stephen king c/d?

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Probably both, honestly. But it helps that It actually looks good. And yeah, SK was pretty crucial at that age but so was horror in general.

I'm inclined to think that kids are maybe missing out on King. My sister is a big horror freak, too, but at 30 I think even she was too young to have a King phase.

Chock Full of Love and Sexy Feeling (Old Lunch), Thursday, 27 July 2017 17:32 (six years ago) link

Why would 30 be too young?

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:00 (six years ago) link

Stephen King's 69. Half + 7 = 41.5

Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:02 (six years ago) link

Read a ton of King growing up, but never tried IT, fsr. Although I never saw the Curry movie, it still held some hold on my imagination through schoolyard talk, seeing the cover in the video store etc. So, uh, not super-hyped by this, but certainly curious.

Oh, there's an easter egg in the trailer
http://i.imgur.com/ITtrvFG.jpg

Rimsky-Koskenkorva (Øystein), Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:07 (six years ago) link

I'd say his pervasive cultural prominence was at a low 20 years ago. Once you're no longer reading or watching what your peers are reading or watching, then you're actively seeking out stuff on your own, which is more work. Pretty sure by then, c. 2000, say, his long moment had moved on and kids 10+ had were passing around other bestsellers.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:09 (six years ago) link

Harry Potter

Οὖτις, Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:11 (six years ago) link

Exactly, at the least. Monolithically. Those things got passed down younger siblings as older siblings moved on to the next book.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:12 (six years ago) link

gah new trailer for It is really good. Some of the visuals are so close to how I pictured it in my head as a kid it gave me goosebumps

serioysly i could not give af abt Dark Tower. I know I'm supposed to and i will see it but it looks so toothless and meh

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:34 (six years ago) link

i am currently reading It for the first time, but my main King reading happened in my tween years -- 11-13 probably
misery was the last one i read when it came out

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:40 (six years ago) link

It's weird to me that people still say, "oh, the TV movie was kind of bad but Tim Curry's performance was amazing"

He's fucking terrible. So misjudged

Number None, Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:44 (six years ago) link

nah curry was good and def looked the part

but i could never get past johnboy walton & john ritter, def took me out of it even as a teen

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 18:55 (six years ago) link

It's weird to me that people still say, "oh, the TV movie was kind of bad but Tim Curry's performance was amazing"

He's fucking terrible. So misjudged

― Number None, Thursday, July 27, 2017 11:44 AM (fifteen minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

i watched it just a few months ago! he's excellent!

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:00 (six years ago) link

johnboy walton's mole is the thing i remember most

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:01 (six years ago) link

The scene of him furiously typing his garbage fiction is hilarious

blog haus aka the scene raver (wins), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:04 (six years ago) link

I concur with the prevailing opinion that the first half is pretty decent and the second half is not that hot

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:06 (six years ago) link

It's weird to me that people still say, "oh, the TV movie was kind of bad but Tim Curry's performance was amazing"

He's fucking terrible. So misjudged

― Number None, Thursday, July 27, 2017 11:44 AM (twenty-two minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

i love tim curry in IT!

-_- (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:09 (six years ago) link

It's like someone realized at the eleventh hour that they'd forgotten to tell the casting people about the second part of the miniseries.

Chock Full of Love and Sexy Feeling (Old Lunch), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:12 (six years ago) link

Everyone who thinks ABC's It was bad, go back and watch The Stand and The Langoliers and get back to me.

Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:34 (six years ago) link

tim curry is solid though i don't think the miniseries is scary unless you're a kid, maybe. idk, i remember some decent imagery. the kid sections were a lot better of course.

nomar, Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:36 (six years ago) link

You know what I liked and no one ever talks about? Golden Years. Although I was like 14 when I saw it and it could be irredeemably shitty.

