The Shape

The Shape as portrayed by Nick Castle in John Carpenter's 1978 classic "Halloween."
The night HE came home!
John Carpenter's "Halloween" is the film that kick-started my lifelong love of Horror. Sure I was into Monsters at an early age, but Halloween was the first truly horrifying film I had ever seen, where the monster was just a guy in a mask, he could be anyone, and he could be real.
And the idea of Michael Myers still scares the shit out of me to this day. I'm talking the REAL Michael Myers here, not the ancient vessel of some pagan cult, or whatever the Hell Moustapha Akkad turned him into, I'm talking about "The Shape," "The Boogeyman."
When I was a kid, my neighbor's son's fiance was killed by Ted Bundy, and I currently live in a house that is half a mile from where someone was gunned down and murdered in the street, right in front of several witnesses during a gas station robbery, but at night when I'm working and get that creepy feeling that I'm being watched, I always expect to turn and catch a glimpse of HIM disappearing behind a tree, he has been burned into my subconscious.
In my reckless youth, there was a time when a friend and I planned on smoking some "whoopee weed" and watching "Halloween" but after waiting impatiently for the tape to rewind, we hit the play button and caught a glimpse of his face, I remember hitting stop, and just being filled with a real sense of dread and just wanting to watch cartoons instead... Luckily, it was my friend who chickened out and said he didn't really feel like watching "Halloween" after all...
My original relationship with the film was a troubled one. You see, my Mom had no problem letting me go see something like Bo Derek's "Tarzan, the Ape Man" with all the nudity, or letting me buy the tie-in Playboy, because it had "an article" on Tarzan that I really wanted to "read." (I can still remember the envy of my childhood friends.)
Being a child of the sixties, she would rather have me watch two people making love, then two people trying to kill each other..." Which was great for me, that is until John Carpenter's "Halloween" hit.
It must have been when it premiered on HBO because all of a sudden everyone was talking about it, like the entire world had watched this life altering film, everyone that is but me. Even my parents and their friend had watched it, (after sending me to bed early) I can still remember hearing them scream downstairs while watching it. At school everyone was talking about it, and it felt like if you hadn't seen it then you were just a little kid left behind playing with your Star Wars guys, among the prepubescent males at school this was what separated the men from the boys...
Hell, even the lunch lady asked me if I had seen it, and not wanting to be the only lame kid in school, I lied and said I had... I can still hear her voice "They have to make another one, they can't just leave him hanging like that." To which I replied "Umm, yeah, that was a big tree he was hanging in."
Needless to say I was caught...
When I finally couldn't take it anymore, I waited until my parents were fast asleep and I snuck downstairs and caught an extremely late night showing of it on good ole HBO, and it scared the crap out of me like no film has since. I was hooked, I still have the novelization I bought the next day at the local grocery store (I smuggled that into the house and hid it like the other kids did their Playboys! ; )
Later I would get to see the mediocre sequel on a double bill with "The Beast Within" at the drive in with my sister, its only worth mentioning because there was a guy in the audience with a Michael Myers costume and a fake knife who would sneak up on cars and scare the living shit out of people...
Anyway, sorry for this insanely long post!
I hope you all have enjoyed this flood of artwork, I wish I would have had the time to write a little something about each of them meant to me personally...
I hope you all have a fantastic Halloween!
R






















