"Creepshow" is a Stephen King movie that is not based on a short story or a novel. It is an anthology Horror film directed by George A. Romero and written by Stephen King.
The first movie based on a book was called Tilby and Little Billee, based on Du Maurier's novel Trilby. It was a movie short, filmed in 1896.
Maximum Overdrive (1986), based on the Stephen King short story "Trucks"
No, Stephen King did not appear in the movie "Big Driver." The film is based on a short story written by King, but he did not have a cameo or acting role in the movie.
Stephen King wrote the novella Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption on which the 1994 movie The Shawshank Redemption is based. It appears with three other novellas in a book called "Different Seasons".
The Body is a novella, or short novel written by Stephen King. You can find it in a collection of novellas by Stephen King entitled Different Seasons. In Different Seasons each of the four novellas has a reference to one of the four seasons. The Body has the subtitle of Fall From Innocence. It was later made into the movie Stand By Me. The story on which the film The Shawshank Redemption was based is also in Different Seasons.
Stand By Me has the phrase 'there's nothing like a good smoke after dinner'. The movie is based on Stephen King's story The Body.
The book "Skeleton Crew" was a short fiction of a second collection. Which written by Stephen King and, later incorporated into the novel 1987 novel "The Tommyknockers". Including a poem written for Stephen Kings' son.
No, there is not a novel named IT 2, but there may be a B rated movie under the name. For instance, Children of The Corn was a short story that was turned into a movie, but none of the sequels had anything to do with Stephen Kings books.
its a series of short novels and a movie
The screenplay for the John Wayne movie "Hondo" was based on the Louis L'Amour short story, "The Gift of Cochise".
Stephen King did not write the screenplay for "Creepshow 2." The screenplay for the movie was written by George A. Romero and Lucille Fletcher, based on stories by Stephen King.
Yes, "The Shawshank Redemption" movie is based on the Stephen King novella "Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption" from his collection "Different Seasons."