Category: Halloween

  • Best Horror Movies to Watch on Halloween

    Jack Nicholson in 'The Shining'. Photo: Warner Bros.
    Jack Nicholson in ‘The Shining’. Photo: Warner Bros.

    Halloween is here again and in-between putting on your costume and eating candy, you may want to sit down and watch a scary movie!

    Moviefone has assembled a list of the 35 scariest movies ever made to help you celebrate All Hallows’ Eve!

    Let’s begin!

    Related Article: The 20 Most Terrifying Horror Films of the Last Decade Ranked!


    35. ‘Event Horizon‘ (1997)

    Sam Neill in 'Event Horizon'. Photo: Paramount Pictures.
    Sam Neill in ‘Event Horizon’. Photo: Paramount Pictures.

    In 2047, a group of astronauts are sent to investigate and salvage the starship ‘Event Horizon’ which disappeared mysteriously 7 years before on its maiden voyage. With its return, the crew of the ‘Lewis and Clark’ discovers the real truth behind the disappearance of the ‘Event Horizon’ – and something even more terrifying.

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    34. ‘Insidious‘ (2011)

    A family discovers that dark spirits have invaded their home after their son (Ty Simpkins) inexplicably falls into an endless sleep. When they reach out to a professional for help, they learn things are a lot more personal than they thought.

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    33. ‘The Purge: Anarchy‘ (2014)

    One night per year, the government sanctions a 12-hour period in which citizens can commit any crime they wish — including murder — without fear of punishment or imprisonment. Leo (Frank Grillo), a sergeant who lost his son, plans a vigilante mission of revenge during the mayhem. However, instead of a death-dealing avenger, he becomes the unexpected protector of four innocent strangers who desperately need his help if they are to survive the night.

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    32. ‘Terrifier 3‘ (2024)

    Five years after surviving Art the Clown’s (David Howard Thorton) Halloween massacre, Sienna (Lauren LaVera) and Jonathan (Elliott Fullam) are still struggling to rebuild their shattered lives. As the holiday season approaches, they try to embrace the Christmas spirit and leave the horrors of the past behind. But just when they think they’re safe, Art returns, determined to turn their holiday cheer into a new nightmare. The festive season quickly unravels as Art unleashes his twisted brand of terror, proving that no holiday is safe.

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    31. ‘Let the Right One In‘ (2008)

    Set in 1982 in the suburb of Blackeberg, Stockholm, twelve-year-old Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant) is a lonely outsider, bullied at school by his classmates; at home, Oskar dreams of revenge against a trio of bullies. He befriends his twelve-year-old, next-door neighbor Eli (Lina Leandersson), who only appears at night in the snow-covered playground outside their building.

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    30. ‘28 Days Later‘ (2002)

    Cillian Murphy in 2002's '28 Days Later.' Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    Cillian Murphy in 2002’s ’28 Days Later.’ Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    Twenty-eight days after a killer virus was accidentally unleashed from a British research facility, a small group of London survivors are caught in a desperate struggle to protect themselves from the infected. Carried by animals and humans, the virus turns those it infects into homicidal maniacs — and it’s absolutely impossible to contain.

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    29. ‘Saw‘ (2004)

    Obsessed with teaching his victims the value of life, a deranged, sadistic serial killer abducts the morally wayward. Once captured, they must face impossible choices in a horrific game of survival. The victims must fight to win their lives back, or die trying…

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    28. ‘The Ring‘ (2002)

    Rachel Keller (Naomi Watts) is a journalist investigating a videotape that may have killed four teenagers. There is an urban legend about this tape: the viewer will die seven days after watching it. Rachel tracks down the video… and watches it. Now she has just seven days to unravel the mystery of the Ring so she can save herself and her son.

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    27. ‘The Blair Witch Project‘ (1999)

    In October of 1994 three student filmmakers disappeared in the woods near Burkittsville, Maryland, while shooting a documentary. A year later their footage was found.

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    26. ‘The Monkey‘ (2025)

    When twin brothers (Theo James) find a mysterious wind-up monkey, a series of outrageous deaths tear their family apart. Twenty-five years later, the monkey begins a new killing spree forcing the estranged brothers to confront the cursed toy.

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    25. ‘Scream‘ (1996)

    Drew Barrymore in 'Scream'. Photo: Dimension Films.
    Drew Barrymore in ‘Scream’. Photo: Dimension Films.

    A killer known as Ghostface begins killing off teenagers, and as the body count begins rising, one girl (Neve Campbell) and her friends find themselves contemplating the ‘rules’ of horror films as they try to survive a real-life one.

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    24. ‘Midsommar‘ (2019)

    Several friends travel to Sweden to study as anthropologists a summer festival that is held every ninety years in the remote hometown of one of them. What begins as a dream vacation in a place where the sun never sets, gradually turns into a dark nightmare as the mysterious inhabitants invite them to participate in their disturbing festive activities.

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    23. ‘It Follows‘ (2015)

    When carefree teenager Jay (Maika Monroe) sleeps with her older boyfriend for the first time, she learns that she is the latest recipient of a fatal curse that is passed from victim to victim via sexual intercourse. Death, Jay learns, will creep inexorably toward her as either a friend or a stranger. Jay’s friends don’t believe her seemingly paranoid ravings, until they too begin to see the phantom assassins and band together to help her defend herself.

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    22. ‘The Descent‘ (2005)

    After a tragic accident, six friends reunite for a caving expedition. Their adventure soon goes horribly wrong when a collapse traps them deep underground and they find themselves pursued by bloodthirsty creatures. As their friendships deteriorate, they find themselves in a desperate struggle to survive the creatures and each other.

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    21. ‘The Black Phone‘ (2022)

    Finney Blake (Mason Thames), a shy but clever 13-year-old boy, is abducted by a sadistic killer (Ethan Hawke) and trapped in a soundproof basement where screaming is of little use. When a disconnected phone on the wall begins to ring, Finney discovers that he can hear the voices of the killer’s previous victims. And they are dead set on making sure that what happened to them doesn’t happen to Finney.

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    20. ‘M3GAN‘ (2023)

    (L to R) M3GAN, Gemma (Allison Williams) and Cady (Violet McGraw) in 'M3GAN,' directed by Gerard Johnstone. © 2023 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) M3GAN, Gemma (Allison Williams) and Cady (Violet McGraw) in ‘M3GAN,’ directed by Gerard Johnstone. © 2023 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.

    A brilliant toy company roboticist (Allison Williams) uses artificial intelligence to develop M3GAN, a life-like doll programmed to emotionally bond with her newly orphaned niece (Violet McGraw). But when the doll’s programming works too well, she becomes overprotective of her new friend with terrifying results.

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    19. ‘The Strangers‘ (2008)

    After returning from a wedding reception, a couple (Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman) staying in an isolated vacation house receive a knock on the door in the mid-hours of the night. What ensues is a violent invasion by three strangers, their faces hidden behind masks. The couple find themselves in a violent struggle, in which they go beyond what either of them thought capable in order to survive.

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    18. ‘The Conjuring‘ (2013)

    Paranormal investigators Ed (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine Warren (Vera Farmiga) work to help a family terrorized by a dark presence in their farmhouse. Forced to confront a powerful entity, the Warrens find themselves caught in the most terrifying case of their lives.

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    17. ‘Poltergeist‘ (1982)

    Steve Freeling (Craig T. Nelson) lives with his wife, Diane (JoBeth Williams), and their three children, Dana (Dominique Dunne), Robbie (Oliver Robins), and Carol Anne (Heather O’Rourke), in Southern California where he sells houses for the company that built the neighborhood. It starts with just a few odd occurrences, such as broken dishes and furniture moving around by itself. However, when he realizes that something truly evil haunts his home, Steve calls in a team of parapsychologists led by Dr. Lesh to help before it’s too late.

