Michael Meyer is Back! HALLOWEEN II Midnights This Weekend at The Moolah

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“I shot him 6 times! I shot him in the heart-but… HE’S NOT HUMAN!”

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HALLOWEEN II screens Midnights this weekend (October 28th and 29th) at The Moolah Theater and Lounge (3821 Lindell Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63108) as part of  Destroy the Brain’s monthly Late Night Grindhouse film series.

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Three years after the original HALLOWEEN, the powers that be behind the original wanted another film. With John Carpenter off doing other projects, first time full length film director Rick Rosenthal took over while John Carpenter and Debra Hill both returned to write this sequel. They sought out the idea to have the film continue exactly where the original film left off. While this story is hardly as groundbreaking as the first film, Rosenthal, Hill and Carpenter still delivered a good, scary film. A twist in this sequel was that we found out that Michael Myers had another sister, and her name was Laurie Strode. Some fans even to this day question the logic behind this twist, but considering the powers that be behind the cameras wanted a sequel, I think this plot device works out rather nicely. HALLOWEEN II hits the ground running and throws us back into the action right where the first film left off to deal with the fallout of what’s just happened: masked serial killer Michael Myers is still on the loose and the injured Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) is rushed to hospital as psychiatrist Dr. Loomis (Donald Pleasence) desperately searches the streets of Haddonfield, Illinois for the murderer.

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Like many sequels, it doesn’t have quite the freshness of the original, but keep in mind HALLOWEEN II came after a few of the spiritual successors of HALLOWEEN had already been released, such as FRIDAY THE 13th (1980). There’s less of the understated menace of the original; where the first film kept to the shadows, the sequel shows more explicit gore and violence. Whether this is simply a reflection of the larger budget facilitating better makeup effects, or a pandering to the new slasher demographic is unclear. The hospital setting (Haddonfield Memorial Hospital) is a fairly common horror movie location, whether a psychiatric hospital, ground zero for a zombie outbreak, or the lair of a mad scientist. It’s even revisited in later Halloween movies. It’s not a bad choice, but it’s unoriginal compared to the previous film’s deconstruction of idyllic suburbia. Hospitals can be creepy with little creative effort, naturally playing on our fears of injury and mortality, and providing Michael with more inventive weapons such as syringes and intravenous drips. Aside from Laurie, the only other patient we see is a young trick-or- treater in the Emergency Room. He has a razor blade lodged in his mouth, an early excuse for some wince-inducing gore which reminds us that it’s still Halloween night and plays on the unsettling urban legend of dangerous objects hidden in Halloween confectionery. The ludicrously small night staff number just one doctor, one security guard, two paramedics, and three nurses. This cast become the new set of victims for Michael. Unlike many slasher films, they are not hedonistic teenagers, and based on their jobs, they should be intelligent and responsible members of the community.

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They do demonstrate typical horror movie naivety: the security guard is bumbling, and the doctor is a drunk. Some of their behavior; a nurse and a paramedic slacking off and having sex in a therapeutic hot tub for example, is exactly the kind of reckless teenage abandonment which draws a serial killer in this kind of film. Sure enough, Michael is right around the corner to deliver some post-coital homicide.

Even though Jamie Lee Curtis and Donald Pleasence are back, their characters don’t have a huge amount to do. This is a shame as their characters and performances are among the best in the series. While all the above has been happening, Laurie’s been lying helplessly under sedation, and Dr. Loomis has been running around town with the sheriff following red herrings.

TICKETS ARE $7 AND YOU CAN BUY THEM ONLINE VIA MOOLAH’S WEBSITE.

THE PSYCHOTRONIC PRE-SHOW STARTS AROUND 11:30P WITH THE FILM STARTING AT MIDNIGHT.

