Its never as good as the first time, Sade Adu sang of love. I have rarely, if ever, found this to be true (third times a charm, if were going to generalize), but I do think it applies to the 1996 slasher movie Scream. Those of us who saw this in the theater early into its release had no idea what we were in for. Its promo campaign was vague, little more than a bunch of actors looking terrified and running and an ominous voiceover declaring, Someone has taken their love of scary movies one step too far. Drew Barrymore, arguably the movies biggest star at the time, was featured prominently. She was clearly the protagonist.
And then, 10 minutes in, after her character Casey was subjected to a sadistic game of cat and mouse over her cordless phone, she was brutally murdered and strung up on the tree in her yard. It was the single most shocking thing that Ive ever seen in a mainstream movie. I was terrified like never before in a movie theater and rarely since. All bets were off. This movie would clearly resort to anything to fuck up its viewers. Remaining in the theater for the next 90 or so minutes was exhilarating torture.
The adrenaline rush of that opening sequence is something I wish I could experience again. Once youre aware, the movie loses some of its visceral power. But certainly not all. Scream is a classic, up there with all of the movies its characters reference and in many cases, funnier and sharper than them. Scream is a relic of its time, but an utter standout in genre filmmaking. It inspired countless knock-offs and reinvigorated horror (slasher movies, specifically), but nothing that it gave birth to even threatened to Liza it and supersede its cultural import.
In a TV documentary included as a bonus feature in the Blu-ray set of the first three Scream films, many of those involved in the production emphasize that horror had been gutted and left for dead in the years before Scream showed its (ghost) face. The previous decades reliable franchises like Friday the 13th and Halloween had run out of steam, plodding along as brainlessly as the murderers they depicted. There were few truly original horror films in the early 90s to capture mainstream attention (save the one-off brilliance of something like Candyman). The thriller had taken over. In vogue were movies with horrific elements that were either not horror films (like Basic Instinct) or that took such a radical approach to genre that they were unrecognizable as such if they qualified at all (like The Silence of the Lambs).
Wes Craven attempted to pump some new life into the slasher with his 1994 movie Wes Cravens New Nightmare, a self-aware seventh entry in the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise that the writer-director launched in 1984. In New Nightmare, the original films actors Heather Langenkamp (Nancy), Robert Englund (Freddy), and John Saxon (Nancys father Lt. Donald Thompson), as well as executives like New Line Cinemas Robert Shaye, played versions of themselves, dealing with the aftermath (and future) of the franchise they helped create. Its a movie about legends, how they never die as long as there are storytellers to repeat them, and while the acting is broad and it all devolves into another goofy Nightmare on Elm Street sequel in its third act when a new version of Freddy hunts Heather and her son, its at the very least a thought-provoking exercise.
It was also a flop. With a domestic gross of about $19 million, it became the lowest-grossing Nightmare, practically refuting the insistence of Shaye and Craven (who also plays himself) in the movie that the NOES audience simply would not accept the demise of Freddy Krueger (the preceding entry, the franchises sixth, was called Freddys Dead: The Final Nightmare and marketed as its last, haha). The response indicated that people, in fact, were happy to let Freddy and his series die.
Undeterred, Craven kept at horror. His next movie was 1995's Eddie Murphy-starring A Vampire in Brooklyn. And then there was Scream. Kevin Murphys script circled around some of New Nightmares ideas, but it was fresher and infinitely funnier.If Scream didnt position itself as canon from jump, it certainly offered its services as the genres ombudsman, dissecting the genre with the sick fixation of one of its antisocial antagonists. It mocked tropes while upholding them. Its cultural antecedents were certainly the movies it openly saluted, but also the pop-culture-obsessed young characters who rattled off references as a matter of course in their dialogue that were becoming commonplace in 90s cinema (think Reality Bites and Clueless). As a pop-culture obsessive myself, these characters seemed realer to me than virtually all depictions of teens and twentysomethings I had seen so far. Pop culture is a terrific meeting ground.
It is the clash of a smirking, eye-rolling, whatEVERness and the real threat of evisceration that helps the first Scream scene retain a lot of its effectiveness, even on repeat viewings. (How many times have I watched Scream before I did this week to write about it? Twenty? Fifty? Ive lost count, but this movie is practically fused to my DNA.) Its a tremendous performance from Barrymore ahead of tremendous performances from just about all involved. The characters are just blank enough to stay out of the way of the plots momentum and rendered just specific enough to feel realer than virtually any other legion of maniac victims that wed previously seen. Rose McGowans spunky Tatum has always been my favorite. Hers is an exuberant performance that is also reeled in enough to never approach hamminess (I wish I could say the same for Matthew Lillards turn). The commanding glow emanating from McGowan is that of a bright future, which makes the tragedy of the abuse and injustice she says she suffered that much more palpable.
