Michael-Bay Movie Reviews


Related Subjects: Melanie-Lynskey
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VHS movie reviews for "Michael-Bay" sorted by average review score:

Palomino
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (18 November, 1997)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: Michael Miller
Average review score:

One Great love story !
I have to say Palomino is my favorite movie by Danielle Steel. ( and she has many great movies) It's a beautiful love story played by wonderful actors. It's a movie you'd want to watch when the kids & husband are away. You can sit, laugh and cry and feel good afterwards. I was touched by it and could never get tired of seeing it.


Peacekillers
Released in VHS Tape by Starmaker/Anchor Bay (10 October, 1991)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Starring: Michael Ontkean
Average review score:

peace killers
This may be the worst movie ever made...so bad that it is good...what is truly memorable is the two songs sung by a folk singer blues guitarist woman...try it you'll laugh your *** off!!


Snakeeater
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (21 February, 1990)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: George Erschbamer
Average review score:

GREAT MOVIE!!
LORENZO LLAMAS STARS AS VIGILANT EX-MARINE SEEKING SEEKING REVENGE ON THOSE WHO MURDERED HIS FAMILY.IT'S A GREAT MOVIE!!


Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends - Thomas Gets Bumped (with Toy)
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertain (22 July, 2003)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: David Mitton
Average review score:

A Good Thomas Tape
This is one of the first George Carlin narrations and it's pretty good. Mavis is a feisty diesel at first but in the later tapes she is nice. In Trust Thomas James plays sick and Thomas gets in trouble doing his work. In Mavis Toby has problems with the new diesel. In Toby's Tightrope Mavis has to save Toby from falling of a bridge. In No Joke for James James gets in trouble when he lies to Gordon so he can pull coaches. In Percy's Promise Percy agrees to take Thomas's train but has to plunge though water to get them home. In Henry's Forest Henry helps to repair his forest after a storm. In The Trouble With Mud Gordon can't pull his train because he is too dirty.
Overall this is a good tape but it is not the best one.


Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends: Thomas' Christmas Party
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (24 August, 1994)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: David Mitton
Average review score:

Good Thomas Video
My three year old daughter LOVES Thomas the Tank Engine and LOVES Christmas too so this was a wonderful video for her. It's basically like all the other Thomas videos -- a bunch of short episodes focusing on one theme or another. This is good for short attention spans. As a parent you'll get sick of it because the kids will want to watch it over and over -- but then again that's often the sign of an engaging product.


Thomas' Usefulness
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (04 May, 1999)
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Director: David Mitton
Average review score:

This was interesting!
This video was a was a collection of 2 thomas the tank engine videos! The videos it included were,Thomas & his friends help out,and Thomas comes to breakfast.


Halloween
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (25 August, 1998)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: John Carpenter
Starring: Donald Pleasence, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Tony Moran
Halloween is as pure and undiluted as its title. In the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois, a teenage baby sitter tries to survive a Halloween night of relentless terror, during which a knife-wielding maniac goes after the town's hormonally charged youths. Director John Carpenter takes this simple situation and orchestrates a superbly mounted symphony of horrors. It's a movie much scarier for its dark spaces and ominous camera movements than for its explicit bloodletting (which is actually minimal). Composed by Carpenter himself, the movie's freaky music sets the tone; and his script (cowritten with Debra Hill) is laced with references to other horror pictures, especially Psycho. The baby sitter is played by Jamie Lee Curtis, the real-life daughter of Psycho victim Janet Leigh; and the obsessed policeman played by Donald Pleasence is named Sam Loomis, after John Gavin's character in Psycho. In the end, though, Halloween stands on its own as an uncannily frightening experience--it's one of those movies that had audiences literally jumping out of their seats and shouting at the screen. ("No! Don't drop that knife!") Produced on a low budget, the picture turned a monster profit, and spawned many sequels, none of which approached the 1978 original. Curtis returned for two more installments: 1981's dismal Halloween II, which picked up the story the day after the unfortunate events, and 1998's occasionally gripping Halloween H20, which proved the former baby sitter was still haunted after 20 years. --Robert Horton
Average review score:

"Evil On Two Legs"
Dr. Loomis is the lone voice against releasing psychotic killer Michael Myers from the asylum - Myers murdered his sister with a knife when he was five on Halloween night, and hasn't spoken a word since. Loomis' warnings don't matter anyway, since Michael manages his own way out. He's on his way back to Haddonfield, Illinois, his old haunt, to carve out a new name for himself, and teenager Jamie Lee Curtis and her friends have become his new target...

