Rob Reiner's 'Stand by Me' returns to Toronto theatres. Here's why it still inspires 40 years later

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By News Room 8 Min Read

Stephen King’s 1982 novella “The Body” is a shivery, elusive account of four preteen boys who set out into the woods beyond their hometown in search of a fifth: a missing classmate, whose corpse, rumoured to already have been discovered by a group of hooligans, becomes a strange sort of holy grail. The body of poor, disappeared Ray Brower — last seen picking blueberries in his Keds in the vicinity of Castle Rock — provides King’s story with both its title and a morbid, evocative emblem of childhood’s end; while not explicitly a campfire tale, “The Body” is frightening stuff.

By the early 1980s, Stephen King movie and TV adaptations had become a cottage industry, the purview of brand-name genre specialists like John Carpenter, David Cronenberg and Tobe Hooper. (Not to mention Stanley Kubrick, whose version of “The Shining” appalled the author due to the liberties it took with his text.)

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