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Michael Myers

Happy 72nd Birthday to The Master!

January 16, 2020 by Sean Decker

From his 1978 groundbreaking masterpiece Halloween, a film which single-handedly introduced the slasher genre to general audiences worldwide (while simultaneously going on to become one of the most successful independent films of all time), to his early classic features The Fog, Escape From New York, The Thing and Christine (and many more), John Carpenter’s unique and subversive work as a filmmaker has been instrumental in defining genre cinema as we know it.

As for his efforts as a musician and composer, he’s further created some of the most iconic melodies ever written for the screen (you’re humming the “Halloween Theme” right now, aren’t you?) and he continues to do so to this day, as evidenced by his recent “Lost Themes” albums and live performances, and his score for Halloween (2018), among others.

In celebration of the man and his incredible and still growing body of work, everyone here at HalloweenMovies.com would like to wish Mr. Carpenter a very happy 72nd birthday!

____

Halloween (1978)

The Fog (1980)

Escape From New York (1981)

The Thing (1982)

Christine (1983)

John Carpenter 2018 Tour Promo

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN, NEWS Tagged With: Christine, Escape from New York, Halloween, Halloween Ends, Halloween Kills, John Carpenter, Lost Themes, Michael Myers, The Fog, The Thing

Exclusive Interview: Halloween 5’s Wendy Kaplan Speaks! – Part 2

January 7, 2020 by Sean Decker

On the heels of the box office success of 1988’s Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, series producer Moustapha Akkad was eager to expand the narrative of Haddonfield’s reinvigorated slasher (following the decidedly lackluster reception of its predecessor, the then maligned and now rather celebrated feature Halloween III: Season of the Witch). The result was Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, a feature film directed by Swiss-born director Dominique Othenin-Girard.

Co-written by Girard and screenwriters Michael Jacobs and Shem Bitterman (following the director’s literal trashing of the original Bitterman script titled Halloween: The Killer Inside Me, which was intended as the follow-up), Halloween 5 was rushed into production in order to make its announced release date of October 13th, 1989. The outcome? A picture which proved polarizing for fans, and one which was received with far less fervor, both critically and financially, than its forerunner. Additionally, the narrative, which introduced audiences to the Cult of Thorn mythos, and which additionally was the victim of both reshoots and a post-production process which left entire sections on the cutting room floor, created some confusion within the Halloween fan base.

In part two of our recent interview series with Halloween 5’s Wendy Kaplan (see part one here), the actress talks the film, the rather infamous party scene at the hotel used to house the cast and crew, her offer to potentially appear in Halloween 6, her surprise at the truncated Haddonfield police station massacre as it appeared theatrically, and her thoughts on the flick thirty-one years later.

Wendy Kaplan as ‘Tina Williams’

With principal photography on Halloween 5 kicking off in Salt Lake City, Utah a mere five months before the film’s scheduled release, and script changes occurring consistently throughout production (in fact the script itself wasn’t complete when cameras started to roll), Kaplan recalls that set life too played fast and loose.

“It was a festive group of people,” Kaplan, who portrayed Halloween 5’s (“I’m never sensible if I can help it!“) ‘Tina Williams’ recalled. “It was pretty fun. You can imagine yourself at twenty-three years old, which is how old I was when I made the movie. We were all young actors, excited and on location, and we were crazy.”

Touched on in the bonus feature Dead Man’s Party – The Making of Halloween 5 contained in Anchor Bay and Shout Factory’s 15-disc Halloween Blu-ray box set, Kaplan alluded of the after-hours festivities, which included makeup effects artists Robert Kurtzman, Greg Nicotero and Howard Berger of K.N.B. EFX Group (a trio known then for not only their exemplary FX work, but also their penchant for the Sunset Strip’esque revelry of the late 80s), “It was like summer camp. We didn’t have phones or the internet to muck it up. And the party sort of followed the three of them. That sort of rock star thing. Everybody was just sort of trailing along.”

