Halloween Kills doesn’t hide the ball (or the knife); the main attraction is right there in the title, and it never gets much deeper than that.
The film picks up right where 2018’s Halloween left off: with Michael Myers trapped in a burning basement and three generations of Strode women riding into their own version of a sunset in the back of a pickup. However, surprise surprise, Michael escapes, tearing (literally) through a squad of first responders in the process. As Michael carves a path of terror and death toward his childhood home, Haddonfield residents, including survivors from Michael’s first rampage 40 years ago, decide enough is enough and try to fight back.
For the rest of the review, click here and head over to the Martin City Telegraph.