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Michael Myers

HalloweenMovies.com to Live Stream this Saturday’s Halloween Panel at Monsterpalooza

April 11, 2019 by Sean Decker

Monsterpalooza, the world’s longest running celebration of the art of monsters and movie magic, (running this year April 12-14 at the Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, CA) is set to host a panel this coming Saturday on the continued exploits of Haddonfield’s most infamous resident, Michael Myers, and HalloweenMovies.com is set to live stream it.

Running from 1:15 to 2:00 PM PST, the panel, moderated by Fangoria’s editor emiritus Tony Timpone, will feature Halloween 2018’s makeup effects designer Christopher Nelson, actress Rhian Rees (the film’s “Dana Haines”) and The Shape himself, actor and stuntman James Jude Courtney, as they reminisce about the making of the highest grossing slasher film of all time.

Tickets are available at the door for $35 each with the convention kicking off at 11 AM, and we encourage those attending to arrive early (if past years are any indication, the show will sell out). For those who can’t make it? HalloweenMovies.com official Facebook page plans to live stream the panel. ‘Like’ the page here, and tune in at 1:15 PM for the feed.

For more information on Monsterpalooza, you can visit their official site here, ‘Like’ them on Facebook here and follow them on Twitter and Instagram.

Filed Under: EVENTS, FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018), NEWS Tagged With: Blumhouse, christopher nelson, Halloween, horror convention, James Jude Courtney, live stream, Michael Myers, Miramax, monsterpalooza, panel, Pasadena, Pasadena Convention Center, Rhian Rees, 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

Exclusive Interview: Halloween 5’s Don Shanks Speaks! – Part 2

April 2, 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 working on the film, and touched on topics ranging from the film’s alternate ‘Dr. Death’ opening and 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 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 Shanks’ beginnings in Part 1 of our interview series here), Shanks told us that prior to Halloween 5 he’d cut his teeth on an entirely different slasher film, the 1984 flick Silent Night, Deadly Night.

“I was in that film quite a bit,” Shanks offered of the movie, which went on to generate four sequels and the 2012 loose remake Silent Night. “A friend of mine was the stunt coordinator on it and he brought me on to double the Santa.”

Directed by Charles E. Sellier, Jr. (who Shanks had worked with on the Adams films and television series years prior), Silent Night, Deadly Night was written by Paul Caimi, and revolves around the character of Billy, who after seeing his parents murdered as a child at the hands of a Santa Claus suit-wearing criminal, goes on a Yuletide spree-killing of his own some years later.

Cashing in on the holiday-themed slasher craze of the time (its predecessors included Bob Clark’s underrated 1974 film Black Christmas and of course 1978’s immensely successful Halloween, as well as their imitators My Bloody Valentine, Friday the 13th Part 2, The Burning and dozens of others), the production too decided to give their killer a narratively related look. Thusly, Silent Night, Deadly Night’s Billy was presented as a none-too-family-friendly axe-wielding Saint Nick, much to the outrage of parents everywhere.

“Everything with the axe was me, and I did all of the stunts required of Santa Claus,” recalled Shanks of his work in the film, which also required him to double many of Santa’s victims as well, “and (often) we were using real axes.”

Of one of those moments when Shanks was asked to use an actual edged weapon, “We were doing one scene with Linnea (Quigley) where she runs to the telephone and (the character of) Billy throws his axe at her, and they wanted me to cut the telephone cord next to her with the axe,” Shanks offered. “I said, ‘That’s a little too close to her for me. There’s a snowman (decoration) right next to her. Let me throw it at that.’ So I first did it with a rubber axe, which didn’t stick and just knocked the fake wall down. So they fixed the wall, and I did it again, and the second time the axe splitt the snowman and it stuck (in the wall).”

 “After the take Linnea said, ‘That was really amazing!’” recalled the actor. “And I said, ‘Well, you know I throw knives and tomahawks.’ And she said, ‘Yeah, but how do you get a rubber one to stick in the wall?’ And I said, ‘The second one wasn’t rubber! They didn’t tell you that I was going to be throwing a real axe at you?’ And she said, ‘No, they didn’t.’”

Linnea Quigley in Silent Night, Deadly Night.