“We were doing night shooting,” she continued, “and then we would come home to the hotel at daybreak and have a party in somebody’s room. And I felt kind of terrible for the other guests, but I was like, ‘Oh my god, this is your typical Hollywood kind of scene.’ I don’t know that we trashed a room, but we would hang out a lot. Even at night we would come home and hang out in this little Salt Lake City hotel bar and ask the bartender to turn up the music, and we would dance. It was fun. I guess every set has that kind of feeling.”

Wendy Kaplan as ‘Tina Williams’

As for her character in the film, conversation turned then to her rather nebulous fate: while indeed stabbed by The Shape (actor Don Shanks) in the third act, she’s never shown definitively as having perished. Was this intended as a set up for Kaplan’s potential return for a Halloween 6?

“I think in the original screenplay it was never really clear what happened to my character,” Kaplan offered. “You know, Tina saved Jamie in the script, but there was no like, ‘Tina’s dead or Tina’s alive, or ‘Jamie goes and visits Tina in the hospital,’ sort of thing. I think it was very open ended, what happened to Tina. And I think that it may have been based on me signing a contractual clause that said I would do a part 6, but my agent didn’t want me to sign it. So, the producers I guess kind of left it open. It could have been that they wanted to hire a whole new crop of people, because I know we were probably a pain in the ass for Moustapha. We were a little crazy when we were shooting Halloween 5. But I do know I didn’t sign on for 6, because my agent was like, ‘Well, it’s really good for you to do Halloween 5, and it’s a significant role in a movie, but it is a horror movie, and we don’t want to make any more commitments.’ But I wound up going back to New York in 1990 and doing a bunch of theater, so it didn’t really have any bearing on anything anyway.”

With the narrative fluctuating as director Girard improvised aspects of the Halloween 5 story-line, and with whole sections missing from the theatrical cut, including the massacre of the Haddonfield police force at the hands of the mysterious Man in Black, Kaplan commented, “I felt that things had to be missing (from the film). They shot in that jail location for a long time, and in the film it’s just Michael sitting in a jail cell, with his mask still on. I was really surprised by that.”

Regarding the heavily edited first act scene featuring Tina and Rachel (as portrayed by actress Ellie Cornell) and an introduction to (as originally posited) a BMX bike-riding Billy Hill (actor Jeffrey Landman), Kaplan recalled, “I think that we had more to say to each other in that scene where we’re walking. There’s actually a lot more to it. I mean, I guess it just went on forever and they cut a lot of it. Which I don’t blame them, I guess. And the script, it kept changing.”

From the Trancas vault, Page 38 of the Halloween 5 Shooting Script, dated 5/2/1989.

Thirty-one years after the film’s release and six films later, and with an ever-growing international fan-base surrounding the franchise, Kaplan mused of her place in the genre, “It’s meaningful and it’s heart-warming. I really appreciate that people for whatever reason really gravitate towards the movies. And also towards Tina, for whatever weird and polarizing character that she is. I never expected that. I just was tagged in an Instagram post that said, ‘Tina’s the best character in the whole series!’ When people say things like that, it’s sweet. It’s a crazy character that came out of me years ago, and people are still kind of, you know, loving or hating her. I guess we all have the power to effect people.”

Fan-made doll of Halloween 5’s Tina Williams by Heath Newman

“With all of the stuff going on in the world right now,” the actress concluded, ”if people have a few moments where they can sit down and watch a horror movie, and they can release some of their fear, then that’s a great thing. I feel like a lot of people have come up to me at conventions and have said, ‘Tina made me feel that it’s okay to be who I am, and that it’s okay to be me.’ And I find that to be the best thing that anybody could ever say to me. Because I didn’t expect that this movie would impact the lives of people. The idea that people can feel like they can express themselves because they watched Tina in the movie is just great, because I feel that way about that character. People should be able to be themselves, and to actualize themselves, and to feel okay. Like, if these people are doing it, then I can do it too. I can be who I need to be.”

