Halloween is a secular holiday celebrated every year on the evening of October 31st. Its origins date back several centuries to the Celtic Feast of Samhain. It was believed that on the night of the festival, the doorway between the lands of the living and the dead were thin, enabling spirits from the afterworld entrance into the real world. While the spirits of beloved family members were welcome, evil spirits were feared and unwelcome. Patrons of the festival warded off evil spirits by wearing frightful masks, which eventually evolved into the custom of wearing decorative costumes on Halloween night. In modern years, the tradition of Halloween is celebrated primarily by children who dress up in costumes and walk from house to house intoning the words "Trick or Treat". As per the custom, the owner of the household was obliged to reward the child with a prize, usually in the form of candy. Halloween is celebrated by adults as well, who regularly attend costume parties on the week of Halloween either at personal residences or at bars, night clubs or theme parks. Adult Halloween parties gives men the chance to wear cavemen costumes to show off their pecs, and women the opportunity to wear slutty versions of a Catwoman costume.
Halloween film series[]
Halloween is a central plot device used in many horror films, in particular, the eponymous Halloween series. The premise of the films involves a masked serial killer named Michael Myers, who murdered his sister Judith Myers on Halloween night in 1963. Fifteen-years-later, the adult Michael returns to his home town of Haddonfield, Illinois to slice his way through promiscuous babysitters on Halloween night.