Stephen King has written hundreds of short stories and more than sixty novels, but he has only directed one movie. The goofball 1986 film Maximum Overdrive (watch it Here), which came to Blu-ray as part of the Vestron Video Collector’s Series back in 2018. Now it has been announced that Vestron Video has put together a special steelbook release of Maximum Overdrive – and this steelbook will only be available at Walmart! The street date is May 30th, and pre-orders are already been accepted on Walmart.com.
Images of the steelbook case can be seen at the bottom of this article.
Based on King’s short story Trucks, Maximum Overdrive has the following synopsis: After a comet causes a radiation storm on Earth, machines come to life and turn against their makers. Holed up in a North Carolina truck stop, a group of survivors must fend for themselves against a mass of homicidal trucks.
Images of the steelbook case can be seen at the bottom of this article.
Based on King’s short story Trucks, Maximum Overdrive has the following synopsis: After a comet causes a radiation storm on Earth, machines come to life and turn against their makers. Holed up in a North Carolina truck stop, a group of survivors must fend for themselves against a mass of homicidal trucks.
- 3/23/2023
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Get behind the wheel of one wild ride when Lionsgate’s Vestron Video Collector’s Series releases Stephen King’s Maximum Overdrive on Blu-ray SteelBook on May 30!
The Blu-ray + Digital SteelBook is exclusive to Walmart, up for pre-order now. Maximum Overdrive was notably written for the screen and directed by Stephen King himself.
We assume the SteelBook release has the same special features as the recent Vestron Video Collector’s Series Blu-ray release of Maximum Overdrive, which included…
New: Audio Commentary with Writer Tony Magistrale, Author of Hollywood’s Steven King New: Audio Commentary by Actor and Comedian Jonah Ray and Blumhouse Film Executive Ryan Turek New: “Truck Stop Tales” Featurette – An Interview with Producer Martha De Laurentiis New: “Rage Against the Machines” Featurette – An Interview with Actress Laura Harrington New: “Honeymoon Horrors” Featurette – Interviews with Actor John Short and Actress Yeardley Smith New: “Maximum Carnage” Featurette – An Interview with...
The Blu-ray + Digital SteelBook is exclusive to Walmart, up for pre-order now. Maximum Overdrive was notably written for the screen and directed by Stephen King himself.
We assume the SteelBook release has the same special features as the recent Vestron Video Collector’s Series Blu-ray release of Maximum Overdrive, which included…
New: Audio Commentary with Writer Tony Magistrale, Author of Hollywood’s Steven King New: Audio Commentary by Actor and Comedian Jonah Ray and Blumhouse Film Executive Ryan Turek New: “Truck Stop Tales” Featurette – An Interview with Producer Martha De Laurentiis New: “Rage Against the Machines” Featurette – An Interview with Actress Laura Harrington New: “Honeymoon Horrors” Featurette – Interviews with Actor John Short and Actress Yeardley Smith New: “Maximum Carnage” Featurette – An Interview with...
- 3/23/2023
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
Not all Stephen King movies are created equal. King's massive catalog of frights has made for exciting film adaptations ever since Brian de Palma gave us "Carrie" in 1976. However, "The Shining" might be best remembered for King's criticisms of the film. Those who remember 1979's "Salem's Lot" miniseries might have found themselves asking, "Why is the vampire blue?" Does 2017's "It" really have a scarier Pennywise the Dancing Clown than the 1990 remake?
The most successful King adaptations tend to stray from the source material, which isn't always a bad thing. King is a master storyteller, but his gifts don't automatically translate to the screen. In fact, creative license often makes the movies based on his work — "Carrie" and "The Shining" in particular — better than they would have been had they followed the text faithfully.
Because the adaptation process is imperfect, some King movies succeed where others fail. Others get lost in limbo,...
The most successful King adaptations tend to stray from the source material, which isn't always a bad thing. King is a master storyteller, but his gifts don't automatically translate to the screen. In fact, creative license often makes the movies based on his work — "Carrie" and "The Shining" in particular — better than they would have been had they followed the text faithfully.
Because the adaptation process is imperfect, some King movies succeed where others fail. Others get lost in limbo,...
- 8/25/2022
- by Justin McDevitt
- Slash Film
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