The biting cold of the Colorado Rockies settled deep into the bones of the Overlook Hotel as winter approached, a vast, opulent structure preparing for its seasonal slumber. It was into this imposing solitude that Jack Torrance, a struggling writer and recovering alcoholic, brought his family: his wife, Wendy, and their young son, Danny. Jack had taken the job as winter caretaker, a last-ditch effort to escape his past failures - the lost teaching position, the broken arm he'd accidentally inflicted on Danny in a drunken rage, and the gnawing urge to drink that perpetually haunted him. He hoped the isolation would provide the perfect environment to finish his play and mend his fractured family.
From the moment they arrived, a subtle unease permeated the air. Five-year-old Danny possessed a rare, powerful psychic ability, a "shining," that allowed him to glimpse the hotel's dark, violent history and sense the malevolent entities lurking within its grand halls. He saw flashes of past tragedies, heard whispers of forgotten parties, and felt the sinister presence of the hotel itself, which seemed to awaken and grow stronger in his presence. The head chef, Dick Hallorann, a man who also possessed the shining, recognized Danny's gift and offered a grave warning about the hotel's capacity for evil before departing for the season.
As the snow piled high, cutting off the Overlook from the outside world, the hotel began to reveal its true, horrifying nature. Jack, already vulnerable, found himself increasingly drawn to the hotel's sordid past, poring over a scrapbook detailing its gruesome history of mob killings, suicides, and other unspeakable acts. The hotel, a sentient, malevolent force, began to prey on his weaknesses, amplifying his anger, his resentment, and his ever-present temptation for alcohol. He started to see apparitions, to hear voices, and to believe the hotel was communicating directly with him, twisting his perceptions of reality.
Danny's visions grew more vivid and terrifying. He saw the decaying woman in Room 217, the phantom guests of a masquerade ball, and the sinister topiary animals in the garden that seemed to move when no one was looking. His imaginary friend, Tony, who was in fact a manifestation of his older self, tried desperately to warn him, showing him the word "redrum" and hinting at the impending doom. Wendy, caught between her son's increasingly disturbing behavior and her husband's alarming transformation, struggled to maintain a semblance of normalcy, her fear growing with each passing day.
Jack's descent into madness accelerated. The hotel, now fully possessing him, used his suppressed rage and alcoholism to turn him against his family. A chilling encounter in the hotel bar, where he found himself served drinks by a ghostly bartender, solidified his allegiance to the Overlook. He became a monstrous reflection of the hotel's evil, wielding a croquet mallet, then an axe, determined to "correct" his wife and son, just as the previous caretaker, Delbert Grady, had been urged to do.
Wendy, realizing the full extent of the danger, fought desperately to protect Danny. She managed to strike Jack, locking him in the pantry, but the hotel's power was too great. He escaped, a relentless, axe-wielding specter of his former self, hunting them through the labyrinthine corridors. Danny, using his shining, sent a telepathic plea to Hallorann, who, despite the blizzard, began a perilous journey back to the Overlook.
Hallorann arrived, only to be ambushed by the deranged Jack. The hotel was crumbling around them, its old, faulty boiler reaching critical pressure, a detail Jack had neglected in his madness. In a harrowing climax, Danny confronted his father, reminding him of his love, momentarily breaking through the hotel's hold. But the Overlook quickly reasserted its control, forcing Jack to turn the mallet on himself.
As the hotel exploded in a fiery inferno, consuming the malevolent spirits and the corrupted Jack, Wendy and Danny, aided by Hallorann, escaped into the freezing night. They left the Overlook to its destruction, carrying only the scars of their terrifying ordeal and the lingering echoes of the shining.