Quentin Tarantino's Halloween Movie Would've Given Michael Myers a Partner (2024)

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Quentin Tarantino's Halloween Movie Would've Given Michael Myers a Partner (1)

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Quentin Tarantino's Halloween Movie Would've Given Michael Myers a Partner (2)

The Big Picture

  • Halloween was a horror game-changer, introducing the iconic Michael Myers and setting the slasher film standard.
  • Sequels like Halloween II added backstory that took away the fear, leading to a creative slump in the franchise.
  • Quentin Tarantino's wild Halloween 6 idea of a road trip killing spree would have strayed too far from the original concept.

In the early 1990s, as one Hollywood phenom began to fall, another one was rising. And for a brief moment, they crossed paths. John Carpenter's Halloween is one of the most influential horror films ever made. It may not be the first slasher movie ever made, but it popularized the subgenre and gave way to the slasher boom of the 1980s. After five movies, each worse than the one before, the franchise started off the decade on life support. As Michael Myers fell, Quentin Tarantino was on the rise as Hollywood's new "it" boy. In 1992, Tarantino wrote and directed his first feature, Reservoir Dogs, and the following year he penned the screenplay for Tony Scott's True Romance. Around this time, Tarantino was turned to as a choice to bring back the Boogeyman forHalloween 6. Tarantino took a stab at it, with an idea so wild that it's probably a good thing it never got made.

Quentin Tarantino's Halloween Movie Would've Given Michael Myers a Partner (3)
Halloween (1978)

R

Horror

Thriller

Fifteen years after murdering his sister on Halloween night 1963, Michael Myers escapes from a mental hospital and returns to the small town of Haddonfield, Illinois to kill again.

Release Date
October 27, 1978
Director
John Carpenter
Cast
Donald Pleasence , Jamie Lee Curtis , Tony Moran , Nancy Kyes , P.J. Soles
Writers
John Carpenter , Debra Hill

The Franchise Was in a Bad State After 'Halloween: The Revenge of Michael Myers'

The first Halloween, released in 1978, set the template of the classic slasher. Sure, there had been influential slashers before like Psycho, Black Christmas, and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, but John Carpenter's vision is the blueprint for the subgenre as we know it today. Halloween was also a uniquely chilling horror experience because it felt too close to home. While you could survive those other movies if you just stayed away from roadside motels, sorority houses, and weird Texas hitchhikers, Halloween was terrifying because the Boogeyman was in the shadows of suburbia, right at your back door. Halloween also worked because its villain, Michael Myers, wasn't some raving lunatic with mommy issues, but a faceless entity in a mask who moved like a ghost without a single word or motivation.

Halloween's success led to the 1980s being led by crazed men hacking up teenagers. To stay with the frenzied pace of the Friday the 13th and later the Nightmare on Elm Street franchises, Halloween couldn't be a slow-burn horror film anymore, but something shocking with a high body count. In Halloween II, many more people die in bloodier ways, and John Carpenter made the fateful choice to give Michael Myers a reason for his madness. As it turned out, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) wasn't just an unlucky young woman picked at random, but the sister sister of Michael. That stripped away the fear, because now, as long as you weren't related to the Boogeyman or friends with someone who was, you were safe.

Many fans didn't like the shocking twist, with even Quentin Tarantino telling Consequence in 2019 that it was a horrible idea that ruined the franchise, adding, "I think they just yanked some idea out of their ass, alright, and they just talked themselves into 'Hey, well, this is why…' and now part two has a reason." This choice left the Halloween franchise stuck creatively. After Halloween III: Season of the Witch, a sequel without The Shape, flopped, Myers had to return, but he spent two straight movies, 1988's Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, and 1989's Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, stalking his young niece, Jamie (Danielle Harris). The plots were boring, the mask had become hilariously awful, and worst of all perhaps, the fifth film ends with a mysterious man in black breaking Myers out of jail, a character created without even knowing who he was, leaving it to be someone else's problem to figure out for Halloween 6.

