Movies Gallery The 12 best Stephen King movie and TV adaptations By Chris Nashawaty Chris Nashawaty Chris Nashawaty is a former senior writer at Entertainment Weekly. He left EW in 2019. EW's editorial guidelines and Clark Collis Clark Collis Senior Writer EW's editorial guidelines Updated on May 18, 2022 03:23PM EDT Close 01 of 13 The King of adapations Everett Collection There are few Stephen King novels that haven't been adapted for the screen, with even fewer being remade several times. Given the novelist's prolific output, it should come as no surprise that some adaptations of his work didn't exactly hit the mark. However, for every cinematic misstep there is a celluloid success. Here's a look at the best movie and TV versions of the author's work. 02 of 13 The Dead Zone (1983) Everett Collection Director David Cronenberg brings his signature brand of Canadian creepiness to this taut supernatural thriller. Christopher Walken stars as a school teacher who comes out of a coma with a gift that feels more like a terrifying curse. He has the psychic ability to tell a person's fate by coming into contact with them, leading to him becoming involved in a political conspiracy. It's like a Twilight Zone episode spiked with arsenic. —Chris Nashawaty 03 of 13 The Running Man (1987) Everett Collection Sure, it may not be as well-known as The Terminator, Predator, or even Commando. However, director Paul Michael Glaser's dystopian sci-fi satire is Peak Schwarzenegger. Ahnuld plays a wrongly convicted man who has to fight for his freedom on a death-sport television reality show. To make matters worse, it is hosted by former Family Feud kissing bandit Richard Dawson (who, let the record show, is a fantastic movie villain). Timely, prescient, and highly underrated. —C.N. 04 of 13 Dolores Claiborne (1995) Everett Collection This powerful feminist psychodrama feels like a love letter from King to his single, working-class mother, who he says supported their family alone after his father walked out. Kathy Bates plays Dolores—a hardscrabble Maine housekeeper who hasn't seen her estranged daughter Selena (Jennifer Jason Leigh) in 15 years. Selena returns after her mother is suspected of a murder that mirrors the events surrounding the death of Selena's abusive and alcoholic father (David Strathairn). Director Taylor Hackford toggles between the past and present in a way that reminds you that sometimes in life, it's hard to tell them apart. —C.N. 05 of 13 Pet Sematary (2019) Kerry Hayes/Paramount Pictures Mary Lambert's 1989 adaptation has its hardcore fans. But for my money, Starry Eyes directors Kevin Kolsch and Dennis Widmyer's remake digs into something darker and more primal. The Creed family (led by an excellent Jason Clarke) moves to Maine, watches their beloved cat, Church, become roadkill, and then brings that pet back to life by burying it in a supernatural cemetery deep in the woods. Like many things that seem too good to be true, there's a catch: those buried there do not come back the same. There's a lesson here about grief and not messing with the dead (or our cherished memories of them), but you'll be too busy digging your fingernails into your armrest to give it much thought until you get home and are home laying in bed. Oh, and P.S., good luck trying to fall asleep. —C.N. 06 of 13 The Mist (2007) Ralph Nelson/The Weinstein Company Frank Darabont is the go-to director when it comes to King adaptations (see also: The Green Mile and The Shawshank Redemption). And he certainly found every ounce of the author's air of locked-room dread in this one. Set almost entirely in a small-town Maine supermarket where the locals are hiding out from…well, what exactly? Thomas Jane steals the show from a great cast of character actors, especially in a final scene that is so raw and bleak and amazing that I may just go watch it again right now. —C.N. 07 of 13 Stand by Me (1986) Everett Collection Sometimes lost in all of those volumes of white-knuckle horror prose is the fact that King is more than just creeping dread and gotcha scares. He's also a master of nostalgia. Rob Reiner's Stand By Me may be the clearest example of the author's Proustian obsession with the smallest quotidian details of youth—the recollected smells, sights, and sounds of long-ago summer nights that we're only able to share with our oldest (and first) friends. But yes, there's also a dead body. Told in sun-dappled flashback, Stand By Me revolves around four childhood