Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Halloween. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

John Carpenter's Halloween: It's a Kentucky Thing



While it may be set in the fictional town of Haddonfield, Illinois (not to mention actually shot in California), John Carpenter's Halloween is to a lot of fans very much a Kentucky film.

I was only five years old when Halloween first hit theaters in October of 1978, so I was too young to see the film in its first run. I ended up seeing it for the first time around the age of ten courtesy of a TV broadcast and it had a huge impact on me. Never before had I felt so much glorious terror and it made horror my favorite genre, a fact that continues to this day. I have watched Halloween at least once every year since, making it one of the films I have seen the most, and those initial viewings still haunt my dreams and memories like no other.

It wasn't just the thrills the film supplied that had such a huge impact on me but it was the regional references that struck an emotional chord. Locations mentioned like Smiths Grove, Hardin County and Russellville were instantly recognizable to me, as they are to any native Kentuckian, and I was thrilled to find out that my Mom had actually attended school (they had one college class together) with John Carpenter in the late sixties. Halloween became not only one of my favorite films just before my teenage years, but also my favorite Kentucky film...and Carpenter became the living embodiment of someone who had got out but hadn't forgotten his roots.

The Kentucky references are scattered all over Carpenter films, especially The Fog, and they appear numerous times in the Carpenter scripted Halloween II. In fact there are two particular moments in the first Halloween sequel that really hit me location wise as one names an area I lived at as a child, and another pinpoints the street and corner where I lived at between 2006 and 2008. The obvious impact the state had on Carpenter (something he made clear last year when I saw him in person) is extremely resonate and quite haunting for someone like myself who knows this area so well and loves these films so much.

As a child and now I often daydream at school about Carpenter's film and the characters who occupied it, especially Laurie Strode. I would often wish to step back into the past and run into the very people who inspired these iconic characters, who know doubt Carpenter knew back in his days as a young man walking down the streets I walk down now everyday.

For those interested in some of the Kentucky locations mentioned in several of John Carpenter's films, please visit this Bowling Green, Kentucky site that offers up a 'driving' tour you can take.

-Jeremy Richey, 2008-

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Down Those Deserted Hallways Again.



Rick Rosenthal’s Halloween II commits the cardinal sin for a suspense film, in that it just attempts to explain too damn much. This mistake is one of the main problems that have plagued so many sequels and remakes throughout screen history. Why is ambiguity such a problem for mainstream American filmgoers? Why do so many feel like unanswered questions are such a bad thing?



Despite it’s many faults and failings, and there are plenty of them, Halloween II has survived and has had an effect. Michael Myers’ role as not only Laurie Strode’s lost brother but also as some sort of ‘lord of the dead’ comes directly from Rosenthal’s frustrating follow up to John Carpenter’s delightfully minimal and mysterious first film. Of course, one can’t blame Rosenthal completely as Halloween II was indeed penned by both Carpenter and producer Debra Hill. One can see the effect of the film in not only its sequels (particularly 4, 5 and 6 that took the ‘Samhain’ idea to finally ridiculous extremes) but also in Rob Zombie’s remake that unfortunately embraced the whole ‘Laurie as a lost sister’ concept.



The many missteps in the film’s script are especially unfortunate when one considers the fact that there are moments in Halloween II that are actually quite effective. Why more horror films haven’t been shot in seemingly abandoned hospitals in the dead of night is a mystery, because Rosenthal uses its empty and long hallways to great effect. At its best, Halloween II manages to build not a small amount of suspense, despite its script that seems to want to spoil all the mysteries the first film had created so terrifyingly.




Rosenthal’s film also benefits greatly from the work of returning cinematographer Dean Cundey, who lights and photographs the film with an eerie clarity. The film is indeed the only one of the sequels that manages to recreate at least partially the look of the stunning original, even though the larger budget actually seems to take away much of the freshness Carpenter and Cundey had come up with originally.



