Summary

  • Flanagan can adapt The Dark Tower with a deep and interconnected narrative like Castle Rock's remix strategy.
  • The failure of the 2017 film highlights the need for a TV format to capture the series' complexity.
  • The series must treat characters like Roland and Susannah with depth and respect, intertwining them in the King-verse.

Mike Flanagan’s upcoming TV series, The Dark Tower, could finally bring Stephen King’s genre-blending saga to the screen the way it deserves. But to truly succeed, it might want to borrow a trick or two from another ambitious King adaptation: the 2018 TV series Castle Rock.

With The Dark Tower, Flanagan is taking on one of the most complex adaptations in modern genre stories. The book series is massive, metaphysical, and deeply connected to King’s larger universe. Flanagan — known for Doctor Sleep, Gerald’s Game, The Haunting of Hill House, and Midnight Mass — has already proven he can turn psychological horror into compelling TV. That gives him an edge, especially compared to the 2017 Dark Tower film, which floundered due to its attempt to squeeze the sprawling story into 95 minutes. It stripped the lore, flattened the tone, and tried to turn King’s mythos into a bland action flick. It’s exactly the kind of failure that shows how a story this big needs a thoughtfully engineered structure to work. And that’s where Castle Rock can help.

The Dark Tower The Crimson King, Explained
The Dark Tower: The Crimson King, Explained

The all-powerful madman behind the events of The Dark Tower is one of the greatest threats to the Stephen King multiverse.

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How Castle Rock Nailed Its Stephen King Remix Strategy

Castle Rock Annie

Hulu’s Castle Rock didn’t take on any single Stephen King novel. Instead, it pulled from dozens of them, using King’s titular fictional Maine town as a sandbox for new stories steeped in familiar lore. The show built an original plot, while nodding to Misery, It, The Shawshank Redemption, The Dead Zone, Salem’s Lot, and more. And it worked — especially in Season 1, which balanced slow-burn mystery with unsettling atmosphere and layered characters.

What Castle Rock Got Right

  • Remixed storytelling: The show didn’t retell stories; it reimagined them. It stitched together references and characters into something new that still felt deeply King.
  • Psychological depth: Episodes like “The Queen” used time and memory as narrative devices, giving horror emotional weight.
  • Crossover character arcs: Season 2 reintroduced Annie Wilkes (Lizzy Caplan) from Misery in a compelling prequel origin, making her both sympathetic and terrifying.
  • Nostalgia Factor: Episodes like “Past Perfect” (S1E9) leaned into haunted-house horror reminiscent of 1408.
  • Mythology building: “The Word” (S2E9) tapped into Salem’s Lot mythology by tying in vampirism and small-town decay.
  • Expansive tone and genre: The show played with genres, from psychological horror and mystery to small-town drama and sci-fi, reflecting King’s own masterful tonal shifts.
  • Layered structure: Characters and storylines slowly revealed themselves to be connected, often metaphysically, across timelines and realities. The writers heightened the suspense by carefully doling out information within the larger narrative.

Why the 2017 Dark Tower Movie Didn't Work

2017 adaptation of Stephen King's The Dark Tower
The Dark Tower with Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey

Before Mike Flanagan took up the challenge, Sony tried to bring The Dark Tower to life with the 2017 film starring Idris Elba as Roland and Matthew McConaughey as the Man in Black. On paper, that cast had promise, but the execution was a mess. The film's biggest misstep was its attempt to condense a sprawling, multi-book epic into a single feature-length movie. It wasn't just a poor adaptation — it barely felt like The Dark Tower at all.

The tone was inconsistent, veering between YA fantasy and gritty action without committing to either. Key relationships, like Roland and Jake's, were rushed. Major themes about obsession, time, and the nature of reality were stripped away in favor of bland exposition. For longtime readers, the movie felt like a surface-level scrape without emotional or philosophical depth. For newcomers, it was simply confusing. The result was a film that attempted to appeal to everyone but resonated with no one. If anything, the failure of the 2017 movie is a compelling argument for the serialized TV format, where the richness of King's vision can breathe.

