Neve Campbell’s character in Scream
Sidney Prescott
This real-life figure is thought to have inspired the creation of Bram Stoker’s iconic “Dracula”
Vlad the Impaler
Isn’t life juicy?
Starburst
“Double, double toil and trouble” is a quote from this Shakespeare work
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth
Originally nicknamed "Chicken Feed"
Candy Corn
The summer camp where Friday the 13th takes place
Camp Crystal Lake
Dr. Frankenstein’s first name
Victor
Double your pleasure, double your fun
Doublemint Gum
He wrote The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
Washington Irving
There’s no wrong way to eat a _____
Reese’s
In Jeepers Creepers, the Creeper rises every ___ years to feed
23 years
Pennywise the clown famously carries this creepy item in the Stephen King novel “It” and in its various film adaptation
Balloons
Two for me, none for you
Twix
Besides horror, Dracula author Bram Stoker also published books in this genre
Romance
Makes mouths happy
Twizzlers
The possessed young girl in The Exorcist
Regan
“If I cannot inspire love, I will cause fear” is a quote from this creepy character
Frankenstein’s monster
Melts in your mouth, not in your hand
M&Ms
This 1845 poem by Edgar Allen Poe features a talking bird that repeats the word “Nevermore”
“The Raven”
Don’t let hunger happen to you
Snickers
In The Ring, you have this amount of time to live after watching the video tape
7 days
Michael Myers’ mask from “Halloween” is one of the most iconic symbols of horror film villainy. It’s not a random costume prop, though: The rubber mask is actually a likeness of this famous figure.
Star Trek’s Captain Kirk — or, more specifically, actor William Shatner.
How many licks does it take to _____
get to the center of a Tootsie Pop
Author of the Goosebumps series
R.L. Stine
Get the sensation
York Peppermint Patty
First and Last name of the black cat in Hocus Pocus
Zachary Binks
El Chupacabra is a feral, bloodsucking creature from Latin American folklore. According to legend, this is the animal's favorite snack
Goats
Chupacabra literally means “goat sucker” in Spanish, and it is thought to feast on all kinds of livestock — with a preference for goats, of course.
It’s more than a mouthful
Whatchamacalit
Janet and Allan Ahlberg’s Halloween classic Funnybones tells the story of a big skeleton, a little skeleton and this other type of skeleton
A dog skeleton
Crispety, crunchety, peanut-buttery
Butterfinger