The Province

The 11th time is almost the charm

- — Chris Knight

Halloween is a franchise that specialize­s in torture. Not to its characters — though there’s plenty of that — but to its timeline. The 1978 original, a well-plotted slasher flick, has since ballooned into 11 movies, including the new one from director and co-writer David Gordon Green.

In 1982, Halloween III: Season of the Witch completely ignored villain Michael Myers in favour of a Scooby-Doo plot about a novelty company fronting an ancient Stonehenge cult.

Halloween 7 (a.k.a. Halloween H20: 20 Years Later) then expunged Halloweens four through six and thus functioned as a new Halloween III.

Rob Zombie’s Halloween 9, which was also called Halloween, was a remake. It had its own sequel, Halloween II (a.k.a. Halloween 10).

Which brings us to Halloween,

HALLOWEEN

Grade: BTheatres, showtimes, pages 32-33

which is really what all future versions of the movie should also be called.

Green was aided in scriptwrit­ing by comedian Danny McBride, which is probably why there are so many funny-yet-terrifying moments.

Jamie Lee Curtis stars as Laurie Strode; 40 years ago she was terrorized by a masked killer.

Now we learn she’s spent the decades since then preparing for his eventual return. Her heavily fortified home — two bedrooms, two bathrooms, six panic rooms — seems more than enough to repel a zombie outbreak, let alone a single

killer who doesn’t even use guns, and who starts the movie locked in an institutio­n.

But of course he escapes during a bus crash and resumes his killing. And while he only managed to off five victims in the original — a fact remarked on by a dopey stoner named Dave (Miles Robbins) — here he manages many more.

Green, whose eclectic body of work includes the lyrical George Washington, the political satire Our Brand Is Crisis and the biopic Stronger with Jake Gyllenhaal, dives into the horror genre with great enthusiasm but mixed results.

On the plus side, he brings back John Carpenter’s simple/ creepy score from the original. And he gives Curtis a formidable family, with Judy Greer as her estranged daughter, and Andi Matichak as her high school senior granddaugh­ter.

They’re lucky they’re tough, since their menfolk are an ineffectua­l bunch.

That said, the more-is-better ethos does get a little tiring, especially when Myers gets some unexpected help from a fan. It’s the weirdest twist since Monty Python added a killer bunny rabbit to The Holy Grail, and it doesn’t quite fit the franchise. But it’s still worth the price of admission to see Curtis reprising a beloved role. And her single-minded motivation will have audiences wondering just who is doing the stalking in this stalker picture.

“I’ve waited for him; he’s waited for me,” she says of Myers, sounding more like she’s talking about an old lover than a killer. After 40 years, maybe it’s hard to differenti­ate. Certainly horror fans will feel as much love as fear.

 ?? — UNIVERSAL ?? Michael Myers is back for more after escaping prison in the 11th instalment of Halloween.
— UNIVERSAL Michael Myers is back for more after escaping prison in the 11th instalment of Halloween.

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