Considering John Carpenter made this movie for almost nothing, it's a masterpiece. The skillful direction and competent cast carry it all off, scaring the pants off the audience with old-fashioned tricks in fine style. Suggestion and stalking shots are the film's principal arsenal, with some good use of hand-held camera killer's POV shots. The movie is, in some places (especially toward the end), extremely violent, yet there is almost no blood anywhere. The photography is really quite good, given that most of the budget was eaten-up on star Donald Pleasance's salary, and the Carpenter and John Howarth theme music is hauntingly effective.

Especially high marks go to newcomer Jamie Lee Curtis and veteran horror actor Pleasance. Curtis wasn't yet completely comfortable in front of the camera, but that mostly works in her favor, here, lending to her besieged character's vulnerability, and she is naturally quite likeable. Pleasance graces anything in which he appears, and he was at his best in this ongoing movie series, making such lines as describing Myers as "evil on two legs" sing, instead of stutter.

The Night He Came Home and Changed the Face Of Horror
In 1978, the world was introduced to a movie that has become a cornerstone in the horror genre. Independent filmmakers John Carpenter and Debra Hill, largely unknown at the time, shot a movie that would become one of the top money-making horror films of all time on a budget of just over $300,000.00. They hired a cast of unknowns, drawing on talent that would become some of the top names in Hollywood. They set out to make a simple film, about a group of teenagers being stalked by a serial killer, and what was born was a movie that has challenged all other films of its genre-Halloween.

Set in the small town of Haddenfield, Illinois, it is the story of Michael Myers, a boy who murders his sister on Halloween night in 1963. Incarserated within the confines of the mental institution Smiths Grove, he is treated by Dr. Loomis (played by Donald Pleasance) until he can stand trial as an adult for the criminal activities of that fateful night.

Fifteen years pass, and Myers is now grown. Loomis is assigned the duty of transporting Myers back to Haddenfield for his criminal hearing. On the eve of halloween, and badgered by a horrendous thunderstorm, Loomis travels the final distance to the gates of the institution with the aid of a nurse who has been assigned to him. Upon their arrival, they discover that the inmates have been set free to wonder about the confines of the sanitarium. Loomis, who has long since grown to believe that Michael Myers in the embodiment of pure evil, rushes to the gaurd post at the front gate. In his absence, Myers overtakes the nurse and steals the car.

Loomis cries out "He's gone..the evil has gone..."

And so begins Halloween.

The balance of the story takes place in Haddonfield, where a group of unsuspecting teens will have a fatal encounter with Michael Myers. Leading the cast is Jamie Lee Curtis, daughter of veteran actress Janet Leigh (of "Psycho" fame), who plays Laurie Strode, a high-school student who begins seeing "The Shape", a non-descript man dressed in a blue coverall, wearing a white mask. She sees him again and again, through the classroom window at school, in her backyard, behind bushes.

For the majority of horror fans who have seen this film, I need go no further. For those of you who haven't, I should go no further, for the film is definitely more than the narrative I began above. It is a story that touches on the psychological truths that our society seems to function on. Whats more, it is a film that touches at our primal fears.

Unlike so many films in this genre, Halloween is genuinely frightening, not because of its use of graphic gore, or visually stunning effects (there really aren't any in this film) but because it plays on the things that scare us most. Whats more, Carpenter uses carefully placed light and shadow to really enhance the experience of his film. His soundtrack also underscores the film as a whole, bringing it to a level and intensity that keep viewers on the edge of their seats.

