Stephen King

February 23, 2012

Under the Dome finds a home

It has been a good summer for Stephen King. We can now add his massive 2009 novel Under the Dome to the list of King projects in various states of development around Tinseltown The thousand-page epic has found a home on Showtime with Steven Spielberg attached as Executive Producer through Dreamworks TV. No word yet on a director or cast but I’m sure that news will start trickling out soon enough.

Under the Dome is about a small Maine town that suddenly finds itself trapped under an invisible dome. As with most King novels the story is less about the catalyst and more about how the people react, in this case the breakdown of the society trapped under the dome. The novel grew from a shorter story he wrote back in 1982 called The Cannibals about a group of people trapped in an apartment buidling. I enjoyed the book tremendously but it does suffer from that pesky “poor ending syndrome” that plagues a few other King books I can think of. In this case, as with those others, the journey far outshined the payoff and I wasn’t complaining.

Seeing Spielberg’s name attached to this gives me all kinds of warm fuzzy feelings, and the added bonus of cable television means that hopefully some of the more disturbing scenes won’t get cut out. If I was a betting man I’d say we’ll see this on screen this time next year.

Jason Priestley digs up a Bag of Bones

So I was totally hanging out at the Peach Pit listening to some Paula Abdul on the jukebox when guess what I heard? Jason Priestley just landed a role in A&E’s mini series adaptation of Stephen King’sBag of Bones! I know right! That’s totally awesome! Priestley has been cast as the literary agent to Pierce Brosnan’s character Mike Noonan who is spending the summer at his lake house in Maine following the sudden death of his wife. Naturally the place is haunted. Also spending the summer at the lake is Melissa George (The Amityville Horror).

This makes the second Stephen King project Jason is a part of. Earlier this summer he joined the cast of SyFy’s Haven and immediately started making moves on Emily Rose. Haven is loosely based on King’s pulp novel The Colorado Kid and Jason plays a guy whose particular problem is that everyone loves him…even the dudes.

Look for Bag of Bones to start rattling around your television in 2012.

Stephen King’s “11/22/63″ & “The Stand” head to the big screen

Lots of big news for Stephen King fans lately, and this time it’s actually good! Silence of the Lambs director Johnathan Demme has signed on to write and direct the big screen adaptation of Stephen King’s forthcoming novel about the JFK assassination 11/22/63. The book doesn’t come out until November (of course) but apparently Demme liked the synopsis so much he snapped up the rights.

11/22/63 is the story of Jake Epping, a high school English teacher in Lisbon Falls, Maine who stumbles upon a time portal to 1958 in his friend Al’s diner. Al wants to use the portal to prevent the assassination of Kenneday 5 years later. Jake agrees to help and mayhem ensues. I like King AND Kennedy so this should be a real treat. Maybe Marilyn will make an appearance. I’d love to see what King does with her. Also, considering this takes place partially in 1958 maybe we’ll get a glimpse of a young Roland D. LeBay and his shiny new Plymouth Fury, Christine.

Also hitting the intarwebs this week was the news that Harry Potter wonder-twins David Yates and Steve Kloves are tackling King’s opus The Stand for Warner Brothers. The Stand was about 10,000 pages long and will probably spread out into 2 movies if they are smart about it. I’m a big fan of splitting up large novels for the screen since the other option is to dump loads of backstory/side plots and what not.

Maybe all this interest in King’s work will get The Dark Tower rolling again.

SyFy’s Haven Expands to Twitter

Just the other day I said to myself  “I wish the plots of my favorite tv shows could be executed in 140 characters or less” and now my prayers have been answered. SyFy’s weird and quirky hit Haven is taking to Twitter to offer the first seamless integration between a network television show and a social network, Twitter.

Here is how it works. Starting with the Friday, August 12 episode Haven’s loveable newspaper men Dave (@DaveHaven) and Vince (@VinceHaven) will join Twitter and begin to interact with a stranger with the username @ColdinHaven. This mysterious Twit knows more about Haven than anyone should and will no doubt cause the locals some concern. Executive Producer Lloyd Segan explains:

“Although Twitter has been featured in TV shows before, this is the first time a storyline from a television series has been fully integrated with the popular online service. The story has been created in such a way that viewers who don’t follow the Twitter plot can still enjoy the show. For those that do, there will be a special meaning to events in Haven during these seven episodes.”

