Salem’s Lot has been a beloved Stephen King guide for practically 50 years, and has already been adapted twice. The Maine city whose quaint exterior masks an intense vampire downside finds its means again on the map because of Gary Dauberman’s new feature, initially slated for a theatrical release earlier than being shuffled to Max. It provides a golden-hued nightmare that admirably commits to its Seventies setting, however doesn’t fairly nail the weather which have made King’s story so enduring.
Maybe it’s simply that Salem’s Lot, a doorstop of a guide as many King novels are usually, isn’t fitted to containment right into a film that runs below two hours (each earlier diversifications have been TV miniseries, and hovered nearer to 3 hours). Whereas there’s a transparent protagonist—novelist Ben Mears, performed right here by Lewis Pullman (Outer Vary, Classes in Chemistry, Thunderbolts*)—the guide additionally offers area to a number of different Salem’s Lot residents, introducing them and exploring their twisted inside lives. The reader has ample time to understand the place isn’t as healthful because it seems even earlier than a supernatural menace lurches into city.
King additionally devotes quite a lot of phrases to essentially the most distinguished landmark in Salem’s Lot: the Marsten Home. The crumbling mansion with a tragic previous looms over the city, broadcasting a continuing reminder that darkness can fester in even essentially the most idyllic communities. Its sinister attract is what attracts Ben, who lived in Salem’s Lot as a baby, again to city; it’s recommended alongside the best way that the home is definitely intertwined with evil itself, making it the proper HQ for a touring vampire.
In case your first encounter with Salem’s Lot is Dauberman’s movie, nonetheless, you won’t decide up on… any of that. The Marsten Home is a part of the story, positive, however its significance feels diminished. Particulars about its historical past are relegated to a montage within the opening credit, a fast dialog or two, and a few library microfiche scrolling. Whereas it’s understood and even anticipated that any adaptation will take liberties with its supply materials, audiences also needs to be given sufficient element that they will simply sit down and revel in a film or TV collection with out having learn what got here earlier than.
The characterization of Ben Mears might be the largest stumble on this tackle Salem’s Lot. Within the guide, Ben is haunted by an encounter he had within the Marsten Home a long time in the past after coming into on a kiddie dare; he’s additionally grieving the far more moderen lack of his spouse. Each particulars are absent right here. As an alternative, all we get is that Ben is a semi-successful writer whose most up-to-date guide acquired middling critiques; he’s returned to Salem’s Lot, the place his dad and mom died 20 years prior, hoping that reconnecting together with his youth will spark recent inspiration. Pullman’s efficiency doesn’t add a lot depth; it seems like he’s skating throughout the floor, whilst Ben’s drawn right into a romance with the one cool woman on the town (Makenzie Leigh as Susan Norton) and befriends native instructor Matt Burke (Invoice Camp).
His circle additional grows when, every week into his keep, the machinations of Richard Straker (Pilou Asbæk, sadly underused) and his vampire grasp, Kurt Barlow (Alexander Ward), escalate from “vintage retailer opening quickly” to “bloodsucking chaos,” and we meet Dr. Cody (a splendidly wry Alfre Woodard), Father Callahan (John Benjamin Hickey), and tweenage horror fan Mark Petrie (Jordan Preston Carter).
They band collectively to struggle again, however with out the groundwork laid to recommend what’s occurring in Salem’s Lot is a cosmic inevitability—the sheriff, performed by the good William Sadler, declares at one level that the city is dying and that’s why Barlow settled there, an remark that appears plucked from skinny air—it feels a bit like Ben simply occurred to select the worst attainable second to go to.
There are different flaws within the script—there’s some heavy-handed foreshadowing, like a harmonica seemingly launched solely in order that it could present a spooky sound impact just a few scenes later—however Dauberman’s apparent affection for his setting, preserving Salem’s Lot in 1975 identical to King’s guide, is completely a constructive right here. The manufacturing design and cinematography keep true to the retro vibes, and the addition of a drive-in theater proves a interval excellent element that brings a nifty dimension to the story.
The particular results, nonetheless, don’t sustain the classic really feel, particularly in the case of one significantly memorable CG shot (you’ll realize it if you see it). There’s undoubtedly extra gore than we’ve ever seen in a Salem’s Lot adaptation—a bonus of not being made for broadcast TV—but it surely doesn’t go excessive. Sadly, it’s by no means very scary, with leap scares doing the heavy lifting and “Character X, why did you do this dumb factor?” supplying an terrible lot of the strain.
And possibly that’s the overall downside with this Salem’s Lot. It’s entertaining and it follows the overall contours of King’s well-loved story, but it surely doesn’t convey a lot of something new to the desk aside from the drive-in scenes. With out that sense of creeping dread—that the Marsten Home is a focus of unholy power that’s been infecting the city for generations—it seems like an adaptation that’s each devoted but additionally curiously lacking a few of the most attention-grabbing components.
It’s not a unhealthy film. It’s price including to your Halloween-season viewing queue. However watching it, you’ll perceive why Warner Bros. opted for a streaming launch—and certain agree with the choice.

Salem’s Lot arrives October 3 on Max.
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