I have first editions of IV, V, and VII (not sure what happened to VI) that I bought the day they came out. They may be the only books I still have that are worth anything. Hopefully these adaptations will be worthy.
The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
YouBet said:
Maybe this could be the rare series where the on screen ending is better than the book ending?
Not that this is necessarily relevant, but a good half of everything else King wrote before ending the main The Dark Tower story line was inside the Dark Tower universe.
Back in the day, I could rattle off every book he wrote that was part of DT that many did not realize was the case. In some cases, the book was essentially part of the main storyline (Black House) and in other cases you might randomly read one sentence or scene in a book that felt totally out of place. There was a scene in Insomina like this as well as one of his Richard Bachman books. If you had not read any mainline DT you would have no idea what it was you were reading.
IT is tied to DT. Obviously, Salem's Lot is heavily tied to it.
No.bonfarr said:
Didn't this get made with Idris Elba already?
YouBet said:No.bonfarr said:
Didn't this get made with Idris Elba already?
look it up and you'll figure it out.bonfarr said:YouBet said:No.bonfarr said:
Didn't this get made with Idris Elba already?
Then what was that show about? Same name and Stephen King title, I never watched the show but sure seemed like it was based on that series.
bonfarr said:YouBet said:No.bonfarr said:
Didn't this get made with Idris Elba already?
Then what was that show about? Same name and Stephen King title, I never watched the show but sure seemed like it was based on that series.
The Porkchop Express said:look it up and you'll figure it out.bonfarr said:YouBet said:No.bonfarr said:
Didn't this get made with Idris Elba already?
Then what was that show about? Same name and Stephen King title, I never watched the show but sure seemed like it was based on that series.
why did you create that Wikipedia page? That movie never happened.bonfarr said:The Porkchop Express said:look it up and you'll figure it out.bonfarr said:YouBet said:No.bonfarr said:
Didn't this get made with Idris Elba already?
Then what was that show about? Same name and Stephen King title, I never watched the show but sure seemed like it was based on that series.
Ok now what? Google says it made $113 million at the box office which is a lot for a move that was never made.
PatAg said:
Its a shame because I think Elba could actually do the role justice in the right hands. Even if he doesn't match all the descriptions of the character.
That movie just had the tone all wrong
Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
KidDoc said:It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.
Well yeah true it started with the flashback that was super confusing om first read.Proposition Joe said:KidDoc said:It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.
Except that technically wasn't the opening line of WoT.
That is definitely not better. It is wordy as *****KidDoc said:
It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.
The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The graphic novels are how I finally got my brother to read the books. The siege at Gilead and the battle of jericho hill finally given some visuals was great. Everythig else as well.Spaceball 1 said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
I have read the graphic novels and they're spectacular. Highly recommend. The Last God was another amazing graphic novel I read recently if you're looking for good ones
TLDR opening line.KidDoc said:It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.
📸 Mike Flanagan with Pedro Pascal recently! pic.twitter.com/xdBjBelQGk
— Mike Flanagan Source (@flanagansource) January 28, 2023
Quote:
Screen Rant was in attendance at Flanagan's House of Usher panel at the New York Comic Con, where the director gave an update on the adaptation:
These are the questions that keep me up at night. The only way to do it is to just do the books. The thing about The Dark Tower that's so incredible is Stephen King builds an astonishing universe and it's huge. It's populated with such a richness of characters and scale and scope, eventually, but he starts that story with one person following another person in the barren desert. It's one of the greatest opening lines of all time. That's how you do it. You start with two people and a simple story. One is trying to catch the other. That's it. It's taking forever.
Quote:
March 2024: On X (formerly Twitter), King now teases that he is working on new Dark Tower stories as he reveals that he is "back in Mid-World...and the Territories." King admits that he does not know what this will amount to, but he expresses his enthusiasm at returning to the universe of The Dark Tower. The tease also includes a shirt that reads, "All things serve the f***** Beam," which is a different quote from the series, and a reference to the Beams that hold up the Dark Tower.
Quote:
July 2024: Speaking with The Wrap, Prime Video executive Vernon Sanders discusses the status of The Dark Tower adaptation:
So Mike is incredibly passionate about this and we're incredibly passionate about Intrepid. There are a few things in the hopper with Intrepid with us and we're trying to figure out right now how to prioritize. So I don't have anything to share specifically on "Dark Tower" other than we are in weekly conversations with him about this and a few other pieces that we're leaning into.
Quote:
July 2024: In a recent interview on the Talking Scared podcast, Flanagan assures fans that he will be able to work on both The Exorcist and Dark Tower at the same time fairly comfortably.:
Oh, it's not in the way. They coexist very well. I think the trick with The Dark Tower is just it's still just takes an enormous amount of time to get going. But we're further along than the last time we spoke. It seems to be moving on its own momentum. There's so much logistical, boring, legal stuff that we have to kind of machete our way through to get that thing moving. But yeah, it has not at all stalled and none of the other work that's that's kind of emerged has in any way taken away from it.
Quote:
Sep 2024: In a recent update from The Hollywood Reporter in September 2024, Flanagan sheds light on the challenges facing his adaptation.
That thing's launching an oil tanker. But we're working on it. It was stalled first by me moving from Netflix to Amazon and stalled again by the strikes. It's progressing, and we're further along than we've ever been on it. I do see feature components to some of the other stories, but the main storyline is [an] ongoing series.
rednecked said:TLDR opening line.KidDoc said:It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.
"It was a pleasure to burn."Definitely Not A Cop said:rednecked said:TLDR opening line.KidDoc said:It is a great start but WoT says hold my beer.Murder Hornet said:The Porkchop Express said:
Back in the pre-Internet days, I have a really vivid memory of walking into a bookstore and seeing Wizard & Glass on the display shelf and just being so happy that the series was continuing.
I bought The Gunslinger and It at Half-Priced books when I was about 13 (clearly my parents had no idea what sort of things were inside those books) to take to a retreat that my dad's company had in Bandera, TX at a place with no TVs. It scared the hell out of me, but from the first page, the Gunslinger was so hypnotic and fascinating, I have loved that journey.
Have you guys read the graphic novels? Wouldn't mind a Battle of Jericho Hill episode if they were to do a season of Wizard & Glass and beyond!
The man in black fled across the desert, the gunslinger followed
Best opening line in literature
#isaidwhatisaid
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist.
"The building was on fire, and it wasn't my fault."
Mega Lops said:
I'm on a reread of Wolves of the Calla right now and it's tough. The writing isn't bad but the plot is a slog and King made downright weird choices (even 20 years ago when it was new) that have NOT held up well. At this point I'm just skimming the filler and reading the good parts.
I haven't tried to reread this series in at least 15 years. At some point I previously concluded The Dark Tower's second half was a complete dud and have since forgotten how bad it was.
The movie from a few years ago was beyond terrible.
I say all of this because adapting a series that is compelling with all the given WTFs will be super difficult. And long drawn out multi season with 8-9 books worth of material will be extremely difficult is a major turn off these days.