
The Relic
1997 • Horror, Mystery, Thriller • R
A homicide detective teams up with an evolutionary biologist to hunt a giant creature that is killing people in a Chicago museum.
Runtime: 1h 50m
Why you should read the novel
Before you watch The Relic (1997), discover the relentless suspense and rich science of Relic by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. The novel delivers layered characters, meticulous research, and white-knuckle pacing that the movie can only hint at.
Set inside the American Museum of Natural History, the book fuses anthropology, evolutionary biology, and forensic investigation into a chilling mystery. Its atmospheric corridors, political infighting, and mounting dread create a deeper, smarter experience than a simple monster-on-the-loose thriller.
Relic also launches the celebrated Pendergast novels, rewarding readers with a broader saga and intricate world-building. If you want maximum tension, richer mythology, and unforgettable characters, read the book instead of watching the movie.
Adaptation differences
Setting and atmosphere shift dramatically. The novel unfolds in New York’s American Museum of Natural History, steeped in institutional politics and academic rivalries, while the film relocates events to Chicago’s Field Museum and emphasizes action-forward horror.
Key characters are streamlined. The book’s iconic FBI agent Aloysius Pendergast is entirely omitted in the movie, and journalist William Smithback is largely minimized. Detective Vincent D’Agosta’s role is reshaped for Chicago PD, while Dr. Margo Green carries more of the narrative weight on screen.
Creature mythology is reframed. The novel centers on the Mbwun—rooted in Kothoga lore and explored through careful scientific theorizing—whereas the film often labels the monster “Kothoga” and simplifies the biology, making the transformation and origin more direct and explicit.
Plot structure and climax differ. The book builds a slow-burn investigation through archives, sub-basements, and museum politics before a labyrinthine showdown, while the movie compresses timelines and culminates in a fiery, effects-driven lab finale designed for cinematic impact.
The Relic inspired from
Relic
by Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child










