Showing posts with label Dr. Sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr. Sleep. Show all posts

Lilja's Library: Doctor Sleep To be Released In 2013

Lilja's Library has  posted  the following news:

Doctor Sleep has finally gotten a release date. Unfortunately we won't see it until September 24th next year. Both Scribner and Hodder & Stoughton will release it on that date.  (www.liljas-library.com)
Lilja notes, "I’m glad it has a release date but disappointed that it’s more than a year until it’s actually released."  I agree!

Time for constant readers  to either catch up on King books they have not yet read (there are plenty for  me) or reread loved King books. . . or catch up with another author.  Ken Follett is doing a new series that looks awesome.

Transcript: King Reading Dr. Sleep

Whoo-Hooo!  Good stuff, here.  My favorite website, Lilja's Library posted a link to an article at savannahnow titled, "Stephen King reads first pages of 'The Shining' sequel 'Dr. Sleep' in Savannah [transcript]."  (HERE)

Jason Kendall introduces the King reading:

About 40 minutes into his address, King opened a file folder and produced the first few pages of his manuscript-in-progress "Dr. Sleep," a sequel to "The Shining." The new novel reimagines Danny Torrance as an 8-year-old boy living alone with his mother, three years after the events of "The Shining." 
Fair warning: Like all of King's material, the "Dr. Sleep" opening gets a little graphic, so if you're easily offended we suggest you stop reading here. The following is transcribed from the full video of King's presentation, made public by the Savannah Book Festival and watchable here. 
At the urging of the audience, King took a seat and narrated the first few pages of "Dr. Sleep."
"So this is how it starts," King said, and began to read. . . 

The First Autograph


photo credit: HERE



Tom Barton has a short piece on King's speech in Savannah. Barton says he imagined King introverted and withdrawn, maybe a little morbid. Then he declares, joyfully, "He's a hoot." Well we knew that! Makes me wonder what rock Barton has been under.

There are the usual Dr. Sleep summery's, nothing new there. Dr. Sleep sounds absolutely awesome! I was rooting for Dr. Sleep when King said he was either going to work on it or Wind Through The Keyhole. Alas, the Shining will return!

Barton also reports an interesting story King related about his first non-book-store environment.
King, who was in his mid-20s at the time, was in the Steel City on a book tour, promoting his first novel "Carrie." Part of his job, he said, was to appear on morning TV shows (AM Pittsburgh), along with jitterbugging grandmas, to plug his book to the locals.

That evening, King said, he had a command performance at a dinner that the local newspaper hosted at a fancy restaurant. Unfortunately, the author was suffering from homesickness and a far worse malady -- an intestinal disorder that forced him to make an emergency trip to the joint's opulently appointed restroom.

This was a place that had its own restroom attendant. King remembered him as an ancient man who appeared to be about 108 years old.

Unfortunately, there was one necessity that this restroom lacked: Doors to the stalls. So as King was sitting on the toilet, the attendant approached the young author, carrying pen and paper.

"He said, 'You're Stephen King, aren't you? I saw you on AM Pittsburgh. Can I get your autograph?' I gave my first autograph sitting on the crapper."

The full article is HERE

Might Danny and Charlie Meet In Dr. Sleep?


In 2009 Stephen King was asked by Star Tribune what books he'd like to revisit. King's said, "I'd like to go back to "Firestarter." She was 9 or 10 at the end of the book; she's probably in her 40s now. I'm always curious about Danny Torrance in "The Shining," what it was like to grow up with psychic talent, in an abusive family. I'd like to see them meet."

So, might Dr. Sleep include a romance?  Might the vicious vampires who want to suck Danny's powers be fedned off by a powerful woman who has the ability to fling fireballs with her eyes?  And what would their kids be like? . . .

"The Horros Of SK" AWESOME!



Okay, there are "spoilers" here.  But I don't think my essay is really going steal any thunder.  There is nothing like listening to King talk about these movies.

I absolutely loved TCM's "The Horrors Of Stephen King."  It is one full hour of King talking about horror films.  It's like having an updated visual version of Danse Macabre.  He says that the movie that scared him most was 1980 "The Changling."  He also notes that one of the great horror films that really works is "the Exorcist."  He seems to have been highly affected by Psycho, and references it often.  In fact, Psycho is identified as a "demon coaster."  Nice!

King's discussion of women in slasher films is interesting!  "He says that these movies are saying if you want to view women as victims, you do so at your peril, because a strong woman will vanquish a monster!"

