Things are very, very grim in “The Long Walk,” the adaptation of Stephen King’s 1979 novel (published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman), which is essentially “The Hunger Games” for teenage boys, or “They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?” for Gen Z— texts that traffic in the extreme outcomes of American capitalism, a force that rots from within, ripe for dissection for nearly a century.

“The Long Walk” is the first novel King wrote, which he started around 1966, eight years before his first book, “Carrie,” was published. The plot is simple, and incredibly dark: in a dystopian United States under totalitarian rule, 100 teenage boys are selected from a lottery to participate in a contest that only one can win — whoever survives a multiday, hundreds-of-miles-long-walk wins, and is rewarded with a

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