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‘Trick ‘r Treat’: Unearthing The Classic’s Hidden Easter Eggs

Recently, Variety ranked Trick ‘r Treat number three in the 21 Best Halloween Movies Ever – only topped by Hocus Pocus and Halloween (1978).

It’s interesting, though, given that the movie initially flopped upon release. Over the years, the film and its lollipop-wielding icon, Sam, have picked up a cult following, whose fans have since helped skyrocket it to the level of popularity we see today.

It’s nice to see the movie getting mainstream recognition. Trick ‘r Treat is a Halloween staple in my household, and our small, murderous friend Sam makes me ecstatic every time I see him. He’s so precious.

Plus, the interwoven stories and comic-style horror are reminiscent of the classics like Tales from the Crypt, Cat’s Eye, and Creepshow – while the setting and character design make it all feel like Halloween night. It’s easy to see why Trick ‘r Treat is now a Halloween classic to even large media outlets like Variety.

However, with so much greatness going on, picking up on every detail the film offers can be challenging. Several Easter eggs in Trick ‘r Treat go unseen by many viewers, so let’s dive in.

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Recently, Variety ranked Trick ‘r Treat number three in the 21 Best Halloween Movies Ever – only topped by Hocus Pocus and Halloween (1978).

It’s interesting, though, given that the movie initially flopped upon release. Over the years, the film and its lollipop-wielding icon, Sam, have picked up a cult following, whose fans have since helped skyrocket it to the level of popularity we see today.

It’s nice to see the movie getting mainstream recognition. Trick ‘r Treat is a Halloween staple in my household, and our small, murderous friend Sam makes me ecstatic every time I see him. He’s so precious.

Plus, the interwoven stories and comic-style horror are reminiscent of the classics like Tales from the Crypt, Cat’s Eye, and Creepshow – while the setting and character design make it all feel like Halloween night. It’s easy to see why Trick ‘r Treat is now a Halloween classic to even large media outlets like Variety.

However, with so much greatness going on, picking up on every detail the film offers can be challenging. Several Easter eggs in Trick ‘r Treat go unseen by many viewers, so let’s dive in.

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Hidden Details in Trick ‘r Treat

Halloween Through the Years

Each story in the film depicts how different age groups experience the holiday, effectively representing a lifetime of Halloween.

  • Billy Wilkins shows us Halloween during young childhood, where we’re guided by our parents and follow family Halloween traditions.
  • The next age group, our “UNICEF” trick-or-treaters, are examples of trick-or-treating with friends when we first gain independence during the tween and teen years.
  • Little Red Riding Hood takes us to a little more grown-up Halloween, where young adults party and try to find themselves.
  • Meanwhile, people like Mrs. Henderson, Principal Steven Wilkins, and our ‘Opening’ sequence couple (Emma and Henry) exemplify Halloween in our prime adult years. The parties are still happening for some, but now it’s also about the kids and handing out candy – and we’re all slightly angry.
  • All culminating in old age and the end via Mr. Kreeg, the bus driver.

Kreeg, you may remember, after going toe to toe with Sam for a couple of rounds, eventually succumbed to the vengeful spirits of the Halloween School Bus Massacre. Mr. Kreeg must have sensed his fate for years, as his door has eight locks – one for each of the eight children he helped murder.

Quinn Lord’s Appearance in Trick ‘r Treat

Quinn Lord was only seven when he starred in Trick ‘r Treat as Sam. In the film, he made an additional, minor appearance as the boy with the lollipop in the dressing room scene.

Horror Movie References in Trick ‘r Treat

Viewers can spot numerous classic horror icons throughout the film through prop placement and costume design.

Kreeg, the bus driver, looks awfully like John Carpenter and this was done absolutely on purpose. In fact, in an interview with Collider, Michael Dougherty revealed that Brian Cox, the actor behind Mr. Kreeg, said:

“I have one request. I wanna look like John Carpenter.”

