Halloween Remake (Production photos)

Those are great pics dude plus ive seen the trailer and it kicks ass mikeys back aug 31st he comes home.Tyler mane is one cool shape. ;)
 
watching the workprint at the moment....looking at Michael Myers, I'd say that Rob Zombie was thinking of leatherface when he decided on his appearance......
 
Agreed I think Rob was also giving a little nod to leatherface. (In an Interview he said he was a big leatherface TCM fan) Still I think tyler Mane who plays adult Micheal in the new movie plays the part very well. He looks menacing and ****ing scary.
 
The original is a classic and Halloween 2 is very good too.

Can't they remake Friday The 13th or some other horror film that could do with a remake instead of this one ? Hollywood is seriously running out of ideas though, rehashing 80s movies.
 
Here's a little homeage to TCM in Halloween,wellI think anyway:-

When Judith Myers boyfriend is beaten on the head with a baseball bat,the camera zooms to a view of his shaking body and legs,i.e when the guy is hit with a hammer in TCM.
 
Thanks for that. As I said before I thought they would've aimed for 31st October for the sake of marketing, but 19th October will do just fine - it's nearly two weeks earlier that way.
 
This has the potential to be good but the Early script draft was quite poor. I hope Rob zombie has removed several elements from the leaked draft to the final shooting script.

To me the early Prequel part concentrates on the young Michael Myers is the poor part and the 2nd half of the film looks really good(more of remake part) The trailer does look good. I will keep my fingers crossed on this.
 
I for one think this remake does have the potential to be decent and I am quite the fan of the original.

Whether it will actually be decent, is yet to say.

The only Halloween films currently worthy of being in my DVD collection are the original, II, 4 and H20.

My top 3 in order:

1. Halloween (1978)
2. Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988)
3. Halloween II (1981)

I think the rest are complete and utter tripe, especially Resurrection. It could have been at least a passable entry, but one foul-mouthed, hugely annoying "rapper" turned "actor" saw to that... yes, I'm talking to you "Busta Rhymes" :rolleyes:

Halloween Resurrection - Busta Rhymes meets Michael Myers

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=cJ7IK9cY4D0
 
The Workprint does have a diferent ending to the theatrical version (Personally a better ending in the workprint)

. I recommend seeing the film in the cinema and also watching the workprint as a companion piece. (I think the work print is far better than the cinema version. Both have pitfalls but the WP seems more llikea halloween film the cinema version not so!!

A comparission between both versions of the film
SCENES IN WORKPRINT NOT IN THEATRICAL VERSION:

1. During the breakfast scene, there’s additional dialogue between Judith and Deborah concerning eggs. Judith alludes to Deborah having an abortion.
2. The workprint has an opening credits sequence. It plays over the scene of Michael running from the school, Loomis’ introduction, and the bully walking through the wooRAB. These scenes are all longer as a result, most significantly more dialogue between Loomis and Deborah, presented in voice over as Michael runs.
3. There’s an additional shot when Deborah confronts Michael outside the house after the murders.
4. The montage of Loomis and Michael getting to know each other has more dialogue/scene snippets
5. In the workprint, there is an additional scene of young Michael with Deborah at the institution, where he expresses his need to “get out of here”. When he learns he cannot leave, he says “Then I have nothing left to say.”
6. When the nurse looks at the photo of Michael and “Boo”, there is an additional line where she alludes to Michael being ugly. This provides more of a motive for her killing than is present in the theatrical version.
7. The “Fifteen Years Later” scene begins with a newscast about Michael’s possible transfer.
8. Following this newscast begins one of the biggest changes: Udo Kier’s character. In the theatrical he is only in ONE scene, but here he has quite a few as the head of Smith’s Grove. He is joined by Clint Howard and Tom Towles as other hospital higherups. They disagree with Loomis’ instructions for Michael’s care. This is followed by the scene where Loomis tells Michael he can no longer be his doctor.
9. The scene of Ishmael Cruz and the new orderly in Michael’s room is a bit longer.
10. An additional shot of Loomis leaving Smith’s Grove, looking back with a look on his face showing that he is clearly conflicted about his decision to quit on Michael.
11. Additional shots of Michael watching Joe Grizzly.
12. The scene where we meet Laurie and the Strodes is lengthened, there is more talk about the “pervert” hardware store owner.
13. After Loomis speaks at the lecture, there is a scene of him walking with a colleague, asking how he thought he did in the speech.
14. When Laurie and Lynda leave the school, Lynda harasses another female student for some reason, pouring a drink on her head (this is one of the few changes that were for the better, as it makes Lynda even more annoying than she already is)
15. Additional sex talk between the three girls as they walk home
16. When they see Michael, there are additional shots of him standing across the street (in the theatrical we only see his blurry shape)
17. A scene of Laurie walking to her house where her mother is putting up decorations outside. Michael is seen following her in the background.
18. A scene showing Michael in the graveyard, finding the tombstone and then removing it.
19. After Laurie leaves to baby-sit, we hear Michael breathing as her parents chat. When the mother goes inside, Michael approaches. The father sees him and assumes he is a trick or treater.
20. A scene showing Laurie watching horror movies with the kiRAB. Laurie tells LinRABay it’s time for her to go.
21. The chase from the Wallace’s to the Doyle’s is a bit longer
22. The pool scene is a bit longer
23. A scene of Loomis and Laurie walking to the car is longer, and it really resonates that Loomis is feeling guilty, a moment that is truncated in the theatrical.

