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Miramax

Halloween (2018) Steelbook Blu-ray Now Available for Pre-Order

November 7, 2018 by Sean Decker

Although director David Gordon Green’s Halloween – the most successful slasher film in the history of cinema (having just crossed $229 million at the global box office) may still be in theaters, it appears that Universal Pictures have made ready the film’s release on DVD, Blu-ray and 4K for early 2019.

We noticed last week that pre-order listings for the film (which originally included a January 15th, 2019 release date, which we predict it will continue to be) appeared on Best Buy, one for a Blu-ray Steelbook version available for $32.99 – click here, and one for a standard Blu-ray with digital copy, priced at $22.99 – click here. You can check out the box art for both below (with more details to come as we get them).

No word yet on what the extras are, but here’s to hoping that they’ll include the original ending and the first act shower scene (moments of which can be seen in the film’s marketing materials).

And if you haven’t yet witnessed the return of Michael Myers on the big screen, or want to once again, you can get your tickets here.

The eleventh film in the franchise and co-written by director Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 classic, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Malek Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Miramax’s Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and returning star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, the latter who also serves as the film’s composer.

Filed Under: FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018), MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: Bill Block, Blu ray, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Pre-order, Ryan Freimann, Steelbook, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

Halloween Overtakes Scream to Become the Biggest Slasher Film of All Time

November 6, 2018 by Sean Decker

Michael Myers has indeed come home. Three weeks into its release, David Gordon Green’s Halloween has earned a whopping $229.6 million worldwide, unseating Wes Craven’s 1996 meta classic Scream as the most successful slasher film of all time. And right behind 2016‘s Split ($278 million) and 2017’s Get Out ($256 million), it’s currently Blumhouse’s third biggest-grossing feature film.

The eleventh film in the franchise and co-written by director Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 classic, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Malek Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Miramax’s Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and returning star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, the latter who also serves as the film’s composer.

Check out the film’s trailer below, and if you haven’t already, get your film tickets here.

Filed Under: FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018), NEWS Tagged With: Bill Block, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Scream, Trancas International Films

Celebrate Halloween with This Trailer Round-Up!

October 31, 2018 by Sean Decker

With David Gordon Green’s critically raved about film Halloween still #1 at the box office for the second week in a row, we’ve rounded up some of the feature film’s trailers, television spots and clips to get you into the Halloween spirit.

Says Variety’s Peter Debruge, “Why choose when you can have tricks and treats? David Gordon Green does horror fans a favor, bringing Michael Myers’ slasher-movie saga back to its roots,” while Katie Walsh of Nerdist proclaims: “David Gordon Green delivers the best Halloween sequel ever.”

That’s not all. Joe Gross of Austin 360 states, “This is Curtis’ show; her third-act confrontation with the man who destroyed Strode’s life plays out with tension and chills,” and Bad Feeling Magazine’s Gabriel Sigler effuses, “Green nails the film’s tone down perfectly, capturing Michael Myers in a way we haven’t seen since John Carpenter’s original.”

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The eleventh film in the franchise and co-written by director Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 classic, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Malek Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and returning star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, who also serves as the film’s composer.

Get your tickets here, and Happy Halloween!

Filed Under: FEATURED, FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018) Tagged With: Andi Matichak, Bill Block, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, Judy Greer, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Ryan Turek, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

Halloween Slays the Competition; Still #1 at the Box Office

October 29, 2018 by Sean Decker

For the second week in a row, director David Gordon Green’s Halloween has slain its competitors and has broken box office records in the process.

Having raked in an estimated $32 million domestically over the weekend, which brings its domestic total to $126 million, achieving the coveted $200 million mark isn’t far from reach. Internationally, Halloween now holds the number one spot in sixty two markets, making its international earnings $45.6 million. Cumulatively that puts the film’s earnings at $172 million, putting it well on the way to becoming the second highest grossing R-rated horror film EVER.

Additional records set include: second biggest horror movie opening ever, second biggest October movie opening ever, biggest opening for a slasher film ever (even adjusted for inflation), biggest Blumhouse debut, biggest Halloween franchise opening ever, biggest horror movie opening ever with a female lead (in star Jamie Lee Curtis) and biggest movie opening of all time with a female lead over fifty-five.

The eleventh film in the franchise and co-written by director Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 classic, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Miramax’s Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and returning star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, who also serves as the film’s composer.

Check out the film’s trailer below, and get your film tickets here.

Filed Under: FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018), NEWS Tagged With: Bill Block, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, John Caprenter, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

#1 at the Box Office, Halloween Smashes Records

October 23, 2018 by Sean Decker

Three days into its release, David Gordon Green’s Halloween has smashed box office records, raking in domestically $77m during its opening weekend, making it #1 at the box office, while also rendering it the biggest horror movie opening EVER with a female lead (in star Jamie Lee Curtis) and biggest movie opening of all time with a female lead over 55.

