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HALLOWEEN 4

This September, Scream Factory Brings the First Five Halloween Films to 4k Ultra HD

July 8, 2021 by Sean Decker

Coming this September 28th from Scream Factory, the first five films in the Halloween film franchise get the 4K Ultra HD treatment with individual blu-ray releases of John Carpenter’s Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, and Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers.

Check out a round-up of the disc’s bonus features below, and for more (including word on Scream Factory’s partnering with Sacred Bones Records for limited 4k Ultra HD and vinyl soundtrack box sets of the Halloween, Halloween II and Halloween III: Season of the Witch), head on over to Scream Factory here.

Halloween Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative, Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Co-Writer/Director John Carpenter And Actress Jamie Lee Curtis
  • Audio Commentary With Director Of Photography Dean Cundey, Editor Tommy Lee Wallace, And Actor Nick Castle

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative, Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With John Carpenter And Jamie Lee Curtis
  • Audio Commentary With Dean Cundey, Tommy Lee Wallace, And Nick Castle
  • “The Night She Came Home”
  • TV Version Footage
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

DISC THREE (BLU-RAY):

  • Original Color Timing Presentation
  • Vintage Interview With Producer Moustapha Akkad
  • “Halloween: A Cut Above The Rest”
  • “Halloween Unmasked 2000”
  • Halloween – The Extended Cut In HD (TV Inserts Are In Standard Definition)
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

Halloween 2 Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Director Rick Rosenthal
  • Audio Commentary With Stunt Coordinator Dick Warlock

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan From The Original Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Director Rick Rosenthal
  • Audio Commentary With Stunt Coordinator Dick Warlock
  • “The Nightmare Isn’t Over – The Making Of Halloween II” Featuring Rick Rosenthal, Dick Warlock, Composer Alan Howarth, Director Of Photography Dean Cundey, Actors Lance Guest And Leo Rossi, And More
  • Horror’s Hallowed Grounds Revisiting The Original Shooting Locations
  • Deleted Scenes With Optional Audio Commentary With Rick Rosenthal
  • Alternate Ending With Optional Audio Commentary With Rick Rosenthal
  • Still Gallery
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV and Radio Spots

DISC THREE (DVD):

  • Television Cut (In Standard Definition)
  • Film Script (DVD-ROM)

Halloween 3 Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Director Tommy Lee Wallace
  • Audio Commentary With Actor Tom Atkins

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative Approved By Cinematographer Dean Cundey
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Tommy Lee Wallace
  • Audio Commentary With Tom Atkins
  • “Stand Alone: The Making Of Halloween III: Season Of The Witch” Featuring Tommy Lee Wallace, Actors Tom Atkins And Stacey Nelkin, Stunt Coordinator Dick Warlock, Director Of Photography Dean Cundey, And More
  • Horror’s Hallowed Grounds: Revisiting The Original Shooting Locations With Host Sean Clark And Tommy Lee Wallace
  • Interview With Make-Up Effects Artist Tom Burman
  • Still Gallery
  • Theatrical Trailers
  • TV Spots
  • Radio Spots

Halloween 4 Bonus Features:

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Actors Ellie Cornell And Danielle Harris
  • Audio Commentary With Director Dwight H. Little And Author Justin Beahm

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Ellie Cornell And Danielle Harris
  • Audio Commentary With Dwight H. Little And Justin Beahm
  • “The Making Of Halloween 4: Final Cut”
  • “The Making Of Halloween 4”
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Still Gallery

Halloween 5 Bonus Features: 

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Actor Don Shanks
  • Audio Commentary With Director Dominique Othenin-Girard And Actors Danielle Harris And Jeffrey Landman

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • NEW 2021 4K Scan Of The Original Camera Negative
  • NEW 2021 Dolby Atmos Track
  • Audio Commentary With Don Shanks
  • Audio Commentary With Dominique Othenin-Girard, Danielle Harris, And Jeffrey Landman
  • “Inside Halloween 5”
  • “The Making Of Halloween 5”
  • “On The Set: Behind-The-Scenes Footage”
  • Halloween 5 Promo
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN II (1981), HALLOWEEN III (1982), NEWS Tagged With: Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Halloween II, Halloween III, Scream Factory

Return to Halloween 4: Where’s Haddonfield’s Vincent Drug, and What’s It Look Like Now?

