Showing posts with label Scream 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scream 2. Show all posts

4/20/11

Review - Scream 4

Don't Fuck With The Original
(Or, What Exactly Is The Problem Here)


Warning: Major Spoilers Below

A quick sojourn through The October Country's posts from the past couple weeks should indicate to anybody reading this, that we here at TOC are big fans of Kevin Willaimson's / Wes Craven's meta, modern day take on the horror genre (or more specifically, the slasher sub-genre). Certainly, our love for the series is going to shade our review with a degree of bias opinions.
There is no denying the fact that we are those big dorky fans that literally counted down the days leading up to Scream 4's release and then promptly waited impatiently in the theater lobby 90 minutes before the film's pre-premier midnight screening We are the type of fans for which there was to be no waiting any longer than need be to experience this sucker as we'd already been waiting for over a decade to return to this world, for crying out loud. Trust me when I say, we simply couldn't put it off one more day.

We had in equal number, so many hopes (detailed here) and apprehension and reservations (here) leading up to the big unveil. We were mildly hoping for another masterpiece (Scream is arguably a masterpiece and Scream 2 is one of the worthiest successors in genre history) yet we were not getting our hopes up, lest our expectations set the bar so high for 4 that no manner of its awesomeness could please us. As far as our doubts are concerned, we prayed that it at least be better than Scream 3. After a decade away from the franchise, a new era of studio horror "films" (recycled, rebooted, remade, ripped off retreads) mucking up the landscape, the mainstream slasher genre essentially put to bed, Wes Craven's previous film being the mangled turkey that was My Soul To Keep and Kevin Williamson's horror output being confined to teenybopper small screen endeavors (The Vampire Diaries and soon The Secret Circle) in addition to Williamson leaving the project midway through production, script rewrites, recasting and the meddlesome nature that is the Weinsteins, being better than Scream 3 seemed like the most that we could realistically hope for.


Right off the bat I'll tell you that thankfully, it is better than Scream 3, so a travesty of those proportions were averted. But what of it's other merits, or lack thereof? Turns out we had to see the film two more times to make up our minds. It's not as though we didn't enjoy Scream 4 by any stretch of the imagination. To the contrary, we had a blast right from the get go. A regular 'ol screaming and laughing, armrest-clenching blast. However, I became aware 20 minutes before the film started of something peculiar going on inside of me. Gone were my everyday pretensions and trademark cynicism that gets me through life (and much of what Hollywood produces). Save for the aforementioned worrying that Scream 4 wouldn't measure up, I was uncharacteristically overexcited and giddy as if I was 15 again (my age when the first film debuted). I realized that for the first time in eons, I was about to watch a film as a eager fanboy first, and a critic second. So, it is this reason that I felt as though additional viewings were required before I officially committed any thoughts down, and those thoughts are as follows.

Picking up 10 years after the conclusion of Scream 3, we return to Woodsboro (the scene of the first film's now famous slaughters), a town that proves the more things change, the more they stay the same. Dewey Riley (David Arquette) once deputy of the small hamlet has now been graduated to sheriff and not only has he staffed his department with equally bumbling and incompetent lawmen (Adam Brody, Anthony Anderson and Marley Shelton) but he's gone and finally made an honest woman (after three films of on again off again romantic struggles) out of the now terminally-bored-as-a-housewife-in-a-small-town Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox, I feel ya girl). Into Woodsboro's relative facade of tranquility enters Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), harbinger of death and destruction arriving like a black thunderstorm on the horizon (not really, she pulls up in a modest, efficient rental but you know what I mean) , or as one character aptly refers to her, "the angel of death". Coinciding with Sid's return to her hometown, a new rash of killings break out that finds not only the core trio back in harms way of Ghostface's blade and pithily humorous threats (or positively bone chilling at times, Ghostface this time around, is not mincing words "I'm going to slice your eyelids open so you don't blink when I stab you in the face") , but also Sidney's remaining estranged family; Aunt Kate (Mary McDonnell, absolutely wasted) her younger cousin Jill Roberts (Emma Roberts) and Jill's high school pals. If the film's dialogue is to be believed (yet, the action falls sadly short of illustrating in most cases), Sidney has yet again awoken a masked madman (or men) hellbent on "remaking" the first "movie" (aka Stab, Scream's film-within-a-film counterpart, based on the "real life" killings from Gale's trashy tell all book The Woodsboro Murders, itself a recount of Scream's fictional world, phwew). A psychopath that won't stop until everyone Sydney cares about is taken from her and in short, she suffers dearly and suffers greatly. Terminally so.


Right out of the gate, Scream 4 announces itself as a film so hyper-aware of itself, so deconstructive of it's trappings, that it seesaws dangerously close from beginning to end into tipping over into outright analysis and fading away as a film. Mirroring the real life (really real life this time) hallway of smoke and mirrors that Craven, Williamson and co. sent fans down prior to its release (feeding us false plot information such as Scream 4 being the beginning of an entirely new trilogy wherein the torch would be passed from the original characters onto Jill and her surviving friends, effectively throwing everybody off their game and fucking with their expectations of the film's intent and final denouement), Scream 4's opening moments are likewise a magic trick that continuously keeps disappearing down it's own rabbit hole (or possibly emerging from it, depending on how you look at it). In essence though, the prologue is stating that what follows is going to be a series of bait and switches that toys with what audiences thought that they were in for (like a set of Russian dolls, Stab 6 begets Stab 7 which begets...dum da da dum, Scream 4) which as it turns out, is only the first in a multitude of this entry's incredibly intriguing story ideas and plot concepts that perhaps worked better on paper than they do in execution. Or rather, this particular version of its execution (being aware of the alleged, initial 2 hours and 20 minute running time makes reviewing the film and picking apart its script entirely frustrating). I mean, does that first trick, the one where we are meant to believe going into this thing, that Jill and her younger generation will inherit Scream's throne work on anybody other than the diehard fans that read Dimension Film's official plot synopsis and listened to what Craven and Williamson had to say about the film's new direction? I see no reason to think so. Likewise with the opening narrative trick. Does it work? Not entirely, not as a whole. Stab 6 moderately works as a tension filled 4 minute mini-movie with some amusing banter between Trudie (Shenae Grimes) and Sherrie (Lucy Hale) transpiring before the characters devolve into world where Scream apparently hasn't taken place and start doing very stupid, groan inducing things that as everyone knows, will surely be their doom (which is right around the point where you the viewer say "Hey wait a damn minute, these two are supposed to be the big celebrity kills?", the requisite tradition of the franchise's prologues). But then there is abrupt screaming and bloodshed and the opening moments end very suddenly and disappointingly until...gotcha, Stab 7 (unknowingly) takes its place. Okay, Kristen Bell (Chloe) and Anna Paquin (Rachel), now these two are celebrities and this is more like it. Except it's not. It's barely more than a slightly clever, blink-and-you-will-miss-it joke (with Paquin doing her usual over emoting of every line, I swear, how did this woman win an Oscar?) There is more biting analysis on the current state of the horror genre (over analysis in this case, or maybe it's just Paquin's delivery of the lines that makes them stick out like the blood spurting, thumb severed appendage that Ghostface just played with) before stab, scream, blood and...gotcha, Scream 4 (unknowingly) takes it's place accompanied to nervous laughter and no doubt furrowed brows from the audience. Enter Jenny Randall (Aimee Teegarden) and Marnie Cooper (Brittany Robertson), two pretty, blonde high school girls carrying on the same deconstructive conversation that the last four dead women had. Only this time, the action is the real action that is about to set off Scream 4's chain of events that will leave a pile of attractive dead bodies in its wake by films end. Action that begins and ends as suddenly as the previous two examples.