Quentin Tarantino Would Have Taken 'Halloween 6' in a Wild Direction

Halloween 5 was a box office disaster, making just $11 million at cinemas. As the '80s came to an end, the slasher fad was over, later to be reignited in 1996 with Wes Craven's Scream, but one year earlier, the Boogeyman made a comeback with 1995's Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers. Notable only for being the first movie Paul Rudd ever filmed, and the last performance of Donald Pleasence, who passed away during reshoots, the sixth Halloween failed just as badly as the previous one, taking in only $15 million. You can blame much of that on the bizarre plot of Michael being controlled by the man in black and a cult, with The Shape no longer being a boogeyman, but a force powered by a supernatural trigger. Part of this even meant Michael trying to kill his own infant son, who was birthed by a held hostage Jamie (yeah, don't ask). Halloween had gotten so out of control that three years later, Jamie Lee Curtis came back for Halloween H20, a movie that erased all the bad sequels after Halloween 2.

Related

This Scrapped Halloween Sequel Turned Laurie Strode Into Michael Myers

Final girl gone bad?

If you thought that was an insane plot, when Quentin Tarantino was offered a chance to write the film, his idea was just as far out there. He told Consequence that it was his job to figure out who the man in black was, long before it was decided that he was the head of the Cult of Thorn. Tarantino said, "And so the only thing that I had in my mind — I still hadn’t figured out who that dude was — was like the first 20 minutes would have been the Lee Van Cleef dude and Michael Myers on the highway, on the road, and they stop at coffee shops and sh*t and wherever Michael Myers stops, he kills everybody. So, they’re like leaving a trail of bodies on Route 66." And if you're wondering, yes, Michael Myers would have done all of this while wearing his painted white William Shatner mask.

You Can See Quentin Tarantino's 'Halloween' Ideas in 'Natural Born Killers'

Quentin Tarantino told Consequence that the Halloween sequels and Halloween 2's sibling reveal were "horrible," saying, "He’s just The Shape. There’s something far more scary that he’s going through Haddonfield and it’s just her." Not understanding what Halloween is really about is why nearly every sequel has failed. Rob Zombie's reboots gave Michael a motive as well, with his madness created by being a bullied kid from the worst family ever. Halloween H20 and Halloween (2018) were the only big successes because they went back to basics, stripping away nearly everything except a silent madman in the shadows stalking the ultimate final girl. It's about the atmosphere, the realism, and the fear of the unknown, not the wild plots and gory kills. Michael Myers on a road trip killing people would have been insane to see, but it would also have gone against everything Michael Myers is. Could you ever see him with a friend, going on a buddy trip together killing people? As brilliant as Tarantino is, if this movie had been made, it would have been the worst idea yet and may have derailed his career before it even got started. Even cults are pretty normal compared to the Boogeyman seeing the country in his friend's car.

If that plot sounds familiar, though, it's because it's very reminiscent of another film Tarantino wrote the initial story for, 1994's Natural Born Killers, directed by Oliver Stone, about psychopaths Mickey (Woody Harrelson) and Mallory (Juliette Lewis), who go on a cross-country killing spree, including at a diner. Stone's film goes beyond the blood to deliver a message about the media's glorification of violence, but we can only guess what the message of a Halloween 6 with Michael Myers on a murder spree road trip would have been, other than to say that Hollywood will do anything to make a few bucks off an existing IP. Thankfully, we'll never know. Instead, Michael Myers had himself a cloned baby with his niece and then tried to kill it. Who would have ever thought that it could have been worse?

Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers is available to watch on Paramount+ in the U.S.

WATCH ON PARAMOUNT+

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  • Quentin Tarantino

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Quentin Tarantino's Halloween Movie Would've Given Michael Myers a Partner (2024)

FAQs

What is the relationship between Laurie and Michael Myers? ›

The sequel, Halloween II, made a huge and highly divisive reveal by explaining that Laurie was actually Michael's youngest sister. A couple of years after Judith's murder, Michael Myers' parents died in a car accident, and Laurie was put into foster care, where she was immediately adopted by the Strode family.

Which Halloween movie tells the story of Michael Myers? ›

Halloween (1978)

This movie takes place fifteen years after Michael Myers murdered his sister on Halloween. The killer escapes from the mental hospital and returns to his hometown of Haddonfield, Illinois with murder on his mind.

Why does Halloween 3 have nothing to do with Michael Myers? ›

Carpenter and Hill agreed to participate in the new project only if it was not a direct sequel to Halloween II, which meant Michael Myers would not be the focus of the film. Irwin Yablans and Moustapha Akkad, who had produced the first two films, gave Halloween III a budget of $4.6 million.

