Stephen King Movie and TV Streaming Guide: Where to Watch Online

A handy guide for where to watch some of the King of Horror’s most notable adaptations online right now.

Stephen King adaptation streaming guide

By our estimate, there are some King-inspired content to plow through, even if not all of them are exactly top-tier fare.

We’ve curated that list down to a manageable three dozen or so, both big and small screen, that are 1) all available for streaming and 2) significant or notable in some way. Your mileage may vary, and you may want to dig deeper for a few favorites we’ve left out. But we’re satisfied that this is a King list fans can easily binge for weeks on end — whether you’re trapped by a raging snowstorm in an empty hotel or locked in your house due to an apocalyptic pandemic.

Sissy Spacek in Carrie (1976)

Carrie (1976/2002/2013)

The 1976 film starring Sissy Spacek as a young girl whose psychokinetic fury is unleashed by relentless high school bullying was the first King adaptation (of his first published novel) and still one of the best. Followed by less impressive remakes in 2002 (a TV movie) and 2013 (a theatrical release).

1976 version: Amazon and Amazon UK, 2002 version: Netflix, 2013 version: Amazon and Amazon UK

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'Salem's Lot (1979)

Salem’s Lot (1979)

King’s second novel and a number of effective and chilling sequences. A remake — also a four-hour miniseries — followed in 2004.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Jack Nicholson in The Shining (1980)

The Shining (1980)

One of King’s all-time classics was turned into one of the greatest horror movies of all time by Stanley Kubrick. The film still holds up as a sustained exercise in dread, featuring a performance for the ages by Jack Nicholson as the doomed caretaker of the Overlook Hotel.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Creepshow (1982)

Creepshow (1982/2019)

King’s first produced screenplay was a collaboration with legendary horror director George A. Romero on an anthology of grisly EC Comics-inspired tales. More fun than truly scary, Creepshow is still a blast and even includes King himself in the cast as the ultimate redneck. Look out for an early Ted Danson appearance too! Horror streaming service Shudder recently launched a series inspired by the movie.

Movie on Amazon and Amazon UK, series on Shudder, Amazon and Amazon UK

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Cujo (1983)

Cujo (1983)

A rabid St. Bernard traps a woman and her toddler son in a searing hot car with no escape in sight in E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial) as the mom.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Christopher Walken in The Dead Zone (1983)

The Dead Zone (1983) / (2002–2007)

Johnny Smith (an outstanding Christopher Walken) wakes from a five-year coma to find that he can see the future…and realizes he’s the only one who can stop a megalomaniac politician (who seems all too familiar now) from wrecking the world. King’s lyrical novel became a poignant movie from something more poetic. The book also inspired a TV series starring Anthony Michael Hall as Johnny.

Movie available on Amazon and Amazon UK, TV series available on Amazon (US only)

Christine (1983)

Christine (1983)

The ink was barely dry on the first copies of King’s novel about a haunted car before Carpenter, but it’s still fun.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK, Netflix (UK only)

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John Franklin in Children of the Corn (1984)

Children of the Corn (1984)

The movie that launched a franchise of its own (11 films, including 10 sequels and a remake!) started life as an unassuming King short story — and not even a particularly memorable one at that. Somehow the idea of an ancient entity lurking in a cornfield and demanding sacrifices from a cult of children caught on…and just kept going.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK, Hulu

Drew Barrymore in Firestarter (1984)

Firestarter (1984)

Little Charlie McGee (Drew Barrymore) can start fires with her mind, so naturally the U.S. government’s most clandestine and sinister branch wants to weaponize her. Although it’s one of the most faithful adaptations of a King novel, Firestarter only works in fits and starts, and its cast — led by vets like George C. Scott, Art Carney and Martin Sheen — is inconsistent.

Available on Amazon (US only)

Drew Barrymore in Cat's Eye (1985)

Cat’s Eye (1985)

This second King-based anthology features adaptations of two of the most fun stories from his classic Night Shift collection — “Quitters, Inc.” and “The Ledge” — as well as an original tale called “General,” all somehow tied together by a pesky cat. A minor entry for sure, but a brisk, breezy 94 minutes.