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    16. ‘Hereditary

    When Ellen, the matriarch of the Graham family, passes away, her daughter’s family begins to unravel cryptic and increasingly terrifying secrets about their ancestry.

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    15. ‘Heretic‘ (2024)

    Hugh Grant in 'Heretic'. Photo: A24.
    Hugh Grant in ‘Heretic’. Photo: A24.

    Two young missionaries (Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East) are forced to prove their faith when they knock on the wrong door and are greeted by a diabolical Mr. Reed (Hugh Grant), becoming ensnared in his deadly game of cat-and-mouse.

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    14. ‘Friday the 13th‘ (1980)

    Camp counselors are stalked and murdered by an unknown assailant while trying to reopen a summer camp that was the site of a child’s drowning.

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    13. ‘The Omen‘ (1976)

    Immediately after their miscarriage, the US diplomat Robert Thorn (Gregory Peck) adopts the newborn Damien (Harvey Stephens) without the knowledge of his wife (Lee Remick). Yet what he doesn’t know is that their new son is the son of the devil.

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    12. ‘Psycho‘ (1960)

    When larcenous real estate clerk Marion Crane (Janet Leigh) goes on the lam with a wad of cash and hopes of starting a new life, she ends up at the notorious Bates Motel, where manager Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins) cares for his housebound mother.

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    11. ‘Rosemary’s Baby‘ (1968)

    A young couple, Rosemary (Mia Farrow) and Guy (John Cassavetes), moves into an infamous New York apartment building, known by frightening legends and mysterious events, with the purpose of starting a family.

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    10. ‘Longlegs‘ (2024)

    Maika Monroe in 'Longlegs'. Photo: Neon.
    Maika Monroe in ‘Longlegs’. Photo: Neon.

    In pursuit of a serial killer, an FBI agent (Maika Monroe) uncovers a series of occult clues that she must solve to end his terrifying killing spree.

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    9. ‘Alien‘ (1979)

    During its return to the earth, commercial spaceship Nostromo intercepts a distress signal from a distant planet. When a three-member team of the crew discovers a chamber containing thousands of eggs on the planet, a creature inside one of the eggs attacks an explorer. The entire crew is unaware of the impending nightmare set to descend upon them when the alien parasite planted inside its unfortunate host is birthed.

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    8. ‘The Substance‘ (2024)

    A fading celebrity (Demi Moore) decides to use a black market drug, a cell-replicating substance that temporarily creates a younger, better version of herself (Margaret Qualley).

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    7. ‘The Thing‘ (1982)

    Members of an American scientific research outpost in Antarctica find themselves battling a parasitic alien organism capable of perfectly imitating its victims. They soon discover that this task will be harder than they thought, as they don’t know which members of the team have already been assimilated and their paranoia threatens to tear them apart.

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    6. ‘The Shining‘ (1980)

    Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) accepts a caretaker job at the Overlook Hotel, where he, along with his wife Wendy (Shelley Duvall) and their son Danny (Danny Lloyd), must live isolated from the rest of the world for the winter. But they aren’t prepared for the madness that lurks within.

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    5. ‘The Silence of the Lambs‘ (1991)

    Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Hannibal Lecter in 'The Silence of the Lambs'. Photo: Orion Pictures.
    Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Hannibal Lecter in ‘The Silence of the Lambs’. Photo: Orion Pictures.

    Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) is a top student at the FBI’s training academy. Jack Crawford (Scott Glenn) wants Clarice to interview Dr. Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins), a brilliant psychiatrist who is also a violent psychopath, serving life behind bars for various acts of murder and cannibalism. Crawford believes that Lecter may have insight into a case and that Starling, as an attractive young woman, may be just the bait to draw him out.

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    4. ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street‘ (1984)

    Teenagers in a small town are dropping like flies, apparently in the grip of mass hysteria causing their suicides. A cop’s daughter, Nancy Thompson (Heather Langenkamp), traces the cause to child molester Fred Krueger (Robert Englund), who was burned alive by angry parents many years before. Krueger has now come back in the dreams of his killers’ children, claiming their lives as his revenge. Nancy and her boyfriend, Glen (Johnny Depp), must devise a plan to lure the monster out of the realm of nightmares and into the real world…

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    3. ‘The Texas Chain Saw Massacre‘ (1974)

    When Sally (Marilyn Burns) hears that her grandfather’s grave may have been vandalized, she and her paraplegic brother, Franklin (Paul A. Partain), set out with their friends to investigate. After a detour to their family’s old farmhouse, they discover a group of crazed, murderous outcasts living next door. As the group is attacked one by one by the chainsaw-wielding Leatherface (Gunnar Hansen), who wears a mask of human skin, the survivors must do everything they can to escape.

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    2. ‘The Exorcist‘ (1973)

    12-year-old Regan MacNeil (Linda Blair) begins to adapt an explicit new personality as strange events befall the local area of Georgetown. Her mother (Ellen Burstyn) becomes torn between science and superstition in a desperate bid to save her daughter, and ultimately turns to her last hope: Father Damien Karras (Jason Miller), a troubled priest who is struggling with his own faith.

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    1. ‘Halloween‘ (1978)

    A scene from 1978's 'Halloween'. Photo: Compass International Pictures.
    A scene from 1978’s ‘Halloween’. Photo: Compass International Pictures.

    Fifteen years after murdering his sister on Halloween Night 1963, Michael Myers escapes from a mental hospital and returns to the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois to kill again.

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  • Universal Orlando Halloween Horror Nights Mazes Ranked

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Now that haunt season has kicked off with Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Orlando, it is time to rank all ten haunted houses, including the popular franchise-themed ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s’, ‘Terrifier’, ‘Fallout’, and more.

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    To celebrate the start of the Halloween season, Moviefone is ranking every maze at this year’s Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Orlando.

    Related Article: Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights is Ready to Terrify Fans

    10. Hatchet and Chain: Demon Bounty Hunters

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    In this Western horrorscape, demons are clawing their way out of Hell to possess unsuspecting humans, and it’s up to bounty hunters Hatchet and Chain to stop them. While this house had some cool light effects and set pieces, such as the demon in the fireplace, the story was not as cohesive as it could have been. However, it is still a fun house and a good original creation.

    Official synopsis:

    In this Old West town, all hell is breaking loose. Red-hot lava demons are trying to possess everyone, melting everything in their path. Your only hope: Hatchet and Chains with their mystical weapons.

    9. Grave of Flesh

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    This haunted house begins with a warning from a gravedigger, and soon, guests descend into the depths of the underworld. There are hellish creatures in every nook and cranny, but the ending was a bit anticlimactic compared to the rest of the maze.

    Official Synopsis:

    Welcome to your funeral, where things are about to go from bad to worse. You’ll enter your grave and then the underworld, where flesh-eaters who feed on the dead will hunt you for all eternity.

    8. ‘Jason Universe’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    It is always a treat to see a horror classic like Jason at Halloween Horror Nights. This house is filled with various Jasons from across the ‘Friday the 13th’ film franchise, and even a special appearance of Pamela Vorhees. The scares in the first half of the maze felt too few and spread out, and it wasn’t until the second half of the maze that the numerous Jasons jumped out at guests relentlessly. It was a good maze, but not as great as some of the other Jason mazes from the past.

    Official Synopsis:

    Come face-to-face with the iconic horror villain Jason Voorhees. Step into the terrifying world of this silent killer. Flee through the woods and into his sinister shack. Enter the summer camp where his gruesome legend began. Jason is back, and nothing can save you now!

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    7. Gálkn: The Monsters of the North

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Inspired by Nordic mythology, this haunted house has stunning set designs. Following the tragic story about the protector of the land who became corrupt. Her vengeful spirit and her monsters taunt guests through various settings, such as tunnels covered in runes. This beautifully designed house offers up a great story and good jump scares.

