Tag: cujo

  • Darren Aronofsky in Talks to Direct ‘Cujo’

    A scene from 'Cujo'. Photo: Warner Bros.
    A scene from ‘Cujo’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Preview:

    • Darren Aronofsky is potentially directing a new ‘Cujo.’
    • It would tell the story of a violent, dangerous dog.
    • The Stephen King novel was previously brought to screens in 1983.

    It would appear that Darren Aronofsky has caught “King Fever”.

    And by that, we of course mean that the filmmaker behind the likes of ‘Pi,’ ‘Requiem for a Dream,’ and the Oscar-winning ‘The Whale’ is becoming the latest to board –– or at least consider boarding –– an adaptation of a Stephen King story.

    In this case, according to The Hollywood Reporter, the title is ‘Cujo,’ which if the name doesn’t ring any jangling dog tags is the tale of a vicious, rabid dog who terrorizes people.

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    Roy Lee, whose own established King bona fides includes the two ‘It’ movies, ‘Salem’s Lot,’ and upcoming dystopian thriller ‘The Long Walk,’ is producing. There is no writer yet on the project but Aronofsky is expected to meet with candidates soon.

    Related Article: Osgood Perkins and Theo James Talk Stephen King Adaptation ‘The Monkey’

    What’s the story of ‘Cujo’?

    A scene from 'Cujo'. Photo: Warner Bros.
    A scene from ‘Cujo’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    The novel, originally published in 1981, sees a mother desperate to protect her son from a formerly friendly 200-pound St. Bernard that has been bitten by a rabid bat and turns into a ferocious, calculating hound that leaves a trail of bodies.

    Mom and her son get stuck in her small car that won’t start, and their choices are to battle it out with the rabid oversized hound or risk heatstroke in a hot car.

    King’s book was turned into a slightly schlocky 1983 thriller starring Dee Wallace as the protective parent, with a script from Don Carlos Dunaway and Barbara Turner, and Lewis Teague in the director’s chair.

    That movie, shot for $5 million, made around $21 million worldwide. And for trivia fans, future ‘Speed’ director Jan de Bont served as cinematographer on the project.

    Both the novel and the movie have become part of pop cultural and general consciousness that “Cujo” has entered the vocabulary to refer to any rabid dog.

    Aronofsky has dealt with psychological terror in the past, and his surreal, offbeat ‘Mother!’ could certainly lay clues to how he’ll handle the King story. But perhaps he’s looking for a more straightforward horror tale this time?

    What else is Aronofsky working on?

    Director Darren Aronofsky on the set of 'The Whale' from A24.
    Director Darren Aronofsky on the set of ‘The Whale’ from A24.

    Aronofsky’s most recent project as a writer and director was ‘Postcard from Earth,’ which plays exclusively at the Sphere attraction in Las Vegas, and which launched in 2023.

    But while he’s been busy  as a producer –– ‘The Good Nurse,’ ‘Little Death,’ ‘Sabbath Queen,’ ‘Holding List’ and ‘Viktor’ are just some of the movies that carry his name –– he is putting the finishing touches to his latest thriller, ‘Caught Stealing.’

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    That crime drama follows burned-out ex-baseball player Hank Thompson (Austin Butler), who unexpectedly finds himself embroiled in a dangerous struggle for survival amidst the criminal underbelly of 1990s New York City, forced to navigate a treacherous underworld he never imagined.

    The cast for that one also includes Vincent D’Onofrio, Liev Schreiber, Zoë Kravitz, Matt Smith, Regina King, and Griffin Dunne.

    Sony has it scheduled for an August 29th release.

    And in addition to ‘Cujo,’ he has been developing another horror pic, this time for Blumhouse, called ‘Adrift.’

    A potential reunion with ‘Requiem’ actor Jared Leto, it’s the story of a fishing boat that discovers an abandoned yacht with a strange distress call. A deckhand agrees to take lone control of it while it is towed into port, but soon he discovers why it is called a “Ghost Ship…”

    What other Stephen King stories are in the works?

