If thereโs one thing weโve learned from the damp, flickering basement of the 80s, itโs that you canโt keep a good corporate mascot down. In the world of horror, death isn’t a finale; itโs a temporary inconvenience, a smoke break before the next shift starts. โBy 1988, the slasher genre was having a full-blown identity…
Forget the guy in the spray-painted William Shatner mask. Forget the heavy breathing in the bushes and the repetitive piano tinkling that sounds like a cat walking across a keyboard. In 1982, Tommy Lee Wallace, Debra Hill, and John Carpenter looked at the most successful slasher franchise in history and said, “You know what people…
โForget the modern reboots for a second. Strip away the tangled timelines and the increasingly elaborate explanations for why Michael Myers just wonโt stay dead .If you want to understand the moment early-80s horror changed gear, when the slow tension of the 70s gave way to the bloodier energy of the slasher boom, you have…