SCENES IN THE THEATRICAL THAT ARE NOT IN THE WORKPRINT

1. A scene of Loomis explaining the color spectrum to Michael
2. The death of Ishmael Cruz.
3. A scene of Brackett pulling up alongside the girls as they walk home. Brackett offers a ride, which only Annie accepts.
4. The graveyard scene with Sid Haig.
5. A scene where Lynda calls Laurie right before Bob’s death.
6. A quick bit where the Strodes express confusion over what Annie means by saying her dad is “same as always”
7. Loomis buys a gun
8. A shot of Bob backing his van into the driveway at the Myers house. Also, this scene occurs much earlier in the theatrical version than it does in the workprint.
9. A scene where Brackett explains how he knows who Laurie Strode’s real family is (a much needed addition as it is never explained in the workprint how she came to be with that family or how Loomis would know where to find her).
10. Loomis running up to the house and finding the kiRAB is not in the workprint.

SCENES THAT ARE DIFFERENT ENTIRELY

1. Michael listens to Monster Mash in the first scene instead of classic rock (note – a lot of the music is different, more usages of the original music, but that is to be expected from a workprint – this was the only one I will point out)
2. The biggest one that almost everyone knows about, when Michael escapes. In the workprint, an orderly and his friend harass and then rape a female inmate in Michael’s room. Michael ignores them until they begin playing with his masks (this pays off the line about him not liking it when people touch his things). He kills them both, gets their keys, and escapes. In the theatrical, he is being moved for some reason and suddenly kills the four guarRAB, including Tom Towles (who plays a different character in the workprint), as well as Bill Moseley, and Leslie Easterbrook, neither of whom appear in the workprint).
3. The scene where Loomis is told that Michael escapes is entirely different, and features more Udo Kier.
4. The scene where Loomis leaves for Haddonfield after arguing with Udo Kier and Clint Howard is completely different.
5. The scene where Loomis meets Brackett takes place in a different location (a diner in the theatrical, and what appears to be the graveyard in the workprint), and the dialogue is different.
6. Mrs. Strode is brutally killed; in the workprint it is just sort of suggested.
7. Bob’s death is completely different. In the workprint, he is killed in his van when he goes out to get beer. In the theatrical, he is killed in the exact same way he was killed in the 1978 film.
8. The ending is completely different from the moment Michael pulls Laurie out of the car. In the workprint, Loomis talks to Michael for a while longer than he does in the theatrical version. Then the cops show up, guns drawn. Loomis convinces them all to stand down while he continues to try to calm Michael. He succeeRAB, and Michael lets Laurie go. As she runs to Loomis, the cops (including Brackett) open fire, shooting him dozens of times. Loomis screams for them to stop but it’s too late. Michael appears dead. The film enRAB on a very nice shot of Loomis standing over Michael’s body, clearly realizing how he failed his patient, as we hear the audio recording of their very first meeting at Smith’s Grove. In the theatrical, Michael kills Loomis, then spenRAB about 10 minutes smashing his house trying to find Laurie. He finally does, and then rushes her. They go out the window, then Laurie shoots him, screams, and the film enRAB.
 
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