Adapting Clive Barker

Tony Todd's killer ghost schemes to destroy Helen (Virginia Madsen)'s complacent life so she'll have to join him in Bernard Rose's Clive Barker adaptation Candyman (1992)

Clive Barker’s distinctive prose style, while it creates vivid and highly visual stories, is difficult to transform into movies because the themes and meanings of the stories are strangely abstract. While Barker himself has been his own most successful adapter, there have been many attempts to capture his vision on film – some better than others. George Pavlou’s Rawhead Rex (1986) misses the mark, but Bernard Rose’s Candyman almost succeeds but is diverted by moving the story from Liverpool to Chicago.

Blasts from the past

Canoa, A Shameful Memory (1976): Criterion Blu-ray review

Aleksei German’s Hard to Be a God (2013)

Alan Pakula’s The Parallax View (1974): Criterion Blu-ray review

Two Mexican westerns from Vinegar Syndrome

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