6.2
The early years of young Michael Myers and the events leading up to his fateful Halloween night murder rampage in the quiet town of Haddonfield, Illinois.
Malcolm McDowell
Dr. Samuel Loomis
Sheri Moon Zombie
Deborah Myers
William Forsythe
Ronnie White
Tyler Mane
Michael Myers
Scout Taylor-Compton
Laurie Strode
Brad Dourif
Sheriff Leigh Brackett
Danielle Harris
Annie Brackett
Hanna Hall
Judith Myers
Bill Moseley
Zach 'Z-Man' Garrett
Daeg Faerch
Michael Myers, Age 10
Kristina Klebe
Lynda van der Klok
Danny Trejo
Ismael Cruz
Ken Foree
Big Joe Grizzly
Udo Kier
Morgan Walker
Sid Haig
Chester Chesterfield
Daryl Sabara
Wesley Rhoades
Daniel Roebuck
Lou Martini
Richard Lynch
Principal Chambers
Clint Howard
Doctor Koplenson
Lew Temple
Noel Kluggs
Tom Towles
Larry Redgrave
Leslie Easterbrook
Patty Frost
Steve Boyles
Stan Payne
Skyler Gisondo
Tommy Doyle
Jenny Gregg Stewart
Lindsey Wallace
Adam Weisman
Steve Haley
Sydnie Pitzer
Baby Boo
Myla Pitzer
Baby Boo
Stella Altman
Baby Boo
Dee Wallace
Cynthia Strode
Max Van Ville
Paul
Nick Mennell
Bob Simms
Pat Skipper
Mason Strode
Richmond Arquette
Deputy Charles
Paul Kampf
Officer Lowery
Sybil Danning
Nurse Wynn
Micky Dolenz
Derek Allen
Mel Fair
Taylor Madison
Nikki Taylor Melton
Princess
Deven Streeton
Princess
Ezra Buzzington
Graveyard Keeper (uncredited)
Richard Fancy
University Dean (uncredited)
Courtney Gains
Jack Kendall (uncredited)
Gary Grossman
Drunk 'Rabbit in Red' Patron (uncredited)
Olja Hrustic
Raped Inmate (uncredited)
Kazu Nagahama
College Student #3 (uncredited)
Director, Screenplay
Rob Zombie
Original Film Writer
Debra Hill
Original Film Writer
John Carpenter
February 14, 2017
4
I don't have a problem with remakes per se. Even though I am not a big fan of the original "Halloween" film directed by John Carpenter, I do acknowledge it as a film that started a horror slasher trend and served as an inspiration for many of the films that came after it. Since I am not crazy about the 1978 film, I thought I would be able to enjoy this remake without being too influenced by my love for the original film. After seeing this remake, I started to appreciate the original version a little bit more, since Rob Zombie turned the story and its characters into a vulgar mess.
The original film mostly focuses on the life of Laurie Strode going on about her business and interacting with her friends for the most part, while we see the mysterious Michael Myers stalking her, appearing from out of nowhere, and we never really get to know why (without taking the sequels into account). In this remake, Rob Zombie attempts to explore little Michael Myers' psychology, giving our villain a soul and establishing the roots of his evilness, taking away all the mystery and darkness surrounding the character. The results are not good by any means and the only thing it proves, is that sometimes, mystery is scarier and more disturbing than having everything explained, especially if the explanation is as predictable as "he was raised in a bad environment". The audience doesn't want to be spoon fed and I think it's clear that one of the main reasons why the original villain was scary, it's because Michael Myers remained as an enigmatic character from the beginning until the end. In the original film, Myers appears to come from a seemingly normal family, but for some reason, he turns out a merciless killer anyway. While the original "Halloween" film is not my favorite, as I established before, I do give the film credit for giving us a villain that no one could ever sympathize with. This film basically tries to portrait Michael as a poor little thing who was poorly raised and eliminates any possibility of seeing him as a genuinely dark and fear-provoking character. This overexposure of Michael's early years lasts about 40 minutes, which gets tedious, it makes the villain more pitiful than frightening and in the end, they don't really manage to establish a point about his insanity all that well either.
Once again, Rob Zombie casts his wife, Sheri Moon Zombie, who was great in 'House of 1000', playing a Insane, trashy girl… but why did she have to play almost the exact same character here? I don't know what's the deal with Rob Zombie having the need to show us his wife stripping and being sexy all the time, maybe it's some kind of fetish they have and it's all good... but 'Halloween' was not the right choice to show Sherri Moon dancing and showing her body again. Another thing that Rob Zombie seems to borrow from his film "House of 1000 Corpses" is the fact that the characters are swearing most of the times and while I have nothing against foul language whatsoever, but I think it sounds repetitive and silly when we hear the f-word every 5 seconds. The amount of stupid lines that could be easily compared to some of the crappiest PG-rated films that came out throughout the last years.
I'm really disappointed. I didn't think I was going to hate it so much, but I do and it's a shame because I really wanted to like this film. Better luck next time, I guess. My noble advice for all fans of the original 'Halloween' movie is: Don't watch this remake if you're sensitive, because this hurts a lot. I know I felt cheated, even if I'm not a fan of Carpenter's version either.