Richard Matheson on Film
- thirtyframesasecond
- Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2007 1:48 pm
Richard Matheson on Film
I think a few Matheson adaptations have been discussed across the forums, but so many of his work has been adapted for television and film that it deserves its own thread!
I was watching Somewhere in Time earlier today, which is probably not considered amongst the best of those adaptations, but remove the implausible logic of the time travel, and it's pretty moving once you factor the Rachmaninoff in!
Any faves?
I was watching Somewhere in Time earlier today, which is probably not considered amongst the best of those adaptations, but remove the implausible logic of the time travel, and it's pretty moving once you factor the Rachmaninoff in!
Any faves?
- DeprongMori
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I just watched Arrow’s recent release of “The Incredible Shrinking Man” and can highly recommend it for its existential dread.
- See Rad
- Joined: Wed Jun 06, 2018 9:23 pm
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
Do his books have any literary value at all? I've skimmed through some paragraphs at the library and the writing always seems tailor-made to be filmed, rather than read. Does he just utilize an economical style or was he, after a certain point, glibly going for the movie/TV sale?
- Slaphappy
- Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2018 5:08 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I Am Legend is a very good book and any of the movies don’t come even close capturing its idea or mood.See Rad wrote: ↑Tue Jun 19, 2018 8:12 pmDo his books have any literary value at all? I've skimmed through some paragraphs at the library and the writing always seems tailor-made to be filmed, rather than read. Does he just utilize an economical style or was he, after a certain point, glibly going for the movie/TV sale?
- thirtyframesasecond
- Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2007 1:48 pm
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I've got the last Penguin set of short stories and most are fairly economic in their style and length. Most were written for sci-fi magazines. Born of Man and Woman is the first in this set, and one of his very first, and its first person narrative pulls the rug from under you. Shipshape Home is a good one from that collection too. You won't look at apartment janitors the same way. Not read the full length novels though.
- Adam X
- Joined: Thu Apr 16, 2009 5:04 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
Hell House is another great novel by Matheson. That and I Am Legend are all I've read so far, but based on that, I wouldn't take his involvement in screenwriting as an indication that that's all he ever had in mind. His books are wonderfully atmospheric, and I'd definitely recommend giving them a go. While it's yet another one that was adapted for screen, I've heard The Incredible Shrinking Man is a really good book also.
Just as Slaphappy noted, no one's yet to do justice to I Am Legend on film, and I think it's his style of writing - they seem to exist a fair bit within the character's psychology, which obviously doesn't translate to the standard 3rd person viewpoint of film so well.
Just as Slaphappy noted, no one's yet to do justice to I Am Legend on film, and I think it's his style of writing - they seem to exist a fair bit within the character's psychology, which obviously doesn't translate to the standard 3rd person viewpoint of film so well.
- Lost Highway
- Joined: Thu Aug 29, 2013 7:41 am
- Location: Berlin, Germany
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I thought the recent post-apocalyptic horror film, The Girl With All The Gifts did the ending of I Am Legend better justice than the three official adaptions. I still wished someone adapted the novel properly. The first adaption was hampered by a low budget, lethargic pacing and a miscast Vincent Price and the other two thought they had to improve on Matheson's novel, to the detriment of the films. I don't actually think it would be that difficult to make a great movie from the book.
- Adam X
- Joined: Thu Apr 16, 2009 5:04 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
It certainly wouldn’t. Maybe it just needs to be a smallish film to discount any ‘star power’ or big studio interference. Though that’s a lot tougher than it was twenty years ago for a genre film like this would be.
- Lost Highway
- Joined: Thu Aug 29, 2013 7:41 am
- Location: Berlin, Germany
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
Making it a 100 million blockbuster the last time was exactly where they went wrong. Considering most hit horror films are low to medium budget, it should be made on the scale of A Quiet Place, 28 Days Later or indeed The Girl with all the Gifts, all of which pulled off a post apocalyptic horror movie on a modest budget. It doesn’t need to be a blockbuster vehicle for Will Smith, it should be a 5 to 20 million movie starring a good character actor like Bryan Cranston. The most eerie scenes in the novel are Neville barricaded in the house of his LA suburb with the vampires calling for him.Adam Grikepelis wrote: ↑Mon Jul 16, 2018 12:12 amIt certainly wouldn’t. Maybe it just needs to be a smallish film to discount any ‘star power’ or big studio interference. Though that’s a lot tougher than it was twenty years ago for a genre film like this would be.
- colinr0380
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
In some ways last year's Mummy movie with Tom Cruise was this decade's version of Will Smith in I Am Legend. A bit too much of a blockbuster to be allowed to be truly disturbing as a horror film.
I actually have some issues with The Girl With All The Gifts as well, mainly that it feels incredibly structurally indebted to The Last of Us.
