A version of the story by author
Alvin Schwartz appears in the 1981 collection of
short horror stories for
children Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. In
film, the Hook legend has occasionally appeared: in the 1947 film ''
Dick Tracy's Dilemma, fictional detective Dick Tracy pursues a murderous killer with a hook for a hand. The killer-with-a-hook theme has also appeared in comedies; in Meatballs'' (1979),
Bill Murray's character tells the Hook legend to campers around a campfire. In
Shrek the Halls (2007), Gingy tells an alternate version of this legend to his girlfriend Suzy in his flashback. The story has, however, most often been depicted and referenced in
horror films. Its prevalence, according to film scholar
Mark Kermode, is most reflected in the
slasher film, functioning as a morality
archetype on youth sexuality. ''
He Knows You're Alone (1980) opens with a film within a film scene in which a young couple are attacked by a killer while in a parked car. The slasher film Final Exam opens with a scene in which a couple are attacked in a parked car, and later, a student is murdered in a university locker room with a hook. Campfire Tales (1997), an anthology horror film, opens with a segment retelling the Hook legend, set in the 1950s. I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) features a killer stalking teenagers with a hook; at the beginning of the film, the central characters recount the Hook legend around a campfire. The Candyman
films of the 1990s, as well as its 2021 Nia DaCosta update, are centered on this legend as well. Lovers Lane'' (1999) is a slasher film featuring a killer who murders teenagers at a lovers' lane with a hook. The story has also appeared in various
television programs; "
The Pest House" (1998), the fourteenth episode of season 2 of the TV series
Millennium, opens with a murder similar to that of the urban legend. Season 1, episode 7 of the TV show
Supernatural features a hookman as the villain. It is the first story in the first episode of
Mostly True Stories?: Urban Legends Revealed. The Canadian animated anthology series
Freaky Stories (1997) has a segment in its first season based on the Hook, set in 1963. The story is referenced in "The Slumber Party" episode of
Designing Women. The Hookman is used as a plot device in season 3, episode 5 of
Community: "
Horror Fiction in Seven Spooky Steps". A
parody of the Hookman is used in
SpongeBob SquarePants, season 2, episode 16: "
Graveyard Shift", in which Squidward, in an attempt to scare SpongeBob out of his wits while they are working at night, tells a made-up horror story of the "Hash-Slinging Slasher" – a dark, faceless figure donning a raincoat who has a rusty, old spatula in place of a hand. The story received a resurgence in popularity on the internet following a retelling of it on
4chan that became an
internet meme, due to it being written in
broken English with several humorous errors, most notably its abrupt ending where the entire
twist is rendered simply as the phrase "Man door hand hook car door", which has since become how this version of the story is referenced. == See also ==