Science Fiction and Fantasy Author Richard Matheson Dead At 87 57
New submitter no bloody nickname writes "The BBC reports that well-known U.S. author Richard Matheson has passed away. He was 87 years old. Mathesons prolific career lasted for more than 60 years and his works include the novels Hell House, The Shrinking Man, A Stir of Echoes, and I am legend. Matheson also wrote for television and cinema. Among the screenplays he wrote were the Spielberg movie Duel as well as multiple episodes of The Twilight Zone. Several of his novels have also been adapted into movies. In the case of I Am Legend this was done not just once but three times. Matheson continued to write books until recently and his most recently published book Generations was released in 2012." Adds reader Dave Knott: "Richard Matheson was a recipient of lifetime achievement recognition in both fantasy (World Fantasy Awards, 1984) and horror (Bram Stoker Awards, 1991), and was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2010. Matheson passed away on Sunday at his home in Los Angeles."
Why so unknown? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why so unknown? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Any famous Shakespeare play (is that redundant? Some are more well known than others) has it beat by a zillion.
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He was a master storyteller. He could craft a story in just about any genre, including fantasy romance (Somewhere In Time and, arguably, What Dreams May Come) and western (the novels Journal of the Gun Years and The Memoirs of Wild Bill Hickock). The range of his body of work is impressive.
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I find in taking to non-scifi geeks that while everyone, and I do mean EVERYONE, has seen a movie(s) or tv shows based on Richard Matheson's work no one seems to have heard of him. It's really odd.
I've seen some of his TV shows, but I didn't know of him till today. I don't think I've read any of his books, but since he did the I am Legend, which the movie left me with more questions then answers, maybe I should pick up the books.
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Agreed. I'm actually kind of surprised and saddened that the death of someone as influential in the nerd/geek genres of horror and SF as Richard Matheson hasn't even merited 40 Slashdot posts yet.
As well as "The Twilight Zone" and "I am Legend", he was responsible for (amongst many, many others):
* The Incredible Shrinking Man /Edgar Allan Poe screenplays
* Five Roger Corman
* Hammer's screenplay for "The Devil Rides Out"
* Being a *major* influence on Stephen King (he's credited repeatedly in King's "Danse Mac
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And yes, I just reread the summary and saw that "The Shrinking Man" was already mentioned. Duh. Chalk it up to my enthusiasm for the man's work...
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Well judging by the lack of comments here and my own lack of knowledge he wasn't that well known among scifi geeks either.
Looking at his work he might have simply been a outside the main part of the genre, he obviously had some very major successes but never won any Hugos or Nebulas which tend to be fairly common among the top SF authors. He did good work but ended up in a small niche.
Almost All of Us (Score:1)
Almost everyone who is alive has read or seen his work (either directly or indirectly). Many writers were inspired by him but I doubt any will match him.
For what it's worth (Score:4, Interesting)
But over all his short stories are a good read and he did write my favorite Twilight Zone episode (Night Call). I've never read the story that was to be made into Night Call, if one exists. Does anyone know?
Re:For what it's worth (Score:4, Interesting)
I beg to differ on I Am Legend. I read the book many years ago and found it suspenseful, engrossing, moving, and, to one willing to suspend disbelief, reasonably plausible.
None of the movies lived up to the original. They went more for thrills and chills at the expense of the humanity of the story.
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Yes, exactly. The moral ambiguity at the end was an eyeopener for my inexperienced teenage mind.
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In any case... to me the book just dwelled on Neville's being a drunk too much. While it's an honest approach it hardly makes for engrossing reading. The only part of the book that really moved me wa
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I was going to say that my comment was off-topic but that my favourite Twilignt Zone episode was "Button, Button", but I just checked the Wikipedia page for "Button, Button" and it turns out that Richard Matheson wrote that as well. Holy crap! I had no idea! I guess my comment isn't off-topic after all.
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The largest list of credits I could find:
http://www.tvguide.com/celebrities/richard-matheson/credits/265673 [tvguide.com]
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0558577/ [imdb.com]
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I think that I Am Legend is pretty weak from the science fiction aspect. Omega Man and I Am Legend (the movie) did a better version of the story. The idea that Neville coming up with a cure for the plague without any prior education is a bit far fetched.