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Brian Cox’s appearance was only one of many references to John Carpenter and his works. For example:

  • When the children emerge from the fog during the Halloween School Bus Massacre segment, the shot is reminiscent of one from John Carpenter’s The Fog.
  • Additionally, when Kreeg sees Sam’s severed hand moving, his remark is the same one Palmer had when the head crawled off in The Thing: “You gotta be fucking kidding.”

It’s arguable whether the crawling severed hand references Evil Dead 2; however, the scene where Sam slices Kreeg’s Achilles’ tendon is undoubtedly a Pet Sematary reference. This iconic attack move is not the only reference to King, as the iconic 1958 Plymouth Fury, better known as Christine, can be spotted on the street.

You can find more movie references in Trick ‘r Treat in characters’ costumes, such as Billy Wilkins, who dressed as Chucky. Speaking of the Wilkins family, did you catch all the details in Principal Wilkins’ storyline?

Principal Steven Wilkins’ Sinister Halloween Night

Since we see Steven Wilkins’ story unfold in various nonlinear scenes throughout the film, it can be easy to lose track. So, let’s review.

Principal Wilkins started his Halloween night by handing out candy. He gave a chocolate bar to our pal Sam, who used it later as a weapon against Kreeg. It was a formidable weapon because of the razor inside – indicating that Wilkins was putting razor blades in the candy.

Of course, this is unsurprising, as in our first few moments of meeting Wilkins, we also watched him poison and murder a child. After grappling with the body in the yard for a time, he returns inside to carve a man-o’lantern with his son.

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Later, a man with a mask and vampire fangs exsanguinates a young girl in an alleyway. The same vampire follows our Red Riding Hood to the werewolf bonfire, intending to make her his next victim. After he attacks her, Red Riding Hood is finally ready to tap into her werewolf roots.

These events lead to the ultimate reveal that those are fake fangs, and the seeming “vampire” was just Steven Wilkins in costume. He died, undoubtedly shitting his pants as he watched the girl who was supposed to be his victim transform into a werewolf and devour him. A fitting end. But did you notice that Wilkins wasn’t the only character we knew who became werewolf lunch?

Coach Taylor’s Wild Night in a Hotdog Costume

A small side story that often goes unnoticed in Trick ‘r Treat is the adventure of Coach Taylor. While at one door, one of our trick-or-treaters lamented that Coach Taylor was in a hotdog costume getting busy with somebody in a pig costume. He was quite the partier, as you can also spot his costume on the ground at the werewolf bonfire.

Michael Dougherty put tremendous effort into making Trick ‘r Treat the Halloween classic it’s become. By paying homage to some of the great horror that’s come before it while serving us a multitude of interwoven storylines in a setting that bleeds Halloween, Trick’r Treat is one of the greatest Halloween movies of all time. Did you pick up on these hidden details in Trick’r Treat? Are there any we missed? Sound off on social media or in the comments below!

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A writer by both passion and profession: Tiffany Taylor is a mother of three with a lifelong interest in all things strange or mysterious. Her love for the written word blossomed from her love of horror at a young age because scary stories played an integral role in her childhood. Today, when she isn’t reading, writing, or watching scary movies, Tiffany enjoys cooking, stargazing, and listening to music.

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‘Ready or Not’ and the Cathartic Cigarette of a Relatable Final Girl

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I was late to the Radio Silence party. However, I do not let that stop me from being one of the loudest people at the function now. I randomly decided to see Ready or Not in theaters one afternoon in 2019 and walked out a better person for it. The movie introduced me to the work of a team that would become some of my favorite current filmmakers. It also confirmed that getting married is the worst thing one can do. That felt very validating as someone who doesn’t buy into the needing to be married to be complete narrative.

Ready or Not is about a fucked up family with a fucked up tradition. The unassuming Grace (Samara Weaving) thinks her new in-laws are a bit weird. However, she’s blinded by love on her wedding day. She would never suspect that her groom, Alex (Mark O’Brien), would lead her into a deadly wedding night. So, she heads downstairs to play a game with the family, not knowing that they will be hunting her this evening. This is one of the many ways I am different from Grace. I watch enough of the news to know the husband should be the prime suspect, and I have been around long enough to know men are the worst. I also have a commitment phobia, so the idea of walking down the aisle gives me anxiety. 

