Monday, October 24, 2022

THE HORROR HARVEST: HALLOWEEN ENDS (2022)

 HALLOWEEN ENDS (2022)


I've made no secret about this; I am a huge Halloween fan. Halloween is my favorite horror franchise. Period. The franchise has certainly had a murky history, with its share of ups and downs. I have my biases and periods in the series I prefer over others (any Halloween film with Donald Pleasence is the gold standard for me. ANY). Above all, I only ask one thing when it comes to new Halloween films: treat Michael Myers well. To me, this is his franchise. To me, I don't go to Halloween films for anything else. And I'm guessing for most of us, if you're all being honest with yourselves, you all go to these movies for the same reason: Michael Myers.

David Gordon Green and Danny McBride's Halloween trilogy has been an interesting experiment to say the least. I feel Halloween 2018 (we'll call it H40) has only grown better with time, at least for me. I recently watched it again in a movie theater and I very much enjoyed it yet again. It's not perfect by any means, but I feel the film, by and large, nails what has made the Halloween franchise so enduring and endearing for over four decades. Halloween Kills is not nearly as good as H40, I'll admit. But for everything that doesn't work in that film, nearly every section with Michael Myers does work. Michael Myers, and how he was menacingly portrayed, really saves the film for me. I'll watch both H40 and H-Kills again and again for these reasons.

Halloween Ends fumbles the ball entirely for one major reason (and you can probably guess what that reason is): a terribly poor treatment of Michael Myers. Michael Myers barely does anything in this movie, and what he does do is underwhelming and head-scratching. It doesn't help matters that the trailers and marketing sold us on an epic showdown between Michael Myers and Laurie... and that comprises the last five minutes of the film.

But...

Nestled in this movie is a very intriguing story about a brand new character and how, maybe, the town of Haddonfield is actually the real source of evil. However, this story isn't set up in any way by the previous films. And given how intimately connected the previous films were to each other, this story comes across as jarring, tonally different, and alien to the story we were following for two entire movies.

If H40 and H-Kills worked for you, more or less, I get the feeling that this film won't. If those two movies didn't work for you (then why did you even bother watching this to begin with?) I get the feeling you probably will enjoy this film. This movie comes across to me as the Halloween film for people who don't like Halloween films (or at least the majority of Halloween films).

I apologize in advance as this review will be a big one.

So let's dig into it!

INITIAL IMPRESSIONS

There are many interesting elements to this movie and ideas that have potential for exploration. I feel the movie is well acted and the social commentary is not quite as ham-fisted as it was in H-Kills. There are a few fun homages here and there such as characters watching John Carpenter's The Thing on television whereas characters in the original Halloween were watching Howard Hawk's The Thing on television. This film also seems to draw heavy influence from Stephen King's Christine (also wonderfully adapted by John Carpenter into film). There's even a touch of Natural Born Killers for a bit, which is left unfulfilled. Also, Laurie's new house appears to be the same house from Halloween 4 and Halloween 5, which was nice to see.

The movie has a few great set pieces such as the open prologue narrated by Jamie Lee Curtis in which she describes the horrors of Michael Myers hanging over the down like a pall of despair, people dying and being killed even without Michael Myers being there. The first major scene with our new protagonist, Cory, and his babysitting stint going horrifically wrong, I felt was quite potent. And there are some fantastic kills towards the latter half of the film that will stick with you too.

But the film leverages its potential at the expense of its main characters: Michael Myers and Laurie Strode. Michael Myers is barely in the film, maybe a paltry ten minutes if that. Instead of making those ten minutes count, Michael Myers is largely ineffectual and seemingly out of place in the story. His inclusion in the film feels like an afterthought or hastily tacked on at the last minute. He's weak, feeble, acts wildly out of character, and inexplicably on the opposite end of the spectrum from where we last saw him in H-Kills with no explanation given. There is no connectivity between this Michael Myers and the Michael Myers from H-Kills. He's a shell of his former self in this film and completely unnecessary to the plot.