You are confusing me. You say you prefer the film I Am Legend to the novella, but go onto say that the idea of him finding a cure was pretty weak. In the movie he finds a cure (and is a professional virologist); in the book he does not (and is not). The movie has a tacked on happy ending; the book is easily one of the most crushingly depressing pieces of sci-fi I've ever read (and I mean that as a compliment).
The Will Smith movie does a good job building the tension and atmosphere in the first half, but squ
Someday they'll film it right? (Score:5, Informative)
If you haven't read I Am Legend, you're doing yourself a disservice. The three adaptations mentioned in the summary are The Last Man On Earth [imdb.com] in 1964 starring Vincent Price, The Omega Man [imdb.com] in 1971 starring Charleton Heston, and I Am Legend [imdb.com] in 2007 starring Will Smith. Of all of these, the oldest is the closest to the actual novella and takes the fewest liberties.
When the 2007 version was in preproduction, I was geeking out as I could not wait to see this done with modern technology and techniques. Of course, as I should have known (and we should all have known with, say, Ender's Game or World War Z) that what made the book excellent is not what would be shown on the screen.
Even though the story is 59 years old, I'm still loathe to spoil it. Go read it. Do Richard Matheson one last tribute.
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If you haven't read I Am Legend, you're doing yourself a disservice. The three adaptations mentioned in the summary are The Last Man On Earth in 1964 starring Vincent Price, The Omega Man in 1971 starring Charleton Heston, and I Am Legend in 2007 starring Will Smith. Of all of these, the oldest is the closest to the actual novella and takes the fewest liberties.
Americans could still read in the 1960s. Now they just assume that all books are books of a movie.
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I always find it annoying when people say stuff like this, considering literacy rates have done nothing but rise since the 1960s. Just because people haven't read a specific old book that you think is good does not make them an idiot.
I don't know. I collect book-to-film adaptations for the public library I run and I put the film on the shelf next to the book with tags on each referring to the other. Patrons will walk down the aisles and take stacks of the videos and not touch the books. I've managed to persuade someone to read the original book only twice in the last year, once for Princess Bride and once for To Kill a Mockingbird. No, make that three--there is a 9-year-old boy reading Lord of the Rings, though that was his idea, n
The Fangoria mention is fitting (Score:1)
Here:
http://www.fangoria.com/new/chris-alexander-remembers-richard-matheson-1926-2013/ [fangoria.com]
and his first story, ``Born of Man and Woman'' is here:
http://www.inspirationbit.com/a-bit-of-literature-born-of-man-and-woman/ [inspirationbit.com]
Trilogy of Terror (Score:3)
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I'm just curious.. how much work would there have to be on the *screenplay* for Duel? I mean, there were, what, 25 spoken words in the whole film? Disclaimer: I am not in "The Industry" at all, and have no idea what a screenplay consists of.
Granted, it's a brilliant film.
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"The general rule is one page per minute"
you know, a book on screenwriting that is nothing but a list of 'general rules' would be pretty damn handy.
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Here ya go: http://www.awesomefilm.com/script/Duel.pdf [awesomefilm.com]
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Camera shooting from the left and at a shallow downward angle. Now the camera starts to pull ahead, drawing around so that Mann's car remains in sight. After a while, the truck is revealed foot by foot; a gigantic gasoline tanker truck pulling a tank trailer, each of them having six wheels. It is not a new rig but dented and in need of renovation, its tanks painted a cheap looking silver color. We hear the grinding strain of the truck's motor. The vertical pipe to the left of the cab is spewing dark smoke
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A copy of the original script is available for download:
http://www.awesomefilm.com/script/Duel.pdf [awesomefilm.com]
"Last Man on Earth" available at archive.org (Score:1)
"Last Man on Earth", the Vincent Price movie version of "I am Legend" is available at the Internet Archive: http://archive.org/details/TheLastManOnEarth_72 [archive.org]
Although I prefer Mathewson's original story to any of the movie adaptations, I think that this is the best movie of the three based on it.
Another story of his. (Score:1)
Stir of Echoes The Sixth Sense (Score:2)
The Kevin Bacon film was an adaptation, but it was so similar to The Sixth Sense and came out around the same time... it's like how Equilibrium was better than The Matrix.
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Thanks, Slashdot for parsing out > Stir of Echoes GREATER THAN(x3) Sixth Sense.
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" Equilibrium was better than The Matrix."
BWAHAHAHAHAhahhahaha..