A new report suggests that Frank Darabont is set to helm episodes of Stranger Things, returning to the directorās chair for the first time since The Walking Dead.
We havenāt heard much from Frank Darabont in the last decade. Darabont directed IMDbās number one ranked movie of all time, The Shawshank Redemption, not to mention other admired Stephen King adaptations, The Green Mile and The Mist. Heās also the guy who got the TV show The Walking Dead up and running to the point that it became a worldwide phenomenon.
Darabont left The Walking Dead after a couple of seasons over creative differences, however. He went on to launch another TV show, Mob City, which would only run for six episodes, and hasnāt directed a feature film since 2007ās The Mist. While heās done some scripting work in the years since, itās been a decade and a bit since we saw Darabont direct a project, and thatās something of a shame.
Heās talked a little in the years since about struggling to finance projects: for a long, long time he held the rights to Stephen King novella The Long Walk, and always said heād get around to it. It emerged last month that an adaptation of that story is finally coming, but Darabont isnāt involved.
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According to industry insider Jeff Sneider, though, Darabont is in talks to direct two episodes of the final season of Stranger Things for Netflix. As something of a Stephen King specialist, itās easy to see why the showās producers would want Darabont on board ā the series has always worn its Stephen King influences proudly on its sleeve. Securing the services of Darabont would certainly embellish the showās long-standing appreciation for the horror author and his works.
For Darabont, meanwhile, perhaps a return to the directorās chair might mean a long overdue comeback is on the cards? Heās been out of the limelight for far too long, and this writer surely isnāt alone in appreciating how creatively uncompromising Darabont could be: his exit from The Walking Dead marked the beginning of a change which pre-empted the showās eventual slide into obscurity. And then thereās his ending for 2007ās The Mist ā that moment remains as the boldest creative departure weāve seen from Kingās stories across any screen adaptation of the authorās many works.
Whether Stranger Things marks a new stage in Darabontās directing career or not, at least those episodes will introduce the filmmaker and his work to a wider audience. Letās hope that Sneiderās report proves to be accurate.