As a long-term horror fan I know better than to trust a studio when it claims a film is the final outing for one of their iconic boogeymen.
But even if it’s inevitable that we’ll see Michael Myers on screen again, this is definitively the closing chapter of David Gordon Green’s trilogy.
And that’s one of the things that makes Halloween Ends so disappointing; it doesn’t feel like the final part of the story that began with 2018’s Halloween - and veers off into wildly different directions from that opening instalment.
The Lanarkshire Live app is available to download now. Get all the news from your area – as well as features, entertainment, sport and the latest on Lanarkshire’s recovery from the coronavirus pandemic – straight to your fingertips, 24/7.The free download features the latest breaking news and exclusive stories, and allows you to customise your page to the sections that matter most to you.Head to the App Store and never miss a beat in Lanarkshire - iOS - Android The decision, apparently brought on by COVID delays to the production, to set Ends four years after predecessor Halloween Kills was a strange one which only gives us questions like where Michael has been all this time that Green and his co-writers didn’t need to back themselves into a corner with.
Read more on dailyrecord.co.uk