    Arnold Schwarzenegger as Captain Benjamin "Ben" Richards in 'The Running Man.' Photo: Tri-Star Pictures.
    Arnold Schwarzenegger as Captain Benjamin “Ben” Richards in ‘The Running Man.’ Photo: Tri-Star Pictures.

    It’s probably easier to list what stories aren’t being developed, but let’s run the list, shall we?

    We’ve already mentioned ‘The Long Walk,’ which has ‘Hunger Games’ director Francis Lawrence bringing to theaters the story of a group of teenage boys compete in an annual contest known as “The Long Walk,” where they must maintain a certain walking speed or get shot.

    ‘The Long Walk’ has yet to set a release date, and is adapted from the period where King wrote under the pseudonym Richard Bachman.

    That also applies to ‘The Running Man,’ a similarly high-concept and dystopian tale, this one of a desperate man who joins a game show where contestants, allowed to go anywhere in the world, are pursued by hunters hired to kill them.

    With Edgar Wright in the director’s chair for that one, the new take on the story (originally filmed in 1987 starring Arnold Schwarzenegger) stars Glen Powell, Katy O’Brien, Lee Pace, Josh Brolin, William H. Macy, Michael Cera and Emilia Jones.

    ‘The Running Man’ will head to theaters on November 7th.

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    Then there’s ‘The Life of Chuck,’ directed by Mike Flanagan, which stars Tom Hiddleston in a story finding King in life-affirming, genre-bending mode, the original novella chronicling three chapters in the life of an ordinary man named Charles Krantz.

    ‘The Life of Chuck’ will be with us on June 6th.

    When will the new ‘Cujo’ come growling onto screens?

    The new ‘Cujo’ –– call it ‘Newjo’ for short (or don’t, we’re not the boss of you!) is still at a relatively early stage, so Netflix has yet to say anything about when this might arrive on screens.

    Author Stephen King. Photo: Stephen King/Facebook.
    Author Stephen King. Photo: Stephen King/Facebook.

    List of Steven King Movies:

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  • More Creepy ‘Crawl’-ies: 16 Creature Features to Watch After ‘Crawl’

    More Creepy ‘Crawl’-ies: 16 Creature Features to Watch After ‘Crawl’

    “Monsters” take many forms, especially in movies. Sometimes they’re otherworldly; frequently they seem to be superhuman. But movies like “Crawl” remind us that there are plenty of very real threats to our safety and security, even if the likelihood of an alligator getting trapped inside your own flooding living room isn’t very high. Of course, Alexandre Aja’s film is far from the first to pit man against beast in a battle for survival; but to commemorate the release of “Crawl,” we’ve assembled a shortlist of other entries in this venerated horror sub-genre (limited to creatures that either do, or at least plausibly could exist) to keep you frightened long after you’ve left the theater.

    The Birds” (1963)

    Universal

    Alfred Hitchcock was hardly the first filmmaker to explore “evil” animals, but his 1963 film starring Tippi Hedren elevated the menace precisely by never bothering to explain why they started attacking in the first place. Meanwhile there’s plenty of really traumatic action involving Hedren and some unhappy crows, which somehow only enhances the unsettling psychological drama unfolding between the human characters.

    Jaws” (1975)

    Universal

    Steven Spielberg’s blockbuster building block changed movies forever with this tale of a local police chief (Roy Scheider) who discovers that a New England 4th of July celebration is about to serve as a buffet for a great white that only a marine biologist (Richard Dreyfuss) and professional shark hunter (Robert Shaw) know how to stop.

    Eaten Alive” (1976)

    Arrow Video

    Tobe Hooper followed up his benchmark horror film “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” with this creepy film about a Louisiana hotelier whose guests check in but don’t check out, especially with a hungry pet alligator lurking in the swamp out front.

