![]() ![]() He clearly has a well rehearsed act much like a stand-up comedian. He does this in front of an audience who just paid to obtain the man's autograph. He describes one autograph seeker with complete vitriol, bashing the fan as a complete loser. He blasts the hardcore fanbase, telling them they are all nothing but a bunch of nerds, right to their faces. Throughout the video, Tony Moran bashes Halloween as an indie piece of garbage that he never thought anyone would ever watch. But that might not necessarily be a good thing. The most difficult scene is easy for me to remember. Walking away from a conversation with Tony Moran, you'll certainly remember it over anything else that happens at a horror con. When each actor discussed the hardest scene they’d ever shot, he didn’t hesitate to bring up Michael’s escape in the 1978 flick. His actions clearly illicit more attention than just an actor at a convention table quietly signing photos for fans with the occasional nod and pleasant greeting. Halloween Ends will wrap up the trilogy, and the original Michael Myers actor has clarified his role in the slasher. It's unclear whether Moran is being truthful here or if he's merely playing to the crowd, hamming it up for the camera, and making a spectacle of himself to lend credit to his place in the franchise's history. The Michael Myers actor even goes as far as to spoil certain aspects of Blumhouse's Halloween Kills, in which he has been privy to certain details. He takes no issue attacking Michael Myers actor Tyler Mane from the Rob Zombie film, constantly calling him names that we can't print here. Moran is seen in the video at various conventions making some outrageous claims about the original Halloween production, including alleged misconduct from John Carpenter and Jamie Lee Curtis on and off set. This new video popped up on Youtube earlier in the week, and it has left many Halloween fans shaking their heads. Those few seconds of screen time in the slasher which is hailed as a seminal classic, have provided Moran with vast opportunities worldwide to profit from the intense fandom that has surrounded Halloween for over 4 decades. If you’re in a hurry to see the stunt, skip to 02:36, but I highly recommend letting the whole moment play out in its entirety.For those who don't know, Tony Moran, the older brother of Erin Moran (Joanie on Happy Days), played Michael Myers in John Carpenter's original Halloween for a few fleeting seconds in the film, when Laurie (Jamie Lee Curtis) rips off the mask of The Shape (played by Nick Castle in 98.99% of the film) to reveal her brother's true face. If you’re curious which classic Halloween scene Castle is talking about, or if you just want to relive a chilling piece of horror history, you can watch it in the clip from the film we’ll provide below. It may not sound like too taxing of a scenario, but if you’re out in the middle of the night, wearing nothing but a thin hospital gown like Nick Castle was, the slightest breeze could chill you to the bone. Michael Myers is one of most recognizable slashers in all of horror appearing across ten of the eleven Halloween films and original actor Nick Castle recounts how he was first cast as the masked killer in the 1978 original film. It was horrendous And then, of course, John had to go, 'Take two.' And when those drops came down on me, through the gown, it was like knives. The worst part of the show, for me, because it was like 40-something degrees that night and it was late and they put on the hoses and there's no warm water coming out of the hose. I wish I would have let the stunt guy do the first scene where it's in the rain and I'm jumping up on the car so I didn't have to freeze to death. As he recalled that decision, the regret of doing so came through in the following thoughts: Apparently, according to his discussion with the hosts of The Thing with Two Heads' video podcast, Nick Castle did his own stunts in the scene involving Michael’s big escape from Smith’s Grove Sanitarium. The one moment that Castle was particularly not fond of is, surprisingly, the rainy night that starts the action within Halloween’s insidious plot. ![]() And recently Castle detailed "the worst part"of filming the iconic classic. Presenting the formidable physical presence of The Shape that would hunt down Jamie Lee Curtis’ Laurie Strode for one fateful night in 1978, Castle apparently had some pretty horrible moments while filming that iconic genre classic. That’s especially true when you learn about some of the experiences the actor who brought him to life in John Carpenter’s Halloween, horror legend Nick Castle, went through. It's a difficult job bringing to life a hulking monster like Halloween's Michael Myers.
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