Doctor Sleep
Directed by: Mike Flanagan
Written by: Mike Flanagan
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Rebecca Ferguson, Kyliegh Curran, Cliff Curtis
Release Date: November 8, 2019
Mike Flanagan’s Doctor Sleep (2019) pulls off the impossible — a sequel to both Stephen King’s The Shining and Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 masterpiece. Ewan McGregor stars in a haunting, soulful continuation that bridges trauma, addiction, and supernatural terror.
Haunted by the Past
Dan Torrance (Ewan McGregor) has spent his adult life running from his past — and from himself. After surviving his father’s murderous rampage at the Overlook Hotel, Dan spiraled into alcoholism, desperate to silence the psychic “shine” that once saved his life. Years later, sober and seeking redemption, he finds quiet purpose working at a New Hampshire hospice. There, he helps the dying find peace in their final moments — earning him the nickname Doctor Sleep.
This quiet redemption story is interrupted when Dan’s psychic connection reaches a young girl named Abra (Kyliegh Curran), whose “shine” burns brighter than his ever did.
A New Kind of Horror
Abra’s extraordinary gift attracts the attention of Rose the Hat (Rebecca Ferguson), the leader of a cult called The True Knot — a group of near-immortal predators who feed on the “steam” of psychic children to sustain their youth. Their evil is chillingly human, rendered with a visceral intensity that’s difficult to shake.
What follows is a battle of wills — between an aging survivor who once ran from his powers and a young prodigy learning to harness hers. It’s a story of mentorship, trauma, and courage wrapped inside a supernatural war.
Mike Flanagan’s Impossible Balancing Act
Doctor Sleep was always going to be a no-win proposition: a sequel to both King’s novel The Shining and Stanley Kubrick’s legendary 1980 film — two creative visions famously at odds with each other. But Mike Flanagan, the director behind Gerald’s Game and The Haunting of Hill House, somehow threads the needle.
Flanagan pays homage to Kubrick’s visual precision — the long, symmetrical corridors, the methodical dread — while honoring King’s deeper themes of recovery, compassion, and the moral weight of the supernatural. That he manages to please both camps (and even win King’s approval) is nothing short of miraculous.
The Performances That Shine
Kyliegh Curran is remarkable as Abra. She’s sharp, fearless, and fully alive — a believable prodigy who never tips into cliché. Her chemistry with McGregor brings heart and humanity to a story about monsters and ghosts.
Rebecca Ferguson, meanwhile, is magnetic as Rose the Hat — seductive, terrifying, and quietly tragic. Her performance anchors the film’s horror with personality and purpose.
And Ewan McGregor? He’s the steady pulse that holds it all together. Haunted yet hopeful, McGregor captures Dan’s lifelong struggle between compassion and fear, his quiet heroism shining through the darkness.
Return to the Overlook
When Doctor Sleep finally revisits the Overlook Hotel, it feels earned — a return to the haunted heart of King’s mythology. The recreation of Kubrick’s visual world is meticulous, from the wallpaper patterns to the steady glide of the camera through its hallways. It’s both nostalgic and devastating, the ghosts of cinema and memory walking side by side.
Flanagan doesn’t merely mimic Kubrick; he reclaims that world to give Dan Torrance — and King’s story — a proper emotional conclusion.
Final Thoughts
Doctor Sleep shouldn’t work. On paper, it’s a disaster waiting to happen. Yet in Flanagan’s hands, it becomes a deeply moving, surprisingly soulful meditation on fear, addiction, and the power of empathy.
This isn’t just a sequel to The Shining — it’s a mirror held up to it. One haunted by the past but strong enough to move forward.
Rating: ★★★★½ (4.5/5)
A bold, brilliant continuation of a classic — and one of the finest modern Stephen King adaptations.