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HALLOWEEN
actually had its roots in John Carpenter's previous film, ASSAULT ON PRECINCT
13. Irwin Yablans, an independent film producer, saw it, liked it, and picked it
up to release through his company, Turtle Releasing. ASSAULT was not a hit, so
he took it overseas to the Milan Film Festival. There, Yablans met a an
englishman named Michael Myers, who liked ASSAULT and entered it into film
festivals in Europe.
Later, John
Carpenter and his girlfriend at the time, Debra Hill, visited the London Film
Festival to see a screening of ASSAULT. There, they met financier Moustapha
Akkad, who was looking to get into the mainstream American film market with his
partner, Irwin Yablans.
Yablans saw the
talent in 29-year old John Carpenter. He had an idea brewing in his mind - about
babysitters being stalked by a psychopath. "I was thinking what would make
sense in the horror genre, and what I wanted to do was make a picture that had
the same impact as THE EXORCIST," executive producer Irwin Yablans said in
an interview with Fangoria magazine. He sketched out an idea for for a
movie he called THE BABYSITTER MURDERS. "I was finishing [directing] a TV
movie called SOMEONE'S WATCHING ME! when Yablans called and said, 'Why don't we
set it on Halloween night - in fact, why don't we call it HALLOWEEN?"
Carpenter told Entertainment Weekly.
Financier
Moustapha Akkad was brought in, and he put up the $300,000 budget from money
leftover from another Akkad project, LION OF THE DESERT. "I was unemployed
at the time, so I was thinking $300,000 is a lot of money," Carpenter said.
"We basically shamed Moustapha into it," laughed Yablans. "I toldhim, '$300,000 would probably be too much for you to invest,' knowing he
couldn't back off because of his pride." John Carpenter was payed $10,000
to direct, write, and create music for the film, plus Carpenter would receive
ten percent of the film's profits.
Akkad was a bit
worried, since the film had a tight schedule, low budget, and relatively new
filmmakers at the helm. "Two things made me decide," Akkad told Fangoria
magazine, "One, Carpenter told me the story verbally and in a suspenseful
way, almost frame for frame. Second, he told me he didn't want to take any fees,
and that showed he had confidence in the project."
In addition to
creative control, Carpenter also wanted his girlfriend at the time, Debra Hill,
to produce. Hill told Fangoria, "The idea was that you couldn't kill
evil, and that was how we came about the story. We went back to the old idea of
Samhain, that Halloween was the night where all the souls are let out to wreak
havoc on the living, and then came up with the story about the most evil kid who
ever lived. And when John came up with this fable of a town with a dark secret
of someone who once lived there, and now that evil has come back, that's what
made HALLOWEEN work. We didn't want it to be gory. We wanted it to be like a
jack-in-the box." The town of "Haddonfield" took it's name from
Haddonfield, New Jersey, where Debra Hill was raised. Many of the street names
were taken from Carpenter's hometown of Bowling Green, Kentucky. Laurie Strode
got her name from an old girlfriend of Carpenter's. Hill wrote most of the
"girl" dialogue, while Carpenter came up with Loomis' speeches on the
evil of Michael. "We wrote the whole thing in three weeks. Then we just had
to find the right actors," said Hill. Yablans wanted the script written
like a radio show, with "boos" every 10 minutes. He also instructed
that the audience shouldn't see anything. It should be what they thought they
saw that frightens them.
Casting for the
film was next. "Jamie Lee wasn't the first choice for Laurie. I had no idea
who she was. She was 19 and in a TV show at the time, but I didn't watch
TV," Carpenter explained. His first choice was Annie Lockhart, the daughter
of June Lockhart from LASSIE. "I knew casting Jamie Lee would be great
publicity for the film because her mother was in PSYCHO," Hill said.
During the brief
pre-production time frame, Carpenter's old friend Tommy Lee Wallace (also Nancy
Loomis' boyfriend) joined the crew. His responsibilities included production
designer, art director, location scout, and co-editor. He also was the man
responsible for creating the killer's mask. "The idea was to make him
almost humorless, faceless - this sort of pale visage that could resemble a
human or not," said Hill. "First came a clown mask, which we all
thought was eerie and scary," Wallace told Fangoria. "A clown
mask really shakes you up a bit, so we knew we were on solid footing." Then
came the Kirk mask. Wallace visited Burt Wheeler's Magic Shop on Hollywood
Boulevard. He bought a Captain Kirk mask for $1.98, "widened the eye holes
and spray-painted the flesh a bluish white. In the script it said Michael Myers'
mask had 'the pale features of a human face' and it truly was spooky looking. It
didn't look anything like William Shatner after Tommy got through with it,"
Carpenter recalled. "We bought my entire wardrobe at JC Penney for probably
a hundred bucks," says Jamie Lee Curtis. The cheap and conservative look
helped convey her character's attitude.