Though we all expect an awful lot of these scenes, I don't hate Scream 4's opening moments. Surely, its better than Scream 3's Cotton Weary (Liev Schreiber) Christine Hamilton (Kelly Rutherford) home invasion (lifeless, limp and bloodless in addition to a returning character like Cotton deserving a better orchestrated, more cleverly conceived sendoff). No, 4's opening lands somewhere slightly behind Scream 2's Jada Pinkett-Smith's / Omar Epps' theater slaughter. Like part 2's, it's fascinating in concept, but it works (sometimes) more as a clever gimmick instead of the emotionally draining roller coaster that the original Scream devised for Drew Barrymore. Which is a shame, because after a 10 year absence from movie screens, Scream 4 should have opened with something that went straight for our throats instead of our smart ass, know-it-all, wink wink funny bone. It's...underwhelming, considering the wait for it. This particular opening is called into further question when taking into account the original way it was conceived (like I said not moments ago, being aware of all that deleted footage is a bitch), the remnants of which can still be seen in the film's trailer, TV spots and film stills. Apparently, Marnie and Jenny's characters, or rather who took the lead in in the unfolding events, were initially reversed. Keeping in line with how nobody in Woodsboro (of their generation) treats Ghostface as anything other than a boogeyman to have fun with (scaring their friends and taunting their acquaintances with phone apps that recreate his signature voice, the second of Scream 4's brilliantly conceived yet go nowhere ideas), Marnie is none-to-impressed when after getting up from the couch to get some popcorn (breaking away from the released version's series of events that finds Jenny going upstairs), she is interrupted by the spectacle of Ghostface brutally stabbing her friend to death on the couch. She barely blinks, going about her business, making sarcastic comments as Jenny screams and bleeds and dies, thinking it is all just another joke that is being played on her. It isn't, obviously (culminating in the clip some may have seen on TV of Marnie lying on the floor, bloodied, croaking out "But your not real" before biting it). Perhaps we'll never know (unless it surfaces on DVD), but that sounds like hands down a helluva lot more disturbing opening that what was ultimately presented to us. Perhaps it was too thematically close to Scream 2's opening, wherein Maureen and Phil are murdered in plain sight of a crowded theater, but likewise, everyone witnessing the crime think it's nothing more than a gag. In a sequel about remakes and recreating past atrocities from the previous films though, I can't see why this would have given the makers pause. I mean, they could have really gotten meta on us there, recreating Scream's killings of Casey Becker and Steven Orth (another deleted scene that finds both Marnie and Jenny's bodies posed like Casey and Steve's; one hung from a ceiling fan, the other tied to a chair) and Scream 2's murders (thematically), which in turn were recreations of Scream's opening kills and copycatting Maureen Prescott's death, all the while, Stab is playing on the theater screen recreating Scream's opening crimes as well, throw in Stab 6 and Stab 7 as a prelude to all of this and....Jesus! I think my scalp just popped off in a hail of smoke and sparks and hit the ceiling trying to work my way through all of that. Unfortunately though, as with much of Scream 4, it comes just inches away from truly clever and falls short of its own potential in addition to going for the humor, instead of the shiver Which by the way, the movie continuously insists on doing at really awkward, inappropriate times (see Anthony Anderson's demise for example, surely the most disturbing death in the film...right up until the moment is ruined by a really cheap, really unfunny one liner, something that really shouldn't be a part of this world). Either way, what remains is still a relatively fun 10 minutes, the body count is up to six, the main titles flash across the screen and then we're off (again, for really real this time).


What follows for the remaining 90 some minutes, is an intriguing mess of ideas, characters, red herrings, murders and story threads that all carry with them the means to really go for the gusto and make something truly memorable of this sequel. Unfortunately, like the opening sequence (a microcosm of the entire film's faults boiled down to 10 minutes), they all race for the finish line, giving everything they got, then abruptly stop dead in their tracks feet from the goal and content themselves with staying there. As far as all of these million and one concepts and metaphors all getting juggled simultaneously by Scream 4's script, ultimately they all come crashing down by film's end, without any one of them having made a serious statement on the proceedings or lasting impression to mull over on the walk to your car.

