One of the first horror authors I actively began to collect in life was Clive Barker. As a younger teen I saw both Hellraiser and Nightbreed, and somewhere in my teens I happened across the first of his short stories series The Books of Blood, and as the price was right, I snapped it up.
The very first story (after the framing story), was "The Midnight Meat Train", a twenty-page journey into one of the most terrifying concepts I had every come across. It follows a man named Leon who happens to see something while riding on a train, something horrifying, methodical, and something that sees him back.
The story began my interest in collecting the works of Clive Barker, and over the years I've built up a pretty decent collection of his writing, so when I found they had made a film adaptation of "The Midnight Meat Train" I knew I'd have to check it out.
Due to the short nature of the story, the movie fleshes out the narrative, changing the main character from an everyman into a photographer, he's given a girlfriend, a job, and a goal - to see the reality of New York City.
The film works fairly well, but honestly, I think the story works if told quickly - an introduction to the horror that is about to be read by the reader. In the end it wasn't a keeper, but an interesting adaptation of one of the most startlingly horrifying stories I read in my youth.
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