If you’re a horror fan like me, John Carpenter‘s Halloween is bound to be an iconic entry in your repertoire of annual October scary movie watches. Not only did Halloween kickstart the ’80s slasher frenzy, its also an extremely well-made movie. The bells and whistles, however, are quite simple—and particularly low on gore.
Utilizing suspenseful filmmaking techniques Carpenter made Michael Meyers one of the most terrifying horror icons of all time. Known in the credits as “The Shape”, Michael credited an essence of terror by simply lurking behind bushes and distantly stalking his prey for much of the runtime of Halloween. Because of this reservation, his kills and terror became all the more impactful when he inevitably commits his babysitter murder spree in the third act.
Even more impressive, as explored below, Halloween was so barebones that Carpenter famously simply spray painted a William Shatner mask white, and created his (still iconic) Halloween theme score from a basic bongo rhythm he adapted from to the piano.
All this to say: sometimes, especially in indie filmmaking, simplicity and basic technique go a lot farther than a giant budget. The original Halloween was made for $325,000—an incredibly small amount in the grand scheme of filmmaking.
Below, check out John Carpenter chat about what made him the filmmaker he is today.
John Carpenter on the Art of Horror
Our guy John puts it best: sometimes making a great horror movie is just recreating the things that scared you most.
John Carpenter on the Simplicity of ‘Halloween’
He makes it seem like making one of the greatest horror movies of all time is so easy…
Author: Grant Vance
This article comes from No Film School and can be read on the original site.