September 24, 2020 by Sean Decker

For many, the nostalgia of small-town drug stores of the 50’s through 80’s endures, from the soda fountains and pocket revolving racks filled with 10 to 25 cent comic books, to the shelves of spooky offerings and costumes always prevalent during the Halloween season. And for fans of Michael Myers, those feelings of sentimental longing are most assuredly stirred each time they watch 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, given its wistful portrayal of one of those locations: Vincent Drug.

From young Jamie Lloyd’s trepidatious selection of her clown costume within to teen Grady’s romantic overtures to the attractive store clerk being decidedly shut down (“Fuck off, Wade”), the colorful events which transpire in the establishment recall for many of us similar memories of own adolescence. But where is Vincent Drug, and does it still exist?

Located on Main Street in Midvale just outside of Salt Lake City, Utah, we recently visited the location to snap some photos, and you can see them below.

Now sadly shuttered, Vincent Drug and its place in cinematic history however remain, from its exterior appearance in Halloween 4 (Utah’s nearby Millcreek Pharmacy stood in for the interior shots) to its prominent presentation in 1993’s The Sandlot and Steven King’s “The Stand” miniseries, among others.

For more on Vincent Drug, here’s an episode of “Horror’s Hallowed Grounds” with host Sean Clark below, which takes a deep dive into the locations of Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers.

Lastly, Fright-Rags even has a new t-shirt depicting Vincent Drug, along with some other really cool designs celebrating Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers.

We’re definitely feeling the Halloween spirit!

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN 4 Tagged With: Danielle Harris, film locations, Fright Rags, Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, jamie lloyd, Kathleen Kinmont, Michael Myers, Midvale, Vincent Drug

‘Rewind’ to ‘12: Michael Myers on Family Guy

August 4, 2020 by Sean Decker

Halloween the film franchise, and its central character of iconic slasher Michael Myers, has over its 42 year legacy permeated international pop culture, with the masked figure making appearances in several mediums, including the American television series “Robot Chicken” and Jennifer Love Hewitt’s “Ghost Whisperer” (among others), but did you know Halloween has also made multiple appearances on “Family Guy?”

One of our favorite instances of that comes in episode 13 of season 10 of the Seth McFarlane animated comedy, titled, “Tom Tucker: The Man and His Dream.” In it, Family Guys’ main character Peter Griffin is excited to find that Quahog’s local TV news anchor Tom Tucker is actually Halloween actor and stuntman George P. Wilbur, who portrayed the character of Michael Myers in Griffin’s “favorite movie ever,” Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers.

And in one of our favorite jokes from the episode (during a snippet of the classic Halloween 4 scene in which Myers terrifies Jamie Lloyd in her bedroom) the Shape arises to proclaim, “Good evening! I’m Michael Myers. I have enormous psychological problems and I’m going to take them out on you.”

What’s your favorite instance of Michael in popular culture?

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN 4 Tagged With: Daniel Harris, Family Guy, George P. Wilbur, Halloween, HALLOWEEN 4, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Michael Myers, Peter Griffin, Seth McFarlane

John Carpenter’s Halloween, Halloween 4 & Halloween 5 Return to the Drive-In (List Updated 10/9/2020)

July 30, 2020 by Sean Decker

You’ve seen Halloween, but have you ever experienced it as many first did in 1978, at a drive-in? Well, now you can, because John Carpenter’s seminal 1978 classic is returning to drive-ins through October 31, along with Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers and Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, and here’s how you can request your local drive-in to screen them!

Speaking with HalloweenMovies.com, Halloween (2018) and Halloween Kills producer Ryan Freimann offered of the news, “Trancas International Films and Compass International Pictures have partnered with CineLife Entertainment® in order to bring Halloween to audiences safely during this time of pandemic, and drive-in theater owners seem excited to be booking it as the Halloween season is right around the corner.”

Having premiered in cinemas and on drive-in screens on October 25, 1978, John Carpenter’s Halloween changed the landscape of horror cinema, stunning audiences worldwide and inspiring countless films in the genre. For the 2020 drive-in engagement, the digital print of Halloween has been restored and remastered under the supervision of cinematographer Dean Cundey.

