Halloween

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The undisputed touchstone of cinematic horror, John Carpenter's Halloween has been admired and imitated for over 30 years. Original masked monster and enfant terrible Michael Myers continues to haunt the zeitgeist as one of the most terrifying and misunderstood creations since Mary Shelly's Frankenstein. On October 31, 1963 Police attend a disturbance at the seemingly quiet neighbourhood of Lampkin Lane, Haddonfield and discover 11 year-old Judith Myers lying in a pool of her own blood. Stabbed to death by her 6 year-old brother Michael, victim of a devastating fratricide, with ripples felt by an entire community, a legacy of terror begins. Institutionalized for 15 years, Michael breaks out to fulfil his insatiable bloodlust. The only person who understands the murderer behind the mask is psychiatrist Dr. Sam Loomis (Donald Pleasence). He knows Michael is coming back to Haddonfield to wreak havoc once more, for tonight the residents of Lampkin Lane live and die in the long dark shadow of Halloween. (Umbrella Entertainment)

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Quint 

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English John Carpenter's most important and successful film, which strongly influenced the 80s wave of slasher movies with masked killers. But while subsequent slashers focused primarily on gory effects, Halloween dispenses with almost all the gore and instead revels in the moments that precede the killing. Carpenter deliberately delays the attacks of psychopath Michael Myers as much as possible. He has the characters take long walks through various locations and keeps the audience guessing as to when and where the expected attack will occur. In doing so, he makes brilliant use of his typical wide-angle compositions, which force the audience to keep a close eye on the spaces around the characters, noting every place where Myers might be hiding (whether behind a bush or a fence in broad daylight, or in dark corners at night). As the film progresses, the scenes take place in smaller and smaller spaces, where the possibilities of escape from Myers diminish. Halloween also makes memorable use of long, voyeuristic steadicam shots. Most notably in the famous opening scene, shot from Myers' point of view, which has gone down in horror film history and has been imitated many times. Myers is completely devoid of personality and character, unlike the subsequent installments which robbed him of mystery by needlessly revealing his motivations. Here he is purely the embodiment of inexplicable evil. There are no close-ups of his reactions, and most often we see him only in outline, blending in with his surroundings (either from behind in a blurred foreground at the edge of the picture, or in the distance in the background). As a result, we cannot empathise with him for a moment. This is also what makes Halloween different from most slasher films that followed, whose central killers gradually became the main stars that audiences cheered for more than their victims. ()

lamps 

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English The cornerstone of the slasher genre and its best representative to this day. At times I had trouble with the plodding pace, but otherwise this is a masterpiece; Carpenter revels in point-of-view shots, unpredictably placing the masked gorilla in a carefully staged and photographed environment, and impressively delaying the climax in favour of a moment of surprise and a crescendo at the end. And there is no need to add anything about the music, no one will ever compose a better horror main theme. ()

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gudaulin 

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English A cult horror film that, despite decent direction by John Carpenter, never managed to entice me simply because I completely miss the point of these kinds of slasher films thematically. Few subgenres are filled with as many clichés and foolishness as this one. Only Scream and Scream 2 caught my attention in this field because of the ironic perspectives. On the other hand, if there has to be a slasher film, it should be in Carpenter's style. His followers often simply plagiarized him. Overall impression: 45%. ()

Stanislaus 

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English Halloween is undoubtedly a classic of its genre, it made Jamie Lee Curtis one of the most famous scream queens of all time, and even after forty long years since its premiere it still manages to evoke suspense and terror, even though the ravages of time have taken their toll. In addition to that, it features one of the most iconic horror soundtracks that manages to strain despite its simple theme and creates a truly uncomfortable atmosphere. A must-see film for fans of the genre, but even a mostly horror-uninitiated viewer like myself will find something to enjoy. ()

MrHlad 

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English Great horror movie. It's not as scary as it once was, but it still leaves most of its followers biting the dust thanks to its atmosphere. They say that you are most afraid of what you can't see, but when you see a killer whose emotions are unrecognizable due to his masked face, it may have an even greater effect. And you'll be whistling the musical theme long after you've finished the film... ()

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