Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The Creepy New Trailer For 'Pet Sematary' Makes A Serious Departure From Stephen King's Original Story

The Creepy New Trailer For 'Pet Sematary' Makes A Serious Departure From Stephen King's Original Story
Paramount Pictures/YouTube screen grab

We've seen quite a few decent adaptations of Stephen King's work in recent years, if It, 1922 and Gerald's Game are any indication.

The latest addition to the long list of King adaptions is Pet Sematary, an updated treatment of perhaps King's most downbeat and nihilistic novel.


Let's do a Pet Sematary crash course for those of you who are unaware. You can expect spoilers below.

The story follows the Creeds, husband Louis, wife Rachel, daughter Ellie and infant son Gage, who move back to Maine after Louis accepts a position as the campus doctor for the local university. Their new home is situated next to a highway regularly traversed by long haul trucks that over the years have claimed the lives of pets unfortunate enough to venture out onto the road.

After the Creeds befriend an elderly neighbor, the retired Judd Crandall, they learn about the existence of a pet cemetery (stylized as "sematary") in the woods behind their property. The landfall in the woods beyond the cemetery is said to hold a mysterious power, namely the ability to raise the dead.

Visions of Victor Pascow, a university student who dies in an accident on the first day of the semester and appears to know of the evil in the woods, plague Louis regularly. Soon after, the Creeds' house cat, Church, is run over and killed by one of the trucks while Rachel and the children are in Chicago, and Louis chooses to revive the cat rather than shatter his daughter's world.

"Sometimes dead is better," the crotchety Crandall warns Louis Creed, recounting sordid tales of undead animals and humans, their once vibrant personalities replaced by a primal urge to kill and destroy.

While a trailer for the film, due to be released on April 5, debuted in October, it managed to withhold one crucial detail: Which one of the Creed children dies. In the book and in the 1989 film, that child is Gage, who rises from the grave, more bloodthirsty beast than hapless child, after his grief-stricken father fails to heed Crandall and Pascow's warnings, exhumes his son, and reburies him in tainted ground.

In the new film adaptation, that child is Ellie.

(We apologize in advance for the tendency of film distributors to release trailers that appear to spoil entire films.)

Pet Sematary (2019) - Trailer 2 - Paramount Pictureswww.youtube.com

The decision to kill off the Creeds' eldest child has been met with a rather mixed reception. For one, the death of Gage Creed made thematic sense, given that he was his father's favorite.

Both the book and the original film also provide plenty of evidence that married life for Louis and Rachel, one characterized by lapses in communication and the resurfacing of Rachel's personal childhood trauma, is not as blissful as it might appear. The death of their youngest child, therefore, served as a sign that innocence was not only lost, but that the disintegration of their marriage could not be forestalled.

Fans were clearly hoping to witness a child performance as memorable as the one Miko Hughes, who played Gage in the original production, gave at the time.

(Hughes was three years old at the time of filming.)






Artistic liberties are artistic liberties, however. The presence of a child cult is not in the source material either, so we're bound to be in for a wild and sickening (if not entirely faithful) ride into the abyss.

King regards Pet Sematary as both his darkest and most personal novel. He felt he'd gone too far with the subject matter and decided not to have it published, only submitting it to Doubleday after realizing he'd need a final book to fulfill the terms of his contract.

It shouldn't surprise you that the book is based, in part, on King's personal experiences. In 1978, King accepted a position at the University of Maine at Orono.

He and his wife, novelist Tabitha King, rented a home next to a highway known for claiming the lives of the neighborhood pets. The neighborhood children had created a pet cemetery in a field nearby.

King's daughter, Naomi, lost her cat to one of the highway's trucks, and his infant son, Owen, was nearly killed after venturing too close to the road.

For those of you who can stomach it, here's the scene that traumatized so very many childhoods.

Pet Sementary(1981) - Gage's Death & Funeral Scene(with subtitles)www.youtube.com

We're very sorry.

More from

Screenshots from @realprogressive11's TikTok video
@realprogressive11/TikTok

Rural Michigan Woman Speaks Out About 'Dystopian' Grocery Costs In Eye-Opening Video

TikToker @realprogressive11, a rural Michigan resident, is tired of dancing around the subject and is ready to call it like it is: according to her, grocery shopping has become a "dystopian" experience.

And based on other TikTokers' experiences, this isn't specific to Michigan.

Keep ReadingShow less
Andrew Rannells Just Dished On How Dating Anderson Cooper At 25 Directly Inspired 'Girls' Storyline—And Our Jaws Are On The Floor
Daily Beast/Obsessed; Gary Gershoff/Getty Images

Andrew Rannells Just Dished On How Dating Anderson Cooper At 25 Directly Inspired 'Girls' Storyline—And Our Jaws Are On The Floor

After years of speculation, the tea has finally been spilled about who inspired Elijah Krantz and Dill Harcourt's relationship.

In case you missed it, the hit TV show Girls aired for six seasons from 2012 to 2017, and followed the lives of four young women making their way through early romance and career moves in New York City.

Keep ReadingShow less
Tom Holland and Zendaya
Pablo Cuadra/WireImage/Getty Images

Tom Holland Just Confirmed The Months-Long Rumors That He And Zendaya Got Married—And His Comments Have Fans Swooning

American actor and singer Zendaya and British actor and dancer Tom Holland first met in 2016 during the screen test and casting process for their roles in the 2017 Marvel made/Sony approved movie Spider-Man: Homecoming. The pair, both born in 1996, were successful child actors transitioning into adults, but still playing teens on camera.

They became fast friends, but didn't begin dating until sometime later, even if fans thought the attraction happened much sooner. They finally confirmed their relationship in 2021.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billy Porter; Elisabeth Hasselbeck
CBS Mornings

Elisabeth Hasselbeck Is Getting Some Major Side-Eye After Making Bizarre Dig At Billy Porter During Interview

Conservative TV host Elisabeth Hasselbeck first gained public notice in 2001 as a contestant on the second season of the CBS reality show Survivor, then she furthered her fame by marrying NFL player Tim Hasselbeck the following year.

After that, she became the conservative voice on The View for a decade (2003-2013), frequently clashing with her co-hosts and garnering animosity from viewers. Portraying herself as a trad-wife while in reality being a working mother, her next stint was on Fox News' Fox & Friends from 2013 to 2015 before being replaced by Sean Hannity paramour Ainsley Earhardt.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of JD Vance and Whoopi Goldberg
Fox News; The View

JD Vance Ripped After Running To Fox News To Whine About Whoopi Goldberg Supposedly Calling Him 'Racist' On 'The View'

Vice President JD Vance was criticized after he complained on Fox News that The View moderator Whoopi Goldberg had called him a "racist" during his appearance on the program.

While on The View, Vance sidestepped a question from Goldberg about concerns that the Trump administration was marginalizing Black history and communities.

Keep ReadingShow less