Chock Full of Love and Sexy Feeling (Old Lunch), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:36 (six years ago) link

The Stand was not very good, yeah. there were a few pretty good performances scattered throughout, Laura San Giacomo probably being the most committed to her role iirc.

nomar, Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:37 (six years ago) link

haha i rented Golden Years on VHS once and watched it, i remember it actually being not bad.

nomar, Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:37 (six years ago) link

i am unreasonably excited that la lechera is reading It for the first time

or at night (Jon not Jon), Thursday, 27 July 2017 19:55 (six years ago) link

yeah i missed that post initially

v exciting!! i would love to get a brainwipe & reread with fresh eyes

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:04 (six years ago) link

though nostalgia is v powerful, idk how it would hold up without the ~feelings~ from reading it as a thirteen yr old

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:05 (six years ago) link

part of my feelings from reading it as a 13 or 14 yr old come from where i grew up, which was kind of an older town with a lot of rural surroundings and odd areas. an old railroad track, abandoned for years heading off into the country, spanned occasionally by an equally old bridge here and there. a mansion which was purportedly used for occult rituals and had a design that was apparently intended to attract spirits, the occasional mysterious murder, a missing child or two, the plane that exploded over my town when i was 8 and killed 27 people. shit like that, reading King novels but *especially* IT at that time, when you're trying to figure out what's real, what's dangerous, and seeing that you can't always trust adults, etc...it was pretty intense actually.

nomar, Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:09 (six years ago) link

lol I enjoyed The Stand mini-series and feel no need to read the book because I watched it.

One thing that fascinated me about the Stand series, and I dunno if anybody remarked on it here or at the time, was how Twin Peaks-y it was. Both depict the supernatural in a kind of similar way, both have an embodiment of evil who looks like a motorcylist with long hair and denim, both have Miguel Ferrer

Evan R, Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:09 (six years ago) link

Both have a character named Nadine.

Anne of the Thousand Gays (Eric H.), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:11 (six years ago) link

part of my feelings from reading it as a 13 or 14 yr old come from where i grew up, which was kind of an older town with a lot of rural surroundings and odd areas. an old railroad track, abandoned for years heading off into the country, spanned occasionally by an equally old bridge here and there. a mansion which was purportedly used for occult rituals and had a design that was apparently intended to attract spirits, the occasional mysterious murder, a missing child or two, the plane that exploded over my town when i was 8 and killed 27 people. shit like that, reading King novels but *especially* IT at that time, when you're trying to figure out what's real, what's dangerous, and seeing that you can't always trust adults, etc...it was pretty intense actually.

Opening paragraph for your roman-a-clef novel here.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:15 (six years ago) link

though nostalgia is v powerful, idk how it would hold up without the ~feelings~ from reading it as a thirteen yr old
yeah i have 0 nostalgia about this book. i also have very little nostalgia about childhood tbh so who knows what will happen?!

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:27 (six years ago) link

either way, i look forward to yr book report :D

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:28 (six years ago) link

because i am not a savage i will not blog about it but if i have anything interesting to share, i will :)

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:30 (six years ago) link

speaking of blogs, i don't think all bloggers are savage (i was referring to that "my husband's stupid record collection" blog tbh)
i am reading along with the booklist It Parade

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:32 (six years ago) link

Can we talk about this plane crash? Did the NTSB investigation reveal that a balloon had been sucked into the engine or something?

how's life, Thursday, 27 July 2017 20:48 (six years ago) link

it crashed a mile NW from our house, the night of the science fair of all things, right after we arrived home. crash location was halfway between school and home. if the crash occurred 15-20 later it would have likely landed on our block. the theory was lightning but it was a leaky fuel pump...it was a military transport plane, their previous plane had experienced trouble so they switched to this one. years later their previous plane crashed as well, killing all aboard. as an eight year old, awakened by booms and seeing the sky orange (and my dad seeing this KC-135 pinwheeling out of the clouds on fire), with the crash site an inaccessible creek area in the woods, one we'd explore months later once the gov't agents had cleared out. ride our bikes the few blocks to the creek and the bridge, disembark, follow the creek down about the quarter mile to the general area of the site, look for bits of wreckage.

once we found a fully intact red balloon, just floating there.

nomar, Thursday, 27 July 2017 21:10 (six years ago) link

jesus christ nomar your posts today are the true vine

or at night (Jon not Jon), Thursday, 27 July 2017 21:22 (six years ago) link

Horror fans rejoice

http://www.clickhole.com/article/horror-fans-rejoice-stephen-kings-novel-skeleton-s-6312#1,

Evan R, Thursday, 27 July 2017 21:22 (six years ago) link

yeah, love those posts, nomar. first one halfway gave me goosebumps!

i am about to start rereading ray bradbury's /dandelion wine/ and iirc it and /something wicked this way comes/ are crucial king precedents. the former tends nostalgic with some creepy parts, the latter vice versa, but they're both about king-esque small towns (midwest rather than new england) and they both capture well how, especially through the wide eyes of kids, there can be so much wrong and sinister and gut-grabbing in very very ordinary places if they're dialed just slightly off of what they should be.

﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Thursday, 27 July 2017 22:17 (six years ago) link

i think if you grow up in a blue collar small town with rivers and forests and hang out with a bunch of other dudes your age who have similarly broken families, latchkey kids riding your bikes everywhere with your buddies, and it's the damn 1980s, i suspect you're gonna have some weird vibes from some of those King books. IT for sure, just the kids angle is pretty hardcore and realistic in certain ways.

everything from that era for me is heightened (like anything from that age), like a classmate dying in a shotgun accident, or you have these more innocuous events like underage beer parties you have in the middle of cornfields, hidden by the tall stalks of corn, everyone pooling their money for a Coors beer ball (lol) which is purchased for you by this cool older dude who in retrospect was probably a sexual predator, or the double murder of our middle school librarian and her husband by their daughter's ex (who vanished for a year after and everyone thought they saw him all over, popping up in random spots like a ghoul even though it was later discovered he was in California), and your classmate the next year is that girl's brother who survived with slash wounds to the face (she survived too but left town.) or the middle school across the lake, where it was discovered both the principal and vice principal were actual sexual predators and jeez did you hear what that so and so's cousin had to go to the police about it?

it's all heightened (with the accentuation on the sinister and the violent and the creepy) but hazy, like the more banal version of that bit at the end of IT where everyone forgets everyone else and the town is destroyed.

nomar, Thursday, 27 July 2017 22:30 (six years ago) link

I don't have an idea in my head what pennywise looks like but I know it has to feel like the pages of the yellowing cheap paperback I read and it must in some similar way also smell of my cousin's room where I read it.

Waves hand at director, to make that happen

Dark Tower, would love it to be good. Books three and four have potential to be great movies. Books one and two great TV seasons.

But it can't be idris imo. And thats not cos I don't love idris, and it's not cos Roland can't be black.

It's cos Roland must be halfwasted, cadaverous, dusty beef jerky lean and gnarled and a walking dry riverbed. Idris ain't that.

Aside from that, yeah the effects, the scenes, locations....what isn't done badly/cheaply still looks wrong to me.

Hoping against hope.

jk rowling obituary thread (darraghmac), Thursday, 27 July 2017 22:34 (six years ago) link

XP at this stage you prob should just be collating these paragraphs for an IT sequel tbh

jk rowling obituary thread (darraghmac), Thursday, 27 July 2017 22:35 (six years ago) link

Tell you what is a great TV series waiting to happen though is the talisman

jk rowling obituary thread (darraghmac), Thursday, 27 July 2017 22:36 (six years ago) link

Hellll yes it would be so weird and good if someone did that book faithfully

Dr C otm something wicked has it all in its kernel

or at night (Jon not Jon), Thursday, 27 July 2017 23:06 (six years ago) link

lotta locations in It had me picturing hometown places - my school library definitely. i ~feel~ like the balloon scene happened in my library, i just know it

Yoni Loves Chocha (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 27 July 2017 23:16 (six years ago) link

Early reviews are...not great.

groovypanda, Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:50 (six years ago) link

Hush, you... I don't want to know anything until I see It.

smug dinner-jazz atrocity (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 3 August 2017 20:54 (six years ago) link

Well...it's getting better reviews than The Emoji Movie, anyway.

It's a fairly impressive feat to make me not care at all that a Dark Tower movie exists.

I'm Calling My Loyer! (Old Lunch), Friday, 4 August 2017 22:56 (six years ago) link

holy geez this was bad

﴿→ ☺ (Doctor Casino), Sunday, 6 August 2017 04:36 (six years ago) link


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