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Philex Mining’s 9-month earnings fall

PHILEX MINING Corporation reported its income plunged in the first nine months of the year, on higher excise taxes and continued foreign exchange volatility.
In a statement, Philex Mining said its net income fell 49% to P570 million during the January to September period, from P1.132 billion a year ago.
Core net income dropped 41% to P687 million during the nine-month period, from P1.158 million during the same period in 2017.
The company attributed its financial performance to the “the significant negative impact of the doubling of the excise tax rate on mining under TRAIN Package I, together with higher depreciation, depletion and amortization; and a forex loss of P167 million due to a weak currency.”
With the implementation of the Tax Reform Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) law this year, mining excise tax was raised to 4% from 2%.
Consolidated revenues as of end-September fell 8% to P6.59 billion from P7.18 billion a year ago “due to reduced metal output, partially offset by improved metal prices, and favorable foreign exchange rates.”
Philex Mining reported Padcal mine milled 6.529 million tons from January to September, up 4% from the 6.259 million tons milled last year, despite the suspension of production when typhoon Ompong hit the area in September. However, the company said the lower ore grades resulted in lower metal output.
“We are cognizant that our existing ore body is challenged to deliver the desired grades due to its mature state. To improve ore grades, a new mining level is being commissioned using sublevel caving method,” Philex Mining president and chief executive officer Eulalio B. Austin Jr. said in a statement.
Philex Mining is one of three Philippine units of Hong Kong-based First Pacific Co. Ltd., the others being PLDT, Inc. and Metro Pacific Investments Corp. Hastings Holdings, Inc. — a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc. — maintains interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — RJCI

Freddie Mercury’s spontaneity challenged Bohemian Rhapsody star Rami Malek

LONDON — When television actor Rami Malek took on the role of colorful rock star Freddie Mercury in the film Bohemian Rhapsody, he found the biggest challenge was capturing the Queen lead singer’s commanding presence on stage.
Malek, the Emmy-winning star of TV drama Mr. Robot, portrays Mercury from his early days with Queen in the 1970s, through its rise to worldwide fame with anthems such as “We Will Rock You,” to a rousing performance at the Live Aid benefit concert in July 1985 at London’s Wembley Stadium.
Mercury was known for an electric stage persona that connected with audiences.
“Every time Freddie was on stage, and in his normal civilian life, he just did everything spontaneously,” Malek said on Tuesday at the film’s world premiere in London. “Trying to capture spontaneity is quite an arduous task.”
Malek worked with a movement coach to convey Mercury’s strutting stage presence and also contributed to the soundtrack.
Filmmakers used a combination of Mercury’s real voice, Malek’s voice, and another singer against the band’s original recordings to showcase the band’s vast catalog of hits.
The film also documents Mercury’s personal battles, including his struggle with his sexuality and drug and alcohol use. Mercury in 1991 was one of the first British celebrities to die from AIDS, at age 45.
Surviving Queen members Brian May and Roger Taylor endorsed the film. Both praised Malek’s performance as well as the actors who played them on screen and who showcased how the band collaborated on its groundbreaking sound.
“We found a perfect Freddie with Rami Malek. He’s sensational,” Taylor told reporters. “We are very happy. We think it’s a good film. I hope it brings joy to a lot of people.”
Malek’s performance has made him a top contender in Hollywood’s annual awards season, which culminates with the Oscars on Feb. 24.
Variety said the 37 year-old Egyptian-born American actor “takes on the role of Freddie Mercury as if born to it,” while The Hollywood Reporter said that “taking on a daunting task, he more than delivers.”
Bohemian Rhapsody began it global roll out on Wednesday. — Reuters

