Highlights

  • Despite Michael Myers meeting a definitive death in Halloween Ends, director John Carpenter believes there are plenty of ways to bring the iconic slasher back.
  • The recent Halloween trilogy helmed by David Gordon Green has faced criticism for its artistic choices, including the decision to make Michael Myers befriended by a loner.
  • Green's failure to impress with his Exorcist reboot suggests that another director may soon take over the Halloween franchise and resurrect Myers once again.

Legendary horror director John Carpenter knows about Michael Myers' fate in Halloween Ends but remains unconvinced that the iconic slasher is gone for good.

The filmmaker behind such classics as Escape From New York and Big Trouble, Little China, Carpenter also happens to be the mind behind the film that dawned the era of the slasher film. The original Halloween premiered in 1978, catapulting the career of Jamie Lee Curtis as a scream queen and becoming one of the most influential horror franchises of all time. Carpenter has since divorced himself from the Halloween films, preferring to let other directors take the wheel.

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One such director was David Gordon Green, who created the most recent and divisive trilogy. Michael Myers meets a seemingly definitive death in Halloween Ends, but that doesn’t mean he’s gone for good. “Don't you believe it yet. Don't you believe it yet,” Carpenter told ComicBook.com of Halloween Ends. “There's all sorts of ways of bringing Michael Myers back. There's all sorts of ways of telling that particular story. We'll just have to wait and see.”

Image of John Carpenter in front of black and white stills of They Live and The Thing.

In the past 40 years of the franchise, not every Halloween film has been a winner. But Green's trilogy has been criticized for its artistic choices, especially in the most recent film, where loner Corey (Rohan Campbell) makes friends with the masked serial killer. This all culminates in the final moments when Michael Myers' obsession with Laurie (Curtis) ends. After a showdown in her kitchen, Laurie makes sure nothing remains of her tormenter and the entire town puts him through a metal shredder.

While it may seem difficult to return from that, Carpenter has a point. Michael Myers is the infamous character that always gets back up. And no one forgets his seeming demise in Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later when Laurie decapitates him. As Carpenter says, there is always a way to bring Michael back, especially when it is time to reboot the franchise again. The newest trilogy seemed promising but was a critical miss for many.

This failure was exacerbated by Green's follow-up of rebooting another beloved franchise: The Exorcist. As with Halloween, Green revitalized the franchise by making The Exorcist: Believer a straight sequel to the original film. But critics and fans alike were less than impressed. Arguably even more rejected than his Halloween trilogy, Green may be on his way to making a name for himself by ruining classic horror films. With this in mind, it may be no time before Hollywood decides it is time for Michael Myers to rise from the grave and give the Halloween trilogy to the hands of another director.

Halloween Ends is streaming on Amazon Prime.

MORE: Halloween Ends: The Benefits Of Switching Up A Franchise

Source: ComicBook.com