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'The Shining' Sequel 'Doctor Sleep' Movie Adaptation Gets Release Date

Lou Cypher

The Tokin' White Guy
The highly-anticipated follow-up to Stephen King's iconic haunted hotel film, The Shining, has just earned a release date. Doctor Sleep, based on the King novel of the same name, will land in theaters on January 24, 2020.

Stephen King's website describes the story, "Haunted by the inhabitants of the Overlook Hotel where he spent one horrific childhood year, Danny Torrance has been drifting for decades, desperate to shed his father’s legacy of despair, alcoholism, and violence. Finally, he settles in a New Hampshire town, an AA community that sustains him, and a job at a nursing home where his remnant 'shining' power provides the crucial final comfort to the dying. Aided by a prescient cat, he becomes 'Doctor Sleep.' Then Dan meets the evanescent Abra Stone, and it is her spectacular gift, the brightest shining ever seen, that reignites Dan’s own demons and summons him to a battle for Abra’s soul and survival."

Mike Flanagan is attached to direct the film, having previously given audiences Oculus, Ouija: Origin of Evil, and last year's adaptation of King's Gerald's Game.

Stanley Kubrick delivered audiences an adaptation of King's The Shining in 1980 and, while many consider it to be a defining horror film, this adaptation earned mixed reviews when it was first released, with King himself being one of the biggest detractors. In 1997, director Mick Garris adapted the story into a miniseries through a collaboration with King.


"If you read the book first, that's what it's about, is the alcoholism and the humanity of a guy losing his humanity. That pressure cooker that's going to blow, that this is a guy saddled by guilt and alcoholism," Garris shared with ComicBook.com. "Whereas Kubrick's film, at the time, I really was not a fan of the movie at all and I didn't know anyone who was, but it resonated with young people like teenagers and everything."

He added, "I recognize it now as a great Kubrick film, but a flawed King adaptation. At that time, that book was my favorite book of all time. I was thinking, 'God, the genius of Stanley Kubrick and The Shining. This is going to be the scariest movie ever made.'"

Ahead of Doctor Sleep, fans can expect Pet Sematary on April 19, 2019 and IT: Chapter Two on September 7, 2019.

http://comicbook.com/horror/2018/05/23/doctor-sleep-movie-release-date-shining-sequel-stephen-king/
 
With all these goddamn adaptions it blows my mind that Stephen King doesnt have JK Rowling type money.

I guess Harry Potter is a much bigger franchise and shes still going with all these spin offs, but still. He's gotta be rich AF unless he sold the rights for a lot of his books a long time ago for cheap.
 
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With all these goddamn adaptions it blows my mind that Stephen King doesnt have JK Rowling type money.

I guess Harry Potter is a much bigger franchise and shes still going with all these spin offs, but still. He's gotta be rich AF unless he sold the rights for a lot of his books a long time ago for cheap.

One of the licensing conceits he is most famous for is the dollar baby principle.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dollar_Baby

Where hungry or aspiring creators could be granted adaptation rights to his work for as little as $1.

Anyhoo I read this book back when it dropped. It was kinda disappointing but it had some moments and an adaptation could actually improve on it. Salem's Lot is a better vampire story and Dr. Sleep had some nods to Salem's Lot. A new Salem's Lot adaptation could actually work now that I think of it.

I also wonder how long before hollywood starts looking at his son's (Joe Hill) work for adaptation? That dude has written some of the best "Stephen King" books in years.
 
With all these goddamn adaptions it blows my mind that Stephen King doesnt have JK Rowling type money.

I guess Harry Potter is a much bigger franchise and shes still going with all these spin offs, but still. He's gotta be rich AF unless he sold the rights for a lot of his books a long time ago for cheap.

Most of Steven King's works were adapted for TV miniseries though. That doesn't bring in the money that blockbuster movies do. Plus Harry Potter is a lot more accessible than anything King writes. It's like algebra vs multivariable calculus. A lot more people can get through the former than the latter.
 
It'll be a remake/reimagining similar to how they re did IT. Hopefully it's just as good. Pet semetary fucked me up as a kid lol. Not as bad as IT, but still.

That shit fucked me up too. I loved it as a kid but i watched it so much i started having nightmares about it
 
That shit fucked me up too. I loved it as a kid but i watched it so much i started having nightmares about it

The old crazy lady would haunt the fuck out of me when I tried sleeping haha. Stayed up for hours trying to get her out of my head
 
Gonna be next to impossible to top what kubrick did. I'll still check it out tho
 
Gonna be next to impossible to top what kubrick did. I'll still check it out tho

Big fan of Kubrick's The Shining as it's own thing. As an adaptation it missed the mark. It changed up dynamics that changed characterizations all around from the novel and another remake of it could be different enough that they can both co-exist (like the ITs).

Nevertheless this won't be a remake of The Shining. Is an adaptation of a novel featuring the adult Danny Torrance (who still has The Shining) so it will be more like a sequel and thematically both stories are different enough that outside of superficialities they can't really be compared.
 
Big fan of Kubrick's The Shining as it's own thing. As an adaptation it missed the mark. It changed up dynamics that changed characterizations all around from the novel and another remake of it could be different enough that they can both co-exist (like the ITs).

Nevertheless this won't be a remake of The Shining. Is an adaptation of a novel featuring the adult Danny Torrance (who still has The Shining) so it will be more like a sequel and thematically both stories are different enough that outside of superficialities they can't really be compared.


I just saw it for the first time fully two nights ago (I've just seen it in spells and not a full watch).. I haven't read the book either

Its common knowledge King wasn't appreciative of the film but Kubrick's technical mastery of film made up for that
 
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