As it turns out, scantily-clad women weren’t the only ones on Santa’s “naughty list” in Silent Night, Deadly Night.

“In another scene, this kid steals a toboggan and is sledding down a hill,” continued Shanks. “So we had a stunt guy wearing a prosthetic head double the kid, and we put a ghost neck on the top of his own head and built his shoulders up, and I took the real axe and cut his (prosthetic) head off with it. So like I said, we were using real axes.”

 Such holiday mayhem was the cause of much controversy on November 9th, 1984, when the film was released to theaters. Lambasted by critics and picketed by parental groups for its content (and television trailers, which aired during hours of family-friendly programming), the TriStar film was pulled from theaters six days into its release. (Wes Craven’s A Nightmare on Elm Street was incidentally released the same day – to less vitriol and far more fanfare).

In the years following Silent Night, Deadly Night, Shanks found work in the television films Louis L’Amour’s Down the Long Hills and Stranger on My Land, as well as the television series Werewolf, before landing the role he’s most known to genre fans for: that of The Shape in 1989’s Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers.

Of that casting, Shanks recalled, “What it was, was that I had worked with stunt coordinator Don Pike. We had done a CHiPS episode together and had become kind of friends, and then later I was here in Salt Lake City, and he called me and said, ‘We’re doing this movie and I wanted to know if you were available to do stunts.’ I go, ‘Yep, sure.’ And so he calls me back ten minutes later and says, ‘The director would like to talk to you.’ I asked, ‘About doing stunts?’ He says, ‘Well, we’re doing Halloween 5 and we’re considering you to play Michael Myers.’ I go, ‘That’s cool.’ So I went in and talked to (the director) Dominique, and after a little bit he says, ‘I want you to walk for me like wood through water.’ I thought about it for a minute, and then I did it, and he said, ‘OK, perfect.’”

 “And that’s how I got the role.”

Don Shanks Unmasked in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

 With its predecessor Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers having released to box office success in October of 1988, the series’ producers were eager to duplicate that with an October 1989 follow-up, and thusly, Halloween 5 was moved quickly into production. Ideas pertaining to the continuation of the storyline varied wildly. A first draft by Shem Bitterman followed Alan B. McElroy’s established conceit and found the character of Jamie Lloyd to have become pure evil, following the stabbing of her stepmother in the finale of Halloween 4. That concept was however rejected by producer Moustapha Akkad, who felt that fans’ interest lay in the story of Myers (given the box office disaster that was the Myers-less Halloween III: The Season of the Witch, his concerns were warranted). Ultimately, writers Bitterman, Michael Jacobs and director Othenin-Girard all found writing credits on the shooting script, in a story which picked up directly where the previous film had left off: with Myers falling into a mine shaft beneath a hail of gun fire.

“We started filming a week and a half after I got the script,” recalled Shanks of Halloween 5, which commenced principal photography in May of 1989 in Salt Lake City and its surrounding environs.

As originally scripted and shot, Myers, in true First Blood fashion, escapes via a fiery opening in the side of a mountain, and riddled with bullets floats down the river to the cabin of Dr. Death, portrayed by local Salt Lake City resident Theron “Uncle Thud” Read, in what has become one of the more discussed ‘lost’ scenes of the film franchise.

Writer’s note: It may not be lost.

“He was a punk comedian here in town,” recalled Shanks of the actor, comic and fixture on the 1980’s SLC punk scene, who is most remembered for his role of Mark Bojeekus in the 1987 comedy Three O’Clock High, and who passed away on July 20th, 2009. “He had a Mohawk haircut, and was very, very emaciated looking.”

Of the scene, which finds The Shape being discovered by Dr. Death and subsequently brought into the cabin in which a resurrection ritual is conducted, Shanks recalled, “(I was) placed on this stone alter, and all around (the set) were things that the production had gotten from witches, and people that sell you the occult. And there were scrolls and different chants and this and that. And (suspended from) the altar, right above me, was this rock that looked like a stalactite – it was on a string and it would circle. And Dr. Death was doing an incantation on me, and then he tattoos on me the Thorn rune, which is the sign of eternal life. And so he does all these incantations, and on Halloween Eve (one year later) I come back to life.”

