Genre: Horror
Director: Rob Zombie
Cast: Malcolm McDowell, Sheri Moon Zombie,
Tyler Mane, Scout Taylor Compton, Brad Dourif, Danielle Harris,
William Forsythe
RunTime: 1 hr 50 mins
Released By: GV
Rating: M18 (Violence and Sexual Scene)
Official Website: http://halloween-themovie.com/
Opening Day: 25 October 2007
Synopsis:
From acclaimed musician and filmmaker Rob Zombie (The
Devil’s Rejects, House of 1000 Corpses) comes an entirely
new take on the highly successful film and terrifying Halloween
legacy that began in 1978. While revealing a new chapter in
the established Michael Myers saga, the film will surprise
both classic and modern horror fans with a departure from
prior films in the Halloween franchise. Audiences should brace
themselves for unprecedented fear as Zombie turns back time
to uncover the making of a pathologically disturbed, even
cursed child named Michael Myers.
Movie Review:
If you had a child who has a fetish of strangling animals
to death, smashing up school bullies to pulps, and most bizarrely,
wearing masks, you should be very worried. This is why we
pity Deborah Myers, because her son Michael is one such sick
child. And we when people start calling you names like “Satan’s
mother”, we know that it isn’t a good feeling.
Joining
the league of “re-imagined” horror movies like
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Hills Have Eyes, Rob Zombie’s
latest work introduces the younger generation to one of movie
history’s most infamous psycho, Michael Myers. We see
how a 10-year-old boy morphs from a mentally unstable kid
to a killing machine.
Like
the other recent “re-imagined” projects (we’d
think the filmmakers would not want to call their movies “remakes),
this one does not offer much in terms of originality and surprises.
The plot plods at a weary pace, seeing the young Myers getting
admitted into an asylum after his disturbing behavior, getting
treated by a doctor, getting older before escaping the asylum
to continue his killing spree, getting in touch with a long
lost sister, and so on and so forth. When the movie ends at
the 110th minute, you’d probably have been worn out
by the tiresome “plot development” (if you really
had to coin a term for it).
The
gore and scares are nothing refreshing either: We’d
seen faces beaten into a mish-mash of flesh and blood, we’d
seen how rock music has been mindlessly infused into the movie
soundtrack, we’d seen brainless teenage couples having
sex before getting hacked by psychos, and we’d definitely
seen how these psychos refused to die despite being stabbed
and shot.
There
are a few victims in the movie we sincerely pity though. The
first is Michael Myers’ drunkard father. Although he
is a crude and useless fellow, we still sympathized with him
when his son taped his mouth up before slashing his throat.
Poor guy, imagine not being able to scream with all the pain
from the blood spurting out of your neck. The next poor soul
is a nice pretty girl who was dragged face-down around the
kitchen topless (you go figure what he was doing before that)
by Michael Myers. The pain must have been excruciating.
Playing
Michael Myers is professional wrestler Tyler Mane (Sabretooth
in 2000’s X-Men). His 2.03m height makes him the perfect
candidate to play this psychopath. But he is the one we pity
most of all – While we read somewhere that the Canadian
watched almost all the old Halloween films to prepare for
his role for this movie, the poor guy is behind an ugly mask
most of the time, and frankly speaking, the intimidating demeanor
of the serial killing monster does not really require all
that preparation and effort.
Movie
Rating:
(Instead of hiding in fear from the Boogieman this Halloween,
you may end up feeling its dreariness instead)
Review by John Li
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