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN INTERVIEWS Tagged With: Danielle Harris, Dominique Othenin-Girard, Don Shanks, Greg Nicotero, Halloween, HALLOWEEN 4, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Howard Berger, Jeffrey Landman, KNB, Michael Jacobs, Michael Myers, Moustapha Akkad, Robert Kurtzman, Shem Bitterman, Shout Factory, The Shape, Trancas, Wendy Foxworth, Wendy Kaplan

Carpenter, Rosenthal & Green Wish Jamie Lee a Happy Birthday!

November 22, 2019 by Sean Decker

On Jamie Lee Curtis’ sixty-first birthday, our absolute best wishes to a true talent and a woman dear to our hearts from HalloweenMovies, Trancas International Films and her Halloween directors John Carpenter, Rick Rosenthal and David Gordon Green!

http://halloweenmovies.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/JAMIE_LIEGH_HD_VERSIONv3.mp4

Filed Under: NEWS Tagged With: David Gordon Green, Halloween, HalloweenMovies, Happy Birthday, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Rick Rosenthal, Trancas International Films

Exclusive Interview: Halloween 5’s Wendy Kaplan Speaks! – Part 1

November 11, 2019 by Sean Decker

With director Dwight H. Little’s 1988 film Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (the first appearance of the iconic slasher since 1981’s Halloween II) proving itself to be a critical and box office hit, excitement ran high and speculation rampant the following year for its sequel, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers.

But would the fifth film bring? With Little’s predecessor having introduced compelling new characters in the forms of both Jamie Lloyd (actress Danielle Harris, portraying Myer’s stalked niece) and Rachel Carruthers (the series’ new ‘final girl’) as well as delivering one hell of a cliff hanger of a finale, anticipation was palpable, and fans buzzed. Had little Jamie truly become evil? Had Mrs. Carruthers died? How had Myers survived that hail of bullets?

The film which moviegoers received however on October 13th of 1989 seemed to ask more questions than which it answered. 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, Halloween 5 remains to this day one of the more polarizing entries in the entire franchise, as does the role inhabited by one of the film’s stars, actress Wendy Kaplan.

Wendy Kaplan as ‘Tina Williams’ in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

Directed by Swiss director Dominique Othenin-Girard from an ever-changing and unfinished script by Michael Jacobs (with reshoots by series producer Moustapha Akkad), Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers introduces Kaplan’s teenage character of “Tina Williams” to the fold. Friend to both Halloween 4 characters Rachel and Jamie (although never previously referenced), Kaplan’s Tina as written falls somewhere between that of stock slasher victim and noble final girl, with the added fashion sense and rebelliousness of an early 80’s Madonna thrown in for good measure.

And it’s perhaps this very deviation from the scripted norm of wall flower as ‘final girl’ why Halloween fans remain divided to this day.

On the 30th anniversary of Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, we sat down with Kaplan (now Foxworth) to discuss in-depth her experience and thoughts on the production, and her outlook on the film three decades later.

“I didn’t know this at the time, like how different Tina was I guess from your typical Halloween ‘final girl,’” offered Kaplan of her role. “Like, I really knew nothing about any of that, or even of the term. It’s just been in the last few years that people have come and said, ‘You’re kinda’ like the final girl’ in the film.’ Which I don’t know if that’s even correct, because the movie’s so strangely structured. But I know that there was all that controversy, because the character’s not particularly a good girl. Like, that was a big thing, and it was a certain aspect of my personality and my performance, too.”

With commercial and soap work and a couple of television credits to her name in 1987 (an episode of “My Two Dads” and the TV movie “Police Story: Monster Manor”), the then 23 year old Kaplan, who had transplanted from New York to Los Angeles in order to pursue acting, found herself offered an audition for Halloween 5, of which she remembers at the time her management being rather underwhelmed.

Recalls the actress of the 80’s mainstream stigma attached to the horror genre, “My management had a certain attitude about it, and I think then too that horror was not as celebrated as it is today. Now there are amazing directors and actors doing all these films, but you know, back in 1989 it was still, ‘Oh, it’s a slasher film.’ So, I think that there was a little bit of that conversation, but I went in for the audition anyway, and the role was so much fun to read for. Tina as a character was written so differently, and I don’t think at that point really that there was any reason why I wouldn’t do it. It was a really good opportunity, and it (eventually) came down to me and one other actor.”

