The series’ journey to the little screen has been an intense one. In the wake of being shopped to a few systems and spilling administrations, and in any event, having a whole pilot scene shot featuring Miranda Otto and Jesse McCartney, thusly shut down, the arrangement has at long last landed on Netflix (coordinated by Mark Romanek). And considering the administration's shining reputation including loathsomeness properties adjusted from writing like "The Haunting of Hill House," "Gerald's Game," and "Hemlock Grove," it would seem that "Locke and Key" may have discovered a spot where it can at long last thrive.
In the years since the first pilot was shot, the innovative rules to "Locke and Key" have changed hands on various occasions. Huge names, for example, Scott Derrickson ("Doctor Strange"), Mark Romanek ("Never Let Me Go"), and the latest "Star Trek" film scholars and makers, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci, being joined to create a film set of three dependent on the books. In any case, the one steady factor all through the long and exhausting creation process has consistently been essayist Joe Hill. This is uncommon, seeing the same number of scholars of properties that are being adjusted for the big screen frequently take a secondary lounge to officials and showrunners.
Be that as it may, Hill has been there through every last bit of it, ensuring his characters have the equivalent unmistakable characteristics and voices that made them so famous, in the first place. Slope has composed various books, short stories, and funnies, and his 2010 novel, "Horns," was adjusted into a film of a similar name featuring Daniel Radcliffe that he additionally delivered.
The arrangement stars Darby Stanchfield ("Scandal") as Nina Locke, Jackson Robert Scott ("It" and "It: Chapter 2") as Bode Locke, Connor Jessup ("American Crime") as Tyler Locke, Emilia Jones ("Horrible Histories") as Kinsey Locke, Bill Heck ("The Ballad of Buster Scruggs") as Rendell Locke, Laysla De Oliveira as Dodge, Thomas Mitchell Barnet as Sam Lesser, and Griffin Gluck ("American Vandal") as Gabe. Andy and Barbara Muchetti ("It" and "It: Chapter 2") will likewise fill in as official makers.
We finally have our first look at Netflix‘s highly anticipated new horror-thriller series, “Locke & Key.” Based on the popular comic series written by Joe Hill, the show is centered around the Locke family who, after their father’s mysterious death, move to their family’s ancestral home, Keyhouse, in Massachusetts. Soon after, the Locke’s begin to find strange keys that lead them to suspect there may be more to their father’s death than they initially suspected.
Here’s the official synopsis:After their father is murdered under mysterious circumstances, the three Locke siblings and their mother move into their ancestral home, Keyhouse, which they discover is full of magical keys that may be connected to their father’s death. As the Locke children explore the different keys and their unique powers, a mysterious demon awakens — and will stop at nothing to steal them. From Carlton Cuse (“Lost,” “Bates Motel”) and Meredith Averill (“The Haunting of Hill House”), the series is a coming-of-age mystery about love, loss, and the unshakable bonds that define family.“Locke and Key” will premiere on Netflix on February 7, 2020. Check out the first teaser trailer below.