Similarly Laurie is portrayed jarringly different from the previous two films. I was not a fan of her "Sarah Conner" impersonation from the first film, but at least she remained consistent from H40 to H-Kills (as did Michael Myers). Just like Michael, we meet an inexplicably different Laurie Strode. Her character has moments of continuity with the previous films, but overall feels largely like a different character. Still, she's wonderfully portrayed by Jamie Lee Curtis and is given far more to do than Michael Myers. Yet, she is merely a side character to the central plot, a passenger rather than the driver of her own story.

This film introduces a new character not seen in the previous films; Cory Cunningham. The film centers around him in which a tragic accident sends him spiraling down to becoming a serial killer and Michael Myers' successor. His journey parallels Arnie Cunningham's from Christine with a slow descent into madness, evil infecting him from within... or from without? I don't know because the central message we're getting from the film, through Laurie's dialog and other allusions, is that Cory becomes infected with evil from within yet it presents the idea of evil being passed to him externally through direct contact with Michael Myers and the cruelty of Haddonfield's citizenry. There's also a Norman Bates parallel with Cory's mother. Nature versus nurture? Internal versus external? The film can't seem to make up its mind.


I like the idea of the town of Haddonfield as a character itself, a dark dour battery of evil, slowly bringing down everyone within it to varying degrees of darkness. I like the idea of the dual evils, external and internal. But all of this runs contrary to the intent of the original 1978 film, the film which director David Gordon Green and writer Danny McBride founded their trilogy's premise upon: the randomness of violence, violence without reason or consciousness. If the point of eliminating Halloween II (1981) from the continuity was to bring Michael Myers back to an unconscionable source of evil, this movie undermines that intent by exploring the origins of evil. Did the town turn Michael into a monster? That's the whole conceit of Cory's story and he is meant to be a parallel to what happened to Michael. So, which is it?  This feels like, to me, the film retreading ground from Rob Zombie's Halloween duology, in particular the extremely divisive elements explaining away Michael's motivation.

This film, to me, draws from a few previous Halloween films, namely all of the divisive films in the series. With Michael barely being in the film and what little he is in it feeling like a wildly different character altogether, feels reminiscent of Rob Zombie's Halloween II and "Hobo-Myers." Michael's demise in this film recalls his "permanent" demise in H20. His living in the sewers and eating rats recalls Halloween Resurrection. And Michael's overall lack of presence and the characterization of Haddonfield feels more akin to Halloween III: Season of the Witch. All of these elements are among the more divisive in the series, polarizing with fans alike.

Everyone has their own preferences and films in the series that work and don't work with them. If H40 was attempting to distill everything that worked for audiences from the series, this film comes across to me as a distillation of everything that doesn't work for most audiences from the series. In a certain way, this film feels like "the Halloween film for people that hate Halloween films." If I could characterize Halloween Ends any better, it's another example of Hollywood "subverting audiences' expectations," a phrase which, by and large, has become synonymous with divisive, polarizing, and franchise shattering films.

Again, I feel the story told in Halloween Ends has potential, not as a main entry in the Halloween series, but rather as a spinoff, similarly to how Halloween III stood apart from the rest (a film notorious for being outright rejected by audiences for years, people only coming around to it decades after the fact). Again, that movie was a Halloween film for people who wanted no more of Michael Myers and Laurie Strode. In a weird way, this new story is ruined by the inclusion of what most of us wanted: Michael Myers. The specter of Michael Myers hovering over the town works, but the actual presence of Michael being there fails abysmally. Michael is poorly treated in this film and would benefit greatly by being removed from the film entirely. In isolation, without Michael Myers, the story of Halloween Ends is intriguing, but the mishandling of Michael (and Laurie too I guess) is what ultimately makes the film so unsatisfying.

