told Horror’s Hallowed Grounds’ Sean Clark on YouTube.“A good thing came out of it, because none of us were prepared for the effect,” he added. “It was an unbelievably terrifying, visceral effect.
And we knew we were in business — that we were gonna have a scary movie even before we got to a scary story.”Shatner, however, was none too pleased when he saw his roughed-up reflection on-screen in Carpenter’s masterpiece.“I thought, ‘Is that a joke?
Are they kidding?’,” the 93-year-old “Star Trek” actor said on his YouTube Channel.Watching 1981’s “Halloween II,” at first glance it appears that Myers’ mask got an artistic revamp.
But it’s actually the same piece used in the original, only with some wear and tear.Legend has it that producer Debra Hill stored the object in a shoebox beneath her bed in the years between productions.
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