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Pages in category "Films based on works by Dean Koontz" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The story was adapted into a 2-hour TV movie of the same name that aired on CBS Sunday September 30, 1990. It starred Lee Horsley as Graham Harris, Pam Dawber as Connie Weaver, Kevin Conroy as the Butcher, Bob Balaban, and William Sadler. It was directed by Farhad Mann, with a teleplay by Dean Koontz and Alan Jay Glueckman.
Title Year Type Pages Notes 1: The Silent Corner: 2017: novel: 464: 2: The Whispering Room: 2017: novel: 528: 0.5: The Bone Farm: 2018: novella: N/A: Audio only 3 ...
Demon Seed is a 1977 American science-fiction horror film directed by Donald Cammell.It stars Julie Christie and Fritz Weaver.The film was based on the 1973 novel of the same name by Dean Koontz, and concerns the imprisonment and forced impregnation of a woman by an artificially intelligent computer. [4]
The television film adaptation of The Servants of Twilight was made in 1991 after the book became an international best seller. The film starred Jarrett Lennon as Joey, Belinda Bauer as Chris, Bruce Greenwood as Charlie Harrison, and cult-favorite Grace Zabriskie as Grace Spivey, also called Mother Grace, the charismatic leader of a fanatical religious cult known as the Church of the Twilight ...
Dean Ray Koontz (born July 9, 1945) is an American author. His novels are billed as suspense thrillers, but frequently incorporate elements of horror, fantasy, science fiction, mystery, and satire. Many of his books have appeared on The New York Times Best Seller list, with fourteen hardcovers and sixteen paperbacks reaching the number-one ...
A series of low-budget horror films was loosely based on the book. Watchers; Watchers II; Watchers III; Watchers Reborn; In the film adaptation Travis is a sixteen-year-old boy, and Nora is his mother. The Outsider is renamed OXCOM, and Vince Nasco is replaced by NSO agents searching for the monster.
The rights to Koontz' book were initially purchased by producer Steven Lane, a producer on The Howling series. [5] Producer Joel Soisson, after reading the book, spent the next ten years pursuing the rights and was instrumental in getting the film set up at Miramax. [6] Phantoms was filmed on location in Georgetown, Colorado in the fall of 1996.