It is also interesting that he was not given a preview of Carrie!  As King says, no one thought to let such a minor creature as the author a screening.

Where's Waldo?

King says he is not really a fan of his own acting, going so far as to say he should have stopped acting at the level of community theater!  Funny.  But he does like to do cameo's in his movies, saying, "I think people kinda like it, it's kinda a Where's Waldo kinda thing."

Black And White:

He takes time to explain why black and white movies are so scary! "When you watch movies from the black and white era, and I'm thinking particularly of the era when Val Lewton worked, you come to an appreciation of how wonderful black and white movies were. The use of shadow --" He points out 1942's "Cat People" as an example. 

King Favorites:

King identifies some of his personal favorite horror movies.  It is no secret that he thinks Bambi is scary!  He also discusses the importance of the 1956 movie "Earth Verses The Flying Saucers" to his own life. 

He spends quite a bit of time explaining the power of "The Night of the Living Dead."  That movie contained for him one of those moments that can't be repeated; where the film gives you a surprise, and in that moment everything changes!  (For me that happened when I first saw The Matrix.)  It is a moment you can't have back, even if you re watch the film. 
"The first time you see night of the living dead. . . you are absolutely riveted.  The second time you're scared.  The third time, the film has lost something essential that it had the first time.  Now, people continue to go back and see Night of the Living Dead, but what they are experiencing is not horror, it is the memory of horror that they felt the first time that they saw it."
His excitement about The Amityville Horror is interesting.  He notes James Brolin's transformation as the film progresses.  What is the cause of Brolin's darkening?  The haunted house!  King does not directly make this connection, but I wonder if there is a sense that Amityville successfully carries out what Kubrick's "The Shining" did not.  King explains, "Kubrick saw the haunting coming from Jack Torrance; where as I always saw it coming from outside."  Now, take Amityville, which shows a normal man who moves in to a haunted house who is then tortured and changed by the ghosts in that house. 

He really liked Dee Wallace in Cujo, and thought she deserved more recognition than she got.  Oh boy, and King really likes the Blair Witch project

King not so favorites:

The Shining: I was glad that King took time to explain a little more exactly what his frustrations with Kubrick's "The Shining" entail.  At the heart of it is a theological disagreement.  Kubrick saw ghosts as a hopeful sign of life after death. In a conversation with Kubrick, King suggested that ghosts may not present the hopeful side of life after death, but they could point toward hell.

King gives the following comparison between the book at the movie: "In my novel, the hotel burns.  In Kubrick's movie, the hotel freezes.  It's the difference between warmth and cold."  He does admit that the images are "striking" though those are surface.  In fact, he describes the movie as a car with no engine.

King also notes that he is not usually moved by werewolf's.  Reason?  Well, the transformation is hard to accept.  (A Twilight dig?  He does say that Twilight is "I was a teenage vampire.").  King also did not find Bella Lugosi particularly frightening as Dracula.  That doesn't mean Lugosi wasn't scary, it just didn't scare King. 

King notes the work of William Castle! Castle was known for using all kinds of gimmicks to hype his films.  Why did Castle need all the gimmicks?  Because, as King points out, his films weren't really all that good.  But, Stephen King points out that Castle was a very talented man and notes his work on Rosemary's Baby.  (see my article on Stephen King and William Castle here)

Dr. Sleep . . .

This documentary had a lot of focus on The Shining.  King points out what beats at the center of The Shining -- Evil spirits want Danny because of Danny's powers.  It seems from the clips and news we've gotten thus far, Dr. Sleep carries this a bit further.  Now there are creatures moving across America, seeking people like Danny. 

So the fear factor is upped a bit because now Danny doesn't have to go to a hotel to encounter the bad spirits they're seeking him out.

It could have been longer:

The New York Times observed, "The frustrating part of the special, though it gets better as it goes along, is that too often it shows just the quickest snippets from films King is referencing. Longer clips would have meant less King, but they would have better illustrated his points." Or, they could have just given the documentary an extra half hour.

My favorite quote: "I never did get behind the idea of the vampire as a love object." Yes! Give is scary vamps!

More Dr. Sleep

Again, this is a youtube upload of King reading from Dr. Sleep. 

