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Stephen King's GRAMMA Will be Directed by Peter Cornwell

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Universal Pictures has hired Peter Cornwell (The Haunting in Connecticut) to direct the big screen adaptation of Stephen King's short story Gramma, from a script written by Matt Greenberg (1408, Halloween H20). They even already have an actress set to star in it, A.I.'s Frances O'Connor. One of the coolest things about this story is that it includes characters, creatures, and unearthly powers that are featured in the works of H.P. Lovecraft, so the story is set in the Cthulhu Mythos.

The story is part of King's 1985 short story collection Skeleton Crew. It follows two young boys who go with their single mother (O'Connor) to take care of their elderly, senile grandmother named Mercy, only to discover that she's a witch who made a pact with a dark force many years before.

The basic plot kind of sounds like where the Paranormal Activity story is going. Of course this was written long before Paranormal Activity came around, and it's a better story. Speaking of which, Paranormal Activity producer Jason Blum will produce the movie with McG. This is all part of a deal he made with the studio last year in which he would develop low-budget films.

The story has been adapted before as an episode of 'The New Twilight Zone' back in 1986. Greenberg is also working on another King project, he's writing the script for the Pet Sematary remake. There's some talented people attached to the project, and as a fan of King's work, I'm excited to see how it turns out!

It amazes me how many stories from King still have yet to become movies. I enjoy everything he writes! 

Check out the Twilight Zone episode below!

Here's a detailed spoiler filled plot summary of the story:

An eleven-year-old boy named George Bruckner is at home with his mother when the two find out that elder son Buddy, age thirteen, has injured his leg playing baseball. George's mother must go into the city, an hour away, to visit Buddy in the hospital, but someone must stay home to watch her own mother, a huge, cantankerous, ancient, bedridden woman. George reluctantly volunteers.

As George sets about the kitchen after his mother leaves, he begins to think about his "Gramma" and recalls the first time she came to the house. He had been six years old, and the old woman demanded that he come to her that she could "give him a hug." George was terrified of this concept, and he cried endlessly. His mother eventually pacified Gramma, promising that he would hug her "in time."

George waits for his mother to return. As the hours pass, strange thoughts - events he had witnessed earlier - begin to surface in his mind. He recalls overhearing his mother's siblings begging her to care for the old woman: "You're the only one who can quiet her down, Ruth." Eventually, Ruth was forced to leave San Francisco and move to Castle Rock, Maine to care for their mother. George also recalls that Gramma had been kicked out of her church for owning particular books. He finally remembers that the woman had been infertile for a long while, any pregnancies she did achieve ending in miscarriages or stillbirths and it was only after being excommunicated that she became pregnant and gave birth to a healthy child.

George suddenly hears a scraping sound on sheets; he imagines Gramma's long, ragged fingernails rubbing against her bed. He enters to check on her and watches the obese, white, almost formless woman for a few moments. Quite suddenly, he recalls other memories: his Gramma uttering strange words one night, and relatives dying the next morning. George abruptly realizes that his grandmother is a witch, having gained dark powers from reading the forbidden tomes.

As George makes this realization, he realizes that his Gramma has died. Though terrified, he checks her pulse and holds a mirror before her nose, making sure. Once he is convinced, he prepares to make a phone call to the doctor, only to find that the phone is dead. George opts to wait for his mother to come home, and thinks of the praise he will gain for handling the situation so calmly...until he realizes that he did not cover his grandmother's face. He imagines his brother tormenting him endlessly for this "cowardly" action.

Determined, George enters the dead woman's room and places a sheet over her flabby face. As he does, her hand suddenly wraps around his wrist and holds it for a few moments. George flees the room, injuring his nose in the process. As he tries to rationalize the movement, he hears groaning from the next room, as though the corpse was trying to get off of the bed. He then hears his Gramma calling him: "Come here, Georgie...Gramma wants to give you a hug."

George is terrified and races from the room. He hears the enormous woman stumbling after him, and even guesses that as a witch, she waited until she was alone with him to die. His Aunt Flo calls, and he tries to explain the situation as Gramma enters the kitchen. Aunt Flo tells him that he must invoke the name of Hastur and tell Gramma to "lie down" in his name. Gramma knocks the phone from his hand, and George screams the phrase repeatedly: "You have to lie down! In Hastur's name! Liedown!" Gramma wraps her arms around him.

The story jumps to an hour later, with George sitting calmly at the kitchen table. When Ruth returns, George runs to her, explaining that Gramma died. His mother fearfully asks if "anything else happened." George denies it and goes off to his room to sleep. It is implied that Gramma has possessed George, turning the boy into an evil warlock, as he used a spell to strike down his Aunt Flo with an aneurysm. The story ends with George grinning wickedly, imagining the kind of torture he will be able to inflict on his brother.


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