“Excellent Tobe Hooper King Adaptation Still Holds Up”
Arrow are releasing a two disc set of Tobe Hooper’s 1979 TV adaptation of Stephen King’s SALEM’S LOT in 4K, with the original mini series on one disc and the feature film cut on the other, along with a bunch of extras.
Writer Ben Mears (David Soul) returns to his birthplace, the small town of Salem’s Lot, to research a new book and take inspiration from the old Marston House, a place with a grim reputation that always disturbed him as a boy. His arrival coincides with Straker (James Mason) making his preparations for the opening of a new antique shop to be run by himself and his mysterious business partner Kurt Barlow (Reggie Nalder) who is always absent.
However, when two workmen are employed to bring a mysterious crate from the docks and install it in the Marston House it’s the signal for all manner of vampire mayhem to start infecting the town. Only Ben’s old schoolteacher Jason Burke (Lew Ayres, best known to horror fans as the one who succumbs to an icy fate in DAMIEN OMEN II) suspects the truth, and soon he is dead too, leaving Ben and a couple of other townsfolk fight the vampire menace that lurks in the Marston House. But the disease is spreading too rapidly and only the destruction of the fountainhead itself can possibly halt its progress.
The equivalent of what is now called ‘Water cooler TV’, everyone was talking about SALEM’S LOT back in the day, certainly on its first BBC1 screening. Most of the conversation was about eerie floating vampire children and it’s an effect that still holds up, thanks to a mixture of practical effects, contact lenses and grubby fangs, and the skill of Tobe Hooper’s direction.
And yes, whoever thought of getting Tobe TEXAS CHAINSAW DEATH TRAP Hooper to direct this deserves plaudits themselves, as Hooper proves himself to be not just a master of restraint but a master at pushing the boundaries of what one could get away with in the notoriously restricting arena of American television. Several changes were made to the novel (in particular how Barlow was represented) and these are dealt with in the extras.
Arrow’s 4K set comes with two UHD discs. The first has the mini-series and gives you the option of watching it as TV intended, or as a single 183 minute piece with no recaps, etc. The two commentary tracks on here accompany that latter version. First is an archival commentary from Tobe Hooper who stays the course but there are a few gaps so if you’re wondering just keep listening and Tobe picks things up again. Far more chatty is the new commentary from the always excellent Amanda Reyes and Bill Ackerman. Disc one also has commercial bumpers, the US broadcast version of the ‘antlers death’ and the shooting script, which clocks in at an understandable whopping 197 pages.
Disc two gives us the ‘Theatrical Cut’ which is 110 minutes long and has an enthusiastic Chris Alexander commentary to accompany it. We also get new interviews with King biographer (and well-known anthologist back in the day) Douglas E Winter (21 minutes), author Grady Hendrix (26 minutes) who gives an appreciation, and Mick Garris (13 minutes). Elijah Drenner provides an excellent concise piece on the filming locations (7 minutes), Heather Wixson gives us a video essay on the hero characters of SALEM’S LOT (9 minutes) and Joe Lipsett and Trace Thurmann provide a 20 minutes mini making of and analysis. You also get trailers and an image gallery. Arrow’s limited edition set also comes with a booklet featuring new writing on the film, a double-sided poster, reversible sleeve and a Salem’s Lot sign sticker!
Tobe Hooper’s version of Stephen King’s SALEM’S LOT is out on 4K in a two disc UHD edition from Arrow on Monday 30th March 2026