Laurie Strode returns in "Halloween" (October 19, 2018)

Discussion in 'Visual Arts' started by AKA, Sep 15, 2017.

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  1. eric777

    eric777 Astral Projectionist

    My wife and I made the commitment to see the film in the theater. I have not been to a movie theater since The Dark Knight Rises. I have little expectations for it. Hopefully I will be surprised.

    I must admit that I would rather see a redo with Jamie Lloyd back in the film so long as it has Danielle Harris playing the character again. I hate that they have ignored that story. I loved parts 4 and 5. I would love to see a continuation of that story.
     
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  2. jason88cubs

    jason88cubs Forum Resident

    Location:
    Us

    part 4 is completely underrated and ANYONE who hates on it has either, never seen it, or just went in hating it without giving it a chance
     
  3. GLUDFSSR

    GLUDFSSR Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles, CA
    Scene stealer in the new movie is the boy being babysited.
    He has the best lines in the whole movie.
     
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  4. yesstiles

    yesstiles Senior Member

    Who's going to see the original "Halloween" (1978) in the theaters this week? :cool:
     
  5. Jason Manley

    Jason Manley Senior Member

    Location:
    O-H-I-O
    I'm planning this week to see the 40th Anniversary screening of Halloween at the Gateway Film Center here in Columbus (maybe twice).

    In honor of that, I was looking back through some old YouTube clips and I found a clip Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert discussion HALLOWEEN on their PBS program Sneak Previews in 1980 .



    Also, here's Roger's review from the Sun Times.

    Halloween | Roger Ebert | Chicago Sun Times
     
  6. MikaelaArsenault

    MikaelaArsenault Forum Resident

    Location:
    New Hampshire
    My mom really wants to see this now because the both of us just saw another commercial for the movie yesterday.
     
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  7. MikaelaArsenault

    MikaelaArsenault Forum Resident

    Location:
    New Hampshire
    My mom really wants me to go see this with her, so I said yes.

    My first time ever seeing a horror movie.
     
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  8. Michael

    Michael I LOVE WIDE S-T-E-R-E-O!

    I'll add this to the Halloween Collection when it comes to Home Video...
     
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  9. Michael

    Michael I LOVE WIDE S-T-E-R-E-O!

    that's cool...
     
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  10. Michael

    Michael I LOVE WIDE S-T-E-R-E-O!

    Damn! what a blast from the past!
     
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  11. Michael

    Michael I LOVE WIDE S-T-E-R-E-O!

    I'll watch it at home my favorite place to watch my movies...
     
  12. MikaelaArsenault

    MikaelaArsenault Forum Resident

    Location:
    New Hampshire
    She wanted to invite her co-worker friend, but she'll just go with her son (who is the same age as me) instead.
     
  13. reddyempower

    reddyempower Forum Resident

    Location:
    columbus, oh, usa
    Watched the original at Gateway in Columbus last night, just a stone cold classic. Preview for the new one was shown.

    It occurred to me that I've seen a sequel to a movie created after the original was remade.
     
  14. Graham

    Graham Senior Member

    Location:
    Perth, Australia
    Or just didn’t like it.
     
  15. jason88cubs

    jason88cubs Forum Resident

    Location:
    Us
    Wtached Halloween 4 again

    Can someone please tell me how Michael got in the hous ethey were hiding in?
     
  16. mmars982

    mmars982 Forum Resident

    Location:
    Pittsburgh, PA
    Watched the original with my wife last night. She had never seen it. She kept asking me how Michael learned to drive. :)
     
  17. Sammy Waslow

    Sammy Waslow Just watching the show

    Location:
    Ireland
    "Maybe someone around here gave him lessons!"
     
  18. questrider

    questrider Forum Resident

    Location:
    Middle, Nowhere
    NSFW :shh: :laugh: :winkgrin:

     
  19. Johnny66

    Johnny66 Laird of Boleskine

    Location:
    Australia.
    4 is certainly a serviceable, if rather routine sequel. But 5? Seriously? That film is a total car crash! Horrendously bad! Favourite bit: the cops with their slapstick musical cue...o_O

    (And take a listen to the old DVD commentary track with director Dominique Othenin-Girard - he is utterly delusional!).
     
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  20. Johnny66

    Johnny66 Laird of Boleskine

    Location:
    Australia.
    Jason? Wrong franchise, Sir! :righton:

    (Admittedly they're all interchangeable at this point.)
     
