![]() He came from a dancer family so he had a grace, an odd grace about him. I think I got paid $8,000 for the whole movie, which at the time, for the lead in the movie was $2,000 a week."Ĭarpenter explained, "I liked the way he moved. "Maybe he got paid a couple hundred bucks or whatever it was," Curtis told Rotten Tomatoes of Castle. "I mean, nobody got paid, anything. And the shape for most of the original film belonged to Carpenter's friend Nick Castle. Upping the horror quotient, Halloween's central menace is referred to as "The Shape" in the closing credits. So Carpenter did, with his son Cody and godson Daniel Davies, whose father is The Kinks' Dave Davies. (He's received requisite "characters by" writing credits on everything since the 1978 original, which he cowrote with Debra Hill, as well as money.) And producer Jason Blum asked if he'd score the new movie. He returned to the franchise as an executive producer on the 2018 "sequel"-his first involvement since being a producer on 1982's Halloween III: Season of the Witch. It's a cheap but effective way of scoring." What surprised me is, they actually fit pretty well into the movie. This was just scoring blind, and then I would cut the themes into the movie. "I only had three days to do the music to Halloween," Carpenter recalled to NPR's Morning Edition in 2018. ![]() ![]() Using an analog synthesizer, Carpenter also composed the unmistakable theme music that never fails to send a shiver up one's spine. Compass International Pictures/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images Play It Again, John ![]()
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