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  1. Sep 21, 2018 · In all seriousness, when adjusted for domestic inflation, the lowest-grossing Halloween movie is Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers.The 1989 release (during a year which also saw low ...

    • Halloween II
    • Halloween: Resurrection
    • Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers
    • Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
    • Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers
    • Halloween Kills
    • Halloween H20: 20 Years Later
    • Halloween
    • Halloween Ends
    • Halloween III: Season of The Witch

    The worst thing a movie can be is boring. 1981’s Halloween II, directed by Rick Rosenthal, from a script by John Carpenter and Debra Hill, reeks of such desperation to simply get a sequel out the door that it forgets to make entertaining the audience a priority. After a promising opening that maintains the momentum of the 1978 predecessor’s pulse-p...

    Surprisingly, this one isn’t at the bottom. That’s because, unlike the previous film, there’s actually some fun to be had here, in a guilty pleasure kind of way. The concept – a reality show where contestants record themselves in the infamous Myers house – is a novel way to get more juice out of a dying franchise. Look at me dead in the eyes and te...

    What we’re dealing with here is a huge leap up in quality from the previous movie. Still, Dominique Othenin-Girard’s Halloween 5 isn’t exactly a franchise high. After a surprisingly good fourth installment, The Revenge of Michael Myers is a bit of a step down. Danielle Harris is, expectedly, still great as Jamie Lloyd, and the idea of a telepathic ...

    After the unanimous critical and box office rejection of Halloween III: Season of the Witch carving its own path, series producer Moustapha Akkad heard the message loud and clear: there’s no Halloween without Michael Myers. Debatable as it may be, Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myersmarked a grand return for The Shape, reconfiguring John Carpen...

    Another day, another Halloween sequel with a troubled production history. After the successful fourth entry and the underperforming fifth release, the sixth movie languished in development hell until it finally went before cameras under the direction of Joe Chappelle with a screenplay by Daniel Farrands. The initial cut of Halloween: The Curse of M...

    For such a resounding critical and commercial success, David Gordon Green’s 2018 Halloween revamp certainly spawned two highly controversial sequels. The first of these, Halloween Kills, could easily be mistaken for a Michael Myers kill compilation at first glance (albeit it fits the title nicely). Under the surface, there are plenty of big ideas– ...

    Audiences widely rejected Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers. Given its attempts to explain the powers of Michael and its extremely over-the-top tone, Moustapha Akkad and the production team knew it was time for a course correction and fast. Therefore, they decided to bring in the big gun: Jamie Lee Curtis returning as Laurie Strode. Mercifully ...

    Halloween (2018)is the third movie of the franchise with that title. It’s the third reboot (of sorts) and the second to focus on a returning Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) dealing with residual trauma from that fateful Halloween night in 1978. Unlike Halloween H20, this revival only follows the first film, discarding any and all lore from other e...

    Yes, you read that right. An extremely controversial film, Halloween Ends stands head and shoulders above the other two entries in the David Gordon Green trilogy to take the narrative to its next logical step. It’s been four years since the events of Halloween Kills. Michael Myers has disappeared, and in his wake, Haddonfield has been searching for...

    John Carpenter and Debra Hill had no intentions of continuing the story of Michael Myers past the original film, so when they were finally rid of the lumbering killer after the second movie, they and Moustapha Akkad thought to take the title in a different direction. Why not make the Halloween movies an annual anthology series with each new additio...

    • 2 min
    • Eliza Thompson
    • Halloween (1978) The original Halloween is a masterpiece, full stop. None of the sequels have ever come close to replicating that feeling of dread, and few horror movies in general have done as much with so little—a man standing behind a shrub, a car creeping down a suburban street on a cloudy day.
    • Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later (1998) H20 isn’t anywhere near as scary as the original Halloween, but it’s thrilling to see Jamie Lee Curtis back as Laurie Strode, and the introduction of a new setting—northern California, where Laurie is living under an assumed name—adds a much-needed jolt of freshness.
    • Halloween (2018) Green’s reboot wiped the slate clean by erasing continuity from all previous Halloween films except the 1978 original—a real boon for fans who didn’t love when Halloween II (1981) established Laurie as Michael’s sister.
    • Halloween II (2009) The first Rob Zombie Halloween is, as established, a miss, but the second one is close to perfect. It’s full of great callbacks to the originals, and in some instances even improves upon weirder plot notes that never quite came together in earlier sequels.
  2. Oct 13, 2023 · Halloween (1978), Halloween II (1981), Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988) Where to watch Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers: Shudder. 05of 13. 9. Halloween 4: The Return of ...

  3. Oct 29, 2020 · Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988) Why to Watch: After disappointing dedicated Halloween fans with no glimpse of Michael in the third film, Halloween 4 brings back The Shape, aka ...

  4. Oct 17, 2022 · Zombie’s is the most blistering Halloween movie of all time, following a young Michael Myers through a rough childhood that ends in murder, and his later-in-life killing spree when he breaks out ...

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  6. Two out of three ain’t bad. The movie’s beauty is in its simplicity. As a child Michael Myers (he didn’t have a name in the first film) kills his sister with a butcher knife on Halloween.