Available on Amazon (US only)

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Maximum Overdrive (1986)

Maximum Overdrive (1986)

Yes, this movie — based on King’s early short story “Trucks” — is also the author’s directorial debut. And yes, he wisely stuck to his day job after taking this sole turn behind the camera. Despite its pulsing score by AC/DC, Maximum Overdrive is just a bad movie, but still worth a look for its overall wackiness and King’s directorial, er, skills.

Available on Amazon (US only)

Corey Feldman, Jerry O'Connell, Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix in Stand by Me (1986)

Stand By Me (1986)

“The Body,” one of the four novellas from King’s first non-horror collection, Different Seasons, was the basis for this Rob Reiner. The four young stars — Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Jerry O’Connell and Corey Feldman — all took very different paths after breaking through in this moving small town odyssey. One of the best King adaptations.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Arnold Schwarzenegger in The Running Man (1987)

The Running Man (1987)

King wrote the slim novel this is based on — one of his few overt sci-fi stories — under his Richard Bachman pseudonym in about a week. Very loosely inspired by the book, the movie stars actually more fun than King/Bachman’s grim potboiler.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

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Church the cat in Pet Sematary (1989)

Pet Sematary (1989)/(2019)

One of King’s darkest, most horrifying novels, 2019’s remake made a significant detour from the story that infuriated some fans and surprised others.

1989 version: Amazon and Amazon UK, 2019 version: Amazon and Amazon UK, Hulu

Tim Curry in It (1990)

It (1990)

Take your pick: King’s Tim Curry as Pennywise, the clown manifestation of the evil title entity.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Kathy Bates in Misery (1990)

Misery (1990)

Rob Reiner is one of three of a small club of directors who have made more than one excellent King adaptation (Frank Darabont and Mike Flanagan are the others). Annie Wilkes, the psychotic ex-nurse who traps her favorite author (James Caan) in her house after he’s gravely injured is a character for the ages, and Kathy Bates won a well-deserved Oscar for her performance. Misery is grim, macabre, funny and humane, and one of the best King movies ever.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK, Hulu, Netflix (UK only)

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Jeff Fahey in The Lawnmower Man (1992)

The Lawnmower Man (1992)

Based on the slimmest of King short stories, Pierce Brosnan). King sued to have his name removed from the film’s credits and marketing materials, and won.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Max von Sydow in Needful Things (1993)

Needful Things (1993)

Based on a novel billed as “the last Castle Rock story” (it wasn’t), Needful Things is a deal-with-the-devil tale in which old Scratch is played by The Exorcist. Von Sydow and Ed Harris lead a generally excellent cast in an often clever story, but director Fraser Heston’s work is never more than pedestrian.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

It may not be the most financially successful King movie of all time, but it’s perhaps only second to The Shining in its infiltration into the cultural zeitgeist. Directed by its classic status.

Available on Netflix (US only), Amazon and Amazon UK

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Kathy Bates in Dolores Claiborne (1995)

Dolores Claiborne (1995)

Kathy Bates stars in her second King drama, this time as the title character, a woman who is somewhat more complex than Annie Wilkes and, in the end, deeply empathetic. Bates drives this overlooked and often absorbing film about memory, loss and injustice, all told through a singular, feminist point of view.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Tom Hanks and Michael Clarke Duncan in The Green Mile (1999)

The Green Mile (1999)

Frank Darabont became the master of Stephen King prison stories with this Tom Hanks and the psychically gifted inmate (the late Michael Clarke Duncan) who changes their lives. Although King’s story falls into the “magic Negro” trap, it’s still an often endearing and moving tale.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Ron Perlman in Desperation (2006)

Desperation (2006)

ABC’s long-running series of King adaptations closed out with this single-night, three-hour movie directed by regular King associate Mick Garris (The Stand). It’s set in the title town, a wide spot on a Nevada road that has come under the control of a frightening entity named Tak. Like the book, Desperation starts out strong but starts to run out of gas toward the end.

Available on Amazon (US Only)

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Jasmine Jessica Anthony and John Cusack in 1408 (2007)

1408 (2007)

After a sparse few years on the big screen, King returned in style with 1408, a nifty little thriller based on one of his more chilling short stories. John Cusack plays a cynical author of paranormal books who spends the night in an actual haunted hotel room; what happens inside is genuinely unsettling.

