Horror movie The Turning opens January 24. Aware moviegoers may notice the connection to the Henry James novel The Turn of the Screw. However, aside from a basic premise (a nanny is terrorized by her two charges), the film has little to do with the book it’s based on. This often happens in Hollywood. Here’s a look at some other horror movie adaptations that strayed from their source material.
I Know What You Did Last Summer
In the 1973 novel, four teenagers accidentally run over and kill someone after a party. They decide to keep it a secret. This premise is the only similarity between the book and the movie The young adult suspense novel is rather tame compared to the gorier film. While everyone survives in the book, there’s a much higher body count in the movie. The teens eventually confess at the end of the book. However, in the movie they remain mum, setting up future sequels. Kevin Williamson definitely did audiences a favor by spicing up Lois Duncan’s book.
The World’s Most Indispensable Movie App
The RunPee app tells you the best times to
run & pee during a movie
so you don't miss the best scenes.
Download the RunPee app.
100% free (donation supported)
Sleepy Hollow
In Tim Burton’s re-imagining of the classic Washington Irving short story, Ichabod Crane is no longer a school teacher but a police constable. He’s been sent to investigate a series of murders. Brom is still a bully but less of a threat than in the original story. Ichabod has flashbacks of his strict Protestant father who tortured his mother. The movie adds elements of witchcraft and satanism, with the Headless Horseman being controlled by another character. And this time, Ichabod gets the girl in the end. While the film is completely unfaithful to Irving’s ancient tale, I much prefer it. I’ve had to sit through countless plays, puppet shows, and retellings of “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.” It was time someone like Tim Burton injected new life (or should I say death?) into it.
The Woman in Black
In the novel, Kipps loses his wife and his child as a result of being haunted by the title spectre. In the movie, Kipps (Daniel Radcliffe) is already a widower when he comes to Eeel Marsh House. The movie keeps the premise that seeing The Woman in Black foretells the death of a child but pushes it into more horrifying territory. The book is about Kipps uncovering the truth about the ghost. The movie is about Kipps and the village being terrorized by the ghost and Kipps trying to break the curse to save his son. The movie uses the book’s premise as a jumping off point to go to even scarier places.
The Island of Dr. Moreau
The H.G. Wells novel is about a shipwrecked man who winds up on the island of a mad scientist and his human-animal hybrids. There’s a great 1932 adaptation called Island of Lost Souls starring Bela Lugosi and Charles Laughton. Then there’s the cult classic from 1996 starring Marlon Brando as said mad scientist. And man, is it strange!
For starters, Dr. Moreau has a mini-me that accompanies him everywhere. He’s dressed all in white with his face painted white as well (or else completely slathered in sunscreen). The creatures call him Father. He uses a remote control to send pain signals to implants under the creatures’ skin. The movie also invents a cat-like daughter for Moreau played by Fairuza Balk. In both the movie and the book, the main character eventually escapes from the island. In the movie, the creatures choose to regress back to their natural state rather than be “cured.” I’m not sure that a dogged faithfulness to the original text would have saved this movie. (It bombed at the box office.) It may have resulted in an even less interesting film. All I can say is that this is one of the craziest movies to come out of the ’90s. For more about the troubled production, you can check out the documentary Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley’s Island of Dr. Moreau.
What people are saying
about the RunPee app.
Water drinkers unite
Run pee is the best app for people who find themselves needing to pee a lot but also not wanting to miss any action. The app gives you the best times to use the bathroom during a movie while also telling you when to leave and which lines to listen for! It not only gives you the time you should go pee, but it also explains to you what is happening during the break. I helped I use this app every time I go to the movies now. My god father recommended this app to 5 years ago and it’s been in my phone ever since! Highly recommended.
View all reviews
Apple App Store | Google Play Store
Download RunPee app
Sometimes straying from the original is a good thing. Sometimes not. What horror adaptations do you think Hollywood got right or wrong? I can think of at least one author I could write a whole other post about. Can you guess who it is?
Don’t miss your favorite movie moments because you have to pee or need a snack. Use the RunPee app (Androidor iPhone) when you go to the movies. We have Peetimes for all wide release films every week, including Wicked, Gladiator II, Red One, The Wild Robot and coming soon Moana 2, The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim, Kraven the Hunter, Mufasa: The Lion King and many others. We have literally thousands of Peetimes—from classic movies through today’s blockbusters. You can also keep up with movie news and reviews on our blog, or by following us on Twitter @RunPee. If there’s a new film out there, we’ve got your bladder covered.
Leave a Reply