20 Years Ago, TNT Released Stephen King’s Twisted Take on Toy Story

There have been many successful Stephen King TV adaptations, but only one – a 2006 TNT anthology series – managed the strange feat of essentially recreating his take on Toy Story. Many of King’s books are considered difficult to adapt into movies or TV shows, often due to graphic content, surreal themes, or a combination of both. However, despite these challenges, quite a few have become excellent adaptations.

Stephen King’s 1986 novel It is well-known for its shocking content, and both the original two-part movie and the recent HBO Max prequel, IT: Welcome to Derry, successfully brought the story to the screen. Adapting King’s shorter works can be even harder, but the 2006 TNT anthology series Nightmares & Dreamscapes did a great job with “Battleground,” a story that came before Toy Story, turning it into a captivating hour-long episode that matched the dark humor of the original.

2006’s TNT Anthology Nightmares & Dreamscapes Adapted Stephen King’s “Battleground”

Originally appearing in Cavalier magazine, “Battleground” was later included in Stephen King’s first collection of short stories, Night Shift. That collection also featured now-famous stories like “Jerusalem’s Lot,” “Strawberry Spring,” and “Children of the Corn,” but “Battleground” stood out as one of the most unusual. The story centers on a hitman who, after killing a toymaker, finds a strange package waiting for him at home – sent by the victim’s mother.

This unusual package holds more than just toy soldiers – they’re alive and equipped with working, miniature weapons and tanks! Soon, an assassin under attack finds himself cornered in his bathroom, desperately trying to trick these tiny, deadly foes. This darkly funny and bizarre horror story features a twist ending that will surprise even Stephen King experts. In 2006, Brian Henson, the director of The Muppet Christmas Carol, brought this unsettling tale to life as part of TNT’s Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King anthology.

Nightmares & Dreamscapes Featured Some of King’s Most Underrated TV Adaptations

The first episode of Nightmares & Dreamscapes, titled “Battleground,” featured a script by Richard Christian Matheson and starred veteran actor William Hurt. It told a standalone story that cleverly reworked the familiar plot of Toy Story into a suspenseful horror scenario. The episode shared the playful visual style of Jim Henson’s Muppet films, but also managed to be genuinely frightening. However, “Battleground” was just one of several compelling episodes in the Nightmares and Dreamscapes series.

Episodes 5, “The Road Virus Heads North,” and 7, “Autopsy Room Four,” are standout adaptations of Stephen King’s stories and definitely worth watching. The villain in episode 5 is as frightening as Pennywise the clown from It, and episode 7 boasts one of King’s strangest and most surprising endings. But if you’re curious to see King’s spin on a story like Toy Story, the first episode of Nightmares and Dreamscapes is the one you shouldn’t miss.

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2026-04-13 21:15