I actually have some issues with The Girl With All The Gifts as well, mainly that it feels incredibly structurally indebted to The Last of Us.
- Lost Highway
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I wouldn’t know as I don’t play games but The Girl With All The Gifts is indebted to a few sources, from I Am Legend to Day of the Triffids to Romero's Day of the Dead. It’s still is a better movie than any the adaptations of the first two.
- Dr Amicus
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
The BBC's 80's version of Triffids is fantastic - the Sekely / Fisher film and the more recent BBC adaptation rather less so...Lost Highway wrote: ↑Mon Jul 16, 2018 11:58 amI wouldn’t know as I don’t play games but The Girl With All The Gifts is indebted to a few sources, from I Am Legend to Day of the Triffids to Romero's Day of the Dead. It’s still is a better movie than any the adaptations of the first two.
I've read The Shrinking Man - it's a tough read, and yes full of "existential dread". It's a long time since I saw the film (the Arrow release is in my kevyip) but from memory I'd say it's a bit lighter in tone but otherwise pretty close to the book.
The great unmade adaptation of I Am Legend remains Hammer's - they had an (apparently) very good screenplay, I think by Matheson himself, but the BBFC pre-vetted it and told them there was no way it would be passed for UK release with the result that it was canned in the pre-production stage.
- Lost Highway
- Joined: Thu Aug 29, 2013 7:41 am
- Location: Berlin, Germany
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I realise that like all British genre TV, the 80s version of Day of the Triffids has a very enthusiastic and vocal fanbase, but I found it incredibly dull, talky, ugly looking and let down by the usual low production values. Maybe it was great when it came out but I watched a repeat twenty years later and it doesn't hold up.
- Mr Sausage
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 9:02 pm
- Location: Canada
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
The movie's version's whole problem is that it hews too closely to the book, turning what should be an inventive and exciting survival/adventure b-movie into a leaden and self-important problem picture with endless pseudo-philosophical voice overs and a dour, over-serious tone. Dr. Cyclops is a much better version of the same premise, not least because it realizes the audience is supposed to have fun!Dr Amicus wrote: ↑Mon Jul 16, 2018 12:19 pmI've read The Shrinking Man - it's a tough read, and yes full of "existential dread". It's a long time since I saw the film (the Arrow release is in my kevyip) but from memory I'd say it's a bit lighter in tone but otherwise pretty close to the book.Lost Highway wrote: ↑Mon Jul 16, 2018 11:58 amI wouldn’t know as I don’t play games but The Girl With All The Gifts is indebted to a few sources, from I Am Legend to Day of the Triffids to Romero's Day of the Dead. It’s still is a better movie than any the adaptations of the first two.
- Slaphappy
- Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2018 5:08 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
Maybe I need to see this. I think both Matheson’s I Am Legend and Wyndham’s Day of the Triffids still remain unparalleled in cinema in many ways when it comes to post-apocalyptic genre. I do like the 80’s Triffids tv-series a lot thought and the movie had some very good moments too.Lost Highway wrote: ↑Mon Jul 16, 2018 11:58 amI wouldn’t know as I don’t play games but The Girl With All The Gifts is indebted to a few sources, from I Am Legend to Day of the Triffids to Romero's Day of the Dead. It’s still is a better movie than any the adaptations of the first two.
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 7:24 pm
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
This made me idly wonder whether Wyndham's The Chrysalids had ever been adapted to the screen, and apparently it hasn't, though there have been a couple of radio adaptations and Jefferson Airplane's song 'Crown of Creation' was based on it. The story may be a little unwieldy, but you could easily pitch it as a post-apocalyptic Handmaid's-Tale-meets-the-X-Men.Slaphappy wrote: ↑Tue Jul 17, 2018 3:15 pmMaybe I need to see this. I think both Matheson’s I Am Legend and Wyndham’s Day of the Triffids still remain unparalleled in cinema in many ways when it comes to post-apocalyptic genre. I do like the 80’s Triffids tv-series a lot thought and the movie had some very good moments too.Lost Highway wrote: ↑Mon Jul 16, 2018 11:58 amI wouldn’t know as I don’t play games but The Girl With All The Gifts is indebted to a few sources, from I Am Legend to Day of the Triffids to Romero's Day of the Dead. It’s still is a better movie than any the adaptations of the first two.
- jazzo
- Joined: Sun Nov 17, 2013 12:02 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
So, no fans of the Francis Lawrence version of I Am Legend? I've read a lot of Matheson, and after the tidal wave of criticism it received upon its release, I waited until DVD to watch the director's cut. And I have to admit, aside from some occasionally clunky CGI, I was very pleasantly surprised that the that such a largely-budgeted summer blockbuster was able to create such a sense of isolation and, in certain sequences, dread.
