Showing posts with label Courtney Cox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Courtney Cox. Show all posts

Sunday, May 14, 2023

Scream VI

Directors: Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett
Starring: Melissa Barrera, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Jack Champion, Henry Czerny, Mason Gooding, Roger L. Jackson, Liana Liberato, Dermot Mulroney, Devyn Nekoda, Jenna Ortega, Tony Revolori, Josh Segarra, Skeet Ulrich, Samara Weaving, Hayden Panettiere, Courtney Cox
Running Time: 122 min.
Rating: R

★★★ (out of ★★★★)   

Ghostface takes Manhattan in Scream VI, a bigger, more brutal follow-up to the 2022 requel rightly credited with resurrecting the franchise after some underwhelming entries. And high expectations accompany it, mostly due to a drastic shift in setting that moves the action from Woodsboro to New York City. With the series currently riding high on momentum, the idea makes perfect sense, and while the execution isn't flawless, it's still a worthy next chapter that marks an official torch passing to the next generation of characters.

The "Radio Silence" duo of Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett resume directorial duties, proving their last outing wasn't a fluke by again hitting the right balance of thrills and meta humor we've come to expect from the stronger entries in the franchise. As for Neve Campbell, she's hardly missed, since it's hard to imagine a version of this story where Sidney Prescott doesn't feel shoehorned in. Even if her reasons for opting out are entirely valid and future appearances could still be in the cards, the timing couldn't be better for focusing entirely on the new cast. Utilizing legacy characters has always been a challenge since their impact tends to lessen the more you lean on them. This wisely centers around two fresh faces who in short time have built just as strong a connection with audiences.

A year following the Woodsboro killings, sisters Sam (Melissa Barrera) and Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega) are now living in New York City attending Blackmore University with twins Mindy (Jasmin Savoy Brown) and Chad (Mason Gooding) when another string of murders indicate Ghostface (voiced again by Roger L. Jackson) is back. Leaving previous killers' masks behind while seemingly framing Sam for the crimes, those "core four," along with Mindy's girlfriend Anika (Devyn Nekoda), Sam and Tara's nosy roommate Quinn (Liana Liberato), Chad's awkward roommate Ethan (Jack Champion), Sam's secret boyfriend Danny (Josh Segura) all emerge as suspects. 

On the case is Quinn's dad Detective Bailey (Dermot Mulroney) and FBI Special Agent Kirby Reed (Hayden Panettiere),who returns after surviving the 2011 attacks. Gale Weathers (Courtney Cox) is also back, attempting to help despite having penned another book exploiting the sisters' recent ordeal. With a traumatized Sam still coming to terms with her lineage as Billy Loomis' (Skeet Ulrich) illegitimate daughter, she attempts to protect a fiercely independent Tara, as the new killer looks to Woodsboro's past for inspiration. Bolder and more dangerous, Ghostface leaves a bloody trail, targeting Sam as the final victim.

For horror fans, the NYC setting was bound to invoke numerous comparisons to the much maligned Friday The 13th Part VIII, which mostly took place on a boat, failing to fully capitalize on its urban surroundings. This stands in stark contrast, as apartment buildings, congested streets, restaurants, bodegas, subways and parks are all put to use, with the filmmakers making good on their promise to have the action differ from anything that came before. It has a tough opening to follow after the last entry, but kicks off with a shocking Ghostface swerve that'll have you do a double take. The story then sort of settles back into what we'd typically expect, while still managing to be clever and subversive.

The strained sibling relationship between Sam and Tara evolves, but an increased focus on the former's trauma elevates Sam to main protagonist. In a timely, inspired twist, she's essentially becomes a public pariah, with online conspiracy theories and misinformation circulating that she's the killer. Things have gotten so bad that even her therapist (Henry Czerny) wants nothing to do with it. Tara responds by wildly partying to bury the pain and move on, continuing to resent her sister's overprotective ways. But if the last film belonged to Ortega, it's Barrera who owns this one, effectively filling Campbell's shoes.

With a script that digs deeper into the psychology of Sam, Barrera knocks it out of the park in a tough, sympathetic portrayal that carries the picture through its highs and lows. Ortega again impresses, particularly when it comes to her realistic registering of genuine fear and terror when confronted by Ghostface. A thrilling sequence where the shotgun wielding killer hunts both in a bodega is a highlight that finds the actresses at the top of their respective games.With Campbell and David Arquette gone, Courtney Cox carries the torch for the original legacy cast, even as she goes through the usual paces as Gail. Aside from an excitingly staged apartment showdown with Ghostface, there's just not much left for her, which isn't a travesty since Cox still excels in serving the character's diminished purpose. 