According to Kaplan, that other actor was none other than Lori Petty, who later that year would land a reoccurring role on the “21 Jump Street” spin-off television series “Booker,” before securing the titular lead in Rachel Talalay’s cult-classic Tank Girl four years later.

“She was a very different kind of actress. You know, very different,” recalled Kaplan, “and I think that we were each bringing very different things to it.”

As for the audition process itself, “They brought me back couple of times, and (Halloween series executive producer) Moustapha (Akkad) was there for at least the last audition or two, and so was Dominique,” she offered. “The last audition was in this big office where we had to run around and scream and do things from the script, but it was pretty fun. You just put yourself into it. And I remember I was surprised by Dominique, because I just didn’t expect this arty European man to be the director. He had a very different approach.”

With principal photography of Halloween 5 kicking off in Salt Lake City, Utah in May of 1989, a mere five months before the film’s scheduled release, and script changes occurring consistently throughout production, we asked Kaplan of her memories of the shoot.

Wendy Kaplan in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

“You know, I was so young. I was in my early 20s and was like, ‘I’m in a movie!’” she said. “So, I was not paying a lot of attention to some of the things that now would probably perk my ears up, like, ‘Oh, something’s happening here, the director and the producer aren’t getting along!’ But back then? I mean, there’s aspects of Tina, especially at that time of the life, that were representative of me (as a person), so much so.”

“And I think that the happy part of me that just wanted to enjoy making this movie and be able to play this incredibly vibrant and fun, daring and snappy character, that was what I was focused on the most,” she continued. “Tina took me over a little, and I took her over a little, so I wasn’t paying a lot of attention to some of the other things. I wish I had. But in retrospect, I can see how fast that Halloween 5 was put into production, and I can see why there was so much disappointment about how different Halloween 5 was from Halloween 4. Like with the death of Ellie Cornell’s character of Rachel. That’s an intense thing for her as an actress, leading in Halloween 4, and then all of a sudden her character is killed off (in Halloween 5)? That doesn’t really make a lot of sense, and it’s kind of disappointing for the fans. I know that she was really loved.”

Don Shanks & Ellie Cornell in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

With the character of Rachel meeting her unceremonious demise in the first act of Halloween 5 (and the character of Jamie losing her surrogate mother figure and protector in the process), the ‘final girl’ baton was passed in narrative to Kaplan’s freewheeling Tina, which causes for her character not only a moral crisis, but also leads to one of the more selfless acts demonstrated in the series.

“Well, I was sort of oblivious to the slasher genre in general at the time,” offered Kaplan of the trope, and of her approach to her performance. “So, I really was just approaching it from the perspective of a person who clearly isn’t strong at parenting, and I think that Dominique had something to do with this too. I vaguely remember these conversations about Tina being hard on the outside, in the sense that she was a wild person, I guess, but also that she was vulnerable and had love to give, and that the one thing she did that was good and positive was to be there for Jamie.”

“You know, there’s that scene where I’m up in the clinic with Jamie, and I’m telling her, ‘I can’t stay with you, I have to go see my boyfriend,’ which makes Tina kind of look like a shit, but when I come downstairs and run into Loomis, I’m fully crying, and there was definitely direction from Dominique there to push Tina into more of a sympathetic realm.”

Kaplan expounded, “And I think that, if you look at that moment of sacrifice, when Tina shields Jamie with her own body and is stabbed, as some form of redemption for maybe some of the things she had done as a teen that were not so great, you can see it that way. I like to think of Tina as a whole person. I mean, most teenagers are everything. They’re troubled, they’re loving, they’re rebellious, they’re afraid. They’re such complex beings. And I think that Tina has all these qualities.”

