Lisa Vanderpump has nothing on Michael Myers.
The official trailer for the subsequent installment in the iconic Laurie Strode vs. Michael Myers horror franchise dropped Thursday night time — and Kyle Richards is stealing “Halloween Kills.”
Followers get the primary actual glimpse of the “Actual Housewives of Beverly Hills” grand dame, 52, returning to her actress roots within the new clip. Diehard horror aficionados will recall that the previous baby star performed wide-eyed Lindsey Wallace, the child OG scream queen Jamie Lee Curtis babysat for in 1978’s seminal “Halloween.”
The final consensus greater than 40 years later: Myers is means scarier than Richards’ arch nemesis Vanderpump, 60, not to mention the remainder of her always catfighting “RHOBH” crew.
The trailer’s gory motion picks up proper the place the final installment within the enduring scary film sequence left off: Laurie (Curtis, 62), her daughter Karen (Judy Greer, 45) and granddaughter Allyson (Andi Matichak, 27) are racing — sirens blaring — to the hospital with life-threatening accidents after leaving a caged Myers ablaze of their booby-trapped basement.
Sure, the foolish survivor is considering as soon as once more that she lastly offed her lifetime “boogeyman.” Not so quick.
The Strode ladies are compelled to affix a gaggle of different Myers’ survivors — a horrified band of “Actual Housewives of Haddonfield” of kinds — to take vigilante justice into their very own arms. Sure, they intend to come back for Myers like Lisa Rinna got here for Denise Richards — and take him down as soon as and for all. Bravo!
Filmmaker David Gordon Inexperienced’s 2018 “Halloween” reboot — starring OG scream queen Curtis — raked in additional than $250 million on the field workplace worldwide.
That movie now ranks as the best grossing entry within the four-decade franchise and set a brand new file for the largest opening weekend in historical past for a horror movie starring a lady, Deadline reported.
Followers can watch what occurs when “Halloween Kills” lastly will get to hang-out theaters on October 15, after repeated COVID-19 delays.