First we have the idea of remakes. Though the movie gets in some wonderfully acidic jabs at the trend currently destroying mainstream horror films (Kirby's breathless, desperate reciting of every recent remake she can remember off of the top of her head is a show stopper, in both a hilarious bitch slap kinda way and tellingly sad statement on the state of affairs the genre finds itself in, and she didn't even list them all) but as far as the concept of Scream 4 itself being a remake (in both the killer's actions and the recreation of key scenes, moments and characters from the franchises' history), it only makes it halfway there. Given how the opening murder of Jenny and Marnie was changed at the last minute, it makes all the characters' proceeding dialogue about a killer "recreating" the original events of Woodsboro completely nonsensical and moot. We get what the filmmakers are trying to establish, so we go with it as viewers but need only pause for a second to realize that it's still all bunk. In fact, no actual recreation of anything on Ghostface's part occurs until the final reel, which finds Charlie Walker (Rory Culkin) tied to a chair on a back patio (ala Steven Orth from Scream's opening moments), his life in the hands of Kirby Reed (Hayden Panettiere, taking over for Casey Becker in this instance) who must answer a series of horror trivia questions to save his life. Certainly, Ghostface does a lot of talking about how he is re-imagining events, but alas he (and the script) is all bark and no bite in this department. As far as the movie itself remaking it's original film, it's a bit more successful but outside of it's own self-satisfied assurance that it is hitting all the right marks (in reality, just barely), this new direction only manages to be nothing more than a series of mildly amusing yet wholly diverting winks to the series' hardcore fans; Kirby is unquestionably the re-imagined Tatum Riley (Rose McGowan), Robbie Mercer (Erik Knudsen) and Charlie together are the re-imagined Randy Meeks (Jaime Kennedy), the entire floundering, inefficient police force is Dewey 2.0, the vaguely stalkerish, quietly menacing Trever Sheldon (Nico Tortorella, smoking hot, did I mention that?) is our new Billy Loomis (Skeet Ulrich) and so on. There is the new version of Billy and Sid's high school hallway confrontation from the original (and spoofed in the sequel with Luke Wilson and Tori Spelling) played out between Jill and Trevor. They also recreated the famous fountain side banter between the kids from part 1 (again, seen in the trailers), but apparently this was excised as well. They recreate the big party in the third reel, but again, this is another missed opportunity (c'mon guys, you got the creepiest barn this side of Halloween 5's Tower Farm, and a scarecrow version of Ghostface's mask created last year and you couldn't cook up something a bit more impressive). Billy and Stu Macher's (Matthew Lillard) kitchen stab-o-thon is recreated in the last act, and finally here is an instance where they almost recapture the same disturbing and horrifying display of insanity but this scene only proves that when recreating the original, you are always going to fall short of matching it. Which is around the time I started to wonder if Scream 4 is just a big, expensive, elaborate lark played on the fans and studio, perhaps its truncated, less than perfect existence is snidely intentional, perhaps it is the statement.


Next up we have the film's preoccupation with new, modern technology and the exciting role this could potentially play into events. Well, I did say potentially, because ultimately the don't do anything with it (it almost seems thrown in either as an after thought). Robbie walks around the film with a huge, streaming webcam strapped to the side of his face like some atrocious modern day head brace and...you guessed it, besides distracting us with its presence, the filmmakers don't do anything with it. Even when the moment arrives where we are led to believe that something clever is about to occur, as Robbie's cam has been reversed and recording what is behind him in his intoxicated state, is proven to be nothing but a false start as he fumbles around and turns it forward only to reveal seconds later that that is where Ghostface is standing, just in front of him (this is one of the film's lamest, most frustrating moments of missed opportunities, goddamn it can I write at least the setpieces next time fellas?) The modern plague of texting is in our face throughout, but nothing really comes of it. Likewise the phenomena of Facebook and Twitter just sit there like some declaration that the filmmakers are "with it" (though the latter does earn an amusing line). So besides being either nothing more than gratuitous product placement or another half-baked concept, all these iPhones and webcams and whatnot do nothing more than seriously date the film, which is never something that you should strive for. It certainly doesn't add anything to the movie but more interruption (and things are already getting mightily disordered at this point).


Then we have the aforementioned characters / red herrings / knife fodder / returning series' stalwarts and again, another mess. The core three, Dewey, Gale and Sidney don't fair so well this time, seemingly regulated to mere cameos as a side effect of the filmmakers' insistence to make this relevant to teenagers (a Hollywood thought process that I will loath till the day I die, seriously I had zero issues with being engaged in and or caring about characters who weren't in my immediate age bracket when I was kid, nor do I know any kids today who think the way that Hollywood presumes they do about such matters). Both Dewey and Gale are wasted in a major way this time around. Regulated to the sidelines, their meager roles are seemingly scaled back to their importance in the original (not an attempt to keep in line with the remake motif, I fear). Dewey isn't even put into harms way until the final scene for Christ's sakes. Though Sidney fairs a little better as far as exposure, but she is given absolutely no storyline other than to react to the next attack on Jill or one of her friends. What gives? This is the one aspect of the film that does really piss me off; The fans don't sit around for ten years wondering how Ghostface could creatively kill off more teenagers. No, we sit around wondering what Gale, Dewey and Sidney might be up to. It is the characters that is the unique heart and soul of this franchise. It is the characters that keep us coming back. Maybe the meat of their storylines ended up on the cutting room floor like much else of the film's substance, but I can't say that for sure and so I'm going to judge the film from what I do know and I know this: you don't spend three films feeding the blossoming relationship between Dewey and Gale only to have them get married and then drop the ball in exploring that aspect of their characters. You don't take a richly fiery woman like Gale Weathers (Gale freakin' Weathers damnit), with all her aspirations of fame and fortune (something that could have easily tied into the film's climatic statement on said matter), plunk her down in no man's land for a decade in the name of love and then not dig into that juicy nugget of dramatic potential. You don't take someone like Dewey who has been fighting for nothing but respect and for people to finally take him seriously for three films, and then not examine how that character may have grown since finally achieving that respect (I'll take his new found position as town sheriff as a sign that somebody believes in the boy). You don't champion Sidney as the face of modern horror's scream queens and then shade her character's return with no more soul other than that she wrote a book (that's it, that's all there is to her this time and it's not even used as a crux of the film's storyline). You just...don't do any of this. In effect, we the audience are left just as in the dark as we were at the conclusion of Scream 3. Hell for all the lack of material they are given to their 10 year back story, this movie might as well just have picked up directly after that one and gone retro. I've done a lot of daydreaming as a result by the way, and I've chosen to believe that Sidney has spent a lot of time regretting that she was always one step behind in the past, and her friends and family suffered as a result. Hence, the explanation as why in this film she goes barreling into danger like a bat outta hell, confronting the killer, rather than retreating (a brush stroke I must single out for praise, as it's quite awesome to behold of our gal, even if she is as unsuccessful in saving anyone as she was before).

