MovieChat Forums > Halloween (1978) Discussion > Was Michael Myers intended to be superna...

Was Michael Myers intended to be supernatural in this movie ?


The way he moves , the knowledge he has, and how he can just disappear . I would say yes

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I disagree. Those things could be of a human nature. Surprising yes, but not out of the question. I think they developed the supernatural element more around 4, to draw out more "mystery" from him. But if you want to think yes, go ahead. There's nothing definitive either way, which is part of the fun :)

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They went more down the supernatural route in part 2 though it was touched upon in the first movie.

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Of course he was.

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I don't think so, maybe a freak of nature, but not supernatural until the lousy sequels came along.

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NOPE...CARPENTER HIMSELF HAS SAID SO...MANY TIMES.

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source?

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DVD COMMENTARY AND INTERVIEWS,ARTICLES OVER THE YEARS.

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No. Originally he was 'just' a silent, determined, unstoppable killer. The rest came later.

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Jamie Lee told you the truth at the end...he IS the boogyman.

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Intended, no. I think it was purely accidental. That doesn't really change the fact he could do things outside of normal human boundaries, so intentional or not, he was like this from the start.

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Kind of depends whether you take Loomis' warning that he was The Boogeyman literally.

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It's strongly implied by Loomis's words that there was something "evil" going on inside Michael any beyond normal psychological explanations.

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Uhh...I don't understand? What made him seem supernatural in this movie? The only thing I can think of is how he survived all those gunshots in the end?

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Loomis seems to feel Michael is possessed of some sort of spiritual evil that can't be explained by medical science. He doesn't even appear surprised when Michael's body disappears, nor does he contradict Jamie when she asks if Michael was the "boogie man".

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