    The Food of the Gods” (1976)

    American International

    Notorious schlockmeister Samuel Z. Arkoff produced this decidedly reductive adaptation of H.G. Wells’ novel about a food product that bubbles up out of the ground on a remote island, transforming all of the local animals that feed upon it into giant monstrosities.

    “Grizzly” (1976)

    Columbia Pictures

    Pretty transparently inspired by “Jaws,” this film transplants not only its concept but many of Spielberg’s techniques into a national forest where an 18-foot-tall grizzly bear terrorizes campers.

    Squirm” (1976)

    American International

    In the fourth but far from last “deadly animal” movie of 1976, a surge of electricity drives legions of bloodthirsty worms out of their soil and towards the remote fishing village nearby.

    Alligator” (1980)

    Group 1

    Lewis Teague (“The Jewel of the Nile”) directed this movie written by John Sayles (“Lone Star”) that is more or less literally an urban legend come to life, about an alligator flushed from a toilet into the sewers of New York, where it grows to a monstrous size and starts preying on locals. Come for the alligator, stay for Robert Forster talking about his hair plugs.

    Cujo” (1983)

    Warner Bros.

    “Alligator” director Lewis Teague also directed this Stephen King adaptation about a friendly Saint Bernard who gets bitten by a rabid bat and becomes a bloodthirsty threat to an unlucky family that, like in “The Birds,” is also dealing with some complex interpersonal issues.

    Of Unknown Origin” (1983)

    Warner Bros.

    Peter Weller (“Robocop”) stars in this oddball film from George P. Cosmatos (“Tombstone”) about a husband who sticks around to work on a business proposal after his wife and child go on vacation, only to find his life disrupted (and endangered) by an oversized rodent he becomes obsessed with destroying.

    Razorback” (1984)

    Warner Bros.

    Australian auteur Russell Mulcahy (“Highlander”) made his directorial debut with this flashy, stylish thriller about a giant wild boar that terrorizes the Australian outback.

    Arachnophobia” (1990)

    Buena Vista

    Frank Marshall (“Jurassic Park III”) directed this creepily relatable film about a small town doctor (Jeff Daniels) who’s forced to confront his fear of spiders after an entomologist discovers a new, deadly species of Amazonian arachnid and accidentally brings it back to the US.

    Anaconda” (1997)

    Columbia Pictures

    Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube and scenery-chewing Jon Voight star in this pulpy thriller about a documentary crew that encounters more than they bargained for after the skipper hijacks their boat in order to hunt down a super-sized Amazonian snake.

    Lake Placid” (1999)

    20th Century Fox

    Steve Miner (“Friday the 13th, Part 2“) directed this script from David E. Kelley (“Big Little Lies”) about a salt water crocodile terrorizing a sleepy Maine community. It’s as funny as it is scary.

    Snakes on a Plane” (2006)

    New Line Cinema

    David R. Ellis directed this film that seemed like a meme before the internet knew what those were, about an FBI agent (Samuel L. Jackson) trapped on a flight from Hawaii to Los Angeles with hundreds of deadly snakes slithering around.

    Primeval” (2007)

    Buena Vista

    Writers John Brancato and Michael Ferris (“The Game”) adapted the true story of a giant, man-eating crocodile named Gustave into this taught, bloody thriller starring Dominic Purcell, Orlando Jones, Brooke Langton and Jurgen Prochnow.

    Piranha 3D” (2010)

    Dimension

    “Crawl” director Alexandre Aja delivered his first dose of animal-themed terror with this brutal, way-the-hell-over-the-top horror comedy about a group of bloodthirsty piranha that are accidentally unleashed into a lake during Spring Break, endangering co-eds by the hundreds.

  • ‘Cujo’ and 7 More Horror Movies That Eff’d You Up When You Were a Kid

    ‘Cujo’ and 7 More Horror Movies That Eff’d You Up When You Were a Kid