    Official Synopsis:

    In a remote northern village, a wicked being rises from the dead, bringing a horde of monsters and demons from the fjords to wreak havoc on the townspeople. Try to escape the belly of the beast.

    6. ‘Fallout

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Based on the Prime Video series and video game of the same name, this maze does a great job taking guests through various locations from the show and encounters with characters such as Lucy, Maximus, and Cooper Howard/ the Ghoul. While not particularly scary, the production design of the haunted house was a feast for the eyes. Keep your eyes peeled for an Easter Egg tease for season 2.

    Official Synopsis:

    Face your fears in post-apocalyptic LA, devastated by nuclear war, based on the hit show and game franchise “Fallout.” You’ll travel into the vaults and be attacked by raiders alongside Lucy. You’ll escape to the wasteland and confront the bounty hunter, The Ghoul. You’ll even encounter Maximus with the Brotherhood of Steel and see T-60 power armor.

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    5. ‘The Horrors of the Wyatt Sicks’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Based on the lore from the ‘Firefly Fun House’ TV segments, this house pays tribute to Bray Wyatt’s legacy and puts guests face-to-face with Uncle Howdy, Rambling Rabbit, Mercy the Buzzard, Huskus the Pig, and Abby the Witch. Even for non-WWE fans, it’s cool to be so immersed in this world, especially with the screen tunnel featuring wrestling personalities.

    Official Synopsis:

    Enter the eerie arena of The Wyatt Sicks, where you’ll go through an ominous doorway into the maniacal minds of Uncle Howdy, Rambling Rabbit, Mercy the Buzzard, Abby the Witch, and Huskus the Pig.

    4. ‘Dolls: Let’s Play Dead’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Do dolls creep you out? If so, this house dials the scares up to 100. Guests are shrunk down to doll-size as they traverse through this twisted dollhouse filled with unnatural recreations of mutilated dolls and toys. Ever wondered what it’s like to be in the ‘Toy Story’ villain Sid’s bedroom? This is it. Every corner is a mangled nightmare waiting for its next victim. Great jump scares, even greater horrific images.

    Official Synopsis:

    You’re about to become doll-sized and witness the unnatural creations of a twisted little girl. You’ll be hunted by burnt fashion dolls, toys she’s melded together and undead horrors in her dollhouse.

    3. ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Based on the popular video game and movie, this haunted house features larger-than-life animatronics and puppets created by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop. With eight-foot-tall animatronics and ghost kids lurking around every corner, this haunted house will definitely get your heart pumping. Fans of the franchise will love this house.

    Official Synopsis:

    Freddy and the Gang Are Dying to Meet You. You wouldn’t last one night at Freddy’s, let alone five. You’re about to be hunted by deadly animatronics Freddy, Bonnie, Chica and Foxy as you flee through creepy, abandoned hallways.

    2. ‘Terrifier

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    A terrifying maze featuring Art the Clown and his many gruesome kill scenes from the movies. This is the most grotesque of all ten houses. Art the Clown pops out at every corner, and each kill scene gets more gruesome. If you’re sensitive to smells, a portion of this maze is filled with the stink of feces. Guests are also put through a “blood bath” where water rains down on them in a tunnel. There is an option for a “dry path” if you prefer not to get wet, but what’s the fun in that?

    Official Synopsis:

    Nothing can prepare you for this grisly haunted house based on all three of Damien Leone’s Terrifier films. Try your luck against the sadistic Art the Clown in his twisted funhouse. Witness Art’s gleefully grotesque handiwork of torture. You’ll be left literally dripping with terror and drenched with fear. It’s a whole new level of gore!

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    1. ‘El Artista: A Spanish Haunting’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    The standout of the event is ‘El Artista: A Spanish Haunting’. It takes place in 19th-century Spain, and the story follows an artist who is tormented inside his manor as he desperately seeks inspiration. This is the most hauntingly beautiful house, including a demon flying on a zipline above guests in the courtyard.

    Aside from the incredible production design, each creature encountered are so unique – like the monster made out of book pages. The maze is evenly paced with jump scares, and has the best story out of the original mazes.

    Official Synopsis:

    In 19th century Spain, a tortured artist moves to an isolated country manor to seek inspiration. Instead, the art comes alive and possesses him. You’re about to be part of the permanent exhibition.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs from August 29 through November 2, 2025.

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Movies and TV Shows that inspired 2025’s Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights:

    Buy Universal Movies On Amazon

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  • Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights 2025

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Preview:

    • A Look at This Year’s Ten Haunted Houses
    • Scare Zones and Live Shows
    • Themed Food and Merchandise

    The Halloween season is upon us, and what better way to kick it off than the 34th annual Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Orlando, taking place August 29 through November 2, 2025. This year’s event will feature ten haunted houses, four scare zones, two live shows, themed food and drinks, and merchandise.

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    Moviefone had the pleasure of traveling to Orlando, Florida, to experience Halloween Horror Nights 34, exploring all the haunted houses and scare zones.

    There are a total of ten haunted houses this year, with four based on popular franchises such as ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s,’ ‘WWE: The Horrors of the Wyatt Sicks,’, ‘Fallout,’ and ‘Terrifier’. The remaining six houses are original creations that can only be found at Universal Orlando.

    Related Article: Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights 2024 Opening Night

    ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Based on the popular video game and movie, this haunted house marks the franchise’s debut as a haunted house at Halloween Horror Nights 34. It features larger-than-life animatronics and puppets created by the Jim Henson’s Creature Shop.

    Official Synopsis:

    Freddy and the Gang Are Dying to Meet You. You wouldn’t last one night at Freddy’s, let alone five. You’re about to be hunted by deadly animatronics Freddy, Bonnie, Chica and Foxy as you flee through creepy, abandoned hallways.

    With eight-foot-tall animatronics and ghost kids lurking around every corner, this haunted house will definitely get your adrenaline pumping and satisfy any FNAF fan out there.

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    ‘Fallout’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Based on the Prime Video series and video game of the same name, this maze will take guests through various locations from the show and encounters with characters such as Lucy, Maximus, and Cooper Howard/ the Ghoul.

    Official Synopsis:

    Face your fears in post-apocalyptic LA, devastated by nuclear war, based on the hit show and game franchise “Fallout.” You’ll travel into the vaults and be attacked by raiders alongside Lucy. You’ll escape to the wasteland and confront the bounty hunter, The Ghoul. You’ll even encounter Maximus with the Brotherhood of Steel and see T-60 power armor.

    While not particularly scary, the production design of the haunted house was a feast for the eyes. Keep your eyes peeled for an Easter Egg tease for season 2.

    ‘Terrifier’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    The cult horror film franchise comes to life this year with the ‘Terrifier’ maze, featuring Art the Clown and his many gruesome kill scenes from the movies. There is also a “blood bath” path where guests are soaked with water raining down from the ceiling.

    Official Synopsis:

    Nothing can prepare you for this grisly haunted house based on all three of Damien Leone’s Terrifier films. Try your luck against the sadistic Art the Clown in his twisted funhouse. Witness Art’s gleefully grotesque handiwork of torture. You’ll be left literally dripping with terror and drenched with fear. It’s a whole new level of gore!

    This haunted house is the most grotesque of all ten houses. Art the Clown will pop out at every corner, and each featured kill scene gets more and more gruesome. If you’re sensitive to smells, be warned that this maze is filled with scents such as bleach and feces. There is an option for a “dry path” and a “blood bath”, with Art the Clown standing above, urging guests to take the Blood Bath.

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    ‘The Horrors of the Wyatt Sicks”

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    This is the first collaboration between Universal Orlando and WWE. The maze is based on the lore from the ‘Firefly Fun House’ TV segments and pays tribute to Bray Wyatt’s legacy. Attendees will come face-to-face with Uncle Howdy, Rambling Rabbit, Mercy the Buzzard, Huskus the Pig, and Abby the Witch.

