• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

HalloweenMovies™ | The Official Halloween Website

  • NEWS
  • FEATURE ARTICLES
  • FILM SERIES
  • MERCH
  • EVENTS
  • IN THEATERS

trick or treat studios

Halloween (1978) Minis Now Available for Pre-order from Trick or Treat Studios!

June 9, 2023 by Sean Decker

Bring the terror of Halloween home with Trick or Treat Studios’ miniature figure set of the iconic characters from the 1978 John Carpenter classic, “Halloween.”

Sculpted by Andy Manoloff, Justin Mabry and Alexander Ray, this set of seven painstakingly realized and paintable figures are perfect for display and for use in the upcoming Halloween board game (you can check that our here!) and are currently available for pre-order (with an expected ship date of December 15th, 2023).

Michael Myers
Dr. Loomis
Laurie Strode
Lynda van der Klok
Annie Brackett
Bob

Don’t miss out on this must-have addition to your horror collection!

© 2023 Compass International Pictures, Inc., Halloween (1978), including all associated characters and setting. All Rights Reserved.

Filed Under: GAMES, HALLOWEEN (1978), MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: Halloween, John Carpenter, Laurie Strode, Michael Myers, trick or treat studios

Halloween (The Game) Coming from Trick or Treat Studios!

June 9, 2023 by Sean Decker

This 1 vs Many game by renowned designer Emerson Matsuuchi is the first time the original Halloween movie has been made into its own board game, and is now available for pre-order from Trick or Treat Studios!

Designed and illustrated by Matsuuchi and Nathan Thomas Milliner, the 2-4 player count Halloween – The Game delves into the night HE came home… and one player must take on the role of Michael Myers! The others will control Laurie and her friends as they scramble to find weapons, the kids, and a way to escape. Their task will be made more difficult because Myers can only be seen when you’re looking right at him! 

What’s more, Trick or Treat Studios is offering up an amazing seven pack of Halloween minis to accompany, available for pre-order here!

© 2023 Compass International Pictures, Inc., Halloween (1978), including all associated characters and setting. All rights reserved.

Filed Under: GAMES, HALLOWEEN (1978), NEWS Tagged With: Halloween, John Carpenter, Laurie Strode, Michael Myers, trick or treat studios

Trick or Treat Studios Unveils the Halloween 1978 Pumpkin Purse!

June 24, 2020 by Sean Decker

Designed by Kenny R. Avila of Love, Pain and Stitches, Trick or Treat Studios and Compass International Pictures are proud to present the first ever officially licensed Halloween 1978 Pumpkin Purse, now available for pre-order here and shipping October 1, 2020.

From Trick or Treat Studios Product Listing:

Based on the infamous jack o’ lantern as seen in the opening credits of the 1978 horror classic, this is the perfect way to show your love of John Carpenter’s Halloween. This incredible purse is made using the highest quality vegan leather for excellent durability. In addition, the purse has a soft inner lining with a large center pocket, two side pockets and an adjustable strap.

So, get yourself The Official Halloween 1978 Pumpkin Purse and celebrate The Night He Came Home!

You can pre-order yours here today.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), MERCHANDISE, NEWS Tagged With: Halloween, Halloween 1978 Purse, John Carpenter, Kenny R Avila, Love Pain and Stitches, Officially Licensed, trick or treat studios

Trick or Treat Studios Unveils Officially Licensed Halloween ’78 Tombstone Prop

May 20, 2020 by Sean Decker

With Halloween only 164 days away, Trick or Treat Studios has unveiled their Halloween 1978 Judith Myers Tombstone Prop, officially licensed from Compass International Pictures.

Sculpted by Darren Roberts from the actual screen-used patterns provided by Compass (from John Carpenter’s seminal classic 1978 film Halloween), this tombstone is a one-to-one replica of what you see on the screen. Measuring 40” high, 25” wide and 3” deep, the Halloween 1978 Judith Myers Tombstone Prop is made from top quality insulated foam board, giving it a realistic screen-used look and feel.