A Facebook invite for Friday’s show can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/1641667752798799/

A Facebook invite for Saturday’s show can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/1010991412343254/

Michael Speaks: The Alternate Ending to HALLOWEEN II

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As an avid van of the entire HALLOWEEN franchise (yes, I even find a shred of enjoyment watching Michael getting Kung Fu’ed by Busta Rhymes), and, as one of only about three people who gave Rob Zombie’s HALLOWEEN II a positive review, I was curious to see the alternate ending to his film.  Today, thanks to Shock Till You Drop, we have the alternate ending for your viewing pleasure.

Check it out:

Needless to say, thank God for reshoots.

According to Shock Till You Drop, this was the scene being shot when they were doing their set visit.  I’m curious if this scene was put together just to mislead movie sites such as them or if Zombie ever intended on this being the true ending to the film.

What do you think?  How do you like the alternate ending compared to the one released in theaters?  Does it bother you how unmasked and speak-heavy Michael gets?  What, if any, are your thoughts on a third film getting thrown together in 3-D?  Let us know by shooting us your comments below.

HALLOWEEN II hits DVD and Blu-Ray on January 12th.

Review: ‘Halloween II’

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Continuing the nightmare he began two years ago, Rob Zombie has returned for another go-around with the Haddonfield slasher, Michael Myers.  Of course, the nightmare he began with his remake of John Carpenter’s 1978 classic, ‘Halloween,’ was not just a nightmare for the characters in the film.  Many believed Zombie tried too hard to recreate Carpenter’s film, a la Gus Van Sant with ‘Psycho,’ while others felt the film deviated far too much.  Still others, myself included, felt Zombie’s first effort with these characters was jarring, disjointed, and, oftentimes, uncomfortable to watch.  Much of that probably had to do with Zombie’s own discomfort in trying to make his own film amidst the overall narrative of something nearly 30 years old.  However, with ‘Halloween II,’ Zombie has found his comfort.  No longer plagued by the belief he had to please all the people all the time, his latest film feels much more his own, and his comfort as writer and director can be seen in the finished product.

Sure, there is a slight nod to the 1981 ‘Halloween II.’  The opening moments of Zombie’s new film, much like the sequel to Carpenter’s original, begins mere moments after the first film.  Laurie Strode, played by Scout Taylor-Compton, is wandering the streets of Haddonfield, Illinois, a gun in her hand and soaked in the blood of the seemingly dead Michael Myers.  She soon finds herself in the hospital, and Myers, surprise, surprise, is anything but dead.

However, Zombie has no intentions of remaking ‘Halloween II.’  Instead, much of his ‘Halloween II’ takes place one year after the events of the first film.  Laurie is trying to get on with her life, now living with Sheriff Brackett, played by Brad Dourif, and his daughter, Annie, played by Danielle Harris.  In the previous year, Laurie has changed from the innocent, naive high schooler.  She has grown up, become somewhat of a hippie, and even sports a few tattoos.  Nonetheless, though she may have changed, she still has horrible nightmare and visions of a returning Michael Myers.  Needless to say, her visions are not entirely unfounded, and, as October 31st fast approaches, Myers returns to the town of his birth in search of Laurie and destroying anyone who gets in his path.

For better or for worse, Zombie’s sequel even further distances his vision of the story from that of Carpenter.  The famous Carpenter theme isn’t heard until the film’s closing credits.  Michael Myers, as in Zombie’s first ‘Halloween,’ is not a stealthy, stalking killer.  He is a hulking beast played by Tyler Mane, and, in ‘Halloween II,’ he is given even more of a humanistic quality than before.  We see Michael in the days before Halloween living as a bum on other people’s land, feeding off dogs and whatever form of sustenance he can find.  It is a very interesting dichotomy that Zombie develops with Michael, one that some may appreciate while others will not.  The classic, white mask Michael Myers wears has become tattered and torn in places, and, for a large part of the movie, Michael does not even wear it.  Either that, or he hides it under a hood.  This, too, will have many fans of the original series up in arms.  Regardless, whether it flows with the original visions of Michael Myers or not, it certainly falls into the logic of what Zombie has created with his first film.  Much of what he does with Michael Myers in ‘Halloween II’ flows right along with the story he has built up for the character.  And, for that alone, Zombie cannot be faulted for the directions he takes these character in this film.  So, too, can be said for the Dr. Samuel Loomis character, played with affable glee by Malcolm McDowell.  No longer the kind, gentle child psychologist, McDowell fleshes out the smarmy writer/businessman Loomis wonderfully.

