The whole experience is really more like participating in a live theatrical performance. Playing a judge, he sentences the group to death and they continue through elaborate sets where “scareactors” playing the Penguin, the Riddler, Two-Face and more usher them through a variety of paths, sometimes splitting up friends and asking guests to solve riddles. Walking through “Batman: Arkham Asylum,” small groups are immediately greeted by the Joker and Harley Quinn. The mazes are longer, more immersive and interactive. Horror Made Here is a different kind of experience than the annual events at Knott’s Scary Farm, Six Flags Fright Fest and Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween Horror Nights, the last of which is just upwind from the Warner Bros. The brief night tour of the back lot is basically used to shuttle campers over to Camp Crystal Lake, where they exit the cart and are left to wander through the lush and very dark jungle set and through memorable scenes from “Freddy vs. Guests can check out Stage 48: Script to Scream where there are several props from Tim Burton films including “Bettlejuice,” “Sweeney Todd,” “Corpse Bride” and “Mars Attacks.” True horror fans can spend their entire life’s savings in the Little Shop of Horrors, which carries a wide variety of wares including socks, T-shirts, candles, wine glasses, novelty shot glasses, posters, Funko Pop! Figures and more. There are horror SFX makeup demonstrations and a Lost Boys Arcade filled with iconic and authentic free-play ’80s arcade games and ’80s music. There’s also an interactive, 4-D screening of the most horrifying clips from “The Exorcist,” held in a back lot church set that was most recently used for the opening scenes of “Annabelle Creation.” The event features four walk-through attractions, including the return of the killer clown Pennywise in the “It Knows What Scares You” maze, “Batman: Arkham Asylum,” “The Conjuring Universe” and campers face off in “Freddy vs. Studio Tour is presenting its Horror Made Here: Festival of Frights, which is now open on select evenings - Friday, Oct. The feedback from last year, was still, ‘We want more.’” The second year, we made it a little bigger and created scare mazes with ‘The Conjuring’ and we did the Neibolt House from ‘It’ and we had an ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ walk-through and a night tour that took guests on the back lot where ‘What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?,’ ‘House of Wax’ and ‘Gremlins’ were shot. “People were coming to us and saying, ‘You have such great movies,’ and we do. Studio Tour said during a recent phone interview. “The instant feedback that we got from fans is that they wanted more,” Gary Soloff, marketing director of the Warner Bros. films “The Conjuring” and “The Conjuring 2” over a single weekend on its famous back lot. Its first event in 2016 featured a spooky nighttime tour and screenings of Warner Bros. Studio Tour in Burbank started dabbling in the rapidly expanding Southern California Halloween event market.