Join Bloody Disgusting for ‘Halloween Kills’ Twitter Watch Party with David Gordon Green and Jason Blum!

Evil dies tonight! Evil dies tonight! Evil dies tonight!

Although David Gordon Green’s Halloween Kills heads to 4K and Blu-ray in January, the film has first been released digitally, today(!), in the form of the brand new Extended Cut!

To celebrate, we’re throwing a Twitter watch party with special guests, and you’re invited!

This Thursday, December 16, we’re hitting play on the Halloween Kills Extended Cut right at 9pm EST / 6pm PST to watch along with Bloody Disgusting and writer-director David Gordon Green and producer Jason Blum!

If you’ve never participated in a Twitter Watch Party before, it’s simple: Press play at the start time and follow the hashtag #HalloweenKillsAtHome to view real-time conversation on the film. If you want to join in, tag your Tweet with #HalloweenKillsAtHome. That’s it!

Be sure to follow along with the hashtag as well as Bloody Disgusting, Blumhouse, and Jason Blum on Twitter.

“Survivors of Michael Myer’s rampage form a vigilante mob and set out to hunt Michael down, once and for all. The Extended Cut has more thrills, kills, and an alternate ending.”

What can we expect from the alternate ending? The novelization may answer that question.

Gordon Green told Collider last month, “There’s an additional scene that we filmed that was scripted. And actually, I think is a pretty brilliant scene. So we’re going to do an extended version on the DVD, just so people can see an extended ending that’s different and cool. We ended up lifting it when I became more confident of where we’re going to pick up in the next movie; it didn’t feel authentic to where we’re going to go. So we lifted it.”

Gordon Green continued, “It’s part of the movie. It’s just not part of the appropriate momentum of…I think it was cool in its own right as watching a one-off movie, but knowing where we’re going to exactly where we’re going to pick up which, you’ll know in a year, it wasn’t the right look in the eye that we needed to give the audience.”