Trick 'r Treat

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Poison, drowning, claw, or knife
So many ways to take a life.

Trick 'r Treat is an Anthology comedy/horror movie that was Screwed By The Studio. It was produced by Bryan Singer and directed by Michael Dougherty, and developed from Dougherty's 1996 animated short, Season's Greetings. The conceptual designer was Breehn Burns, co-creator of Dr. Tran. Trick 'R Treat was originally slated for a theatrical release in 2007, but was held up until a DVD release in 2009.

Set over a single Halloween night (although there is a flashback set on a Halloween thirty years prior), Trick 'r Treat is less interested in plot than it is in the holiday itself: the fears, emotions, atmosphere, and the traditions that have coalesced into what people imagine Halloween is about.

Trick 'r Treat has several subplots, loosely connected, that are the focus of this anthology:

  • A young couple is divided by his love and her (Leslie Bibb) hatred of Halloween.
  • A school principal (Dylan Baker) carries out a double life as a Serial Killer.
  • A group of college girls go to a Halloween party, where the sweet and virginal one (Anna Paquin), dressed as Little Red Riding Hood, is hoping to finally meet the man of her dreams...
  • A group of kids, inspired by the town legend of the "Halloween Schoolbus Massacre", play a prank that goes horribly wrong...
  • An elderly curmudgeon (Brian Cox) with a Dark and Troubled Past attempts to get through the night without acknowledging that it's Halloween.

All these stories frequently overlap and share characters, particularly a mysterious trick 'r treater named Sam (pictured).