Don Shanks & Wendy Kaplan in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

“I have had people come up to me since the film,” she continued, “sometimes at horror conventions, and they have told me that in ways that they relate to Tina, or that if they were having trouble in life, that she served as a little bit of inspiration for them, and that to me is amazing because they are finding something in this kind of wild, conflicted character. I mean, I don’t think that sacrificing her life was Tina’s plan, but she did it instinctually, and it was a noble act.”

As for her interaction with series star Donald Pleasance, in which Kaplan shares the screen briefly in Halloween 5, Kaplan recalls of working with the English actor, “He was really professional, and he was really kind. It never felt like he was behaving like the sort of icon that he was. He was very present with us, in the sense that it didn’t feel like he put himself above us, but I didn’t have a lot of direct interaction with him outside of when we were shooting. I think I was a little intimidated by him, frankly. Like I didn’t feel particularly comfortable going, ‘Hey! Whatcha’ been doing here in Salt Lake City for the last few days in your down time?’ It’s not to say that he was unapproachable. It’s just that I was young and new and he was this big deal. He was this icon of film and theatre.”

Donald Pleasence as ‘Sam Loomis’ in Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

In our upcoming Part 2, Kaplan talks her near attachment to an already gestating Halloween 6, the rather infamous party scene at the production’s hotel during principal photography of Halloween 5, her confusion over the introduction and identity of the Man in Black, her surprise at the truncated Haddonfield police station massacre as it was released theatrically, and her thoughts on the film thirty years later.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN 5 (1989), HALLOWEEN INTERVIEWS Tagged With: 1989, Cult of Thorn, Danielle Harris, Dominique Othenin-Girard, Donald Pleasence, Dwight H. Little, Ellie Cornell, Final Girl, Halloween, HALLOWEEN 4, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers, jamie lloyd, Lori Petty, Michael Myers, Moustapha Akkad, Tina Williams, Wendy Foxworth, Wendy Kaplan

New Fright-Rags Officially Licensed Halloween Garb Comes Home Tomorrow!

October 28, 2019 by Sean Decker

Set your alarms for tomorrow, 10/29 at 10am EST, because Fright-Rags is set to release some new Officially Licensed Halloween garb, as well as a reprint of their sold-out Halloween jacket, and we’re pretty sure it’ll be gone faster than Tommy and Lindsay ran to the Mackenzies.

Here are the deets:

HALLOWEEN LOUNGE PANTS

Cool, casual, and comfy, these lounge pants will have you relaxing in serious style. Polyester/spandex blend.

– Moisture-wicking
– Stretch comfort fabric
– Elastic waistband with drawstring
– 2-pocket

HALLOWEEN NYLON JACKET

Celebrate John Carpenter’s Halloween with this old school, classic nylon jacket. This comfortable light weight athletic style jacket has a quilted nylon lining and outer nylon shell perfect for cool Spring or Autumn days. No matter the weather, you will be in good “shape” with this jacket. While these jackets fit true-to-size, the bottom hem is ribbed and hugs the waist. If you are unsure of what size to get, order a size up from what you would normally wear.

– True to size fit (see size chart)
– medium-weight Duraweav™ fabric
– smooth nylon surface
– quilted nylon lining
– full snap front
– striped rib-trim
– easy-entry front pockets
– extra interior pocket for hidden storage

HALLOWEEN 1978 DAD HAT

– Officially Licensed Halloween Destroyed Dad Hat
– Embroidered Logo
– Custom Distressed Look (Heavy Fray)
– One Size Fits Most – Adjustable
– Heavy Washed Cotton Twill

To purchase, visit Fright-Rags at their official site here, and for more, stay up to date with Fright-Rags on their official Instagram page here.

Filed Under: JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN, MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: Fright Rags, Halloween, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Officially Licensed

Halloween Celebrates its 41st Anniversary

October 26, 2019 by Sean Decker

During this week in 1978, John Carpenter’s classic Halloween released into theaters, and changed the shape of cinema forever. Our sincere thanks from everyone here at HalloweenMovies.com to the fans who’ve taken the journey into the once sleepy town of Haddonfield, and to those who’ve never had the chance to see Carpenter’s seminal classic on the big screen? We’re happy to say you’ll be able to do so now.