The new, younger faces are a mixed bag. Besides being modern day incarnations of previous entry's characters, they're also not all that sympathetic (something the Scream series has always asked it's audience to do, is care when that blade slices flesh to ribbons and people start dropping like flies). It's my opinion that a degree of this is unintentional (you cut back your film's running time, you cut back your characters' dimensionality, assuming that it was there to begin with, period) but that a huge amount of it is intentional; commenting on younger generations' desensitization and their removed attitudes from real world horrors (they've seen it all on YouTube) in addition to growing up in a culture obsessed with fame and celebrity, this lot is more concerned with status and shallow pursuits than they are with one another. When their friends start getting brutally butchered in front of their very eyes, they go through the requisite screaming and hysterics, for a moment. Then the next day, it's seemingly back to business as usual: parties, gossip, snark. This new approach to the franchise's potential victims works in a blackly satirical way (if you dig in mind you, it's subtle enough where you wonder if this is indeed what is going on, or if everyone just happens to be unlikable assholes) but it doesn't do much for our sympathy which in turn doesn't make us give a hoot if they die, which in effect renders the scare sequences kinda toothless and so on. However, this is no fault of the actors as the young cast all turn in fine performances, Robertson and Knudsen standing out with Panettiere stealing the show as every geeks wet dream (she owns Suspiria and knows who Gunner Hansen is, hotness incarnate), even if she is kind of a bitch. As far as the cast of characters doing double time as red herrings, I say what red herrings? Besides a few suspicious, pointed camera shots and select characters being in suspect locations at certain points in the game, there are virtually no clues left for audiences to stew over. Largely gone is the series' format of murder mystery via slasher film. There really isn't any mystery. Or investigation. Or yes, clues. Instead, we have in its place a series of killings that stretch to the climax where the killers are revealed abruptly, without any diverting storylines laid, or red herrings worked for, that should make their ultimate unveiling shocking.


Which leads us to the motivation of the killers, film geek Charlie Walker and Sidney's cousin Jill. Again, much like most else in the film (I'm getting really sick of saying that at this point), Jill's initial motivation, that she deserves the spotlight after growing up in the shadow of Sidney's fame, that she deserves a chance to be Sidney, is very intriguing until you realize that again, what filmmakers have shown us contradicts the information coming out of their character's mouths. Throughout Scream 4's runtime, we witness the denizens of Woodsboro mostly meet Sidney with scorn or derision (save for a few stragglers at Sidney's book signing). When the murders start anew, townspeople congregate outside the police line and heckle Sidney, blaming her presence for the the death of one of their own. Her own Aunt Kate even seems initially put off by her return ("nobody asks me about my scars"). Likewise Jill's very friends, though they regard Sidney from afar as a pseudo-curiosity, want nothing to do with her ("What are you doing in the house with her, that's like being on Top Chef with Jeffrey Dahmer"). So we are yet again being told something contradictory that we haven't seen, at which point we are left but no choice but to try and take Jill's word on matters (an unreliable witness no doubt, though I get the impression we are supposed to believe her sob story) . As far as Charlie? Well he is along for the ride apparently, seeking the same fame and notoriety that Jill is perusing (he's to be the new Randy to Jill's Sidney). Despite the above criticisms, I personally liked this turn of events, or the latter half of Jill's motivation. I'm just about as over this nation's obsession with fame, reality TV and celebrity gossip as anybody could be and I found Jill's statement that she didn't need friends, she needed fans, very dead-on in the moral rot it was portraying. I fear that her Jill Roberts is a very accurate representation of a certain contingent of modern day American society (hey, if parents are willing to concoct elaborate ruses like setting their small children adrift in balloons to gain attention, I'm not putting anything past anybody anymore) and I think this last magic trick the filmmakers perform; pulling back the curtain to reveal a selfish motivation even sicker than bloodlust, insanity or revenge, is one of the film's few, genuinely amazing moments (and finally, a relatively concise deceleration escapes the movie's other, muddled fumbles at them). If the film had ended in the glare of flashing light bulbs and swarming reporters in the vein of Sunset Boulevard, as Jill was wheeled away on the stretcher (achieving her goal), I think frankly I would have been stunned at both the statement and the balls on display. But alas, Scream 4 has no balls, and we are drug along to the hospital for a protracted climax that even one character has the sense of mind to realize is "getting silly", or more aptly, way over the top (Sidney even resourcefully uses a defibrillator as a weapon, ala Dr. Giggles, now there is a film you want to model yourself after, good Christ). As expected by this point, Jill goes down (several times, per tradition) and Sidney, Gale, Dewey and Deputy Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton) triumph. The end.


You probably have forgotten by this point and after all of that nitpicking, that I actually enjoyed Scream 4 (three times now, and there is sure to be many more times in the near future). I think what you have just have borne witness to, was the inner struggle of a rabid fanboy against his more critical nature (a nature that knows better). However, when all is said and done, the overly eager, salivating fan who waited 90 minutes in the lobby for the film to start, so impatient he was to get to it, wins (mark it down, because it isn't likely to happen again for another 10 years). In all honesty, if I judged Scream 4 by the merits of everything else that is getting produced in Hollywood these day, it would surely rate a lot higher. In all reality, it could be so very, very much worse than it is (even Campbell has stated publicly that it is a "miracle" it came out at all, considering the behind-the-scenes drama that hounded it endlessly). And when stacked up against other part 4s in major horror franchises (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 4: The Next Generation, Jaws 4: The Revenge, Hellraiser 4: Bloodlines, A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, Saw 4 but to name a few), it looks all the more like a regular class act. However, I'm not grading the film on a curve. I'm holding Scream 4 up to the franchise's own standards and it is these standards (not mine, not Hollywood's, not sequel's, not remakes) that it fails to live up to.





Scream 4 stars Neve Campbell (The Craft, The Glass Man, The Dark), Courteney Cox (The Tripper, Cougar Town), David Arquette (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Ravenous, Eight Legged Freaks, The Tripper), Emma Roberts (It's Kinda a Funny Story, Homework), Hayden Panettiere (Heroes, I Love You Beth Cooper), Lucy Hale (Fear Island, Pretty Little Liars), Shenae Grimes (Sugar, The Cross Road), Anna Paquin (True Blood, Darkness, Trick R' Treat, Open House), Kristen Bell (Pulse, Roman), Marielle Jaffe (Locked Away), Marley Shelton (Valentine, Dark Shadows, Grindhouse), Erik Knudsen (Saw II, Beastly, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), Rory Culkin (The Zodiac, Signs, Mean Creek), Aimee Teegarden (Beneath the Darkness, Beautiful Wave), Brittany Robertson (The Secret Circle, From Within), Alison Brie (Man Men, Parasomnia, Born), Nico Tortorella (The Lowenfish Party, Trespass), Anthony Anderson (Scary Movie 3 & 4, Urban Legends: The Final Cut), Adam Brody (Jennifer's Body, Smiley Face), Mary McDonnell (Donnie Darko, Independence Day) and Heather Graham (Scream 2, From Hell, Twin Peaks, Nowhere). Scream 4 is currently in theaters worldwide.




