
EXCLUSIVE: TNT has put in development Frankenstein, a drama series from Lionsgate Television and 1019 Entertainment based on the five Frankenstein novels by Dean Koontz, which have sold more than 20 million copies.
Feature writer James V. Hart (Dracula, Hook) and his son Jake Hart will write the project, a modern-day reworking of the classic Frankenstein mythology. It is set in present-day New Orleans and follows Victor Helios (Frankenstein) and his creation 200 years after they thought they
killed each other in a battle in the Arctic. The creature has survived and Victor has used science to keep himself alive — and they’re now in the same city unbeknownst to each other. Victor has engineered a new race of bizarre beings who answer to him, and when the creature learns that Victor is alive, an epic war ensues built on 200 years of pent-up rage, with New Orleans caught in the middle. James Hart will executive produce alongside Koontz, whose books have sold more that 450 million copies worldwide, and 1019 Entertainment principals Terry Botwick and Ralph Winter. 1019 Entertainment acquired rights to Koontz’s Frankenstein book series in 2010 for what was originally envisioned as a feature franchise series.
Koontz’s Frankenstein actually originated on TV with the 2004 original movie/backdoor pilot Frankenstein on USA based on his concept, which was executive produced by Martin Scorsese, directed by Marcus Nispel and starred Parker Posey, Vincent Perez and Thomas Kretschmann. It didn’t go to series, and a year later, Koontz launched his book series with Prodigal Son.
This marks the series debut of James V. Hart, who has adapted the works of several big-name authors to the big screen, Bram Stoker (Dracula), Robert Louis Stevenson (Muppet Treasure Island) and Carl Sagan (Contact). This is not the first time he has tackled Frankenstein. Hart has a story credit on the 1994 feature Frankenstein, based on Mary Shelley’s novel, which he also produced. Meanwhile, James Hart credits his son Jake for coming up with the idea for the Peter Pan sequel Hook.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


The 2004 take on Koontz’s Frankenstein (starring Parker Posey and Vincent Perez) was pretty good but never got the ratings to go to series.
Maybe this time around an actual series will happen – but I’m not holding my breath – but it will have to be pretty special to better that first attempt.
AMAZING! These are my favorite in a long line of Koontz books. So intelligent and interesting. I really hope they don’t screw it up…but if Koontz is involved, I think he will manage it. I am really looking forward to this as a longtime fan!
Great to see an older writer like Hart back on top, and I have to say that this is one of the few “re-imagined” concepts that sounds really cool.
way to go TNT, this series is awesome!
It must be said. Write what you know.
They tried this already, in 2004, USA did, I think. But only ended up with some weird and unsatisfying, pilot/tv movie hybrid. The books are great fun when focused on the original creation, Frankenstein’s new creations, and the end game battle to come. But whenever time is given to the NOPD characters… pretty, pretty, not good. While the books have an inspired approach to the original monster, his evolution, discovering his purpose, etc, all the cop stuff is about as interesting as a TJ Hooker rerun.
Koontz is one great marketer…
justin bieber ..i know where you got your inspiration on style!
is the photo a guess at what the Frankenstein monster will look like?
Half the first book is kind of okay and the last of book three are worthwhile, but the rest is Koontz in contractual obligation mode. Hopefully, a team this seasoned recognizes that and moves as far away from the source material as possible.
Please cast Koontz as the monster… there is clearly a zombie brain underneath that mop-top.
I still haven’t read the last book because the one before it was pretty bad. It was like he was writing the prologue and accidently wrote too much. I had liked the first trilogy, but I wouldn’t call it the greatest of series.
Sounds like a plan looking forward to it
All the books were fantastic – they had everything, humor, scifi stuff, romance, horror – captivating, each one.
When? Any word?
Just caught the 2004 pilot by accident. This was a set that was intended for the screen, either one. with the way they shoot for tv now the best way to present it would be one book per season. or cut corners with a bookper half season. i really enjoyed the series of books. even with the incredible gap between installments 2&3
This will only be good if they stick to the books! and of course the right people to play the parts. I know I will be watching when it comes out. Can’t wait!