For tickets and showtimes, visit Cinelife here, and Happy Halloween! We’re beyond thrilled to celebrate forty-one years together.

To many cinematic nightmares to come.

Halloween – Trailer from CineLife Video Showcase on Vimeo.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN, NEWS Tagged With: Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Michael Myers

Sheriff Leigh Brackett Returns in Halloween Kills

October 14, 2019 by Sean Decker

We’ve been sitting on this news for a while here at HalloweenMovies.com, but today we’re happy to confirm Twitter account @Halloween_Fans’ tweet that another original cast member from John Carpenter’s 1978 classic Halloween has returned for David Gordon Green’s currently shooting feature Halloween Kills: actor Charles Cyphers.

Cyphers, who portrayed ‘Sheriff Leigh Brackett’ in the seminal film (as well as the 1981 follow-ups Halloween II) will reprise his role in Green’s sequel to last year’s hit film Halloween (in its new timeline), joining actresses Kyle Richards (as ‘Lindsey Wallace’) and Nancy Stephens (as ‘Nurse Marion’) and series final girl Jamie Lee Curtis as ‘Laurie Strode.’ Joining them are Anthony Michael Hall (in the role of ‘Tommy Doyle’, taking over for Brian Andrews) and Robert Longstreet as ‘Lonnie Elam.’

Set for release by Universal Pictures on October 16th, 2020, Halloween Kills is produced by Trancas International Films, Miramax and Blumhouse Productions, with director Green directing from a script he co-wrote with returning collaborator Danny McBride and series newcomer Scott Teems.

Based on characters created by series originator John Carpenter and Debra Hill, Halloween Kills and its 2021 follow-up Halloween Ends will be produced by Akkad, Jason Blum and Bill Block. Green, McBride, John Carpenter, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jeanette Volturno, Couper Samuelson and Ryan Freimann will serve as executive producers, with Ryan Turek overseeing both projects for Blumhouse.

Check out a teaser for the films below.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN KILLS, NEWS Tagged With: Bill Block, Blumhouse, Charles Cyphers, Couper Samuelson, Danny McBride, Debra Hill, Halloween, Halloween Ends, Halloween Kills, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeanette Volturno, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Ryan Turek, Sheriff Leigh Brackett, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

Halloween Spoilers: A Message from the Editor

October 11, 2019 by Sean Decker

Film spoilers: many hate them, while others actively seek them out. Being lifelong film fans ourselves here at Trancas International Films, we can relate. Some of us here can even recall the days before the internet, in which Halloween fans experienced the latest entry with little knowledge of the film’s narrative, other than what had possibly been gleaned from the flick’s trailer, television and radio ad spots, or set visit within the pages of Fangoria magazine.

So with Halloween Kills in production, and the start of Halloween Ends right around the corner, how do we balance both, in order to deliver an exciting and unspoiled cinematic experience for the fans who’d like it, but also satisfy the fans hungry for information? It’s a bit of a conundrum, and while Trancas won’t oversee in entirety either films’ marketing rollouts (amazing distributor Universal Pictures will be handling that, along with input from producing partners Blumhouse and Miramax, as they did with last year’s Halloween), we do also feel that we have some responsibility to you, the fans, many of who have been with us since the very beginning, when Michael first came home in 1978 (and thank you sincerely for continuing on this bloody journey with us).

So what’s our approach? Here at HalloweenMovies.com, we’ll stay as spoiler free as possible, and while we’ll certainly be providing you behind-the-scenes peeks and more from both films (and exclusive info as it comes in), those peeks will hopefully be enough just to whet your appetite, but not to sate it.