Skull Ratings:
5 Skulls - The Best
4 Skulls - Very Good
3 Skulls - Good / Average
2 Skulls - Poor
1 Skull - The Worst

4/14/11

Scream 4...Tonight!

Final Thoughts



It's almost here dear readers, well for me at least. Just as I am certain that many of you are putting the final touches to your plans for this evenings' many Scream 4 midnight screenings, I too am gearing up for my own return to Woodsboro tonight (a private viewing on an IMAX screen no less, can I get a woot to that shit). Some final thoughts and hopes before I depart though, as The October Country completes its Scream 4 countdown and returns to it's regular preoccupation with things not Ghostface related (I am looking forward to this, to be sure).

Dear Scream 4,

This is what I want of you, nay, this is what I expect from you tonight:

- At least two showstopping, stunningly suspenseful setpieces. This is something that you excel at (the cop car escape and the media classroom cat-and-mouse scenes from Scream 2 come to mind) and you have had an entire decade to cook up some more, so you best bring it.

- I am equally in love with the idea of the returning cast members biting it gruesomely (solely for dramatic storytelling purposes) as much as I am staunchly opposed to this development. Surprise me (just keep your hands off of my Gale Weathers, seriously I'll probably cry).

- I don't expect you to recapture Drew Barrymore's lightening in a bottle opening sequence magic twice, however, I expect you to have cooked up something just as special and just as different as you did with the first sequel.

- I've already come to terms with the fact that due to the expanded, gargantuan cast, combined with the abbreviated running time, the characters are going to suffer as a result (no, not in the fun way). It would have been nice had you given the film the proper running time to flesh them all out, but this sadly is not to be the case apparently. I don't like it, but I'm dealing with it. The core three better be given their due, and it would be nice if you make me care about the fates of at least 50% of the rest of the cast. I'm not expecting miracles, but my fingers are crossed.

- Keep the comedy biting, witty, blackly satirical and genuinely funny and not stupid (Scream 3) and over the top (Scream 3) as in the last outing. Please. Pretty please.

- Tear remakes and reboots a new one to the point that no Hollywood studio dare make another one, lest they be seen in the eyes of the mainstream public as the evil, money grubbing monsters Scream 4 surely paints them as.

- At least one death scene worthy of the ages (or equal to the jaw dropping denouement of dearly departed Tatum).

- Be better than everything in the entirety of Scream 3.

- Remind us what was so damn special about you to begin with.

-
Don't suck.

- I repeat, don't suck.

Hyper-demanding super fan that I am, I could go on but I think it's best for my own inflated expectations that I stop there before I run the risk of setting the bar so high for the film that it will never satisfy me. I truly have no idea what to expect tonight. Every single review I have read (at least 20 and counting) contradicts what was written in the one that came before it (scary not scary, funny not funny, it's clever it's smug, the actors are wasted the actors really shine,suspenseful not suspenseful and so on) . It seems as though every critic has either watched a different film entirely, or everyone has come away uniquely affected in their own manner. Either way, all the conflicting reports has left me right where I was in the beginning, when we started our countdown and turned our site for two weeks into an exclusively Scream related blog. I'm still just as equally excited and nervously apprehensive as I ever was. Come midnight tonight, as the lights dim in the theater and Dimension's logo flashes across the screen, I'll soon find out.

4/12/11

Oh Please! By Definition Alone, Sequels Are Inferior Films!








Mark:
"I know what it's like to see ghosts that don't go away, to be watching a scary movie in your head... watching it alone."
Sidney: "Ghosts are tough. You can't shoot ghosts."
Mark: "Can't arrest ghosts, but the best way to fight them is to be around people. You're not hiding. You've done the right thing, Ms. Prescott."

Dear Kevin Williamson, Where Da Gay At?

I don't think it's news to most horror movie fans that Scream screenwriter / creator Kevin Williamson is a homosexual fellow. Keeping in mind that though our community had exposure in the mid to late 90's, America and Hollywood by extension, was still not the most excepting of places. It wasn't the kind of environment one was necessarily encouraged to come out in, especially if you had a high profile career in the movie making capital of the world. Despite this, Mr. Williamson did publicly step out of the closet in the late 90's at what was arguably the height of his career (after the smashing success of Scream, he was Hollywood's "it" boy for some time before all the hoopla and circus eventually died down). Some might argue that it wasn't the most death defying of acts, seeing as he is a screenwriter and not subject to the same exposure, scrutiny and public ridicule that actors and actresses find themselves caught up in. I say, hush thyself. It was brave of him. Period. Despite the fact that Hollywood as we know it would crumble if it weren't for the queer contributions of many, it was still ballsy move on his part, and the stuidos', to have an out gay man headlining his screenwriting credits on every film he wrote (I Know What You Did Last Summer was "From the Creator of Scream", The Faculty was "From Kevin Williamson, the writer of Scream and Scream 2" and so on). Though thankfully, no one seemed to notice, or give a shit (in truth, I'm certain that only a small percentage of Americans care to hear what the screenwriter of slasher films has to say and were never the wiser as a result) and nothing negative ever came of it (unlike say Rupert Everett, who was likewise Hollywood's "next big thing" around the same time and also came out of the closet at the height of his popularity but as a result, his career trajectory took a nosedive).

It's been a decade since Williamson came out of the closet and looking back over his cinematic filmography (television is another beast entirely, complete with it's own set of rules) I have to ask, "What gives sir, where are the gays at?" Out of the eight horror films he has written (if you include Teaching Mrs. Tingle) , only one film, the abysmal Cursed, has an openly gay character. The Faculty almost has a gay character in the form of Stokely Mitchell (the lovely Clea DuVall), but her lesbianism is later revealed to be nothing but an anti-social ruse as all the girl really wants to do is hop atop the high school football star Stan Rosado (considering that its yummy, farmer-tanned Shawn Hatosy, I'll give Williamson a pass, cause I'm right there with ya Stokes). Scream 2 has the rumor of a gay character, one of Sidney Prescott's (Neve Campbell) bodyguards, Officer "Don't Ask Don't Tell" Andrews (Philip Pavel). But that's all it was, a rumor. It could even be argued that the first Scream's killers, Stu Macher (Matthew Lillard) and Billy Loomis (Skeet Ulrich) were lovers of some sort, as there is certainly a vibe filled with bizarre sexual tension (something the makers of Scary Movie, Scream's official spoof, picked up on and lampooned). There is even a great, queer horror blog named in their "union's" honor, the wonderful Billy Loves Stu, ran by the amazing Pax Romano (who incidentally, has been an invaluable source of advice and knowledge in helping get certain aspects of this very site off of the ground). Even in the absence of any identifiably queer characters (or knife fodder) there is much homoerotisicm that runs throughout the majority of Williamson's scripts. Or if not outright homoerotisicm, than scenes that were certainly written by a gay man, not a straight one; mirroring heterosexual men's desire to see good looking women eviscerated, Williamson's victims tend to be male just a wee bit more than female. Likewise, in another inversion of the typically straight screenwriter's desires seen on screen, Williamson tends to have his young men disrobe in lieu of the ladies (Ryan Phillipe's towel clad, locker room strut in I Know What You Did Last Summer, is particularly telling). Additionally, the potential male love interests are written in a such a lovable, adorable, sympathetic way that only a gay man dreamily lusting after them himself could write them as such, in my opinion. That's all well and good, but I'll ask again, "Mr Williamson, it's 2011, where the hell are the gay characters?"


