Tag Archives: Tommy Lee Wallace

The Fog-1980

The Fog-1980

Director John Carpenter

Starring Adrienne Barbeau, Jamie Lee Curtis, Tom Atkins

Scott’s Review #1,523

Reviewed March 9, 2026

Grade: A-

Ghost stories can be tough for a filmmaker to make interesting, let alone be successful. So much depends on atmosphere, mood, and good storytelling.

The most memorable ghost films are The Innocents (1961), The Shining (1980), and The Sixth Sense (1999), but there are bound to be others I can’t think of.

The key is to make the unbelievable believable and to make the subject matter realistic and spooky enough to avoid a mediocre or worse yet, hokey experience.

The Fog (1980) is one of the top-tier ghost stories, often mistaken for a slasher film, undoubtedly because it stars scream queen Jamie Lee Curtis and is directed by John Carpenter, who, two years earlier, had created one of the greatest slasher films, Halloween (1978).

It also stars slasher stalwarts Charles Cyphers and Nancy Loomis, and includes Halloween producer Debra Hill and Halloween editor Tommy Lee Wallace, who was once married to Loomis.

Additionally, Curtis’s mother, Janet Leigh (Psycho, 1960), is also in the cast, making the entire film an incestuous horror experience.

But it’s hardly Halloween lite.

Instead of making a patterned carbon copy, Carpenter pivots to a spooky, original story filled with exceptional jump scares, a foreboding musical score, and iridescent fog; a character in itself is so prominent.

The keyboard-tinged sounds are highly effective at delivering a downright scary mood.

One midnight hour, cleverly billed the ‘witching hour’ by sultry radio announcer Stevie (Adrienne Barbeau), strange things begin to occur as a tiny California coastal town prepares to commemorate its centenary.

Reverend Malone (Hal Holbrook) stumbles upon a dark secret about the town’s past while reading his grandfather’s diary, and town resident Nick Castle (Tom Atkins) and hitchhiker Elizabeth (Curtis) try to save others from death as the body count begins to climb.

Savvy Halloween fans know that Nick Castle was a stuntman who played the Shape in the film. And, Carpenter makes a cameo as Bennett Tramer, a character in the Halloween franchise.

At a quick ninety minutes of running time, The Fog hardly has time to lag and almost feels like a short anthology. The brevity is to its advantage despite the many characters featured.

A common theme in horror, the film opens with a campfire story told around a campfire by an older man, Mr. Machen (John Houseman), to a group of startled kids about a doomed clipper ship that crashed into rocks a hundred years ago.

With the stage perfectly set, the killings ensue in rapid form first aboard a fisher boat and subsequently when deadly lepor beings rap loudly on their victim’s doors in the hopes of being answered.

The casting is an exceptional part of the fun. Atkins joins Holbrook, Curtis, Leigh, Loomis, Cyphers, and Barbeau to round out a phenomenal cast. I only wish mother and daughter, Curtis and Leigh, shared more screentime.

The special effects need to be seen in light of the 1980s cheesiness. Yes, in 2026, more CGI would be used, but the misty rolling fog and the shimmering light are quite impressive.

Unsure if Curtis or Barbeau is considered the lead (Barbeau gets my vote, but Curtis gets the cover shot), Curtis was a bankable horror film star, so perhaps an attempt to grab the younger demographic was the motivation.

Jump out of the seat, moments like a falling dead body, a hand on a shoulder, and a gruesome-looking hand smashing through glass are highly effective moments aided by perfectly placed synthesizer sounds.

A well-crafted, intelligent, though underappreciated horror effort, The Fog (1980) is more of a cult classic than a bona fide classic, which is a shame because it’s a very good film.

A dismal remake followed in 2005 and should be avoided.

Halloween-1978

Halloween-1978

Director John Carpenter

Starring Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Pleasence, Nancy Loomis

Top 250 Films #9

Top 40 Horror Films #3

Scott’s Review #114

569090

Reviewed July 16, 2014

Grade: A

 Halloween is an iconic 1978 horror film that set the tone for the barrage of slasher films that followed throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s.

Today, the film continues to hold up incredibly well, and I am proud to list it not only as one of my favorite horror films (which I watch religiously every Halloween) but also as one of my favorite films of all time.

The focus is on style and substance over gore (the film contains little of it), and the score is one of the scariest and most effective in cinematic history.

The premise of the film is simple- a homicidal maniac is on the loose in a sleepy little town named Haddonfield, Illinois, targeting three female babysitters on a crisp Halloween night.

The audience knows that the six-year-old little boy dressed as a clown on a dark Halloween night years ago, who butchered his older sister to death, is the now grown-up culprit.

What we do not know, nor should we, is what his (Michael Meyers’) motivation is.  This confusion only adds to the impact.

Subsequent remakes have added complexities to the character, albeit unnecessarily so; however, in the original, we see a seemingly happy child with stable parents and a good life.

Similar stories have been told throughout film history. But Halloween is simply one of the greatest horror films ever made.

