A teleplay of this story was written by Bradbury for possible use on the television program
The Twilight Zone, but
Rod Serling and the producers of the show deemed it too expensive to film. This led to the end of Ray Bradbury's brief association with the show, which resulted in just one of his stories ("
I Sing the Body Electric") being used. It was later produced as a radio episode of the series
Bradbury 13 (June 18, 1984) and the television program
Ray Bradbury Theater (November 30, 1990). A Soviet animated adaptation of the story (in Russian:
Здесь могут водиться тигры,
Zdes mogut voditsya tigry,
ru) was produced in 1989, with the plot change that one of the men wishes to harvest the resources and leave, to the point where he sets an anti-matter bomb to blow the planet up. The planet promptly summons an eponymous tiger to kill him, whilst the captain takes the bomb on board their spaceship and takes off, although not until after one of the men sneaks off to live on the planet. The navigator tells the captain of this, saying it is not too late to turn back and get him, but the captain reveals the bomb, stating that it is too late, and to plot a course as far away as possible. The story ends with the planet giving the remaining astronaut a new pet dog, as well as the promise of a female companion. The movie was directed by
Vladimir Samsonov (
ru). ==Similar stories in popular culture==