Considerable mileage comes from Panettiere's return as more hardened Kirby, whose role as an FBI Agent is larger than you'd expect, with her motives generating curiosity and suspicion. The same could be said for the others, as any one or more could easily be Ghostface, whose warehouse shrine to Woodsboro's history hugely factors into the plot and eventual reveal. The intrigue in determining the killer is still ridiculously fun and this ending might be the craziest yet. As usual, it rarely holds up to logical scrutiny, but the enjoyment in speculating who's behind the mask makes up for it.

The only obvious flaw involves Ghostface, who's never been this ruthlessly violent, but strangely claiming few victims. The far lower body count could stem from a desire to subvert expectations, but too many targets miraculously survive certain demise. Hesitation to kill off anyone in an extremely likeable cast is understandable, but sometimes it has to be done, especially when the characters openly tout how all bets are off under these "new rules." Sometimes the only thing that really raises the stakes and suspense for subsequent encounters are deadly consequences, which are in shorter supply here. Aside from that, there's little to complain about.

Scream VI will ultimately be remembered for two masterful set pieces. The first involves an unbearably tense ladder escape with a gruesome payoff and another finding the group in crowded subway full of masked Ghostfaces. Clocking in as the longest entry yet, a slight trim wouldn't have hurt, but it's offset by the performances and those sequences, which rank among the series' best. Should the franchise stay this course, there's reason to believe even better sequels could await. And that's a resurgence few saw coming, especially for the sixth installment of a decades old horror staple.      

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Scream (2022)

Directors: Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett
Starring: Melissa Barrera, Jack Quaid, Mikey Madison, Jenna Ortega, Dylan Minnette, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Neve Campbell, Courtney Cox, David Arquette, Mason Gooding, Sonia Ammar, Marley Shelton, Skeet Ulrich, Kyle Gallner, Heather Matarazzo, Roger L. Jackson
Running Time: 114 min.
Rating: R

★★★ ½ (out of ★★★★)

After years of devolving into more of a parody than the slasher films it was supposedly satirizing, the fifth Scream returns to its meta roots with a smart, wildly entertaining whodunnit that offers up a shockingly intelligent, multi-layered commentary on modern horror. Consider it the Cobra Kai of the series, expertly balancing the returning legacy characters with well written and performed newer ones that actually have the potential to stick around, injecting the franchise with its first signs of life in over a decade. It would be easy to understand if Ready or Not directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett (collectively known as Radio Silence) decided to get out now and leave on top, as they've just made the definitive sequel with this fifth installment, or at least the first in a very long time that doesn't feel like a Scary Movie follow-up. 

Everything that could possibly go right does here, and the few things that don't carry a critic proof defense because of the knowing, self-referential machinations of the plot, which feel fresh and of the moment. Between a more brutal, unrelenting Ghostface, some new twists on familiar franchise tropes and a delicate incorporation of returning characters, it cleverly introduces "Requel" to the pop culture lexicon while taking shots at elevated horror and toxic fandom. Of course, we already knew what the word entailed, but screenwriters James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick cleverly send up that entire idea, breathing new life into what had become a tired property.

Twenty-five years after Billy Loomis and Stu Macher terrorized Woodsboro, high school student Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega) receives a frightening landline phone call from the Ghostface killer while texting her friend Amber (Mikey Madison). Tara's brutal attack brings her estranged older sister Sam (Melissa Barrera) back to town with current boyfriend Richie (Jack Quaid). Soon, they meet up with Amber, Wes (Dylan Minette), twins Mindy and Chad Meeks-Martin (Jasmin Savoy Brown and Mason Gooding) and Chad's girlfriend Liv McKenzie (Sonia Ammar), who all piece together that Ghostface has returned and is likely among them, with the killer or killers motivated by something from the past.  

As the body count rises and mistrust within the group quickly escalates, Wes' mom, Sheriff Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton), tries to narrow down the suspects while Sam and Richie recruit the now retired Dewey Riley (David Arquette) to reluctantly help. But he's still aching over his divorce from morning TV host Gale Weathers (Courtney Cox), whom he warns along with Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) to stay far away from Woodsboro. But with the kills continuing, that might be a request both find impossible to honor, as Tara's friends all look to expose each other as Ghostface before it's too late.      

