Halloween Kills: Ending Explained What Happened To Laurie And Michael Myers In The Film?
Haddonfield Strikes Back? Allyson Joins The Fight? The Night I Come Home
Halloween Kills the second installment of the reboot directed by David Gordon Green, is already a reality in various cinemas around the world, as well as being available on the Peacock streaming platform (only in the United States). This return of Michael Myers has left many fans delighted thanks to the fact that the essence that John Carpenter once raised in the 70s is maintained. In that sense, below, we explain what happened at the end of the horror movie with Jamie Lee Curtis.
What is Halloween Kills About?
Minutes after Laurie Strode (Lee Curtis), her daughter Karen (Judy Greer) and her granddaughter Allyson (Andi Matichak) leave Michael Myers caged and burning in Laurie’s basement, Laurie is taken to the hospital with endangering injuries. his life, with the idea that he has finally killed his longtime tormentor. However, when Michael manages to free himself from the Strode matriarch’s trap, the monster resumes its killing ritual. As the woman fights her pain and prepares to defend herself against it, she inspires all of Haddonfield to rise up against their unstoppable foe. The Strode women join a group of survivors of Michael’s first massacre who decide to take action, so a mob of vigilantes is formed that sets out to hunt down Myers once and for all.
Halloween Kills Ending Explained What Happened At The End?
Even though Allyson, Lonnie, and Cameron are armed and ready when they enter Myers’ house, it is all to no avail. It doesn’t take long for Michael to dominate the trio, and Lonnie dies off-screen. For his part, Cameron receives a brutal beating before his neck is broken, while Allyson almost dies (saved by her mother, Karen, who stabs ‘the thing’ with a kind of ax and removes her mask). After a sequence of events, the villagers begin beating Michael with baseball bats and other blunt tools. He ends up on the ground and Karen stabs him once in the back with her own knife. Satisfied at having killed the fearsome killer, the woman returns to the old Myers home to comfort her daughter}
As the rest of the neighborhood continues their revenge, Leigh Brackett is about to shoot him, but Michael leaps up, grabbing the knife from his back and slitting Brackett’s throat. Then he turns around and begins to execute everyone around him. Halloween Kills ends with the hint that Laurie is somehow aware that her daughter Karen is being murdered, something that does indeed come to fruition, as the woman discovers that the lurid figure of masked evil is right behind her to stab her to her death. imminent death.
Haddonfield Strikes Back?
As Laurie is rushed to the hospital, we head to a local Haddonfield bar full of residents who are still unaware of what happened at Strode’s farm. During a memorial ceremony, we are introduced to three characters originating from the 1978 film: Lindsey Wallace (played by Kyle Richards), Marion Chambers (played by Nancy Stephens), and Tommy Doyle (Anthony Michael Hall). For those who don’t know, Marion survived an attack when Michael first escaped from Smith’s Grove Sanitarium (she was the nurse who was driving Dr. Loomis), and Lindsey and Tommy were the two children Laurie cared for on the night of Halloween.
Tommy takes the stage and tells the traumatic story of his encounter with Michael Myers. It is evident that he also suffers from PTSD, so when news breaks that Laurie was attacked at her compound and photos of a crashed Smith’s Grove sanitarium bus flash on the television screen, this immediately hits him. active to enter full watchful mode. Armed with a bartender-supplied bat, he quickly wakes up a mob of lynchmen, who have decided they will take the law into their own hands and hunt down Michael themselves.
Allyson Joins The Fight?
Meanwhile, back at the hospital, we are reintroduced to former city sheriff Brackett (repeated by Charles Cyphers), who now works as a hospital security officer. In the original film, he was also the father of Laurie’s best friend, Annie (Nancy Kyes), who yelled, “Hey, idiot! Speed kills!”. She was also one of Michael’s victims, just like Tommy and the rest of the mob of enraged lynchmen, Brackett wants some good, old-fashioned (and long overdue) revenge.
While Laurie is sedated and recovering in the hospital (she’s off duty for most of the movie), Karen and Allyson learn that Michael is still at large. When Allyson learns that her boyfriend Cameron (Dylan Arnold) and her father Lonnie (Robert Longstreet) are joining the search for Myers, she signs up, against her mother’s wishes. After all, Michael killed his father in the previous movie, so as you can see, everyone wants to be in on the action. Fun Fact: Lonnie is a lesser-known character who was only seen briefly in the 1978 original. He was the kid who dared to walk into Myers’ house when Loomis creepily whispered “Lonnie, get your ass out of there!”
