Under The Dome

We mentioned last week that Stephen King mentioned that his new book, Under The Dome, might end up as an HBO miniseries. Well, Variety now has word that Steven Spielberg and DreamWorks TV have optioned the book and are looking to set it up as a mini series, likely for cable. Spielberg will executive produce. The story is set in a small vacation town in Maine which becomes covered by an invisible force field which causes the residents to fight for survival, in two warring factions.

Here is the official plot description from the book:

On an entirely normal, beautiful fall day in Chester’s Mill, Maine, the town is inexplicably and suddenly sealed off from the rest of the world by an invisible force field. Planes crash into it and fall from the sky in flaming wreckage, a gardener’s hand is severed as “the dome” comes down on it, people running errands in the neighboring town are divided from their families, and cars explode on impact. No one can fathom what this barrier is, where it came from, and when — or if — it will go away. Dale Barbara, Iraq vet and now a short-order cook, finds himself teamed with a few intrepid citizens — town newspaper owner Julia Shumway, a physician’s assistant at the hospital, a select-woman, and three brave kids. Against them stands Big Jim Rennie, a politician who will stop at nothing — even murder — to hold the reins of power, and his son, who is keeping a horrible secret in a dark pantry. But their main adversary is the Dome itself. Because time isn’t just short. It’s running out.

The front of the book features an elaborate town map and list of characters, even including “Dogs of Note”. USA Today called the book “Propulsively intriguing… Staggeringly addictive”, and The New York Times said it was “Tight and energetic from start to finish… Hard as this thing is to hoist, it’s even harder to put down.” And author Neil Gaiman called it one of his “favourite books of the year so far.” The 1088-page book was released on November 10th, and is available on Amazon for $14.50.

To give you a feel of what the mini series might look like, here is a promotional trailer King’s publisher produced to sell the book:

Dreamworks is on the search for writers, and will probably begin shopping the project to prospective buyers after the creative details are nailed down.

Spielberg has been trying to be involved in a King production for years. Steven purchased the rights to King’s book The Talisman shortly after the book was published in 1984. The project went through many incarnations, but never went into production. Most recently, Spielberg and Kathleen Kennedy announced plans to produce a six-part mini-series based on the book for TNT. The project fell back into development hell due to budgetary concerns.

  • AJ
    This is exciting. Finally a Stephen King property that may be handled properly.
  • dee_dee_n
    ummm...shawshank? green mile? the shining? the mist? dolores claireborn? misery?
    no? nothing?
    yeah...those werent handled properly at all.
  • Tayor
    Don't forget Stand By Me.
  • Swarley
    I'd also add in Dreamcatcher, but I'm not sure if everyone would agree with me. But don't forget Carrie! Or, even, the Stand miniseries, which (for it's time) was well done and only looked stupid at the end (but so do most adaptations of King's work.)
  • DB
    And the Dead Zone with Christopher Walken. It's such a sweet story and such a great ending.
  • freemachine
    Too bad the Simpson's beat them to the punch :P
  • rockinrors
    I was just about to say cue annoying Simpsons' quips, but you beat me to the punch. :P
  • Toaster27
    Yea I wonder if he was bummed when that came out cuz he said he tried to write this a few decades ago but it was too big for him at the time. Oh well, I'm glad it's out now, I really rely hope it doesn't get on TNT. This has to be put on premium network like hbo or sho.
  • Sam Smith III
    I'm reading it now. Starts slow but is engaging by page 200. Forget the simpson's movie, this story has depth. I like it...
    Sam I Am
  • Which Speilberg production quality will we get, shitty TNT Speilberg or Brilliant HBO Speilberg. Hope for the latter. We'll see.
  • Prat
    I'm reading this right now.
    feels a bit like the comic by the luna brothers : Girls.
  • Sounds great, I hope to read this book soon because the description in the article makes it sound very interesting.

    Also, it wouldn't be a bad thing if Stephen King optioned his Dark Tower series to Steven Spielberg.
  • dee_dee_n
    yes it would...spielberg would ruin that.
  • rockinrors
    This sounds really good.
    The plot description really intrigues me.
    I'm glad its not a film, a miniseries sounds perfect.
  • this sound Epic to me!..lets keep our fingers crossed!!

    Steve
    http://www.isopurewater.com/
  • Mike
    Bought it last week and I'm about ready to call it his best since The Stand. It's huge but you cannot put the thing down.
  • Rodion
    NOOOOOOOOOOooooo! Don't give the rights to Steven Spielberg! His been sitting on one of King's best books 'The Talismen' FOREVER! He doesn't deserve to get any more of King's book rights until he makes The Talismen or hands it over to someone who actually will!
  • Swarley
    Jesus Christ someone's actually had the rights to that thing, someone like Spielberg, and hasn't done anything with it yet! That's completely outrageous. I agree, he should give it to someone else if this means it'll go on the back burner.
  • What exactly is the difference between this and The Mist in terms of basic plot? I get a very "supernatural force traps people inside a closed environment and forces residents to fight for survival, revealing that the true horror is really humanity blah blah" vibe from this synopsis. Perhaps someone who's read the book can enlighten me? Don't get me wrong, The Mist is one of my favorite novels/movies ever, and King is an absolute genius. Just wondering...
  • Slatters
    If you distill alot of things down to "the basic plot" you'll find a staggering amount of similarities.

    Though to answer your question: The "trap" in "Under the Dome" is an entirely different situation, there's a staggering ensemble of characters (I'm about 200 pages in and have lost count of how many there are), and about a 1000 more pages of development then "The Mist". There's some thematic similarities, sure, but thats nothing new if you are familiar with King's work.

    Its also much better then "The Mist".
  • Ken
    There is actually a reference in the book comparing their situation to the Mist. Talk about irony!
  • While it's neat and all, I'd feel better if Spielberg was more creatively involved.
  • Reading this at the moment, one of Kings best 'modern' works. Here's hoping they put time and effort into the mini-series.
  • I'm looking forward to this.
  • Jacob Cook
    that video that takes the piss out of stephen king for saying stephenie meyer can't write. the person who made that video is a cunt
  • Jacob Cook
    Im reading under the dome and it is by far the best book i have ever read
  • Ken
    Very few Stephen King books can successfully be made into movies rated less than R. I've barely gotten into this book and there have been a half-dozen major felonies. You loose too much of that on cable. I hope they put it on HBO or something.
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