Stephen King: The 10 Scariest Movies Based On His Books, Ranked – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

There are almost as many scary movies based on Stephen King books as there are books hes written. A few of them were TV miniseries instead and some have not been filmed at all yet, although some already have remakes. King may be a master horror writer, but not all directors are masters at turning them into scary movies. That includes King himself who directed one of his worst adaptations, Maximum Overdrive.

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It was still hard to narrow down the 10 scariest Stephen King movie adaptations. Consider that the best Stephen King movies arent even horror movies: The Shawshank Redemption, Stand By Me, Dolores Claiborne, The Green Mile, 1922, The Running Man. Compilations of his short stories like the Creepshow films and Cats Eye have some winners but are mostly uneven. So here are Showbiz Cheat Sheets ranking of the scariest Stephen King movies. Do you dare watch them tonight?

This 80s movie based on a King short is a little cheesy, but creepy kids in a cornfield? Are you kidding? Not even Linda Hamilton can terminate them. They made a ton of sequels and the creep factor may wear off by part five or six, but one trip to the cornfield is enough.

King can make a single hotel room scary (see below too). John Cusack stays in the allegedly haunted room 1408, and lets just say hes not going to be leaving a very nice Yelp review. 1408 was one of Kings short stories, but it still had enough frights for a whole movie.

This King book was considered unfilmable, because it stars only one woman and its all her internal point of view. Writers Jeff Howard and Mike Flanagan, who also directed, figured it out. Kings premise is a very human fear. Handcuffed to the bed during a sex game, Jessie (Carla Gugino)s husband dies leaving her stranded. Then other visitors leave her even more vulnerable.

Shawshank and Green Mile writer/director Frank Darabont always wanted to make The Mist and he finally got to do one of Kings actual horror stories. After a storm, a group of neighbors becomes fogged in at the local supermarket. There are creatures out in the mist, but are they even as scary as human beings pushed to the edge?

This one is sort of on the edge of not quite being horror. Johnny Smith (Christopher Walken) has the ability to see the future. Many of the tragedies he foresees are chilling and the suspense of weather or not he can prevent them keeps you on edge until the final vision.

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This is really two movies, to capture Kings 1,100 page tome, and its still five hours all in. The supernatural force terrorizing the kids of Derry, Maine has no limits. Pennywise the clown (Bill Skarsgard) is its signature manifestation, but it can hit you with any of your deepest fears. And growing up isnt going to save you either.

Kings first book has been adapted many times into two movies, one with a sequel, and a TV miniseries Theyll probably remake it again because Carrie is always timeless. Brian De Palmas 1976 movie did the book faithfully. Carrie White (Sissy Spacek) is really a tragic figure. If one thing had been different, she might have been okay.

If she didnt have an abusive, religious mother, she might have gone through puberty without incident. If the mean kids didnt bully her, she might have been content. If she didnt have psychic powers, she wouldnt have been able to murder all her abusers. She may have wanted to, but its those powers that made her dangerous.

This too is all one story now. King may not like Stanley Kubricks adaptation of his most personal book. Thats fair, but Kubricks recreation of the twins, the bloody elevator and room 237 are unimpeachable parts of cinema history. Based on Kings own sequel, Flanagan found a way to make both Kubrick fans and King himself happy.

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Danny Torrance (Ewan McGregor) as an adult is every bit as compelling as he was when he defeated his father as a child, and he gets to mentor young Abra (Kyliegh Curran). They face new terrors from the vampiric clan The Knot, and on top of that still have to contend with the Overlook ghosts.

Gee, wonder what gave King this idea? Superfan Annie Wilkes (Kathy Bates) holds her favortie author, Paul Sheldon (James Caan), captive when he crashes his car in a blizzard. To make matters worse, she has some notes on his last two novels.

The psychological battle of wits between Paul and Annie is exhilarating but always terrifying because you never know what Annie is capable of.

Both Pet Sematary movies are good and the 2019 remake takes a different enough twist on the story to be its own compelling exploration. But the faithful 1989 movie is peak 80s gore on top of Kings primal tale. Behind the Pet Sematary (misspelled by kids), theres a Micmac burial ground that can bring the dead back.

So Louis (Dale Midkiff) brings his daughters cat back to spare her the heartbreak. When his family suffers a tragedy, can he really stay away from the burial ground? Everything and everyone who comes back returns on a murderous rampage, but the scariest part is Louiss relentless drive to make bad decisions. Nobody can stop him.

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Stephen King: The 10 Scariest Movies Based On His Books, Ranked - Showbiz Cheat Sheet

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Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero
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