Year of Release: 2021
Director: David Gordon Green
Screenplay: Scott Teems, Danny McBride and David Gordon Green, based on characters created by John Carpenter and Debra Hill
Starring: Jamie Lee Curtis, Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, Will Patton, Thomas Mann, Anthony Michael Hall, Kyle Richards
Running Time: 105 minutes
Genre: Horror
Immediately following the events of Halloween (2018), Laurie Strode (Curtis), her daughter Karen (Greer), and Karen's daughter Allyson (Matichak) are taken to hospital to recuperate. However, murderous Michael Myers (James Jude Courtney and Nick Castle) emerges from the inferno of the Strode compound and proceeds to cut a bloody swathe through the good people of Haddonfield, Illinois. The townspeople desire to band together to stop Myers once and for all.
The original Halloween (1978) worked because it emphasised suspense and tension over blood and guts, the 2018 Halloween which is a sequel to the 1978 film but ignores all of the previous umpteen sequels, remakes and reboots, wasn't great but it was an enjoyable enough rejuvenation of the hoary old franchise. Halloween Kills, however, is pretty much a bloodbath. The film tries to make a comment about mob mentality and vigilante justice, but it feels pretty half hearted, swallowing the greens of social commentary to linger over the pudding of gruesome murders. The violence is surprisingly brutal, even by the standards of the Halloween franchise. Jamie Lee Curtis is underused as Laurie Strode, who is in hospital throughout most of the film. Judy Greer is the highlight of the film, providing some much needed heart as Karen, and Andi Matichak as Allyson does as well as anyone could do with a pretty underwritten part. Some of the kills are imaginative, and a hospital riot is a highlight. The thing is that the film is so over the top in terms of gore and violence it just becomes funny. People were laughing at the screening I attended, and you could have some fun with it if you were watching it at the right time with the right audience. It needs to be watched late at night, after a few beers, with some likeminded friends, for some silly, campy fun. It's not scary and really not much of a movie. There isn't really any conclusion, it forms the centrepiece of a trilogy, with Halloween Ends due out in 2022, and so instead of a satisfying ending, it's like the film just stops.
Michael Myers (James Jude Courtney / Nick Castle) in Halloween Kills
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