Thus, the iconic horror character was born and Hellraiser had its villain to compete with Freddy, Michael Myers, and other 1980's horror antagonists. Found and taken to a hospital, Kirsty wakes up and, at first believing everything that has happened to be a dream, realizes she is wrong when a doctor hands her the box. Even though Barker didn't name him, the crew started calling him "Pinhead", and the name stuck. For the movie, when it came to designing the cenobites one in particular stood out as the natural leader to the makeup artists and film crew naturally, the one with all the pins sticking out of his head. In The Hellbound Heart, the cenobites appear as a group, with the one who became known as Pinhead only briefly mentioned. Nevertheless, the biggest difference in Hellraiser between Clive Barker's books and his movie is none other than Pinhead himself. Now Want to Read Rate it: The Vessel by Adam Nevill 3.92 avg. Other notable changes from the book to the movie include the Engineer, who appears only in the film, Julia using a hammer in the movie instead of a knife, and the winged bone demon in Hellraiser is certainly not in the book. Clive Barker's iconic masterpiece The Hellbound Heart, the novella adapted into the film Hellraiser, unleashed a new mythology of horror, brilliantly conceived and born of the darkest imagination. This changes how her character reacts to things in the movie, as a concerned daughter looking after her father rather than as a friend. Another difference is that Kirsty's character in the book is a friend of Larry's, rather than being his daughter from another marriage.
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