Pfeiffer-Pfan
Cool Rider
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Quite mixed all things concerned... I'll still happily watch this in the cinema.
In the aftermath of IT: Chapter Two’s blockbuster success, the filmmaker learned that Warner Bros. held the rights to King’s beloved novel about bloodsuckers, and there were plans to make a new adaptation as a TV series (what would have been the third small iteration of the story following Tobe Hooper’s 1979 miniseries and the 2004 version from Mikael Salomon). Having had the experience of making his directorial debut under his belt – 2019’s underrated Annabelle Comes Home – Dauberman convinced the studio to go in a different direction with the material:
IT comes out, they are big successes, everybody's looking around what to do next. I knew they were sitting on Salem's Lot and they were gonna make a TV series of it. And I thought, 'Let's do a movie!' And that's how that started. It was a pretty easy conversation.
was here where Dauberman’s experience making IT was helpful. In writing the scripts for the Andy Muschietti-directed duology, he gained an understanding that even the most devout Stephen King fans will be forgiving when it comes to material being cut or changed when being brought to a new medium. Said the filmmaker,
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Leaning on his past experience, Gary Dauberman felt a reduced anxiety going into the making of Salem’s Lot – though he also stressed that he still holds the source material in the highest esteem:IT was challenging because you're trying to whittle down all these great moments and you have to lose a lot of great moments in order to distill it down, even though it's just two movies. And I was so ****ing worried, dude, about like, 'Holy ****, people are gonna crucify me for not including this, or not including that' or whatever. And I found the audience to be really forgiving because they understand that the book is the book and the movie is the movie.
That gave me, I felt, a little bit of a license, a little bit of a safety net of going like, 'Ok, well I'm not gonna be able to include everything that I want to in this book, but it seems like the audiences will allow for that.' So I felt a little less anxious when it came to having to cut certain moments or changing things for narrative purposes or whatever. Because I always get nervous changing his stuff. To me, it's biblical.
Dauberman reveals that his initial cut of the film, which included more of the town’s backstory, was significantly longer.
“My first cut was about three hours,” the filmmaker confirms. “There’s a lot left out. My first draft of the script is 180-odd pages or something because you’re trying to include everything. And a lot of it has to do with a lot of the secondary characters and stuff that I spoke about. So it was sad to see that stuff go, but it’s like a necessary evil.”
Saw it, it was definitely a movie... that was cut into pieces.
I have neither seen this nor the 70s one. Should I stick to the old adaptation?