For over 40 years, the Halloween franchise has been associated with one character and one mask. It’s Michael Myers and his blank white face. (He also appears in standalone Halloween III: Season of the Witch “Hehehehe. Do you get it?” commercials on television.) Famous for taking William Shatner’s Star Trek mask and reimagining it to offer even more mindless evil, this mask is the infamous Jason Voorhees when it comes to embodying the entire slasher genre. It’s the same as a hockey mask.
However, not all masks are created equal. As the Halloween series progressed, the various redesigns have resulted in certain ups and downs. If you’re the type of person who cares deeply (the right type of person), you’ll notice that each gives Michael a distinctly different vibe. .
Halloween (1978): Classic
The romantic ideal of Michael Myers’ mask is largely because the film’s director, John Carpenter, knows exactly where the shadow should be. The cheekbones are slightly underlined in dark close-ups, so it doesn’t look like Myers is wearing a mayonnaise container on his head, and we rarely see Michael’s actual eyes, and the inhuman look of “The Shape.” Combine that with a slight tousle in his hair and you have a Grade A maniac mask that completely shuns the audience from any kind of human connection or empathy.
Halloween II (1981): Dye Job
mask inside Halloween II It’s not that different from the first, but there is one important difference. The hair is given a brownish touch and can appear reddish or blonde depending on the light. It’s also much more slicked back here, with Michael already looking like he’s wearing a wig and reliving his glory days three years ago. Halloween II It’s a franchise working overtime to keep up with the wave of slashers that inspired it, and it feels like a rushed product.
Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers (1988): Bland
Story-wise, the fact that Myers would get masks that bear little resemblance to his original in the sequel set ten years later makes sense. It has changed owners several times, probably during the Reagan era in the 80’s. The mask was stripped of all cool details, giving it a look that “had panicked just before trick-or-treating, and he bought it at the CVS pharmacy at 6:04 p.m. on Oct. 31.” It’s a shame it looks so cheap and corny in every shot. Otherwise, return It’s a great Halloween movie with a lot of atmosphere.
Halloween 5: Revenge of Michael Myers (1989): Bottom of the Barrel
It’s a debate that has raged for centuries, at least since the ’90s. Which mask is worse, the 1988 or he 1989? returnhas, to an ironic degree, lost its threatening function, revenge There are functions, but they are all wrong. The neck is so big that the rubber just flaps around the stuntman’s throat. On the other hand, the nose is too thin, and when mixed with dirty hair, it gives a real Timothée Chalamet vibe.
Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995): Goofball
After a six-year hiatus, the Halloween franchise returns with a mask that’s slightly better than those of the previous two installments. It does not mean that Instead, it’s the puppy-like innocence that Michael Myers always seems to have trouble with with his trivia questions. The confusion makes sense, though — at this point in the franchise, Halloween lore has spiraled out of control, losing its original intent of a faceless, inexplicable evil, instead making Myers a Celtic-themed character. Transformed into the incest bull of the doomsday cult.
Halloween H20 (1998): Mixed Bag
Returning the franchise to its roots, ignoring the past four sequels, and reintroducing Jamie Lee Curtis’ Laurie Strode character to the series has made for an arguably polished experience. As long as you wear a mask.Multiple masks are used throughout H20, including CGI stuff. But if you have to grade it with the main Myers his mask, the mask that appears in the iconic scene where the dreaded Laurie comes face-to-face with Michael through a small window, the results get pretty uneven. The details of the mask are there, but without Carpenter’s shadow (his wide eyes can always be seen clearly doesn’t do Michael’s mystique any favors) and with the onion-tufted hair, the result is: There are very few.
Halloween Resurrection (2002): Wicked Ones
Perhaps the most infamous film in the series, halloween resurrection It kills off Laurie Strode in the opening sequence and introduces Busta Rhymes as a big-shot reality TV producer. In short, it’s an odd watch. That said, as long as you want Michael to look very visibly evil, the mask used isn’t too bad. looks really grumpy. Now writing the seventh installment, the old man will have to put up with his fickle, horny teen who wants stardom in his childhood home.
Halloween (2007): Scarred Model
Director Rob Zombie layers dirt and scratches on his Myers mask as he reinvents Michael Myers for his mid-twenties horror remake arms race. This is the result of him being left under floorboards for 15 years, which isn’t too bad. At least it seems to be the product of an actual artist and not the spirit of his desperate dash to Halloween. Even in the film’s first act, we get to see a faithful replica of the original, a brief nod to fans of the series before Zombie goes and does what he wants.
Halloween II (2009): Beard
With even more scars and actor Tyler Maine’s large beard sticking out of his neck, Rob Zombie’s mask for Go Round’s second in the series is either a farce or an artist’s departure from the original material. Zombies break free when one of Myers’ victims scratches about a third of his mask off, leaving Myers with one eye and one under his mask. Visually, it looks pretty flashy, especially when the masked eyes are immersed in darkness, and a great balance whenever Zombie decides to let Michael walk around without a mask and enjoy the autumn breeze. is.
Halloween (2018): The Old Man
The mask of the first direct sequel, like Zombie’s weathered approach Halloween is also old. But this time we are offered a few more wrinkles and a ton of dust. So this mask, like Michael, is trapped to be forgotten. works, and unlike Michael’s final (now non-canonical) family reunion with Laurie Strode, he hides his eyes and prevents his facial expressions from penetrating.
Halloween Kill (2021) and Halloween End (2022): Two Face
Thanks to a fire at the end of the 2018 film, Michael’s mask halloween kills (and future halloween ends) Has Harvey Dent style burn marks on one side. It looks pretty cool in the dark—a tiny piece of charred rubber sticking out from the side adds a clever complication to his 11th design in the series. Meanwhile, in plain sight, you can still recognize it’s Michael. And as the series has proven over the years, it’s really all you could ask for.