friends (beautifully played by River Phoenix, Wil Wheaton, Jerry O'Connell, and Corey Feldman) who, in 1959, set off to find that dead body. But really it's about male bonding, the first taste of freedom, and how the most insignificant things (a catchy pop song, a campfire story about a pie-eating contest puke-athon) can feel like the only things that matter. —C.N. 08 of 13 Misery (1990) Everett Collection Misery is the moment Kathy Bates became an icon. Annie Wilkes, the self-proclaimed number-one fan of a jaded bestselling author played by James Caan, is an unforgettable cocktail of G-rated verbal abuse and hard-R physical violence (the sledgehammer!). "I thought you were good Paul. But you're not good. You're just another lying ol' dirty birdy." King and Bates both make Annie, arguably King's most vivid and dementedly noble character, the perfect villain in their own ways. It should come as no surprise, then, that Bates won the Academy Award for Best Actress for the role in 1991. —C.N. 09 of 13 The Shawshank Redemption (1994) Everett Collection Although it was nominated for seven Oscars, including Best Picture, Frank Darabont's adaptation of King's 1982 novella Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption was greeted at the box office with relative indifference. Since then, thanks to an infinite loop of cable airings, The Shawshank Redemption has snowballed into the ultimate male weepie—a nakedly sentimental drama that guys can choke up watching and not feel guilty about afterward. Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman play Andy and Red—a pair of long-term convicts who gradually become best friends despite Andy's undying dream of freedom and Red's suspicion that after so long behind bars, he might not know how to live on the outside. Shawshank has its naysayers who dismiss it as melodramatic hooey, but they're wrong. —C.N. 10 of 13 The Shining (1980) Everett Collection Before you say anything, yes, Stephen King is famously not a fan of this version of his 1977 novel. Then again, he may be too close to the story to see what everyone else loves about Stanley Kubrick's haunting goose-flesh adaptation. Part supernatural chiller, part psychological thriller (with a dash of sub-zero cabin fever thrown in for atmosphere), The Shining is the ultimate combination of a typical horror movie and an art film. This dream-logic nightmare begs you to wrestle with it, rearrange it, decode it, and find your own terrifying answers. Like the mad conductor of a runaway train, Jack Nicholson and his devilish smile drive it all. —C.N. 11 of 13 Carrie (1976) Everett Collection A horrific but oddly relatable coming-of-age story, Brian De Palma's masterpiece stars Sissy Spacek as small-town outcast Carrie White—a sheltered, picked-on wallflower with a deranged religious zealot mother at home (Piper Laurie) and a telekinetic gift triggered by a rage she's just beginning to grapple with. De Palma's suspenseful Rube Goldberg-meets-Alfred Hitchcock pig's blood at the prom climax gets all the attention. Still, this sympathetic love letter to teenage misfits everywhere wouldn't work without Spacek's wide-eyed vulnerability and King's deep understanding of the humiliations of adolescence and popularity that every teen knows all too well. —C.N. 12 of 13 Mr. Mercedes (premiered on Audience, 2017) Kent Smith/AT+T AUDIENCE Network If you are looking for an underrated crime series, Mr. Mercedes should be at the top of your watchlist. Brendan Gleeson is simply terrific as retired detective Bill Hodges, who remains haunted by a terrifying incident in which a man dubbed Mr. Mercedes claimed the lives of 16 people. His independent investigations lead him to a supernatural serial killer (Harry Treadaway), who will seemingly stop at nothing to torment Hodges. Not unlike its 2020 contemporary The Outsider, Mr. Mercedes combines procedural drama with supernatural scares to create an enjoyable roller coaster ride. —Clark Collis 13 of 13 Castle Rock (premiered on Hulu, 2018) Dana Starbard/Hulu It is easy to poke holes into Castle Rock's inclusion in this list. After all, it's not technically an adaptation of any particular work. Despite this technicality, this anthology TV show skillfully evokes the milieu of King as a posse of top-notch acting talent (including Sissy Spacek, André Holland, and, in season 2, Lizzy Caplan as a young Annie Wilkes) help extend the Master of the Macabre's universe. Talk about a multiverse of madness! —C.C.