Because after all, in our estimation, there’s nothing like the feeling of sitting down in a theater, a bag of popcorn in one hand and a Coke in the other as the house lights go down and the screen begins to flicker a story unknown. Stories of shock, fear and fright, and stories we would never dream of spoiling.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN KILLS Tagged With: Halloween, Halloween Ends, Halloween Kills, John Carpenter, Michael Myers

The First Ever Officially Licensed Halloween Trading Card Sets Available Now

October 8, 2019 by Sean Decker

Just in time for the spooky season, Fright-Rags has made available for purchase the first ever Officially Licensed Halloween Trading Card Sets, and we’ve gotta’ say, they’re pretty darn cool!

Filled with factoids, trivia, rare photos and more revolving around John Carpenter’s classic 1978 film Halloween (we worked hand in hand with Fright-Rags in order to get it just right), the trading cards are now available in the following three formats:

#1. HALLOWEEN TRADING CARDS – SINGLE WAX PACK (Price: $5)

  • 9 trading cards
  • 1 sticker
  • Autograph and sketch cards and other chase/parallel cards are randomly inserted

_

#2. HALLOWEEN TRADING CARDS – SEALED BOX (Price: $120)

Each sealed box of 24 wax packs includes:

  • 2 full base sets
  • 2 full sticker sets
  • 2 full character sets
  • 2 full art parallel sets
  • 2 checklists
  • 1 sketch card, autograph, or printing plate

_

#3. HALLOWEEN TRADING CARDS – FACTORY BOX (Price: $35)

Each box of 83 cards includes:

  • 78 full base card set
  • 2 random unique art parallel cards
  • 2 stickers
  • 1 checklist

_

Get ‘em here before they sell out, and make sure to follow Fright-Rags on Instagram at @frightrags and on Twitter at @frightrags for news and updates on other current and future Officially Licensed Halloween merchandise.

 

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN, MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: Fright Rags, Halloween, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Officially Licensed, Trading Card Set

‘REWIND’ to ’83: Michael Myers First Foray into Video Games

October 2, 2019 by Sean Decker

Five years after Michael Myers exploded onto the silver screen in John Carpenter’s seminal 1978 slasher Halloween, the character found himself exploring for the first time an entirely different medium: home video games. But how did he fair in 1983, a year in which the home video game space was dominated by such child friendly releases as Crystal Castles and Dig Dug?

Decades before the online multi-player Dead by Daylight allowed PS4 players to walk in the digital shoes of Haddonfield residents beset by The Boogeyman, Wizard Video Games employee Tim Martin took a stab at the intellectual property by programming the first Halloween game, a cartridge for the early home gaming console Atari 2600. Developed by Martin and Robert Barber, the game was released in October of 1983, and like Wizard’s other genre inspired cart release The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, the title unfortunately received a rather tepid response from parents concerned over the title’s violent content.

While by today’s standards considered rather tame, the game’s central conceit (players attempt to rescue children while also attempting to avoid Myers’ slicing blade) didn’t sit quite well with retailers worried over potential parental backlash. This is perhaps rather unsurprising given that the 2600’s most popular games at the time were the fairly pedestrian shooters Combat and Space Invaders, neither of which featured a headless, blood-gushing babysitter as (the result of a Myers attack) or Halloween’s iconic central theme music and poster, all of which weren’t necessarily considered “acceptable” entertainment for children of the early 80’s, regardless of how primitive the gaming technology.

The result? Wizard Video’s Halloween game, which was manufactured in smaller quantities due to such, has become somewhat of a Holy Grail item for collectors, as carts now fetch prices in the in the hundreds of dollars depending on their condition.

Check out some Halloween gameplay from ’83 below, and let us know in the comments below, “What do you want out of a Halloween game release?”

Filed Under: FEATURED, GAMES, HALLOWEEN (1978), MERCHANDISE Tagged With: 1980s, 8-bit, 80s, Atari, Atari 2600, Combat, Crystal Castles, Dead By Daylight, Dig Dug, Halloween, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, PS4, Space Invaders, The Boogeyman, video games, Wizard Video Games

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Feature Articles

Halloween Ends to Debut in Theaters and On Peacock October 14, New Poster & More!

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