The new "Halloween Returns" film is one of the most anticipated events in the horror world this year, almost as much as back in 1998, when Jamie Lee Curtis made her grand return to the franchise. But fans are also kind of skeptic as to what the new film could be about, considering the franchise had already been rebooted with a successful run by horror maestro Rob Zombie.

The new director for the film, Marcus Dunstan, gave a candid interview to one of his fans, as reported by Halloween Daily News. Darnell Weeks is a reader of the website and a fan of the franchise, who scored an interview with Dunstan and uploaded the audio content to You Tube.

The film, which is still in its earliest stages of production, has not yet cast for Michael Myers. Dunstan spoke about the film with enthusiasm, in hopes of recreating what was so inherent to the original film that gave it so much glory.

"Suspense isn't expensive. A karate fight in a burning room is expensive," Dunstan said, referring to the incredibly low budget of the first film in comparison to the much larger budget of the second film.

The original creator and director for "Halloween," John Carpenter, famously made the film on an incredibly low budget at the time, which was only $300,000, according to the IMDb. It would later pull in more that $70 million worldwide, $60 million of which would come from the 1978 run.

So when Dunstan compared the two costs, he was looking at what made the film a success to start with.

"Michael Myers is subtlety and suspense," Dunstan said.

Although he did not give a shot for shot breakdown of how the new film would be taking place, he has spent a lot of time studying the original film, and he wants to give his fans a taste of the original, just in a more "aged" sense.

"If it looks anything at all disparaging to anybody, then we've failed. Our goal is really to have that Han and Chewie moment," Dunstan said, referring to Han Solo and Chewbacca showing up in the latest "Star Wars" trailer.

See the interview below.