Mike Flanagan knew that pitching a Stanley Kubrick-inspired film to Stephen King would be a tough sell ā but did it anyway.
Kudos to filmmaker Mike Flanagan. Not only does he have some of the better Stephen King adaptations from the last few years on his resume, but he also created
Midnight Mass, the best Stephen King-inspired TV show to have not originated from the iconic authorās mind. We certainly canāt think of anybody who was better qualified to pitch the mighty horror author a film version of
Doctor Sleep, the sequel to Kingās iconic horror tale,
The Shining.
Flanagan didnāt make it easy for himself though, as heās outlined himself in an excellent post.
He was set on making his version of
Doctor Sleep as a sort-of sequel to Stanley Kubrickās 1980 take on
The Shining, a film adaptation that King famously hates. āI put together a proposal that outlined what I wanted to do ā use Kubrickās visual language, and keep the Overlook standing as a setting for the final battle,ā explains Flanagan on Tumblr. āThe initial feedback we got was āno.ā King really, really didnāt like Kubrickās film, and his priority was to adapt
Doctor Sleep ā not to revisit
The Shining.ā
Ultimately, Flanagan would detail the filmās finale to King and the author would sign off on the idea, something that was vital to Flanagan who says that he wouldnāt have made the film without the blessing of his āhero.ā
Itās a long and candid post and weād advise you to go
check it out as it gives an interesting insight into how these types of hookups between studio bosses and creatives go. Oh, and Flanagan reveals that he went into the meeting looking to get a greenlight on a horror-themed Clayface movie for the DC Extended Universe. Imagine that for just one momentā¦
ā
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