


If we can wrap our head around them, and be our own hero, then maybe we've got a fighting chance." It's a study of the contagiousness of these negative entities that are in our lives. Green did so by "bringing in a new character of Corey Cunningham, and discovering first his own immediate trauma in our cold open, and then how that affects him, and then how an encounter with our already established evil could become kind of an infectious thing. "We'd seen the story of a stalker, and we'd seen a lot of the ways that trauma had affected Laurie Strode, but I really wanted to see how that affected the town." "I wanted to get a new perspective of Michael Myers and Laurie Strode and the family, and I wanted to bring a new central character to be a pivotal exploration of those characters and the town," says Green, who also co-wrote the film. So why did director David Gordon Green want to prominently feature a freshly-minted character in his third Halloween tale? Three years after the tragedy, Corey encounters Michael Myers, who has apparently been living in Haddonfield's drainage system, and is inspired to embark on his own reign of terror, murdering people in a variety of different ways while also beginning a relationship with Laurie's daughter Allyson (Andi Matichak).

Played by Rohan Campbell, the newcomer accidentally causes the death of a child he is babysitting in the film's pre-credit sequence and becomes a pariah in his hometown of Haddonfield, Ill.
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But many viewers of the movie may be surprised to discover how much screen time is devoted to the story of a brand-new character: Corey Cunningham. Halloween Ends has been hyped as the final battle between masked killer Michael Myers and Jamie Lee Curtis' Laurie Strode, and the film ultimately delivers on that promise. Warning: This story contains spoilers for Halloween Ends.