Carpenter went on to film two additional films in the franchise, the much more commercial Halloween II and Halloween III:Season of the Witch (the third installment having nothing to do with the Myer storyline). The Halloween franchise itself has given birth to a total of seven sequels, including the largely popular Halloween H20, in which Jamie Lee Curtis reprised the role of Laurie Strode. Still, it is this original film, a small budget, independent movie that was shot in the early spring (yes, leaves were brought in and scattered about to simulate the fall season) that has become a staple that is synonymous with the holiday which the movie was named after.

If you have reservations about this film, set them aside and watch it...but watch it with the lights on, because Michael Myers might be there, in the shadows, waiting. Halloween-the Night He Came Home-is worth the time and money. It is the film that really re-defined the horror/slasher genre, and it is the one film that really rises above the rest, setting a standard that no film that followed has ever matched.

THE BOOGYMAN IN ALL HIS GLORY
Halloween singlehadedly set the bar for all other slasher flicks and still to this day continues to be viewed as one of the scariest movies of all time. With his creepy music and terrifying mask, he reeks havoc on all who oppose him. It scared me the first time I saw it and still scares me today. Don't watch it alone.


Halloween
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (15 August, 1997)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: John Carpenter
Starring: Donald Pleasence, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Tony Moran
Halloween is as pure and undiluted as its title. In the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois, a teenage baby sitter tries to survive a Halloween night of relentless terror, during which a knife-wielding maniac goes after the town's hormonally charged youths. Director John Carpenter takes this simple situation and orchestrates a superbly mounted symphony of horrors. It's a movie much scarier for its dark spaces and ominous camera movements than for its explicit bloodletting (which is actually minimal). Composed by Carpenter himself, the movie's freaky music sets the tone; and his script (cowritten with Debra Hill) is laced with references to other horror pictures, especially Psycho. The baby sitter is played by Jamie Lee Curtis, the real-life daughter of Psycho victim Janet Leigh; and the obsessed policeman played by Donald Pleasence is named Sam Loomis, after John Gavin's character in Psycho. In the end, though, Halloween stands on its own as an uncannily frightening experience--it's one of those movies that had audiences literally jumping out of their seats and shouting at the screen. ("No! Don't drop that knife!") Produced on a low budget, the picture turned a monster profit, and spawned many sequels, none of which approached the 1978 original. Curtis returned for two more installments: 1981's dismal Halloween II, which picked up the story the day after the unfortunate events, and 1998's occasionally gripping Halloween H20, which proved the former baby sitter was still haunted after 20 years. --Robert Horton
Average review score:

"Evil On Two Legs"
Dr. Loomis is the lone voice against releasing psychotic killer Michael Myers from the asylum - Myers murdered his sister with a knife when he was five on Halloween night, and hasn't spoken a word since. Loomis' warnings don't matter anyway, since Michael manages his own way out. He's on his way back to Haddonfield, Illinois, his old haunt, to carve out a new name for himself, and teenager Jamie Lee Curtis and her friends have become his new target...

Considering John Carpenter made this movie for almost nothing, it's a masterpiece. The skillful direction and competent cast carry it all off, scaring the pants off the audience with old-fashioned tricks in fine style. Suggestion and stalking shots are the film's principal arsenal, with some good use of hand-held camera killer's POV shots. The movie is, in some places (especially toward the end), extremely violent, yet there is almost no blood anywhere. The photography is really quite good, given that most of the budget was eaten-up on star Donald Pleasance's salary, and the Carpenter and John Howarth theme music is hauntingly effective.

Especially high marks go to newcomer Jamie Lee Curtis and veteran horror actor Pleasance. Curtis wasn't yet completely comfortable in front of the camera, but that mostly works in her favor, here, lending to her besieged character's vulnerability, and she is naturally quite likeable. Pleasance graces anything in which he appears, and he was at his best in this ongoing movie series, making such lines as describing Myers as "evil on two legs" sing, instead of stutter.

The Night He Came Home and Changed the Face Of Horror
In 1978, the world was introduced to a movie that has become a cornerstone in the horror genre. Independent filmmakers John Carpenter and Debra Hill, largely unknown at the time, shot a movie that would become one of the top money-making horror films of all time on a budget of just over $300,000.00. They hired a cast of unknowns, drawing on talent that would become some of the top names in Hollywood. They set out to make a simple film, about a group of teenagers being stalked by a serial killer, and what was born was a movie that has challenged all other films of its genre-Halloween.