If by chance you should ever stumble upon my humble little home away from home and read this, I should state a few things in response to my own question. First, I don't believe that an out gay artist has any responsibility to please any community or fandom, to any public or sociopolitical organization. Nay, I don't believe that they have any responsibility to please anybody but themselves with their own creative endeavors. Art should satisfy the artist, however much the motivations for making said art gets mucked up in the commercial world of Hollywood. It is nice when a writer or director throws things out there for the fans, but I don't believe that anybody should put a gun to their head and force them to do so. Secondly, I don't believe that the inclusion of gay characters should take place just to make a big stink about them being gay. To the contrary, can't they just occasionally be there and well...be. If there is one thing that I hate about queer American cinema it is that no gay character can exist in a film without their sexuality seemingly being the be all and end all to their existence. This is the same problem that has plagued screenwriter / director Clive Barker's attempts to make a scary movie with a gay male lead for over a decade and ultimately lead to him stating that he would never direct another horror film again until a studio had the balls to lift this unofficial, but very present ban. Apparently, Barker could not have as his lead, a character who happened to be gay (that's it, no muss no fuss and moving on) unless the entire plot (as demanded by studio heads) was about his sexuality. The studio's reasoning being that audiences aren't prepared or ready for us to merely exist like the rest of the human race, we apparently need to be screaming from the rooftops about our sexuality everywhere and at all times. Tell me again for the record, just who are the ones who are obsessed with what queers are up to and where we stick it? This problem only seems to be a problem in films produced in the good 'ol US of A. Here, our cinematic queers have three storylines: coming out, battling HIV and AIDS or behaving as the catty, flaming comic relief sidekick whom usually consist of so many stereotypes that I quit counting ages ago. Elsewhere in the world, homosexual men and women get to explore all avenues of storytelling, so why not here? Why not even in our independent cinema? And why not in horror films written by an out of the closet gay man?


In closing Mr Williamson, I would never demand that you insert elements into your scripts that you did not desire to have there, all to serve some cultural and political pressure. However, I would like you to ask yourself, just why you've refrained from including in your films a gay character here, or a gay character there. Honestly, slice and dice 'em and tear them asunder like every other hapless unfortunate that finds themselves in the confines of a bloody cinematic massacre. But after decades of queer characters existing in scary movies purely to be portrayed as sick and deserving of their inevitable violent deaths, or as in the cases where they are the unhinged monsters, to have their sexuality be the root cause of their psychotic tendencies, it would be nice if a forward thinking, non-self-loathing queer screenwriter such as yourself took the bull by the horns and started reinventing the genre in other ways, a feat that you have made millions off of doing. I mean, what queer horror movie fan wouldn't want to see Sidney Prescott's gay bestie go down swinging? Even Bride of Chucky pulled this off for crying out loud. Just give it a thought 'eh, in time for the inevitable Scream 5.

4/10/11

But You Will Sit Through A Movie Called Stab?









Mickey: "Come on Randy, with all due respect, the killer obvious patterned himself after two serial killers who have been immortalized on film."
Film Class Guy #1: "Thank you!"
Teacher: "Are you suggesting that someone's trying to make a real life sequel?"
Randy: "Stab 2? Who'd want to do that? Sequels suck!"

4/9/11

It's Happening Again, Isn't It?








Sydney:
"You're as crazy as your son was!"
Debbie: "What did you just say? Was that a negative, disparaging remark about my son? About my Billy?"
Sydney: "No, Billy was a good boy. Billy was perfect, you did a bang-up job Mrs. Loomis."
Debbie: "It's not wise to patronize a woman with a gun Sidney! Randy spoke poorly of Billy and I got a little knife happy."

Videodrome


Scream Edition

In retrospect, I suppose the Scream soundtracks weren't all that I thought that they were when I was 15. Well, let me rephrase that. The first one's soundtrack still stands up. A little (perhaps this is due to the bands in question having been mostly independent acts, who knows). In particular, Gus's acoustic cover of Don't Fear the Reaper retains the same haunting power it did in '96. The inclusion of Julee Cruise (David Lynch's forgotten muse) on any soundtrack is cool beyond the telling of it. Alice Cooper needs no excuses. The Connell's Bitter Pill still remains somewhat enjoyable and Birdbrain's Youth of America (the video is below) follows suit. The masterstroke though, is obviously Nick Cave and the Bad Seed's amazing Red Right Hand, which went on to become the franchise's anthem of sorts, reworked versions of it subsequently appearing in the next two sequels.

However, the soundtrack to Scream 2 is rather annoying. Truth, it was rather annoying back in the day, but it is even more so now. What with the producers attempting to fill (or overfill, there are no less than three bands that play throughout the closing credits if I remember correctly) the movie with "hot acts" to "hip up" their film. I choose to believe that the inclusion of The Dave Matthews Band's (irritating voice of yuppies everywhere) Help Myself, which played at sorority sisters' Lois (Rebecca Gayheart)and Murphy's (Portia de Rossi) party, is meant to be an indicator of how grating those two characters were (sometimes you have to tell yourself lies). The Eels is a bright spot, but their song Your Lucky Day In Hell was never one of my favorites. Less Than Jake's cover of I Think I Love You is to this day is as energetic as ever. Everclear = blah Republican rockers. Kottonmouth Kings = no, just no. Followed by a no, no, no and no to just about every remaining act on the album, with special attention being paid to Collective Soul's She Said, which simultaneously is akin to an entire classroom of rambunctious kindergarteners collectively dragging their nails down a chalkboard while making me feel as though I am being horribly violated and molested as it plays and lastly, leaves me in such a mood that drop-kicking infants into roaring a furnace could only free me of it. I really hate that song. Oddly, the one track that no longer bothers me (though it use to) is Master P.'s Scream (whose video is also below). It's definitely grown on me since I started revisiting these songs in preparation for Scream 4. But this is where I end it because as far as Scream 3's soundtrack is concerned, not then, not now, not ever.

