Earlier today, Universal brought the goods to San Diego Comic-Con. During a very exciting panel, the studio offered up a look at two of their most anticipated releases. Up first, of course, was Glass. The threequel’s been building a steady amount of buzz for months now and today, they finally unveiled the first trailer, giving us a glimpse into what looks like another dark, twisted thriller from the mind of M. Night Shyamalan.
But there was another, perhaps even more anticipated film in attendance, too. Its name? Halloween. Yes, David Gordon Green’s upcoming sequel was present at Universal’s panel and though the footage they showed off hasn’t made its way online just yet – and it probably won’t, unfortunately – what we’re hearing about it has us very excited indeed.
Seen below is a sampling of what folks are saying on Twitter and it’s all positive, with those who saw it calling the clip “shocking,” “unsettling” and “incredible.” Of course, it’s best to remember that what was on display was only a very small sampling of the film, but between the impressive first trailer and now these reactions, it certainly seems like Halloween‘s shaping up to be something truly special.
https://twitter.com/CrisMovieCorner/status/1020453515322445824
David Gordon Green showed a new clip from #HalloweenMovie involving a home invasion to get a knife and then putting that knife to horrific use. Shocking. Also, John Carpenter’s score is immensely unsettling. pic.twitter.com/ivhVHSrNVs
— Fandango (@Fandango) July 20, 2018
The Shape looks incredible in the extended scene from #HalloweenMovie just showed at #SDCC! Mercilessly going door to door killing people randomly and brutally.
— Rafael Motamayor (@RafaelMotamayor) July 20, 2018
Loved the #Halloweenmovie clip, felt like it was right out of the original movie
— Rick (@freelance616) July 20, 2018
Excited yet? We sure are, and if the clip that was shown at San Diego Comic-Con happens to make its way online, we’ll certainly let you know. In the meantime, we’ll sit here anxiously waiting for Halloween to creep into theaters worldwide on October 19th, at which point we’ll know if David Gordon Green and Danny McBride’s decision to render all previous sequels non-canon was the right move.