For the aged protector in ‘Halloween II,’ Zombie turns to Dourif as Sheriff Brackett, who ends up being the deepest character in the entire film.  Brackett is a lonely, single father and sheriff of a small town who wants nothing more than to protect his daughter and her live-in friend.  The scenes where he is unable to do so are near heartbreaking, and much of this comes from Dourif’s incredible portrayal of the character.  Laurie may be the clear protagonist of ‘Halloween II,’ but it is with Dourif’s Sheriff Brackett that you connect most of all.

Back to the Michael Myers character a bit, Zombie produces near unintentional comedy in Michael’s visions of his mother, played by Sheri Moon Zombie.  He communicates with her through an apparitional avatar of himself as a young child.  Unfortunately, these moments hinder more than help the overall film.  Sheri Moon Zombie has grown so much as an actress since ‘House of 1000 Corpses,’ but she still doesn’t have the complete package to play this role of a ghostly vision of one’s mother.  The young actor playing Michael as a child, Chase Wright Vanek, is none too talented, and you long for the days of Daeg Faerch.  The white horse…let’s just say we all know where Zombie was going with that one, but it does miss the mark.  Zombie tries too hard in analyzing Michael’s psyche, and, in the end, it just boils down to Sheri Moon Zombie leading a white horse.  Intentions aside, it does grow somewhat laughable before long.

Scene for scene, ‘Halloween II’ is an impressively shot film.  Zombie has come into his own in the near decade has been directing films.  He composes off-kilter shots and utilizes lighting to the best of their ability.  However, as wonderful as his shots are, a large problem arises while moving throughout the narrative of ‘Halloween II.’  There is very little cohesion to the story.  Much of the film jumps from character to character without of word of how much time has passed or even where this scene is in direct relation to another scene.  Much of this is noticeable in Loomis’ scenes, which seem to be offering very little to the plot until the film’s final moments.  Loomis is on a book tour through Haddonfield.  He has a book signing, a scene featuring a character’s father which offers one of the better moments in the entire mythology for fans of the series.  He goes on a talk show with Weird Al Yankovic, which, believe it or not, produces some genuine moments of comedy.  These scenes with Loomis are really the only moments in Zombie’s sequel that feel disjointed, that hearken back to the issues Zombie had creating his first ‘Halloween’ film.  After the film is over, one can go back over each scene and see how they were building to a point, but, within the film itself, they are disconnected and almost pointless.  There is also one scene in particular involving one of Laurie’s friends whose mere presence causes frustration.  It involves a van, so you’ll know it when it comes along, but it doesn’t need to be here.  It doesn’t add anything.  If anything, it hurts the flow of the film.  This is one time where trimming an entire scene out and leaving it for the DVD special features would have helped tremendously.

Nonetheless, laughable Jungian subtext and insequential plot point ordering aside, there are some very suspenseful and very horrific moments in ‘Halloween II’ for horror fans to take solace in.  Zombie doesn’t shy away from using Michael, and he succeeds in making Michael the unstoppable killing force that he is, even more so than in his first film.  Fans of Zombie’s previous films will be happy to know that still knows how to utilize gore effects, and ‘Halloween II’ offers up some intense and satisfying kill scenes.  It is all logical, as well.  We aren’t left at the Level 1 slice and dice of Michael wielding a butcher’s knife, nor are we subjected to Michael devising elaborate schemes to take out his victims.  He uses what he can, and, when that doesn’t work, he turns to brute force to get the job done.