HALLOWEEN
was shot in 21 days in the spring of 1978, mostly in South Pasadena California.
Check out the Location
Pictures page and Location
Directions page for
information about the film sites. Pumpkins in March were a problem, as were the
palm trees of sunny California. Fake leaves were raked up and reused due to the
low budget.
Production
started at an old abandoned house (the Myers house), which was owned by a
church. The crew worked out of cinematographer Dean Cundey's Winnebago. The
caterer's truck was featured as the "Phelps Auto Service" truck in one
shot, while Carpenter's old Cadillac showed up in another. "When we needed
kids walking down the street, anyone who had a family rounded up their kids.
Everyone helped out - it was just the joy of making movies," Carpenter
explained
The entire crew
worked together to redecorate the old Myers' house for the last scene shot -
which was the opening scene. Crew members had to move lights as the long opening
shot, reminiscent of TOUCH OF EVIL, was filmed. "John
had planned these elaborate shots. The setup for it really was a lot of
work," Nancy Kyes (who played Annie) recalled. Debra
Hill's hands doubled for young Michael's. "We couldn't afford another kid
to hold the knife later that night, so that's my hand holding the knife that
stabs Michael Myers' sister. I had the littlest hands," Debra Hill
proclaimed.
Carpenter worked
closely with Curtis, creating a "fear meter," since the film was shot
out-of-sequence. "Here's about a 7, here's about a 6, and the scene we're
going to shoot tonight is about a 9 1/2," said Curtis, remembering John
Carpenter's directions.
"We
were like these little kids who they were coming to with $300,000, and we really
wanted to put everything on the screen," said Debra Hill. The film went on
to become one of the highest grossing independent films of all time. A key
success factor was John Carpenter's score, consisting of a haunting piano
melody, a 5-4 time rhythm Carpenter learned from his father. Carpenter stated in
an interview, "I can play just about any keyboard, but I can't read or
write a note." Carpenter used the name "The Bowling Green
Orchestra" and created the horrific soundtrack. He and a few pals on the
crew got together and created a group called "The Coupe Devilles" -
their song can be heard in the background as Laurie gets into Annie's car. Also
helping was composer/orchestrator Dan Wyman, in his arrangement and
"electronic realization" of the Halloween themes. Wyman is currently a
professor at San Jose State University in California, in the electronic music
department. He has an extensive background in creating soundtracks for major
motion pictures including another one of John Carpenter's greats, THE FOG.
HALLOWEEN opened
up slowly, with a platform release. But word of mouth grew, and soon it was a
hit. "Right after HALLOWEEN, I started ELVIS, and I wasn't paying attention
to how HALLOWEEN was doing. Then, around Christmas, people started treating me
nice. All my friends were looking at me like I was keeping some secret, and
studio people wanted to meet with me," said Carpenter. Slowly the critics
came around, too. HALLOWEEN went on to gross $55 million theatrically.
Unfortunately, most of the creative players involved didn't have very good
deals. Nick Castle, who played the Shape, was payed only $25 dollars a day.
Curtis only received $8,000 for her participation, while Pleasence took a flat
$20,000 fee. "After it took off, I did see some of it, though. I can't
remember exactly how much money I made off the film. I do remember getting one
check for over a million dollars - that wasn't bad," Carpenter recalled.
"Over the years, we've seen a lot of money from all the HALLOWEEN
movies," said Hill. "But if I knew then what I know now, I'd be
rolling in it. I really resented it when Irwin Yablans drove up in a yellow
Rolls-Royce and bought a yacht."
"Everyone
had something to prove with HALLOWEEN," said cinematographer Dean Cundey.
"We were all struggling because it was a very hard time to break into
mainstream Hollywood." HALLOWEEN more or less created the slasher film.
Many films since have duplicated the "kill point-of-view" camera
perspective. The film stock used on the film conveyed the colors of fall
perfectly, and filming the movie in Panavision scope format added to it's
horrific feeling. Many critics of the film have brought up the fact that Laurie
(the virginal character) was the only female to survive. Lynda, Annie, and
Judith, who are up to no good with their boyfriends, all fall prey to The Shape.
Debra Hill and John Carpenter both deny any preconceived notion on this theme
appearing in the film. Overall, they wanted to convey the idea that evil can
appear in even the smallest of towns. Although it has been duplicated by many
films, the legacy of HALLOWEEN continues, and it remains a very distinctive
classic.
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