Locations include:

Friday 10/9/20

Gateway Film Center, 1550 N. High Street, Columbus, OH 43201

Grandview Theater & Drafthouse, 1247 Grandview Avenue, Columbus, OH 43212

Southwest Theaters Lake Creek, 13729 Research Blvd. Suite 1500, Austin, TX 78750

Southwest Theaters, Hattiesburg 1000 Turtle Creek Dr., Hattiesburg, MS 39402

Skyview Drive In, 1500 Old Rte 66, N Litchfield, IL 62056

Elmira Drive In Theatre, 2431 State Route 352, Elmira, NY 14903

Aksarben Cinema, 2110 S. 67th Street, Omaha, NE 68106

Promenade Cinema, 14 924 4th Street, Sioux City, IA 51102

Main Street 7, 866 E 23rd Street, Fremont, NE 68025

Holland Plaza, 717 8th Street, SE Orange City, IA 51041

The Melody Drive In, 7055 US-35, Knox, IN 46534

Becky’s Drive In, 4548 Lehigh Drive, Walnutport, PA 18088

Sunset Drive In, 155 Porters Point Rd, Colchester, VT 5446

Saturday 10/10/20

Gateway Film Center, 1550 N. High Street, Columbus, OH 43201

Marcus Point Cinema, 7825 Big Sky Drive, Madison, WI 53719

Grandview Theater & Drafthouse, 1247 Grandview Avenue, Columbus, OH 43212

Southwest Theaters Lake Creek, 13729 Research Blvd. Suite 150, Austin, TX 78750

Southwest Theaters Hattiesburg, 1000 Turtle Creek Dr., Hattiesburg, MS 39402

Midway Drive-In, 7074 N Franks Ave, Niles, IL 60714

The Alexandria Theatre, 407 N Harrison, St Alexandria, IN 46001

Skyview Drive In, 1500 Old Rte 66, N Litchfield, IL 62056

Elmira Drive In Theatre, 2431 State Route 352, Elmira, NY 14903

Aksarben Cinema, 2110 S. 67th Street, Omaha, NE 68106

Promenade Cinema, 14 924 4th Street, Sioux City, IA 51102

Main Street 7, 866 E 23rd Street, Fremont, NE 68025

Holland Plaza, 717 8th Street, SE Orange City, IA 51041

The Melody Drive In, 7055 US-35, Knox, IN 46534

Becky’s Drive In, 4548 Lehigh Drive, Walnutport, PA 18088

Sunday 10/11/20

Gateway Film Center, 1550 N. High Street, Columbus, OH 43201

Marcus Point Cinema, 7825 Big Sky Drive, Madison, WI 53719

Grandview Theater & Drafthouse, 1247 Grandview Avenue, Columbus, OH 43212

Southwest Theaters Lake Creek, 13729 Research Blvd. Suite 1500, Austin, TX 78750

Southwest Theaters Hattiesburg, 1000 Turtle Creek Dr., Hattiesburg, MS 39402

Midway Drive-In, 7074 N Franks Ave, Niles, IL 60714

The Alexandria Theatre, 407 N Harrison St, Alexandria, IN 46001

Skyview Drive In, 1500 Old Rte 66, N Litchfield, IL 62056

Elmira Drive In Theatre, 2431 State Route 352, Elmira, NY 14903

Aksarben Cinema, 2110 S. 67th Street, Omaha, NE 68106

Promenade Cinema, 14 924 4th Street, Sioux City, IA 51102

Main Street 7, 866 E 23rd Street, Fremont, NE 68025

Holland Plaza, 717 8th Street SE, Orange City, IA 51041

The Melody Drive In, 7055 US-35, Knox, IN 46534

Becky’s Drive In, 4548 Lehigh Drive, Walnutport, PA 18088

Wanna’ see Michael Myers at your own local drive-in? It’s easy! Reach out to them and let them know that they can book Halloween by visiting CineLife Entertainment® at: https://www.cinelifeentertainment.com/event/halloween/

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), NEWS Tagged With: CineLife Entertainment, Compass International Pictures, drive-in, Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Ryan Freimann, Trancas International Films

‘Rewind’ to ’89: Halloween 5’s Danielle Harris & Donald Pleasence on MTV’s “The Big Picture”

June 1, 2020 by Sean Decker

In our latest installment of ‘Rewind,’ we take a trip back to 1989 via MTV’s “The Big Picture” with host Chris Connelly, who interviews the film’s then twelve-year old star Danielle Harris (with the addition of a clip from the set of Halloween 5 of series veteran, the late-great Donald Pleasence), as well as a rather cheeky video montage of Halloween‘s Michael Myers, set to Steve Winwood’s “Back in the High Life Again.”

