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Halloweentown II: Kalabar's Revenge is a 2001 American fantasy comedy film released as a Disney Channel Original Movie for the Halloween season. It is the second installment in the Halloweentown series. [1] Set two years after the first film, Marnie returns to find Halloweentown's citizens transformed into dull, black-and-white humans.
In Halloweentown II: Kalabar's Revenge, Benny falls victim to the Grey Spell and becomes a boring version of his usual self (and also gets a flesh-and-blood body). He returns to normal when Dylan casts the reversal spell to undo his transformation. In Return to Halloweentown, he drives Marnie and Dylan to Witch University. Benny's full name is ...
Now: Judith Hoag. Back to television she went! After Halloweentown, Judith returned to her roots, guest starring in hit series like Grey’s Anatomy and CSI: New York.But if you really want to ...
Halloweentown proposes that fantasy beings such as warlocks, vampires, werewolves, mummies, ghosts, trolls, ogres, zombies, pumpkin heads (a race of people with jack-o'-lanterns for heads), skeletons, goblins, and humanoids with varying numbers of heads, limbs, and sensory organs are real, but have separated themselves from Earth's history to escape humans' fear and persecution.
Shortly after Halloweentown, she made an indelible impression in a guest-starring role on Will & Grace as Grace's mother, Bobbi Adler, which she continued until the series' initial conclusion in 2006.
Only two of the original cast members from "Halloweentown" appeared in all four films: Judith Hoag, who played Gwen Cromwell, and Joey Zimmerman, who played Dylan. "Halloweentown" was supposed to ...
In 2001, he played his most notable character, Kal in Halloweentown II: Kalabar's Revenge; he acted alongside Kimberly J. Brown. [1] In a 2020 question-and-answer panel, Kountz revealed he had four or five auditions for the film before being cast. [2] He also was in an episode of Ghost Whisperer titled Ghost in the Machine, as the avatar.
Disney Channel's "Halloweentown" premiered in 1998 and was the first in a series of four movies. It makes real-world references to the Egyptian "Book of the Dead" and Shakespeare's "Macbeth."