125 Years ~ The Boulder Daily Camera from 1891 to 2016

Page 45

DAILY CAMERA

SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 2016 | 45T

Stephen King, the film critic Boulder’s Daily Camera didn’t hire

Courtesy photos

Top: Stephen King, seen in a promotional photo for the television adaptation of his novel “Under the Dome,” wrote to the Daily Camera in 1974 offering to review films for the newspaper. The future bestselling author — a Boulder resident at the time — even included two sample reviews. The paper’s editors didn’t take him up on that offer.

Living in Boulder in 1974, author offered to review movies for the paper By Matt Sebastian • Staff Writer

F

or more than four decades, writings under the most famous byline the Daily Camera never published have languished in the newspaper’s archives: a pair of reviews by a young would-be film critic named Stephen King. Yes, that Stephen King.

In September 1974, while living with his family in south Boulder’s Martin Acres neighborhood, the 26-year-old writer and future master of horror mailed a typewritten letter to the Camera’s features editor. It was an unsolicited — and notoriously unaccepted — offer to review a film or two a week for Boulder’s daily newspaper. King enclosed critical appraisals of Sam Peckinpah’s “Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia” (“a merciless dissection of human greed”) and Robert Altman’s “California Split” (“a stupid gambling picture”), one of which already was screening in Boulder, the other expected shortly. “I’m offering them for publication, but also as a sort of advert i s e ment,” King wrote. “I think the city paper could use occasional movie reviews, both for the amusement of the paper’s readers and a thumbnail guide for area moviegoers — not Stephen King that any of them are obligated to accept what I write, and most won’t.” Noting that criticism should have a “local touch” and, above all else, be entertaining, King promised that, if hired, he’d “hope to review lightly, sometimes with my tongue tucked firmly into my cheek, and provide that entertainment.” “I don’t want to write snotty avant-garde reviews of obscure foreign films,” he continued, “but I would like the chance to shake down what’s playing at the Boulder or the Fox or the Basemar Twin Cinemas once or twice a week.”

“I don’t want to write snotty avantgarde reviews of obscure foreign films.”

‘Succession of stupid movies’ King’s review of “Alfredo Garcia” — which runs just over a page, and includes one small, handwritten edit — praises Peckinpah as one of America’s great directors, and compliments star Warren Oates.

After reeling off the wide variety of violence featured in what’s now a cult classic, King observes it all “might have amounted to so much cheap exploitation in the hands of a lesser director, but under Peckinpah’s sure hand, ‘Alfredo Garcia’ becomes a merciless dissection of human greed, a black comedy where Oates ends up stuffing dry ice into the bag which contains Garcia’s head and plonking it in his shower to keep it fresh.” The young novelist was less kind to Altman, calling him “a smart director who has made an amazing succession of stupid movies since ‘M*A*S*H,’ his masterpiece.” King didn’t like the gambling comedy “California Split,” either. “It would really be more exciting to stay home and get up a penny-ante game of your own,” he concluded in his threeparagraph review. King closed his letter to the Camera with a final plea. “And by the way,” he wrote, “I work cheap.”

celebrity, the newspaper’s failure to hire the writer had become newsroom lore. “The story was well known at the Camera when I got there in ’85,” said John Lehndorff, who worked as the paper’s food editor and columnist until 2000. Sue Deans, a journalist at the Camera from 1977 to 1987 who returned to serve as the paper’s editor for four years beginning in 2003, knows it well. “I ran across (King’s letter) once when I was looking for something in the early ’80s,” Dean said, recalling a trip to the newsroom library, where old clippings, photographs and other historic material were archived. “I was looking in some files, and there was this letter from Stephen King, saying he’d like to write reviews for the paper,” she said. “What I didn’t know was whether it was the same Stephen King who’d gone on to become very famous. “I asked Laurie,” Deans said, referring to Paddock, “and he said, ‘Yeah.’” Newsroom lore (Attempts to query King The pitch failed to land. through his agent and book pub“He applied and we turned him licists, and even directly via Twitdown,” Laurence “Laurie” Paddock, who served as the Cam- ter, were unsuccessful.) era’s editor from 1960 until his ‘A happy year living retirement in 1992, recalled on 42nd Street’ recently. “We didn’t have a job for King and his family lived in a him.” Looking back on the episode house on South 42nd Street for decades later, Paddock conced- about a year, during which time ed it was just as well the newspa- he wrote “The Shining,” with its per didn’t hire the soon-to-be-su- iconic Overlook Hotel famously based on the Stanley Hotel in perstar horror writer. “He couldn’t have gone on like Estes Park. “We came very close to living that,” Paddock said. “He’s a novelist making millions of dollars here the rest of our lives rather and he wouldn’t have made that than going back to Maine,” as a newspaper reporter. But it King told the audience at Chauwould have been nice to have tauqua Auditorium during a him among our alumni.” 2013 event to promote “DocKing, of course, was far from a tor Sleep,” his sequel to “The household name at the time he Shining.” lived in Boulder and offered his “(But) it seemed like services to the Camera. there were a lot of people As noted in his letter, King’s from IBM, and we didn’t fit first published novel, “Carrie,” with them; a lot of people was out in hardback at the time from CU, and we didn’t fit (it wouldn’t be a smash until its with them. And a lot of paperback release in 1975), and a Republicans, and we didn’t fit second book — “Jerusalem’s with them.” Lot,” eventually retitled “Salem’s Boulder would figure into sevLot” — was due the following eral of King’s bestsellers, from summer. By the 1980s, with King having “The Shining” and its sequel to become a literary and cinematic the author’s post-apocalyptic

magnum opus, “The Stand,” in which the book’s heroes converge under the Flatirons while the forces of evil settle in Las Vegas. In 1987’s “Misery,” author Paul Sheldon — played by James Caan in the hit film adaptation — finishes his latest novel, as is his tradition, at the Hotel Boulderado. A Camera reporter wrote to King about this detail, and received a belated response in August 1988, a letter that also remains in the newspaper’s archives, now housed at Boulder’s Carnegie Branch Library for Local History. “I know the Boulder area, because my wife and family and I spent a happy year living on 42nd Street, in the Table Mesa area,” King wrote. “The reason Paul Sheldon chose to finish all his books at the Boulderado is because that’s the place I’d go to finish mine, if I were a man in his position (divorced, no kids)... or maybe the Stanley, in Estes Park, although the views from the Stanley are maybe a little too spectacular for complete concentration.”

A second stab at ‘Alfredo Garcia’

Camera, of course, did absolutely nothing to hinder King’s writing career. He’s gone on to pen more than 50 novels spanning genres from horror and fantasy to suspense, mystery and crime fiction — a bibliography boasting collective sales that exceed 300 million. Additionally, dozens of his books and short stories have made it to the big screen, most notably the acclaimed films “The Shining,” “Stand By Me” and “The Shawshank Redemption.” And, almost exactly 35 years after sending his sample review to the Camera, King got his chance to laud “Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia” in print. In a 2009 column in Entertainment Weekly devoted to his Top 20 video-store rentals “that never disappoint,” King slotted “Alfredo Garcia” at No. 9. His review the second time around? “Warren Oates as the grimmest, grittiest small-time bad guy ever. This is the cinematic equivalent of Cormac McCarthy’s ‘Blood Meridian.’”

Staff Writer Alex Burness Getting snubbed by the Daily contributed to this report.

Read King’s letters, reviews Visit dailycamera.com to read Stephen King’s two letters to the Daily Camera, as well as two never-before-published movie reviews he penned as samples of his work.


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