@from_grom I personally think OP conveys the look perfectly without going overboard on redesigning his look entirely. I feel like keeping him clean and smooth takes away from the fact that he’s supposed to be a forest dwelling monster, who would absolutely look smelly and gross
@from_grom “More suited to his usual design”
All your examples do is decrease the detail in comparison to OP’s design. OP didn’t drastically redesign him or anything to begin with, so I’m not sure what you’re even getting at tbh
@s_kneecaps That would’ve been awesome! In a perfect world, Corey should’ve been introduced in Kills imo. Have him meet and be attacked by Micheal then, but survive. Have Corey seek Micheal out in Ends and build up towards that climax of him taking on the shape mantle.
They spent an entire movie building his guy up to follow in the footsteps of Micheal Myers and crudely “kill” him off in the final act because they couldn’t find a way to fit him in. I refuse to believe that neck snap was it.
@PleasantJDeMoss Jamie Lee Curtis was really putting pressure on David Gordon Green to leave no loose ends open. As a result, Corey’s character was transformed to circle entirely around being a tragedy, when by the final act he was to turn on Allyson and carry on evil.
@PleasantJDeMoss I disagree. His original character purpose was to serve as the next evolution of evil, as there was an alternate ending in which Corey was to dawn the mask and vanish into the night; with parallels of his transformation throughout. It was cut because (1/2)
@WarlockJump There are scenes in the trailer of Corey getting ready to attack Allyson in Micheal’s mask, presumably after Micheal’s death. I feel like there was an intended Laurie V Micheal/Corey V Allyson parallel ending that was to end in a cliff hanger like the original. A shame it was cut