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Halloween: Resurrection

Threat advisory: Guarded - General risk of entertaining activities

Movie propaganda

Evil finds its way home.

Three years have passed since the demise of serial killer Michael Myers (Brad Loree), decapitated at the hands of his sister Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis). As Halloween approaches and the people of Haddonfield prepare to celebrate another peaceful Halloween, news quickly spreads that the body of Laurie Strode has been found butchered in Northern California. Tension mounts as speculation that Michael Myers still lives smothers the impending festivities while a sense of paranoia and fear once more grip the town where its rumoured that somewhere in Haddonfield, someone is protecting the last of Michael's bloodline and they must be found before Michael once again slaughters the innocent in his quest to kill this, the final member of his family. But Laurie Strode killed Michael Myers, or did she?

Persons of interest

Cinematic intelligence sources

Intelligence analyst

Special Agent Matti

Theatrical report

Horror for the digital age. Or, at least, the reality TV age, which is a horror all by itself. What comes to pass is that which everyone wanted to everyone in the Big Brother house (or on the Survivor island, etc.): murder and mayhem. Of course, the baddy is indestructible, which makes it harder and harder to believe what's happening the more indestructible he shows himself to be. The now-obligatory "he's not really dead" scene at the end got more laughs than it die screams. Actually, it got no screams and only laughs. That's a sad thing to have to say about a (supposedly) scary movie.

Like Alien: Resurrection, Halloween: Resurrection starts with a dodgy rewrite of history and doesn't look back. You have to be very forgiving - or one of those squealing teenage girls - to get a proper scare out of it, but there are some really funny bits, especially the 18-year-old boy virgin saving the 20-year-old heroine by means of an internet chatroom.

It's your choice.

Media intelligence (DVD)

Security censorship classification

MA 15+ (Medium level violence)

Surveillance time

85 minutes (1:25 hours)

Not for public release in Australia before date

Film: 28 November 2002
DVD rental: 9 April 2003
VHS rental: 9 April 2003

Surveillance images and posters

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