Set in the small town of Haddenfield, Illinois, it is the story of Michael Myers, a boy who murders his sister on Halloween night in 1963. Incarserated within the confines of the mental institution Smiths Grove, he is treated by Dr. Loomis (played by Donald Pleasance) until he can stand trial as an adult for the criminal activities of that fateful night.

Fifteen years pass, and Myers is now grown. Loomis is assigned the duty of transporting Myers back to Haddenfield for his criminal hearing. On the eve of halloween, and badgered by a horrendous thunderstorm, Loomis travels the final distance to the gates of the institution with the aid of a nurse who has been assigned to him. Upon their arrival, they discover that the inmates have been set free to wonder about the confines of the sanitarium. Loomis, who has long since grown to believe that Michael Myers in the embodiment of pure evil, rushes to the gaurd post at the front gate. In his absence, Myers overtakes the nurse and steals the car.

Loomis cries out "He's gone..the evil has gone..."

And so begins Halloween.

The balance of the story takes place in Haddonfield, where a group of unsuspecting teens will have a fatal encounter with Michael Myers. Leading the cast is Jamie Lee Curtis, daughter of veteran actress Janet Leigh (of "Psycho" fame), who plays Laurie Strode, a high-school student who begins seeing "The Shape", a non-descript man dressed in a blue coverall, wearing a white mask. She sees him again and again, through the classroom window at school, in her backyard, behind bushes.

For the majority of horror fans who have seen this film, I need go no further. For those of you who haven't, I should go no further, for the film is definitely more than the narrative I began above. It is a story that touches on the psychological truths that our society seems to function on. Whats more, it is a film that touches at our primal fears.

Unlike so many films in this genre, Halloween is genuinely frightening, not because of its use of graphic gore, or visually stunning effects (there really aren't any in this film) but because it plays on the things that scare us most. Whats more, Carpenter uses carefully placed light and shadow to really enhance the experience of his film. His soundtrack also underscores the film as a whole, bringing it to a level and intensity that keep viewers on the edge of their seats.

Carpenter went on to film two additional films in the franchise, the much more commercial Halloween II and Halloween III:Season of the Witch (the third installment having nothing to do with the Myer storyline). The Halloween franchise itself has given birth to a total of seven sequels, including the largely popular Halloween H20, in which Jamie Lee Curtis reprised the role of Laurie Strode. Still, it is this original film, a small budget, independent movie that was shot in the early spring (yes, leaves were brought in and scattered about to simulate the fall season) that has become a staple that is synonymous with the holiday which the movie was named after.

If you have reservations about this film, set them aside and watch it...but watch it with the lights on, because Michael Myers might be there, in the shadows, waiting. Halloween-the Night He Came Home-is worth the time and money. It is the film that really re-defined the horror/slasher genre, and it is the one film that really rises above the rest, setting a standard that no film that followed has ever matched.

THE BOOGYMAN IN ALL HIS GLORY
Halloween singlehadedly set the bar for all other slasher flicks and still to this day continues to be viewed as one of the scariest movies of all time. With his creepy music and terrifying mask, he reeks havoc on all who oppose him. It scared me the first time I saw it and still scares me today. Don't watch it alone.


Halloween
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (07 August, 2001)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: John Carpenter
Starring: Donald Pleasence, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Tony Moran
Halloween is as pure and undiluted as its title. In the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois, a teenage baby sitter tries to survive a Halloween night of relentless terror, during which a knife-wielding maniac goes after the town's hormonally charged youths. Director John Carpenter takes this simple situation and orchestrates a superbly mounted symphony of horrors. It's a movie much scarier for its dark spaces and ominous camera movements than for its explicit bloodletting (which is actually minimal). Composed by Carpenter himself, the movie's freaky music sets the tone; and his script (cowritten with Debra Hill) is laced with references to other horror pictures, especially Psycho. The baby sitter is played by Jamie Lee Curtis, the real-life daughter of Psycho victim Janet Leigh; and the obsessed policeman played by Donald Pleasence is named Sam Loomis, after John Gavin's character in Psycho. In the end, though, Halloween stands on its own as an uncannily frightening experience--it's one of those movies that had audiences literally jumping out of their seats and shouting at the screen. ("No! Don't drop that knife!") Produced on a low budget, the picture turned a monster profit, and spawned many sequels, none of which approached the 1978 original. Curtis returned for two more installments: 1981's dismal Halloween II, which picked up the story the day after the unfortunate events, and 1998's occasionally gripping Halloween H20, which proved the former baby sitter was still haunted after 20 years. --Robert Horton
Average review score:

