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I kept looking behind to check if anyone was following me. I thought she knew which advert I’d been reading and was about to stand up and announce ‘This one’s queer!” Of course, that never happened.Īs I walked home, my heartbeat raced. Nodding my head, I could feel myself blushing. “Got everything you need today?” she asked me as she pushed the keys on the cash register. I told myself to be brave and quickly walked over to Karen, and nervously placed the newspaper by the cash register. I quickly closed the paper and checked around to see if anybody had noticed me reading the advert.Īt that point, I wanted to put down the paper and rush out of the shop, but the chance of being in touch with other gay people stopped me from doing so. She was referring to me and a few other customers who were all flicking through various newspapers and magazines. “I see the library is open again, Karen.” I didn’t personally know any other gay people, yet here was an advert in a music newspaper about a world I belonged to yet knew little of.įor a copy, send a postal order for (I can’t remember how much) to –Īt that moment, a member of staff entered the shop and shouted over to the cashier – It was a significant point in my life which opened up a door and invited me to step through. Towards the back of the newspaper, I stumbled upon the advertisement section, and one of the adverts immediately got my attention. Picking up the newspaper, I flicked through it, pretending not to notice the picture and taking little if any notice of who was around me. I didn’t particularly like their music, but I found both men sexually attractive. On the front was a picture of the singing duo Chas and Dave.
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Before we rank into every theatrically-released Stephen King adaptation let's give out one honorable mention.Scanning the shelves full of newspapers and magazines for the music newspaper I wanted, it soon caught my eye. We promise we tried.)Įven with all those caveats we felt one particular film deserved a quasi-official, honorable mention.
(There are also some adaptations that are simply difficult to find in America, like the Indian adaptions of "Misery" and "Quitter's, Inc." - "Julie Ganapathi" and "No Smoking" - but we tried. We also cut King some slack and removed "The Lawnmower Man" from our watch list, since he fought to have his own name removed from the film and won. The sequels to King's work rarely have anything to do with the source material, so they're all disqualified (even though some, like Larry Cohen's prescient anti-fascist monster drama "A Return to Salem's Lot," are genuinely interesting). Cataloguing every adaptation might be a fool's errand, so we made some tough choices and decided to focus only on his theatrical releases.Īnd even then, there are so many King adaptations that it gets tricky.
King's books and short stories quickly became hit movies, many of them celebrated in their time, and some flopped so hard that hardly anybody remembers them. The best King stories scare so many of us that we all feel connected, and even the worst are usually pretty fun. Stephen King isn't just an author by this point: He's an institution, a legacy of classic horror stories that capture our imaginations, fuel our nightmares, and speak - when he's at his best - to our shared experiences as flawed, emotional beings.