Birdbrain - Youth of America



Master P. (featuring Silkk the Shocker) - Scream


My apologies for the less than stellar qualities of these two videos. They are the best that I could find.

4/7/11

Your Forgetting One Thing About Billy Loomis. I Fucking Killed Him.

Mickey: "You should really deal with your trust issues Sid. I mean, poor Derek. He's completely innocent and such a nice boy too. He's bright and funny and handsome. Decent singing voice. And he was going to be a doctor. This is just the kinda boy you'd like to take home to mom. If you had a mom."
Sydney: "Fuck you!"
Mickey: "Oh, so vulgar! Did Billy let you talk to him this way?"
Sydney: "Billy was a sick fuck just like you!"
Mickey: "No. Billy was a sick fuck who tried to get away with it. Mickey is a sick fuck who wants to get caught, yea! Ya see I got my whole defense planned out. I'm gonna blame the movies. Pretty cool huh? It hasn't been done before. You see, this is just the beginning, a prelude to the trial. Cuz see that's where the real fun is 'cause these days it's all about the trial. Can you see it? The effects of cinema violence on society. I'll get Dershowitz or Cochran to represent me. Bob Dole on the witness stand in my defense. Hell the Christian Coalition'll pay my legal fees. It's air tight Sid. I'm an innocent victim."
Sydney: "You're a psychotic."
Mickey: "Yeah, well. Shh...that'll be our little secret. Cause people love a good trial. It's like theater. They're dyin' for it. And I've worked hard to give the audience what they want. See that's what Billy was good at. He knew... It's all about... execution."

Mickey: that'll be

Say A Prayer For The Youth Of America

For 24 Hours Only, The Scream Expanded Film Scores!

Here we go again. That's right dear readers, for 24 hours only, The October Country will be acting as your gateway to the expanded soundtracks of the trendsetting Scream film scores. Why are we doing this you ask? Well, for starters we can't think of a better occasion that in celebration of the return of the legendary franchise next week with the release of Scream 4 (April 15th). Secondly, do we need a reason to ceremonialize composer (Academy Award nominated at that) Marco Beltrami's stunning, memorable, moving and frightening work within this film series (incidentally not only is he extremely talented but he is also a very handsome man, how many good looking composers are there, like 5?)? No, I thought not. Much like everything else associated with the Scream namesake, Beltrami's modernized scores brought the film music of the slasher genre screeching into the 20th century (seeing as how it languished for nearly a decade in cheap, throwaway synth compositions and generally made due by ripping off everything that became stale during it's height in the 80's). In fact, so influential and effective were Beltrami's scores for the Scream films, that select pieces from them went on to be featured not only partially in other horror films (NC-17 in Robert Rodriguez's and Kevin Williamson's The Faculty, which Beltrami also scored) but also almost entirely, as was the case with Steve Miner's Halloween: H20 (sharing responsibilities with John Ottman's and John Carpenter's relegated to the side lines contributions, a move both effective and terribly annoying for fans of the classic Halloween themes, reworked or traditional). Even though its been ten long years since all that business, Marco Beltrami's exciting compositions to this day remain some of the most memorable and recognizable horror film tracks ever committed to film. But before we get to the music itself, shall we dig a little deeper to further put things in context?


Scream's Music
*

The score for the Scream series was provided by Marco Beltrami, starting with Scream in what was his feature film debut. Beltrami was brought onto the production of Scream after director Wes Craven's assistant Julie Pleck requested input on the now defunct site Hollywood Cafe asking for opinions on what was "new", "fresh" and "wonderful" and was provided with Beltrami's name by several people. Craven sent for samples of Beltrami's work and was impressed by what he heard, bringing him to the set to view the first thirteen minutes of the film featuring the introduction and murder of the character Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore). Craven had Beltrami produce music based on this scene and then demonstrate it, impressing Craven enough to hire him. For Scream (1996), the decision was made to intentionally use music to raise the tension in scenes where it was unnecessary when the characters were entering a situation where the audience may expect a killer to suddenly appear, only to not deliver on that expectation, part of the film's theme of playing with horror conventions. Craven and editor Patrick Lussier provided Beltrami with advice on how best to deliver the music during scary and tense scenes as Beltrami had no prior experience in developing a horror score. Beltrami intentionally avoided conventional horror score styles and approached the film as a western, taking influence from Ennio Morricone, prolific composer of many western films, in the creation of Scream's music. When scoring a theme for the character of Dewey, Beltrami approached him as a Sheriff but also as a "quirky" character, using a Morricone-style guitar accompaniment to maintain the Western approach. An acoustic cover of Blue Öyster Cult's Don't Fear the Reaper plays softly in the background to Sidney and Billy's discussion of their relationship, which analyst Jeff Smith describes as:

“An ironic comment on the brutality we have just seen in the opening sequence. More importantly, however, the allusion to the Blue Öyster Cult classic recasts the song's title by literalizing its meaning. While the title itself invokes the Reaper as a popular symbol for death, the film presents us with an actual person, who not only dresses as the Grim Reaper but also unleashes homicidal vengeance on the other characters of the film. The irony here, of course, is that Billy himself proves to be one of the film's dual slashers and is, in fact, the "Reaper" to be feared.”


The theme tune of Sidney Prescott, entitled Sidney's Lament became a signature track for the series, variations of the tune appearing across the score of Scream, Scream 2 , Scream 3 and Scream 4. The track features a female choral arrangement expressing "sorrow" concerning the fate of the character. In Scream, Beltrami stated that the voice "spoke" for the character, "lamenting" the loss of her mother. In future films it went on to represent the murders and ensuing trauma inflicted on her. Christian Clemmensen of Filmtracks called the "haunting" vocals of the track the "voice of the franchise". The track Sid Wears a Dress features in the finale of Scream 3 where the sorrowful chorus of Lament gradually shifts key to represent "hope" for the character's future following the resolution of her storyline in what was then the final film in the series. The female voice would be accompanied by a male addition for the first time in Pied a Terror from Scream 3 to represent the brother (Roman played by Scott Foley) of the character.

