Looking for the name of this film... - by shadows
gunsmoke on 19/5/2009 at 10:42
Quote Posted by dethtoll
The older he gets, the truer that gets. He's unreadable now.
True dat. I haven't been able to stand him (no pun intended) since the early 90's.
Dia on 19/5/2009 at 12:02
Agreed. I lost interest in his books around the same time. After his accident in '99 his writing got even worse imo.
Thirith on 19/5/2009 at 12:27
The film seems to be a pretty free adaptation, though. King's original story is from the '70s or '80s, I believe, and it's quite different. It's also fun in a pulp horror story way.
Here's the summary from Wikipedia:
Quote:
The Cat from Hell is a short story by Stephen King. King initially published the first 500 words of the story in March 1977 in Cavalier, and the magazine held a contest for readers to finish the story. The winning entry, as well as King's complete story, was published in the magazine in June of the same year. It also appeared in Gent Vol. 18 #6 (December 1977), credited to King and Marc Rains. King revised the story and it was reprinted in Tales of Unknown Horror (1978), in Year's Finest Fantasy (1978), in Magicats! (1984), and again in Twists of the Tale: An Anthology of Cat Horror (1996). This story was also adapted to film in the anthology film Tales from the Darkside (1989). It was later reprinted in Just After Sunset, Stephen King's fifth collection of short stories.
Plot summary"The Cat from Hell" tells the story of a professional hitman who is hired to take out an unusual target - a cat. He is offered $12,000 for the hit and accepts, despite being told that the cat was implicated in the murders of three different people. He soon discovers that the cat is much more than it seems. While driving toward a desolate place to kill it, the cat escapes confinement and eventually attacks him -- crawling inside his body to finish the job -- after he is temporarily paralyzed in the resulting accident. After killing the hitman, the cat leaves on "unfinished business" to go after the hitman's employer.
gunsmoke on 20/5/2009 at 12:26
Quote Posted by Thirith
The film seems to be a pretty free adaptation, though. King's original story is from the '70s or '80s, I believe, and it's quite different. It's also fun in a pulp horror story way.
Here's the summary from Wikipedia:
What? I am pretty sure it is based on Trucks. (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trucks_(short_story)) Wiki link
EDIT. Oops you were referring to the Tales From the Darkside, not Maximum Overdrive. Mah Bad.
marshall banana on 20/5/2009 at 12:33
That's one badass cat.