Tropes used in Trick 'r Treat include:
  • Adaptation Expansion: From the original short.
  • All Hallow's Eve: Of course.
  • Alpha Bitch: Macy might as well have been named Libby.
  • Anachronic Order: The opening scene is, chronologically, the very last event in the film. After this scene, it tells three stories that are more or less set simultaneously, before backing up to the beginning with another story, set during a time skip. It ends just before the opening scene.
  • Angry Guard Dog: Mr. Kreeg's pit bull, Spite. No really, his name is Spite.
  • Anthology
  • Anthropomorphic Personification
  • Asshole Victim: Almost every victim. Charlie is probably the most standard example, though.
  • Bait and Switch: Many. Best used for a humorous effect in the opening when a woman sees a masked man who looks like Michael Myers across the street just standing there watching, and it turns out just to be a guy waiting for his ride.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: Remember to always be nice to your friends or else they'll leave you to die.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Macy. Although there are more literal examples elsewhere...
  • Blind Without'Em: Rhonda.
  • Braces of Orthodontic Overkill: One of the four trick-or-treaters.
  • Children Are Innocent: Averted, overall.
  • Covers Always Lie: Inverted with the Blu-Ray release as it clearly shows Sam's true face.
  • Creepy Child: Sam, the schoolbus kids, and Billy Wilkins
  • Deadly Prank: Macy and her friends pretend to be the undead schoolbus kids to scare Rhonda, who panics and cracks her head against a rock. The trope is subverted when it turns out that Rhonda is still alive, and subsequently inverted, when the real schoolbus kids show up and kill the pranksters.
  • Dead Star Walking: Leslie Bibb dies very early on in the film.
  • Death by Sex: Not literally, but the girl killed by the "vampire" is mortally wounded during their make out session.
  • Deliberately Cute Child: Billy Wilkins is absolutely adorable.
  • Dies Wide Open: The victim of the vampire.
  • Cheerful Child - "Let's carve a scaaaary pumpkin this time, Daddy!"
  • Did You Just Have Tea With Cthulhu - Once Sam's true nature is revealed, every time in which a character interacts peacefully with him comes across as this.
  • Fan Service / Fan Disservice: Laurie's friends disrobe before... removing their skin and sprouting hair.
  • Final Girl: Laurie has many aspects of this, being named, as she is, after the Final Girl in Halloween. She's even got the Little Red Riding Hood costume, which is, of course, symbolic of virginity. In the end, however, she and all her friends survive. And they were never really in any danger at all.
  • Fluffy the Terrible: Sam.
  • Fur Against Fang: Sort of.
  • Furry Fandom: One of the teachers is having a weird costume party.
  • Ghost Butler: One of them opens and shuts a door for Sam. Or maybe he's just telekinetic.
  • Ghostly Goals: The schoolbus kids want to avenge their deaths.
  • Grievous Bottley Harm: Attempted by Kreeg against Sam.
  • Hell Hound: Invoked by Kreeg, who dresses his rather petit dog in black with glowing eyespots and sics him on trick-or-treaters.
  • Homage: There's a trick 'r treater dressed as The Shape from the Halloween movies. Also, the character set up as an obvious Final Girl, as noted above, is named Laurie.
    • Also, a colourized version of the original House on Haunted Hill is playing on TV in one scene.
    • Naming a Serial Killer "Steven" may also be an Alice Cooper reference.
    • Mr. Kreeg says "You gotta be fuckin' kidding," while Sam's severed hand skitters across the floor, much the same way as Palmer said the exact line in The Thing while Norris' head ran around the lab on spider legs.
  • Hey, It's That Guy! :This film feels a bit like an X-Men 2 reunion: Bryan Singer, Michael Dougherty, Brian Cox, and Anna Paquin were all involved in both movies.
  • Horror Doesn't Settle for Simple Tuesday
  • Idiot Savant: Rhonda is stated as such by one of the characters.
  • Improbable Weapon User: Look carefully at the movie poster.
  • Infant Immortality: Averted hard at every turn.
  • Info Dump: Rhonda on the origins of Halloween/Samhain.
  • Ironic Echo: "Screw you."
    • As well as "My my, what big eyes you have."
  • Ironic Nursery Tune: ...give me something good to eat...
  • Jerkass: Mr. Kreeg.
  • Kiss of the Vampire: The victim is so pleasured that she doesn't even realize it's happening until she notices her own blood dripping down her arms.
  • Malevolent Masked Men: Just about everyone wears a mask at some point for obvious reasons, but particular examples include Sam, the vampire, and the schoolbus kids.
  • Meaningful Background Event
  • Meaningful Name: Sam is strongly implied to be short for Samhain, the Celtic god of death and the harvest.
  • Mugging the Monster: Principal Wilkins trying to kill Laurie, a werewolf.
  • Nigh Invulnerable: Sam
  • Offing the Offspring: Subverted. For a while, it really looks like Steven is going to knife little Billy to death. It turns out he was probably never planning to; he was just really excited about carving that "jack o' lantern"...
  • Once Is Not Enough: Kreeg takes no chances against Sam. He gets back up anyway, but you have to to give Kreeg that much credit, at least.
  • Our Vampires Are Different: They're not real vampires, for one thing...
  • Our Werewolves Are Different: They're all female, for one, and transform by the rather unusual method of tearing through their human skin.
    • Probably took inspiration from the Van Helsing film.
    • Most likely the shedding skin was inspired by the film "The Company of Wolves", which also featured "Little Red Riding Hood".
  • Police Are Useless: When Mr. Kreeg calls the police, he is put on hold long enough for Sam to cut the line. No one is ever sent out to check on the cause of the call.
  • Pulling Themselves Together: Sam, after Kreeg dismembers him with buckshot.
  • Razor Apples: It's easy to miss the literal example, but Steven uses poison ("Always check your candy!"), and the chocolate bar he gives Sam actually has a razor blade inside, which is later used as a weapon.
  • Redemption Equals Death: After Mr. Kreeg appeases Sam by giving him a chocolate bar, he is seen giving out candy to other trick 'r treaters and basically doing Halloween right. However, at the end of the night, the schoolbus kids still come for him.
    • To elaborate, Kreeg was the bus driver in the story about said kids. And the only survivor.
  • Room Full of Crazy/Couldn't Find a Pen: Sam plasters Mr. Kreeg's room with the lyrics of the Ironic Nursery Tune in absolutely record time.
  • The Schlub Pub Seduction Deduction: How the werewolf girls lead unsuspecting men to their feast. Said men are the main course.
  • Scary Scarecrows: Sam's mask, as well as the ornaments on Henry and Emma's lawn
  • The Scourge of God: Well, a god...
  • Serial Killer
  • Shout-Out: Scooby Doo on Zombie Island briefly plays while Mr. Kreeg is channel surfing.
  • The Speechless: Sam never speaks onscreen, although he makes a sort of hissing noise toward the end, and giggles a little.
  • Stab the Salad: A rare example where the "innocent" reveal isn't really much better than what we had first assumed.
  • Strange Girl: Rhonda, who is probably autistic. She takes Halloween very seriously, it appears. Though not quite as seriously as Steven or Sam.
  • Undead Child: The schoolbus kids.
  • Whispering Ghosts: Starts up the moment Macy extinguishes the last nearby jack-o-lantern.
  • Yuppie Couple: The three kids dressed as clowns, who can be very helpful in establishing the film's Anachronic Order. Sam starts out as one of these, too.