 
HALLOWEEN H20
20 Years Later
One Last Stab?
Sequels to john Carpenter's Halloween resemble cover versions
of a classic hit tune churned out as misguided "tributes". Any amount of
stylistic innovation or fresh vieppoints are foredoomed to be taken as sacrilege. And
sticking to the formula that Joe Bob Briggs has held up as the perfect design for any
sequel: "The same movie made all over again", will be received as a dull lack of
imagination infected with shallow opportunism.
Though Carpenter has resisted the urge to return to the extended killing spree of
Michael Meyers, Jamie Lee Curtis saw this as an oportunity to not only star in a movie
that gives her a very juicy part, but also to re-examine her early claim to fame and put
it in perspective.
Like the moddern Gozilla series, H20 chooses to ignore the whole flock of
inferior sequels and is a direct sequel to Halloween 2. Emotionally scarred
survivor Laurie Strode has successfully faked her own death in an attempt to escape her
belief that Meyers also survived to pursue her. She's right, of course. Not only did
Meyers recover from burning to death, but his nifty William Shatner mask survived, too. In
fact, he looks too good - The Shape appears to be played by a younger actor here, which I
think diminishes his menace.
I don't wonder much about how Meyers manages to recover from being dead all those
times, but I am curious about where he's suppose to have been the past 20 years. Perhaps
he's spent some time as a private detective, as once he decides to go after his sister
again he knows just how to find her.
Curtis has somehow (perhaps with the help of old Dr. Loomis?) established a new
identity and is teaching literature classes at a northern California private school, where
her 17-year old son is a student. She's a "functioning" alchoholic" and
overprotective mother, trying to hide from her haunting past.Curtis is in charge here,
giving one of tthe best performances of her career. Especially well one are her several
emotionally complicated scenes with Adam Arkin, who plays her boyfriend and the school
counselor.
Director Steve Miner (who helmed two Friday the 13th sequels) is clearly no Carpenter -
his attempts to build suspense are marred by a pitifull overreliance on 'bus' tactics
(false scares) - but with a cast that can hold its own it's enough for him to just let
them loose and keep the pictures looking pretty. Some of the running time is devote to
gently sending up slasher sequels, and horror films in general - some of which comes in
the casting of Jamie's mom Janet Leigh, still driving the classic car that Marion Crane
drove to the Bates Motel. This is not surprising when you notice that Kevin Williamson is
listed as an executive producer. Williamson's script for Scream 2 (cameoing here
via a video clip) was a virtual catalogue of what's right and wrong with the genre.
Various characters are introduced as obvious cannon fodder an are dutifully slaughtered
by Meyers with minimum fuss. This is merely slasher movie ritual - an unimpressive body
count that had me cringing, and not for the right reasons. I was worried that the entire
film was about to bury itself in the mediocrity that marked the series' previous
installments. But once that business is out of the way, the story gets to concentrate on
the point of this movie, an extended climax in which Strode (and Curtis) faces the
nightmare that made her what she is today, honors thenightmare, then brings it to a
satisfying conclusion.
The script provides us with some footnotes in the form of comic relief security guard
LL Cool J, who is constantly on the phone reading his amatuer fiction to his girlfriend.
After his heroine fails to fall for some smooth talk, the girlfriend's response is:
"Good! Make her smart!" Laurie Strode has always been one of horror cinema's
smartest heroines. Nice to see that everyone involve has opted to cap off this series in a
smart way.
P-stars Curtis and
Leigh; head rolls; knife fu; axe fu; blood; supernatural (or is he?) monster psycho
killer.
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