"Evil On Two Legs"
Dr. Loomis is the lone voice against releasing psychotic killer Michael Myers from the asylum - Myers murdered his sister with a knife when he was five on Halloween night, and hasn't spoken a word since. Loomis' warnings don't matter anyway, since Michael manages his own way out. He's on his way back to Haddonfield, Illinois, his old haunt, to carve out a new name for himself, and teenager Jamie Lee Curtis and her friends have become his new target...

Considering John Carpenter made this movie for almost nothing, it's a masterpiece. The skillful direction and competent cast carry it all off, scaring the pants off the audience with old-fashioned tricks in fine style. Suggestion and stalking shots are the film's principal arsenal, with some good use of hand-held camera killer's POV shots. The movie is, in some places (especially toward the end), extremely violent, yet there is almost no blood anywhere. The photography is really quite good, given that most of the budget was eaten-up on star Donald Pleasance's salary, and the Carpenter and John Howarth theme music is hauntingly effective.

Especially high marks go to newcomer Jamie Lee Curtis and veteran horror actor Pleasance. Curtis wasn't yet completely comfortable in front of the camera, but that mostly works in her favor, here, lending to her besieged character's vulnerability, and she is naturally quite likeable. Pleasance graces anything in which he appears, and he was at his best in this ongoing movie series, making such lines as describing Myers as "evil on two legs" sing, instead of stutter.

The Night He Came Home and Changed the Face Of Horror
In 1978, the world was introduced to a movie that has become a cornerstone in the horror genre. Independent filmmakers John Carpenter and Debra Hill, largely unknown at the time, shot a movie that would become one of the top money-making horror films of all time on a budget of just over $300,000.00. They hired a cast of unknowns, drawing on talent that would become some of the top names in Hollywood. They set out to make a simple film, about a group of teenagers being stalked by a serial killer, and what was born was a movie that has challenged all other films of its genre-Halloween.

Set in the small town of Haddenfield, Illinois, it is the story of Michael Myers, a boy who murders his sister on Halloween night in 1963. Incarserated within the confines of the mental institution Smiths Grove, he is treated by Dr. Loomis (played by Donald Pleasance) until he can stand trial as an adult for the criminal activities of that fateful night.

Fifteen years pass, and Myers is now grown. Loomis is assigned the duty of transporting Myers back to Haddenfield for his criminal hearing. On the eve of halloween, and badgered by a horrendous thunderstorm, Loomis travels the final distance to the gates of the institution with the aid of a nurse who has been assigned to him. Upon their arrival, they discover that the inmates have been set free to wonder about the confines of the sanitarium. Loomis, who has long since grown to believe that Michael Myers in the embodiment of pure evil, rushes to the gaurd post at the front gate. In his absence, Myers overtakes the nurse and steals the car.

Loomis cries out "He's gone..the evil has gone..."

And so begins Halloween.

The balance of the story takes place in Haddonfield, where a group of unsuspecting teens will have a fatal encounter with Michael Myers. Leading the cast is Jamie Lee Curtis, daughter of veteran actress Janet Leigh (of "Psycho" fame), who plays Laurie Strode, a high-school student who begins seeing "The Shape", a non-descript man dressed in a blue coverall, wearing a white mask. She sees him again and again, through the classroom window at school, in her backyard, behind bushes.

For the majority of horror fans who have seen this film, I need go no further. For those of you who haven't, I should go no further, for the film is definitely more than the narrative I began above. It is a story that touches on the psychological truths that our society seems to function on. Whats more, it is a film that touches at our primal fears.