Haven, based on Stephen King’s The Colorado Kid just started its second season and stars Emily Rose (not the one possessed by the Devil), Eric Balfour and Lucas Bryant. The show is mostly a “weirdness of the week” type thing where FBI Agent Audrey Parker (Rose) and the local sheriff (Bryant) try to uncover the mystery behind the “troubles” which usually involve people who can control machines with their minds or shoot lightning bolts from various orifices. It is great fun and so far only loosely based on the King novel. References to other King works are peppered in if you pay enough attention. I spotted Pennywise a few weeks ago.

Viewers can follow the story on Twitter at #HavenNews as well as on www.syfy.com/haven and on SyFy every Friday night at 10pm. And speaking of Twitter you can follow me there as well @omgneal

Paramount digs up Pet Sematary

The soil of a man’s heart is stonier, and so is the seemingly endless string of remakes being vomited from the gaping mouth of Hollywood lately. OK so that didn’t make much sense but it gave me an excuse to use one of the more memorable quotes from the 1989 film adaptation of Stephen King‘s classic Pet Sematary.

Pet Sematary is the tale of a big city doctor who takes a job at a college in rural Maine and winds up losing more than his mind. When the beloved family cat is killed in the road his neighbor across the street, played brilliantly by Fred Gwynne, has him bury the cat not in the local pet cemetery but in the sacred indian burial grounds beyond it. As you may have guessed no good comes of this. A remake was rumored back around the time of the writers strike with George Clooney attached to play the role of Louis Creed. A dreamy Dale Midkiff played him in the original. I wonder whatever happened to him. Now Paramount has dug up this rotting corpse and is working on its own resurrection of sorts with Piranha 3-D skipper Alexander Aja at the helm and script by Matt Greenberg who most recently penned 1408 which stunk as bad as a dead cat.

Sadly it would take longer to name the Stephen King adaptations that sucked than the one’s that really worked. This was one of the good ones and I don’t think it needs remaking. Fred Gwynne was perfection as Jud Crandall and you can slap me across the face if they find a child who can do what Miko Hughes did with Gage Creed. He was heartbreaking. And the flashbacks with Rachel’s ailing sister Zelda were terrifying. I had nightmares about that twisted bitch for weeks. Here is a bit of trivia for you; Zelda was played by a man…Andrew Hubatsek…whose only other film credit was in Blue Steel.

There has been no “official” word from Paramount on this but it sounds like a sure thing, especially considering it already has an IMDB entry for 2013. The original spawned a forgetful sequel starring Eddie Furlong which I don’t recommend unless you have a Furlong fetish or something. This could be good, but I wish they’d work on getting Gerald’s Game or The Talisman made instead.

A&E Picks up Bag of Bones

A&E announced today that they will air a four-hour mini series based on the novel Bag of Bones by Stephen King and starring Pierce Brosnan and Annabeth Gish. This is mild consolation in the wake of the news that The Dark Tower collapsed at Universal and is in search of a new home, but good news nonetheless. Bones was an excellent read and should make a darn fine movie.

Bag of Bones is the story of Mike Noonan, a writer living in Derry, Maine, a place King fans will instantly recognize. Noonan is suffering from writer’s block after the death of his wife and moves to their lake house for inspiration. Instead he finds a single mom with some serious problems and a ghost that isn’t terribly friendly. This being a King story there is of course a kid involved and an enemy in the form of a rich and powerful man in town. And speaking of The Dark Tower, Bones shares a link with that world as well. I’ll leave it up to you to sort that one out.

Bag of Bones will air this fall on A&E.

Dark Tower dead in the water

The Man in Black fled across the desert and he had the contract for Universal’s adaptation of Stephen King’s opus The Dark Tower with him. Sadly, this time The Gunslinger did NOT follow.

For months Universal has been developing the seven-book series into a massive and ambitious project to be helmed by Ron Howard and included three feature films and a television series. The news was music to the Ka-tet’s ears and seemed too good to be true. When rumblings of budget concerns surfaced recently I began to fear the worst and now when faced with the July 15th deadline to commit Universal has pulled the plug due to the massive budget.

The good news is that the project is now free to be shopped around and we can one of the other big studios will pick it up. Now that Harry Potter has ridden his Firebolt into the sunset it could be argued that Warner Brothers should grab it as their next big franchise, but The Dark Tower doesn’t have the universal appeal that Harry Potter did unfortunately. Personally I’d like to see HBO or Showtime snatch it up and turn it into a series, but I don’t make the rules. There are so many different ways this story could make it to the screen, I just hope someone takes a chance on it.

Plugin from the creators of Brindes :: More at Plulz Wordpress Plugins