It is, of course, unfair to hold Halloween II up to its legendary predecessor. Perhaps it is more fitting to compare it to the other dozens upon dozens of slasher flicks that were populating American screens in the early eighties. In this respect it carries itself quite well. With Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasance and a couple of other key players back on board, Halloween II is one of the best cast slashers of the period. The new additions redeem themselves quite nicely as well, especially Pamela Susan Shoop and Gloria Gifford. Compared to many of the Slasher films of the period, Halloween II is actually pretty top notch, although finally it cannot be considered among the best.



Personally speaking, I have a lot of memories tied up in Rick Rosenthal’s Halloween II, and despite its problems I find myself watching it each year. I’m especially drawn towards the television version, with the alternate ending, that seemed to play endlessly throughout my teenage years. While it is mostly just nostalgia that keeps pulling me towards it, I have always suspected that somewhere down those stretched and shadowy hospital hallways that a great film could have emerged. When asked my opinion on the film, I typically just reply, “It has its moments” and perhaps that is all that should have been expected from it…but I have the feeling it could have been so much more.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Those Seventies Horror Remakes (Final October Poll)

TheHillsHaveEyes_2006_06_1024

As promised, there will be quite a few Halloween related posts coming up here in the next week to celebrate the holiday and the thirtieth anniversary of John Carpenter’s legendary film. I thought it might be fun to also have one more semi-related poll and, with the remake of Friday the 13th coming soon, the seventies horrors remakes that have filled our theaters in the past decade seemed like a pretty good subject.
The poll is simple. I have chosen ten of the more high profile remakes of seventies classics that have been released in the past decade for the poll. Simply pick your favorites and ignore the ones you can’t stand. I think a few of these are really solid films in their own right, while some are okay, and some are just plain garbage so the results should be interesting.

Texas Chainsaw Massacre

I only focused on remakes of American films, and by only picking ten I obviously left out some, but this will hopefully prove an interesting poll to close out October with. Enjoy and vote away…

Friday, October 17, 2008

Requiem for Laurie Strode

H20 1

Truth be told Halloween H20: 20 Years Later shouldn’t have been any kind of success. Placed after three mind numbingly dreadful sequels, not to mention automatically falling right in the shadow of the masterful original, H20 had a lot going against it ten years ago when production wrapped and the film prepared for release. Placing the odds further against the film were constant rewrites, persistent technical difficulties and numerous interferences from a studio looking to turn it into another Scream rather than a proper film to fit into the Halloween legacy.

H20 2

Honestly one can see all of the negative influences weighing on the film during its short running time. H20 is a messy production with many visible mistakes ranging from such obvious flubs like the odd switching of Michael Myer’s mask, to a rather large number of smaller continuity errors. Despite these errors and all that it had going against it, H20 is a surprisingly successful and enduring film that maintains as much if not more of the spirit of Carpenter’s original work than any of the other sequels or the countless number of copycat films that landed in its wake.

H20 3

The reasons for H20’s success are easy to point out. First and foremost is the Steve Miner as the choice of director. Miner’s an undervalued character in the film community and he was the ideal choice to lead H2O back to the spirit of the original. Second is the return of Jamie Lee Curtis to the role of Laurie Strode, her most interesting and iconic character. Thirdly is the cast gathered surrounding Curtis, an engaging and talented group who elevate the film above the many studio caused errors. Finally, and perhaps its biggest asset, is that H20 loves being a Halloween film. Unlike the sequels which felt like they were working against the original as much as they could, H20 works towards Carpenter’s work and it shows as it is the scariest and most resonating of all the Michael Myers sequels.

H20 5

The genesis of H20 came from Curtis herself, who reportedly wanted to do something special for the twentieth anniversary of Carpenter’s film. She also had been itching to revisit the character of Laurie Strode and, like many, had been unhappy with the way the sequels had been handled. Carpenter was approached but balked at the idea of directing although he gave his thumbs up to Curtis to proceed.
An early draft of the script was submitted by Scream scribe Kevin Williamson but it felt too much like a sequel to Scream rather than Halloween. Unfortunately some of Williamson’s material and dialogue survives and at its weakest moments, H20 is a bit too winking and self referential for its own good. Thankfully it does contain Scream’s glowing reverence to Carpenter’s original film and some of its most effective scenes come as it is deliberately paying homage to some of Halloween’s smaller and most enduring moments, such as Laurie staring out of her classroom window (mirrored wonderfully by Michelle Williams here).

