Krantz
Mark Hamill
Albie Krantz
Annalise Basso
Janice Halliday
Jacob Tremblay
Charles 'Chuck' Krantz (teen)
Cody Flanagan
Charles 'Chuck' Krantz (child)
Samantha Sloyan
Miss Rohrbacher
Trinity Jo-Li Bliss
Cat McCoy
David Dastmalchian
Josh
Matthew Lillard
Gus
Kate Siegel
Miss Richards
Rahul Kohli
Bri
Harvey Guillén
Hector
Saidah Arrika Ekulona
Andrea
Carl Lumbly
Sam Yarbrough
Taylor Gordon
Taylor Franck
Michael Trucco
Dylan's Dad
Q'orianka Kilcher
Virginia 'Ginny' Krantz
Violet McGraw
Iris
Andrew Grush
Mac
Heather Langenkamp
Vera Stanley
Amy Biedel
Dylan's Mom
Franklin Ritch
Brent
Antonio Raul Garcia
Brian Krantz
Molly C. Quinn
Chuck's Mother
Lily Rose Lumpkin
Clerk
Sauriyan Sapkota
Ram
Mackenzie Gwaltney
Student #2
Anne Russell West
Student #3
Kyler Alan Collvins
Timmy
Mike Flanagan
Mourner
Matt Biedel
Doctor Winston
Carla Gugino
News and Commercial Voice (voice)
Elan Gale
Radio News Reporter (voice)
Eric Vespe
Radio Host #1 (voice)
Scott Wampler
Radio Host #2 (voice)
Hamish Linklater
American Reporter (voice)
Axelle Carolyn
French Reporter (voice)
Sandra Hess
German Reporter (voice)
Alexa Bolter
UK Reporter (voice)
Lauren LaVera
Italian Reporter (voice)
Mikki Levi
Japanese Reporter (voice)
Raymond Garcia
Spanish Reporter (voice)
Trevor Macy
Mourner (uncredited)
Screenshots
Ratings
7.348/10 based on 572 votes.
Review
The sci-fi drama The Life of Chuck is based on a Stephen King short novella of the same name, which is included in the 2020 story collection called If It Bleeds. The screenplay and film are written and directed by Mike Flanagan (Gerald’s Game, Doctor Sleep). The film is broken down into three acts told in reverse chronological order. Despite being based on a Stephen King story, this is not a horror film and is drama more in line with films like The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile.
In the not-too-distant future, the world is crumbling. The internet is down for good, California has dissolved into the sea, cell phones have stopped working altogether, massive sinkholes cause impossible traffic nightmares, and stars begin disappearing out of the night sky.
The one constant is that a man named Charles Krantz (Tom Hiddleston) is being thanked nonstop through bizarre marketing like billboard, radio, and TV ads, skywriting, and graffiti. And yet nobody seems to know him.
The Life of Chuck’s backward storytelling gives Charles Krantz a kind of Benjamin Button aura but is somehow less interesting. The acts follow Chuck through different ages or stages in his life; as a young boy (Benjamin Pajak), as a teenager (Jacob Tremblay), and as an adult (Hiddleston). The story is immaculate when it comes to explaining why Chuck has a fascination with dancing, his association with math and how he ended up as an accountant, and what his grandfather Albie Krantz (Mark Hamill) was hiding in the locked cupola that would become Chuck’s childhood home.
However, The Life of Chuck leaves out important information. Mike Flanagan’s screenplay seems mostly accurate to Stephen King’s original story, but nothing is explained regarding the state of the world in the future or why there are Charles Krantz advertisements everywhere. What resides in the cupola is interesting, but it also just raises more questions with the only takeaway being that we should continue to live our lives without worrying about what lies ahead.
The acts all have important life moments for Chuck. Act Three sees Chuck’s journey ending at the same time the world is ending. His grandfather dies in Act Two while he’s a teenager. Chuck finally has the opportunity to see what’s inside the cupola. In act one, Chuck loses his parents at a young ages and lives with his grandparents throughout childhood. He finds comfort in dancing and eventually discovers the love of his life.
Despite getting top billing, Tom Hiddleston gets maybe ten minutes of screen time, and most of that time is spent dancing in the street. He also doesn’t have many lines of dialogue. There’s a reason for that, but if you’re a Hiddleston fan seeing this hoping for a meaty role then you’ll be sorely disappointed.
The majority of Act Three is driven by people walking around and talking. News reports and TV broadcast signals are being cut short, but most exciting aspects aren’t shown and take place off-screen. Act 3 mostly follows a teacher named Marty Anderson (Chiwetel Ejiofor) as he attempts to maneuver a world falling to pieces while trying to get to his ex-wife Felicia Gordon (Karen Gillan).
Conversations and particularly our interactions with people are what shape The Life of Chuck. What the littlest thing in the present like a grandmother dancing to rock and roll in the kitchen while she cooks and what that could mean throughout the rest of our lives makes Chuck feel more and more like a genuine person as he ages and experiences more as his life progresses.
Despite being a relatively normal guy, Charles Krantz’s life was given extraordinary treatment and the spotlight. And maybe that’s the big takeaway from the film and the story that no matter how routine our life feels there are still wonderful moments and unforgettable life lessons that more than just one person experiences.
The film features Mark Hamill giving a five-minute speech about how great math is to a young Chuck culminating with a line that would stick with anyone for the rest of their life; math is an art and you have art in you. The craft and beauty have never been the big predictable moments we all see coming, but what we do in between and how we get there.
Wholesome, meaningful, timely, and incredibly moving; The Life of Chuck is overflowing with heart and is the type of film we all need right now. Our lives are a gift that deserves to be lived and studied and reminded of how incredible it is to exist.
FAQs
Q: Who directed The Life of Chuck? A: Mike Flanagan.
Q: What genre is The Life of Chuck? A: Fantasy, Drama.
Q: When was The Life of Chuck released? A: 2025-06-05.
Q: Who wrote The Life of Chuck? A: Stephen King, Mike Flanagan.