Halloween III: Season of the Witch

    Halloween III: Season of the Witch
    1982

    Synopsis

    A terrified toy salesman is mysteriously attacked, and at the hospital, babbles and clutches the year's most popular Halloween costume, an eerie pumpkin mask. Suddenly, Doctor Daniel Challis finds himself thrust into a terrifying nightmare.

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    Cast

    • Tom AtkinsDr. Daniel 'Dan' Challis
    • Stacey NelkinEllie Grimbridge
    • Dan O'HerlihyConal Cochran
    • Michael CurrieRafferty
    • Ralph StraitBuddy Kupfer
    • Jadeen BarborBetty Kupfer
    • Brad Schacter'Little' Buddy Kupfer Jr.
    • Garn StephensMarge Guttman
    • Nancy KyesLinda Challis
    • Jonathan TerryStarker

    Recommendations

    • 88

      Slant Magazine

      That plot gives you an idea of how casually insane this movie is, but if you’re able to radically suspend your disbelief (the story is an illogical shambles), the film offers a number of modest pleasures.
    • 75

      The A.V. Club

      Once the action shifts to the dead-eyed denizens of Santa Mira, the remote town that Silver Shamrock calls home, the film becomes a sly and creepy indictment of corporate engineering. It’s not what Halloween fans wanted—and Wallace rubs it in by showing a couple of clips from the original film on TV—but take the Halloween part away and Season Of The Witch is a standalone oddity worth considering on its own terms.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      Mr. Wallace clearly has a fondness for the cliches he is parodying and he does it with style.
    • 60

      Empire

      Guest star Dan O'Herlihy steals the film as a Celtic joke tycoon (‘the man who invented sticky toilet paper and the dead dwarf gag’) who hates the way American kids are despoiling the religious spirit of Samhain and decides to teach them a nasty lesson.
    • 50

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      Writer-director Tommy Lee Wallace is not, as can be gathered, a born auteur, but he is crafty at timing the jumpies - despite a silliness that increases as the movie goes on, there are enough left-field shocks to please even the most discriminating fan of what American Film has dubbed the "genre non grata. [25 Oct 1982]
    • 50

      Washington Post

      Obliged to launch the hero on an effective counterattack down the stretch, Wallace goes through the motions proficiently enough for exploitation thriller purposes. He should have quit while he was ahead, but Halloween III demonstrates a reasonable ability to control comic-horror effects on his first derivative try. [27 Oct 1982, p.D9]
    • 40

      TV Guide Magazine

      Though the film certainly isn't awful, the filmmakers couldn't decide on their focus. Did they want the picture to be be a fun little piece full of black humor, or did they want to go the usual blood-and-gore route?
    • 38

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The one saving grace in Halloween III is Stacey Nelkin, who plays the heroine. She has one of those rich voices that makes you wish she had more to say and in a better role. But watch her, too, in the reaction shots: When she's not talking, she's listening.

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