
Roseanne, Season 2; Episode 7; "BOO!"
If a television show like this could be considered flawed, the weak spot here is undoubtedly Lecy Goranson as Becky. Understandably, after her apple rant, you'll see her onscreen for maybe 3 minutes total in the Halloween episodes for seasons 3 and 4 combined.

Roseanne, Season 3; Episode 7; "Trick or Treat"
"Badda bing, badda boom"? I should imagine that in 1990, that phrase must have been at least 3 years past its' expiration. An amusing enough commentary on bad perceived male behaviors ("what does she want with you when she's got a suitcase full of sex toys?"), though as one of the first gay-referencing progressive episodes of the show I'm not sure Dan's "mess with me" line was very flattering.

Roseanne, Season 4; Episode 6; "Trick Me Up, Trick Me Down"
Undoubtedly, the best Halloween episode of the series. As though I had to say anything, it's the tightest in terms of execution. Everything works and everyone on the crew and cast is at their absolute best. The Roseanne vs. Kathy thing is perfect here (and Meagen Fay is hilarious), all bases covered (favorite moment; "Alls I've gotta do is
think... If I were her, what would I do to get even? ...Oh hoah,
that bitch!"). Good psycho-killer music at the beginning too.

Roseanne, Season 5; Episode 7; "Halloween IV"
There's just something inherently off about an episode where Roseanne herself is the one who needs an intervention to get her into the Halloween spirit. Ironic though it is, it's also hokey (the whole 3 Halloween ghosts thing really doesn't do that much- the past section is especially lame) and a bit of a downer. Though, Roseanne is still giving an amazing performance (almost good enough to top Season 4's Halloween episode), the lodge party scenes are great, and the scene into Roseanne's future showing her as the complete antithesis of who she is in the show is classic ("Don't leave me, Dan; I try the best I can but I am
only a woman!").

Roseanne, Season 6; Episode 4; "Halloween V"
Definitely an improvement over Season 5's Halloween episode. The return of the prank war theme is great (both of the set-ups were perfect), Dan's "the things you have no intention of doing" mini-speech is excellent, the Nancy jokes are great and it's proof of how good an actress Sandra Bernhard is that she can play that whiny little twit (I actually knew several girls frighteningly just like Nancy) without her trademark cynical-aggressive attitude. It's a bit lowkey with not as much actual Halloween antics but it's more fun than "Halloween IV."

The Jeffersons, Season 4; Episode 11; "The Costume Party"
Historic show, yes. And the characters are a lot of fun over the course of the first 3 seasons (probably the best). But the 4th season slowed things down a lot- I never thought Marcus (absent from this episode, thankfully) or Leroy (Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning's Vernon Washington) were good additions to the cast. Then, with Zara Cully's passing (I believe her last episode, though she died in '78, was season 4's "The Last Leaf")... I'm not sure the show did enough to keep it fresh or had enough left in it to sustain an entire season. And though season 4 had its' moments (I remember "Florence's Union" being one of the highpoints), there's little going on in "The Costume Party." (Not a Halloween episode, no, but there are costumes and people playing characters all the way through it) Florence's "
oh ma' goooodniss!!" routine is a lot of fun and somewhat reminiscent of Marla Gibbs' tour-de-force performance in the final scenes of Season 3's exquisite "Florence in Love."

Garfield's Halloween Adventure
Everyone who's seen this knows it's a masterpiece on the same level as It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. Garfield's always a great character but this episode (special) also goes the extra mile to deliver awesome animation (it's like watercolors but it's extremely heady, prime nostalgia factor) and memorable songs (I've been hum-singing "sixty men all lost at sea..." nonstop for days now). The moment at the abandoned house with the creepy old man is the stuff of legends and I wouldn't be surprised to find its' a staple of many of our childhoods. This is just full of amazing scenes but even then, there are at least half a dozen standouts. Love "the one thing I'm not is a scaredy cat" especially (it actually still spooks me a little - and... look at that ghost at the end, looking at the camera blinking at us like he's saying; "what did
I do?" - SO FREAKING ADORABLE!). And that beautiful chalk look to the ghosts... Might there be some The Fog influence here?