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So, throughout multiple timeline changes and decades of filmmaking, which entry has come the closest to recapturing the magic of the 1978 classic? Let’s find out.
13) Halloween: Resurrection

None of the next five entries are really worth watching, but Halloween: Resurrection is still the worst. And, while Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers gives it a run for its “massive step down” money, Resurrection still holds that title.
Halloween H20: 20 Years Later was a perfectly effective post-Scream franchise revival, but Resurrection then threw away all the goodwill those 90 minutes built in about five. This is the movie that killed off Laurie Strode, and it did it as though she were never that important (and capable of making some very silly decisions). Then the rest is uninventive kills, a lame reality TV plot, and Busta Rhymes watching martial arts movies.
Stream Halloween: Resurrection on HBO Max.
12) Halloween (2007)

There are essentially two halves of Rob Zombie’s Halloween, and neither of them work. The first half is an origin story rife with abusive family members and child-on-child murder. The second half is an extremely violent rehash of the far more subtle and effective first film.
Halloween isn’t entirely devoid of merit. Michael’s mask is solid, Scout Taylor-Compton was a good choice to play Laurie Strode, and it was great to see Danielle Harris in the franchise once more, but that’s about it. The rest is loaded with unpleasant, brutal scenes and grating dialogue.
Stream Halloween (2007) for free with ads on The Roku Channel.
11) Halloween Ends

One can’t blame David Gordon Green and crew for trying something different, but Halloween Ends really does send out the trilogy started by Halloween (2018) out on a down note. This is one perpetually uncomfortable film.
The key problem is no secret: this is the Michael Myers movie that doesn’t have Michael Myers as its primary killer. Instead, it’s a 20-something young man who has been repeatedly bullied and goes on a bloody, vengeful spree. It’s a little too close to reality in the current state of United States life. It’s neat they had Laurie Strode kill of Myers once and for all, but it’s a bummer of a journey getting there.
Stream Halloween Ends on Peacock.
10) Halloween II (2009)

Like Halloween Ends and Rob Zombie’s first Michael Myers movie, Halloween II is ultra-violent to an extent that does not make for easy viewing. Zombie has never made an attempt to be subtle in his filmmaking, and Halloween II is arguably him at his most unrelenting brutal.
So why is Halloween II ranked above Halloween? It’s an overall tighter experience and there’s something to be said about Zombie’s efforts to alter the character of Laurie Strode to a fairly significant degree. It also gives Malcolm McDowell’s mean-spirited Dr. Loomis (a fault of the writing, not the actor) the send-off he deserved.
Stream Halloween II (2009) on fuboTV.
9) Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers

Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers exists in a very strange nebulous. It was dead center of a modernization for the franchise, making it feel disconnected from the fourth and fifth installments (whose plot points it continues) and the subsequent Halloween H20: 20 Years Later.
At the very least, Curse does some things right. It captures the feel of Fall so integral to the franchise, there are as many memorable performances as there are awful ones, and if you’re watching the Producer’s Cut it gives Dr. Loomis an interesting hard left turn of a franchise exit.
Stream Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers on HBO Max.
8) Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers

Man, what a step down from Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers. Halloween 4 is loaded with memorable set pieces and two fantastic lead performances by Ellie Cornell and Danielle Harris, who do a dynamite job of selling the dynamic between Rachel Carruthers and Jamie Lloyd.
Then, Halloween 5 steps in, makes nary a mention of its predecessor’s excellent ending, kills off Rachel in the first act, and makes you Harris perform Jamie as silent and traumatized for 80% of the movie. But perhaps those aren’t Revenge‘s biggest crimes, as there isn’t one scene that is truly memorable, much less up to the par of Return.
Stream Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers on AMC+.
7) Halloween Kills

We’re back in unpleasant Halloween territory with Halloween Kills. In fact, this may very well be the most blood-soaked installment of the franchise. But if the film really commits one sin, it’s giving the audience too much of what it has historically wanted, which is more overwhelming than a true fault.
Without a doubt this is a less streamlined cinematic experience than that of its predecessor’s, but it does continue to capture the spirit of Halloween when it was at its peak. And, as far as opening kills go, Michael’s dispatching of what amounts to an entire fire department really does set the stage for how this movie won’t pull a single punch.