Zombie’s film, though never entirely scary, is intense, but it doesn’t push the pace to a breakneck speed, either.  He allows the story to breath, gives his characters time to set themselves before all hell breaks loose.  For this reason, alone, ‘Halloween II’ is a far better presented film than Zombie’s previous entry into the franchise.  Much of this stems from the comfort that is noticeable in his direction.  Never before have we had a helicopter shot of Michael walking in a field far in the distance, and this shot is just one in an entire film that allows us to sit back and take in the film at hand.  With the nightmare and vision scenes, Zombie is also allowed to create some intense and surreal imagery, as well.  Though there may be one or two too many of these, they are intriguing uses of his visual style.  One scene in particular makes you wonder how much more interesting a Rob Zombie vision of ‘Alice in Wonderland’ would be than the upcoming one from Tim Burton.

‘Halloween II’ is anything but a perfect slasher film.  There are several counts of logic loss and the second half of the film, the payoff, is nowhere near as satisfying as the buildup.  The psychoanalysis of Michael Myers began in 2007’s ‘Halloween’ and it continues to grow.  You can’t say Zombie abandons something once he sets his mind to exploring it.  For that, he earns points.  Regardless of the film’s flaws, ‘Halloween II’ is an intense whirlwind of macabre and grainy horror, the kind of unstoppable serial killer movie you just knew Zombie was going to make some day.  While it goes nowhere near touching Carpenter’s original, something so unobtainable you can’t even fault it for not trying, Zombie’s latest is a healthy helping of everything that defines his style of horror.  Love it or hate it, you know exactly what you are getting going in.  With that, Zombie has succeeded in what he set out to accomplish two years ago.  He has created a ‘Halloween’ story that both pleases fans of the genre and franchise and takes on a new life all its own.  This is Zombie’s ‘Halloween,’ and it tries to be nothing else.  In that, the film is triumphant.  In the annals of the slasher film, it still offers enough thrills and chills to prove a solid effort of the genre.

Throwback Thursday: ‘Halloween II’ (1981)

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After pulling in $47 million in domestic box office from a $325,000 budget, it was inevitable that a sequel to John Carpenter’s ‘Halloween’ would be in the works sooner rather than later.  Not only was ‘Halloween’ a financial success, and not only was it a critical success, it sparked something in the world of horror filmmaking.  As of 1978, the slasher film was born, and, after 1980’s ‘Friday the 13th,’ the people behind a ‘Halloween’ sequel knew the masses wouldn’t be satisfied with the tension-filled air Carpenter’s first film projected.  They knew they had to up the body count and give audiences exactly what they wanted.  What resulted in ‘Halloween II,’ is a horror fans grab bag, a mixture of both suspense, atmosphere and enough blood to go around.

Picking up mere seconds after Carpenter’s film ends, ‘Halloween II,’ continues the “night he came home.”  Laurie Strode, played by Jamie Lee Curtis, has been taken to Haddonfield Memorial Hospital.  Dr. Loomis, played by Donald Pleasence, is still searching the small town for his escaped patient, a creature who he now believes is nowhere near human.  Michael Myers still stalks Haddonfield, searching for the teenage girl who escaped him and who, as the film reveals, has more ties to Laurie Strode than previously revealed.

The incredible thing about ‘Halloween II’ above most, other horror sequels is how well it stands up on its own.  Even though the film is essentially the second half of a much larger film, it is easy to jump right into any scene and enjoy it for the fun that it is.  Much of this is due in large part to Carpenter and Debra Hill, who, like the ’78 original, co-wrote the screenplay for ‘Halloween II.’  The idea of setting it in a near-abandoned hospital is at once completely logical given the events of the previous film and wholly atmospheric.  Like the ocean in ‘Jaws,’ ‘Halloween II’ takes a seemingly innocent and safe place and throws any illusions of sanctuary back into the viewer’s face.

