GamesRadar+ Verdict

The latest Halloween instalment is fun while it lasts, but unl🃏ike the original, it’s not a classic for the ages.

Why you can trust GamesRadar+ Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Find out more about our revie💦ws policy.

After ditching the majority of the franchise’s 40-year canon to serve as a direct follow-up to John Carpenter’s 1978 original, is Halloween a worthy sequel? Well, yes and no. Thrill-seeking fans of Carpenter’s definitive slasher will have a good time with the nods, call-backs and mostly relentless pace. But anyone hoping to see some 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Blade Runner 2049-style hefꦐt added to the mythology is lik༺ely to walk away unsatisfied.

The film opens with Michael Myers (played by James Jude Courtney and, in a ke🐻y cameo, a returning Nick Castle) having been incarcerated in a high-security facility for 40 years. Two irritating podcasters arrive to try and get the mute killer talking, using his mask to taunt him. The fact that the facility allows this is symptomatic of the film’s lack ꦓof logic – for better or worse, the emphasis falls on fun here.

The podcasters next visit the reclusive Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis), who has trained herself in survival skills. The interview is bungled badly, but director David Gordon Green (Stronger, 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Pineapple Express) is more sensitive in his treatm🥂ent of Strode. One of the biggest delights here is Curtis’ 🎶badass return to her career-launching role: the film lights up whenever she’s at the forefront.

An image from Halloween

In a hint that trauma may have created a monster in Strode, her daughter (Judy Greer) has little time for her after a childhood spent learning weapons skills. But any chance of the subplots being examined goes out of the window (and disappears from the front lawn) as the hack-and-s♉lash begins. After a slightly slow start and an ill-advised facility tran😼sfer, the pace doesn’t let up once Myers starts murdering his way back to Haddonfield.

Between the gruesomely inventive kills and the visual stylings, Green operates with affection for Carpenter’s original. If that’s aided by Carpenter’s exec producer role, the reprise of his score (alongside new music from Carpenter, his son Cody, and Daniel A. Davies) also adds to the atmosphere. But where Halloween devia🐎tes wildly is in the humour. Danny McBride co-writes, and it shows: while some knowing gags suggest you should just enjoy the fun, the insistent one-liners detract from the tension.

The humour and allusions su💝ggest a film that’s intended to be whooped along to at midnight screenings, and the cracking final sequence ensures audiences will leave on a high. But given all that has been sacrificed to give the franchise a shot at redemption, the end result feels flimsy and throwaway. There’s enough ambiguity in the ending to suggest further sequels could be on the way, but on this evidence, there’s not a lot left to be wrung from this well-w𒁏orn franchise. 

Find out what else is hitting cinemas soon with our breakdown of the most anticipated 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:upcoming movies of 2018 and beyond. 

  • Release date: October 19, 2018
  • Certificate: R (US)/18 (UK)
  • Running time: 106 mins
Matt Maytum
Editor, Total Film

I'm th⛎e Editor at Total Film magazine, overseeing the running of the mag, and generally obsessing over all things Nolan, Kubrick and Pixar. Over the past decade I've worked in various roles for TF online and in print, including at GamesRadar+, and you can often hear me nattering on the Inside Total Film podcast. Bucket-list-ticking ꧂career highlights have included reporting from the set of Tenet and Avengers: Infinity War, as well as covering Comic-Con, TIFF and the Sundance Film Festival.