avclub-17f87e036e41121d88da3a20654f0adf--disqus
dan caffrey
avclub-17f87e036e41121d88da3a20654f0adf--disqus

I'm admittedly no expert when it comes to comic-book art, but most of these are digital scans pulled from the (now defunct) Halloween comics website and Facebook account. For what it's worth, the hard copies are gorgeous (and I don't think the digital versions are half-bad either).

I completely agree. H20 did what you scream at every other horror sequel to do, which is simply cut off the killer's head. Even the most immortal maniac would have a hard time getting around if they're headless, unless they're secretly powered by a demonic worm like in Jason Goes To Hell.

Michael?

"I realized that what was living behind that boy's eyes was purely and simply…envy over wanting to ride that merry-go-round."

But they never say he dies in the film, and while it's maybe a bit silly that he's able to survive getting shot, burned, stabbed, etc., it's still in line with the original film's central idea that Michael Myers is pure, unstoppable evil. It wasn't until they introduced the Thorn stuff that it started to feel

What's incredible about the comics is that they still adhere to the more absurd plot elements and flat-out pile of bullshit that is Resurrection, and still manage to craft a compelling story that feels very much in line with the world and purpose of the original film. It's like Hutchinson was able to only cherry-pick

They're just great. I should've said this in the article, but they've become kind of hard to find since they're out of print, although "Sam" and "White Ghost" are available online, and you can get Nightdance and 30 Years Of Terror for pretty cheap (the former also includes "Charlie"). And any unopened copy of the 25

Not exactly. In The First Death Of Laurie Strode, Michael revisits Nichols' Hardware Store to steal some more masks. In one panel, you can briefly see the three Silver Shamrock masks on display, placing the films in the same universe. However, in three the original Halloween exists as a movie, so maybe they're more

Yeah, I'm with Ham. Love Watership down, but neither the novel nor the movie is meant as kids' entertainment.

Actually, I have an Ursa Major! It's my favorite Third Eye Blind album, too.

Man, Transformers: The Movie is so much better and more adult than anything Michael Bay put out. Also scary: the way Megatron shoots Ironhide in the head execution-style when the poor Autobot's literally begging for his life.

When it comes to scary Muppets (Miss Finch, "You Do Something To Me," "Hugga Wugga," etc.), it's always in the eyebrows. Always.

Even that Auntie Shrew character is kinda scary. And she's a good guy!

Dragon is scarier!

Nuts, saw that right after I posted. Fixed!

Apologies. I'm a hug Destroyer fan. Fixed!

Fixed!

Yes! Thanks for sharing. Do you know if those graphics come from anything? I guess the safe spaces look kind of like the line next to all the performers in the video.

Yeah, but the issue with Randy is that he keeps going back to Whole Foods. It wasn't like he went once, got accosted with the charity thing, then never went back. It's that old joke of the guy doing to the doctor and saying "It hurts when I do this." The doctor says "Then don't do that."