    Official Synopsis:

    Enter the eerie arena of The Wyatt Sicks, where you’ll go through an ominous doorway into the maniacal minds of Uncle Howdy, Rambling Rabbit, Mercy the Buzzard, Abby the Witch, and Huskus the Pig.

    This is the maze to visit for any WWE fan looking to be immersed in the lore. Its unique story and characters make this haunted house a standout and an unforgettable experience.

    ‘Jason Universe’

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    It is always a treat to see horror classics at Halloween Horror Nights, and this year is no different with ‘Jason Universe’. This haunted house is filled with various Jasons across the ‘Friday the 13th’ film franchise.

    Official Synopsis:

    Come face to face with the iconic horror villain Jason Voorhees. Step into the terrifying world of this silent killer. Flee through the woods and into his sinister shack. Enter the summer camp where his gruesome legend began. Jason is back and nothing can save you now!

    There’s no escape from Jason while you’re in this haunted house. Though relentless, the scares got a bit repetitive by the end.

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    Original Haunted Houses

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    HHN 34 also includes five original haunted houses, including ‘Galkin: Monsters of the North’, inspired by ancient Nordic mythology and creatures, and ‘Grave of the Flesh’, where guests are invited to their own funeral.

    ‘Hatchet and Chain: Demon Bounty Hunters’ is reminiscent of ‘Slaughter Sinema 2’, where demons are crawling their way out of Hell to possess unsuspecting humans while melting everything in their path.

    ‘Dolls: Let’s Play Dead’ is not one to be missed. Guests become “doll-sized” as they enter this haunted house, and will encounter a variety of the most unnatural re-creations of dolls and toys. Everything, from set designs to scareactors, works cohesively in this twisted dollhouse.

    The standout of the original houses is ‘El Artista: A Spanish Haunting’. Taking place in 19th-century Spain, an artist is tormented inside his manor as he desperately seeks inspiration. This is the most hauntingly beautiful house, including a demon flying above guests in the courtyard.

    Live Entertainment and Scare Zones

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    There are two live shows available during Halloween Horror Nights – ‘Nightmare Fuel: Circus of Decay’, which is a sequel to last year’s live spectacular ‘Nightmare Fuel: Nocturnal Circus’. Gravity-defying aerialists and fiery pyro acts wow the audience as the best live entertainment of the event.

    ‘Haunt-o-Phonic: A Gholish Journey’ is a water show taking place at Universal Studios Lagoon, featuring haunting images projected onto giant water screens, lighting effects, music, and synchronized dancing water fountains.

    This year’s event includes four scare zones: ‘The Origins of Horror,’ ‘Mutations: Toxic Twenties,’ ‘Masquerade: Dance with Death,’ and ‘The Cat Lady of Crooked Lane.’ Each zone offers a unique theme and its own assembly of scare-actors taunting guests as they make their way through the park.

    Themed Food and Merchandise

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    There are a variety of foods created in theme of this year’s haunted houses. ‘Terrifier’ fans can enjoy the Clown Cafe Bloody Popcorn, a bucket filled with popcorn chicken, pepperoni, marinara “blood” sauce, and spiced parmesan. For something sweet, try the Abracadabra Sunflower Glasses sugar cookies, complete with chocolate blood splatters.

    ‘Fallout’ enthusiasts can try the Yum Yum Deviled “Eggs”, but everything is not as it seems when it comes to this creation. The eggs are actually coconut panacotta with pineapple whipped ganache and Tajin.

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Indulge in a Mister Cupcake from ‘Five Nights at Freddy’s’, a delicious chocolate cupcake topped with a generous amount of pink mascarpone frosting. Filled with cannoli cream and raspberry, and finished with chocolate eyes and teeth.

    Specially themed merchandise, such as Art the Clown popcorn bucket, is available at the Tribute Store near the Mutation: Toxic Twenties scare zone.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs from August 29 through November 2, 2025.

    Universal Studios Orlando's Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.
    Universal Studios Orlando’s Horror Nights 2025. Photo: Wendy Lee Szany.

    Movies and TV Shows that inspired 2025’s Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights:

    Buy Universal Movies On Amazon

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  • Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights 2024

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    Another Halloween is upon us and with it brings another season of Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights, which takes place at Universal Studios Orlando August 30th – November 3rd.

    Beginning in 1991, Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights has become the world’s premier Halloween event. This year’s event will include 10 terrifying haunted houses based on popular films like ‘A Quiet Place’, ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’, and ‘Insidious’. The event will also include houses based on original ideas like ‘Major Sweets Candy Factory’, ‘Triplets of Terror’ and ‘Goblin’s Feast’.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    This year’s event will also introduce two new hosts of horror, Sinist3r and Surr3al, who are reigning the streets of Universal Studios Florida and unleashing horror within five scare zones including ‘Duality of Fear’, ‘Torture Faire’ and ‘Enter the Blumhouse’, which features characters from Blumhouse movies like ‘The Black Phone’ and ‘M3gan’. The massive event also includes new themed food and beverages and an energetic live show called ‘Nightmare Fuel: Nocturnal Circus’.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of traveling to Universal Studios Orlando to enjoy the opening night of Halloween Horror Nights 2024 firsthand and experience all the scares and spookiness they have prepared for visitors this year.

    Related Article: Ernie Hudson Talks ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’ and the Franchise’s Legacy

    Haunted Houses

    ‘A Quiet Place’

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    Be prepared to silence your screams in the new ‘A Quiet Place’ house, which is based on director John Krasinski’s ‘A Quiet Place’ and ‘A Quiet Place Part II’.

    Here is the official synopsis:

    Fans will relive the tension that will come to life in iconic scenes from the first two films, from traveling through the farmhouse that serves as the Abbott family’s shelter and stepping into the root cellar where Evelyn Abbott (Emily Blunt) escapes to give birth as one of the creatures closes in. Mirroring the silence in the films, the haunted house will embrace unique sound design, special effects and will incorporate the use of American Sign Language (ASL) for the first time ever at Halloween Horror Nights.

    While the attraction does not incorporate elements of the recent box office hit ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’, it does follow the characters from the original film and includes lots of alien scares.

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    ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    Based on the events of the most recent installment of the franchise, the ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’ house follows an ancient artifact that unleashes an evil force that threatens to destroy the world.

    Here is the official synopsis:

    ‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’ will transport fans of the film franchise to New York City where the Spengler family teams up with the original Ghostbusters who are now at the helm of a top-secret research lab for their ghost-busting enterprise. With the daunting discovery of an old relic that has set free the vengeful spirit of Garraka, who threatens to freeze everyone to death, Ghostbusters new and old must join forces to protect their city and save the world from a second Ice Age.

    While the haunted house follows the story of ‘Frozen Empire’ very closely, it also includes Easter eggs from other ‘Ghostbuster’ movies including Slimer from the original and Vigo the Carpathian (Wilhelm von Homburg) from ‘Ghostbusters II’.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
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    ‘Insidious: The Further’

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    Produced by Blumhouse Productions in association with Sony Pictures, ‘Insidious’ tells the disturbing story of the Lamberts, a family haunted by evil supernatural forces after their son slips into an inexplicable comatose state after becoming possessed by a demonic entity.

    In the all-new Halloween Horror Nights haunted house, guests will follow in the footsteps of the Lamberts, encountering familiar settings and scares as they are transported directly into “The Further” – the ethereal place where ghosts and demons lurk.

    Here is the official synopsis:

    Guests’ journey into ‘Insidious: The Further’ begins as they step through the iconic red door, where many of the tormented spirits and demons from the franchise await – determined to ensnare humans and steal their souls. Fans will come face-to-face with The Red-Faced Demon, who will attempt to lure them into his lair; the grim KeyFace, hoping to lock his victims in this dark dimension; the ghastly and dangerous Bride in Black; and the vengeful spirit of the Man Who Can’t Breathe. As guests make their way through the haunted house, they’ll go from red door to red door – traveling deeper into a dark and timeless astral world where they must evade this collection of sinister creatures at every spine-chilling turn, or their souls will be trapped here…forever.

