The Guardian (USA)

Halloween Kills review – indestruct­ible killer returns in efficient follow-up

- Jonathan Romney

It’s Halloween 2018 in Haddonfiel­d, Illinois, and the time-honoured festivitie­s are in full swing. At the start of the second episode of the revived franchise there’s already a body impaled on railings, and a cop (Will Patton) gushing blood on the ground. Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) – horror cinema’s original Final Girl, now Final Grandmothe­r – is being rushed to hospital, and her house is in flames. But indestruct­ible killer Michael Myers has decided to make a night of it, and is out there armed with a firefighte­r’s axe, axing firefighte­rs.

Forty years after John Carpenter made the defining slasher movie, director David Gordon Green has made a creditable stab, as it were, at reanimatin­g the title. Green is an occasional indie auteur (George Washington, Prince Avalanche) who leads a double life as a mainstream stalwart, and showed in his 2018 Halloween reboot that he’s more than competent at straight genre thrills. Writing again with Danny McBride, here joined by Scott Teems, Green offers a functional but enjoyably efficient follow-up. It kicks in only minutes after the events of the previous episode, and pretty much follows a straight line, apart from brief flashbacks to 1978, with even a passable Donald Pleasence lookalike on hand to lend authentici­ty.

There’s not a massive amount of innovation, but the significan­t new element is that the citizens of Haddonfiel­d decide to hunt Myers down vigilantes­tyle, at the urging of Laurie’s one-time babysittin­g charge Tommy Doyle, now a bullish barroom bro; he’s played by Anthony Michael Hall, a veteran of the 80s John Hughes cycle. The population storms Haddonfiel­d hospital, chanting “Evil dies tonight!”, bloodlust in their eyes as they pursue the wrong man – which is where the film gestures at a parable about everyday Americans going rogue under the spell of collective hatred. No one actually dons a horned helmet, but we get the message.

But – in contrast with George Romero’s zombie films, where political allegory is the whole point – we’re really here for the slaughter, and the reliable repetition. Loose bits of plot from Green’s 2018 film are strewn all around like fragments of shattered pumpkin, and there are more characters to follow than Haddonfiel­d’s entire original population. But familiarit­y with the terrain helps us settle in quickly, and while the film doesn’t re-craft old-school slasher politics for contempora­ry sensibilit­ies quite like 2019’s Black Christmas remake, the focus is still determined­ly female. Jamie Lee Curtis’s Laurie, now wearing Patti Smith’s current hair, is as indestruct­ible as ever; new-generation unscareabl­es Andi Matichak and Kyle Richards give their best; and the always superb Judy Greer manages to convey undaunted intensity even despite some very autumnal knitwear. James Jude Courtney, Nick Castle and Airon Armstrong all loom as Michael Myers – or The Shape, as he’s credited – whose featureles­s mask has now taken on a slightly rueful expression, as if he knows he’s likely to be on carving duty for a very long haul yet.

• Halloween Kills screened at the Venice film festival, and goes on release in Australia on 14 October, and the US and UK on 15 October.

 ?? Ryan Green/Universal Pictures ?? Time-honoured festivitie­s … James Jude Courtney in Halloween Kills. Photograph:
Ryan Green/Universal Pictures Time-honoured festivitie­s … James Jude Courtney in Halloween Kills. Photograph:

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