  21. Chris DeVoe

    Chris DeVoe RIP Vickie Mapes Williams (aka Equipoise)

    Sorry, my mistake. I have a tendency to confuse my teen slaughter films.

    At least I didn't confuse him with Freddy.
     
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  22. frozen-beach

    frozen-beach Forum Resident

  23. eric777

    eric777 Astral Projectionist

    I loved part five. I loved how Jamie’s character progressed in it. I loved how insane Dr. Loomis was becoming. It showed how all the years of chasing the bogeyman was wearing on him. Part 6 was where things went horribly wrong in my opinion.
     
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  24. jason88cubs

    jason88cubs Forum Resident

    Location:
    Us
    watched part 6 last night. Awful
     
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  25. Encuentro

    Encuentro Forum Resident

    Variety ranks all 11 films from worst to best. What do you think? Agree? Disagree? I certainly agree with 1 and 2. I haven’t seen Resurrection the Rob Zombie films or Halloween (2018), and I don’t remember much about the entries after Halloween II. I saw H2O a couple of times, so I’m slightly more familiar with that one than I am the other post-Halloween II movies.

    ‘Halloween’ Movie Ranking: All 11 Films From Worst to Best

    Proving that you can’t kill pure evil, Michael Myers returns once again to pierce fresh victims with an assortment of cutlery in Universal’s “Halloween” reboot. Though this latest entry in the franchise ignores the events of the last nine films, enough references are included throughout it to make several of the sequels well worth revisiting. To help you plan a Myers movie marathon, here’s our ultimate Halloween ranking, from tedious trick to terrifying treat.

    11) Halloween: Resurrection (2002)
    At times resembling an amateur Halloween fan film that was accidentally released in theaters, the eighth entry in the slasher series finds a blasé Michael Myers stalking a group of fame-seeking college students who’ve agreed to spend a night in his childhood home as part of a ridiculous internet reality show. Clumsily interspersed with low-res video footage shot by the actors themselves, “Halloween: Resurrection” is a suspense-free disaster that wastes Jamie Lee Curtis in a disrespectful cameo, before introducing Busta Rhymes as a karate-kicking web producer. Director Rick Rosenthal — who also helmed one of the best sequels in the franchise — saps Myers of every last ounce of fear he once commanded by keeping him front and center on screen for far too long.

    10) Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (1989)
    It’s hard to decide what’s most depressing about this visually ugly addition to the Myers saga. Could it be the somnambulant pacing and uninspired kill scenes? Or possibly that it features the most annoying character in the entire series (a.k.a. Tina)? Or maybe it’s the baffling cartoon sound effects we hear whenever two bumbling cops arrive on screen? Whatever the case may be, “Halloween 5” manages to completely trash the modest charms of its preceding chapter thanks to director Dominique Otherin-Girard’s inability to generate a single decent scare. Worse yet, the movie ends on a groan-inducing cliffhanger that’s so awkwardly shot and edited, it feels like a prank played on the audience.

    9)* Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995)*
    The presence of future Ant-Man Paul Rudd playing twitchy Haddonfield weirdo Tommy Doyle helps lift this notoriously troubled production slightly higher than the previous two entries on the list. Still, that’s not saying much. Hamstrung by an indecisive studio and a wildly overcomplicated backstory to contend with, screenwriter Daniel Farrands does a solid job of patching the series’ muddled mythology together while adding several cool new wrinkles of his own. Unfortunately, endless reshoots and disastrous re-edits rendered the finished film a confusing disappointment. An alternate Producers Cut was released on video in 2014, but it didn’t help clear up much.

    8) Rob Zombie’s Halloween (2007)
    The most divisive installment in the franchise, Rob Zombie’s “Halloween” works best when it focuses on material not previously found in John Carpenter’s original film. In particular, the early scenes depicting 10-year old Michael torturing pets, murdering a school bully, and receiving psychiatric treatment at an asylum for the criminally insane are authentically disturbing. Things become less interesting, however, once the familiar babysitter storyline kicks in. Though Zombie’s meat-grinder aesthetic is the polar opposite of the less-is-more approach that made Carpenter’s original so terrifying, this controversial remake isn’t the mess that some expected.

