Radio and stage Orson Welles adapted and starred in
Heart of Darkness in a
CBS Radio broadcast on 6 November 1938 as part of his series,
The Mercury Theatre on the Air. In 1939, Welles adapted the story for his first film for
RKO Pictures, and it was to be entirely filmed as a POV from Marlow's eyes. Welles even filmed a short presentation film illustrating his intent. It is reportedly lost. The film's prologue to be read by Welles said "You aren't going to see this picture - this picture is going to happen to you." In 1991, Australian author/playwright
Larry Buttrose wrote and staged a theatrical adaptation titled
Kurtz with the Crossroads Theatre Company,
Sydney. The play was announced to be broadcast as a radio play to Australian radio audiences in August 2011 by the
Vision Australia Radio Network, and also by the RPH –
Radio Print Handicapped Network across Australia. In 2011, composer
Tarik O'Regan and librettist
Tom Phillips adapted an
opera of the same name, which premiered at the
Linbury Theatre of the
Royal Opera House in London. A suite for orchestra and narrator was subsequently extrapolated from it. In 2015, an adaptation of Welles' screenplay by
Jamie Lloyd and
Laurence Bowen aired on
BBC Radio 4. The production starred
James McAvoy as Marlow. Another BBC Radio 4 adaptation, first broadcast in 2021, transposes the action to the 21st century.
Film and television (photo from 1957) played Kurtz in 1958 In 1958, the
CBS television anthology
Playhouse 90 (
S3E7) aired a loose 90-minute television play adaptation. This version, written by
Stewart Stern, uses the encounter between Marlow (
Roddy McDowall) and Kurtz (
Boris Karloff) as its final act, and adds a backstory in which Marlow had been Kurtz's adopted son. The cast includes
Inga Swenson and
Eartha Kitt. Perhaps the best known adaptation is
Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 film
Apocalypse Now, based on the screenplay by
John Milius, which moves the story from the Congo to
Vietnam and
Cambodia during the
Vietnam War. In
Apocalypse Now,
Martin Sheen stars as Captain Benjamin L. Willard, a
US Army Captain assigned to "terminate the command" of Colonel Walter E. Kurtz, played by
Marlon Brando. A film documenting the production, titled ''
Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse'', was released in 1991. It chronicles a series of difficulties and challenges that director Coppola encountered during the making of the film, several of which mirror some of the novella's themes.
A 1993 television film adaptation was written by
Benedict Fitzgerald and directed by
Nicolas Roeg. The film, which was aired by
TNT, starred
Tim Roth as Marlow,
John Malkovich as Kurtz,
Isaach de Bankolé as Mfumu, and
James Fox as Gosse.
James Gray's 2019 science fiction film
Ad Astra is loosely inspired by the events of the novel. It features
Brad Pitt as an astronaut travelling to the edge of the
Solar System to confront and potentially kill his father (
Tommy Lee Jones), who has gone rogue. In 2020,
African Apocalypse, a documentary film directed and produced by Rob Lemkin and featuring Femi Nylander portrays a journey from
Oxford, England to
Niger on the trail of a colonial killer called Captain
Paul Voulet. Voulet's descent into barbarity mirrors that of Kurtz in Conrad's
Heart of Darkness. Nylander discovers Voulet's massacres happened at exactly the same time that Conrad wrote his book in 1899. It was broadcast by the
BBC in May 2021 as an episode of the
Arena documentary series. A British animated film adaption of the novella is planned, directed by Gerald Conn. It was written by Mark Jenkins and Mary Kate O Flanagan and is produced by Gritty Realism and
Michael Sheen. Kurtz is voiced by Sheen and Harlequin by
Andrew Scott. The animation uses sand to better convey atmosphere of the book. A Brazilian animated film (2023) also adapts the novella. It is directed by Rogério Nunes and Alois Di Leo and moves the story to a near future
Rio de Janeiro.
Video games The video game
Far Cry 2, released on 21 October 2008, is a loose modernised adaptation of
Heart of Darkness. The player assumes the role of a mercenary operating in Africa whose task it is to kill an arms dealer, the elusive "Jackal". The last area of the game is called "The Heart of Darkness".
Spec Ops: The Line, released on 26 June 2012, is a direct modernised adaptation of
Heart of Darkness. The player assumes the role of
Delta Force operator
Captain Martin Walker as he and his team search
Dubai for survivors in the aftermath of catastrophic sandstorms that left the city without contact to the outside world. The character John Konrad, who replaces the character Kurtz, is a reference to Joseph Conrad. The
grand strategy video game
Victoria II (released 2010) has an expansion pack named after the novella, which improved the
colonization system present in the game.
Literature T. S. Eliot's 1925 poem "
The Hollow Men" quotes, as its first epigraph, a line from
Heart of Darkness: "Mistah Kurtz – he dead." Eliot had planned to use a quotation from the climax of the tale as the epigraph for
The Waste Land, but
Ezra Pound advised against it. Eliot said of the quote that "it is much the most appropriate I can find, and somewhat elucidative." Biographer
Peter Ackroyd suggested that the passage inspired or at least anticipated the central theme of the poem.
Chinua Achebe's 1958 novel
Things Fall Apart is Achebe's response to what he saw as Conrad's portrayal of Africa and Africans as symbols: "the antithesis of Europe and therefore civilization". Achebe set out to write a novel about Africa and Africans by an African. In
Things Fall Apart we see the effects of colonialism and Christian missionary endeavours on an Igbo community in West Africa through the eyes of that community's West African protagonists. Another literary work with an acknowledged debt to
Heart of Darkness is
Wilson Harris' 1960
postcolonial novel Palace of the Peacock.
J. G. Ballard's 1962
climate fiction novel
The Drowned World includes many similarities to Conrad's novella. However, Ballard said he had read nothing by Conrad before writing the novel, prompting literary critic Robert S. Lehman to remark that "the novel's allusion to Conrad works nicely, even if it is not really an allusion to Conrad".
Robert Silverberg's 1970 novel
Downward to the Earth uses themes and characters based on
Heart of Darkness set on the alien world of Belzagor. In
Josef Škvorecký's 1984 novel
The Engineer of Human Souls, Kurtz is seen as the epitome of exterminatory colonialism and, there and elsewhere, Škvorecký emphasises the importance of Conrad's concern with Russian imperialism in Eastern Europe.
Timothy Findley's 1993 novel
Headhunter is an extensive adaptation that reimagines Kurtz and Marlow as psychiatrists in Toronto. The novel begins: "On a winter's day, while a blizzard raged through the streets of Toronto, Lilah Kemp inadvertently set Kurtz free from page 92 of
Heart of Darkness."
Ann Patchett's 2011 novel
State of Wonder reimagines the story with the central figures as female scientists in contemporary Brazil.
Comics A comics adaptation,
Au coeur des ténèbres, written by and illustrated by , was published by
Soleil in 2014. and created another French comic adaptation, published as
Coeur de ténèbres by
Delcourt in 2020. A
graphic novel adapted by David Zane Mairowitz (script) and Catherine Anyango Grünewald (artwork) appeared in 2010 from
alternative comics publisher
SelfMadeHero. A separate adaptation by
Peter Kuper, appeared 2019 from
W. W. Norton & Company. The latter contained an introduction by
historian Maya Jasanoff.
Georges Bess' 2021
Bande dessinée Amen is a liberal adaptation of
Heart of Darkness in a
space opera setting. ==See also==