    ‘Insidious: The Further’ is one of the scariest new houses at the attraction and incorporates elements from the entire franchise including the recent movie, ‘The Red Door’.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
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    Universal Monsters: Eternal Bloodlines

    Based on classic Universal Monsters like Dracula and Frankenstein, this new house is based on an original story including female Monster characters like Saskia Van Helsing, She-Wolf, the Bride of Frankenstein and Dracula’s Daughter.

    Here is the official synopsis:

    Fans will encounter Saskia Van Helsing, a new fearless huntress. She faces off with Dracula’s daughter, Countess Marya, who arose from the dead to seek revenge for her father and destroy the Van Helsing bloodline. With a mission to kill, Dracula’s daughter, from 1936’s ‘Dracula’s Daughter’, forms a deadly alliance with the She-Wolf, inspired by the 1946 film ‘She-Wolf of London’, and Anck- Su-Namun, from the 1932 film ‘The Mummy’ – only to be intercepted by Saskia and an unlikely ally, ‘The Bride of Frankenstein’. The terrifying adventure will take guests on a journey between the hunted and the hunters in a life and death battle with only one bloodline left to survive.

    Emmy-nominated composer Sara Barone created an original score for this all-new haunted house, which also features a performer on a zipline.

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    Other Haunted Houses

    The event also includes several original haunted houses such as ‘Slaughter Sinema 2’, which takes place at a Drive-in, and ‘Goblin’s Feast’, which simulates a Goblin’s Thanksgiving dinner where the human visitors are the main course.

    ‘Major Sweets Candy Factory’ finds its candy transforming kids into candy-coated killers and is like a demonic version of ‘Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory’, while ‘The Museum: Deadly Exhibits’ features a rotten stone that possesses the museum and all the artifacts inside it.

    Finally, ‘Monstrous: The Monsters of Latin America’ features creatures like Tlahuelpuchi, La Lechuza and El Silbón, while ‘Triplets of Terror’ tells an original story of the Barmy triplets, who murdered their parents on their birthday and kill a new family every year to celebrate.

    Scare Zones

    This year’s event will introduce two new hosts of horror, SINIST3R and SURR3AL, who are reigning the streets of Universal Studios Florida and unleashing all the horror that awaits within five scare zones, which are interactive areas within the park.

    ‘Enter the Blumhouse’

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    The only Scare Zone based off an IP, ‘Enter the Blumhouse’ includes characters from ‘The Purge’, ‘The Black Phone’, ‘Freaky’ and ‘M3gan’. The area also has a “dance party” vibe and was one of the most populated zones during our opening night visit.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
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    Other Scare Zones

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    ‘Duality of Fear’ allows visitors to choose a path to follow either Sinist3r or Surr3al, with the former taking you to Sinist3r’s ‘Torture Faire’ or the latter bringing you to Surr3al’s ‘Demon Queens’ zone, where four merciless queens rule the otherworldly hellscape. Finally, we have ‘Swamp of the Undead’, which allows guests to wander onto private property where they are surrounded by zombies born from the bodies of former trespassers.

    Live Shows and Food

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    This year’s new live show, which runs nightly, is entitled ‘Nightmare Fuel: Nocturnal Circus’. The experience is set inside a dark circus and is full of pyrotechnics and aerialists flying to the beat of rock rhythms.

    Finally, Universal Studios Orlando is offering several Halloween Horror Nights themed food and beverage’s including Pork Carniceria (‘Monstrous: The Monsters of Latin America’), Mini Stay-Puft S’mores (‘Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire’), Abbott’s Farm Corn Chowder (‘A Quiet Place’) and returning fan- favorites like Twisted Taters.

    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.
    Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights runs August 30th – November 3rd 2024.

    Movies that inspired 2024’s Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights:

    Buy Universal Movies On Amazon

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  • Best ‘Halloween’ Movies Ranked

    Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode in director David Gordon Green's 'Halloween Ends.'
    Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode in director David Gordon Green’s ‘Halloween Ends.’

    The latest movie in the ‘Halloween’ franchise, ‘Halloween Kills’ starring Jamie Lee Curtis is out now in theaters.

    The series, which started in 1978 with director John Carpenter‘s ‘Halloween,’ has spawned a dozen of movies that range from sequels to remakes, and even reboots.

    With the Halloween holiday taking place this week, and with ‘Halloween Kills’ currently in theaters, Moviefone has ranked every ‘Halloween’ movie ever made!

    Let’s begin!


    13. ‘Halloween: Resurrection‘ (2002)

    When Busta Rhymes being a principle cast member is one of the least horrible things about your movie, well, you know you’re in deep doo-doo. After the success of “Halloween H20,” Dimension moved forward on a direct follow-up that undoes much of the charm of the previous film. It turns out that Laurie Strode accidentally killed a paramedic at the end of “H20” instead of Michael Myers! Whoops!

    The mentally unstable Strode is now institutionalized and Michael attacks her in the asylum, eventually killing her and throwing her off the roof of the building. Please keep in mind that all of this happens in the first ten minutes of “Resurrection” and the rest of it is a dumb-as-heck riff on reality television where a group of goofballs are holed up in the old Myers house (now festooned with close circuit TV cameras). All of the action is clumsily choreographed by Rick Rosenthal, who you might remember as the guy that they fired from “Halloween II.” Yuck.

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    12. ‘Halloween Ends‘ (2022)

    Following ‘Halloween Kills,’ the story moves on four years, as Haddonfield has enjoyed a time of relative calm after the disappearance of Michael Myers. Though the vibrating hum of tension is always present as an undercurrent, Laurie has done her best to move on with life. She’s living without a complicated security system, writing about her experiences and the nature of evil and trying to guide granddaughter Allyson (Andi Matichak), who is still suffering the psychological scars of her parents’ loss and trying to move on by working as a nurse at the local hospital.

    But even as everyone looks to cope and heal, the town is set back on edge when Corey Cunningham (Rohan Campbell) accidentally kills the boy he’s babysitting. Though it’s a tragic mistake, the repercussions are devastating, turning Corey into an unwitting bogeyman and the target of bullies. Jamie Lee Curtis is thankfully handed more to do as Laurie this time, and of course she’s still fantastic as the haunted heroine we’ve come to know and worry about. Switching up her attitude once more works for the character, as she tries to put the past behind her and concentrate instead on a future for her and her family.

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    11. ‘Halloween‘ (2007)

    If the latter canonical “Halloween” sequels (pre-“H20”) leaned a little too heavily into the mystical side of Michael Myers, then Rob Zombie‘s highly touted reboot goes too far in the opposite direction, as he strived to provide a psychologically grounded explanation for Myers’ madness. And the results were … iffy.

    Failing to understand just how much of the character’s power lies in his unknowable mystique, Zombie’s “Halloween” focuses mostly on Michael Myers’ childhood, as he tortures animals, faces bullies at school, and is abused at home. And then, suddenly, in the last act, it shifts into a straight-up remake of the original film. It feels both incredibly risky and very safe and, in the end, quite boring, sadly.

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    10. ‘Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers‘ (1995)

    halloween the curse of michael myers 1995
    Dimension

    The previous installment in the franchise clearly ended on a cliffhanger and an obvious attempt at building out the world, but the sixth film, “Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers,” wouldn’t happen for another six years. This installment doubles down on the mystical woo-woo that the previous films introduced, folding in elements of 1981’s “Halloween II” (there’s an extended hospital sequence) and a subplot about a mystical cult and the pagan “Curse of Thorn.”