Peso-renminbi spot mart to boost trade, business

By Karl Angelo N. Vidal, Reporter
THE PHILIPPINES is set to have a peso-renminbi (RMB) spot market, which is seen to help boost trade and business relations between the Philippines and China.
According to a statement, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is set to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Bank of China Manila, as well as its local banking partners, on Tuesday to ratify the formalization of the Philippine RMB Trading Community.
The Bank of China’s partners include Asia United Bank Corp., Bank of Commerce, BDO Unibank, Inc., Bank of the Philippine Islands, China Banking Corp., East West Banking Corp., Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co., Philippine Bank of Communications, Philippine National Bank, Philippine Business Bank, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC), Sterling Bank of Asia, Security Bank Corp. and UnionBank of the Philippines.
“The MoU signing between the BSP and Bank of China Manila, along with its local banking partners, will ratify the formalization of the Philippine RMB Trading Community that aims to promote a fair, transparent, and resilient domestic renminbi market,” the statement read.
Economists said the establishment of the peso-yuan exchange facility will benefit trade and tourism between China and the Philippines.
“Access will now improve because it will encourage more financial institutions to deal with the Chinese currency,” Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, UnionBank chief economist told BusinessWorld in a text message.
Meanwhile, RCBC economist Michael L. Ricafort said the exchange facility would encourage more importers and exporters in the Philippines as well as Chinese tourists to switch their currency into peso at better exchange rates.
According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, China was the country’s top trading partner in August, with total trade amounting to $2.864 billion.
China was also the country’s second-largest tourism market with a total of 764,094 tourist arrivals in the January-July period, data from the Department of Trade and Industry showed.
The yuan-peso spot market will also reduce spreads or foreign exchange costs as businesses can now directly swap their peso into renminbi rather than passing through the US dollar.
“CNY/PHP spot market could also help any pressure or demand in the USD/PHP spot market as well,” Mr. Ricafort noted, adding that the new spot market “has already been long overdue.”
For years, local banks have been clamoring for the establishment of the peso-yuan exchange facility. In December 2015, former BSP Governor Amando M. Tetangco, Jr. said there were proposals to come up with a facility for a direct peso-yuan exchange, similar to the current peso-dollar spot market.
Increased use of the Chinese currency is expected after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) included the unit in its special drawing rights (SDR) or currency basket in 2015.
The SDR stands as the global measure for a country’s potential claim to the “freely usable” currencies held by the IMF as a multilateral lender. Aside from Chinese yuan, currencies part of SDR include the euro, US dollar, Japanese yen and British pound.

Next big thing on reality TV: popping pimples

IN 2014, dermatologist Sandra Lee, MD (also known as Dr. Pimple Popper) uploaded a short video on Instagram of a patient being treated for a pimple. Dr. Lee was surprised that it got over a thousand “Likes.” That was just the start. At present, Dr. Pimple Popper has 2.9 million followers on Instagram and over 4 million subscribers on YouTube.
Four years after that first video, she now has a reality show.
Dr. Lee has been a practicing dermatologist in Los Angeles for 15 years, specializing in removing lumps and cysts from various parts of her patients’ skin.
Dr. Pimple Popper, a reality show where Dr. Lee examines and treats patients’ skin conditions, premieres on TLC on Nov. 5 in the Philippines.
“It’s a [much] more rich experience compared to my social media because you really get to see the people beforehand and what they’ve been living with,” Dr. Lee told members of the Southeast Asian press in a phone interview.
The show features patients who will get treatment for cysts and lumps that have affected their lifestyle and self-confidence.
“They (patients) really go through a selection process with the casting and the production company. I take a look at the patients to select and see whether it is really something that is treatable,” Dr. Lee said.
According to Dr. Lee, she has received patients from around the world since becoming popular on social media and the reality show. “It’s just so interesting, the power social media. You can show how you interact with others and what you do, and people trust you and are willing to travel,” she said.
“I think that part of the success of what I do on social media and the success of the show is the fact that people recognize that I don’t treat somebody differently because of how they appear, and that’s really important for me. For somebody to see a doctor, you’re in a very vulnerable position. You’re showing things that you have not shown anyone else and you don’t want to feel judged or embarrassed,” she added.
For Dr. Lee, Dr. Pimple Popper turns something that may be disturbing into something positive.
“I’m just doing my job and I’m doing what I like to do. I feel [really] lucky to play such a big part in people’s lives… I might not remember them as much as they will remember me and that’s really special,” she said.
Dr. Pimple Popper premieres on Nov. 5 on TLC through Cignal TV and Sky Direct at 8:05 p.m. — Michelle Anne P. Soliman