Additional records set include: second biggest horror movie opening ever, second biggest October movie opening ever, biggest opening for a slasher film ever (even adjusted for inflation), biggest Blumhouse debut, and biggest Halloween franchise opening ever.

Whew! Michael Myers truly has come home.

Said Halloween producer Malek Akkad of Trancas International Films, who’s been shepherding since 1995 the franchise his father Moustapha Akkad co-created in 1978 with director John Carpenter, Debra Hill and producer Irwin Yablans, “I’m thrilled to see the reinvigoration of something my father helped to start, and happy to see the overwhelmingly positive response of fans and critics alike to the return of Halloween. This weekend’s success and fervor over what we’ve been able to achieve is both humbling and altogether exciting, and it’s a testament to my producing partners Blumhouse, Miramax, Rough House and director David Gordon Green, and the incredible job Universal has done in the marketing and release of the film.”  

The eleventh film in the franchise and co-written by director Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 classic, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Miramax’s Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and returning star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, who also serves as the film’s composer.

Check out the film’s trailer below, and get your film tickets here.

Filed Under: FILM, HALLOWEEN (2018), NEWS Tagged With: Andi Matichak, Bill Block, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Debra Hill, Halloween, Irwin Yablans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, John Carpenter, Judy Greer, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

Halloween Premiere Photos, Video & More!

October 19, 2018 by HalloweenMovies

Director and co-writer David Gordon Green’s Halloween held its official premiere to a packed house this past Wednesday, October 17th at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, California, and HalloweenMovies was there to document the buzzed-about event forty years in the making. Read on for video, photo galleries and more.

Attended by director and co-writer Green, co-writers Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley and producers Malek Akkad of Trancas International Films, Jason Blum of Blumhouse and Bill Block of Miramax (among others), as well as returning series star and executive producer Jamie Lee Curtis and fellow key cast members Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, Nick Castle and James Jude Courtney, the cast and crew arrived to a Grauman’s courtyard decked out with a façade emulating the infamous Myers house from John Carpenter’s 1978 originating classic.

Additionally in attendance for the event were Halloween 2018 stars Rhian Rees, Virginia Gardner, Dylan Arnold, Miles Robbins, Drew Scheid, Jibrail Nantambu and executive producer Ryan Freimann and co-producer Ryan Turek, as well as FX artist Christopbher Nelson and Halloween 1978 producer Irwin Yablans and cast members PJ Soles and Kyle Richards.

Jamie Lee Curtis
(left to right) Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Jeff Fradley
(left to right) Danny McBride & David Gordon Green
(left to right) Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum
Halloween Premiere
Judy Greer
Andi Matichak
(left to right) Andi Matichak, Jamie Lee Curtis
(left to right) Nick Castle & James Jude Courtney
Malek Akkad
(left to right) Ciara Aumentado & Ryan Turek
(left to right) Jamie Lee Curtis. Kyle Richards
Halloween Premiere
Halloween Premiere
Halloween Premiere

Following the carpet, producers Akkad, Blum and Block took to Grauman’s stage to kick-off the screening (see the video below).

Followed by McBride and Green.

And lastly the grande dame of final girls herself, Jamie Lee Curtis.

On the heels of the wildly received premiere, a filmmakers after party was held poolside at the Roosevelt Hotel on Hollywood Blvd.

(left to right) Malek Akkad, Jamie Lee Curtis
(left to right) Ryan Freimann, Jason Blum, Malek Akkad
Judy Greer, Miles Robbins and guests
(left to right) David Gordon Green & guests
(center to right) Rhian Rees, Drew Sheid
Dylan Arnold and guests
(left to right) Erin Freimann, Ryan Freimann
Sean Clark & Nayshalee Del Valle
(left to right) Rhian Rees, Sean Decker
(left to right) Malek Akkad, Angelina Akkad, Ciara Aumentado, Ryan Turek
Angelina Akkad
(left to right) Nick Castle, James Jude Courtney, Chris Nelson

 

The eleventh film in the long-running and successful franchise, Halloween is now in theaters. Get your tickets here.

Filed Under: EVENTS, FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (2018) Tagged With: Andi Matichak, Bill Block, Blumhouse, Chinese Theatre, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Debra Hill, Drew Scheid, Dylan Arnold, Graumans, Halloween, Hollywood, Irwin Yablans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, Jibrail Nantambu, John Carpenter, Judy Greer, Kyle Richards, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miles Robbins, Miramax, Moustapha Akkad, PJ Soles, premiere, Rhian Rees, Roosevelt Hotel, Ryan Freimann, Ryan Turek, Trancas International Films, Virginia Gardner

How Long Can You Survive the 8-bit ‘Escape Michael Myers’ Video Game?