Unlike so many films in this genre, Halloween is genuinely frightening, not because of its use of graphic gore, or visually stunning effects (there really aren't any in this film) but because it plays on the things that scare us most. Whats more, Carpenter uses carefully placed light and shadow to really enhance the experience of his film. His soundtrack also underscores the film as a whole, bringing it to a level and intensity that keep viewers on the edge of their seats.

Carpenter went on to film two additional films in the franchise, the much more commercial Halloween II and Halloween III:Season of the Witch (the third installment having nothing to do with the Myer storyline). The Halloween franchise itself has given birth to a total of seven sequels, including the largely popular Halloween H20, in which Jamie Lee Curtis reprised the role of Laurie Strode. Still, it is this original film, a small budget, independent movie that was shot in the early spring (yes, leaves were brought in and scattered about to simulate the fall season) that has become a staple that is synonymous with the holiday which the movie was named after.

If you have reservations about this film, set them aside and watch it...but watch it with the lights on, because Michael Myers might be there, in the shadows, waiting. Halloween-the Night He Came Home-is worth the time and money. It is the film that really re-defined the horror/slasher genre, and it is the one film that really rises above the rest, setting a standard that no film that followed has ever matched.

THE BOOGYMAN IN ALL HIS GLORY
Halloween singlehadedly set the bar for all other slasher flicks and still to this day continues to be viewed as one of the scariest movies of all time. With his creepy music and terrifying mask, he reeks havoc on all who oppose him. It scared me the first time I saw it and still scares me today. Don't watch it alone.


Halloween
Released in VHS Tape by Anchor Bay Entertainment (15 August, 1997)
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Director: John Carpenter
Starring: Donald Pleasence, Jamie Lee Curtis, and Tony Moran
Halloween is as pure and undiluted as its title. In the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois, a teenage baby sitter tries to survive a Halloween night of relentless terror, during which a knife-wielding maniac goes after the town's hormonally charged youths. Director John Carpenter takes this simple situation and orchestrates a superbly mounted symphony of horrors. It's a movie much scarier for its dark spaces and ominous camera movements than for its explicit bloodletting (which is actually minimal). Composed by Carpenter himself, the movie's freaky music sets the tone; and his script (cowritten with Debra Hill) is laced with references to other horror pictures, especially Psycho. The baby sitter is played by Jamie Lee Curtis, the real-life daughter of Psycho victim Janet Leigh; and the obsessed policeman played by Donald Pleasence is named Sam Loomis, after John Gavin's character in Psycho. In the end, though, Halloween stands on its own as an uncannily frightening experience--it's one of those movies that had audiences literally jumping out of their seats and shouting at the screen. ("No! Don't drop that knife!") Produced on a low budget, the picture turned a monster profit, and spawned many sequels, none of which approached the 1978 original. Curtis returned for two more installments: 1981's dismal Halloween II, which picked up the story the day after the unfortunate events, and 1998's occasionally gripping Halloween H20, which proved the former baby sitter was still haunted after 20 years. --Robert Horton
Average review score:

"Evil On Two Legs"
Dr. Loomis is the lone voice against releasing psychotic killer Michael Myers from the asylum - Myers murdered his sister with a knife when he was five on Halloween night, and hasn't spoken a word since. Loomis' warnings don't matter anyway, since Michael manages his own way out. He's on his way back to Haddonfield, Illinois, his old haunt, to carve out a new name for himself, and teenager Jamie Lee Curtis and her friends have become his new target...

Considering John Carpenter made this movie for almost nothing, it's a masterpiece. The skillful direction and competent cast carry it all off, scaring the pants off the audience with old-fashioned tricks in fine style. Suggestion and stalking shots are the film's principal arsenal, with some good use of hand-held camera killer's POV shots. The movie is, in some places (especially toward the end), extremely violent, yet there is almost no blood anywhere. The photography is really quite good, given that most of the budget was eaten-up on star Donald Pleasance's salary, and the Carpenter and John Howarth theme music is hauntingly effective.