Williamsons script sparkles. His high school students fling insults and compliments (fuck rag, goon fuck, stud bucket) that are original but not quite as esoteric as those in Heathers, many of which were just made up to satirize the way teens talk. Without fanfare or self-congratulation, his script examined the effects of trauma on its protagonist, Sidney (Neve Campbell), who is still reeling from the rape and murder of her mother when her own stalking begins. Campbells sweetness and vulnerability make her third-act strength that much more satisfying.
Sometimes Scream feels like Cliffs Notes Carol Clover, especially in the dialogue of video-store clerk Randy (Jamie Kennedy), who gives a lesson in tropes during a viewing party of the original Halloween. But even that stuff is mostly delicious, toometa-commentary is taken to a delirious level when, later, a drunk Randy continues watching Halloween by himself on the couch and slurs at the screen, Jamie, look behind you! while the Scream killer stalks him from behind. Hes talking to that movies protagonist, Jamie Lee Curtis, and also himself, Jamie Kennedy. Amazing trick. Screams killers, revealed in a series of twists, are similarly savvy with genre tropes, and the movie is clearly commenting on societal anxiety of the corrosive effect that watching scary movies will have on young, impressionable audience members. This is a satirical vision of a worst-case scenario that is also consistently terrifying in its potential realism. But Scream leaves nothing much to subtlety, and it comments on this aspect as well, with one antagonist declaring: Movies dont create psychos. Movies make psychos more creative. Touch. Scream shows and tells.
Maybe what I love most about Scream is that when all the smarty-pantsing is said and done, its all just been an excuse for another dumb bloodbath. The movie represents progress in motion and is more creative than so much that happened in the time between its grandfather Halloween and it, but its still just another scary movie, another excuse for a franchise. (Williamson had already outlined his trilogy when he started shopping his script, hoping to woo investors with series potential.) Scream knew its place, the ultimate sign that it deeply understood what it was talking about.
I realize that its a bit strange to write effusively about a Harvey Weinstein property in 2020. Screams distributor, Dimension Films, was Miramaxs genre label. What do we do with movies that were important and influential and fucking brilliant that also had attached to them, men who have been accused of heinous, career-destroying, life-upending crimes? I dont know that there is a single answer to this, and avoiding them entirely seems a completely reasonable course of action. As a great admirer of 90s cinema, I just cant do that with a lot of the films that Weinstein worked on. I dont want to live a life without Pulp Fiction or Jackie Brown or Madonna: Truth or Dare or Unzipped or Paris Is Burning or Scream. Still, I thought it would be useful to call on some guidance, so I read the section of Rose McGowans 2018 memoirBrave about the filming of Scream. At the time, McGowan hadnt yet met Weinstein, which she says happened at the 1997 Sundance Film Festival (during which she also says he raped her). In Brave, McGowan calls Scream a refuge for me and offers a rather cogent assessment of its artistic success:
No one discusses how disconnected people are when they watch horror films. God forbid you watch someone die awfully and you feel something. If you dont think this translates to real-life numbness, youre deluding yourself. Numbing yourself to violence against women comes early and if its not coming to you at your home, and I hope its not, then its coming to you through TV and film. What I thought the original Scream did very well was to make you care about each character. We werent disposable.
Amen.