Beltrami returned for Scream 2 (1997) leading the score, though there would be a late inclusion by Danny Elfman in the form of the choral track Cassandra Aria. In addition, excerpts from the score of Broken Arrow by Hans Zimmer appeared in the film, in particular guitar work by Duane Eddy, for the character Dewey, replacing many of the character's related tracks from the original Scream score. Beltrami later explained that the Zimmer piece was used as a scratch track for test screening purposes before the score was finalized. The test audience reaction to it influenced the studio keep the Zimmer piece, reducing Dewey's Theme, which Beltrami had composed to fill it's place, to minor use during more serious scenes involving the character. The Zimmer-piece would continue to be used in Scream 3 during scenes concerning the evolving relationship between the characters of Dewey and Gale with Beltrami appropriating and adding his own influence to the piece to blend it into the thematic Scream 3 score.


For Scream 3, Beltrami employed seven orchestrators to aid in scoring the extensive orchestral accompaniment featured in the films score. Additionally, he experimented with new styles of sound production by recording instruments in abnormal circumstances such as inserting objects into a piano and recording at various velocities to create a distorted, unnatural sound and modifying the results electronically.

So there you have it, a brief historical reference point which hopefully has aided you dear readers, in appreciating Marco Beltrami's chilling music even more. Here's also hoping that these albums will provide you a soundtrack for the coming week as you prepare for the premiere of Scream 4. Included below are Beltrami's complete, expanded scores for the first three Scream films (as far as we are aware, never before commercially released or available though they have been plentifully available elsewhere online for ages) in addition to a small preview of his work on Scream 4 (which can be pre-ordered and purchased here and here, but beware, it's track listing could be considered very spoilery) that also contains two tracks from 4's teaser and theatrical trailers. Our suggestion? Turn off all the lights and crank the volume. Just don't answer the phone.



Scream

01. Opening Logo
02. The Game Begins
03. Sid´s Window
04. Trouble In Woodsboro
05. Gut Someone
06. Sidney´s Lament
07. Red Herring
08. Killer Calls Sid
09. Chasing Sidney
10. Sid Looks
11. Billy Looks
12. Interrogation
13. Billy To Cell
14. Backdoor Gail
15. Killer Calls Again
16. Back To School
17. In The Hallway
18. Bang Into Billy
19. Bathroom Attack
20. Himbrey´s Last Stand
21. Girl Talk
22. Video Store
23. Sheriff & Dewey
24. Why She´s Here
25. Tatum´s Torture
26. Billy Sting
27. NC-17
28. Late Night with Dewey
29. Off To See Himbrey
30. Prescott´s Car
31. Altered Ego
32. Hairbrush
33. Running For Help
34. Gail Crashes The Van
35. "We All Go A Little Mad"
36. A Cruel World
37. A Killer Confrontation
38. Billy´s Back
39. Red Right Hand

Total Running Time: 1.2 hours

Link:
Someone has taken their love of scary movies one step too far.



Scream 2

01. Opening Logo
02. Maureen & Phil
03. Phil Gets The Point
04. Stage Fright Requiem
05. Cotton On TV
06. Reporters Galore
07. It's Happening Again
08. Trouble At Winsler College
09. News Conference
10. Deputy For A Friend
11. Dewpoint
12. Omega Beta Zeta
13. Cici's Creepies
14. Phone Games
15. Cici Checks Out
16. Gale Gets Scooped
17. Sid's In Trouble
18. Sidney Mourns
19. Copycat Killer
20. Outside The Station
21. Cassandra Aria
22. A Ghostly Image
23. The Breakup
24. Killer Calls The Gang
25. Instant Messenger Of Death
26. Cotton Confronts Sidney
27. At The Station
28. Sundown Search
29. Love Turns Sour
30. Hollow Parting
31. Sid's Wild Ride
32. Running Into Cotton
33. Cassandra Aria Reprise
34. Mickey's Madness
35. A Surprising Partner
36. Hair Trigger Lunatic
37. Cotton To The Rescue
38. They Always Come Back
39. Back In The Saddle
40. It's Over, Sid
41. Gestures
42. Red Right Hand (Scream 2 Version)

Total Running Time: 1.5 hours

Link:
Someone has taken their love of sequels one step too far.




Scream 3

CD 1
01. Here We Go Again
02. Cotton Car
03. 100% Scared
04. Cotton Gets Picked
05. Home Sweet Home
06. Gale Meets Kincade
07. Sunset Pictures
08. Dewey & The Gales
09. At Home With Dad
10. Mother's Watching
11. Boo Balicious
12. Candy Phone
13. Candy Ain't So Sweet
14. The Fall Of Roman
15. Killer Calls Sidney
16. Gale Force
17. Comparing Photos
18. Stone Cold
19. Roll With It
20. Sid Arrives
21. On The Set
22. Randy Returns
23. Searching
24. Leia & The Stormtroopers
25. Sid In The Can
26. Pied A Terror
27. Killer In The Closet

CD 2
01. Crime Scene
02. The Fall Girl
03. Milton Takes Meetings
04. At The Station
05. Dewey Mobile
06. Dewey Mobile (Alternate)
07. Roman Around
08. The Killer's Phone
09. Ghostface Attacks
10. Jennifer's Final Act
11. Dewey Falls For Gale
12. Last Call
13. Sid Joins The Party
14. Unused
15. Sibling Rivalry
16. Sid Gets Shot
17. All In The Family
18. Sid Wears A Dress
19. Sid's Theme
20. Red Right Hand (Scream 3 Version)

Total Running Time: 1.7 hours

Link:
Someone has taken their love of trilogies one step too far.




Scream 4 (Preview)

1. Final Oman 2.0
2. Don't Mess With The Original
3. Hannibal Rising
4. Jill's Amercia

Total Running Time: 11 minutes

Link:
Someone has taken their love of reboots one step too far.

For more on Marco Beltrami, you can visit his official site here.

Scream 4, opening April 15th in theaters nationwide, is released by Dimension Films and stars Neve Campbell, Courtney Cox, David Arquette, Lucy Hale, Shenae Grimes, Anna Paquin, Kristen Bell, Aimee Teegarden, Brittany Robertson, Alison Brie, Hayden Panettiere, Emma Roberts, Marielle Jaffe, Marley Shelton, Erik Knudsen, Rory Culkin, Nico Tortorella, Anthony Anderson, Adam Brody and Mary McDonnell.

* Content from Wikipedia
**
Editor's Note:
All the downloads on here are for evaluation/preview purposes and if you download something that you like, then you should buy the DVD, CD, tape, or vinyl it comes from. Thanks
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