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Those are the ones that follow. They’re not golden eggs in Carpenter’s oeuvre, but they’re not lumps of coal, either.
1) Ghosts of Mars

A flawed but underrated action-horror movie, Ghosts of Mars unsurprisingly bombed hard when released during 2001’s summer movie season. It was always going to be niche, and its over-stylization and surprisingly cheap production values (at $28 million in 2001, it didn’t have a microscopic budget) were bound to kill repeat business.
And, admittedly, it’s perfectly understandable why Carpenter fans saw it as arguably his worst film. But time has been fairly kind to Ghosts of Mars. It’s not fully trying to be scary, it’s more trying to be fun, and once you get past how much of a drop it is from his Halloween and The Fog days, it succeeds in being that. For all intents and purposes, this is Carpenter’s swan song (in no way does The Ward feel like his), and it was an interesting final project to tackle.
Stream Ghosts of Mars for free with ads on The Roku Channel.
2) Village of the Damned

Like the next entry on this list, Carpenter’s Village of the Damned remake is an excellent example of the primary issue with the director’s latter half filmography. Specifically, many of the films start out very well but then proceed to gradually lose their way.
But unlike a few other examples, Village of the Damned opens phenomenally, then merely dips down to average. It’s also Christopher Reeve’s theatrical film swan song, and that alone gives it a considerable cultural curiosity factor (though the less said about Kirstie Alley’s performance, the better).
Rent Village of the Damned on Amazon Video.