Rick Rosenthal served as director, and, though he makes every attempt at recreating much of what filled the original with a sense of dread, he just doesn’t have the confidence as a filmmaker Carpenter expressed.  Fun and suspenseful as it may be, Rosenthal seemed to have very little sense of subtlety. This is seen in the many shots he practically lifts from Carpenter’s original.  Michael’s white mask slowly appearing out of dark corner behind someone is just one of many acts of thievery Rosenthal utilizes in his film’s direction.  Even such, aside from a few moments here and there where Myers appears in shadows or off in the background, there is very little in the way of true scares. Of course, even these moments could be attributed to Carpenter himself.  The horror master came on board late in the game to shoot additional scenes.  While there is no true layout of who shot what, and while Rosenthal claims Carpenter came on board to add gore and nudity to his film, there is definitely a feeling of disconnection from one shot to the next.  Rosenthal has claimed in interviews that he set out to make more of a thriller than a slasher film.  If this is, indeed, the case, it would appear it was Carpenter’s decision to include some of the gorier moments in the film.  There certainly are plenty of those with ‘Halloween II’ boasting a body count twice as large and death scenes three times as in-your-face than is seen in the original.

But higher body count aside, there is still plenty left over from Carpenter’s original ‘Halloween’ for fans to latch onto in the sequel.  The film’s score came as a collaboration by Carpenter and Alan Howarth.   It has the same synthesized simplicity as the original, but, much like the rest of the film, it seems to have a studio polish about it.   This is particularly noticeable in the secondary themes such as Laurie’s Theme and The Shape Stalks.   Of course, you cannot talk about the film’s soundtrack without mentioning the key usage of “Mr. Sandman” performed by The Chordettes.   The song, lyrics and all, is a perfect fit for the entire franchise.   It is an interesting contrast between the song and the visuals over the opening scene, but it clinches its incongruous brilliance as it plays out the film’s final moments.

‘Halloween II’ also boasts an A+ cast with Pleasence and Curtis fitting back into their respective roles like old gloves.   Curtis had begun wearing her hair shorter in the years since Carpenter’s original film.   As such, she was forced to wear a wig for this film, something that is notably off about her character.   Other than that, though, she does an amazing job of running the gamut between victim and fighter.   You absolutely buy the final transition into the attacker 16 years later with ‘Halloween H20,’ and much of that comes from her character’s growth throughout ‘Halloween II.’

Great actors like Lance Guest, Charles Cyphers, Leo Rossi, Pamela Susan Shoop, Hunter Von Leer round out the cast.   Guest is most recognizable to mass audiences as Alex Rogan in ‘The Last Starfighter.’   He isn’t given just a whole lot to do, playing the would-be hero to Laurie’s damsel in distress.   However, he falls out of the picture fairly early, and his ultimate resolution varies between the theatrical and the TV version of the film, but we’ll get into that shortly.   Cyphers and Von Leer turn in commendable performances as members of the Haddonfield Police Department.   Cyphers reprises his role as Sheriff Leigh Brackett, and, though his character disappears early in the film, he gives an emotional performance as the father of one of Myers’ victims from the first film.   Von Leer plays Deputy Hunt, and it’s not a very fleshed out role.   Nonetheless, the sincerity Von Leer gives the performance makes you wonder if there is something deeper going on with the character.   He seems to be fully tied to the town, and it ends up being one of the more interesting secondary character in the franchise.

As a side note about the cast, watch for a tracking shot that passes right by a young Dana Carvey in his first on-screen performance.

When ‘Halloween II’ began airing on TV, it was Rosenthal’s original cut of the film that was being showed.  This had most of the gore and graphic violence and all of the nudity stricken from it.  It also switched around a few scenes and brought Lance Guest’s Jimmy back in the final moments.  All in all, the TV version is a mess of a film, throwing in random shots here and progressing through the story in a completely nonsensical manner.  This is typically the version shown when the film runs on AMC.  This version, however, has never been released on VHS or DVD.  Talk of a completely new special edition of the film has come about, and it looks like Lionsgate and Universal Home Video will be releasing it sometime in 2010.  This would include all of Rosenthal’s cuts including a few scenes that have never been seen by the public before.

