‘Halloween’ Trailer: Jamie Lee Curtis Faces Her Fate, And The Return Of Michael Myers [Updated]
Update:Anothernew trailer with a ton of new footage has arrived and you can now watch it below.
TheHalloweenhype is already through the roof, and you probably don’t need to be sold on it anymore. But just in case you do, here’s an exciting new trailer ahead of the film’s upcoming TIFF premiere.Jamie Lee Curtisis back as final girl Laurie Strode, who is about to come face-to-face with Michael Myers one final time. Watch theHalloweentrailer below.

Halloween Trailer
Could this really be happening? Are we about to receive our first greatHalloweensequel in years? It certainly looks that way, based on this trailer and the trailer before it.David Gordon Greenhas teamed with Blumhouse to help bring Michael Myers back from the dead, and by all accounts, the results are going to be very rewarding.
Update:The Brazilian trailer forHalloweenincludes a ton of additional footage. Some would even saytoo muchfootage. Consider this a spoiler warning before you click play.
Brazilian Halloween Trailer
Green and co-writersJeff FradleyandDanny McBridehave crafted a new legacy for the franchise, ignoring virtually every film save the original 1978Halloween. As a result, this new film is both a reboot and a sequel, continuing the story that concluded with Carpenter’s film, with a whole new set of rules. Laurie Strode, the survivor of Michael Myers' brutal Halloween-night rampage, now lives in seclusion. She’s spent the last 40 years preparing herself, convinced that one day, Michael would return. And it turns out she’s right. Michael, who has been locked away in a mental asylum all these years, busts his way out, and heads back to Haddonfield.
I’m a bigHalloweenfranchise fan – the first film is a masterpiece, and almost all of the sequels have their charms (save the abysmalHalloween: Resurrection). I had long reserved myself to believing that we’d never get a genuinely goodHalloweenmovie again (I don’t care for the Rob Zombie films; don’t @ me). But everything I’ve seen and heard about this new film has been very promising. Green and McBride actually pitched their idea for the film to John Carpenter, and made sure the filmmaker signed-off on the project. In addition to that, Carpenter to returned to help compose the score for the newHalloween. And the prospect of seeing Laurie Strode face-off against Michael Myers one final time is too exciting to pass-up. In short, I can’t wait for this movie.
Halloweenwill have its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on Saturday, September 8, and I’ll be there. Look for my review! After that, the film will play at Fantastic Fest, before openingOctober 19, 2018.