Skullcanon: Graveyard Corridors
This skullcanon is sponsored by “I swore I wrote about this before”
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We all know this brief moment in the movie, where Jack climbs out of a tomb on his mission to set things right:
This is one of many entrances to ‘corridors’. A corridor is a hidden path that works as a shortcut between two locations, such as between the graveyard Jack crash-landed in, and the one in Ha.llowe’en Town. The distance travelled is far shorter than expected.
The statues over them give an indication of where they will go. For instance, demons are for the human world, and two matching hooded figures bring you from the new graveyard to the older and vice versa. There are also ghastly, horror-stricken figures that lead to places where the deceased reside. Given Jack’s connection with guiding lost souls, it’s no surprise that such corridors have popped up.
In order to use them, one simply enters and focuses on where they want to go. With the corridors linked to the human world, this is crucial if you want to visit a certain location, otherwise you’ll get dropped off in any cemetery. (Jack would normally do this for his own research of locations, but it’s not advised if you’re trying to go home).
Every graveyard has a spot that holds the entrance to the corridor to H.allowe’en Town. Normally, they are larger monuments with a door that not everyone can open. In circumstances where there isn’t such a piece (especially in old, abandoned graveyards), it will be in the guise of a headstone that can be pushed back to reveal stairs. The entrances snap shut once you’ve entered, so there is little worry of anything unwelcome following. Residents attuned to the corridors (such as Jack) will have no problem finding the doorway, but one can learn with practice. Jack has been known to show friends how to use their local entrance should they want to come and visit.
This also applies in locations where the dead reside, (for example, the Land of the Dead in Cor.pse Bride). However, if a deceased visitor that isn’t originally from Ha.llowe’en Town stays too long, they will feel a tiredness and a pull to ‘go home’. This is usually why Jack opts to visit instead, as he isn’t restricted in such a way.
As a final note, the H.interlands also play a similar role. If one truly desires to go beyond what humans know, they must allow themselves to become lost in the woods. However, given the unpredictable nature of this (and the stories surrounding the fate of those that might become lost), it’s recommended to use the corridors.