“So I put the mask on,” continued Shanks of the results of Myers’ not-quite-grateful response to his resurrection, “and I grab Dr. Death by the throat and pick him up over my head and break his back, and then put him on the altar, and take the stalactite and I go through his chest with it. I thought it was one of my better kills. But (later) Moustapha thought it was too much of the occult type thing. So they decided to shoot it differently.”

Gone was Dr. Death, now replaced by actor Harper Roisman who would in the theatrical release portray an elderly mountain man living in the same cabin (in a direct homage to 1935’s Bride of Frankenstein), as were any signs of the occult, with a talking parrot taking their place.

Of Reads’ performance as Dr. Death, “It was eccentric,” offered Shanks, “and if you saw it you would just go, ‘Wow, that guy looks really weird.’ But it kind of gave the film a little more of an artistic and avant-garde (touch). I mean, it worked perfectly. For what we were doing and the way the (occult) set looked, you want something that isn’t the norm. And the old guy, when we re-shot the opening, Othenin-Girard wasn’t even there. We shot that the last day (of production). I think it was (line producer) Rick Nathanson that directed it. Or it might have been (first AD) Kelly Schroeder. But I’m pretty sure Dominique was not there.”

Fangoria Magazine. November 1989. Issue #88.

 Other interesting changes to Myers included those that were visual, as evidenced by The Shape’s mask itself. As designed and provided by Robert Kurtzman, Greg Nicotero and Howard Berger of K.N.B EFX Group (who also served as the film’s special makeup supervisors), Myers’ visage took on an arguably more malevolent look than the ones which had preceded it.

“There were some changes to it after I’d been cast,” said Shanks of the mask. “I believe it had been sculpted off of a mold of Nicotero, and my head’s a little bigger than his. And then Moustapha thought that the nose needed work, so they changed that. And then we put makeup sponges underneath the neck so it would flare out more, because it form-fitted (without them), and it looked more like a face than it did a mask.”

 “And then of course we had to change it again later after Donald Pleasence had broken my nose.”

 In our upcoming Part 3, Shanks talks working with Danielle Harris and Pleasence (and his hearty swing) in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, those infamous ‘lost’ SWAT massacre scenes, a near fatal Camaro mishap, his introduction to the Halloween fan base, and much, much more.


 

Filed Under: FEATURED, FILM, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989) Tagged With: Black Christmas, Bob Clark, Danielle Harris, Deadly Night, Dominique Othenin-Girard, Don Shanks, Donald Pleasence, Dr. Death, Friday the 13th Part 2, Greg Nicotero, Halloween, HALLOWEEN 4, Halloween 5, Howard Berger, John Carpenter, lost footage, Michael Myers, Robert Kurtzman, Silent Night, Slasher films, The Burning

John Carpenter to Receive the Prestigious Golden Coach Award at Cannes Director’s Fortnight 

March 29, 2019 by Sean Decker

According to Variety, Halloween director and horror master John Carpenter is set to receive the 2019 Golden Coach Award (Carrosse d’Or) at the Director’s Fortnight sidebar of the Cannes Film Festival on May 15th.

In its letter to Carpenter, The French Directors’ Guild, which chooses the recipient of the award, called the filmmaker “a creative genius of raw, fantastic and spectacular emotions,” and when on to say that each of his films “enhances the irresistible delight of staging. In each of them, the work on space, on what is off-screen, on the visible and on the invisible, is constantly renewed and regenerated in order to redefine fear – a fear that is always prone to trigger emotions in characters and actors who have now become iconic.”

Past recipients of the award include Martin Scorsese in 2018 and Werner Herzog in 2017.

Congratulations John from HalloweenMovies.com and everyone at Trancas!

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), NEWS Tagged With: cannes, Carrosse d'Or, Christine, Escape from New York, French Directors Guild, Golden Coach Award, Halloween, In the Mouth of Madness, John Carpenter, Martin Scorsese, Masters of Horror, Michael Myers, Starman, The Fog, The Thing, They Live, Warner Herzog

SFX Legend John Carl Buechler Passes Away at 66

March 18, 2019 by Sean Decker

It’s with a heavy heart that we must report that SFX legend John Carl Buechler has passed away at the age of 66.

