Stephen King’s Review Of The Bruce Springsteen Movie Will Sell You On The 2025 Flop | 31 Years La…


Explore the latest developments concerning Stephen King's Review.

Stephen King's Review Of The Bruce Springsteen Movie Will Sell You On The 2025 Flop

Scott Cooper's "Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere" was a haunting biopic with a powerhouse lead performance. It was also a box office bomb. Now, however, Stephen King has weighed in with one of his social media reviews, claiming to have been moved by the film and hopefully prompting a few of his fans to check it out.

2024 gave us Timothée Chalamet's safe but enjoyable Bob Dylan biopic "A Complete Unknown," and while it featured many tired biopic tropes, it was a very well done homage to the singer's early Greenwich Village years. More importantly, the movie was about something. It perfectly captured the essence of its title, taken from Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone," by depicting the musician as a mysterious outsider constantly reinventing himself and prompting those around him, and by extension us as the audience, to question what our past means in the grand scheme of our lives and how the stories we tell about ourselves shape our futures. It's part of the reason director James Mangold isn't a big fan of cinematic universes, where the goal is to set up future installments rather than craft a story that has something to say.

31 Years Later, Stephen King's Cult-Classic Adaptation Resurfaces on Streaming

Stephen King is known as the biggest horror writer thanks to his extensive collection of novels and short stories. Many of his works have found their way to big or small screens, some being more well received than others. First published in 1978, The Stand is one of King's works to receive the miniseries treatment — twice. It was first adapted for television in 1994, with ABC airing the episodes beginning May 8. Now 31 years later, The Stand has seen renewed interest, as shown by its resurgence on streaming services, according to FlixPatrol. U.S. fans have been enjoying the horrors on Prime Video, where it first resurfaced.

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The First Adaptation Of Stephen King's Longest Novel Resurfaces On Streaming 31 Years Later

Hollywood has been adapting numerous Stephen King novels over the years, with his work continuing to live on the big and small screens beyond the pages of his books. However, the world of streaming is now generating new success for King's very first novel adaptation.

Originally released on ABC in 1994, The Stand mini-series is surging on Prime Video in the U.S., as a new generation of viewers is discovering the show for the first time. Based on King's longest novel, the book was originally published in 1978. The TV adaptation starred Gary Sinise as Stu Redman and Molly Ringwald as Frannie Goldsmith.

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