Grace Under Fire

Ready or Not is a horror comedy set on a wealthy family’s estate that got overshadowed by Knives Out. I have gone on record multiple times saying it’s the better movie. Sadly, because it has fewer actors who are household names, people are not ready to have that conversation. However, I’m taking up space this month to talk about catharsis, so let me get back on track. One of the many ways this movie is better than the latter is because of that sweet catharsis awaiting us at the end.

This movie puts Grace through it and then some. Weaving easily makes her one of the easiest final girls to root for over a decade too. From finding out the man she loves has betrayed her, to having to fight off the in-laws trying to kill her, as she is suddenly forced to fight to survive her wedding night. No one can say that Grace doesn’t earn that cigarette at the end of the film. As she sits on the stairs covered in the blood of what was supposed to be her new family, she is a relatable icon. As the unseen cop asks what happened to her, she simply says,In-laws.It’s a quick laugh before the credits roll, andLove Me Tenderby Stereo Jane makes us dance and giggle in our seats. 

Ready or Not Proves That Maybe She’s Better Off Alone

It is also a moment in which Grace is one of many women who survives marriage. She comes out of the other side beaten but not broken. Grace finally put herself, and her needs first, and can breathe again in a way she hasn’t since saying I do. She fought kids, her parents-in-law, and even her husband to escape with her life. She refused to be a victim, and with that cigarette, she is finally free and safe. Grace is back to being single, and that’s clearly for the best.

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This Guy Busick and R. Christopher Murphy script is funny on the surface, even before you start digging into the subtext. The fact that Ready or Not is a movie where the happy ending is a woman being left alone is not wasted on me, though. While Grace thought being married would make her happy, she now has physical and emotional wounds to remind her that it’s okay to be alone. 

One of the things I love about this current era of Radio Silence films is that the women in these projects are not the perfect victims. Whether it’s Ready or Not, Abigail, or Scream (2022), or Scream VI, the girls are fighting. They want to live, they are smart and resourceful, and they know that no one is coming to help them. That’s why I get excited whenever I see Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett’s names appear next to a Guy Busick co-written script. Those three have cracked the code to give us women protagonists that are badasses, and often more dangerous than their would-be killers when push comes to shove. 

Ready or Not Proves That Commitment is Scarier Than Death

So, watching Grace run around this creepy family’s estate in her wedding dress is a vision. It’s also very much the opposite of what we expect when we see a bride. Wedding days are supposed to be champagne, friends, family, and trying to buy into the societal notion that being married is what we’re supposed to aspire to as AFABs. They start programming us pretty early that we have to learn to cook to feed future husbands and children.

The traditions of being given away by our fathers, and taking our husbands’ last name, are outdated patriarchal nonsense. Let’s not even get started on how some guys still ask for a woman’s father’s permission to propose. These practices tell us that we are not real people so much as pawns men pass off to each other. These are things that cause me to hyperventilate a little when people try to talk to me about settling down.

Marriage Ain’t For Everybody

I have a lot of beef with marriage propaganda. That’s why Ready or Not speaks to me on a bunch of levels that I find surprising and fresh. Most movies would have forced Grace and Alex to make up at the end to continue selling the idea that heterosexual romance is always the answer. Even in horror, the concept that “love will save the day” is shoved at us (glares at The Conjuring Universe). So, it’s cool to see a movie that understands women can be enough on their own. We don’t need a man to complete us, and most of the time, men do lead to more problems. While I am no longer a part-time smoker, I find myself inhaling and exhaling as Grace takes that puff at the end of the film. As a woman who loves being alone, it’s awesome to be seen this way. 

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Ready or Note cigarette

The Cigarette of Singledom

We don’t need movies to validate our life choices. However, it’s nice to be acknowledged every so often. If for no other reason than to break up the routine. I’m so tired of seeing movies that feel like a guy and a girl making it work, no matter the odds, is admirable. Sometimes people are better when they separate, and sometimes divorce saves lives. So, I salute Grace and her cathartic cigarette at the end of her bloody ordeal.