You can pre-order your own by clicking here, and celebrate “The Night He Came Home” this Halloween with a spooky addition to your haunted yard… or headboard, depending on how you care to decorate.

Filed Under: HALLOWEEN (1978), NEWS Tagged With: Compass International Pictures, Halloween, John Carpenter, Judith Myers, Michael Myers, Tombstone Prop, trick or treat studios

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

February 22, 2020 by Sean Decker

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

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

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

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

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

August 21, 2019 by Sean Decker

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

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

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

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

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

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

‘REWIND’ to ‘82: Halloween III Masks To Help Scare Up Sales

April 25, 2019 by Sean Decker

In 1982, genre fans could score themselves a Don Post-created mask from Halloween III: The Season of the Witch for a mere $25.00 (those same vintage masks now go for roughly $500.00 in the collector space, which means we’re thankful for Trick Or Treats Studios’ current and affordable reissues).

In today’s ‘Rewind’ article (a new series in which we’ll take a look back at vintage coverage and moments of and on the Halloween franchise), writer Aljean Harmetz’s October 16, 1982 piece in The New York Times focuses on mask-maker Post, who talks those original mass-produced Halloween III masks, as well as Universal Pictures’ at-times unique marketing approach to the R-rated film (which interestingly enough included inviting children – who’d colored newspaper advertisements of the murderous Silver Shamrock masks – to the studios’ backlot for a mask-making demo), and a whole lot more.

So gather around, kids. The big giveaway is at 9. And don’t forget to wear your masks.

___

HALLOWEEN III MASKS TO SCARE UP SALES

The three Halloween masks that form an integral part of the plot of a new movie, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, will also be an adjunct to the merchandising of the movie, which opens next Friday in 1,250 theaters across the country.

The glow-in-the-dark sunken skull, the menacing orange Day-Glo pumpkin head and the lime-green latex witch mask that a diabolical mask maker in the movie hopes will make millions of children his prisoners will be offered for use in the real world this Halloween.

Because the three masks will retail for about $25 each, it is doubtful that many 10-year-old trick-or-treaters will wrap themselves in the witch’s dark blue-gray cowl or don the clammy black vinyl of the skeleton. ”Our masks are for an adult market, 13-to-35-year olds,” said Don Post, whose father was one of the creators of the latex mask industry nearly 45 years ago. Although Don Post Studios was successful with masks of monsters from Universal movies in the 1960’s, Mr. Post dates the dramatic realization that there was money to be made from intertwining masks and movies to 1970, when 20th Century-Fox decided to license masks for a then-three-year-old movie, Planet of the Apes.

”The results were awesome,’‘ said Mr. Post.

Darth Vader a Big Hit

But they were nothing compared to the sales of masks of the characters from Star Wars, the 1977 movie. More than $3 million worth of the Post Studios’ black plastic masks of Darth Vader alone have been sold at prices ranging from $30 to $40.

The problem with making character masks from movies is that ‘‘they only become appealing to the public after audiences have identified with the movie,” said Mr. Post. ”Buyers for stores have no imagination. No one wanted Star Wars masks until the week after the movie came out. Then we were deluged.”

According to Mr. Post, the masks from Halloween III are the first to be exactly the same as those featured in a movie. In fact, they were made from the same molds. ”Because the masks are so significant to the movie, they could become a cult item, with fans wanting to wear them when they go to see the movie,” he said.

Universal is sponsoring radio promotions involving the masks in cities around the country. In southern California, for example, children who color advertisements of the masks can accompany their parents on the Universal Studio tour free. And on the tour, Don Post will give mask-making demonstrations.

A $40 Million Halloween

The $300,000 Halloween, directed by John Carpenter and produced by Debra Hill, is the most successful independently distributed movie of all time, having sold $40 million worth of tickets in the United States. Halloween III, which cost $4.6 million, including $2 million in overhead paid to Universal, does not use the same plot as Halloween and Halloween II about a knife-wielding maniac. This film focuses on Dan O’Herlihy as a demented toy maker rather than on Jamie Lee Curtis as a frightened baby sitter.