Right from the opening phone call it's evident this film will subvert whatever expectations remain from Drew Barrymore's iconic 1996 scene. It basically takes that entire sequence and flips it, with results that prove to be the ideal lead-in for the direction they've chosen to go. Roger L. Jackson continues his successful streak as the mysterious, sinister voice quizzing victims on scary movies, but puts a different spin on it that lets us know the sequel's really come to play. And since there's usually a new Ghostface (or sometimes multiple ones) in each new installment, it makes sense that this one would be particularly dangerous since they've had a lot of source material to study. This makes it hard to recall any previous entry where the killer seemed as forceful and unrelenting in their attacks. 

There are a lot of gruesome, uncomfortable scenes, mainly because the filmmakers rarely cut away from the action, often lingering for a disturbing amount of time as victims stare right into Ghostface's eyes. It's something you'd almost expect to see in a Halloween film, but represents a massive leap forward considering too many Scream pictures had a tendency to make a total joke of the killings. And for all the talk about rules and tropes, the characters aren't walking cliches or lazily written modern counterparts to their predecessors despite varying connections to them. They also give Ghostface some grueling fights, making the Woodsboro slasher's job tougher than it's ever been, in large part due to their familiarity with history. It's definitely not business as usual so kudos should go to the studio's marketing team for holding back in trailers and commercials to ensure key details weren't given away.

It's not exactly fair to label Melissa Barrera's Sam the "Final Girl" since that doesn't carry with it any guarantees she makes it to the end, or even that she's not the killer herself. But she can comfortably be called the lead protagonist since it's her that much of the action revolves around. As major connective tissue between the original and newer characters, she has a dark, Dexter-like secret that the screenplay fleshes out extremely well, with Barrera believably delivering a lot of expository dialogue and nailing it. The fractured sibling relationship between her and Jenna Ortega's Tara powers the narrative, as former Disney actress and You star Ortega not only fills Barrymore's shoes, but goes more than a few steps further, registering physical pain, fear and trauma in a realistic manner that hasn't exactly been a hallmark of the series up until now. 

Ortega's work ranks amongst the best we've gotten in any Scream sequel, but nearly equaling her is a sarcastically likable Jack Quaid, who kind of channels a late 90's Joshua Jackson as Sam's boyfriend Richie, getting to deliver many of the script's most cleverly satirical lines. Jasmin Savoy Brown is also a huge standout as kind of a modern take on Jamie Kennedy's horror rules-obsessed Randy Meeks, and for good reason, since her character's his niece. The rest of the newer cast is also uniformly excellent, with Dylan Minette carrying a memorable, Psycho-inspired sequence that uses misdirection to mine maximum suspense in a playful way that the other films have rarely explored to this extent.  

It's a while before David Arquette's Dewey appears, and while his previous appearances have meant less with each subsequent film, this feels entirely different. Like a veteran gunslinger called to action for one last stand, there's a tinge of sadness and regret in Arquette's performance that wasn't there before. Whether you want to chalk it up to age, experience or simply being given something meaningful to dig into this time, it's a high water mark for him. His complicated relationship with Courtney Cox's Gale Weathers also strikes a surprisingly bittersweet note without sacrificing any of the warmth or humor associated with the character.

Similarly, Scream queen Neve Campbell is in this only as much as necessary as Sidney, fully completing her evolution into the Jamie Lee Curtis of the franchise, minus the latter's timeline confusion. Her return is carefully handled, dovetailing nicely into the current storyline but never overwhelming it. Sidney offers sage advice while quickly reestablishing herself as a badass fans know and love, all with the recognition that she can only go so far and that these kids are going to have to face this, with or without her help. Campbell doesn't miss a beat, taking full advantage of a script that finally shows the character the respect she's owed, but in an appropriately impactful supporting role that doesn't overstep its bounds. By doing this, the film proves the franchise can have a future without her, should it ever come to that.

By this point, the Stab movies within the movies provide more of an inspiration for the killings than the actual sequels, so it's fitting that the rules have shifted focus from surviving to actually uncovering Ghostface. Using them to cleverly reference this franchise's stumbles and address a lot of popular online complaints about other soft reboot attempts turns the tables on hardcore fans for a change. No previous entry has leaned into the whodunnit aspect as well or strongly as this, luring the characters and viewers into a false sense of security regarding who's responsible. They'll always be watchers claiming they "knew the whole time," but the ingenious aspect to this script is how it has everyone second-guessing themselves because certain picks just seem too obvious, or maybe not obvious enough. 

