Heres an interesting question

Do you think that Michael really does love Halloween or that it is just the day he chooses to kill on or both?. Tell me what you think :thinking:

Halloween serves as Michael Myers’s prime hunting ground because it provides the perfect cover for his sinister actions. Amid the sea of frightening masks, blood-splattered costumes, and people brandishing fake weapons, he seamlessly blends into the chaos, making it nearly impossible for anyone to realize the actual threat lurking among them. This eerie camouflage allows him to strike fear into the hearts of unsuspecting victims while remaining obscured in the festive revelry. :jack_o_lantern::hocho:

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If we ditch the Thorn Trilogy reasoning, yeah like said before me; this is a day where everyone has their guard down.

It really shows in H40 where Michael freely roam around in the streets and go kill everybody while walking from house to house in plain sight!

The thing with the shape is that he could be anyone. This works even more on Halloween because anyone could be walking around with a mask while the other days you tend to be more suspicious of this!

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Exactly nobody notices him in a crowd even though he’s 6 foot 3 the guy’s incredibly sneaky.

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I firmly believe that when we revisit the classic Halloween films, particularly the original parts 1 and 2, we must acknowledge that Michael Myers embodies something far beyond mere mortality. He is a haunting figure, a relentless specter whose existence is intertwined with a malevolent force. This tangible evil seems to flow through him like a dark, unyielding current. Myers is not just a man; he is an unstoppable boogeyman, an embodiment of supernatural power that strikes fear into the hearts of those who encounter him. His presence alone evokes a chilling sense of dread, reminding us that the laws of our world do not bind some horrors. It’s utterly unimaginable that an ordinary person could endure the sheer brutality of the devastation that he faces, getting shot center mass multiple times by Loomis-He immediately falls off a second-story balcony, crashing to the ground, and continues to flee and bleed out like a half-butchered pig. In H2, on the same night, he busts through those thick double-paned hospital glass doors, gets shot again in the vitals by the Marshall, gets shot into the eyes by Laurie, and then gets choked out by a mix of gases, following the final moments of the explosion, which sets him on fire, and he staggers afterwards; undoubtedly the chilling manifestation of a malevolent, otherworldly entity, consumed by dark forces. The Thorn trilogy merely revealed this concept from a fresh angle, yet it had been woven into the fabric of the narrative from the very beginning. I absolutely love the Thorn trilogy and all the other films in the franchise, however they simply can’t compare to the original concepts of Halloween 1 and Halloween 2. Those classics set the standard for horror.

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I never used to watch these films at all but then getting into (for the most part) the lore of who he is…it’s a great modern halloween myth…the faceless embodiment of worst fear.

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Michael Myers is the ultimate embodiment of terror, a chilling figure steeped in pure malevolence. With eyes as dark and fathomless as the abyss, he captivates all who dare to meet his gaze, reminiscent of an ancient demon’s unsettling stare. Drawn irresistibly to the ominous mask, he feels a powerful force surging within him, igniting a primal instinct that transforms him into an indomitable predator. A relentless killing machine emerges, driven by an insatiable thirst for destruction that promises nothing short of spine-tingling horror. The thrill of evil incarnate lurks in every shadow he casts!

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