According to a GoFundMe page set up by his wife Lynn last month, Buechler died early this morning after a battle with Stage IV prostate cancer.

From designing and supervising the special makeup effects for 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers and 1995’s Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers to directing Kane Hodder in Paramount Pictures’ Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (in which he also delivered one of the more notable character makeups in that series’ history), Buechler is additionally well known for his special effects work on such genre films as Re-Animator (1985), From Beyond (1986), Dolls (1987), A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988), Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991) and Adam Green’s Hatchet (2006), among many others.

The first person in history (according to his IMDB bio) to make his way into the director’s chair by way of make-up effects superstardom, Buechler told HorrorNews.net in a 2010 interview, “I’ve always loved writing and I’ve always loved directing – makeup effects are part of the tools that I use.”

“His family is absolutely devastated as are many of his fans and friends,” reads the updated GoFundMe page, which was originally created to assist in Buechler’s mounting medical bills. “His wife who works for the school system has been left with thousands of dollars worth of bills and the position to care for three children. Please donate to this newly captioned memorial fund (to) help them get through this terrible tough time. To all of you who sent good wishes and love please know that your communication really lifted his spirits.”

From everyone at Trancas, we offer our sincere condolences to Buechler’s wife Lynn and surviving family.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN VI (1995), NEWS Tagged With: Friday the 13th, Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 6, John Carl Buechler, Michael Myers

Exclusive Interview: Halloween 5’s Don Shanks Speaks! Part 1

March 11, 2019 by Sean Decker

Love it or hate it, one thing which can’t be argued is the divergent path which 1989’s Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers took the franchise on. From the head-scratching 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 working on the Dominique Othenin-Girard-directed film, and touched on topics ranging from the film’s alternate ‘Dr. Death’ opening and 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 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, Shanks, now 69, recalls of landing the role of the young Crow brave (the first of many which paved his way to Myers) and of his entrance into the film industry, “I was twenty two at the time, and I was doing a play that required a lot of prosthetic makeup, and some people in the audience said that they’d really enjoyed my performance, as I was playing an old man.”

“About two months later I received a call from them that there was a movie in town that needed someone to work in prosthetic makeup,” he continued. “So I called the production, and they said, ‘We need a guy to be in makeup and wrestle a bear.’ And so I asked them, ‘Do you need any actors?’ They said, ‘Yeah, we are looking for an Indian in makeup and they’d have to wrestle a bear.’ And I told them, ‘Well, I’m part Indian and I’ll wrestle a bear.’ And that was my first film.”

Born February 26, 1950 in Piasa, Illinois, Shanks said of his childhood introduction to the world of cinema, “I grew up on a farm, and I’d watch these TV shows about the Old West and since I had a horse I learned to do all of the fancy mounts (the actors were doing on TV). And then when I was seven or eight, I saw a movie called The Crimson Pirate with Burt Lancaster, and since we had a barn I rigged it up like the mast of a pirate ship, and I would swing from it. I pretended to be a pirate, or a cowboy, or an Indian, and my Mom would say, ‘You’re going to break your neck doing that.’”

“I went on to make a living out of it,” Shanks chuckled, “starting with The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams.”

An initially storied production (as Shanks recalls, under financier/producer and Shick Electric mogul Patrick Frawley the film initially wasn’t completed), producer Charles E. Sellier, Jr. was brought on board with assistant cameraman Dick Freidenberg in order to save it (the latter was eventually bumped up to director). The resulting film was the seventh highest grossing release of 1974, earning $65 million worldwide off of a $140,000 budget.

“It’s still in the top five or ten highest grossing independent films of all time,” stated Shanks of The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, which stars, as does the later network series iteration, the now deceased actor Dan Haggerty in the titular role. “And my role of Nakoma in that film led into an expanded role in the television series.”

Revolving around the character of woodsman Adams, an innocent fugitive from the law who lives in the wilderness and who helps passers-by in the forest with the help of his grizzly bear companion, the 1977-1978 period NBC series was comprised of thirty seven episodes, with Shanks appearing in thirty-six of them. And at the time, he was one of the few Native Americans working in the industry.

