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Halloween
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Directed by Rob Zombie.
The Devil's Rejects director Rob Zombie resurrects one of the most notorious slashers in screen history with this re-imagining of the 1978 John Carpenter classic that spawned numerous sequels and countless imitators. As a child, young Michael Myers (Daeg Faerch) committed one of the most unspeakable crimes imaginable. Subsequently locked in an asylum and placed under the care of Dr. Loomis (Malcolm McDowell), the hollow-eyed boy grew into an emotionless man determined to escape back to his hometown of Haddonfield and complete the murderous mission that he began so many years back. These days, the long-abandoned Myers house sits decrepit and overgrown on a peaceful suburban street, its boarded windows and rotting wood a silent testament to the slaughter that has haunted Haddonfield for decades. Now Michael Myers (Tyler Mane) is back, and as the children of this typical Midwestern town fill the sidewalks for a fun-filled night of tricks and treats, Haddonfield is about to find out that there is no escape from pure evil. Brad Dourif, William Forsythe, Udo Kier, Dee Wallace, Sheri Moon Zombie, Danny Trejo, and Adrienne Barbeau co-star. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 Halloween (2007)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Remaking a movie which has already spawned seven sequels is a daunting task. It´s akin to seeing an NBA logo which isn´t Jerry West. The colors are the same, the idea is there but something is different. It doesn´t feel quite right. In the case of Rob Zombie´s remake of John Carpenter´s "Halloween," the characters exist in the universe and the situation is familiar; the artistry and the magic of the original film is lost in a veritable orgy of blood and profanity. Oh yeah, and a William Shatner mask. As a young child, Michael Myers is doted on by a loving mother despite the rest of his world falling around him. He´s harassed at school with pictures of the only person he admires in the world (his mother, who is an exotic dancer); Mom´s live-in lover, Ronny, demeans Michael at every turn; he´s stood up on Halloween by his sister so she can spend "quality" time with her boyfriend. Something inside him snaps, prompting the first of many k ... " [More]
devomayhandevomayhan huge problem!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ...
by devomayhan in devomayhan Blog
is neutral about it.
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"The movie was good in the way it was a remake of the oiginal.But Micheal myers dosn't have long hair!He also does not have stitches on his mask!it was a little ok though! " [More]
minjoeminjoe My Problems...
by minjoe in minjoe Blog
lost interest.
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"Hi, my name is Minjoe and I have a problem with this movie."What's your problem with it Minjoe?"Ummm, you remember the original correct?"vaguely."Le t me refresh you. Michael Myers is institutionalized. We know he kills his sister in the original but we don't know what led up to that night other than him apparently being an evil kid. "Ah yes, I recall. But the remake filled in the gaping plot hole by showing you the man behind the mask and why he became the killer he was."Right, and in theory, that sounds like a good idea. However, you didn't show us the man behind the mask, you showed us the boy--and when you take a character that was great because he was essentially the incarnation of evil and turn him into an angst-filled kid who doesn't have the best home life it takes something away from the film I think. In the original we are left to let our imaginations run wild with why a small child would knife a family member, in the ne ... " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re:Who Wants to Help Me Kill Mi ...
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
is neutral about it.
"Yes, I have to agree that there have been a few very excellent remakes. I really love the 70s Invasion of the Body Snatchers too. Donald Sutherland is just incredible and towards the end when he points and sreeches, I still can't get that image out of my head...shiver (has anyone seen him in the 70s movie, Don't Look Now - I love that little film too). But yes, every once in a while a remake comes along that just blows my socks off. Sometimes I forget that The Thing is a remake, the old movie is kind of cute actually, but the remake is pretty incredible (actually anything that Kurt Russell is in is pretty incredible). Hey I will even admit it, I loved the OLD Black Christmas movie, but I also enjoyed the remake of it. I did enjoy the remake of NOTLD in a way but I didn't like the woman that was the lead. There were even some parts of the remake of Halloween that I liked, but as a WHOLE movie, I didn't care for it at all and don't even compare it to the o ... " [More]
clownman70360clownman70360 Halloween is the best,A+ for Ro ...
by clownman70360 in clownman70360 Blog
loved it.
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"I really love this remake,it was slammin,i got that on 2-discs,unrated dvd.I gonna write a another upcoming horror slasher film for Rob Zombie called:The Massacre House,is about an iron masked,murderous farmer named Massacre is terrorized a group of stranded childhood friends,while they trapped in a locked,isolated farmhouse,it's half The Haunting,half The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,half House of Wax,half High Tension,half Venom,half Wrong Turn,half See No Evil,half Spirit Trap,half The Butcher,half My Little Eye and half Saw,all become mixed. " [More]
andrew123andrew123 THE REVIEW
by andrew123 in andrew123 Blog
loved it.
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"This was better than any other remake. Rob Zombie really did a great job in remaking Halloween.I hope he remake other movies such as It,Pet Cemetery,Friday the 13th,and other great movies. My favorite part was when Michael broke out of prison. This one and Halloween 6 are my favorites. " [More]
nicolewhitnicolewhit Halloween
by nicolewhit in nicolewhit Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"I was very skeptical about the remake of "Halloween" since I love the original, but Rob Zombie did a great job. It was definitely my least favorite Zombie movie, but I think he stuck to the original story line very well - I love how he expanded on the characters and of course my baby firefly - Sherry Moon- was awesome ! " [More]
gaigai I just saw it
by gai in gai Blog
loved it.
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"I have to say, Rob Zombie has impressed me with his other movies and music but this is the best. I saw the original a few weeks ago and it was HIllarious " [More]
daboo73daboo73 interesting
by daboo73 in daboo73 Blog
loved it.
