The resort that impressed Stephen King’s “The Shining” will host a Blumhouse-curated exhibit centered across the ebook and its 1980 movie adaptation.
The Stanley Hotel in Colorado, the place King stayed for an evening and drew inspiration for his story of terror, shall be dwelling to a ten,000 sq. foot exhibit house known as the Stanley Movie Heart, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and the Colorado Workplace of Movie, Tv and Media introduced Friday. “Blumhouse will create a true horror destination in an iconic Colorado setting,” in accordance to a press release put out by Polis and COFTM.
“Here’s Blumhouse! This iconic Colorado hotel will now have a new element of fun and fright for Coloradans and visitors across the world to enjoy, driving tourism and strengthening our economy. I look forward to seeing the exhibit and am happy that our administration can help make this possible,” Polis stated.
“The Stanley Hotel is hallowed ground for horror fans and that makes this presence at the Stanley Film Center a natural extension for Blumhouse,” Blumhouse CEO Jason Blum stated. “Fans are going to get closer than ever before to their favorite films, though they may want to keep their distance with a few of the ‘items’ in our collection. We’re excited to get to work, but first we need to make it out of the hedge maze.”
Not a lot else is understood, together with a completion and opening date for the exhibit. Blumhouse, the manufacturing firm behind “Get Out” and “M3GAN,” will curate further reveals from their catalog and different options, together with from the tv and gaming world.
“Bringing Blumhouse to the Stanley is exciting and terrifying at the same time,” Grand Heritage Hotel Group president John Cullen stated. “We searched the world for the right partner to bring the Stanley Film Center exhibit space to life as a horror destination, and there’s no one better than Blumhouse. With the support of the state of Colorado, and the boundless creativity and worldwide track record of success of Blumhouse, we hope to create something truly special that honors and celebrates the past, present and future of horror.”