Be sure to stick around for the end, in which Harris goes trick-or-treating just outside MTV’s studios in New York City! Oh, the 80’s!

Check it out below, as well as trailers for both 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers and 1989’s Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989) Tagged With: Chris Connelly, Danielle Harris, Donald Pleasence, Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Michael Myers, MTV

Trick or Treat Studios Unveils Officially Licensed Michael Myers 1:6 Figures

February 22, 2020 by Sean Decker

With the 2020 Toy Fair currently in full swing at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in Manhattan, New York, Trick or Treat Studios has unveiled their brand new officially licensed Michael Myers 1:6 scale figure line from Halloween, and we’ve got an early look!

Priced to retail for $119.99 each (with pre-orders set to go live in the coming weeks, specific dates to be determined), the first releases in the 12” articulated figure line are faithful recreations of cinema’s most iconic slasher Michael Myers from the films Halloween (1978), 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers and 1989’s Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, as well The Shape from 2018’s Halloween (coming late 2020), with  portrait sculpture for all by Justin Mabry, additional sculpting by Alex Ray and clothing design by Tinela Ayres.

For all things Trick or Treat Studios related, visit their official website here, and follow them on Instagram at @trick_or_treat_studios

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN (2018), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: 1:6 scale, Alex Ray, Halloween, HALLOWEEN 4, Halloween 5, Justin Mabry, Michael Myers, New York Toy Fair, NY Toy Fair, Officially Licensed, The Shape, Tinela Ayres, TOTS, trick or treat studios

The Official HalloweenMovies Discussion Group is Live!

February 5, 2020 by Sean Decker

We know that you’re a vocal, passionate, opinionated and ardent fan community (so are we!), and thusly we thought, “Why not just create a specific destination where we can not only discuss the Halloween series overall, but also what things we’d all like to see in the future?” The result? The Official HalloweenMovies Discussion Group, which is now live on Facebook.

From Halloween ‘78 to Halloween Ends and everything in between, we wanted to create a space that’ll not only allow your voices to be heard, but one in which we may interact as well, as a supportive community of people who love all things Haddonfield, as moderated by former Editor-in-Chief and Co-Founder of Dread Central, Steve “Uncle Creepy” Barton.

Join the conversation here. We’ll be listening (and from time to time giving away some cool stuff too)!

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN (2007), HALLOWEEN (2018), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN H20 (1998), HALLOWEEN II (1981), HALLOWEEN II (2009), HALLOWEEN III (1982), HALLOWEEN RESURRECTION (2002), HALLOWEEN VI (1995), NEWS Tagged With: Discussion Group, Halloween, Michael Myers

Michael Myers Comes Home in Trick Or Treat Studios’ Halloween Legacy Collection

August 21, 2019 by Sean Decker

With only 71 days to go until Halloween, we’re getting into the spirit of the holiday here at Halloweenmovies.com, and so is Trick Or Treat Studios, with some new and exciting Officially Licensed offerings in their Halloween Legacy product line.

From their “Halloween – The Boogeyman Michael Myers Mask” sculpted by the legendary artist Justin Mabry to their injection molded and electro plated “Halloween – Michael Myers Poster Knife Prop” based on the iconic poster art by artist Robert Gleason, we’re gonna’ predict that fans of the 1978 Carpenter classic will be thrilled by TOTS’ latest offerings (because quite frankly, we are!)

