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Stephen king mobile
Stephen king mobile




stephen king mobile

I promise I’m not trying to troll by omitting this deeply beloved-and, in its way, extremely accomplished-modern American classic when I was 13 years old, I loved it very much. Honorable Mentions The Shawshank Redemption (1994) So while I don’t have the strength to go through 80-plus titles-and settle once and for all whether, say, The Mangler is better than Maximum Overdrive (it is!)-I’ve been entrusted with a list of the 10 best, as well as some favorites that didn’t make the (completely subjective) cut. With It Chapter Two set to open (and possibly top its predecessor’s record-setting box office) all of those previously comprehensive rankings of King’s film adaptations will be reshuffled given his prolificacy, we’ll be doing this until the Maine Coast is underwater (we’ll float, too). Some of King’s best novels have made for lousy movies, while minor efforts have been translated brilliantly by imaginative filmmakers, and faithfulness isn’t a particularly useful barometer for quality: from Carrie and The Shining to The Shawshank Redemption and The Mist, the King-branded films that have endured have displayed a willingness to rework and revise their core texts, sometimes to a startling degree.

stephen king mobile stephen king mobile

And the films produced out of his source material vary about as wildly in quality as the books themselves-although not necessarily at a 1-to-1 ratio. With more than 80 credited adaptations of his novels and short stories, King has provided more grist for the Hollywood mill-its gleaming studios and dingy grindhouses alike-than any other author of the last half-century. They are both fruit but they taste completely different.” This is not the greatest analogy in the world, but it’s the one we’ve got on the record from Stephen King about the two mediums that have made him a household name. “Books and movies are like apples and oranges.






Stephen king mobile