|
HALLOWEEN (2007)
|
||||||||||
|
Plus, on a prurient level, there's some spectacular nudity from Judith Myers in this movie that, when coupled with the gore and brutality she faced were enough for me to get my rocks off and the movie was just getting started. It's too bad the other characters couldn't be so well developed. In the original film, the other characters weren't developed extensively either (they didn't need to be for us to understand what was going on) but in this movie, when we're just watched almost an hour of Michael Myers' back story, the lack of development of the other characters feels like a cop out. That's not to say that the actors don't turn in good performances, because they do. Dr. Loomis is sufficiently campy and melodramatic and his exchanges with the Sheriff as they drive around Haddonfield at night work (even though the actors can't keep the timeline straight when they talk, first something happened fifteen years ago, then something that happened AFTER that happened seventeen years ago...it was a mess and it could have easily been corrected and it irritated me that it stuck out so badly in the final cut of the film). Scout Taylor Compton does a great job as Laurie Strode (even though her brain falls out at the end of the movie and she makes the dumbest moves I've ever seen) and even the child actors do a great job of making Tommy and Lindsay sufficiently endearing and annoying. Lindsay's banter with her babysitter Annie is fun and it rings true. Annie herself gives us some awesome nudity (with its own bloodstained, brutal turn later in the movie) and in this Halloween, Linda shows us the whole shebang, not just her tits when she asks us if we "see anything we like." I did, I did. So the nudity, the gore, and most of the acting worked wonders for the movie and made me a happy little horror fanatic indeed.
And what was up with bastardizing the "Was that the boogeyman?" "As a matter of fact, it was" exchange that the original made so famous? This movie isn't the original, it's got a completely different tone, and the line felt tacked on and frankly, stupid. The characters in this movie come from a different era with none of the romanticized small town innocence that made the exchange work in the first movie, so it really had the opposite effect of feeling disconnected and out of place in this version. Everyone in the theater laughed when the characters said it, and it just didn't work the way it was supposed to. I understand why the line was included, Zombie is a fan boy too, but the line didn't work and should have been cut. And with all the asinine things going on the final act felt like it was hours long. It shouldn't have dragged like that. I heard several people in the theater say "What's taking so long?" and "Why is she being so stupid?" That's NOT the reaction you want to leave people with, trust me. We were with you up until that point, Rob, why did you lose us?
|
|||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||
|
Have something to say about this review? Pop on over to Cinema-Lunatics
and speak your mind in our Answer Back! Forums >> |
|
[
Link to
Us |
FAQ |
Top^
] ¤ ¤ ¤ |