Especially high marks go to newcomer Jamie Lee Curtis and veteran horror actor Pleasance. Curtis wasn't yet completely comfortable in front of the camera, but that mostly works in her favor, here, lending to her besieged character's vulnerability, and she is naturally quite likeable. Pleasance graces anything in which he appears, and he was at his best in this ongoing movie series, making such lines as describing Myers as "evil on two legs" sing, instead of stutter.

The Night He Came Home and Changed the Face Of Horror
In 1978, the world was introduced to a movie that has become a cornerstone in the horror genre. Independent filmmakers John Carpenter and Debra Hill, largely unknown at the time, shot a movie that would become one of the top money-making horror films of all time on a budget of just over $300,000.00. They hired a cast of unknowns, drawing on talent that would become some of the top names in Hollywood. They set out to make a simple film, about a group of teenagers being stalked by a serial killer, and what was born was a movie that has challenged all other films of its genre-Halloween.

Set in the small town of Haddenfield, Illinois, it is the story of Michael Myers, a boy who murders his sister on Halloween night in 1963. Incarserated within the confines of the mental institution Smiths Grove, he is treated by Dr. Loomis (played by Donald Pleasance) until he can stand trial as an adult for the criminal activities of that fateful night.

Fifteen years pass, and Myers is now grown. Loomis is assigned the duty of transporting Myers back to Haddenfield for his criminal hearing. On the eve of halloween, and badgered by a horrendous thunderstorm, Loomis travels the final distance to the gates of the institution with the aid of a nurse who has been assigned to him. Upon their arrival, they discover that the inmates have been set free to wonder about the confines of the sanitarium. Loomis, who has long since grown to believe that Michael Myers in the embodiment of pure evil, rushes to the gaurd post at the front gate. In his absence, Myers overtakes the nurse and steals the car.

Loomis cries out "He's gone..the evil has gone..."

And so begins Halloween.

The balance of the story takes place in Haddonfield, where a group of unsuspecting teens will have a fatal encounter with Michael Myers. Leading the cast is Jamie Lee Curtis, daughter of veteran actress Janet Leigh (of "Psycho" fame), who plays Laurie Strode, a high-school student who begins seeing "The Shape", a non-descript man dressed in a blue coverall, wearing a white mask. She sees him again and again, through the classroom window at school, in her backyard, behind bushes.

For the majority of horror fans who have seen this film, I need go no further. For those of you who haven't, I should go no further, for the film is definitely more than the narrative I began above. It is a story that touches on the psychological truths that our society seems to function on. Whats more, it is a film that touches at our primal fears.

Unlike so many films in this genre, Halloween is genuinely frightening, not because of its use of graphic gore, or visually stunning effects (there really aren't any in this film) but because it plays on the things that scare us most. Whats more, Carpenter uses carefully placed light and shadow to really enhance the experience of his film. His soundtrack also underscores the film as a whole, bringing it to a level and intensity that keep viewers on the edge of their seats.

Carpenter went on to film two additional films in the franchise, the much more commercial Halloween II and Halloween III:Season of the Witch (the third installment having nothing to do with the Myer storyline). The Halloween franchise itself has given birth to a total of seven sequels, including the largely popular Halloween H20, in which Jamie Lee Curtis reprised the role of Laurie Strode. Still, it is this original film, a small budget, independent movie that was shot in the early spring (yes, leaves were brought in and scattered about to simulate the fall season) that has become a staple that is synonymous with the holiday which the movie was named after.

If you have reservations about this film, set them aside and watch it...but watch it with the lights on, because Michael Myers might be there, in the shadows, waiting. Halloween-the Night He Came Home-is worth the time and money. It is the film that really re-defined the horror/slasher genre, and it is the one film that really rises above the rest, setting a standard that no film that followed has ever matched.

THE BOOGYMAN IN ALL HIS GLORY
Halloween singlehadedly set the bar for all other slasher flicks and still to this day continues to be viewed as one of the scariest movies of all time. With his creepy music and terrifying mask, he reeks havoc on all who oppose him. It scared me the first time I saw it and still scares me today. Don't watch it alone.


Related Subjects: Melanie-Lynskey
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