
Michael Myers for Christmas? This House Makes It Work
I'm not sure when Halloween decorations bled over (no pun intended, I swear) into Christmas decorations, but I've never been mad about it. When it comes to holiday decor for the outside of one's home, I say throw it all out there and go crazy.
Specifically, I'm referring to the many large skeletons that homeowners keep around after October 31st to transform them into Christmas skeletons. They're all over my hometown Owensboro, Kentucky, and I'm sure they dot the landscape everywhere else, too.
Halloween and Christmas
But I saw something come into my Facebook feed that I have never seen before, and it's been out there as a possibility for 47 years. Sure, we've had plenty of Christmas horror movies, but we've never had one that's been part of, arguably, the most popular horror franchise of all time. And since I doubt they'd make a Yuletide version should it ever be rebooted, we might as well enjoy what this clever North Carolina holiday display whenever we can.
Michael Myers Christmas and On Set Cinema
Kenny Caperton is an actor and producer based in Hillsborough, North Carolina, and he has created a film series called On Set Cinema that allows you to "step into the screen" and experience horror classics as if you were in the movie, so to speak. His home is a replica of the iconic Michael Myers house in Halloween, and, as you can see, it's beginning to look a lot like Christmas in "Haddonfield." Here's his story.
But Caperton is no one trick pony. His On Set Cinema invites guests to watch classic horror films like Children of the Corn, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and The Lost Boys on actual sites where parts of those movies were shot; North Carolina has been a hotbed of horror filmmaking activity over the last few decades.
Merry Christmas from the Myers household, and, by all means, enjoy the "slay" ride.
LOOK: What Christmas was like the year you were born
Gallery Credit: Stacker
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