Joining the previously mentioned in TOTS’ line-up are eye-catching Michael Myers 925 Sterling Silver collector rings, Halloween wall decorations designed by Marty McEwen (with art in the style of vintage 60’s Halloween décor), young and old Michael Myers Halloween costumes perfect for any costume party (with Laurie Strode and Loomis getups available to boot), Halloween enamel pins, a light-up pumpkin, and a life-sized, 1:1 scale poseable prop of The Shape that’s sure to scare the hell out of the trick or treaters come Halloween night… and probably anyone else who encounters it.

Further, TOTS has delivered for fans of 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers and 1989’s Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers Justin Mabry-sculpted masks of the Shape stemming from both (and a “The Brute” mask developed by Rudel to boot), as well as adult and children’s Jamie Lloyd clown costumes, and a whole lot more.

Check out a smattering of images below, and for the full line head on over to Trick Or Treat Studios here to check out their Officially Licensed Halloween products, and follow them on Instagram to stay up to date on all of the latest.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: Dr. Loomis, Halloween, jamie lloyd, John Carpenter, Laurie Strode, Michael Myers, Officially Licensed, The Shape, trick or treat studios

Exclusive Interview: Halloween 5’s Don Shanks Speaks! – Part 3

April 17, 2019 by Sean Decker

In 1989, director Dominique Othenin-Girard’s Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers polarized Halloween fans. From the introduction of the character of the Man in Black and the early beginnings of The Cult of Thorn mythos to a psychic connection between uncle and niece, this fifth film in the franchise (and the fourth which followed the iconic character of the babysitter-slashing Myers, who first found fame in originator John Carpenter’s seminal 1978 horror classic Halloween) was indeed a departure from its predecessors.

But what of the man who donned the infamous coveralls and mask for this fifth entry? Thirty years since its release, we caught up with stuntman and actor Don Shanks to discuss his experience, and touched on topics ranging from the film’s deleted scenes to working with young lead Danielle Harris, as well as his prolific career in the film and stunt industry, navigating Hollywood as a Native American, and a whole lot more.

Commencing with his role of Indian brave Nakoma in the 1974 film The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, and kicking into high gear in 1977 in the hit television series of the same name (you can dig deep into that in Part 1 of our interview series here), prior to assuming The Shape’s mantle Shanks had cut his teeth on an entirely different slasher film, the 1984 flick Silent Night, Deadly Night (you can dig into that in Part 2 here, as well as his recollection of shooting the infamous ‘lost’ “Dr. Death” scene from Halloween 5).

As for Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers itself? With principal photography kicking off in May of 1989, a mere five months before its scheduled release on October 13th, 1989 (in a year already saturated with slasher sequels, including Friday the 13th VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan and A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, along with dozens of other hopeful contenders), Shanks didn’t have much time to prepare for the role – or to prepare for the evening on which series regular Donald Pleasence accidentally broke his nose with a two by four, either.

Shanks recalled of that spring night in 1989 in Salt Lake City, Utah (where the majority of principal photography took place), “(It was our fault that) we didn’t let Donald know. The board we were using was foam, but it had a piece of PVC in it, and so as long as you hit with the right side of it, you’d be fine. But if you hit with the other?”

Don Shanks and Donald Pleasence in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

“He was getting tired,” expounded Shanks of Pleasence and the scene, which finds the actor’s character of Loomis dropping a chain net onto Myers before striking him repeatedly, “and he caught me (with the prop), and blood was running out of my mask, and (stunt coordinator) Don Pike ran over asked if I was OK. I said that I was, and not to worry about it, and not to say anything (to Pleasence). But the next day my eyes were black, and that’s a pretty good sign that you broke your nose.”

Aside from that unfortunate incident, Shanks recalls that working with the actor, “Was great. That scene where we were on the staircase (in the Myers house) and he’s talking to me – I swear I was getting lulled by his voice. It’s almost hypnotic, just listening to him. And (even at his age) he wanted to do all his own stunts. So when I slam Loomis into the window (in the film)? That was actually Donald Pleasence.”

 A famously committed actor, the classically trained Pleasence’s desire for authenticity was additionally illustrated in his request to Shanks for him to remain on set – for a scripted scene in which the latter doesn’t appear.