”It’s a pod picture, not a knife picture,” said Miss Hill, who chose to name the town in which the grisly happenings take place at Santa Mira, in honor of the town in Don Siegel’s classic 1956 pod movie Invasion of the Body Snatchers. The tie-in of masks and movie was an accident born of necessity. ”We didn’t exactly have a whole lot of money for things like props,” said Miss Hill. ”So we asked Post, who had provided the shape mask for the earlier Halloween movies, if we could work out a deal. He said, ‘Don’t give me money. Give me the merchandising rights and we’ll share the profits.’ ”

The skull and witch are adaptations of standard Post Studios masks, but the jack-o’-lantern was created for Halloween III. ”Every society in every time has had its masks that suited the mood of the society,” said Mr. Post, ”from the masked ball to clowns to makeup. People want to act out a feeling inside themselves – angry, sad, happy, old. It may be a sad commentary on present-day America that horror masks are the best sellers.”

Big Item for Collectors

While the less expensive Post Studios masks, priced at $8.50, are sold in toy stores, most of the $20-and-up movie tie-in masks are available only at such places as costume and magic shops and theme parks. Although 70 percent of all masks are sold during the weeks before Halloween, Mr. Post has a file of more than 1,000 letters from people who are mask collectors, some specializing in movie monsters, some in specific films such as Star Wars.

Post Studios has, of course, had its failures – Star Trek among them. ”The characters were too human,” said Mr. Post. ”We tried to do Spock several times, and it never worked out. Successful characters for masks have to be bigger than life. Monsters are bigger than life.” Perhaps for the same reason, he added, the sale of Annie wigs have been disappointing.

What Mr. Post calls the ”Rolls-Royces” of generic masks – werewolves, witches, vampires – sell perhaps 2,000 a year. A successful licensed character like Frankenstein’s Monster or the Creature from the Black Lagoon can sell 6,000 to 20,000. Yoda, from The Empire Strikes Back, is now the second-best-selling mask, behind Darth Vader; but probably not for long.

On long tables in the Post factory -with the acrid smell of ammonia thick as soup and jets blowing 110-degree air at plaster molds – thousands of E.T. heads are being poured, trimmed, painted, bagged, and boxed. The difficulty in designing an E.T. mask, the length of the head, has been solved by a rigid plastic strip, and Mr. Post expects 70,000 of the over-the-head latex E.T. masks to be in stores by Christmas.

Filed Under: FEATURED, HALLOWEEN III (1982), MERCHANDISE Tagged With: Dan O'Herlihy, Darth Vader, Debra Hill, Don Post, Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween III, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Michael Myers, Silver Shamrock, Spock, Star Trek, Star Wars, The New York Times, trick or treat studios, Universal, Yoda

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

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

Primary Sidebar

FOLLOW US ONLINE

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Feature Articles

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

With the recent news that Halloween Ends will premiere both in theaters and on Peacock October 14, … [Read More...] about Halloween Ends to Debut in Theaters and On Peacock October 14, New Poster & More!

The First Official Trailer for Halloween Ends is Here!

You wanted it... you got it! From director David Gordon Green, Trancas International Films, Miramax … [Read More...] about The First Official Trailer for Halloween Ends is Here!

New Featurette Halloween Kills “Warriors” Showcases the Strodes

Just ahead of the October 15, 2021 release of Halloween Kills, Universal has released a new … [Read More...] about New Featurette Halloween Kills “Warriors” Showcases the Strodes

MORE FEATURED ARTICLES

Footer

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Legal Notices

Copyright © 2025 · Compass International Pictures · All Rights Reserved. · Log in

HalloweenMovies.com could care less about cookies, but because this is a [WORDPRESS] site, they are present solely to provide you with the best experience on the website, which if you continue to use this website you acknowledge you are agreeable to this. Please also know that HalloweenMovies.com will NEVER sell or utilize your data in any way.    Ok    Privacy Policy