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"I thought the movie was interesting and gladly enough it wasnt lacking of the style of robzombie. It was great to see he stuck with the style of the original but with a twist of his vision, in which it was time for some one to do. No offense to john carpenter i love his style of horror , but with the help of rob the new horror grnre opened a door. " [More]
notkevinbaconnotkevinbacon Re: Re-makes.......
by notkevinbacon in HORROR MOVIES 101
disliked it.
"Ok, quickly off topic (ish)... :)I read your review of Halloween (nice review!!) and I think we have some similar opinions about the movie, but ultimately split on the final decision. I would fully agree that not only is the demented white trash family a bit of a cop out and obvious choice... it's so overdone at this point it's distracting. I mean we have HIlls Have Eyes, Cabin Fever, Wrong Turn, TCM, Wolf Creek, House of 1k Corpses and all their sequels... I like the public persona of Zombie. I think he's a horrible director, though. The saving grace for me is that I think he generally loves making horror films... I just don't think he does it well. When I heard he was doing Halloween I was intrigued, but ultimately he made House of the Devils Rejects starring Michael Meyers. I don't feel like I learned anything about The Shape that was remotely interesting. I always liked the ambigious nature of Michael Meyers. He's a force... quiet, reflective and viol ... " [More]
[More reviews]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Every now and then, a talented filmmaker gets wrapped up in a production that's run off the rails, something that Rob Zombie knows all too well after his stint resurrecting a seminal horror legend with his so-called reimagining of Halloween -- the result being a thoroughly troubled picture whose faults are, at times, too much to bear for even the most casual viewer. Was it his gritty, goth aesthetic that got in the way of delivering a better translation -- or merely studio interference? One thing is for sure, the film that was released into theaters is a colossal mess of misguided product appeasement that barely taps into what made John Carpenter's original so effective. Gone is the ratcheting suspense, in favor of heavy-handed aggression that Zombie effectively mined so well in his previous film, The Devil's Rejects. The problem here is that that kind of in-your-face brutality doesn't lend itself well to this film series. By the end of the torturous finale, the movie is basically broken down into a Texas Chainsaw Massacre-style insanity trip, with cues taken directly from that masterpiece and crossbred into this franchise, thus blurring the lines of what the director considers to be so special about the original in the first place. But was it all Zombie's fault? He's a bit blinded by his own fetishes -- that's for certain. For one, his white-trash take on the tale is a sure shock compared to the quiet simplicity of the first film. The constant need to explain everything is another possible detriment, depending on one's tastes. Those in the camp who find much unease with a growing evil sprouting out of suburban normality will no doubt be taken aback by what seems to be a clinical case of dysfunctional family syndrome, with young Michael Myers (played with a mix of pudgy preteen angst and confusing psychological indifference by newcomer Daeg Faerch) turning psychopathic seemingly because of his homestead's constant hostility. The forked-tongued William Forsythe provides much of this through his evil stepfather character, who seems wildly out of place from the get-go -- the same can be said of many of the now-you-see-em, now-you-don't cameos that pepper the picture. The headlining cast doesn't fare too well either -- whether it's the sex-crazed teen girl trifecta or Malcolm McDowell's near laughable sentimentality, the new incarnations are poor substitutes for their predecessors all across the board. As a bland reincarnation of Dr. Loomis, McDowell fails to bring anything new or even old to the character, while Scout Taylor-Compton comes off as more of a walking goofball hormone machine instead of being bred out of the virginal heroine mold. Unfortunately, Zombie doesn't help things much with his decision to condense the original film into the final act, thereby denying the audience the time to invest in these characters. And as far as the adult Michael Myers goes, Tyler Mane hulks around okay, but ends up looking like a degenerate wrestler most of the time, smashing anything in his way with little to no care put into connecting his mannerisms to the classic Myers of yesteryear. Add a schizophrenic style onto all of this, plus more of the director's flare for dirty, grungy horror, and one has a film that so drastically gets things wrong as a narrative that it barely matters how well it realigns with the past. Given all of this, is there a silver lining to this production? One compliment that's been thrown out there is that at least it's Zombie's vision all the way -- or is it? When rumors of the reshoots popped up promising more deaths and an extended ending, the filmmaker scoffed at the idea, sizing it up to Internet lunacy. The official response was that Bob Weinstein offered more money to help juice up the production any way that Rob wanted, so the timeline of the film was played with, opening things up for a few more cameos along the way (including key members of the Rejects alumni -- Sid Haig and Bill Moseley). Additionally, the director has said that the ending was reworked to give Laurie a more satisfying arc, but if that's true, then he missed the point even more the second time around, studio interference or not. Either way, one thing no one counted on was a workprint copy leaking onto the Internet the week of release, not only raising the piracy flag in Tinseltown, but allowing an interesting peek at what the picture looked like before the notorious Weinstein Company waved more money around. Reportedly gone is the Texas Chainsaw-tinged ending, as well as the absurd chain-breaking escape from the hospital. In their place, grounded character work that allows for a richer Halloween experience than the cut-and-paste one that made its way onto the big screen. Sadly, it seems that audiences lost out again, making this yet another Halloween sequel that's been tampered with before its theatrical release. What's even worse is that this looks to be a monumental step back creatively for Rob Zombie, who for whatever reason, has delivered what many outside his loyal following would consider to be a colossal waste of time. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide
 



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DejaVecu
DejaVecu
loved it.
black13
black13
loved it.
clownman70360
clownman70360
loved it.
rica5tully
rica5tully
is not interested.
wyrdsister
wyrdsister
is not interested.
fa531
fa531
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