Southeast Asia’s Grab inks deal with Mastercard for issuance of prepaid cards

SINGAPORE — Singapore-based Grab has partnered payments processor Mastercard Inc. to issue prepaid cards tailored to Southeast Asian consumers, extending the use of Grab’s digital wallet and helping its unbanked users transact online.
The companies hope to leverage Grab’s 110 million users based on download numbers, and Mastercard’s network of 3 million merchant outlets.
“This partnership with Grab significantly advances our reach in Southeast Asia and aligns with our goal of expanding digital payments across all consumers and merchants,” Mastercard said in the companies’ joint statement on Thursday.
Grab will issue virtual and physical prepaid cards through its app. Customers can top up their cards using cash through agents, drivers and merchants on the GrabPay platform, and will be able to use them at online and offline merchants that accept Mastercard.
Six-year-old Grab, which made its start as a taxi-booking app, is transforming itself into a consumer technology group, offering services such as food and parcel deliveries, micro-loans and mobile payments in one of the world’s fastest-growing internet markets — home to some 640 million people.
The region with its large unbanked population has emerged has a financial services battleground for local companies such as Grab, Sea Ltd. and Indonesia’s Go-Jek, as well as foreign firms including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd.
Cash remains the most common payment method in Southeast Asia, making the region challenging for e-commerce firms.
“For the first time, these unbanked and under-banked users will be able to use virtual and physical cards to buy things online,” Reuben Lai, senior managing director, Grab Financial, told Reuters.
Grab and Mastercard said they hope to offer their card in the first half of 2019, starting in Singapore and the Philippines. — Reuters

Goodyear aims to further grow NCR market share

GOODYEAR PHILIPPINES, Inc. is targeting to further increase its market share in the National Capital Region (NCR), which it already dominates.
“Hopefully we increase it… Say, 1% every year,” Goodyear Philippines Market Director Kenneth D. L. R. Sambajon said in a media roundtable in Taguig City on Thursday.
Citing figures from a Gfk Global report, Mr. Sambajon said Goodyear Philippines already accounts for 41% of the 19.2 million tires of the 2.4 million passenger segment vehicles registered with the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board in the NCR.
For the past four years, the company has been expanding its market share by 1% annually.
Saul Aurelius Isidore C. Babas, marketing head at The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., said NCR is a priority market since it is where the company generates the most sales.
Goodyear Philippines, Inc. is a subsidiary of The Goodyear Tire & Rubber.
Mr. Babas expects the company to continue growing in “double-digits” at par with the overall industry’s 12% average annual growth rate for the past five years.
Goodyear Philippines’ outlook is bolstered by the growth registered in the sport utility vehicle (SUVs) segment.
“For the past how many year, we have seen tremendous growth in the SUVs. Because of this tremendous growth in the automotive industry, it replicates on the tire replacement industry,” Mr. Babas said.
However, the company expects an impact from the slump in auto sales this year. In the first nine months of the year, vehicle sales dropped 13.8% to 261,057 units, weighed down by higher excise taxes, soaring inflation and rising fuel prices.
Mr. Sambajon said its effect on the tire replacement market is expected to be felt after three years, the minimum turnover period for higher-end tires.
“In terms of that impact, bababa ang replacement rate after three years. But also the positive thing is more and more people will keep their SUVs for a longer period of time,” the Goodyear Philippines marketing chief said. “The impact will be different in that you will now think twice about buying a cheaper tire.”
Next year, Goodyear Philippines will be celebrating 100 years of operations in the country, while its Ohio-based parent will mark its 120th year. — Janina C. Lim

Exporters: Pay already high ahead of wage ruling

EXPORTERS said high wages in the National Capital Region (NCR) will pose an “additional burden” on top of the possible loss of incentives under tax reform, noting that worker pay is already uncompetitive relative to the region.
“If there is an increase in minimum wage, that would be an additional burden on the part of exporters considering that we are already struggling with the TRAIN law and our competitors,” said Confederation of Garment Exporters of the Philippines Inc. (CONGEP) Legal Counsel Jesus Gabriel C. Domingo on Wednesday.
He was referring to the tax reform program known as Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN), the second iteration of which proposes to rationalize investment incentives while reducing corporate income taxes with a view to getting all companies — those enjoying incentives and those that rely on them less — to eventually pay as uniform a tax rate as possible.
Mr. Domingo said the Philippines’ average minimum wage is already among the highest in Asia, eroding the Philippines’ competitive advantage.
“We are not just competing with fellow Filipinos but also with other countries. Our minimum wage is way higher than that of other countries,” he said.
According to the National Wages and Productivity Commission’s (NWPC) comparative data of wages in selected countries as of Sept. 12, Metro Manila minimum wage earners in the private sector earn P475.00-P512 or $8.88-$9.57 a day.
In the regions, Philippine minimum wages start at P303 or $5.67, according to NWPC data.
On Wednesday, Joint Foreign Chambers of Commerce of the Philippines representative Ernie O. Cecilia told the NCR wage board that investors would rather invest in the cheaper labor on offer in Bangladesh and Vietnam.
According to the NWPC, Bangladesh has the lowest minimum wage in the region at $2.13 while Vietnam pays $4.77-5.39.
Amid demand for a wage increase due to high inflation and eroded purchasing power, Mr. Domingo said “Maybe the timing is not right or appropriate” for an NCR wage hike.
“We have around 62,800 workers,” he added, noting that many of these are at risk of possible job losses if employment costs rise significantly due to a wage increase.
The NCR wage board will mount its public hearing today after it consulted with the labor sector on Oct. 22 and the employers on Oct. 24. The board can act on wage levels after the first anniversary of its last wage order, which fell on Oct. 5. — Gillian M. Cortez