“It was starting to go into that trend,” said Shanks of Hollywood’s penchant for then casting Caucasion actors in roles written as Native American, as evidenced in such films as 1950’s Winchester ’73 (which featured Rock Hudson in feathered pigtails and face paint) and in 1953’s The Searchers (which featured actor Henry Brandon in the same). Television too wasn’t without its offenses: the popular 1970-1971 ‘Crying Indian’ commercials (which featured the weeping Iron Eyes Cody, in reality actor Espera DeCorti, whose descent was Italian and decidedly not Cherokee and Cree as he had claimed) similarly cast loose and fast.

“I have my family history, you know, to trace back,” mused Shanks, who is of Cherokee and Illini descent, “and if you were going to say you were Indian you had to have some proof. A lot of the Native Americans at that time weren’t educated. And so (one of the few actual Native Americans to) play many of those parts was Mohawk actor Jay Silverheels, who famously portrayed Tonto in the 1950’s The Lone Ranger television series. When he started out he did extra work, and they told him that if he could learn to read he could play speaking parts. So he learned to read through comic books. I mean, this is what I’ve heard. And so from that time on he started educating himself and trying to help other Native Americans.”

“Years ago they were going to do a remake of The Lone Ranger,” Shanks continued of the actor, and of the 1981 William A. Fraker-directed feature The Legend of the Lone Ranger, “and I was up for the part of Tonto. The only reason I wanted to play it was because Silverheels was going to play my (character’s) father. And I wanted to be in it because I really respected him.” (Writer’s note: Silverheels passed away on March 5, 1980 in Los Angeles, CA, and neither he or Shanks would appear in the film).

As for the impact his authentic portrayal of Nakoma in The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams had, Shanks offered, “A guy I knew once told me a story. He’d said that while his Native American cousin was dying of cancer that he’d told him he knew me, and that his cousin had replied, ‘Can you tell Don how much I thought of him in that role, because Nakoma didn’t take shit from anyone, and because he spoke in (correct) Indian dialect? When I watched that show as a kid, I’d pretend to be Nakoma.”

Regarding this, Shanks said of his determination to accurately portray the character, “At the time (the producers) didn’t understand why I wanted to speak in an Indian dialect, and it was also difficult because there’s a masculine and feminine gender in that language. That, and the Indian language had changed after the 1860’s, and the show was set in the 1850’s. So I had to find a way to translate the script into the right period dialect. So I found a lady up in Montana who would translate it from English to Indian, and then she’d send it down to me, and I’d have a man I knew translate her translation into the masculine Indian dialect. So, I tried to portray him as authentically as I could. It was that important to me.”

Shank’s portrayal helped rocket the NBC show to popularity with an impressive 32% market share during its run, although it would be a few years until Shanks and cast realized just how deeply the series had resonated with viewers.

“We had so many fan letters that we never got,” recalled Shanks. “Dan (Hagerty) was over at NBC one time, after the show had been over for I don’t know how long, and this lady there goes, ‘You want your fan mail?’ And he goes, ‘You have fan mail?’ She says, ‘Yeah. Have you got a truck?’ He goes, ‘Yeah, I got a pick up.’ She says, ‘No, do you have an actual truck?’ There were eight million fan mails that we didn’t get.”

Expounding, “I was working for scale and Dan was working for maybe $2,500 a week,” Shanks recalled, “and the producers on the show didn’t want us to really know how popular it was, because they didn’t want us to ask for more money. And they were running a scam too. The episodes were budgeted at $700,000 each, but they were shooting them for like $150,000 to $200,000 an episode and pocketing the difference. And there was also $139 million dollars of merchandising that we never received.”

Above. a 1978 merchandising tie-in: articulated Grizzly Adams dolls from Mattel.

“But you know what, we were having a good time (during production),” said Shanks of his then ignorance to the goings-on. “All the cast did was go out and make people happy (with the show) and have a good time, and I was just out of college and (even at scale) it was the most money I’ve ever made.”

Airing at a time when environmentalism had begun to flourish, much of The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams was shot on location in the mountains of Utah, Arizona and New Mexico, and contained several animal actors, one of which was the female grizzly Bozo, who portrayed the series’ Ben the Bear. Given this, the rugged locations and often rugged narrative, Shanks at times found more than just alleged shady dealings and the perfection of his character’s dialect to be of challenge.

