Halloween 2007 |work| File
Rob Zombie’s Halloween doesn’t just remake John Carpenter’s original; it dissects it, smothers it in white trash realism, and stitches it back together with a sledgehammer. Whether that’s a triumph or a travesty depends entirely on what you want from Michael Myers.
Once Michael escapes Smith’s Grove (now a hulking, profane madhouse run by a lecherous Malcolm McDowell as Dr. Loomis), the film shifts into a greatest-hits reel of the 1978 original. Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor-Compton) is no longer the quiet, smart final girl; she’s a screaming, emotional wreck. The stalking scenes are present, but Zombie replaces Carpenter’s suspenseful silence with loud, hulking brutality. The biggest misfire? The mask. Zombie’s weathered, grimy version strips away the eerie emptiness. And giving Michael (now a 7-foot Tyler Mane) a backstory of mommy issues ironically makes him less scary. The unknown was always the point. halloween 2007
Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3/5) or ★★★★☆ (4/5) depending on your tolerance for grit Loomis), the film shifts into a greatest-hits reel
Zombie makes a bold choice: spend the first 45 minutes inside the broken home of 10-year-old Michael Myers (Daeg Faerch). This isn’t the unknowable, ghost-like boogeyman of 1978. This is a boy with a neglectful stripper mother (Sheri Moon Zombie), an abusive stepfather, and a bullying sister. Zombie argues that Michael was created , not born. And it works. Young Faerch is terrifyingly believable—a ticking time bomb of animal rage. The murder of his stepfamily is raw, ugly, and far more visceral than the original’s clinical stalking. You almost feel sorry for him. Almost . The biggest misfire
if you love the original’s mystique. Watch it if you want to see what happens when the boogeyman takes off his mask and says “die.”