H20 6

The script for H20 apparently went through a lot of hands before Robert Zappia and Matt Greenberg ended up sharing the main credit. Despite the many phases it went through, the script for H20 still feels a little undercooked to my tastes. At times the film survives just on the skill of Miner’s direction and talented cast…even when they really don’t have a lot to work with story wise.

H20 8

The set up of H20 is fairly simple. Ignoring parts 3, 4, 5 and 6, H20 is essentially a sequel to the first two films where we find a paranoid, pill popping and alcoholic Laurie Strode living under an assumed name as the head of a private school for teenagers, which includes her son John (played well by a young Josh Hartnett). The film plays out exactly as you expect it to, with Michael Myers finding Laurie and returning to enact another night of mayhem on the kids remaining at the school Halloween night after everyone else has gone on a field trip.
H20 doesn’t attempt to reinvent the wheel here. Miner knows the Slasher film basics and he delights in playing to them…this is after all the man who helmed both Friday the 13th Part Two and Part Three.

H20 11

Born in Connecticut in the early fifties, Miner began cutting his teeth in film in his early twenties with friends Wes Craven and Sean Cunningham. It is indeed Miner who helped produce and edit Craven’s landmark 1972 feature Last House on The Left. He continued working closely with Cunningham throughout the seventies and it was indeed the first sequel to Cunningham’s immeasurably popular Friday The 13th that marked Miner’s first full time directing gig. Working mostly in television with the odd theatrical feature thrown in occasionally (such as 1986’s House and 1999’s Lake Placid) Miner has perhaps not had as distinguished a career as he should have but he remains more than a little undervalued. H20, for all its sloppiness due to the studio’s tampering, remains arguably Miner’s greatest moment.

In front of the camera joining Curtis (who by the way does some of the best work of her career here) as her love interest is award winning actor Adam Arkin, and stealing the film briefly in just a couple of scenes is Curtis mom, Janet Leigh. Watch out for one of the film’s smartest and sweetest references involving Leigh, a car and a certain famous film role she had played herself many years before.

H20 7

Even more worth noting is the younger cast though, one of the best assembled for a horror film in the nineties. Miner had directed Michelle Williams previously on the series that gave her her start, Dawson’s Creek, and she proves a splendid ‘final girl’ here already exhibiting the great acting chops she would eventually hone to devastating effect in her Oscar nominated turn in Brokeback Mountain (2005).
Hartnett, making his debut here, is fine and very believable as Curtis’ frustrated and concerned son. Re-watching the film today, one wonders why Hartnett traded in much of his natural youthful expressiveness for the rather stolid style he has become so known for.

H20 9

Featured in smaller roles are L.L Cool j (in the film’s most underwritten part), Adam Hann-Byrd (7 years after his extraordinary debut in Jodie Foster’s miraculous Little Man Tate (1991), Joseph Gordon-Levitt (whose work since has been quite miraculous in itself) and gorgeous Jodi Lyn O’Keefe (essentially playing the PJ Soles role here, and redeeming herself quite nicely). O’Keefe should also be given kudos for performing the film’s most brutal and grueling sequence that ends with the film’s most classic kill and shock piece.

H20 10

While the film is filled with as many ‘inside tributes’ as possible to the original film (and Halloween II which H20 clearly embraces as well, even though Miner denies it), Miner’s film stands as its own work and if it didn’t have the impact of Craven’s Scream when it was released it definitely distinguished itself amongst the onslaught of that film’s copycats…it also made more people jump than any of those films, something I can attest to after seeing it with a sold out crowd opening night.

H20 13

Far from perfect, Carpenter’s original score is particularly missed although composer John Ottman does the best he can and cleverly weaves Carpenter’s iconic theme in quite well, H20 finally works as a standalone Slasher film and a celebration of the most legendary entry in the genre.

