Halloween
From The Film Guide
| Halloween | ||
|---|---|---|
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| Directed by: | John Carpenter | |
| Produced by: | John Carpenter, Debra Hill | |
| Written by: | John Carpenter, Debra Hill | |
| Executive producer(s): | Moustapha Akkad, Irwin Yablans | |
| Starring: | Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Plaisance, Arthur Malet, Tony Moran | |
| Tagline: | The Night HE Came Home! | |
| Aspect ratio: | 2.35:1 | |
| Runtime: | 91 min (original release) / 101 min (extended version) | |
| Country: | United States | |
| Language: | English | |
| Colour: | Colour (Metrocolor) | |
| Sound mix: | Mono | |
| Ratings: | R (USA) R18+ (Australia) 18 (UK / Peru / Chile) 15 (Norway / Sweden) 16 (Netherlands / West Germany) 13 (Argentina) M/18 (Portugal) | |
| Production companies: | Compass International Pictures, Falcon Films | |
| Distributed by: | Compass International Pictures (original release, USA) Astral Films (Canada) Anchor Bay Entertainment (DVD) | |
| Released on: | October 25, 1978 | |
| Budget: | $325,000 (estimated) | |
| Box Office: | $47 million (USA) | |
| IMDb entry | ||
| Looking for more? Try the fan page! | ||
The Halloween films are a series of horror movies, of which the first is considered one of the most important and influential of the genre.
Contents |
[edit] The original blockbuster
The first film, Halloween, (originally titled The Babysitter Murders), was released in 1978. It was written by John Carpenter (who also directed) and Debra Hill, and was executive produced by Moustapha Akkad. It starred Jamie Lee Curtis and Donald Pleasence. Shot on a budget of $300,000, it became the highest grossing independent film ever, and held that title until Dirty Dancing was released in 1987. The name of the city where the film takes place, Haddonfield, Illinois, is taken from screenwriter Debra Hill's hometown, Haddonfield, New Jersey.
Halloween was produced on a budget of only $325,000 and grossed $47 million at the box office in the United States, becoming one of the most profitable independent films ever made.
Telling the story of an unstoppable psycho-killer wearing a white-painted William Shatner mask from the film The Devil's Rain, Halloween is generally considered the first of a long line of modern-day "slasher" movies descending from Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). The movie originated a great many of the clichés seen in countless low-budget slashers of the 1980s and 1990s, although first-time viewers of Halloween may be surprised by the fact that compared to its many imitators and competitors, the original film actually has very few explicitly violent scenes. Many slasher buffs, however, also note that the lesser-known 1974 horror film Black Christmas, directed by Bob Clark, actually features many of the same motifs that Halloween is credited with establishing. For example, the film is a holiday-themed slasher that has shots from the killer's perspective replete with muffled breathing noises, much like those in Halloween. This does not detract from Halloween however, as it is certainly the film the popularized such motifs, even if it did not officially "invent" them.
Deeper meaning has been read into this movie by some film critics, including the idea that everyone who dies in the film is sexually promiscuous, while the "innocent" (chaste) heroine survives. Carpenter has been quoted as saying that inclusion of this sort of morality into the story was entirely unintentional, and he did not mean for the movie to be seen as a form of "punishment" for those who indulge in sex and drug use. Nevertheless the parallel between a character's moral strengths and their likelihood of not getting killed has become a standard slasher movie trope.
[edit] Plot
- WARNING: Spoilers follow here.
If you have not seen this film, it is recommended to skip to another section.
On Halloween night 1963, six-year-old Michael Myers (Will Sandin) stabs his seventeen-year-old sister Judith (Sandy Johnson) with a kitchen knife at their home in Haddonfield, Illinois. He is sent to Smith's Grove - Warren County Sanitarium in Illinois and placed under the care of psychiatrist Dr. Sam Loomis (Donald Pleasence). After years of treatment, Loomis begins to suspect that there is more to Myers than meets the eye and plans to have him committed indefinitely. Loomis, sensing that a tremendous amount of rage and emotion stir behind Myers's blank stare, describes Myers as evil. Myers escapes from Smith's Grove while being transferred and returns to Haddonfield. Loomis pursues Myers.
In Haddonfield, Myers stalks teenager Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) and some of her friends. Laurie glimpses a man in a white mask (Michael Myers) from her classroom window, behind a bush while she walks home, and in the clothesline from her bedroom window.
Later in the evening, Laurie meets her friend Annie Brackett (Nancy Kyes) who is babysitting Lindsey Wallace (Kyle Richards) across the street from where she is babysitting Tommy Doyle (Brian Andrews). After arranging to pick up her boyfriend, Annie sends Lindsey to stay with Laurie at the Doyle house but is murdered by Myers (who had followed them). Tommy sees him carrying Annie's body into the Wallace house and thinks Myers is the Boogeyman. Laurie dismisses the boy's terror and sends Tommy and Lindsey to bed. Myers later murders Laurie's other friend Lynda Van Der Klok (P.J. Soles) and Lynda's boyfriend, Robert "Bob" Simms (John Michael Graham), in the empty Wallace house.