Pryce nets P1.1B in 9 months

PRYCE CORP. reported a consolidated net income of P1.11 billion in nine months to September, an increase of around 18% from P943.07 million, as revenue growth stayed in double digits during the period.
The company, which operates primarily in Mindanao, said it “remains positive that it will achieve its target of P1.5 billion in net income (plus or minus 10%) for the year 2018 coming into the fourth quarter, it being the strongest one historically in terms of sales volume and income.”
Gross revenues during the period rose 17.5% to P7.57 billion from P6.44 billion a year, with the bulk or 92% of this year’s total coming from the sale of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), while the remaining 8% came from sales of industrial gases, real estate and pharmaceutical products.
“The company’s ongoing expansion projects in its marine-fed terminals and construction of additional refilling plants are seen to foster demand in various regions towards the close of this year and beyond,” Pryce said.
The company said for the third quarter, all of its segments reported positive revenue growth. LPG and industrial gas division recorded a 15.79% increase, while real estate and pharmaceutical products grew by 112.05% and 26.15%, respectively.
Pryce said the average LPG contract prices during the period increased by 17% at $541.33 per metric tons (MT) from last year’s $462.67 per MT.
“The rising LPG prices affected consumer’s purchasing behavior as very little growth for LPG sales was registered for the comparative period,” the company said.
Operating income rose by 28% to P1.24 billion from P965.05 million, “mainly driven by revenue growth and efficiency in the management of operating expenses.”
Including other income, Pryce’s net income after tax during the three quarters stood at P1.11 billion, or an earnings per share of P0.5507.
On Thursday, shares in Pryce slipped by 2.63% to cost at P5.55 each. — Victor V. Saulon

InstaPay transactions surge sevenfold

BSP
TRANSACTIONS through the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’ InstaPay platform surged to P2.6 billion as of September.

By Melissa Luz T. Lopez, Senior Reporter
USAGE OF THE central bank’s InstaPay platform has surged sevenfold as of September from the initial volumes when the platform for real-time interbank transfers was launched earlier this year.
Latest available data from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) showed total InstaPay transactions at P2.606 billion in September, more than seven times the P19.119 million traded back in April when the electronic facility went live.
InstaPay is an automated clearing house which processes real-time transfers worth P50,000 or lower across accounts or e-wallets from different banks or service providers. Money is sent and credited to a destination account in a matter of seconds or minutes.
The tally showed a sustained uptrend in total monthly transactions processed under InstaPay in terms of both volume and value. In fact, interbank transfers surged tenfold within the first month when the platform was made available to online banking users, with transactions rising to P190.91 million in May.
By volume, 1,740 fund transfer commands in April leaped to 12,548 a month later, and eventually to 225,519 in September.
There are 18 banks and electronic money issuers which allow clients to send and receive money via InstaPay as of early October, while 33 financial firms can receive funds through the interbank service.
Transaction fees vary across service providers, with some charging P10 for every InstaPay transaction, while the steepest is set at P100, according to a list published on the BSP website as of May.
Vicente T. de Villa III, officer-in-charge of the BSP’s Financial Technology Sub-Sector, has said they have seen “catapulting increase” in InstaPay usage, versus modest but stable activity in another clearing house which went live in November last year.
The Philippine Electronic Fund Transfer System and Operations Network (PESONet) — which compiles all interbank fund transfer instructions, runs a batch process, and credits the amount to the receiver by the end of the banking day — saw transfers grow relatively steady since its launch.
PESONet transfers started at P52.764 billion and even dipped to P52.595 billion in December, data showed. Transaction value has since grown to P63.597 billion as of September, with a peak of P74.45 billion tallied the previous month.
By volume, September saw 555,972 fund transfers fulfilled, higher than the 329,906 tallied when the PESONet started.
The central bank has required all banks and other financial firms to offer electronic banking portals and interbank transfer schemes in place by Nov. 30, in line with the regulator’s goal of prodding increased use of digital.
The BSP is eyeing to raise the share of e-payments to 20% of all transactions in the Philippines by 2020, coming from a measly 1% share back in 2013.
Central bank officials have also said that they are eyeing to set a national standard on quick response (QR) codes, which is expected to promote wider use of digital retail payments and away from cash. QR images can be scanned using a smartphone camera, which will then allow a customer to pay their bills fully online.