In 1982, a man named Richard Delmer Boyer murdered an elderly couple in Fullerton, California.  In what would eventually be called the “Halloween II Murders,” Boyer stabbed the couple a total of 43 times.  He claimed he had had hallucinations brought on by watching ‘Halloween II’ while on PCP, marijuana, and alcohol.  During the trial, the film was shown to the jury.  A psychopharmacologist pointed out various similarities between what was being depicted in the film and what played out in the elderly couple’s home.  Boyer was sentenced to death for the murders.

‘Halloween II’ is a horror sequel many fans of the genre can enjoy, not just fans of the ‘Halloween’ franchise.  While it does fall into the sequelitis trap of throwing in more scares and a higher body count, it still provides a suspenseful and intriguing story rarely seen in horror sequels.  It pulls off so much more than just being ‘Halloween’s cash-in follow-up.  Had it had a director as gifted in the genre as Carpenter, it very well could have been on an equal playing field as the 1978 original.  As it is, it still stands as one of the best horror sequels ever made, particular in the slasher sub-genre

‘El Superbeasto’ and ‘Tyrannosaurus Rex’ Updates

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With the follow-up to ‘Halloween’ just a few weeks away, and with ‘The Haunted World of El Superbeasto’ on its way to DVD shelves next month, it seems Rob Zombie’s career as a filmmaker is in full effect.   Today, thanks to the heads up by /Film, we have the teaser trailer for ‘El Superbeasto.’

Check it out:

This looks like a nice piece of insanity is headed for our TV screens.   It features the voices of Rosario Dawson, Paul Giamatti, Danny Trejo, Sheri Moon Zombie, Clint Howard, Brian Posehn, Bill Moseley, Sid Haig, and Dee Wallace.   It hits video stores on September 22nd.

Also in the news today is this bit of information Zombie dropped while speaking with Shock Till You Drop.

The plan is to go on tour for a while then finally come back and make Tyrannosaurus Rex. Because that got shoved off to the side and that was a film I really wanted to make. It’s like Rejects on steroids.

The plan is that Zombie finishes up the ‘Halloween II’ promo train, release a new album near the end of October or beginning of November, then go on tour for a bit.   Once finished with that, he plans to dive into the world of ‘Tyrannosaurus Rex,’ which is being billed as ‘Raging Bull’ meets ‘The Road Warrior.’   So, this time next year, production is looking to have begun on the film, and we could be looking at a release date sometime very late 2010 or early 2011.

New ‘Halloween II’ Pic

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The fine folks over at Shock Till You Drop got their mitts on this new pic from ‘Halloween II.’   It features Scout Taylor-Compton under the knife of one Mr. Michael Myers, played by Tyler Mane.

There have been pictures upon pictures coming out for ‘Halloween II.’   You could print them all out, flip them one right after another, and probably come up with some cohesive storyline.   So, thank for that Rob Zombie.   You’ve given away the entire film before it’s even gotten a release.

On an unrelated note, Zombie also spoke with MTV’s Movie Blog last week and basically said that he would never, NEVER make a ‘Halloween 3.’   You know what Sean Connery says about saying “never”?   Actually, I don’t think he says anything.   He just slaps people, both men and women, then plays a round of golf.

I digress.   ‘Halloween II’ is set for release on August 28th.

Source: Shock Till You Drop

Rob Zombie Unleashes Final ‘Halloween 2’ One-Sheet

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‘Halloween II’ is Rob Zombie’s fourth film, and, if you think about it, all of Zombie’s films have been movies about family.   Nobody gets family quite like Zombie.   I mean, NOBODY.

This latest one-sheet for Zombie’s latest film was released via his Myspace page, and it looks pretty sweet.   It’s got the same style as that pumpkin patch poster design we saw a few months back.   This one, though, calls to mind the Japanese film, ‘Onibaba’ with the tall grass and the rain.   Very cool.

I also like that the film’s final title is ‘Halloween II’ and not the wannabe hip ‘H2’ that we’ve been seeing pretty much since the film’s inception.

‘Halloween II’ comes out on August 28th.

Source: Rob Zombie’s Myspace Page