‘People will compare our horror series to Stranger Things – ours is darker’

'I wanted it to have more of an edge.'

‘People will compare our horror series to Stranger Things – ours is darker’
The Institute director wanted their show to have more ‘edge’ than Stranger Things (Picture: Rex/MGM+)

Stephen King isn’t one to mince his words, even when discussing adaptations of his own novels. There are whole lists of the movies made of his works which he has disavowed.

So when he agrees to take an executive producer credit – an option he has on every screen adaptation of his novels – and come on board to consult, you can see it as a vote of confidence.

That’s what he did for the MGM Plus adaptation of his novel The Institute, available via Amazon Prime Video. In the whole eight-part TV show, King only suggested one change and it was for a script stage direction.

Director Jack Bender and writer Ben Cavell told Metro that their main concern for the show wasn’t securing King’s seal of approval – it was casting, as they weren’t sure they could find someone good enough for the lead role. 

The Institute series is built around boy genius Luke (Joe Freeman, who has little acting experience but boasts the genes of his actor parents Martin Freeman and Amanda Abbington), who is kidnapped from his childhood home in the dead of night by a shady group of operatives. 

He’s taken to the top-secret titular Institute, where a bunch of young’uns with special talents – not just being good with maths, more like telekinesis and telepathy – are imprisoned for sinister geopolitical purposes.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Up Next

Previous Page Next Page The show stars Joe Freeman as boy genius Luke (Picture: MGM+)

In the nearby town of DuPray, Tim Jamieson (Ben Barnes) has bagged a job as a neighbourly nighttime security guard – or ‘nightknocker’, as King rendered it – and starts to twig that something is afoot at the heavily-patrolled building on the outskirts.

DuPray is the type of place that’s small enough that everyone knows everyone (and their business) but large enough that dodgy sorts can hide in plain sight. The vibe might remind you of another science fiction horror series: Stranger Things. 

This is by no accident. The Duffer brothers have cited King as a major influence on the style and themes of their Netflix show. However, the creators of The Institute never wanted to ape the eeriness of the Upside Down.

The Stranger Things comparisons will certainly be made (Picture: Netflix/Everett/Rex/Shutterstock)

Director Bender – who has stints on Lost, The Sopranos and Game of Thrones on his CV – said that he thought Stranger Things was a ‘crayon version’ of what they have made (not disparagingly, he hastened to add).

He explained: ‘I don’t mean to say anything derogatory about the show, I thought it was quite good, but it’s a very 80s look at that world and that collection of kids. 

‘I wanted this show to be more of… call it an ink drawing as opposed to a coloring book crayon. I just wanted it to have more of an edge.

‘There will certainly be critics who compare it to that, because it’s about young people, it’s a similar place, doesn’t matter that Stephen wrote it first, and they took it – more power, more homage. They love Stephen King.’

The Institute is comparatively ‘darker and grittier’, the show’s writer Ben Cavell said. ‘Not that ours is by any means unrelentingly dark, we have some levity,’ he added. 

The show’s director said he ‘did not want to make the X-Kids’ (Picture: MGM+) Ben Barnes plays the local town’s ‘nightknocker’ (Picture: MGM+)

As opposed to Stranger Things or X-Men – which may come to mind, since The Institute is a bit like a sinister version of Professor Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters – Bender and Cavell’s inspirations were iconic prisoner of war films.

‘I never wanted to make the X-Kids,’ said Cavell.

Films like The Great Escape were top of mind, because the trapped kids and their mission to free themselves was central, rather than having ‘a Liam Neeson or a Jason Statham ride in to save them’.

Bender compared it to his work on Lost, where ‘no one wanted to be on that island, but the point is the audience wanted to hang out’.

He added: ‘I’m not suggesting that people are going to want to hang out at the Institute and be put through psychological and physical torture, but I am saying that these kids invite you in.

‘We were with them, we cared about them, and they were the thing. Stephen King said to me early on, “The kids are the thing.”’

The Institute will premiere in the UK on MGM+ on July 13.

Got a story?

If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us [email protected], calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.