Frank Underwood is dead but looms large in final House of Cards season

LOS ANGELES — In the final season of Netflix Inc.’s House of Cards, Frank Underwood is physically gone, having died unexpectedly in his sleep. But the ghost of the win-at-all-costs politician played by Kevin Spacey haunts his wife and her young presidency.
Writers of the acclaimed drama had to rework the story after Spacey was accused of sexual misconduct a year ago and dropped from the show that made Netflix a player in premium television. The ending of the Underwoods’ story, which the producers called a “season of reckoning,” will be available on Netflix on Nov. 2.
At last season’s conclusion, Frank’s statuesque wife Claire, played by Robin Wright, looked into the camera and declared “my turn” as the power shifted and she became the first female US president.
After Spacey’s departure, executive producers and writers Frank Pugliese and Melissa James Gibson said everyone involved in the show felt they wanted to go ahead with a sixth and final season.
“What would it have been like to actually rob her turn?” Pugliese said in an interview. “It seemed like an impossible, unacceptable way to end it that way.”
The eight new episodes do not dance around Frank’s absence. The first episode reveals early on that he died in bed but makes the cause of his death the subject of an ongoing mystery.
“It would have felt really dishonest to try and erase him essentially as a character,” Gibson said. “I think that wouldn’t have honored the seeds of the show.”
Spacey was nominated for five Emmys for his House of Cards role. But last November, Netflix quickly cut ties with the actor after allegations of sexual misconduct surfaced. He has been accused by more than 20 men and has said nothing publicly about the allegations since an apology to the first accuser in October 2017.
Throughout the final House of Cards season, Claire is forced to constantly grapple with her late husband’s deals and the compromises she made with him.
“She is trying to carve out her own path and in doing so she has the opportunity and obligation to really face herself in a profound way,” Gibson said.
Claire also has to figure out who she can trust as the White House is destabilized with Frank out of picture, a scenario that provided the writers with rich story lines, they said.
“The circumstances became opportunities that I hope this season fulfills,” Pugliese said. — Reuters