October 15, 2018 by Sean Decker

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Forty years in the making, Laurie Strode’s final (?) confrontation with Michael Myers hits the big screen this Friday, October 19th from Universal Pictures, and to get you in the mood, the retro-style ‘Escape Michael Myers’ video game, in which the boogeyman chases our beloved and beleaguered final girl through a graveyard, the streets of Haddonfield and beyond, is now available for free online at www.escapemichaelmyers.com

It’s pretty addictive, although we here at Trancas haven’t been able to survive any longer than a minute and a half. How will you fair against The Shape?

The eleventh film in the franchise, co-written by director David Gordon Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s 1978 classic of the same name, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Malek Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, who also serves as the film’s composer.

Filed Under: FEATURED, GAMES, HALLOWEEN (2018) Tagged With: 8-bit video game, Bill Block, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Gree, Escape Michael Myers, Halloween, Halloween 2018, Jamoe Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, John Carpenter, Laurie Strode, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

LA Press Junket: Jamie Lee Curtis Talks 2018’s Halloween

September 20, 2018 by Sean Decker

This past Saturday, September 15th, HalloweenMovies.com sat down with film star Jamie Lee Curtis on the Universal backlot to discuss her forthcoming movie Halloween, which is set for release by Universal Pictures this October. Co-written by Jeff Fradley, Danny McBride and David Gordon Green and directed by the latter, Trancas International Films’ Malek Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and returning star Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, who also serves as the film’s composer.

Seated outdoors at a picnic table on the backlot’s Wisteria Lane, which was decked out for the occasion in Halloween décor, Lee said of the film, which ignores all existing sequels subsequent to Carpenter’s seminal 1978 film and which pits Curtis’ character of Laurie Strode up against original nemesis Michael Myers, albeit in a fresh way, “It’s a movie about trauma. There’s no question. Generational trauma. But you know, it can’t be (too) heavy. It’s a horror movie. It’s a Halloween movie, so it can’t be laden with psycho drama. Do you know what I mean? It has to be judicious.”

The generational trauma Curtis referred to is the PTSD her character now suffers after having survived the (now random, as they aren’t related in the new narrative) October 31, 1978 attack by escaped mental patient Myers, as set forth in Carpenter’s original. And as with any tragedy, the ensuing trauma has impacted everyone in its path. In Green’s Halloween that includes Laurie’s daughter Karen (portrayed by actress Judy Greer) and granddaughter Allyson (newcomer Andi Matichak).

Expounding on the familial damage the attack would inflict, as well as the personal, Curtis recalled of the shoot, and of her head space during, “The entire movie I was very isolated. I’m a homebody. I’m a mom. I’m a card carrying friend. Do you know what I mean? I buy a lot of birthday presents. I’m that girl. And I left (my home) and went to South Carolina to make this movie and I was very isolated. And from the moment I began the movie, Laurie’s trauma just all came back. The first time I walked on set it was very emotional. And it was that way all of the way through.”

Curtis continued of ‘finding’ Laurie four decades later, pointedly in a moment which serves to communicate the enormity of her trauma, “It was the last scene (of the film) that we shot, and as written in the script, Laurie sits in the truck, her truck, and there’s a gun and there’s alcohol and basically forty years of trauma comes back. Now, what do you do? So I prepared, and we were shooting it in the middle of nowhere in Charleston on a street called Ashley Phosphate Road in that truck and in a parking lot at night, with a bunch of lights and a bunch of people.”

“You need to know in advance that when I make a movie I like crews to wear name tags for the first few days of the production,” expounded the actress, “Because I like to know who you are. So on this last day, as I walked to Laurie’s little truck under this bank of lights and cranes (ready to shoot the scene), I realized that the entire crew were (instead) wearing names tags which read, ‘We Are Laurie Strode.’ The entire crew was saying, ‘We are with you. We are all in this together, and we believe in you.’ Needless to say, it was an incredibly emotional gift for them to give me, and something that for me was sort of the underpinning of the whole thing. It was beautiful.”

As Green’s Halloween cuts a new path in the franchise, talk then turned to the complicated narrative of the Halloween series, from the introduction of Jamie Lloyd as the daughter of a deceased Laurie in Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers in 1988, to the re-introduction of Laurie (and that of a new timeline) in 1998’s Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later, the latter of which was intended as the final showdown between Laurie and Michael.

“H20 was my simplistic idea of, ‘Hey! We’re all still in show business and the movie’s twenty years old. How often does that happen? Let’s make a twentieth anniversary movie and deal with the trauma,’” offered Curtis of the Steve Miner-directed film.

