“You know what I think? I think that we’re all in our private traps, clamped in them, and none of us can ever get out. We scratch and we claw, but only at the air, only at each other. And for all of it, we never budge an inch” – Norman Bates, PSYCHO
There’s
quite a bit of Norman Bates lurking inside the Michael Myers of John
Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN. This was before the film had spawned a
complicated franchise full of brother-sister revelations, mystic
Celtic runes, and reality TV show shenanigans. The Michael Myers of
HALLOWEEN, which will be referred to as HALLOWEEN 1978 from this
point on, is just a man (albeit one who can take some serious abuse),
a vessel for a fractured, psychopathic personality forever fixated on
a single act of violence he committed as a child.
That
quote from PSYCHO up there? That is what Norman is referring to, not
relationship troubles or family issues, but psychopathy, a point of
pure trauma that renders an individual perpetually stuck in time. For
Norman, his sexual desire for his mother and his subsequent act of
matricide has left him in a regressive, almost childlike state, every
feeling of lust a potential cause for murder. For Michael Myers, his
act of sororicide has left him in a similar state, his obsessive need
to keep murdering his sister triggered when young Laurie Strode
wanders onto his front porch. Just like that, Michael has found a
surrogate sister and the cycle of violence begins anew.
Carpenter’s
film is best watched as a singular entity. Every film that came after
changed the nature of both the narrative and the villain at the
center of it. In erasing all of the sequels, David Gordon Green’s
HALLOWEEN 2018, gets back to the basic underlying psychosis of the
original film. Michael is not Laurie’s brother. There is no Man in
Black, no psychic connections to family members, no talk of “the
rage” beating within Myers’ black heart. Michael is once again
just a psycho in a mask.
But
Green’s film does something quite interesting… it addresses the
impact of Michael’s 1978 killing spree by reinventing Laurie Strode
as a PTSD-riddled prepper who, like Michael, is stuck forever in
time, a victim of her own brand of psychosis. The film is at its most
interesting when it explores this issue, painting Laurie and Michael
as two different sides of the same damaged coin, both linked by
violence, both scarred by violence, both doomed to violence. There’s
no need for Laurie and Michael to be sister and brother in this
narrative. Here, they’re linked by something far more intimate and,
quite possibly, much stronger than simple DNA.
Laurie
is estranged from her family, stuck in her “own private trap”, a
paranoid, ex-alcoholic agoraphobe whose home is littered with weapon
caches, door locks and booby traps. In the same way that Michael sits
waiting for his opportunity to finish what he started all those years
back, Laurie’s life has been consumed with the thought of Michael
escaping and the vengeance she wishes to bring down upon him. Even
with a hundred plus miles and four decades between them, they’re
still fighting in the upstairs bedroom of the Doyle house.
This
is the central narrative thrust of the film and when it is at the
forefront, HALLOWEEN 2018 is a strong, heavy piece of work. Unfortunately…
For
as much love and respect that Green and his co-writer Danny McBride
show to Carpenter’s original film, HALLOWEEN 2018 simply does not
feel like a HALLOWEEN movie. Gone are the playfulness and the
attention to suspense. Michael Myers doesn’t feel like a silent,
patient stalker anymore. He feels like a goddamn ballistic missile,
barreling through random characters for no other reason than the film
needs for him to show up every five minutes. HALLOWEEN 2018 packs a
surprisingly high body count and not much else. Characters show up
just to die and that alone makes it feel like you’re watching Jason
Voorhees in a Michael Myers mask spend the day in Haddonfield.
It’s
a movie that simply doesn’t work whenever Laurie Strode is not on
screen. Green attempts to create a new Laurie in Allyson, Laurie’s
granddaughter, but the film doesn’t seem all that concerned with
weaving her into the narrative properly. Her boyfriend troubles don’t
affect the plot and her friends are underdeveloped body count fodder
whose deaths are so random that they feel like they’re taking place
in some other movie. When Allyson finally has her run in with
Michael, I think we’re supposed to feel like this is some grand
plan of fate, but it all comes across as a giant distraction from
what we really came to see.
The
finale of the film is definitely a crowd pleaser, even if it fails to
offer up any real sense of closure. But therein lies another problem... Had this been Jamie Lee Curtis’ first return to the
franchise since 1981’s HALLOWEEN 2, there might be reason to
celebrate. However, if we ignore the third installment and the
horrible remake films, Curtis has appeared in over half of the
franchise installments. It’s simply no longer a treat to see her in
a HALLOWEEN film. HALLOWEEN H20: 20 YEARS LATER might be an entirely
different beast, but watching an alcoholic, anxiety ridden Laurie
best Michael in a mano a mano showdown for psychological closure is
slightly more dramatically interesting than watching Laurie stalk
around her own home in the dark with a shotgun.
The
existence of Steve Miner’s film robs HALLOWEEN 2018 of some of its
glory, if not its entire gimmick. The particulars might be different
(the settings, the hair styles and clothing, etc.), but the films are
largely the same. The most interesting character in the film has to
share running time with completely uninteresting teens up until the
showstopper finale when we can all sit back and finally enjoy some
good old fashioned bloody therapy.
HALLOWEEN
2018 is a good looking film plagued by bad pacing, uninteresting side
characters, an overabundance of Michael Myers standing around in the
open, and one horribly executed plot twist that should have been torn
out and flushed down the nearest toilet. It looks like HALLOWEEN
1978, but it certainly doesn’t feel like it. It’s an ‘almost’
kind of film, one that comes so close to being exactly what It wants
to be. Unfortunately, it just doesn’t hit the mark.
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