A tranquil escape


By Michelle P. Soliman, Reporter
PALAWAN’s Dimakya Island is a tiny green jewel floating in a sea of deep blue that turns a clear aquamarine just before it touches the beach’s white sand.
The island — a 20-minute trip by land followed by a 30-minute boat ride from Coron — is where one finds the appropriately named Club Paradise resort.
It was towards the end of the lean season when we visited, and the resort was tranquil and the view was picturesque from any direction.
We were welcomed by the staff — mostly Palawan locals — waiting for us at the shoreline, greeting us with their hands to their chests.
“If you treat the staff as a family member, they would treat our guests the same. We invest heavily on keeping the staff happy,” said Club Paradise general manager Joegil M. Escobar.
The 19-hectare property, previously under German management, was acquired by the Discovery Group in 2013.
“We have staff engagement activities for them every year. We send them off to different properties of Discovery for exposure and activities in Manila for rest and recreation,” he said.
Since the Discovery Group’s acquisition of the resort, they keep up the motto: “Service That’s All Heart.”
“We want everyone to feel at home,” he said.
WHILE ON THE ISLAND
To keep up with the increasing number of tourists — the Department of Tourism reported that 6.6 million tourists visited the country in 2017 compared to 5.9 million in 2016 — the resort is currently focusing on developing its facilities.
The resort is currently doubling the number of rooms to 96. Mr. Escobar said that the rooms will blend with the look of the existing property.
The resort offers a variety of accommodations: the Sunset Villas, which face the sunset at the west of the island (additional villas were recently completed); Sunrise Villas which are at the eastern end of Dimakya; Garden Suites and Garden rooms.
“When we build something on the island, we try to make it a point to not cut trees. We adjust the design so that no trees are affected because we want to keep the natural landscape of the island,” said Mr. Escobar.
The resort also recently renovated the swimming pool with a mix of fresh and salt water.
The menu at its Firefish restaurant has also been revamped with Pan-Asian dishes care of Thai chef Alex Atthasarn who joined the kitchen four months ago.
A second restaurant offering a Mediterranean cuisine will also be opened soon, as well as a “make you own menu offer” packages for guests who want their meals personalized.
The expansion of facilities comes with the improvement of bandwidth around the island.
In addition, upcoming projects and courses of action in line with the resort’s EcoConserve program (implemented in 2017) will include the reduction of use of plastic products, the use of organic bathroom amenities, and the installation of water refilling and bottling stations in the resort. Eco-bricks will be used as an alternative to hollow blocks in building terraces for the nearby Taranuman Farm where certain vegetables are planted.
The resort is currently testing the waters with the use of solar panels at the restaurant.
“We are very heavy on environmental protection. It is our share of giving back to the island,” Mr. Escobar said.
The developments are targeted to be implemented by the third quarter of 2019.
WHAT TO DO THERE
While one can always just laze the day away in the comfortable rooms, that would be a shame as there is much to do.
Island hopping tours are offered to the three nearby islands of Malpagalen, Dimalanta, and Diatoy.
Then there is the full day Coron tour which includes a swim at Kayangan Lake and Sieste Pecados marine park and viewing of the sharp cliffs in Twin Lakes.
One can also take a boat ride to the west of the island to visit the famous Calauit island where a private safari park was set up during the Marcos regime for the pleasure of the ruling family. Today the descendants of many of the original African animals — from giraffes to antelope — still make their home on the island alongside native Palawan flora and fauna, and one can take a half day Calauit Safari tour to see them (you can also feed the giraffes).
One doesn’t have to leave the island to enjoy the Palawan wildlife — you can always snorkle or scuba dive in the area as the waters around Dimakya Island whose “house reefs” have been protected for the last 15 years, and thus teem with sea life (and if you come at the right time of the year, you can see sea turtles lay their eggs on the island). The resort can also arrange for diving expeditions in nearby areas, from dugong watching or diving expeditions in Calauit, to a 1.2 kilometer reef at nearby Diboyuyan Island, to a day of at APO Reef National Marine Park.
After all that, relax with a massage at the Glow Spa.
To end the day, take a 15- to 20-minute hike up to Eagles Point, the highest point on the island, and watch the sunset. Then go back down to the resort for cocktails — there is a wealth of choices as the resort has the Dugong Bar, where one can also play billiards, table tennis, darts, and foosball; the beachside Shack bar; and, even closer to the water, the Sand Bar.
For more information, visit www.clubparadisepalawan.com.