I really like the segment he read, it is very funny.  I am always taken aback that King is free to talk directly to the reader in his text.  It feels like there is a rule, somewhere, that you can't do that.  Note the way the clip begins -- he's talking so directly to the reader that it sounds like he's actually reading a speech to the audience.  That's one reason we love Stephen King!  He writes as if he were writing only for me.  The magic in King's writing is when it feels like he's just sitting across the table, telling you this messed up story, making you laugh and curl up in fear at the same time.

Oh yeah. . . here's the clip.  I'm posting this because it is much closer than previous posts.  Gigantic thanks to those of you who not only attended, but recorded for the rest of us to enjoy.

King Reads From Dr. Sleep

I just saw this at Lilja's Library, which has posted a segment of Stephen King reading from his current project, Dr. Sleep. 

King's Currently Writing Dr. Sleep

FairfaxCityPatch has an article on King's appearance at George Mason University's Center for the Arts, where King accepted the "Mason Award."  It is chalk full of King news.

Dr. Sleep Is Next!



At the ceremony, King revealed (and read from) the book he is currently writing -- Dr. Sleep!  King said, "I've always wondered what happened to that kid in The Shinning."  Well, over 30 years later, we'll find out!  I am really, really looking forward to this book. 

Where Do Idea's Come From?


Larson says that King related that King did not intentionally become America's boogie-man.  This lead him to share  some thoughts on why he writes what he writes.  Of course, there is his usual answer, he doesn't really get to chose what he writes.  He shares the basis for IT was distantly related to the Three Billy Goats gruff.  IT was intended to be his final word on kids and monsters.  He also notes that he doesn't know where some ideas come from. 

"In some ways the mother force [of my writing] comes from the horror comics of the 1950's," he said.  He also cited such influences as Edgar Allan Poe (Tell Tale Heart in particular) and H.P. Lovecraft's "The Rats In The Wall."  (I shiver at just the title!)

Here is what King said about his upcoming 11/22/63:

King said he tried to write this book in 1972, but the wounds were too fresh and the research required was too great for a kid his age at the time. "I was about 17 when Kennedy was assasinated," he said. "For us back then, that was our 9/11."


So What's Left?

Larson says that when King was asked if he ever leaves projects unfinished, the answer is yes.  Of course, we knew that.  But the number is a surprise -- about 40!  One of them includes a half written novel titled "Hatchet Head."  Sounds interesting.

Larson's full article is at FairfaxPatch

More On THE SHINING's Alternate Endings

Yesterday I posted a short bit of news about the alternate ending of Kubrick's The Shining.  I really appreciated a link Bev Vincent shared that gave some more information on the cut scene from The Shining, HERE.  (So yes, file this under. . . Bev Vincent still knows all things Stephen King!  I have no idea how he found this, but it's awesome.)


From The Kubrick Archives

The website offers the following information:
Any Kubrickphile given the opportunity will tell you there were in fact three versions of The Shining—the original release included a brief scene of Ullman visiting Danny and Wendy in hospital, where he assures Wendy that searchers have found no evidence of the supernatural events she had witnessed, and tries to convince her that her experiences were in her mind. It appeared between the final shot of Jack frozen in the maze and the long track shot closing in on the 4th of July photo.



This scene was cut from the film days after its first release (when it was only playing in a small number of theatres—this was typical of release patterns of the day, as opposed to today's "wide releases" that require thousands of prints); the cuts were made by hand from those prints, presumably by projectionists at the theatres, as well as from the internegatives that all subsequent prints were made from.


Consensus from those who saw the scene is that the film is better off without it. By taking viewers out of the conflict between the Overlook and the Torrence family the final menace of the hotel was weakened, and it unnecessarily pulled Ullman into that conflict (after ignoring him since the first act). The audience reaction was clearly not what Kubrick wanted, and so the scene was removed at the first opportunity. It has never been seen since, and presumably only survives in a vault in the Kubrick family's estate.


Two actors are still listed in the end credits, however: Burnell Tucker (the notably odd Clavius Base photographer in 2001) as a policeman, and Robin Pappas as a nurse.


None of the dialogue for the scene is available in any form. Three continuity polaroids from the sequence however appear in Alison Castle's The Stanley Kubrick Archives

Another Alternate Ending:


There is another alternate ending of The Shining.  This one is an alternate ending of the novel.  It belongs solely in Stephen King's mind!

