Succinctly described by co-creator Dustin Thomason as âan original story in the key of Stephen King,â Castle Rock is still largely shrouded in secrecy. Only time will tell exactly what comes after the pilot, which had its world premiere at SDCC. But we were lucky to find out what Thomason and co-creator Sam Shaw have in store for future seasons of what might be described as a King-infused anthologyâand why we should be excited about that.
1) Thomason and Shaw have many more King-influenced tales to tell
âOur plan was always to tell a series of self-contained stories,â said Thomason. The first is inspired by Kingâs novels and short stories set in prisons, chiefly The Shawshank Redemption and The Green Mile. Given Kingâs libraryâhe is, in Thomasonâs words, âa genre unto himselfââthere are several other options for which direction to take after the first season wraps.
According to Thomason, tales based around the cosmic struggle of good vs. evil and what he described as âbanginâ monster storiesâ (perhaps even one set in 1970s Castle Rock, which, awesome) are top of mind.
2) Their fandom came first
âI think, truly, it starts with fandom,â said Thomason when asked where the ideas behind Castle Rock came from. âAt some level, every piece of television [Shaw and I] have ever talked about has kind of gone back to Stephen King.”
He cited Manhattan, their WGN series about the atomic bomb and its development, as a distinctly King-influenced storyâa historical tome, ala 11/22/63, with inherent drama and intrigue.
3) When youâre making a Stephen King show, it helps to have J.J. Abrams on speed dial
âIf [Abrams is] not the worldâs greatest Stephen King superfan, heâs right up there,â said Thomason. Thatâs high praise from the man who sneaked Easter eggs into the show that even fellow King diehard Shaw couldnât identify. (âIâll never tell,â swore Thomason.)
Still, working with the man behind The Force Awakens and LOST does have its complications for some involved in the production. âIâve never done anything where Iâve had to hide plot aspects, and Iâm very bad at it,â said Melanie Lynskey, who plays Molly Strand. âIâm pathologically honest. If somebody asks me something, Iâm going to be honest about it. And I donât know how to do this.â Still, Lynskey maintained Abrams is âthe sweetest man,â despite his reputation as a stickler for secrecy.
4) The project is by fans and for fans, and that extends to the cast
Shaw and Thomason, who, according to Thomason, could teach a graduate-level course on King, aren’t the only ones behind Castle Rock who have been devouring the authorâs books since they were kids. Lynskey, for her part, is also a longtime fan. âI was a painfully shy child, and other children were not my friends, so all I did was read books,â she said.
At age 10, she read âeverything that [King had] written up to that point.â (She counts Pet Sematary as her favorite, a book she noted is a bit much when youâre in your formative years.) So, naturally, she was thrilled to be brought into the world of Castle Rock.
And now that we’ve learned a little bit more about the show, so are we.
Which King subgenres do you want to see developed into series? Let us know in the comments!