What is the Michael Myers theory in Halloween? ›

Theory: Michael Myers Is All About Fear, Not the Kill

Michael Myers was described by Dr. Sam Loomis (Donald Pleasence) as the embodiment of evil, so this theory fits perfectly, as Michael is more interested in haunting and seeing his victims consumed by fear rather than killing them.

Why is Michael Myers so obsessed with Laurie? ›

His bloodthirsty obsession with her no longer stems from a familial connection. It's simply a continuation of him seeing her as the right victim and then becoming consumed by his own inability to kill her.

Why did Laurie kiss Michael? ›

When she approached to remove his mask, Michael seized her, causing the added weight to break the rope and send both siblings tumbling off the roof. Michael then drove his knife through Laurie's back. As she hung dying, Laurie kissed Michael's mask and promised he would see her in hell.

What serial killer is Michael Myers based on? ›

The extent to which the character of Michael Myers, the antagonist in the "Halloween" franchise, is based on real-life cases, such as those of babysitter Janett Christman and convicted kidnapper Andre Rand, has been debated since the original movie's debut in 1978.

Why does Michael Myers wear a mask? ›

Carpenter felt this kind of character, one that was "a force", would be more terrifying than personifying him. Michael's mask was meant to help illustrate this further, because it would "blank out his human features […] Making him then just some sort of force of evil that is irrational, unstoppable."

How was Michael Myers killed? ›

Being stabbed and shot doesn't normally remove all your blood because you can adapt and save yourself. Michael bandaged himself in Kills, if you'll recall. But Laurie sliced two of his major arteries (and stabbed his lungs) to drain him of blood, to make it physically impossible to breathe, thus rendering him dead.

Why did people not like Halloween 3? ›

However, the major drawback of Halloween III lies in its lacklustre central characters, Daniel and Ellie, portrayed by Tom Atkins and Stacey Nelkin. Both performances are subpar, and their romantic subplot feels so misjudged.

Why doesn t Michael Myers talk in Halloween? ›

For instance, The Cult of Thorn storyline from the original movie track implies that Michael Myers isn't human. At six years old, he became a pawn, and with the first sacrifice of Judith, his soul got infected by the murderous being worshiped by the cult. As such, he might not be able to communicate like a human does.

Why does Michael Myers look different in Halloween 4? ›

Michael Myers' Mask Was Botched in 'Halloween 4'

It's also a bit distorted, as a new actor, Dick Warlock, played Myers, and had a different head shape than Nick Castle.

Why did Michael Myers cry? ›

Jamie gets him to take off his mask and show his face to her, and even sheds a tear before falling into a murderous frenzy when she tries to touch him. Speaking with HalloweenMovies, director Dominique Othenin-Girard stated Michael cries because "Again, to humanize him, to give him a tear.

Why can't Michael Myers run? ›

For starters, one cause as to why Michael never runs may be due to his mind still being present on the night that he killed his sister. If so, that would mean Michael never mentally matured, and he won't chase his victims because the child version of Michael still believes he wouldn't catch them if he ran.

What is Michael Myers secret? ›

In that same movie, a different reason for Michael's evil and killing sprees was given: Michael was afflicted with an ancient Druid curse that drove him to kill, especially those related to him, and the Cult of Thorn was also responsible for his supernatural “abilities”.

Is Michael Myers still related to Laurie Strode? ›

Loomis discovers that Laurie is Michael and Judith's sister; she was put up for adoption after the death of their parents, with the records sealed to protect the family. Realizing that Michael has killed one sister and now wants to kill the other, Loomis rushes to the hospital to find them.

Who is Jamie Lee Curtis to Michael Myers? ›

In the films, Jamie is the daughter of Laurie Strode, who died off-screen in a car accident in the time between Halloween II and 4. As such, she is also the niece of the series' main antagonist, Michael Myers, and becomes her uncle's new primary target after he learns about Laurie's death.

Why does Michael Myers not talk? ›

Some possible reasons why Michael Myers hasn't talked again since the murder of his sister is that it's part of the catatonia he tricked everyone into thinking he had, while others, based on the events of Halloween Kills, suggest he is still in shock after what happened in 1963, and he's still that little boy who ...

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