In Tim Underwood's book, Stephen King Goes To Hollywood, he includes some really interesting quotes from King about The Shining.
"The Shining' was open right until the end. I didn't know what was going to happen until the very end. The shows in the book. The original plan was for them all to die up there and for Danny to become the controlling force o the hotel after he died. And the psychic force of the hotel would go up exponentially. . . But I got connected with the kid.
In the first draft of the book Jack beats his wife to death with the mallet and it was blood and brains and everything. It was really just terrible and I couldn't do it. I couldn't leave it that way." S.K. Goes To Hollywood, p.76
I sure would like to read that draft!  Sounds like fun.

I am glad King didn't kill Danny!  After all, many of us are still hoping for Dr. Sleep, which is supposed to focus in on the character as a young man.  I blieve King has even toyed with the idea of having Danny meet up with Charlie from Firestarter.  That would be totally awesome!

Dark Tower or Shining Sequel

I spotted this thanks to Lilja's Library: http://www.liljas-library.com/
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The moderator at stpehenking.com posted, "Steve has asked for your input as to what book he should write next. To cast your vote for either a new Dark Tower book or a sequel to The Shining"
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and then this posting from King:
"Hey, you guys--I saw a lot of you Constant Readers while I was touring for Under the Dome, and I must say you're looking good. Thanks for turning out in such numbers, and thanks for all the nice things you've said about Under the Dome. There'll be another book next year. It's a good one, I think, but that's not why I'm writing. I mentioned two potential projects while I was on the road, one a new Mid-World book (not directly about Roland Deschain, but yes, he and his friend Cuthbert are in it, hunting a skin-man, which are what werewolves are called in that lost kingdom) and a sequel to The Shining called Doctor Sleep. Are you interested in reading either of these? If so, which one turns your dials more? Ms. Mod will be counting your votes (and of course it all means nothing if the muse doesn't speak). Meanwhile, thanks again for 2009."
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Are we interested in reading either of these. . . ?!
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That's new! But the decision is simple enough -- write both. And don't ask constant readers tough questions like that, it makes our brians hurt. Since the publication of Under The Dome, King seems much more "connected" or interested in readers opinions. A little scary, if you ask me, since he never seemed to care what the reader thought in the past.
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The description for both books sounds pretty evolved; I think he'll end up writing both.

The Shining II -- Not So Fast


E.W. writer Kristen Baldwin posted this about the possibility of Stephen King writing a sequel to The Shining:
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King is quoted thusly from an email, “It’s a great idea, and I just can’t seem to get down to it. . . People shouldn’t hold their breath. I know it would be cool, though. I want to write it just for the title, Dr. Sleep. I even told them [at the book signing], ‘It will probably never happen.’”
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Baldwin notes, Still, King — whose most recent novel is this month’s Under the Dome — can’t quite shut the door on the Shining sequel, adding, “But ‘probably’ isn’t ‘positively,’ so maybe.”
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Is Dr. Sleep Really A Sequel?


I'm seeing a lot of news and internet activity suggesitng King will again use Danny Torrance in a novel titled Dr. Sleep.
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Already in the writing?
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James Grainger at books.torontoist.com says that King said he began writing the book last summer.
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Sequel?
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"King remarked that though he ended his 1977 novel on a positive note, the Overlook was bound to have left young Danny with a lifetime’s worth of emotional scars. What Danny made of those traumatic experiences, and with the psychic powers that saved him from his father at the Overlook, is a question that King believes might make a damn fine sequel."
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Though Danny returns, the story itself looks pretty unique. Of course, the Shining itself centered on the family as much as on Danny alone. Usually a sequel continues the precious story. Will the overlook play any part? What about Jack's ghost?
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A Kubrick Slam?
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Of course, Danny has taken up horse betting, something he learned from. . . Dick Hallorann. WAIT A MINUTE! Dick Hallorann is dead, right? We all saw it on screen. He's quite dead, in Kubrick's version of The Shining. But in King's novel, Hallorann comes to the rescue just in time as the family escapes the big explosion.
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Actually, it should be a lesson to movie makers: Stick with the book, or the writer might get the last laugh when he wrties the sequal.
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Dark Tower?
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With King writing a sequal to the Shining and a new Dark Tower book in a close time frame makes me wonder if he might connect the two. He certainly didwith Salem's Lot. Of course, I really no idea, but I'm just sayin'. . .
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Thank You Mr. King!
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A word of thanks to Mr. King. Before he went on this talking tour, sharing all these ideas and leaving us all breathless with anticipation, he at least gave us a thousand page novel to sift through. Nice. That does ease the waiting. Well, not really. And they're killer ideas, aren't they! I mean, a dark tower novel, a Danny Torrance novel, cool.
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