The Dark Tower Needs a Multiversal Storytelling Approach

The Dark Tower The People of the White and the Red 07

Stephen King’s The Dark Tower novels form a kind of gravitational center to his literary multiverse. Characters from other novels, like Father Callahan from Salem’s Lot, appear in the Tower series. There are worlds that connect to It, The Stand, and even Hearts in Atlantis. This interconnectedness isn’t just lore — it’s a fundamental part of the story’s structure. For a screen adaptation to work, it can’t follow a book-by-book format. It needs to embrace the fluid, interdimensional narrative of the source material.

This is where Castle Rock offers a compelling structural blueprint. The series wove together multiple realities and timelines through layered character arcs and subtle thematic echoes. Episodes often dropped the viewer into disorienting narrative spaces, allowing meaning to slowly emerge. “The Queen” is a standout example, depicting the fragmented experience of memory through fractured chronology, making the viewer feel lost in time right alongside the character. A Dark Tower series could take similar risks, using a non-linear structure to represent shifting realities, alternate timelines, and the echo of ka (fate).

Flanagan could introduce characters like Father Callahan or references to Pennywise not just as Easter eggs, but as narrative anchors in parallel worlds. A side arc could explore the downfall of Gilead in a flashback-heavy structure reminiscent of The Haunting of Bly Manor. Roland’s past and Jake’s New York could be shown simultaneously through a dual timeline format. Even Susannah’s internal duality might be visualized through split narratives or symbolic mirroring across universes.

The key difference from the movie’s approach was patience. The film rushed world-building for mass appeal. A show can unfold slowly, revealing the Tower’s meaning not through exposition but through character experience. Letting the audience live in the story moment to moment until it all begins to coalesce into a bigger picture — something weighty, cosmic, and new.

Characters in The Dark Tower Who Deserve More

The Dark Tower This Breaking Bad Star Should Play a Pivotal Role

The Dark Tower series is full of unforgettable characters, ripe for deeper, more psychological treatment in a TV format. Rather than relying on their mere existence in the King universe or presenting them as fixed archetypes, the series could treat them the way Castle Rock handled figures like Annie Wilkes or The Kid: complex, evolving, and tied to broader themes.

Roland Deschain, the stoic Gunslinger, can be more than a human figure. He can be humanized through backstory and moral conflict, even early on. Jake Chambers, the time-displaced boy from New York, offers an opportunity to explore fractured timelines, echoing the nonlinear storytelling Castle Rock handled so effectively. Susannah Dean’s dual identity provides a platform for a layered character study, especially through Flanagan’s lens of emotional horror. And Walter O’Dim, aka Randall Flagg, could benefit from a slow-burning build-up, reinforcing his recurring villainy in King’s works without needing immediate exposition.

What makes these characters special is not just their personal arcs, but how they echo and intersect with characters across the King-verse. A show that leans into this, rather than steering away, will feel both more like a faithful adaptation and a fresh take on the world.

The Tower Is a Myth, Not Just a Destination

The Dark Tower The People of the White and the Red 04

One of The Dark Tower’s most important elements is the Tower itself, acting as both a real structure and a metaphysical symbol. Adapting that to television requires more than VFX and set design. It demands atmosphere, suggestion, and emotional weight. Castle Rock excelled at this type of tonal storytelling. The town itself felt haunted and alive, not because of jump scares, but because of its history and what it represented.

Flanagan can treat the Tower the same way: an ever-present idea that shapes the world around it. Let it be something mysterious, something whispered about, something dreamed. If handled with restraint and imagination, the Tower can evolve from a distant goal into an emotional heartbeat and driving force.

Why Mike Flanagan Is Perfect for This Stephen King Adaptation

Mike Flannigan's Dark Tower Adaption Needs to Include This Important Prequel Story

Mike Flanagan has already proven himself as one of the best modern interpreters of King’s work. With Doctor Sleep, he balanced sequel and standalone. With Gerald’s Game, he made a “book too weird to adapt” into a Netflix hit. Even in his adaptations of other authors' works like Midnight Mass and The Haunting of Hill House, he showed how horror can be entertaining, terrifying, and meaningful all at once.

The Dark Tower needs that blend of ambition and humanity. Flanagan’s writing team is known for emphasizing character over spectacle. If that same care is applied to Roland’s ka-tet and the Tower’s lore, and if they take a page out of the Castle Rock playbook, this could be more than a good adaptation — it could be the definitive King series.

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stephen king Cropped
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Birthdate
September 21, 1947
Birthplace
Portland, Maine
Notable Projects
The Shining, Cujo, The Shawshank Redemption, It, Carrie
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