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My name is Nancy and I am a horror movieholic. I glory in this. I had, in my mind, the advantage of growing up in a 200 year old haunted house, originally built by John Dickinson of the Declaration of Independence fame. I never saw a physical manifestation but many times heard the heavy, measured sounds of footsteps in the attic in an otherwise empty house, save for me. That creepiness was not enough for me: I delved into the world of vampires, ghosts, mummies and monsters courtesy of Universal Pictures and the family television. One Christmas, my parents bought me a huge poster of Bela Lugosi posing in his famous role as Dracula. Fl studio 41 cracked free download free. I bought every issue of the FAMOUS MONSTERS magazine.
I was doing all the fangirl things. At that time, vampire films were my movies of choice. SALEM’S LOT rocked my world, first as a novel then the miniseries. I was in high school when Stephen King’s second novel, “Salem’s Lot” was published in October, 1975. I was mesmerized. A haunted house?
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And a vampire?! How could I NOT like it?
King was riding the wave of new success with his first published novel, “Carrie” a paperback best seller. It was already being made into a major motion picture. “Salem’s Lot” became a blockbuster best seller, a novel inspired by King’s time as a high school teacher, teaching “Dracula” to his science fiction fantasy class.
King wondered what would happen if Dracula came to the 20th century and landed in New York City. He toyed with that for a while until his wife, Tabitha, opined the setting should be a small town. It would offer a more intimate setting and a chance to integrate the fantastic story into a small town and all its gossip, dirty secrets, certainly a microcosm of the antics in the big city, but with a horrifying intimacy. Drop Dracula into that mix and you can have one hell of a vampire novel.
“Salem’s Lot” is one hell of a vampire novel and the 1979 adaptation actually improved on the story in a number of ways. I stress the year 1979 as there have been several adaptations of the novel. Warner Brothers snapped up the movie rights soon after the novel’s publication. The BBC produced a seven-part radio play of the novel in 1995. TNT aired the second television adaptation in June 2004.
(I have not seen that version but I do know they updated the time period from the mid-1970s to the 2000s.). King originally titled the novel “Second Coming” but he and his wife thought that would make the novel sound like a bad sex story.
He re-titled it “Jerusalem’s Lot” but then there the concern it was too religious sounding. Thus, what would become King’s favorite came to be called “Salem’s Lot.” The novel and the film each represent a unique experience.
I highly recommend both. King’s novel, as he said himself, was muddled in spots and its structure not the best. That said, once you get into the unfolding horror it’s hard to put the novel down. There is much more horror in the book than in the movie which includes a horde of creeping kiddie vampires on a school bus. That would probably have been too much for a primetime television audience.
So, what’s the story? The film opens with a prologue featuring writer Ben Mears and the orphaned teenager, Mark Petrie. They look dirty and unkempt. That’s because apparently they have fled from Salem’s Lot in Maine, seeking some kind of sanctuary.
Now in Guatemala hiding out in a church, they have raided the holy water and are pouring the holy water into several small bottles. One of the bottles suddenly starts to slowly glow and Mears tells the teen “They've found us again.”. We can surmise from this prologue that something or somethings are after these two. If you know your horror movies, you can pretty much guess the supernatural entities in question are probably vampires. What to do, what to do. We are transported back two years to the small town of Salem’s Lot, Maine.
Ben Mears (David Soul) is a moderately successful writer returning to the Lot where he had spent a few years as a child. His time there left an indelible memory on him, primarily because he saw something very scary at the local haunted house on the hill, known as the Marsten House.
The story of the Marsten House is much more involved in the novel than in this teleplay, the start of seeing how this script has streamlined the 400-page novel by editing together or editing out certain characters, and simplified the story enough for coherency. This had been the stumbling block in getting a script at all back when Warner Brothers bought the rights for the purpose of making a movie. Numerous screenplays had been written — and rejected — and then the format was changed to television. Mears wants to write his book about the Marsten House in the now empty house but learns that it has recently been rented out to another newcomer named Richard Straker (James Mason). Straker, along with a mysteriously absent partner Kurt Barlow (Reggie Nalder) are in the process of opening up a high end antique store in town. Barlow’s absence is explained away as his being on a buying expedition in Europe. Everyone is curious about Mr.