View post:
Scream and the Art of Being Smart About Being Dumb - Jezebel
- Forget the tired franchises, a new wave of horror movies will make us jump out of our seats - The Guardian - July 17th, 2024
- Surprise horror hit Longlegs raises the question, is Oregon safe to live in? - OregonLive - July 17th, 2024
- House of the Dragon star unrecognisable in hair-raising new horror movie - Express - July 17th, 2024
- Monster Summer trailer: Mel Gibson family horror film reaches theatres in October - JoBlo.com - July 17th, 2024
- Is Longlegs Really the Scariest Movie of the Year? - Decider - July 17th, 2024
- Terrifier, Scream Included in Spirit Halloweens New Horror Movie Babies Collection - ComingSoon.net - July 17th, 2024
- Is Longlegs Really That Scary? Inside the Horror Movie's Gruesome Twists and Turns (Spoilers!) - PEOPLE - July 17th, 2024
- Is the Next Jay and Silent Bob Sequel Going to Be a Horror Movie? - Cracked.com - July 17th, 2024
- Christian Bales Upcoming Horror Movie Can Help Pay Off The Actor's Divisive Superhero Movie - Screen Rant - July 17th, 2024
- Longlegs Star Alicia Witt Recalls Being Gently Slapped by Al Pacino During Scare on 88 Minutes (Exclusive) - Us Weekly - July 17th, 2024
- Longlegs Scores Highest Opening Weekend for an Original Horror Movie This Year - Bloody Disgusting - July 17th, 2024
- A four-star horror movie? Expertly crafted Longlegs achieves the impossible - St. Paul Pioneer Press - July 17th, 2024
- Psycho stars son directs Nicolas Cage in this creepy new horror movie - Sydney Morning Herald - July 17th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's new horror movie Longlegs is certainly terrifying, but not in the ways you were probably expecting - Gamesradar - July 17th, 2024
- Chilling haunted doll horror movie with 100% Rotten Tomatoes score drops this week - Dexerto - July 17th, 2024
- Osgood Perkins Gets Into the Family Business With Longlegs - Vulture - July 17th, 2024
- Kevin Smith's Next Jay And Silent Bob Outing Could Be A Horror Movie - SlashFilm - July 17th, 2024
- House of the Dragon star unrecognisable in snaps from chilling new horror movie - The Mirror - July 17th, 2024
- Exploring the genius (and terror) of the 'Longlegs' marketing campaign - Euronews - July 17th, 2024
- Longlegs Ending Explained: Digging Into The Dark Mystery In The Nicolas Cage Horror Movie - CinemaBlend - July 17th, 2024
- A True Story Inspired The Horror Movie Open Water - SlashFilm - June 20th, 2024
- Horror Movies In Theaters This Weekend - FANGORIA - June 20th, 2024
- 'Lumina' Trailer - Alien Abduction Horror Movie Crash Lands in Theaters This July - Bloody Disgusting - June 20th, 2024
- The First Trailer For NOSFERATU Will Be Released This Weekend in Theaters GeekTyrant - GeekTyrant - June 20th, 2024
- 10 Best Horror Movies Of 2024 - Screen Rant - June 20th, 2024
- 20 Horror Movie Villains With Motives You'll Understand - The Pryor Information Publication - June 20th, 2024
- This Korean Horror Film Is One of the Scariest Movies of 2024 - CBR - June 20th, 2024
- Zazie Beetz Shines in Muschiettis Scary Movie They Will Kill You - Digital Chew - June 20th, 2024
- Scary Summer: Five Aquatic Horror Movies to Stream This Week - Bloody Disgusting - June 20th, 2024
- This Lovecraft Adaptation Has Some of the Best Practical Effects Ever in a Horror Movie - Collider - June 20th, 2024
- Forget Ghost Ship, Wes Craven Gave Us the Best Horror Opening - CBR - June 20th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's New Horror Film Debuts With Perfect Rotten Tomatoes Score and Stunning Reviews - CBR - June 20th, 2024
- Stephen King Called This Classic Scene the Scariest Moment in Horror History - Collider - June 20th, 2024
- Dark R-Rated Supernatural Horror Mystery Thriller One Of The Best In Years, Stream Without Netflix - Giant Freakin Robot - June 20th, 2024
- Kyra Sedgwick on Finding Freedom in Directing, Plans to Make a Horror Movie With Her Family, and That One Time She Was Jealous of Kevin Bacon -... - June 20th, 2024
- 'Circles' - Sequel to the 2015 Horror Movie 'Circle' in the Works - Bloody Disgusting - June 20th, 2024
- Sequel to one of the best horror movies of the decade gets amazing first trailer - Joe UK - June 20th, 2024
- 20 Most Anticipated Horror Movies Of 2025 - WhatCulture - June 20th, 2024
- Everything You Need to Know About the Alien: Romulus Release Date - Geeks World Wide - June 9th, 2024
