Halloween II: More of the Night He Came Home!
Halloween III: Season of the Witch
Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers
Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers
Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later
Halloween Resurrection
Halloween: Evil Has a Destiny
Halloween II: Family is Forever
There is another sequel coming out for the Rob Zombie rebooted series scheduled for October 26, 2012. However, this film will not be directed by Rob Zombie.
Here are 8; Hellraiser, Hellbound, Hell on Earth, Bloodline, Inferno, Hellseeker, Deader, and Hellworld.
And the original Hellraiser is due to be remade and released to theatres in 2010.
Including Halloween 3: Season of the Witch, which has absolutely nothing to do with Michael Myers. The Halloween movie servies has 10 movies in total.
That also includes the two remakes of Halloween and Halloween 2.
Seven sequels from the original 1978 film, and one sequel to the 2007 remake with another sequel coming in 2018 which will pick up where the first movie left off.
There have already been far too many; it's impossible to know when they will finally bleed this franchise completely dry.
10 or 11
He doesn't kill his father in the original series, and in the remakes of the films by Rob Zombie, Michael slices the throat of his mother's alcoholic and verbally abusive boyfriend in the beginning of the first film. Nothing is said of a real father for him in this series, but I suppose you are to assume that he was the product of either a one night stand or a failed relationship and the real dad bailed. He may have been the one to pass the insanity to Michael to begin with, and then later to Lorie assuming that it was the same father.
Halloween III Season of the Witch
In the 1978 film there is no connection between them, he just takes a bit of a sick shine to her when she drops the keys off at his old house, Halloween II is when her being his little sister is first revealed.
The franchise has a total of ten installments so far:Halloween (1978)Halloween II (1981)Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers (1988)Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (1989)Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995)Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later (1998)Halloween: Resurrection (2002)Halloween (2007) (reboot of franchise)Halloween II (2009) (sequel to reboot)Malek Akkad, Trancas International Films, and The Weinstein Company are currently under the stages of production with an eleventh installment, Halloween III (2012). They will end the films on the franchise's thirty-first installment. That's what Moustapha Akkad was going for.
John Carpenter (who was the original owner of the Halloween franchise at the time) wanted to turn the Halloween franchise into an anthology. He wanted to make it a series of stand-alone Halloween-seasoned films. Each one with it's own unique characters, setting, and storyline. So it would be like this: Halloween (1978) and Halloween II (1981) were about Michael Myers, an insane criminal who escaped from a insane asylum and goes on a bloody rampage through Haddonfield, Illinios on Halloween night. Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982) was about a toymaker who wanted to sacrifice everyone in the world to the pagan sun-god Nuada through Halloween-masks and a television commercial on Halloween night (for those you who still think that Cochran did it for no apparent reason). And future Halloween films would've told other stories that took place on Halloween night. Fans of the first two Halloween films were confused by the title and lack of reference to the previous films and as a result the box office suffered and this idea was quickly dropped. And for some it wasn't that Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982) had nothing to do with the first two films, but the story the producers decided to tell, the fans wanted to something very different from the film, something more traditional. Several years later the idea was brought up to bring back the Michael Myers storyline in Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers (1988) officially resurrected the storyline and characters of the original.
Some widely appraised horror films include the Halloween saga, the Saw series and classics like American Psycho. Other films that have garnered praise include the Jason series, the Scream franchise and modern remakes of old classics such as The Hills have Eyes, Carrie and House of Wax.
As far as I know there have been approx 30 carry on films (not including tv series) And there are 22 James Bond films (including the new "Quantum Of Solace" movie.) hope this helps
Lord of the rings. period.
A list of his filmography is below. I am not sure which ones are remakes.
Halloween
He doesn't kill his father in the original series, and in the remakes of the films by Rob Zombie, Michael slices the throat of his mother's alcoholic and verbally abusive boyfriend in the beginning of the first film. Nothing is said of a real father for him in this series, but I suppose you are to assume that he was the product of either a one night stand or a failed relationship and the real dad bailed. He may have been the one to pass the insanity to Michael to begin with, and then later to Lorie assuming that it was the same father.
No.
Hamlet (movie remake) Shakesphere in love Romeo and Juliet (movie remakes)
Probably not, anything from this point on will either be a follow on from Rob's two films or it will be completely new, the old series is dead in the water at this point.
NFL Films Presents - 1967 Happy Halloween was released on: USA: 29 October 2012
Halloween III Season of the Witch
The franchise has ten installments so far:Halloween (1978)Halloween II (1981)Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)Halloween IV: The Return of Michael Myers (1988)Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (1989)Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995)Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later (1998)Halloween: Resurrection (2002)Halloween (2007) (reboot of franchise)Halloween II (2009) (sequel to reboot)Malek Akkad, Trancas International Films, and The Weinstein Company is currently in production with an eleventh installment, Halloween III (2011). They will end the films on the franchise's twenty-second installment. That's what Moustapha Akkad was aiming for.