HALLOWEEN: RESURRECTION, 2002.Photo:Maximum Film/ Alamy
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Halloweenis considered one of themost influential horror filmsof all time, and the movie’s filmmakers, John Carpenter and Debra Hill, based the story on real-life experiences.
“The idea was you couldn’t kill evil,” she toldTheGuardianin 2002. “We went back to the old idea of Samhain, that Halloween was the night when all the souls are let out to wreak havoc on the living, then came up with the story about the most evil kid who ever lived.”
When it came to details, Hill drew upon her background to create the film’s fictional town, while Carpenter took inspiration from a boy he met in college to create the character of Myers.
Here is everything to know about the real stories that inspiredHalloween.
Tony Moran in ‘Halloween’.Fotos International/Courtesy of Getty
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Michael Myers was named after a real person that Carpenter and Hill both knew.
As Hill explained in the 2003 documentaryHalloween: A Cut Above the Rest, the real-life Myers was the distributor for the filmmakers’Assault on Precinct 13. “Michael Myers pushed it into the London film festival … I felt I owed him, so that was my tribute,” Carpenter said in the documentary.
When it came to Myers’ persona, the screenwriter said he drew inspiration from several sources, including a patient he met while visiting a psychiatric hospital as a student at Western Kentucky University.
“We visited the most serious … patients,” Carpenter said inHalloween: A Cut Above. “There was this kid, he must have been 12 or 13 and he literally had this look … It’s a really evil stare. And it was unsettling to me. And it was like, the creepiest thing I’d ever seen.”
Carpenter described the look further through the character of Sam Loomis (Donald Pleasence), who says in the first film, “I met this 6-year-old child with this blank, pale emotionless face. The blackest eyes. The devil’s eyes. I spent eight years trying to reach him and then another seven trying to keep him locked up, because I realized what was living behind that boy’s eyes was purely and simply evil.”
As for Myers’ inhuman strength, Carpenter said his resilience was intentional and reminiscent ofWestworld’s Yul Brynner, who plays a killer robot that’s incapable of destruction.
“I thought it might be a good idea to raise this Michael Myers character up to a mythic status,” the producer said in the documentary. “Make him human, yes, but almost like a force … a force that will never stop. That can’t be denied.”
Carpenter toldDeadlinein 2014: “[Michael Myers] is part person, part supernatural force.”
Donald L. Shanks in ‘Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers’.Magnum/Kobal/Shutterstock
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According to Carpenter, production designer Tommy Lee Wallace found the accessory at a mask shop on Hollywood Boulevard. “There were two options – one was a clown mask, which was a better mask,” he toldDeadlinein 2014.
Wallace revealed in the 2003 documentaryHalloween: A Cut Above the Restthat the Captain Kirk mask “didn’t really look like anybody” despite its branding, making it better suited to the filmmakers' preference for something “pale” and “featureless” — characteristics Carpenter said he found in the 1960 French filmEyes Without a Face.
“This girl had a burned face so she wore this face mask, and it was [really] creepy because it was featureless and immobile, except for her eyes,” he explained.
Wallace ultimately cut the eyeholes of the Shatner mask to be larger, tore off the eyebrows, poufed out the hair “so it looked demented and strange” and removed the sideburns. He also spray-painted the mask white, transforming it into Michael Myers’ face.
Jamie Lee Curtis in ‘Halloween’.Mary Evans/COMPASS INTERNATIONAL PICTURES/FALCON INTERNATIONAL PRODUC/Ronald Grant/Everett
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Mary Evans/COMPASS INTERNATIONAL PICTURES/FALCON INTERNATIONAL PRODUC/Ronald Grant/Everett
Like Michael Myers, Laurie Strode’s name likely came from a real-life person.Business Insiderreported in 2021 that Carpenter named the film’s heroine after an ex-girlfriend.
Like Strode, Hill also grew up in a small town —Halloween’s fictional setting of Haddonfield, Ill., was modeled after Hill’s hometown borough of Haddonfield, N.J. “I really had a sense of what a small town was like,” Hill said in the documentary.
James Jude Courtney in ‘Halloween Kills’.Ryan Green/Universal Pictures/THA/Shutterstock
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Carpenter said that Myers’ home in the film was based on small-town folklore. “Most small towns have a kind of haunted house story of one kind or another, at least that’s what teenagers believe: There’s always a house down the lane that somebody was killed in,” he said inA Cut Above the Rest.
The exterior of the home where Myers lived is a real place, though it’s not in the Midwest, but in South Pasadena, Calif. “That’s where the old house is, that the kids are out in front of that’s where we pull back … It’s right off of Sunset Boulevard,” Carpenter confirmed in the film’s documentary.
A general view of the atmosphere at the Michael Myers House, the filming location for the John Carpenter 1978 Classic Horror Film on November 4, 2020 in South Pasadena, California, USA.Barry King/Alamy
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The South Pasadena home whereHalloweenwas filmed still exists today, albeit in a different location.
According to Florida- and Georgia-based realty companyWatson Realty Corp, the home was relocated from its 707 Meridian Avenue address to 1000 Mission Street in 1987 to make way for a hospital.
While the home was saved from being bulldozed, the company reports that it was converted from a private residence into office spaces in the process and does not allow visitors to come inside.
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As Carpenter explained inA Cut Above, the character was never meant to have such a definitive narrative.
“This guy is a human but he’s not, he’s more than that,” he said. “He’s not exactly supernatural, but maybe he is — who knows how he got that way. It makes the [original] ending more surprising.”
source: people.com