I cannot wait to see what single shenanigans she gets into in Ready or Not 2: Here I Come. I personally hope she inherited that money from the dead in-laws who tried her. She deserves to live her best single girl life on a beach somewhere. Grace’s marriage was a short one, but she learned a lot. She survived it, came out the other side stronger, richer, and knowing that marriage isn’t for everybody.

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The Best Horror You Can Stream on Shudder in January 2026

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My New Year’s resolution is to spend more time watching my favorite app. Luckily, Shudder is not taking it easy on us this holiday season, so I may meet my quota this January. The streamer is bringing in the new year with quite a few bangers. We have classics from icons, a new title from the first family of indie horror, and a couple of lesser-known films that have finally found a home. So, I am obviously living for this month’s programming and think most of you will too. I have picked the five films that I believe deserve our collective attention the most. Get into each of them and start your 2026 off on the right foot. 

The Best Movies to Stream on Shudder This Month

Carrie (1976)

A sheltered teen finally unleashes her telekinetic powers after being humiliated for the last time. Carrie is the reason I thought proms might be cool when I was a kid. This Brian De Palma adaptation is one of my favorite Stephen King adaptations. It is also an important title in the good-for-her subgenre. I cannot help rooting for Carrie White (Sissy Spacek) when I watch her snap at this prom and then head home to accidentally deal with her mom. The only tragedy of this evening is that Carrie had to die, too. I said what I said, and I will be hitting play again while it is on Shudder. This recommendation goes out to the other recovering sheltered girls who would be the problem if they had powers. I see you because I am you.

You can watch Carrie on January 1st.

Marshmallow (2025)

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A shy 12-year-old gets sent to summer camp and finds himself in a living nightmare. While Marshmallow did not land for me, I know plenty of people who love it. Which makes this the perfect addition to the Shudder catalogue. I am actually excited to see more folks fall in love with this movie when it hits the streamer. If nothing else, it will help a few folks cross off another 2025 title if they are still playing catch-up with last year’s movies. It also gets cool points from me for not taking the easy route with the mystery it built. I hope you all dig it more than I did, and tell your friends about it. Perhaps you could even encourage them to sign up for the app.

You can watch Marshmallow on January 1st.

Chain Reactions (2024)

Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chain Saw Massacre cemented his horror legacy over fifty years ago. So, it is long overdue for a documentary where horror royalty can discuss its impact on them and their careers. I have been waiting for a couple of years to hear Karyn Kusama and Takashi Miike talk about Hooper’s work and how he inspired them. So, I am super geeked that Shudder is finally giving me the chance to see this film. The streamer is also helping the nerds out by adding The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre 2 (1986) this month. If you are also an overachieving couch potato, I will see you at the finish line next week.

You can watch Chain Reactions on January 9th.

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In the Mouth of Madness (1994)

An insurance investigator discovers the impact a horror writer’s books have on people. I love chaos, and John Carpenter chaos happens to be one of my favorite kinds of chaos. While we talk about The Thing and Halloween all the time, this maestro has given us plenty of horror to celebrate. In the Mouth of Madness is very much one of those titles vying for a top spot among the best of his filmography. To sweeten the batshit pot, this movie features Sam Neill. You know that he only shows up in our genre if the movie is going to be legendary. You cannot tell me this is not a Shudder priority this month.

You can watch In the Mouth of Madness on January 10th.

Mother of Flies (2025)

A terminally ill young woman and her dad head to the woods to seek out a recluse who claims she can cure her cancer. The Adams Family has been holding court on Shudder for years, so it feels right that Mother of Flies is a Shudder Original. More importantly, this fest favorite has one of the best performances of 2025. Which makes it a great time for people to finally get to see it and get in line to give Toby Poser her flowers. Whatever you think your favorite Poser role is, it is about to change when you see her as Solveig. I am being serious when I say that this movie might be the first family of indie horror at their best.

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You can watch Mother of Flies on January 23rd.

New year, but same Shudder. I would not want to go into 2026 any other way, personally. I hope these horrific recommendations bring you the good kind of anxiety.  Or at least distract you from the state of the world for a bit.

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