Laurie worries after receiving a strange phone call from Lynda at the Wallace house. She walks across the street and discovers the three bodies and Judith Myers's missing tombstone. She is attacked by Myers but escapes back to the Doyle house. Laurie stabs Myers with a knitting needle, a clothes hanger and a knife, but he continues to pursue her. Eventually, Loomis spots Tommy and Lindsey running from the house and finds Myers in the upstairs hallway. Loomis rescues Laurie, shooting Myers six times and causing him to fall from the house's second-story balcony. Upon looking out the window for Myers' body, however, Loomis discovers that he is nowhere to be found.
[edit] Selected quotes
- "It's Halloween, everyone's entitled to one good scare." - Charles Cyphers as Sheriff Leigh Brackett.
[edit] Sequels
[edit] Halloween II
Halloween's success led inevitably to a sequel. In 1981, Akkad sold the film rights to maverick producer Dino DeLaurentis (though Akkad was still actively involved in production of any films that used those rights). Later that year, DeLaurentis (in partnership with Universal Pictures) released Halloween II, also written by Carpenter, but this time directed by Rick Rosenthal. It was designed to pick up precisely where the 1978 original left off, in fact taking place on the same night the original movie ended. At the time, this sequel was intended to be the final chapter of the series.
Critics generally agreed it was not the calibre of its predecessor. Carpenter himself was extremely displeased with the end result, describing it as "about as scary as an episode of Quincy" and, reportedly, reshooting many scenes himself. Retrospectively, it is now generally considered by far the best of the sequels. Many of the original films' fans are disenchanted by the seemingly endless spate of further sequels featuring Michael Myers, which are perceived as cynically-motivated moneymakers, rather than quality horror films made by dedicated filmmakers with a love for the originals and a genuine artistic vision.
[edit] Halloween III: Season of the Witch
A third film in the series, Halloween III: Season of the Witch was released in 1982, also by Universal Pictures. It was directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, with John Carpenter only acting as producer. Whereas the first sequel was a direct continuation of the original story, Halloween III was an entirely unrelated film. Many were disappointed that Michael Myers did not return in this entry, although it was Carpenter himself who felt that the Myers storyline could not be extended any further.
[edit] Post-Carpenter sequels
John Carpenter was to play no further part in the series, other than supplying the original Halloween theme music. In 1988 (the tenth anniversary of the release of the original movie), Moustapha Akaad bought back the rights to the series from Dino DeLaurentis, and produced Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers.
The film (which was released independently) brought both murderer Michael Myers and Dr. Loomis back from their graves (in Hollywood scriptwriting tradition). The success of this sequel inspired yet another the following year, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, also released independently.
[edit] Dimension Films sequels
- Main articles: Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, Halloween H20: 20 Years Later, Halloween: Resurrection
In 1995, the sequel rights were sold again, this time to Miramax Films (via its Dimension Films division). Miramax/Dimension then released Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, which partially told the story of Michael Myers' origins. Joe Chappelle directed, but studio interference caused re-editing of the film and the re-shooting of certain scenes, leaving the door open for another sequel.
Donald Pleasance, who had appeared in every entry of the series to date, died before Halloween H20: 20 Years Later could begin production in 1998 (the 20th anniversary of the first film). Halloween H20 marked the return of Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode (since her character had died sometime before the events of the fourth film, the continuity of the previous three films in the series are ignored and this film is treated as a direct follow-up to Halloween II).
Both Halloween H20 and its follow-up, Halloween: Resurrection (2002), were produced in the same style as Dimension's previous 1990s horror films (such as Scream (1996)).
As of August 2006, Rob Zombie is signed on to write and direct a new sequel for a 2007 release.
[edit] The film rights
- Halloween
- Main rights: Trancas International Films (Akkad's production company)
- Home video rights: Anchor Bay Entertainment
- Television rights: Carlton/ITC Entertainment
- Halloween II
- Main rights: Universal Pictures
- Home video rights: Universal Pictures
- Television rights: Universal Pictures
- Halloween III: Season of the Witch
- Main rights: Universal Pictures
- Home video rights: Universal Pictures
- Television rights: Universal Pictures
- Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
- Main rights: Trancas International Films
- Home video rights: Anchor Bay Entertainment
- Television rights: Anchor Bay Entertainment
- Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers
- Main rights: Trancas International Films
- Home video rights: Anchor Bay Entertainment
- Television rights: Anchor Bay Entertainment
- Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers
- Main rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Home video rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Television rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Halloween H20: 20 Years Later
- Main rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Home video rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Television rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Halloween: Resurrection
- Main rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Home video rights: Miramax/Dimension
- Television rights: Miramax/Dimension
Dimension Films also currently own rights to any further sequels in the Halloween series.
[edit] See also
In Wikipedia:
- Halloween, the holiday the movie is named after, and around which the events of the films take place.
[edit] External links
| This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original article was at Halloween (film). As with THEfilmGUIDE, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |
| | This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original article was at Halloween. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with THEfilmGUIDE, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License. |



