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Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (or simply Goosebumps 2 as marketed on home release) [7] is a 2018 American horror comedy film directed by Ari Sandel and written by Rob Lieber from a story by Lieber and Darren Lemke. A stand-alone sequel to 2015's Goosebumps, it is based on the children's horror book series of the same name by R. L. Stine.
Prepare to get Goosebumps once again! In Season 2 of the Disney+/Hulu anthology series (this time subtitled The Vanishing), David Schwimmer (Friends) plays Anthony Brewer, a former botany ...
Move over, Justin Long: David Schwimmer is next in line to take on author R.L. Stine’s weird and wild universe of things that go bump in the night. At New York Comic Con Sunday, Disney+ released ...
Fans are in for a lot of changes when Goosebumps returns for its second season on Disney+. The horror series, which premiered in October 2023, took inspiration from R.L. Stine's popular horror novels.
Goosebumps author R. L. Stine makes a voice cameo in "Night of the Living Dummy Part 2" as the host of the podcast Let the Write One In. Stoller and Letterman originally planned for Stine to have a physical cameo, but plans were discarded due to Stine's unavailability, after which showrunner Hilary Winston and co-executive producer James Egan ...
When the Goosebumps film was in early production and was going to be made by 20th Century Fox and DreamWorks, Burton was originally going to produce it in 1998, with the option to direct. [59] However, the project fell through and was later sold to Sony Pictures Entertainment , resulting in the 2015 film directed by Rob Letterman and composed ...
Goosebumps proves that creating a successful TV adaptation is all about incorporating the source material while still putting an original spin on the story. The spooky series, which is streaming ...
Stine also says that he incorporated a duck costume his parents got him for trick-or-treating in the book. [2] Tim Jacobus's niece was the model for the cover of the book. [3] The book was first published in September 1993 by Scholastic, and reissued in 2003 [4] and on September 1, 2008. [5]