    Perhaps notable for its introduction of a young, squirrely Paul Rudd (who plays Tommy Doyle, one of the kids Laurie babysat for in the original film), for years a superior “producer’s cut” was talked about and shared at horror conventions. Spoiler alert: it’s pretty different but it’s not that much better. (It’s still awash in unnecessary backstory that would ultimately sink Rob Zombie’s remakes.)

    You could tell that the franchise was hopelessly out-of-date, and that was before considering that it opened the same weekend as David Fincher‘s groundbreaking “Seven.” Barry kicks ass, though.

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    9. ‘Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers‘ (1989)

    “Halloween 5” doubles down on a lot of things established in “Halloween 4” (the centralized role of Michael’s niece Jamie Lloyd, here traumatized from the events of the previous movie, the idea of multiple people dressed as Myers, Loomis’ unhinged pursuit) while adding even more to an increasingly cumbersome mythological stew (Jamie and Michael’s connection is more openly supernatural, a shadowy cult is introduced).

    If these elements had been woven into the already established framework more elegantly, or if they were in service of a storyline that needed such embroidery, it would be one thing, but “Halloween 5” is pretty dopey (and we haven’t even mentioned the keystone cops-type music that plays when local law enforcement shows up). Smash this pumpkin.

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    8. ‘Halloween III: Season of the Witch‘ (1982)

    This was supposed to be the new template for the franchise – that every year a new entry would focus on a different aspect of Halloween. Michael Myers would be retired and we’d get a big, splashy, cinematic equivalent to “The Twilight Zone.” Except that didn’t happen. Instead, “Halloween III: Season of the Witch” was indifferently received and, well, you know the rest.

    It’s an inventive, gonzo, occasionally quite shocking little occult thriller with an ingenious script by British legend Nigel Kneale and director Tommy Lee Wallace (a Carpenter confederate who had served as art director and production designer for the first film) and one of the best scores of the series (by Carpenter and Alan Howarth).

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    7. ‘Halloween Kills‘ (2021)

    After Laurie, Karen and Allyson leave the masked monster Michael Myers caged and burning in Laurie’s basement, Laurie is rushed to the hospital with fatal injuries, believing she has finally killed her algorithm. But when Michael manages to free himself from Laurie’s trap, his bloodbath ritual begins again. As she fights her pain and prepares to defend against it, she inspires everyone in Haddonfield to rise up against The Shape.

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    6. ‘Halloween II‘ (2009)

    Zombie said that he felt liberated by the fact that he wasn’t beholden to the “Carpenter-ness” of remaking the first film. And you can tell. Gone are any pretext of the floating, widescreen, Steadicam-assisted beauty of Carpenter’s film (or Zombie’s remake); instead, it’s replaced with shaky, handheld 16mm. Gone, too, is much of what made Zombie’s first film such a drag.

    Michael isn’t intellectualized, but rather given a simple, effective mommy complex that’s accompanied by suitably dreamlike imagery. Of course, the filmmaker isn’t above cribbing from “Halloween II,” including the hospital setting and familial twist. But that seems like a secondary concern to Zombie, who makes this film his own in ways that he felt too intimidated by the first time around. It’s not for everybody, but that’s part of its charm.

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    5. ‘Halloween H20‘ (1998)

    halloween h20 1998
    Dimension

    Conceptually, “Halloween H20” is a lot more fun than it actually wound up being. Discounting the events of the fourth, fifth, and sixth films, it would serve as a direct sequel to the second film, with Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis, back for more) living in hiding and teaching at a prestigious boarding school. (Okay.) Clearly intended to cash in on the revived slasher craze (started by “Scream,” which directly referenced “Halloween” and whose screenwriter, Kevin Williamson, was involved heavily with “H20”), the film is largely unimaginative and a waste of Curtis’ considerable talents.

    Slack direction from Steve Miner gives a talented young cast (including Michelle Williams and Joseph Gordon-Levitt) very little to do. Also, the filmmakers had an infamously hard time getting the iconic mask right, resulting in several variations that were swapped out during production, including the utilization of an unsightly CGI version.

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    4. ‘Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers‘ (1988)

    After producers rejected a pitch from Carpenter that would have followed two of the young kids from the first movie (now babysitter-aged themselves), with a bloody climax at a drive-in movie theater, they settled on something more conventional. “Halloween 4” sees Michael Myers return for the first time since the second film; this time, he’s hunting Jamie Lloyd (Danielle Harris), Laurie Strode’s young daughter.

    There are some nice flourishes to the film, including Jamie’s decision to wear a clown costume eerily similar to the one when Michael killed his older sister all those Halloweens ago, but these are largely undermined by WTF-worthy character motivation and Dwight H. Little‘s basic-cable action movie direction (that man is not much of a stylist). Still, pretty good twist ending.

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    3. ‘Halloween II‘ (1981)

    In a weird way, “Halloween II” is just as influential as the original. Its hospital setting has not only inspired other entries in the franchise (the sixth installment and Zombie’s “Halloween II” owe a debt) but it’s also inspired the genre as a whole, with the sequel-set-in-a-hospital idea utilized by everything from “Scream Queens” (on TV) to the underrated horror comedy “Final Girls.” Other than that, there’s not much to love about the half-baked sequel.

    Sure, original screenwriters Carpenter and Debra Hill returned but were mostly out of ideas. In fact, the idea of Laurie Strode (a returning Jamie Lee Curtis) being Michael’s sister was thrown in at the last minute and not something planned by either filmmaker. (Oddly, it basically formed the basis for the rest of the franchise, including the remakes; the 2018 film wisely omits this plot point.) At some point during production, original director Rick Rosenthal was removed, leaving Carpenter to shoot key sequences. Scary.

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    2. ‘Halloween‘ (2018)

    40 years after Laurie Strode first faced down Michael Myers, Jamie Lee Curtis returns to the franchise for a “Halloween” that feels fresh, funny, irreverent, surprising, and totally topical. Her Strode has calcified into a wary survivalist, waiting for the day that her psychotic stalker returned. In this film, he does, and the results are spectacular.

    Largely ignoring the increasingly convoluted mythology of the sequels (including “Halloween II,” so say bye-bye the Laurie-is-Michael’s-sister nonsense), co-writer/director David Gordon Green instead crafted a keenly aware and deeply entertaining back-to-basics follow-up that thoughtfully grapples with the way that violence and trauma can ripple through whole generations. This is the rare sequel that can stand proudly alongside the original, four decades later.

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    1. ‘Halloween‘ (1978)

    halloween 1978
    Compass International

    It cannot be overstated what a monumental event the release of John Carpenter’s “Halloween” really was. Originally envisioned as a low budget cheapie, this classic is elevated by Carpenter’s commitment to craft and his dedication to getting fully realized performances out of his mostly young cast (led by Jamie Lee Curtis). For a while, “Halloween” was the most successful independent feature of all time. It not only inspired a 40-year-old franchise but also countless imitators (some of them good, most of them bad), reinvigorating the slasher franchise for generations to come.

    Wonderfully entertaining and craftily made, “Halloween” remains as thrilling and artful today as it was in 1978. Much of this has to do with its simplicity. In following a group of teenagers as they are terrorized by a local murderer (who killed his older sister on Halloween night when he was just a child), Carpenter made a template simple enough to follow but roomy enough to allow for social, political, and cultural subtext.

    If “Halloween” was anything less than a masterpiece, we wouldn’t still be talking about it today.

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  • First Trailer For ‘Halloween Ends’

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    How many times can Michael Myers truly come back to terrorize the residents of Haddonfield?

    If the ‘Halloween’ franchise is anything to go by, the answer to that is, “as long as people show up to watch the movies.” And the latest entry is on the way this fall, so the first trailer for ‘Halloween Ends’ has now stalked online.

    Director David Gordon Green, who gave the horror franchise a jolt back in 2018 with his first ‘Halloween’ (which directly followed the events of the original and largely ignored most of the other sequels), is here wrapping up his own run on the movies.