The story told in Halloween Ends comes across as the wrong story to tell at this time. No plot threads or through-lines from the previous films are followed up on, leaving me to think that there was no plan for a trilogy when they started with H40. Halloween Ends feels like a different trilogy's finale, not the one that should've concluded H40 and H-Kills.

Overall Ranking: 4 out of 10

Cory's story feels like it was meant to be another movie and a different ending was smashed onto it. The ideas are intriguing and filled with potential, but there is virtually no cohesion with previous films and sketchy cohesion within this film itself. And that end fight scene (which felt completely tacked on and unearned)... what the hell was that? We finally get Michael Myers back and he is hilariously defeated and ground into hamburger. That's like making a sequel to Jaws in which a barracuda does most of the killing throughout the entire film. And when Bruce finally appears, he's killed off by the first fishermen he encounters.

I've only seen the movie once and, frankly, I don't feel the need to watch it again. My gut reaction after the film ended was disappointment. From the moment the movie started I instantly had the feeling something was wrong from the music. The last two films began with the ominous notes of the score, setting a terrifying tone for the film. This film begins with music from the Haddonfield radio station, which plays into elements of the movie to come, doing anything but establish a tone. The feeling setup with this music was anything but Halloween. It's a nitpick, I know, but it seemed to foreshadow how "different" this film would be from the others and, ultimately, how I ended up feeling about the movie by the end.

For more of my thoughts on the Halloween franchise, check out these previous posts below

THE HORROR MOVIE MASTER LIST

Monday, October 17, 2022

MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE: WEREWOLF BY NIGHT (2022)

 MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE

CHAPTER... WHO KNOWS ANYMORE?

WEREWOLF BY NIGHT


Yep, I returned to that once great obsession of mine, the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I've missed a few chapters of the MCU in the last two years and fallen off of the MCU gravy train. I used to be hopelessly addicted to the MCU, never missing a thing. I watched anything with even the slightest hint of being connected to the MCU (Agents of SHIELD, Daredevil, Agent Carter, Jessica Jones, Inhumans, all of it!). 2018 felt like a high point with Black Panther, Infinity War, and Ant-Man and the Wasp. But ever since 2019 my enthusiasm has been drying up.

An ending can sometimes make or break the whole story (or at least lessen the journey making you question: "Was it worth it?"). I did not like Avengers: Endgame and the film has only grown worse with each subsequent viewing. Endgame hit the mark for so many viewers, but it missed the mark with me. Endgame felt like the start of the MCU's significant decline with me personally. With the exception of the Spider-Man films, every entry in the MCU since Endgame has either only slightly been better or has been far worse in my opinion.

I gave up on watching the D+ MCU shows in 2021, but I stayed for the movies, naively hoping they'd be different, better, with more effort put forth into them. To be fair, I am not the typical viewer of the MCU. I have a modestly extensive knowledge base of Marvel's comic books. Perhaps the most egregious fault I have found with the MCU since Endgame, the big reason why I have largely felt alienated by the MCU, is in their adaptions of the source material or lack thereof. The MCU barely resembles the characters and stories I have read for years, for most of my life. It's surprising now when I see something in the MCU that actually resembles the comics in more than a superficial way.

Let's put it this way: Say you've read Stephen King's IT or Harry Potter or the Lord of the Rings and not only that, you loved them and read them multiple times for years. Then you went to see the movie based on the book and that movie was about punk rockers traveling into space to battle the cheeseburger empire. You'd be saying something akin to: "Hey, that's not Harry Potter." This is more or less how my experiences have been with the MCU since 2019.

I came back to D+ for Moon Knight and did not like it. I saw Doctor Strange 2 and that film finally broke me. I had to walk away. Of the dozen or so D+ MCU shows I've only seen three and disliked them all. I haven't yet seen THOR: LOVE AND THUNDER, but have been told by close friends and multiple other sources that the film is... disappointing to say the least. And from all indications BLACK PANTHER 2 seems to be headed in the exact same direction. Unless something convinces me otherwise, I will be sitting out Black Panther 2 as well.