Mommy direst

By Noel Vera
Movie Review
Halloween
Directed by David Gordon Green

PART of what makes Halloween (2018) remarkable: the return of John Carpenter (helped with music); the return of Nick Castle (he provided the heavy breathing and at one point plays masked killer Michael Myers); the return of Jamie Lee Curtis (reprising the role that made her famous, Laurie Strode) but what for me really sets this sequel apart from the 10 other sequels reboots remakes and so on is a new name: David Gordon Green.
Oh some details do leave an impression: the blocky orange font (ITC Serif Gothic) on black background; the flattened pumpkin swelling back up to life (as handy an image as any of this resurrected franchise); the different shots recreated from Carpenter’s 1978 original, albeit with a twist; and, of course, Carpenter’s music, that familiar piano-and-synthesizer score with (on occasion) a clever twist when things get busy.
Green moves away from the Rob Zombie 2007 reboot, abandoning the abused childhood subplot — here, as in Carpenter’s film, he’s simply The Shape, and named as such in the credits (James Jude Courtney, who did the more strenuous bits). I suspect Carpenter had reasons for keeping the “character” so abstract — one being that it saved him the need to write extra dialogue — but possibly to free him to build up the figure (via camera movement and mis-en-scene) into something terrifying and mythic. “[N]o reason, no conscience, no understanding in even the most rudimentary sense of life or death, of good or evil, right or wrong,” Michael’s doctor Sam Loomis (a wonderfully unhinged Donald Pleasance) muttered in the original. On occasion he’s referred to as The Boogeyman, which is about the closest to an explanation of the character that you’ll ever get.
Which brings up the debate as to whether or not Zombie’s decision to explain Michael was right. Personally I thought the move reductive; Michael diminished into being yet another serial killer in a genre already crowded with graceless stumbling examples. The 2009 sequel to this reboot had nowhere to go but give the siblings (Oh, did I mention? In Halloween ll Michael and Laurie were revealed to be brothers and sisters) a telepathic link (an idea recycled from Halloween 5), and an excuse to splatter the screen with surreal imagery — Zombie, in effect, ran out of ideas about traumatized Michael and fell back to doing what Carpenter had been doing from the beginning: pure filmmaking dazzle and style, and to hell with substance (Carpenter did it with elegance and grace; Zombie — well, he dazzled, sometimes. Sometimes he induced a migraine.).
Halloween 2
What Green brings to the table is a shift in focus. Jamie Lee Curtis’ former babysitter 40 years later is now a “twice-divorced basket case,” estranged from daughter Karen (Judy Greer), desperate to maintain contact with granddaughter Allyson (Andi Matichak). She drinks too much; she’s also agoraphobic. When invited to a dinner with the parents and Allyson’s new boyfriend, she picks up Karen’s wineglass and takes a sip while her daughter looks on in dismay; they spend the rest of the shortlived dinner bickering. For a horror movie/slasher flick this installment of Halloween sure likes to take its time getting to know the cannon fodder.
To spoil matters a little — it’s about Laurie; it’s all about Laurie all along. The Shape is an unstoppable force, come out of nowhere, that assaulted a young Laurie — why? Who knows? Green does away with the longstanding (and frankly tiresome) franchise lore about siblings (when asked Allyson responds “that’s something that people made up”) — assault in this film is random and unexplained, as it is for many women. Laurie has been bent out of shape ever since, moving into a small fortress of a house complete with perimeter fences and surveillance cameras and a basement arsenal. Curtis, in what may be the role of her career, looks suitably formidable, but underneath that fierceness is a haunted quality, as if a figure stood before her that she can flinch away from or rail against but simply won’t go away. There’s an economy to her movement, the way she rams in deadbolts and drops crossbars in place, pumps a shotgun or sweeps a room with revolver in hand — Green repeats these sequences over and over till they become a delirious cadenza of survivalist poetry.
And like other forms of poetry, you recognize what’s being alluded to, or evoked: the economic grace of John Carpenter’s gliding camera; The Shape’s own minimalist predatory stride.
The dollhouse in Laurie’s room — a replica of the Myers house — is a dead giveaway, an undiscussed unemphasized detail suggesting The Shape’s sway over Laurie’s life: presiding over an exclusive corner in her bedroom, inside her head.
A bit of a sidenote: Judy Greer as Laurie’s daughter Karen performs ably enough in the comically embarrassing mother-daughter-grandmother scenes but little else — till the point when she’s unwillingly brought to Laurie’s house. There her face becomes a mask of stricken recognition — she knows this house; it’s in fact her childhood, an existence so intense Social Services took her away and declared Laurie an unfit mother. Karen, like her mother, has suffered in the past, not from The Shape but from her own mother; this homecoming is also an awakening, not into real life but into nightmare. Daughter Allyson isn’t half as interesting despite the disproportionate screen time — basically your levelheaded teenager suddenly in over her head — but Green’s concept needs her, as the rookie Strode ready to experience her own trauma, a generational rite of passage.
Suddenly Green’s callbacks to the original make sense. Each time we see a familiar pose — a face in a darkened doorway, a figure across the street, a body curled on the lawn — and each time it’s Laurie, not The Shape. They’re not so much telepathically linked (silly idea) as visually, a victimizer who failed to catch his prey and a victim who failed to die; over the years they’ve obsessed over this failed relationship, one preparing and the other — well who knows what he’s been doing all these years (Resistance training?).
Curtis has been criticized for being a gun control activist who here wields a Winchester rifle — only I’ve known a few gun collectors and she doesn’t act anything like them. They talk lovingly about their toys; they discuss cartridges and stopping power and smooth bolt actions. Curtis’ Laurie uses guns but they give her no joy — if anything they form the bars of her selfmade prison. Why is she so obsessed with confronting The Shape, after so many years? Because — aside from the need to protect her loved ones — she wants her life back, the life that he stole long ago. She finally wants to be free.
MTRCB Rating: R-16

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