One of my favorite “quiet” moments in John Carpenter’s
Halloween occurs when little Tommy
Doyle shows Laurie a big stack of comics that he keeps hidden behind a couch because
his mom disapproves. It makes for a fun little “spot the title” game for
collectors. Some of the comics are recent and obviously just plucked off of the
stands (the most visible is Howard the
Duck #26) others appear to be from Atlas/Seaboard, which was then several years
defunct. It’s a brief and pointless, but cute moment.
Although he’s
just a supporting character in the original film and is never in any real
danger, a now adult Tommy Doyle was brought back in a major role for 1995’s The Curse of Michael Myers and made into
an occult expert who had been tracking the origins of Myers for years, traumatized
for life by the brief glimpses he saw of the killer. I like Curse more than most fans will admit to,
but I always thought it was odd to bring him back. Were they trying to make him
Michael’s new nemesis for future sequels? (Donald Pleasance was then dying) Were
they trying to make him into the Halloween franchise’s equivalent of another
Tommy; Jarvis from Friday the 13th? Or maybe they figured they
should bring back some character from
the first film to create a sense of legacy. He even gets the honor of beating Michael to death, and in some cuts (there are many different versions of the film available), he actually succeeds.
Needless to
say, Tommy Doyle has also popped up in the various Halloween comics, mostly in variations of his “monster hunter”
persona from Curse, which I guess
works better in the comics medium than film. However, my favorite use of the
character in a comic, and a far more interesting (and plausible) fate for him
came about in 2008’s Halloween: 30 Years
of Terror one-shot anthology in a story titled "Tommy and the Boogeyman".
Here, Tommy’s
love of comics has taken a natural conclusion: He’s become a comic book
artist! And we also get to see the “Tarantula
Man” comic that Laurie name drops, but we never see. Here it is, enjoy. All ©
Devil’s Due Publishing. Art by Jeff Zornow.
Icky, but
awesome. I do have a few small gripes with this story. I always assumed that
the ‘Tarantula Man” comic was just a lawyer-friendly reference to Spider-Man,
not a horror comic (Although since there are some Atlas/Seaboard comics in
Tommy’s collection, perhaps it was a reference to Michael Fleischer’s “Tarantula”
character from Weird Suspense).
I
also don’t really know what they seem to be referencing here, the black and
white art seems to suggest Warren, but it appears to be a mainstream
publication instead of a magazine. Oh well, the comic at least has a retro feel
to it, even though I don’t know what it’s supposed to be a retrospective of. At
least one thing’s for sure; Tommy had very good reason to hide this comic from
his mother!
But wait,
what’s this? Look at the comic Tommy is drawing:
See that arm
with a tattoo on the wrist? That’s the Sign of the Thorn from Halloween 4-6, which retconned that
Michael was being controlled (or not controlled, all 3 movies are confusing as
hell) by a druid cult which made him kill because of a constellation that came
out on Halloween night.
Since this is
obviously not the same Tommy Doyle from those movies, and his son is named
Jamie (the same name as the little girl who is the “heroine” of 4-5), as well
as that the other Halloween comics by Devil’s Due don’t utilize the Thorn BS, this
means 4-6 were all comic book stories by Tommy! The supernatural occurrences,
faulty continuity, ridiculous twists, Tommy being a hero who gets to kill an unkillable juggernaut, it all fits!
This, my friends, is how you do a “It was all
fiction within universe” retcon and do it right.
So... final judgment, Halloween 3 still sucks?
ReplyDeleteI like it, although more as a "What could have been". I've probably re-watched it more than any of the other sequels. I'd argue it's actually a bit overrated in some circles though, for the same reason.
DeleteDevil's Due (or whoever holds the rights to the comics) should take advantage of the format and put out comics corresponding to Carpenter's original idea. They don't have to give up connections to the franchise completely (maybe they could use Loomis as a horror host or something), but I'm amazed no one's toyed with the idea.