To be completely transparent: I am not in Marvel's corner anymore.


A MOMENT OF WEAKNESS

But, like all junkies, I had a relapse. I went back to D+ for, I won't say the "last time," but hopefully the last time for a while. Another adaptation of an IP I have a strong attachment to received its MCU debut: WEREWOLF BY NIGHT.

Needless to say, nothing has changed. There were four characters in this 55 minute special that I recognized from the comic books: Jack - Werewolf by Night, Ted - Man-Thing, Elsa Bloodstone, and Ulysses Bloodstone. And none of them felt like the characters I know and love from the comics. Nothing about Jack recalled the character I've read for years from the comics. Man-Thing looked great, but was characterized completely different. And the depiction of Elsa was all wrong beyond the accent.

The only character among them that felt somewhat accurate was Ulysses Bloodstone and he was dead at the beginning of the film. But if that WAS his talking corpse spelling out the details of the plot then he was physically unrecognizable as the character (my impression is that it wasn't his corpse, but another corpse he was speaking through, at least I hope that's the case). And if that corpse was supposed to be the Frankenstein Monster or N'Kantu ~ the Living Mummy then it's still wrong.

The black and white classic horror filter felt tacked on and not fully thought through. The special was actually filmed in color and the black and white was added after the fact. I noticed a few digitally added spots of cigarette burns, but it would've been nice to have seen more, for instance: film grain, 4:3 aspect ratio, camera jutter, have the score drop out at times, and overall a little more effort and authenticity in recreating the 30s horror feel. 2007's GRINDHOUSE went to far greater lengths to recreate the 70s and 80s film experience and this special put forth the shallowest effort by comparison.

The tongue n' cheek tonal approach signaled a few things to me: 1 - it felt like the filmmakers themselves didn't think much of these characters and treated them as cheesy schlocky B-movie fair. 2 - that the MCU refuses to drop the humor and will go to great lengths to maintain said humor. 3 - if this is how they treat the horror characters then we have reason to believe that Blade and Ghost Rider will be  treated no differently. Above all, it showed me that the MCU is firmly entrenched in their formula and will drive it into the ground, potentially killing the genre as a whole, before changing.

Jack and Ted were cut and paste copies of Rocket and Groot. If Elsa was Gamora (which isn't that far of a stretch) and they were on a black and white alien planet (there was one in Thor: Love and Thunder), with only a few minimal changes this could've easily been a scrapped Guardians of the Galaxy story. This entire film felt empty, devoid of care or emotion, and lacking any love for the genre, characters, and source material. In short, it felt like a soulless product.

Overall Ranking: 4 out of 10

The filmmakers couldn't even be bothered to get the characters right, provide an authentic story, nor embrace the black and white classic horror homage beyond a filter change and three digitally inserted cigarette burns.

Look, I realize these characters are considered D-Listers or worse by many and would say that no one cares about these characters anymore. For the majority of people, that's probably true. But so were the Guardians of the Galaxy and Ant-Man, and many others. I realize I'm in the minority in that I know and love Werewolf By Night, Man-Thing, Ulysses & Elsa Bloodstone and the majority of people don't care. But if there's anyone who should care, more than me or anyone else, for these characters it should be Marvel themselves. And this definitely feels like Marvel doesn't care at all. So, if Marvel themselves doesn't care that signals to us that we shouldn't care either.

I wanted a Werewolf By Night film adaptation. I want to watch and like every Marvel show and movie coming out (for a decade there I almost did). But it feels to me that Marvel themselves doesn't care about their characters or source material anymore. It feels like Marvel is actively eroding their fans and destroying their IPs with each new product. Again, if Marvel is signaling to us that they themselves don't care about their comics, characters, history, or movies and television shows... then why should we?

If you'd like to read about my rising love and falling out with the MCU, check out the posts linked below

THE MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE (MCU)

  

 
Fox-Marvel, Sony-Marvel, and other stuff too!