Available on Amazon (US only)

Thomas Jane in The Mist (2007)

The Mist (2007)

The third King-based film by Frank Darabont is also the darkest — Darabont even changed King’s bleak but ambiguous ending to make it a TV series that ran for a single season on Spike.

Movie: Amazon (US Only), TV series: Amazon (US only), Netflix

Under the Dome (2013)

Under the Dome (2013–2015)

Based on one of King’s most well-received recent novels, Under the Dome — about a small Maine town (of course) sealed inside a massive, mysterious alien bubble — started out like gangbusters and got progressively weirder and dumber as it veered further away from King’s epic. But the first season is pretty strong and you may find yourself sucked in anyway.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK, CBS All Access

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James Franco and Sarah Gadon in 11.22.63 (2016)

11.22.63 (2016) 

King’s other big book from about a decade ago was a gripping time travel tale about a man who goes back to 1963 to stop JFK from getting shot. Well-acted by stars James Franco and Sarah Gadon, and full of both heart and supernatural mystery, 11.22.63 is well worth your time (haha) if you missed it the first time around.

Available on Hulu, Amazon and Amazon UK

Carla Gugino in Gerald's Game (2017)

Gerald’s Game (2017)

King’s “unfilmable” novel — about a woman left chained to a bed in a remote house after her husband dies of a heart attack during sex play — was indeed filmed (for Netflix) by horror auteur Mike Flanagan, who combines King’s strange novel and a bravura performance by Carla Gugino in a tense, claustrophobic thriller with a comionate theme of feminine resilience.

Available on Netflix

Thomas Jane in 1922 (2017)

1922 (2017)

Thomas Jane (The Expanse) gives one of the finest performances of his career as Wilfred James, a Nebraska landowner whose depraved plot to kill his wife (Molly Parker) — by getting his son involved — leads to a spiral of psychological and possibly supernatural destruction. A slow-burning, effective thriller that once again proves King’s novellas are often the perfect length for filming.

Available on Netflix

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Bill Skarsgard in It: Chapter One (2017)

It: Chapter One (2017) / It: Chapter Two (2019)

While the TV movie was okay for its time, the theatrical version of King’s book has a knockout first half and Bill Skarsgard outdoes even Tim Curry with a frightening, intense performance as Pennywise the Dancing Clown.

Chapter One available on Amazon and Amazon UK, Netflix (UK only), Chapter Two available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Brendan Gleeson and Harry Treadaway in Mr. Mercedes (2017)

Mr. Mercedes (2017–present)

Brendan Gleeson plays retired cop turned private eye Bill Hodges in this series based on King’s Hodges trilogy of supernaturally-tinged crime novels. Gleeson is one of his generation’s finest actors, and the show features a different take on the character of Holly Gibney, who later shows up on The Outsider.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Lizzy Caplan in Castle Rock (2019)

Castle Rock (2018–present)

One of the more unusual King-derived series, Castle Rock wove characters and locations from the King Universe into an original story in its first season, while turning its second year into a prequel to Misery. Think of it as “King remixed,” enjoy the a young Annie Wilkes.

Available on Hulu, Amazon and Amazon UK

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Patrick Wilson in In The Tall Grass (2019)
In The Tall Grass – Patrick Wilson, Harrison Gilbertson, Laysla De Oliveira, Avery Whitted – Photo Credit: Netflix

In The Tall Grass (2019)

Vincenzo Natali has been a interesting writer/director on movies like Cube and Splice, but he his son Joe Hill.

Available on Netflix

Ewan McGregor in Doctor Sleep (2019).

Doctor Sleep (2019)

A sequel to The Shining? It seemed improbable even when King wrote his 2013 novel. But then Mike Flanagan made a movie that best and most overlooked movies.

Available on Amazon and Amazon UK

Ben Mendelsohn in The Outsider (2020)

The Outsider (2020)

One of King’s most recent novels got a speedy adaptation on HBO, bolstered by a great cast and a powerful sense of atmosphere and dread. It struggles to stretch the novel through its 10 episodes, but never loses its consistent tone and haunted esthetic.

Available on HBO Now, Amazon and Amazon UK, Sky (UK only), Now TV (UK Only)

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