- Dr Amicus
- Joined: Thu Feb 15, 2007 10:20 am
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
It's some time since I saw it, but I remember it started fine but as it progressed and moved more into blockbuster territory it became less interesting. And, as has been noted many times elsewhere, it completely reverses the meaning of the title from the book.
Incidentally, this had been a Ridley Scott / Arnie project for years - does anyone know if the script originated from that period?
Incidentally, this had been a Ridley Scott / Arnie project for years - does anyone know if the script originated from that period?
- Lost Highway
- Joined: Thu Aug 29, 2013 7:41 am
- Location: Berlin, Germany
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
It was still the same project many drafts of the screenplay later.Dr Amicus wrote: ↑Thu Jul 19, 2018 5:02 amIt's some time since I saw it, but I remember it started fine but as it progressed and moved more into blockbuster territory it became less interesting. And, as has been noted many times elsewhere, it completely reverses the meaning of the title from the book.
Incidentally, this had been a Ridley Scott / Arnie project for years - does anyone know if the script originated from that period?
- cdnchris
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
Don't completely disagree. I saw it in the theater and thought it started fine but the ending was pretty terrible, completely missing the point of the story (and then twisting what the title means). The original ending that was included on video was better in that it at least was more in tune with the book's, turning around who the monster really was, but then it goes for a happier ending and still loses what the title means.jazzo wrote:So, no fans of the Francis Lawrence version of I Am Legend? I've read a lot of Matheson, and after the tidal wave of criticism it received upon its release, I waited until DVD to watch the director's cut. And I have to admit, aside from some occasionally clunky CGI, I was very pleasantly surprised that the that such a largely-budgeted summer blockbuster was able to create such a sense of isolation and, in certain sequences, dread.
- jazzo
- Joined: Sun Nov 17, 2013 12:02 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
True, and there have been plenty of films ruined for me by tonally contradictory endings, or the (often) studio/box office-driven need to end things on notes of hope, but for some reason, at least with the director's cut ending, this one didn't spoil all the good stuff that came before.cdnchris wrote: ↑Thu Jul 19, 2018 9:32 amDon't completely disagree. I saw it in the theater and thought it started fine but the ending was pretty terrible, completely missing the point of the story (and then twisting what the title means). The original ending that was included on video was better in that it at least was more in tune with the book's, turning around who the monster really was, but then it goes for a happier ending and still loses what the title means.jazzo wrote:So, no fans of the Francis Lawrence version of I Am Legend? I've read a lot of Matheson, and after the tidal wave of criticism it received upon its release, I waited until DVD to watch the director's cut. And I have to admit, aside from some occasionally clunky CGI, I was very pleasantly surprised that the that such a largely-budgeted summer blockbuster was able to create such a sense of isolation and, in certain sequences, dread.
- Lost Highway
- Joined: Thu Aug 29, 2013 7:41 am
- Location: Berlin, Germany
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I too thought that just like The Omega Man, the Will Smith version was OK for the first act while it establishes the post apocalyptic world and Neville's day to day survival. It goes off the rails once the plot kicks in and the ending is an insult to Matheson's novel.
I'm not someone to complain about CGI on principle but just like with the The Thing prequel, the studio decided to overrule the director on using practical effects and then they did a rush-job with the CGI and the creature effects looked terrible. It's a shame because the practical effects would have looked much better, they could still could have augmented them with CGI here and there. There are some tests of the practical effects here: https://io9.gizmodo.com/5793402/what-i- ... g-monsters
Unrelated, but one thing I love about The Omega Man is the very loungey Ron Grainer score, one of my favourite scores of the 70s.
I'm not someone to complain about CGI on principle but just like with the The Thing prequel, the studio decided to overrule the director on using practical effects and then they did a rush-job with the CGI and the creature effects looked terrible. It's a shame because the practical effects would have looked much better, they could still could have augmented them with CGI here and there. There are some tests of the practical effects here: https://io9.gizmodo.com/5793402/what-i- ... g-monsters
Unrelated, but one thing I love about The Omega Man is the very loungey Ron Grainer score, one of my favourite scores of the 70s.
- Dr Amicus
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Re: Richard Matheson on Film
As an aside, has anyone seen the Asylum produced I Am Omega? I'm assuming it's terrible and has even less to do with Matheson...
- Slaphappy
- Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2018 5:08 am
Re: Richard Matheson on Film
I Am Legend would make a great movie if it was given to someone like Alex Garland or Jonathan Glazer, but as a big star vehicle it is bound to fail.
I actually love the first half of Omega Man. Heston must have been so pumped for that role.
I actually love the first half of Omega Man. Heston must have been so pumped for that role.