“They were to shoot the scene which takes place right after I wreck the car (at the Tower Farm), and they had wrapped me for the night,” remembers Shanks. “And there was a knock on the door and I answered it. It was Donald and he said, ‘Might I impose on you? I have to shoot the scene where I’m talking to you and I won’t see you, but I just want to know that you’re out there. Would you mind?” I’d already wrapped for the night, but I was like, ‘It’s OK. Cool.’ So I was out there in the trees when he’s saying, “If you want to get rid of this rage, Michael, go home. Go home. Go to your house.’”

Shanks also holds fond recollections of the film’s young lead Danielle Harris, who had returned to reprise her role of Jamie Lloyd in Halloween 5, which she’d originated in its predecessor.

“I thought she was a trooper,” effused Shanks. “I mean, for eleven years old, she was like a little person. She was always there, and she always wanted to do her own stunts.”

One of those stunts required Danielle’s character to be marauded by Myers while trapped within a metal laundry shoot, while The Shape stabs violently through it with an actual butcher knife.

Danielle Harris in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

“That whole thing, she wanted to do it,” offered Shanks of the sequence, “And I was stabbing blind. I couldn’t see where she was. So we worked it out, and I put marks on the inside where she had to be, and I would stab through it.”

 “Even when we were doing the chase (at the farm), she wanted to be there. I was tearing up the place in that car (with her running in front of it), and there was so much fog!”

Inarguably one of the more visually arresting moments of the film, the scene finds Myers, having previously dispatched the character of Mike and having stolen his prized 66’ Camaro, chasing down not only Harris, but actors Jeffrey Landman and Wendy Kaplan (the latter in the role of Tina Williams) in it. And as Shanks tells it, it was for Kaplan that things got a bit dicey.

Wendy Kaplan in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

“Well, we had very few doubles,” Shanks said of the production’s apparently anemic approach in hiring stunt people, “(and for that scene) we were using the car for lighting. (Cinematographer) Rob Draper was in the back seat, and we had the headlights on Wendy and we were chasing her, so we had to be fairly close. So we had done it three times, and she asked Rob between takes, ‘When does the camera see my face?’ And Rob said, ‘Well, I really don’t see it.’ So, I think it was on the fourth take that she turned towards us (during the chase), and when she did she stepped on her cape, and it pulled her down and screamed. My heart was jumping out of my chest. I said, “My god!” and slammed on the brakes. I put it right on top of her. I didn’t run over her, but I could have. And I was like, ‘What are you doing?’ And she said, ‘Well, I want them to see my face.’ I told her, ‘It’s not worth getting killed over!’ But she was a trooper too. They all were!”

 “There’s one shot (though from that sequence) that I wish I had,” said Shanks, “where I had the mask on, and there was so much fog that it was coming out of the eye holes.”

Having previously dived into the “Dr. Death” alternate opening, conversation then turned to the other ‘lost’ footage from Halloween 5: the long rumored SWAT team massacre at the hands of Myers.

“Oh, I took out Haddonfield’s SWAT team,” confirmed Shanks. “I killed a whole bunch of people.”

Expounding of the filmed scenes, “They took place at the hospital, the place where Danielle’s character left from,” he offered of the location in Orem, Utah which stood in for Haddonfield Children’s Clinic. “If you remember, the police get on the radio (in the film) and they say, ‘He’s here,’ and the whole SWAT team (which is stationed) at the Myers house gets in their cars and they drive off, and there’s one guy left up (in the house) with Danielle in the bedroom, and then there’s one guy down below in a police car (on the street), and over the radio he hears people screaming. So that’s where the (SWAT massacre) scene was to be – just before that.”

Of the extent of the sequence, Shanks said, “Well, I think we didn’t spend that much shooting it, because it was mostly second unit, with Don Pike directing instead of Dominique. So we were doing it fast.”

Speed of set-ups aside, Shanks does indeed recall the kills.

“There’s one guy, and I mean they show it, when they’re taking out one of the bodies, whose head is twisted around,” recalled the actor. “They put the wardrobe on him backwards, and he looks like his head’s been twisted one hundred and eighty degrees. And another, the direction was, ‘Take an M16 rifle, and you’re just walking through these guys and killing them.’ There’s Donre Samson, a big tall black guy that I kill, and another one, I put the M16 through his head, and another guy, I break his neck and stomp on him, you know. The whole idea was that you’d hear everybody screaming (over the radio) when he’s killing everybody. So we did all these really quick shots. You know: ‘Pick this guy up. Knock this guy down. Stab this guy.’”