As simple as the story is, the way the film is made makes it a masterpiece. Everything about Halloween is mesmerizing – the lighting is perfect, the ambiance, the brilliant, scary musical score, the battle between good and evil, and the feeling of a chilly Halloween night.

Highly unusual for its time, the film’s use of the killer’s point of view and heavy breathing is prevalent throughout, startling and scaring the viewer. The opening shot is through the eyes of a masked six-year-old kid wearing a clown mask.

The unique technical aspects continue to evolve.

Director John Carpenter had a vision for this film, and thankfully, no studio influence compromised it, as it was an independent film on a shoestring budget.

The Hitchcock influences are evident in the character names, such as Sam Loomis, and in many scenes where someone watches the action or peers around a corner or through a window, making the viewer anxious and nervous.

Set in small-town USA, the film’s frightening element is that it could happen anywhere, and its location is ingenious. There is very little blood, let alone gore. It is needless. It is the creepiness that makes the film brilliant.

The three teenagers are perfectly cast- Jamie Lee Curtis is the serious bookworm, P.J. Soles and Nancy Keyes are the flirtatious bad girls. Still, the chemistry is excellent, and the audience buys them as best friends.

The jump-out-of-your-seat moments are incredibly well-timed, and it is one of the few genuinely scary films.

Forget the horror genre alone- Halloween (1978) is one of the greatest films ever made.

Halloween III: Season of the Witch-1982

Halloween III: Season of the Witch-1982

Director Tommy Lee Wallace

Starring Tom Atkins, Stacey Nelkins

Scott’s Review #506

569108

Reviewed November 1, 2016

Grade: B

Halloween III: Season of the Witch was met with much disdain when it was released in 1982, a mere one year following the very successful Halloween II, the sequel to the iconic Halloween (1978).

Fans (and critics) expecting a third chapter in the maniac-wielding Michael Myers saga were sorely disappointed and perplexed at what they were “treated” to.

After all, the title is billed as “III”. Therefore, the film was met with disapproval.

This film is not even in the slasher genre, although I’ll categorize it as such for name recognition alone- more of a science fiction meets Twilight Zone.

Years later, this film would be heralded as a not-so-bad offering from a stand-alone film perspective. A different title might have been wise, but at the risk of being a forgotten film.

I agree with the sentiment-it’s not a fantastic film- the plot is far from its strong suit, but a brave film and one that has aged well.

The franchise creators (John Carpenter and Debra Hill) had hoped to create an anthology-style film series with different chapters all centered on the holiday of Halloween. This was not to be, and Michael Myers would return for the fourth installment.

Director Tommy Lee Wallace was also affiliated with the original Halloween.

The story begins a week before Halloween (reaching a crescendo on Halloween) as shop owner, Harry Grimbridge, runs along a highway in northern California, panicked and fleeing from corporate-looking men in business suits- he clutches a Halloween mask.

Finally rushed to the hospital by a stranger, he is killed by one of the businesspeople, who then sets himself on fire.

Grimbridge manages to tell Dr. Dan Challis that “They’re going to kill us.” Challis and Grimbridge’s daughter, Ellie, mounts an investigation to solve the mystery of her father’s demise.

Naturally, a romance ensues between the pair.

The film, while not a stinker, does have some issues. The corporate greed we recognize in the villain, Cochran, the founder of a company that produces Halloween masks and is responsible for the prosperity of a town, is silly.

Even more perplexing are his motivations- he plans to sacrifice children wearing the masks to honor some ancient witchcraft- huh?

He creates androids as his henchmen and airs creepy television commercials to release a signal- and there are strange bugs that emerge from the masks, thereby killing the mask wearers.

The story is ludicrous.

Other gripes involve the lack of chemistry between leads Tom Atkins and Stacey Nelkin, and the shameful waste of actress Nancy Loomis’s (Annie Brackett from Halloween) time and talents, as she is reduced to a one-scene appearance as the nagging, haggard-looking ex-wife of Challis.

She deserved better and would have been perfect in the lead female role. The fact that Loomis was married to director Wallace makes this even more surprising- they were later divorced.

The negative attributes listed above might lead one to think I detested this film, but it is compelling in its own right.

The musical score is one highlight of Halloween III. Techie and new-wave-ish, it does wonders at portraying peril and creepiness- especially where the male androids are concerned.

And the sing-along jingle to the tune of the classic children’s song, “London Bridge is Falling”, encouraging children to buy the masks, is superb.

Though the story does not work, the subject contains a throwback to science fiction films of yesteryear, most notably resembling Invasion of the Body Snatchers in its eeriness and mystique, which renders the film appealing.

In the end, a character we do not suspect is revealed to be an android, spinning the plot into a fun finale.

Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982) is flawed, but becomes a bit of an acquired taste- appreciated a bit more over the years- if for no other reason than going against the grain and trying to be something different and creative.

The story fails, but other little nuances succeed immeasurably.