“(In that film) she was running (and had) changed her identity,” she continued. “She was an alcoholic and a drug addict, and we tried to explore it a little bit in that movie, but she wasn’t Laurie Strode. She’d already given up her identity. And it just didn’t work. I mean it was good. There were great things in it. It just wasn’t great.”

“What was beautiful about what David, Danny and Jeff did is,” Curtis mused of the writers’ decision (which was to ignore, barring the first film, its predecessors), “is that if you imagine all the Halloween movies as their own inner tubes on a lake, all they did was untie them from the dock. And they floated away. And they all exist. There’s Halloween II, there’s Halloween 4, but the only one that this movie relates to is the first one. Because in order to tell this story, that was the way they could. If they had to take all of those stories and try to weave them together, it wouldn’t have been possible, because Laurie died (in Halloween: Resurrection)! So I think the way that they did it was beautiful, and all of those movies still exist. None of them have been popped and or drowned. Do you know what I mean? They’re right there. But this is the story we’re telling today.”

And in this story, the character of Laurie’s granddaughter Allyson factors significantly. Portrayed by newcomer Andi Matichak, Curtis effused of the young actress (who bears a striking resemblance to the nineteen year old version of the grande dame of scream queens in not only physicality but in demeanor), “Andi (apparently) was going to go to college on a soccer scholarship, and that summer, before college, she went to model in Greece and met an actor’s manager there, who said, ‘You could be an actress.’ And she gave up college and moved to New York to become an actor at nineteen.”

Curtis continued of the shared similarities in their respective career trajectories, “When I was nineteen I was going to college, and I ran into an actor’s manager who said, ‘You could be an actress,’ and I went up for a part and ended up quitting college and becoming an actor. (1978’s) Halloween was my first movie. (2018’s) Halloween is her first movie. Neither of us were going to be actors, and we both ended up being actors, and in a Halloween film for our first movie.”

She concluded of Matichak, “She’s gorgeous, she’s grounded, and she’s gonna’ be a big star.”

David Gordon Green’s Halloween arrives to theaters October 19th, 2018 from Universal Pictures.

Check out the trailer below.

This interview has been lightly edited and condensed for clarity.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN (2018) Tagged With: Andi Matichak, Bill Block, Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Halloween, Halloween 4 The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween H20, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, Jeff Fradley, Judy Greer, Malek Akkad, Michael Myers, Miramax, Ryan Freimann, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures

Halloween Has Premiered at TIFF and the Critics are Raving

September 10, 2018 by Sean Decker

Ahead of its October 2018 release via Universal Pictures, director and co-writer David Gordon Green’s Halloween held its world premiere to a packed house this past Saturday, September 9th at Toronto International Film Festival, and the critical response has been overwhelming.

Says Variety’s Peter Debruge, “Why choose when you can have tricks and treats? David Gordon Green does horror fans a favor, bringing Michael Myers’ slasher-movie saga back to its roots,” while Katie Walsh of Nerdist proclaims: “David Gordon Green delivers the best Halloween sequel ever.”

That’s not all.  Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly  states, “Long live Michael Myers, so maybe someone can finally kill him — in a big, funny, scary, squishy, super-meta sequel that brings it all back to John Carpenter’s iconic 1978 original,” Dreadcentral’s Jonathan Barkan muses, “After years of waiting for a Halloween sequel that felt like it did justice to John Carpenter’s original masterpiece of slasher horror, David Gordon Green has brought us a vision of terror that gives fans what they’ve been craving,” and originating filmmaker Carpenter himself has declared that following his 1978 original, Green’s is the best in the franchise.

Perhaps some of the TIFF audience agreed, as following the screening, Jamie Lee Curtis and assembled cast and crew took the stage to an enthusiastic standing ovation, to which Curtis playfully said, “Happy Halloween, mother*ckers.”

The eleventh film in the franchise and co-written by director Green, Danny McBride and Jeff Fradley, Halloween is intended as a direct sequel to Carpenter’s ‘78 film, and thusly disregards all of the series subsequent entries. Trancas International Films’ Malek Akkad, Blumhouse’s Jason Blum and Bill Block produce, with McBride, Green and star Jamie Lee Curtis serving as executive producers, along with Ryan Freimann and series originator Carpenter, who also serves as the film’s composer.

Looking forward to October 19th? We are.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (2018), NEWS Tagged With: Blumhouse, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Dreadcentral, Entertainment Weekly, Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jason Blum, John Carpenter, Malek Akkad, Miramax, Nerdist, The Hollywood Reporter, Trancas International Films, Universal Pictures, Variety

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