In addition to the body count Shanks racked up in Halloween 5 as The Shape, he additionally tallied up a few as the film’s other antagonist, the nebulous Man in Black, a character whose identity and connective tissue had yet to be determined at the time of filming.

Gorezone Magazine. January 1990. Issue #11.

“Well, I wasn’t sure where they were going with that,” said Shanks of the conceit, “because in the scene where Danielle’s in the coffin, we were shooting stuff where I didn’t have the Myers mask on. And I was asking (executive producer) Moustapha (Akkad) about it, and he was like, ‘I’m not going to use the footage here, I’m going to use it later.’ So my thought was that in Halloween 6 that they’d cut back to scenes that were in Halloween 5 that would show that the Man in Black (and Myers) were the same person. Because later (after production) when Moustapha had called me and said, ‘We’re thinking about doing Halloween 6, and we would like you to go out and promote part 5,’ he also said, ‘but don’t say anything about the Man in Black.’”

And while Shanks would not return to reprise either role in 1995’s Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers (those would go to George P. Wilbur and Mitchell Ryan as Myers and the Man in Black, respectively), the actor said of working with Halloween 5’s director Othenin-Girard (whose unique stamp on the franchise forced many a challenge for its immediate follow-up), “If you look at Halloween 5, it has certain artistic qualities to it, which is what he brought to it. You know, there’s little inner meanings and nuances, that when you watch it, aren’t in the other ones. Like the “Dr. Death” scene: the occult items (in it) happened through Dominique. He’d gotten in touch with (local) witches to get them, and he wanted it shot on a certain day, or it had to be a certain date, I don’t remember which. But numbers were a big thing with him for some reason. His (hotel) room even had to be have certain number, and his bed had to face a certain direction.”

 “And that’s just what Dominique did.”

 As for what Shanks, now sixty-nine years old (and surprisingly still fit, regardless of the spinal fractures he endured as a stunt man in the 80’s) is up to, “I’m still riding horses,” he said. “I have one friend, and she’s been doing horse rescues and stuff, and so I help her train the horses. You know, just taking it easy.”

“Although,” he added, “She did just start doing Mongolian archery. That’s where you shoot targets with a bow on horseback.”

 “I think I might try that.”

Filed Under: FEATURED, FILM, HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN VI (1995) Tagged With: A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child, Danielle Harris, Deadly Night, Dominique Othenin-Girard, Don Shanks, Donald Pleasence, Dr. Death, Friday the 13th VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan, Halloween, HALLOWEEN 4, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Halloween 6, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Moustapha Akkad, Silent Night, The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, Trancas International Films

Horror’s Hallowed Grounds Host Sean Clark Talks Screen-Used Halloween Props

April 3, 2019 by HalloweenMovies

The latest episode of the docu-series Collection Complete (which takes an in-depth look into the lives of artists and the collections that fuel their work) returns for an expanded look into the rarely-seen prop collection of Horror’s Hallowed Grounds host Sean Clark, which includes screen-used items from the Halloween franchise, and a whole lot more.

You can watch the episode below.

The episode (which serves as part two on Clark’s Halloween collection) also chronicles the evolution of his horror location docu-series Horror’s Hallowed Grounds, which has featured many filming locations from the Halloween franchise, from the Myers house in South Pasadena, CA to the home of Halloween II’s Mrs. Elrod in the same. Speaking of which, Clark shows off that cutting board (which he now owns), as well as an original Halloween shooting script, given to him by The Shape himself, Nick Castle.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN (2007), HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN H20 (1998), HALLOWEEN II (1981), HALLOWEEN II (2009), HALLOWEEN III (1982), HALLOWEEN RESURRECTION (2002), HALLOWEEN VI (1995), JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN Tagged With: Collection Complete, Fright Rags, Halloween, Halloween 6, Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers, Halloween II, horror, Horrors Hallowed Grounds, Michael Myers, Mrs. Elrod, Nick Castle, Sean Clark, The Shape, trick or treat studios

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