“Dan once cut off two of my fingers when we were doing a scene,” Shanks laughed of an incident on the set of the 1977 Grizzly Adams episode ‘The Search.’ “(Rawhide actor) Paul Brinegar played a trapper in it, and (cast member) Denver Pyle gets caught in a net and Dan and I are cutting him out (of it), and Dan cut off two of my fingers with his knife. It was my first index finger at the first knuckle and the middle finger at the second joint.”

His response to this rather harrowing accident?

“I went and had them sewn back on and I went back to work,” said Shanks. “I’ve never missed a day of work. I’ve had my back broken before and I came back to work.”

Of that accident, “(Years later) I was doing a picture in Atlanta that required a high fall,” Shanks recalled, “and the production had ordered a bag that was too big for what I was doing. Long story short, it bounced me out of it and I landed on my face and my heels hit me in the back of the head.”

When asked if he took time off from the mishap (which resulted in compression fractures to his second, third and fifth vertebrae) in order to heal, Shanks replied, “Never did. Never have. You’re gonna’ have to kill me to get me off the set.”

In our upcoming Part 2, Shanks talks re-teaming with Sellier for the 1984 Christmas slasher Silent Night, Deadly Night and dives into the production of Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, those infamous alternate scenes, Donald Pleasence’s hearty swing, and a whole lot more.

 

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989) Tagged With: Bozo the Bear, Charles E. Sellier, Cherokee, Crying Indian, Dan Hagarty, Danielle Harris, Deadly Night, Denver Pyle, Dick Freindenberg, Dominique Othenin-Girard, Don Shanks, Espera DeCorti, Halloween, Halloween 5, Henry Brandon, Illinia, Jay Silverheels, Jr., Michael Myers, Mohawk, Nakoma, Native American, Patrick Frawley, Paul Brinegar, Rawhide, Rock Hudson, Silent Night, The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams, The Lone Ranger, The Revenge of Michael Myers, The Serachers, Tonto, Winchester '73

Horror’s Hallowed Grounds Host Sean Clark Talks His Screen-used Halloween Mask Collection

March 8, 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) takes a deep dive into the rarely-seen prop collection of Horror’s Hallowed Grounds host Sean Clark, which include screen-worn masks from Halloween III: Season of the Witch through Halloween: Resurrection, and much more.

You can watch the episode below.

The episode (which serves as part one of 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, as well as her bloody cutting board (guess who now owns the latter? Well, Clark does, of course).

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, daniel ferrands, Fright Rags, giveaway, Halloween, Halloween 6, Halloween H20, Halloween II, halloween masks, Halloween: Resurrection, Halloween: Season of the Witch, Horrors Hallowed Grounds, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, mask collection, masks, Michael Myers, Sean Clark, trick or treat studios

Rondo Awards Nominates Halloween (2018) – Cast Your Votes!

March 4, 2019 by Sean Decker

The ballot for the 17th Annual Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards has arrived, and we’re honored to say that not only has David Gordon Green’s 2018 hit movie Halloween been nominated for Best Film, but also for Best Score (by series originator John Carpenter). What’s more, last year’s Halloween 40 Convention, held October of 2018 in Pasadena, California has been nominated for Best Event.

We’re simply thrilled to be included beside the work of so many talented people and artists working within the horror genre, and we hope you’ll swing over to Rondo’s official site and cast your votes today in their over thirty different categories which recognize significant work or achievement in the same.

Here’s the link to the ballot for the Annual Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards, and you can follow them on Twitter at @RondoAwards

Filed Under: FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018), NEWS Tagged With: Annual Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards, ballot, best event, best film, best score, cast your vote, David Gordon Green, Halloween, Horror Awards, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, nominated, nominations, Rondo Awards, Rondos, Ryan Freimann

Halloween 4’s John Carl Buechler Is Battling Cancer & Needs Our Help

February 21, 2019 by Sean Decker

From designing and supervising the special makeup effects for 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers to directing Kane Hodder in Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (in which he delivered one of the more notable character makeups in that series history), John Carl Buechler has been instrumental in delivering to Halloween and horror fans alike some of horror cinema’s most iconic moments.

