Movies
Sweets & Treats
Halloween History
Monsters
Music
100

This actress played Lauri Strode in the 1978 movie "Halloween"

Jamie Lee Curtis

100

Originally called "chicken feed", According to a survey of 17,000 Candystore.com customers, this Halloween treat is considered the worst.

Candy Corn (followed by Circus Peanuts)

100

Abracadabra! This famous magician died on Halloween day in 1926. 

Harry Houdini

100
Count Wampyr was the original name of this character in the Bram Stoker classic. 

Count Dracula

100

This 1984 song asked "Who you gonna call?"

Ghostbusters

200

This 2017 movie remake is considered the most commercially successful horror movie of all time

IT

200

According to YouGov's 2021 survey, this treat is the most popular adult Halloween candy (with the cutest mascots) 

M&M

200

This first lady was the first to decorate the White House for Halloween in 1958

Mamie Eisenhower

200

The legend of these monsters most likely originated in Haiti

Zombies

200
Vincent Price provides the spooky monologue at the end of this popular Halloween Song

Thriller

300

The mask this frightful movie character wears is a spray-painted Captain Kirk mask.

Michael Myers

300

These candy bars were the first two to come in "fun size"

Snickers & Milky Way

300
This is the name of the Celtic harvest festival that many people believe Halloween is based on

Samhain (SAH-win or SOW-in)

300

Lycanthrope is another name for this popular Halloween K9. 

Werewolf

300

We need more cowbell! This Blue Oyster Cult song was featured in a popular SNL skit. 

Don't Fear the Reaper

400

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Beetlejuice! This is the number of minutes Michael Keaton appeared on screen in this movie. 

17

400

This fruity square Halloween candy was originally called "Opal Fruits" 

Starburst

400

This root vegetable was traditionally used to carve jack-o-lanters before the pumpkin

Turnip

400

This movie monster is immortalized with a life sized statue at the bottom of lake in Crosby Minnesota 

Jason Voorhees

400

The year the "Monster Mash" was released 

1962

500

Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Psycho, and Silence of the Lambs were all inspired by this famous serial killer 

Ed Gein

500

According to the American Chemical Society, eating this many fun size candy bars would be enough to poison a 180 pound person

262

500

"Double, double, toil and trouble". This rhyme was originally featured in this Shakespearean play

Macbeth

500

This monster creature was modeled after an Academy Award 

Creature from the Black Lagoon

500

"The Nightmare Before Christmas" composer, Danny Eflman, also performed in this 1980's band who had their own big Halloween hit with "Dead Man's Party"

Oingo Boingo