A new version of Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor-Compton) appears in the Rob Zombie remake (2007). This film establishes from the beginning that Laurie (born Angel Myers) is Michael's baby sister, nicknamed "Boo", with whom young Michael (Daeg Faerch) shares a close bond.
Michael Audrey Myers was born on October 19, 1957. He had an older sister named Judith and a younger sister. The family resided in a two-story house at 45 Lampkin Lane in the suburban town of Haddonfield, Illinois.
Halloween II follows two prominent storylines — that of Dr. Loomis searching for Michael and that of Laurie at Haddonfield Memorial Hospital. It's towards the end of the film, in a scene with Loomis and his colleague Marion Chambers, that the divisive twist is revealed: Laurie Strode is Michael Myers' sister.
Meanwhile, Dr. Loomis discovers that Laurie is Michael and Judith's sister; she was put up for adoption after the death of their parents, with the records sealed to protect the family. Realizing that Michael has killed one sister and now wants to kill the other, Loomis rushes to the hospital to find them.
The new timeline picks up on Halloween night, where the original film ends. Laurie did not learn about being Michael's sister until Part II (1982). So, because Part II no longer exists in this timeline, Laurie is never informed about any of this.
It's simply a continuation of him seeing her as the right victim and then becoming consumed by his own inability to kill her. The thought of her having been in the wrong place at the wrong time is a truly frightening concept when one remembers that it could've been anyone.
Jamie Lee Curtis reprised the role in Halloween (2018), which ignores the previous sequels in the franchise and serves as a direct sequel to the 1978 film. Consequently, Michael and Laurie are not related in this continuity since that revelation does not exist without the 1981 sequel.
But what makes the H2O timeline great is that Michael wants to kill Laurie specifically because he has completion anxiety (thanks to Nica Pierce for coining the term). Laurie gets away from him and keeps getting away from him. Everyone else (including dogs) who dies, including dogs, are simply in the way or convenient.
John Strode is the insane, abusive, alcoholic husband of Debra Strode and father of Kara and Tim. He is also the brother of Laurie's father Morgan Strode. John bought the Myers house from Morgan after the house was proved to be "unsellable". John worked at Strode Real Estate with his brother.
Films. Michael Myers made his first appearance in the 1978 film Halloween. At the beginning of Halloween, a six-year-old Michael murders his teenage sister Judith on Halloween night in 1963.
Source. Steven Lloyd is a minor character in the Halloween series. He is the only son and child of Jamie Lloyd and serial killer Michael Myers, also being the latter's grand-nephew. Steven is one of the few surviving members of the Myers family.
The only connection that Laurie has to Michael is that Laurie's father is the realtor who is trying to sell Michael's family home. Laurie's father asks Laurie to drop the keys off at the Myers house and that is where and how Michael first sees Laurie.
Deborah Myers was a major character in the remake of Halloween and the mother of Michael Myers, Judith Myers, Angel Myers. Deborah Myers is played by Sheri Moon Zombie.
In 1957, Michael Myers was born to Donald and Edith Myers–unfortunately, he would be the one to take their lives shortly after his birth. He was taken in by the Strode family as if he were their own son; yet his biological father only showed himself briefly in flashbacks.
It should be noted that in The Producer's Cut of Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, it is heavily implied that the Cult of Thorn forced Michael to rape Jamie and got her pregnant, resulting in him being the father of the baby.
As revealed in Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, a group of druids belonging to Halloween's Cult of Thorn placed a curse on Michael when he was an infant. This curse causes him to be possessed by Thorn, a demonic force that requires its host to sacrifice their family on Samhain (now known as Halloween night).
Angel Myers, better known as Laurie Strode, is a character in the Halloween franchise. Laurie first appeared in Rob Zombie's Halloween and Halloween II as the main protagonist. She is based upon the main teenage protagonist from the classic Halloween, and is played by Scout Taylor-Compton.
Following the traumatic experience of 1978, Laurie married Mr. Lloyd and in 1980 had a daughter with him named Jamie.
Morgan Strode (died 1979) was the father of Laurie Strode, the husband of Pamela Strode, the grandfather of Karen Nelson, the great-grandfather of Allyson Nelson and the owner of Strode Realty.
Michael was supposed to be being looked after by his sister who was babysitting him - but instead she went off to have sex. This leads to the theory that Judith choosing her boyfriend over him, saw Michael react by killing her.
On a cold Halloween night in 1963, six year old Michael Myers brutally murdered his 17-year-old sister, Judith.
Quite simply, he chooses not to. Dr. Loomis is quoted in the series as saying that Michael can talk, but simply doesn't. There's no known damages to his mouth, tongue, or vocal cords.
Halloween's protagonist Laurie Strode has died three times throughout the film series, including the remakes. John Carpenter's slasher classic Halloween was released in 1978 and introduced a new masked villain: Michael Myers, and his target, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis).
In the original film, Michael Myers wore a mask because he was not a person, but “the embodiment of evil.” He was called “The Shape” and only existed to murder unsuspecting people. Wearing a mask takes away his identity which makes him more menacing.
In the original canon, movies 1–6 before the H20 retcon and the remake by Rob Zombie Michael Myers much like Jason had a mythical aspect to him. This is a thing known as the Curse of the Thorn, it grants immense strength, durability, a pathological need to kill your family, and above all complete immortality.