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Trick 'r Treat

Trick 'r Treat

Warner Bros. (2008)
Blu-ray Xvid
R
MP4
Comedy | Drama | Horror | Thriller
Canada | English | Color | 01:22

Four interwoven stories that occur on Halloween: An everyday high school principal has a secret life as a serial killer; a college virgin might have just met the one guy for her; a group of teenagers pull a mean prank; a woman who loathes the night has to contend with her holiday-obsessed husband.


Cast View all

Dylan Baker Steven
Rochelle Aytes Maria
Quinn Lord Sam
Lauren Lee Smith Danielle
Moneca Delain Janet
Tahmoh Penikett Henry
Brett Kelly Charlie
Britt McKillip Macy
Isabelle Deluce Sara
Jean-Luc Bilodeau Schrader
Alberto Ghisi Chip
Samm Todd Rhonda
Anna Paquin Laurie
Brian Cox Mr. Kreeg
Leslie Bibb Emma
Connor Christopher Levins Billy
James Willson Alex
Patrick Gilmore Bud The Cameraman
Troy Everett Bud's Assistant
Barbara Kottmeier Centaur Girl
Derek McIver Centaur Guy
Matthew Kevin Anderson Clerk
Tatiana Anderson Lady Barbarian
C. Ernst Harth Giant Baby
Chloe Smeltzer Little Pig #1

Trailer

Edition details

Packaging Keep Case
Nr Discs 1
Screen Ratios Fullscreen (4:3, Letterboxed)
Theatrical Widescreen (2.35:1)
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital 5.1 [English]
Dolby Digital 5.1 [French]
Dolby Digital 5.1 [Spanish]
Subtitles English | English (Closed Captioned)
Distributor Warner Home Video
Layers Single side, Single layer
Edition Release Date Oct 06, 2009
Regions Region

Personal

Owner Jackmeats Flix
Location Horror Disk 1
Purchased On Oct 31, 2019 at YTS
Watched Nov 01, 2019 (at our home w/bec)
Index 1313
Added Date Jul 06, 2017 01:36:04
Modified Date Oct 12, 2025 03:17:31

Notes

My quick rating - 7.5/10. How in Sam’s burlap sack-covered name did I let this one slip past me for so long? That was my thought a few years ago when I finally pressed play, and it hit me all over again on my recent rewatch—this time in anticipation of its upcoming 4K theatrical run this October 14th-16th. Some movies are Halloween set dressing, and some are Halloween. Trick ’r Treat is the latter. You don’t just watch it, you bask in it like a jack-o'-lantern soaking up candlelight.

The structure is a horror fan’s playground: five interwoven tales, all orbiting around one Ohio town on Halloween night. There’s a mild-mannered principal with a side hustle in murder. A shy virgin (Anna Paquin) looking for her first time—though not in the way you’d expect. A group of kids executing a cruel prank because apparently, Are You Afraid of the Dark? raised a whole generation wrong. A Halloween-hating wife who dares to desecrate decorations before midnight. And finally, Brian Cox as the crankiest old man alive, squaring off against the most iconic pint-sized enforcer since Chucky.

What makes it work isn’t just the individual stories, but how elegantly they’re stitched together. Characters drift in and out of each other's timelines like trick-or-treaters cutting through backyards. Michael Dougherty wrote and directed the whole thing with the confidence of someone who’s spent his entire life stockpiling urban legends like ammunition. Consequence-filled candy? Check. Ghost children and crashing school buses? Yup. Werewolves? Oh, absolutely. He doesn’t just reference Halloween myths—he weaponizes them.

Then there’s Sam. Sweet, silent Sam. Pajamas. Button eyes. Pumpkin lollipop. The face (or sack) of justice. He’s not a villain so much as he’s quality control. Cross the holiday? Lose a limb. Blow out a jack-o'-lantern too early? See you in hell. IF your doorbell rings, and he says Trick ’r Treat, you'd better oblige. Honestly, if society just agreed to follow Sam’s rules year-round, things might improve.

The production is drenched in peak October ambiance. Leaves swirl in every frame like the crew was armed with industrial-strength fans and a truck full of foliage. The homes look like Halloween Express sponsored them. The practical effects land with the kind of giddy crunch you want from a seasonal horror flick—bloody without being bleak, fun without being fluffy.

Is it perfect? Frighteningly close. Some segments hit harder than others, but this anthology format keeps you from ever realizing it is one. The consistency of the atmosphere keeps everything glued together like caramel on an apple.

If you’ve never seen it, correct that immediately. And if you have seen it, watch it again in theaters this October. Halloween (1978) may be the reigning champ, but that could happen all year round. Trick ’r Treat is the movie that doesn’t just visit the holiday—it IS Halloween.

Tags

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