Celebrate Halloween

Ultimate Halloween Houses – Amazing Halloween Decorations with Top 3 Halloween Songs

Ultimate Halloween Houses – Amazing Halloween Decorations

Halloween decorations can be fun and artful. You’ve got your pumpkin out and a couple of cobwebs and you’re ready for Halloween right? Well not for some people – some people go all out for Halloween Decorations and outdo many Christmas displays! I might add a little extra – put out a black-light or something, maybe a whole set of pumpkins. But these people do a Disneyland show – let’s look at some of these neat displays.

Halloween Decorations: Ghostbusters Light Displays

Ghostbusters is a 1984 American supernatural comedy film directed and produced by Ivan Reitman, and written by Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis. It stars Bill Murray, Aykroyd, and Ramis as Peter Venkman, Ray Stantz, and Egon Spengler, three eccentric parapsychologists who start a ghost-catching business in New York City. It also stars Sigourney Weaver and Rick Moranis, and features Annie Potts, Ernie Hudson, and William Atherton in supporting roles.

Based on his own fascination with spirituality, Aykroyd conceived Ghostbusters as a project starring himself and John Belushi, in which they would venture through time and space battling supernatural threats. Following Belushi’s death in 1982, and with Aykroyd’s concept deemed financially impractical, Ramis was hired to help rewrite the script to set it in New York City and make it more realistic.

It was the first comedy film to employ expensive special effects, and Columbia Pictures, concerned about its relatively high $25–30 million budget, had little faith in its box office potential. Filming took place from October 1983 to January 1984, in New York City and Los Angeles. Due to competition for special effects studios among various films in development at the time, Richard Edlund used part of the budget to found Boss Film Studios, which employed a combination of practical effects, miniatures, and puppets to deliver the ghoulish visuals.

Ghostbusters was released on June 8, 1984, to critical acclaim and became a cultural phenomenon. It was praised for its blend of comedy, action, and horror, and Murray’s performance was often singled out for praise. It earned $282.2 million during its initial theatrical run, making it the second-highest-grossing film of 1984 in the United States and Canada, and the then-highest-grossing comedy ever.

It was the number-one film in theaters for seven consecutive weeks and one of only four films to gross more than $100 million that year. Further theatrical releases have increased the total gross to around $295.2 million, making it one of the most successful comedy films of the 1980s. In 2015, the Library of Congress selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry. Its theme song, “Ghostbusters” by Ray Parker Jr., was also a number-one hit.

With its effect on popular culture, and a dedicated fan following, the success of Ghostbusters launched a multi-billion dollar multimedia franchise. This included the popular animated television series The Real Ghostbusters (1986), its sequel Extreme Ghostbusters (1997), video games, board games, comic books, clothing, music, and haunted attractions. Ghostbusters was followed in 1989 by Ghostbusters II, which fared less well financially and critically, and attempts to develop a second sequel paused in 2014 following Ramis’s death. After a 2016 reboot received mixed reviews and underperformed financially, a second sequel to the 1984 film, Ghostbusters: Afterlife, was released on November 19, 2021.

Halloween Decorations: Thriller Light Displays

Thriller” is a song by the American singer Michael Jackson. It was released by Epic Records in November 1983 in the UK and on January 23, 1984 in the U.S., as the seventh and final single from his sixth studio album, Thriller. It is a funk song featuring a repeating synthesizer bassline and lyrics evoking horror films, with sound effects such as thunder, creaking doors and wolf howls. It ends with a spoken-word sequence performed by the horror actor Vincent Price. It was produced by Quincy Jones and written by Rod Temperton, who wanted to write a theatrical song to suit Jackson’s love of film.

The “Thriller” music video was directed by John Landis and premiered on MTV on December 2, 1983. In the video, Jackson becomes a zombie and performs a dance routine with a horde of the undead. Many elements of the video have had a lasting impact on popular culture, such as the zombie dance and Jackson’s red jacket, and it was the first music video inducted into the National Film Registry. It has been named the greatest music video of all time by various publications and readers’ polls.

“Thriller” received positive reviews and became the album’s seventh top-ten single on the Billboard Hot 100, reaching number four. It reached number one in Belgium, France and Spain, and the top ten in many other countries. In the week of Jackson’s death in 2009, it was Jackson’s bestselling track in the US, with sales of 167,000 copies on the Billboard Hot Digital Tracks chart. It charted on the Billboard Hot Digital Singles Chart at number two, and remained in the charts’ top ten for three consecutive weeks. “Thriller” is certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America.

It appears on several of Jackson’s greatest-hits albums and has been covered by numerous artists. In 1984 at the 26th Annual Grammy Awards, the song “Thriller” won the Grammy for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Male. The song has returned to the Billboard Hot 100 chart multiple times since its initial release due to its popularity around the time of Halloween.

Halloween Decorations: This is Halloween – The Nightmare Before Christmas Display

This Is Halloween” is a song from the 1993 film The Nightmare Before Christmas composed and written by Danny Elfman. In the film it is performed by the residents of the fictional “Halloween Town”, which is the film’s main setting, and introduces the town’s Halloween-centered lifestyle.

“This Is Halloween” was created by Danny Elfman, the main composer for The Nightmare Before Christmas.[1] In the film, it serves as the opening song as the characters of the film introduce themselves and the setting of the film is established.

“This Is Halloween” was covered by the bands Marilyn Manson and Panic! at the Disco in 2006 for the special edition release of the film’s soundtrack and subsequently included on the 2008 cover album, Nightmare Revisited.

On the 2011 album V-Rock Disney, which features visual kei artists covering Disney songs, Sadie covered this song.

The Swiss/German symphonic metal band Ad Infinitum did a cover in 2020.

The song was performed as part of a virtual Broadway benefit concert hosted by the Disney Music Group on Halloween 2020. Money from the concert was donated to the Lymphoma Research Foundation and the Actors Fund.

In October 2023, the song was added to the soundtrack of the video game Rocket League as part of a Halloween event.

The All Halloween Website – (celebratehalloween.net)

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