    Jamie Lee Curtis is back once again as Laurie Strode, one of the few survivors of Michael Myers’ original October slaughter rampage, who has since turned herself into a lean, mean fighting machine, ready to put an end to him once and for all.

    To be honest, we’ve heard that before – no matter how many times someone (even Laurie) thinks they have put an end to Michael, he always seems to return, ready to pick up whatever is around and start slashing people.

    This latest movie is being billed as Laurie’s last stand, as she faces off for the last time against the embodiment of evil in a final confrontation unlike any captured on-screen before. Only one of them will survive.

    Michael Myers (aka The Shape) and Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode in 'Halloween Ends,' directed by David Gordon Green.
    (L to R) Michael Myers (aka The Shape) and Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode in ‘Halloween Ends,’ directed by David Gordon Green.

    Four years after the events of last year’s ‘Halloween Kills’, Laurie is living with her granddaughter Allyson (Andi Matichak) and is finishing writing her memoir. Michael Myers hasn’t been seen since. Laurie, after allowing the specter of Michael to determine and drive her reality for decades, has decided to liberate herself from fear and rage and embrace life.

    But when a young man, Corey Cunningham (Rohan Campbell), is accused of killing a boy he was babysitting, it ignites a cascade of violence and terror that will force Laurie to finally confront the evil she can’t control, once and for all.

    You knew it wasn’t going to be that easy, right? Laurie’s spent decades being worried that Michael would return, even when everyone else was convinced he was gone for good. Of course, he wasn’t, and the end of ‘Halloween Kills’ hinted that he’d once more be wandering the suburb killing people.

    Green now faces the true challenge of putting a capper on the whole story – even if someone picks up the baton in the future.

    ‘Halloween Ends’ co-stars returning cast Will Patton as Officer Frank Hawkins, Kyle Richards as Lindsey Wallace and James Jude Courtney as The Shape/Michael Myers.

    As well as directing the movie, Green also co-wrote it with regular collaborators Paul Brad Logan, Chris Bernier and Danny McBride.

    ‘Halloween Ends’ will be in theaters on October 14th, just in time for… is it Christmas? No, wait, another holiday that slips our mind right now.

    ‘Halloween Ends’ will be in theaters on October 14th.
    ‘Halloween Ends’ will be in theaters on October 14th.
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  • 25 Best Teen Horror Movies to Watch

    25 Best Teen Horror Movies to Watch

    Here are the best slasher pics that all fans of the horror movie genre should see.

    25. ‘Disturbing Behavior’ (1998)

    Katie Holmes on the movie Disturbing Behavior in 1998
    Dimension

    Not a great film, but a decent premise, at least — it’s a high school version of “The Stepford Wives,” with delinquent teens turned into overachieving, fascist automatons. Katie Holmes and James Marsden are the well-scrubbed leads, but Nick Stahl steals the movie as the most tormented of the teens.
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    24. ‘The Slumber Party Massacre’ (1982)

    This chiller, about teen sleepover guests menaced by a power-drill-wielding serial killer, was written as a genre parody (by “Rubyfruit Jungle” novelist Rita Mae Brown, of all people), but it was shot as a straight horror film. It works on both levels, scary and tongue-in-cheek.
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    23. ‘Urban Legend’ (1998)

    urban legend movie 1998
    Dimension

    Here’s one about a copycat killer whose murders mimic famous urban legends. A cast that includes Jared Leto, Joshua Jackson, Alicia Witt, and Rebecca Gayheart give this premise more credibility than it merits.
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    22. ‘My Bloody Valentine’ (1981)

    Not just the name of a cool band, “My Bloody Valentine” was also perhaps the goriest of the early wave of holiday-themed slasher movies. Here, the target is a Valentine’s Day dance in a mining town beset by gruesome tragedy. The killer is armed with a miner’s pickaxe and has a fondness for cutting out people’s hearts and putting them in candy boxes. How festive.
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    21. ‘Sleepaway Camp’ (1983)

    You’d think “Friday the 13th” would have had this territory covered, but you’d be wrong. Typical exploitation fare, but for a gender-bending shocking-twist finale worthy of “Psycho.”
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    20. ‘The Faculty’ (1998)

    Elijah Wood on the Faculty movie in 1998
    Dimension

    Robert Rodriguez’s tongue-in-cheek teen horror movie, written by “Scream” scribe Kevin Williamson, probably deserves a better reputation than it’s earned over the years. The tale of a high school whose students believe their teachers have been taken over by alien parasites is not that original, but it’s well-executed — thanks to Rodriguez’s inventive direction and a cast of future all-stars that includes Elijah Wood, Jordana Brewster, Josh Hartnett, and Jon Stewart.
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    19. ‘I Was a Teenage Werewolf’ (1957)

    I was a teenage werewolf movie 1957 Today, it’s considered camp, but back then, the idea of a teenage monster was actually considered shocking. This movie launched a series of similar exploitation films in which puberty, adolescence, and delinquency are conflated with monstrous metamorphoses. It was a huge hit, and it made a star out of Michael Landon in the lead role.
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    18. ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ (1992)

    Yeah, this horror-comedy lacks the dark brilliance of the TV adaptation that followed, but the original movie, for all its “Valley Girl”-with-vampires silliness, is actually not that bad. That climactic prom night vampire attack certainly hints at where Joss Whedon would go with the series.
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    17. ‘Last House on the Left’ (1972)

    This early Wes Craven film is adapted from no less arty a source than Ingmar Bergman’s “The Virgin Spring.” Two teenage girls are tortured, raped, and murdered by a Manson-like gang, but their parents capture the killers and wreak bloody vengeance. Craven later remade the movie when he could command a real budget, but the original, in all its cheap, exploitative glory, is the one to watch.
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    16. ‘Prom Night’ (1980)

    Jamie Lee Curtis in Prom Night movie in 1980
    Sony

    Long before “I Know What You Did Last Summer” came this cult-fave entry in the group-secretly-responsible-for-manslaughter-stalked-by-vengeful-killer genre. Jamie Lee Curtis cemented her early scream-queen reputation as the dead girl’s sister, whose prom night is ruined by the relentless slasher.
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    15. ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ (1997)

    The kids-stalked-by-hook-handed-killer plot is no more original than the urban legend that spawned it. Still, as with other Kevin Williamson horror movies, this one benefits a lot from the casting, which includes Jennifer Love Hewitt (in her first ghoulish role), “Scream” alumna Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze, Jr., and Ryan Phillippe.
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    14. ‘The Blob’ (1958)

    The blob movie 1958
    Fox

    Steve McQueen’s first feature film lead came as the teen hero in this tale of a small town whose populace is rapidly being consumed by a mass of alien Jell-O. The film’s clever centerpiece involved the blob attacking an theater full of teens watching a horror movie. (Meta!) The 1988 remake with Kevin Dillon and Shawnee Smith isn’t bad, either.
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    13. ‘The Craft’ (1996)

    The craft movie 1996
    Sony

    A coven of teen witches uses magic to obtain the usual teen-girl wants: boyfriends, clear skin, etc. Of course, they go too far (especially freaky Fairuza Balk), and a cosmic comeuppance is in order. Known more for its style than its scares, this one was still frightfully influential.
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    12. ‘Fright Night’ (1985)

