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  3. I know he was very unhappy with The Shining. How did he like Christine?

I know he was very unhappy with The Shining. How did he like Christine?

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  • F Offline
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    wrote last edited by
    #7

    doowopfan — 11 years ago(March 20, 2015 12:22 PM)

    IN the book Stephen King at the Movies he says Cujo and Cat's Eye were his favorites. The Shining and Children of the COrn were his least favorites. And this it says there are some that leave me cold like Christine.
    Not sure what he meant by that exactly but that is what he thought of it.
    I did sixty in five minutes once

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      #8

      IMDb User

      This message has been deleted.

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        #9

        TheSwordofValthrakian — 10 years ago(August 03, 2015 11:34 PM)

        I watched the dvd years ago and either in the commentary or featurette, it was said that the screenplay and novel were being written simultaneously and at some point in the process, Stephen King took the novel in a different direction.

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          #10

          Chris-Au — 10 years ago(August 20, 2015 01:24 PM)

          Re: Did King like the movie?
          by
          TheSwordofValthrakian
          Mon Aug 3 2015 23:34:08
          IMDb member since August 2006
          I watched the dvd years ago and either in the commentary or featurette, it was said that the screenplay and novel were being written simultaneously and at some point in the process, Stephen King took the novel in a different direction.
          Yeah
          No.
          Not true.
          Stephen King wrote 'The Shining' in 1974 while living in Colorado. The book was published in January 1977.
          At some point after the book was published Kubrick was in search of his next project after 'Barry Lyndon'. He was given a stack of horror novels and he read through them.
          'The Shining' was the book he picked.
          http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v109/chrisau214/Scribbles-Ep04.jpg
          Chris

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            #11

            eweland — 10 years ago(February 09, 2016 02:55 PM)

            King has since softened his views on The Shiningand he should. Kubrick improved greatly on the book and made a near flawless tale of terror, with no wasted scenesunlike the book, which is bloated and self-serving.
            Sorry, but there was NOTHING terrifying about hedge monsters coming to life and rambling on and on about a boiler.
            King was big time into his cocaine and alcohol addiction when he wrote The Shining, and it shows in the book.
            This. Absolutely, THIS!
            _
            Kubrick's film -
            will always be the definitive version of
            THE SHiNiNG
            .

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              #12

              jordanjanellejoy — 9 years ago(April 16, 2016 08:31 AM)

              I think I may be one of the only people who absolutely hated Kubrick's version.
              My ass may be dumb, but I ain't no dumbass

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                #13

                jbaker1-2 — 1 year ago(May 29, 2024 01:11 PM)

                I'm also a member of that small club. Just because the name Stanley Kubrick is attached to a movie doesn't make it a masterpiece. In fact, I find a fair percentage of Kubrick's work to be boring and self-indulgent, plus he had a (to me) very annoying habit when adapting a novel of more or less tossing out what the author wrote and using his/her characters to tell his own story. That's basically what he did with
                The Shining
                . To be honest, I think I disliked it even more than King did. 🙂
                There are 8.2 billion people in the world. 8.19 billion of them have never heard of and don't give a fuck about Charlie Kirk. Get over it.

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                  IceboxMovies — 2 years ago(August 03, 2023 10:22 PM)

                  King was bored by it.
                  He had this to say in his introduction to the 2003 publication
                  Dreamcatcher: The Shooting Script
                  :
                  "I may just be the most adapted novelist in modern times… and I don't say that with pride so much as with a kind of stunned bemusement. Several honorable adaptations have come from this thirty-year spew of celluloid… and the best of those have had few of the elements I'm best known for: science fiction, fantasy, the supernatural, and pure gross-out moments… The books that do have those elements have, by and large, become films that are either forgettable or outright embarrassing. Others – I'm thinking chiefly of
                  Christine
                  and Stanley Kubrick's take on
                  The Shining
                  – should have been good but just… well, they just aren't. They're actually sort of boring. Speaking for myself, I'd rather have bad than boring."

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                    #15

                    jbaker1-2 — 1 year ago(May 29, 2024 01:16 PM)

                    It seems that Hollywood just didn't know what to do with King - until Frank Darabont came along. Rob Reiner, to give credit where it's due, did turn
                    The Body
                    into a good movie, but by the time he was done with it, it wasn't really the story King wrote.
                    There are 8.2 billion people in the world. 8.19 billion of them have never heard of and don't give a fuck about Charlie Kirk. Get over it.

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                      #16

                      AnthonySocksss — 1 year ago(December 24, 2024 07:20 AM)

                      it wasn't really the story King wrote.
                      wdym it’s almost word for word recreation of the novella
                      Melton1 Wanted for Pedophilia:
                      https://i.ibb.co/6cnPmJVr/IMG-0830.jpg
                      https://m.youtube.com/shorts/Zjxk307CND0

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                        wrote last edited by
                        #17

                        twoshedsmcginty — 1 year ago(December 24, 2024 09:54 AM)

                        I interviewed him (aged 16!) in 1983 when he was junketing Christine in the UK. He liked the movie, way more than The Shining (he really was still bitching about Kubrick's adaptation back then).

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