Articles related to "Laurie Strode"This novelization of John Carpenter's Halloween should delight fans of the movie; it follows the movie to the letter, fleshes out the characters, and expands the story.
Referred to as the daddy of all slasher movies, Halloween set the standard for slasher films to come.
Everyone knows his name. Everyone knows the white mask. Everyone fears him on Halloween night. But who is Michael Myers, the man who hunted his sister for three decades?
A horror movie is very villain-focused. We spend a lot of time following the antagonist as he/she slays and prays upon the weak. But what about the heroes of horror?
Director Rob Zombie tries to breathe new life into the John Carpenter classic, but no amount of resuscitation can help a franchise exploited to the Nth degree.
Halloween is the quintessential horror movie. Despite the string of increasingly tepid and repetitive sequels that followed, it is as frightening today as it was in 1978.
From classic 1950s B-Movies to the 21st century, the following films are essential viewing for the Halloween season (and all year round, if you're an avid horror fan).
This gratuitous, unrelentingly ugly movie out to "reinvent" the seminal 1978 horror classic, but instead tarnishes the memory and craft of the spare original.
Several teens find themselves in peril at the hands of a ruthless killer while partying at a secluded ranch. Amber Heard stars and Jonathan Levine directs.
Though Rob Zombie clearly has talent as a director, some of the decisions made for his Halloween sequel appear to be questionable at best. Michael Myers lives...again.
The horror films of the 1970's and 1980's are known for the individuality and the killers who terrorized the theaters. So why blend them together?
With A Nightmare on Elm Street lurking and Friday the 13th done, it's time to deal with Rob Zombie's take on Halloween, covering the 'holy trinity' of horror franchises.
|