Unfortunately we’ve learned that the man is currently fighting Stage IV prostate cancer, and given the continuing costs of his treatment which have exhausted his savings, he needs our help.

From his wife Lynn Buechler (who has launched a GoFundMe page in order help him wage his battle):

“For many starting out in the movie business in the 80’s, John Carl Buechler was much more than the man who gave many of us our start. He was a hilarious and positive friend who believed in giving young people a chance, often keeping us on payroll even when he didn’t have work…and in some cases while we were still learning the craft itself.  His friendship, love and dedication has been unfaltering throughout the years to not only his friends, but to his family and fans.

We are sad to report that John has recently been diagnosed with Stage IV prostate cancer and he and his family desperately need help.  For months John has quietly been trying every treatment he can to turn his situation around and in the process has not only exhausted his insurance, but his personal savings.  There is still a glimmer of hope that a miracle will occur, and that John’s situation will get better, but regardless his wife and family are about to be hit with thousands of dollars-worth of medical bills and lost wages, due to the fact they spend much of their time with John at the hospital. Every penny the family has is going to John’s care and comfort. The bottom line is we desperately need to raise money for his continued treatment.

He is currently focusing on the best of both conventional and alternative medicine, as well as taking daily physical therapy. He is responding to his homeopathic treatment, but it’s an expensive process – all of this is tremendously taxing both physically and monetarily.

Although it was tough making the decision to go public with his situation – it’s time for his friends, family and the horror community to come together to do everything possible to help make him more comfortable and hopefully get him on the road to recovery.  John is a fighter and insists on not giving up. It is his hope to turn his situation around and get back to work.  More importantly his family is his main priority and he is fighting ferociously to get better and have the chance to spend more time with them.

We are raising 120k to pay off his past and much needed upcoming treatment bills.”

To assist John in his struggle, please donate to his GoFundMe page here.

From everyone at Trancas, we are sending our thoughts and prayers to you, John. You’ve got this.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN 4, HALLOWEEN VI (1995), NEWS Tagged With: cancer, Friday the 13th, GoFundMe, HALLOWEEN 4, Jason Voorhees, John Carl Buechler, Michael Myers, special effects makeup

A Look at Trick or Treat Studios’ Officially Licensed Halloween Merchandise for 2019!

February 8, 2019 by Sean Decker

Sometimes the caliber of Halloween product development gets us truly abuzz here at HalloweenMovies.com, and such is the case with the awe-inspiring 2019 catalog recently released by Trick or Treat Studios (which marks their first time releasing product in connection with the original 1978 film Halloween and its sequels, 1988’s Halloween 4 and 1989’s Halloween 5). And while we can’t reveal everything they have in store for the year at present, we can give you a look at some products currently available for pre-order, and a few that aren’t!

Chock full of Officially Licensed Halloween franchise goodness, Trick or Treat Studios product for this year includes a new Halloween ’78 inspired Myers mask (sculpted by legend Justin Mabry) and a bevy of costumes from the film, including affordable takes on the Young Myers Clown, Adult Myers and Ghost Myers, as well as Dr. Samuel Loomis and Laurie Strode getups. Joining them are props, enamel pins, and even a life-sized poseable Myers (just to make sure you scare those trick or treaters come October).

Also currently available for pre-order are brand new Myers masks stemming from the entire film franchise (including the “The Brute” mask from Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers – deep cut, guys!), new costumes (Jamie Lloyd’s Clown costume, anyone?) and so much more.

Because in keeping with the theme, Trick or Treat Studios has also developed Halloween franchise wall décor through the beloved prism of Vintage Beistle (you know, the company that manufactures those amazing and Halloween decorations from the 20’s through 50’s), and while it’s not available just yet for pre-order on TOTS’ website, you can get a peek below.

All we can say is, “There go our paychecks.”

For more, visit Trick or Treat Studios online here, and follow them on Instagram @trick_or_treat_studios and on Twitter @trickortreat831.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (1978), HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), MERCHANDISE Tagged With: beistle, costumes, Halloween, halloween 2019, halloween costumes, halloween decor, halloween decorations, halloween masks, jamie lloyd, John Carpenter, Laurie Strode, masks, Michael Myers, Sam Loomis, The Shape, trick or treats studios

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