    This fondly-remembered horror comedy about a teenage boy who discovers that his suave neighbor, played by Chris Sarandon (“The Princess Bride”), is a vampire but can’t convince anyone except for a cheeseball TV horror-movie host (Roddy McDowall). Pick this over the Colin Farrell remake.
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    11. ‘Final Destination’ (2000)

    final destination movie 2000
    New Line

    A nightmare vision keeps a group of teens from boarding what turns out to be a doomed plane, but Death will not be cheated. It soon picks off the survivors one by one, by staging a series of elaborate, lethal accidents. As the franchise continued, the killings became increasingly complex — and far-fetched. Still, there’s much to be said for a horror villain that can’t be defeated, only put off for a while.
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    10. ‘Ginger Snaps’ (2000)

    ginger snaps movie 2000
    Motion International

    This Canadian cult-classic launched a franchise and brought something fresh to the werewolf genre. Here, the afflicted heroine’s monstrous changes are linked to her beginning menstruation and burgeoning sexuality. The result is both scary and a smart critique of the horrors of puberty for girls in our society.
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    9. ‘The Lost Boys’ (1987)

    the lost boys movie 1987
    WB

    This horror comedy earned a lot of derision for giving us the Coreys (Haim and Feldman), but it works on many levels — gothic teen romance (between bitten Jason Patric and Jami Gertz), teen peer pressure cautionary tale (if a gang of teen vampires tries to recruit you, just say no — especially if creepy Kiefer Sutherland is the gang leader) — comic-book parody, and seedy frightfest.
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    8. ‘Friday the 13th’ (1980)

    You never forget your first visit to Camp Crystal Lake, especially if you’re a promiscuous teen. Before Jason became an unstoppable, hockey-masked killer in the later entries, it was his mom who did the slashing, back when the premise was still fresh.
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    7. ‘It Follows’ (2014)

    it follows movie 2014
    RADiUS

    This bare-bones teen horror thriller centers on a young teen and her friends plagued by some sort of curse (its origins and specifics are intentionally, terrifyingly, vague) that spreads like an STD. That aspect makes the film even more relevant and clever as it slow-burns toward one hell of an unsettling climax.
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    6. ‘IT’ (2017)

    It movie 2017
    WB/New Line

    Stephen King scored his most successful (commercially) adaptation with this record-breaking hit, that pit the teens of Derry against the murder-fueled clown Pennywise. The rest is box office history.
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    5. ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ (1984)

    If other slasher films implicitly punished teens for bad behavior, this one went after them merely for thinking bad thoughts. Not even your subconscious is safe from Freddy Krueger. Yeah, this franchise-launcher has a lot of lame imitators to answer for. On the other hand, it also gave us Johnny Depp. So there’s that.
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    4. ‘The Cabin in the Woods’ (2011)

    Joss Whedon co-wrote with director Drew Goddard one of the best modern horror films, full of meta references to many movies on this list. In doing so, they successfully pay homage to — and subvert — the genre. Ever wonder why so many teens meet stab-happy deaths at the titular location? “Cabin” answers that question with an intricate (and terrifying) “upstairs, downstairs” mythology that involves zombie pain worshipers, werewolves and, of course, a mer-man.
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    3. ‘Carrie’ (1976)

    Carrie movie 1976
    MGM

    The first Stephen King novel to be translated to the screen, “Carrie” remains a well-executed film of bullying and horrific revenge. It’s a cautionary tale about religious extremism, an allegory about the terrors of puberty and female adolescence, a hear-wrenching showcase for Sissy Spacek in the title role, a source of iconic moments (Worst. Prom. Ever.), and a brutally effective Brian De Palma scare machine, right down to that shocking final shot.
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    2. ‘Halloween’ (1978)

    Halloween movie 1978
    Universal

    John Carpenter’s classic pretty much wrote the rules for teen slasher films as we know them. Michael Myers is, of course, one of the scariest horror villains ever, and Jamie Lee Curtis is one of the great scream-queens of all time. The rest of the franchise may have come to seem rote, but the original is still plenty terrifying.
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    1. ‘Scream’ (1996)

    Scream movie 1996
    Dimension

    Before the franchise descended into (deliberate?) self-parody, Wes Craven‘s slasher saga managed to spoof a tired genre while revitalizing it for a new generation. It works as both a parody and a damn scary movie on its own terms.

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  • Watch a fresh take on the zombie genre with ‘Blood Quantum’

    Watch a fresh take on the zombie genre with ‘Blood Quantum’

    Forrest Goodluck, Michael Greyeyes, and Kiowa Gordon star in ‘Blood Quantum’

    Zombie movies have been around for decades, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t any fresh takes to be had in the genre. As an example, writer/directer Jeff Barnaby has just given us the indie horror film ‘Blood Quantum,’ a story about a 1981 zombie outbreak in and around the Red Crow reservation in Canada.

    One of the things that sets this film apart is that the First Nations characters are immune to the zombie bites, and that allows Barnaby to explore some ideas about colonialism and its legacy. But make no mistake… Barnaby delivers a bloody, scary film, as you can see from the trailer:

    Barnaby has a strong cast on hand here, including Michael Greyeyes and Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers (both of whom write about First Nations peoples themselves) and younger stars like Forrest Goodluck and Kiowa Gordon. And to be honest, Stonehorse Lone Goeman, in his feature debut, almost steals the entire film.

    Director Jeff Barnaby and stars Michael Greyeyes and Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers took some time to talk with Moviefone about their film:

    ‘Blood Quantum’ is now available on VOD and digital platforms.

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  • ‘Halloween Kills’: Anthony Michael Hall to Star Alongside Jamie Lee Curtis

    ‘Halloween Kills’: Anthony Michael Hall to Star Alongside Jamie Lee Curtis

    Anthony Michael Hall in War Machine
    Netflix/YouTube

    Another original “Halloween” character is coming back, but a new actor will take over the role in the next installment in the horror franchise.

    Anthony Michael Hall has been cast as Tommy Doyle, Variety reports. He’ll star alongside Jamie Lee Curtis as the grown-up version of the bogeyman-fearing boy she babysat the night Michael Myers went on his chilling 1978 rampage. The role was first played by Brian Andrews.

    As a follow-up to 2018’s “Halloween,” the upcoming movie will ignore the sequels that came before it, including 1995’s “Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers.” In that film, Paul Rudd played Tommy. Another version of the character was portrayed by Skyler Gisondo in 2007’s “Halloween.” Hall’s Tommy is part of a script that director David Gordon Green and Danny McBride will co-write.

    While this is Hall’s first film in the famed horror franchise, he’s had a long and notable career. He has starred in classics such as “National Lampoon’s Vacation,” “Edward Scissorhands,” “The Breakfast Club,” and more. More recently, he was seen in the films “Bodied” and “War Machine” as well as the series “Murder in the First.”

    “Halloween Kills” will lead to more scares; another sequel, “Halloween Ends,” will shoot directly after. The two films are set to open on Oct. 16, 2020 and Oct. 15, 2021, respectively.

    [via: Variety]

  • Disneyland’s Oogie Boogie Bash to Bring Halloween Tricks and Treats

    Disneyland’s Oogie Boogie Bash to Bring Halloween Tricks and Treats

    Oogie Boogie Bash
    Disney Parks

    Mickey’s Halloween Party isn’t happening this year, because the Oogie Boogie Bash is taking over Disneyland instead. The upcoming event is going to bring new tricks and treats for parkgoers.

    The Disney Parks Blog shared more information Thursday about what it’s officially calling the Oogie Boogie Bash — A Disney Halloween Party at Disney California Adventure. The celebration will start on Sept. 17 and run for 20 select nights in September and October. During that time, parkgoers will get to celebrate, explore, and mingle with Disney characters, including “The Nightmare Before Christmas” villain Oogie Boogie himself.

    Each night, there will immersive treat trails through the park and walks through Villains Grove that visitors of all ages will enjoy. Additionally, the park will offer the Frightfully Fun Parade, a DescenDANCE Party, a stage production called “Mickey’s Trick & Treat,” and a “World of Color” nighttime spectacular called “Villainous.” On top of all that, parkgoers are encouraged to dress up, so there will be great costume-spotting.

    Oogie Boogie Bash requires a separate ticket from the rest of the park. You can purchase them on the Disneyland website. Let the Halloween fun begin.

    [via: Disney Parks Blog]