H20 14

H20 did fairly well when it opened (despite Dimension botching the release) and got some surprising critical support from publications like The New Yorker. However a superior work print leaked soon after its release alerting fans that the film had been tampered with, and that many of the film’s issues were not Miner’s fault. Dimension, which had wanted a new Scream and not a new Halloween all along, continued to do the film no favors when it botched its DVD release by not delivering a promised audio commentary by Curtis and Miner, and by over-pricing the near bare bones disc. H20 has still yet to get the proper DVD release it deserves.

H20 15

Battling my nostalgia for Halloween II, H20 is my favorite of the Halloween sequels. Despite the fact that it is a classic example as to the kind of trouble a film can get into due to studio pressure and tampering, H20 is surprisingly potent. One wonders what Miner and Curtis could have accomplished though had they been left alone to really deliver the film they wanted to.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

I Love the Seventies Halloween Clip

Not exactly probing but if you have ever wanted to see clips of Halloween set to to The Talking Heads "Psycho Killer" or hear Luis Guzman and Lisa Marie Presley pontificating on its greatness...here you go:

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Mark Kermode Interviewing John Carpenter on Halloween

Just came across this interview Mark Kermode did with John Carpenter 10 years ago for Halloween's twentieth and wanted to post it for those who haven't seen it.





Sunday, October 12, 2008

John Carpenter Film Poll Results

thing

John Carpenter's The Thing (isn't it hard to believe that this masterpiece was originally considered a failure by many?) reigned supreme in last weeks poll based on Carpenter's work for 76-86. Thanks to everyone who made it one of the most popular polls I have ever hosted here. The results are really interesting and I appreciate all that voted.

Here are the results:


Assault on Precinct 13: 40 (41%)

Halloween: 61 (62%)

Someone's Watching Me: 5 (5%)

Elvis: 17 (17%)

The Fog: 40 (41%)

Escape From New York: 55 (56%)

The Thing: 71 (73%)

Christine: 22 (22%)

Starman: 24 (24%)

Big Trouble in Little China: 32 (32%)

I'm still trying to figure out the details for the next poll, in the meantime please visit this essential The Thing tribute site.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Halloween Film Poll #2: John Carpenter 76-86 (Ten Awe-Inspiring Years)

Carpenter's Halloween 7

One of the most remarkable periods for any American filmmaker comes for director John Carpenter between 1976 and 1986. With no disrespect meant for Carpenter's work before the period or since, this particular ten year run is truly awe inspiring and it is the focus of my 2nd poll here at Moon in the Gutter to celebrate the 30th anniversary of one of Carpenter's most startling creations, Halloween. So vote for as many favorites as you like and ignore the ones you don't and I will post the results a week from now.

Halloween Film Poll #1 Results: The Sequels

Thanks to the folks who participated in last week’s Film Poll on the Halloween sequels. I expected Halloween II to win fairly easily but it got some welcome competition from both Season of the Witch as well as H2O. Thanks again to all that voted and the results are as follows:

Halloween 2 37 votes (71%)

Halloween 3: Season of the Witch 27 votes (51%)

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers 8 votes (15%)

Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers 5 votes (9%)

Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers 8 votes (15%)

H20 22 votes (41%)

Halloween Resurrection 5 votes (9%)


I will be offering up a new Halloween related poll shortly and hope everyone will participate.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Halloween Tribute Poll #1: The Sequels



All through October, to go along with my sporadic Halloween Tribute posts, I will be conducting some polls for people to participate in. The first one has just gone active and it will hopefully prove interesting as there seems to be a lot of disagreement among fans about what the best and worst of the sequels are to John Carpenter's original. So cast some votes for your favorites and ignore the ones you hate if you decide to vote. I will post the results next Sunday when I start the second of at least four polls. Enjoy...

Friday, September 26, 2008

Starting Next Week at Moon in the Gutter: A Month Long Celebration of The Night He Came Home

Halloween BHS 2

This October marks the 30th anniversary of John Carpenter's incredibly influential Halloween, and I couldn't let the celebration go by without something special, so starting next week at Moon in the Gutter I will be offering up some sporadic visual and written tributes to the film which will stretch throughout my favorite month of the year. Throughout October you'll learn about:

Halloween BHS 3

My special regional connection to the film and why it still means so much to me all these years later.

My nostalgic feelings for the very flawed Halloween 2 and especially the television version of it.