    7) Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988)
    Despite featuring the cheesiest Myers mask in the series, this fourth entry delivers the goods thanks to its no-frills plot and reliable direction from Dwight H. Little. The result is a better-than-expected ‘80s slasher pic with enough autumnal atmosphere to make you forget that it was shot in Utah during the springtime. Best known for introducing 11-year old scream queen Danielle Harris to horror fans around the world, “Halloween 4” ends on an intriguingly macabre final image that, sadly, wasn’t sufficiently developed in the miserable follow-up.

    6) Rob Zombie’s Halloween II (2009)
    Freed from the burden of having to rehash Carpenter’s original story, Rob Zombie transforms his blood-drenched sequel into an audacious three-ring freak show filled with pulverizing violence, bizarre surrealism, and pitch-black humor; all of it captured on gritty 16mm film stock by inventive cinematographer Brandon Trost. By far the goriest entry in the series, Zombie’s “Halloween II” depicts Michael Myers as a humanoid wrecking ball who doesn’t so much stab his victims as he does punch knives straight through their fragile bodies. For the complete stomach-churning experience, watch the superior unrated director’s cut and prepare to be rattled.

    5) Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later (1998)
    Two decades after the release of Carpenter’s 1978 classic, Jamie Lee Curtis reprised her iconic role as Laurie Strode in this rousing anniversary chapter. Wisely ignoring the events of parts 4, 5 and 6, “Halloween H20” finds Laurie working as the headmistress at a private boarding school whose students include Michelle Williams and Josh Hartnett. Naturally, big brother Michael decides to pay a visit on his favorite holiday. Slickly helmed by two-time “Friday the 13th” director Steve Miner, the film benefits immeasurably from Curtis’s strength and charisma, and from composer John Ottman’s epic orchestration of Carpenter’s immortal theme music. Few films, regardless of genre, end on a more satisfying note.

    4) Halloween (2018)
    A deft mixture of horror and humor, David Gordon Green’s sensational franchise reboot is a loving homage to the original and a perfectly crafted slasher movie in its own right. Obsessive Michael Myers fans will find a wealth of clever call backs and in-jokes to enjoy, while moviegoers who’ve never seen a Halloween film before will discover just how cool Jamie Lee Curtis can be when pitted against a masked maniac. Dialing Laurie’s seasonal paranoia up a few dozen notches from where it was in the unrelated “H20,” Curtis elicits well-earned cheers from the audience when she makes her final stand against the relentless boogeyman.

    3) Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)
    The lovable black sheep of the series, “Halloween III” offers a welcome respite from Michael Myers mayhem, opting to tell a wonderfully old-fashioned sci-fi horror tale about a diabolical toymaker and his boobytrapped masks instead. Beautifully shot by master DP Dean Cundey, and impressively scored by Carpenter and Alan Howarth, this nostalgic chiller has gained cult status over the years, thanks in large part to its charming lead performance by stalwart character actor Tom Atkins. Sporting a luxurious ‘70s pornstache and a gigolo swagger, Atkins shines in the role of an ER doctor who’s groovy enough to battle an Irish warlock in California.

    2) Halloween II (1981)
    Delivering on the promise of its tagline – “More of the night HE came home” – Rick Rosenthal’s superlative sequel picks up directly after the original and continues the bloodshed unabated. The film features much of the same cast and crew, including Carpenter and co-writer/producer Debra Hill pulling script duty, and occasionally looks and feels like it was shot simultaneously with its predecessor. Only the creepy hospital setting is new. Memorable murder methods include a scalpel to the spine, exsanguination through IV tube, and boiling to death in a scalding hydrotherapy tub. The fiery face-off between Dr. Loomis and his unstoppable patient remains a series high point.

    1) Halloween (1978)
    Carpenter, Curtis, and trailblazing producer Debra Hill garnered much of the acclaim for the phenomenal success of this independent film that birthed a subgenre. But for classic movie fans, the importance of legendary English actor Donald Pleasance can never be overstated. Gifted with one of cinema’s greatest voices, it’s difficult to imagine anyone else delivering Dr. Loomis’s ominous warnings about “pure evil” without sounding completely absurd. Yet the stage-trained Pleasance makes you believe every single word. Appearing in a total of five Halloween films, each one sillier than the last, Pleasance never gave anything less than 100% on screen. Which helps explain why, for many fans, he remains the series’ stealth MVP.
     
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