The Night I Come Home
Now that we have all the main actors established, let’s talk about that incredible ending. During the final act, Lonnie glances at a map of the city and realizes that Michael’s blood trail points directly to his childhood home, Myers’ house, which is now occupied by a couple, Big. John and Little John, who have unfortunately already met their children. It ends up in the hands of you, you know who. As Cameron, Allyson and Lonnie drive home, Lonnie decides to take a look and makes the ill-advised decision to go in alone. After a blast shot is heard, Cameron and Allyson rush inside, only to discover another bloodbath.
After they discover the bodies of Big John, Little John, and Lonnie, Michael shows up and takes Cameron out by hitting him repeatedly against the railing. During the bone-crushing fight, he then fixes his gaze on Allyson, who falls down the stairs. As Michael prepares to sink his knife, Allyson fearlessly yells, “Do it!” just when he is impaled on the back by a gallows. Surprise, it’s mom Karen to the rescue. While Michael is taken aback by the sneak attack, she takes off her mask and taunts him with it. Using it as bait, she tells him to “come get it.”
As Michael chases Karen behind Myers’ house, he is lured into a quiet, empty street with nothing but his mask in the middle of the street. It is a trap! As he goes to reclaim his “precious”, the lynch mob emerges, including Tommy and Brackett and numerous armed local residents. It is here that Michael meets a hardcore Haddonfield justice. The lynch mob unleashes literal hell on their lifelong tormentor. Michael is riddled with bullets and stabbed multiple times, while Tommy manages to put his rage and trusty bat into high gear. Even Karen gets into the action. Wielding Michael’s weapon of choice, he apparently delivers the final blow, doesn’t he? As Thanos from “Avengers: Infinity War” once said, “You should have gone for the head.”
The Loss Of A Son
Unfortunately, the mob lets their guard down and thinks it’s over. But hey, this is a “Halloween” movie, you know it’s not over. As Karen returns to the Myers house to check on her daughter, Michael unsurprisingly stands up and takes everyone out for revenge, including Tommy and Brackett. Back at the Myers house, Karen looks out the same window that Michael once did, unaware of the carnage that is taking place outside. Soon, the victorious Shape emerges behind her and does what she does best. Karen’s lifeless body falls to the ground. Could it be alive? It’s doubtful, but you never know with these movies. But most likely his lifeless eyes denote death.
The end of “Halloween Kills” is the polar opposite of the conclusion of the previous film. As we learned on “Halloween” in 2018, Karen had a strained relationship with her mother. She resented Laurie and considered her a crazy alcoholic who spent her entire life obsessed with a “bogeyman” who attacked her randomly on a Halloween night. But she eventually found out that the bogeyman was real and that her mother was just setting her up for hell on two legs that is Michael Myers. It may have taken a horrible event to bring them together, but Laurie seemingly defeated her nemesis and did it alongside her daughter, eventually getting her back. He managed to protect his family from the evil that he knew would one day return. In his eyes, he won. But as we learn in “Halloween Kills,” that victory was short-lived.
Karen’s disappearance sets the stage for what might be the darkest and most vengeful “Halloween” movie yet. Losing her only child could drive Laurie Strode to the brink of insanity. Will she torture herself for not being able to protect her daughter from what she most feared? Now, 40 years after the night that changed her life, the nightmare she feared, the one she tried so hard to prevent, has finally come true. Laurie is pretty depressed and on the mend for most of “Halloween Kills” and is not around for the big showdown, so when news of Karen’s death reaches her ears in the next movie, we might see the most unhinged version of the character. up to now.
The Shape Lives
And then there’s Allyson, who seems to be living a fate not dissimilar to her grandmother’s – the Halloween curse has now infected a new generation of the Strode family. Now she has lost two parents in the same night to Michael Myers. The question is, will it spiral down a dark path similar to Laurie’s? Or perhaps you feel overwhelmed by terrible guilt as well as unparalleled pain. After all, he disobeyed Karen, who implored him to stay in the hospital. But instead, he became obsessed with settling scores and got carried away by the whole mob mentality. If he had stayed in the hospital, his mother would most likely still be alive.
As for Michael, how did he survive that lynching? In this new trilogy, there are people who describe him as the embodiment of evil or who say things like “No human could have survived that fire” or “The more he kills, the more he transcends,” but the source of his unnatural abilities has yet to be traced. known. to be explained. No human would be able to resist the spray that was inflicted on him during the finale of “Halloween Kills.” Someone at Smith’s Grove Sanitarium loaded you with PCP? Is it superhuman? Or maybe even something supernatural? So far, it hasn’t been addressed in the David Gordon Green saga, but either way, we can find out next year when “Halloween Ends.”