Why I think Laurie Strode is one for the key female characters in all of modern American cinema.

How the seventies couldn't have happened without P.J. Soles.

My hatred for Parts 4, 5 and 6 and my admiration for H2O.

Halloween BHS 4

Plus the usual number of screenshots, wallpapers, some Halloween related polls, and perhaps some surprises as well. I realize Halloween has been covered to death but I will try to bring a personal touch to a film that has haunted my memories for most of my life.

Halloween BHS 1

The usual posts will continue here as well (and also at Fascination and Nostalgia Kinky) but I hope everyone will get a kick out of my upcoming special tribute to one of the greatest of all American films.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Halloween Anniversary Edition

Honestly I have everything in this box except for the Blu-Ray version and the mask so I won't be shelling out the money for this set, but for those interested here is the press release from DVD Active.
I'm actually pretty disappointed as I was hoping Anchor Bay would pull out something really special for Halloween's 30th anniversary but this is basically just a repackaging of what is already out there. I am glad to see the Extended version coming back in print for collectors, even though it is totally inferior to the original but otherwise this is a pretty unimaginative collection.
There are lots of goodies Anchor Bay could have come up with for this release as we have still yet to have a cast commentary (or a track for the many filmmakers influenced by the film) and the rumored outtakes that were discovered a couple of years back have to still yet to resurface. It's really too bad as Carpenter's masterpiece deserves more than this...

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Happy Halloween


Thanks to everyone who continues to read and comment here, I really appreciate the support. I hope everyone has a great and safe Halloween.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Quick Thoughts On The Upcoming Halloween Remake


John Carpenter's HALLOWEEN is one of my all time favorite films and it is one of the key films of my youth. I first saw it in my early teens on VHS and I must have watched it, and its first sequel, over twenty times as a teenager. I also read all of the novelizations and devoured article after article about it in back issues of magazines like Fangoria. I still revisit the film every Halloween and I never grow tired of it, it is a true American classic and one of the major films that marked Horror as my favorite genre.
I have very mixed feelings on the upcoming re-thinking of HALLOWEEN by Rob Zombie. I think it is a mistake and whatever merits it might have, there is no way it will come close to equalling the original. That said, I must admit that I like Zombie very much and I will be seeing the film opening weekend and I hope it plays better than anyone might expect.
I was never a fan of his music and his first film, HOUSE OF 1,000 CORPSES (2003), left me cold but I greatly admired his THE DEVIL'S REJECTS (2005). To me it is one of the few modern exploitation films that comes close to feeling authentic. It is a controversial work that divides horror fans but I honestly believe that THE DEVIL'S REJECTS will someday be regarded as one of the key genre works of this decade.

I also really like Zombie's wife, Sheri Moon and think that she is an incredibly charismatic and talented actress. The main thing I like about both of them is that they seem to really love the genre. I don't feel any winking, pandering or apologizing, just an overwhelming affection for the same horror movies that I loved and admired growing up.
Zombie has stated repeatedly that the original HALLOWEEN had a major impact on him growing up and I believe that his new version is meant as a tribute. When I saw John Carpenter speak several months ago, he spoke highly of Zombie as a person and filmmaker (and very highly of the check he received for the new film).
So, I will be seeing the new HALLOWEEN but I have to admit that I wish it had been directed by a total hack and I could just ignore it. Apparently the studio has already been tampering with Zombie's final cut and I am honestly not expecting a lot. I hope that Zombie follows it up with an original work and doesn't get trapped in a remake mode, as we are overrun with them right now.
HALLOWEEN is one film that I did not want to see get remade. It is one of the most perfect American films of the seventies and I can only hope that Zombie's version isn't an embarrassment. Hopefully it will turn out like Aja's searing HILLS HAVE EYES remake and have something valuable to add rather than being something truly horrendously bad like THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE re-working. Either way, I will be there opening weekend and success or failure, I will still admire Rob and Sheri Moon and hope that they will one day deliver another film as good as THE DEVIL'S REJECTS.
I must say that even if I do end up liking the new HALLOWEEN, nothing and I mean nothing will ever replace these three for me.