- The Watchers Review: Dakota Fanning Horror Movie Is Heavy on Exposition - TheWrap - June 9th, 2024
- Mike Flanagan Promises His Exorcist Movie Will Be 'Really Scary' - MovieWeb - June 9th, 2024
- Isolated Horrors: Appreciating the 2012 Horror Movie 'ATM' - Bloody Disgusting - June 9th, 2024
- Star of new horror movie The Watched says it features things she's never seen in a film before - Gamesradar - June 9th, 2024
- New horror movie The Watched was inspired by one of the best supernatural thrillers and a very divisive 2009 horror - Gamesradar - June 9th, 2024
- Horror Movies in 2024 - Cineworld - June 9th, 2024
- This new horror movie told mostly from the killer's POV may not be destined to be a classic, but its innovation is very ... - Gamesradar - June 9th, 2024
- Best of the scariest: The top 10 horror movies of all time - Popverse - June 9th, 2024
- This Divisive 2024 Horror Movie With 91% On Rotten Tomatoes Is Finally Streaming - Screen Rant - June 9th, 2024
- The Watchers - Plugged In - June 9th, 2024
- The 6 Best Sci-fi and Horror Movies to Watch on Peacock for Pride Month 2024 - Syfy - June 9th, 2024
- Under Paris: Netflix has delivered one of the best shark movies ever made - The Guardian - June 9th, 2024
- 100 mins of unrelenting intense overwhelming dread say fans as new horror movie is SO scary people are le... - The Sun - June 9th, 2024
- New follow up to 'grotesque' Netflix horror movie that left viewers 'bothered for days' is on the way - LADbible - June 9th, 2024
- Munjya review: Dinesh Vijans latest horror-comedy is neither scary nor funny, goes downhill after 30 minutes - The Indian Express - June 9th, 2024
- 'In a Violent Nature': How this innovative Canadian horror movie hacked its way to success - Toronto Star - June 9th, 2024
- The 25 best Korean horror movies of all time, ranked - Entertainment Weekly News - June 9th, 2024
- Alien: Romulus Is Making Xenomorphs Scary Again And Its About Time - Giant Freakin Robot - June 9th, 2024
- 31 Friendly Creatures From Fantasy/Horror Movies And TV Shows - MSN - June 9th, 2024
- Best Horror Movies Of 2024 (So Far) - Time Out - May 20th, 2024
- The Best Horror Movies If You Loved The Strangers - CBR - May 20th, 2024
- The Smartest Horror Movie Heroes, Ranked - CBR - May 20th, 2024
- 15 Horror Movies So Controversial They Got Banned - CBR - May 20th, 2024
- Before 'Psycho,' This Is The Twisty Horror Thriller Hitchcock Wanted to Make - Collider - May 20th, 2024
- 10 Most Rewatchable Horror Movie From Each Year of the 2010s - Collider - May 20th, 2024
- Jaws and Hitchcock's Psycho inspired new horror movie The Strangers: Chapter 1, as director explains its lack of gore - Gamesradar - May 20th, 2024
- The monsters that made me: Growing up disabled, all of my heroes were villains - Polygon - May 20th, 2024
- Shocking Horror Movie The Coffee Table Is Earning Raves From Stephen King. Its Director Wants Audiences to Suffer and Hate Me - Variety - May 20th, 2024
- Netflix fans freak out over 'insanely scary' horror film that found its way into the top 10 - Daily Mail - May 20th, 2024
- 10 Best So-Bad-They're-Good Horror Movies of the '90s, Ranked - Collider - May 20th, 2024
- Making Sense of I Saw The TV Glow's Tragic and Terrifying Ending - TIME - May 20th, 2024
- New Horror Movie With 21% RT Score Nearly Triples Budget At The Box Office In Just 10 Days - Screen Rant - May 20th, 2024
- Sting director says he's "kind of remaking Alien" with the giant spider horror movie - Gamesradar - May 20th, 2024
- How Scary Is The Strangers: Chapter 1? It's R-Rating Explained - Screen Rant - May 20th, 2024
- New Upcoming Horror Movie Gives Five Nights At Freddy's 2 Its Biggest Rival After $291 Million Success - Screen Rant - May 20th, 2024
- 10 Impossible Horror Movie Kills (and the Visual Effects Behind Them) - CBR - May 20th, 2024
- 10 Most Satisfying Horror Movie Reveals - WhatCulture - May 20th, 2024
- Stephen King Reviews Horror Movie With 88% RT Score: "You Have Never Seen A Movie As Black As This" - Screen Rant - May 20th, 2024
- Wolf Man Producer Reveals If the Horror Movie Is Part of Universal's Dark Universe Franchise - CBR - May 20th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage is set to take on another horror movie, this time about Jesus? - Gamesradar - May 9th, 2024
- Horror Tips from Director Jeff Wadlow and the Set of 'Imaginary' - No Film School - May 9th, 2024
Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero