where are all the big H.P lovecraft films?

h.p lovecraft is probably my favorite horror writer,maybe because he writes in a way that inspires awe,and an ultimately the futility in fighting such horrors,nevermind understanding.

from y/t:
H.P. Lovecraft is one of the most important horror and science fiction writers of all time, yet there really aren't that many large scale adaptations of his work, and even fewer successful ones. So where are all the Lovecraft films?

Footage taken from:
Call of Cthulhu (game)
Re-Animator
IT
Masque of the Red Death
Hellraiser
Prometheus
Dagon
Event Horizon
The Mist
Necronomicon: Book of the Dead
Bloodborne (game)
Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth (game)
Eldritch (game)
Call of Cthulhu (short film)
Alien
Alien Vs Predator
The Thing
Hellboy
Prince of Darkness
In the Mouth of Madness
Paranormal Activity
Cloverfield
Godzilla (2014)
poolcleanersays...

Doesn't Netflix have Dagon and Necronomicron: Book of the Dead? I looove John Carpenter's Apocalypse Trilogy and The Mist RULES! Frank Darabont has also made many a Stephen King flick (Shawshank especially).

Off the top of my head, I would say HP Lovecraft isn't simply about madness driving horrors, it's biological horror, rather than supernatural. So almost anything by David Cronenberg, a lot of Japanese and Korean film, such as Akira, Uzemaki, The Ring movies, (which is based upon a Japanese folklore, but in modern times became biological horror, the Ring is actually a hybrid biological, technological virus), etc.

Also, the Matthew McCant-spell-his-last-name's True Detective breeches the Lovecraftian realm on a subtle and then not so subtle way in the end, such as the concept of "black stars" in a constant daytime of white background. I would say it's pre-Lovecraftian mythos from authors in the 1800s writing nihilistic almost biological horror, more just heavy uncomfortable writing. I can't recall the primary author who inspired Lovecraft beyond Bram Stoker's The Lair of the White Worm.

Anyway. I love horror, thrillers, suspense, nihilism, pulp and gothic literature.

poolcleanersays...

Hell, even Blatty's Exorcist and Legion are actually biological nihilistic horror. In Legion, he describes the demonic pathways as technological pathways like a computer and that there likely is no God beyond this evil horror.

poolcleanersays...

Marvel's upcoming The Defenders series, is Dr. Strange related (at least in the comics) and steongly tied to Marvel's Lovecraftian side, namely The Nameless One and his entities. Dr. Strange comics are very very Lovecraft driven. You could say The Infinity Gauntlet is Lovecraftian in it's nihilism themes, the concept of gaining all the pwoers of a god, and the fact that it is the cosmic beigs who fight Thanos, NOT the useless human superheros who become pawns and tortured by Thanos. I mean, just read a lot of comics written by Jim Starlin and you may encounter these horrors

Galactus and the Silver Surfer are ALSO a horrific, biological, cosmic horror story. Norrin Radd, a human like being from a humanlike world was called to by a dark entity and he helped feed that entity with the dezteuction of his homeworld and then SERVES and is augmented by Galactus....

Marvel's Celestials? Especially The Dreaming Celestial, Tiamut, awoken to judge earth.

poolcleanersays...

Ghostbusters:
"Then, during the Third Reconciliation of the Last of the Meketrex Supplicants, they chose a new form for him, that of a giant Sloar! Many Shubs and Zulls knew what it was to be roasted in the depths of a Sloar that day, I can tell you!" -Vinz Clortho (Rick Moranis)

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