While rumors are true that original Ghostface, Billy Loomis, appears in hallucinatory form thanks to some de-aging technology on Skeet Ulrich (that admittedly doesn't look great), the bigger story is that it serves the story rather than feeling like a stunt. It's also brief enough that any complaints are skillfully covered by the context in which he's used. The last act is a bit long, but the final reveal justifies it, featuring one of the more wildly unhinged Ghostface portrayals we've seen, as one particular performer chews all the scenery in sight while literally and metaphorically returning to the scene of the original crime. It's a perfect balance brutality and absurdity when the curtain's pulled back on the intricasies of this wacko meta plan. There's also a spectacular death scene that provides the ultimate in-joke for those familiar with the recent career of the actor involved.

So much discussion has centered around how a new Scream film could possibly stay true to the late Wes Craven's vision and still manage to creatively fill the tank for any potential future installments. But this threads that needle so convincingly that those who skipped the sequels wouldn't miss much. And yet, it still acknowledges them in the best of ways, playing fast and loose within that timeline to spring even more tiny surprises on us. With a sense of renewed purpose, the legacy characters return in a logical manner that supplements an already tight story, enabling the actors to bring a welcome gravitas to their roles that's gone missing for too long. It finally feels like the right amount of time has passed for their presence to mean something again and the filmmakers really work to make it count. Better yet, this only further facilitates the efforts of the new cast, many of whom have earned another go-around. And it's definitely been a while since we could say that.                                        

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Scream 4


Director: Wes Craven
Starring: Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Courtney Cox, Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere, Marley Shelton, Adam Brody, Rory Culkin, Erik Knudsen, Alison Brie
Running Time: 111 min.
Rating: R

★★ ½ (out of ★★★★)

I'll say this for Scream 4: It gets its most miscalculated sequences out of the way early. In its first few minutes to be exact. Opening with a movie within a movie within a movie, it's a self-referential stab (literally) at parody that ends up being a parody in itself as a number of characters bite the dust before the opening credits roll. Of course, we're not sure if they're actual victims or actresses in the fake "Stab" sequels inspired by Scream. But does that even really matter when you've already exposed the killer four times with nearly eight murders before the "real" movie begins? So when our old friend Ghostface does eventually show up it induces unwanted giggles and when he starts killing people "for real," I started doubting if it was. Part of the problem is highlighted in that crazy opening, as the film descends so far into parody that it's unclear whether they're even in on the joke. Director Wes Craven and screenwriter Kevin Williamson must have understood why their classic opening scene with Drew Barrymore in 1996's Scream worked. Right? If a really crappy sequel were released today it's easy to think Ghostface probably would be text messaging. Are they trying to make fun of movies that would do that by actually doing it?  Do their intentions even make a difference? It's almost maddening trying to distinguish this film from one of the Scary Movie sequels at points, except for the fact that this is might be unintentionally funnier and boasts what's easily the craziest ending the series has seen yet. At least I wasn't bored.

When bestselling self-help author and Ghostface survivor Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) returns home to promote her latest book she finds the town overrun with many more residents (i.e. potential victims) than when she left, as well as a new Ghostface slashing away on the fifteenth anniversary of the Woodsboro murders. So many new characters that a manual could probably be handed out before the film and it would still be fairly difficult to keep track of who they are, where they are, and all their various sub-plots. There's Sidney's cousin and the film's protagonist Jill (Emma Roberts), who along with her ex-boyfriend Trevor (Nico Tortorella) and pals Kirby (Hayden Panettiere) and Olivia (Marielle Jaffe) are the first to experience Ghostface's menacing phone calls. We also have the school's cinema club geeks Charlie (Rory Culkin) and Robbie (Erik Knudsen), basically assuming the Jamie Kennedy role from the first two films by explaining how the killer is now playing by the new horror movie "rules" established in the past decade involving reboots, remakes, torture porn and found footage.  Of course, there's the return of Deputy (now Sheriff) Dewey (David Arquette) and his wife, struggling author Gail Weathers-Riley (Courtney Cox). Their relationship is strained not only by her desire to break the case before him to resurrect her journalism career but by Deputy Judy's (Marley Shelton) crush on Dewey. There's also Sidney's overbearing publicist Rebecca (Alison Brie) who's determined to exploit her client's tragedy to become the next Gail Weathers. Needless to say, all these characters are set up as suspects. 

Over-plotted and needlessly complicated, this script was reported to have some major issues in pre-production and after watching what unfolds onscreen it isn't difficult to see how. Throwing an entirely new cast of young, fresh faces into the mix with the originals had to be done but the execution seems way off, with everyone fighting for screen time and more than a few characters not making much of an impression at all. One of them is unfortunately Campbell's Sidney, the supposed linchpin of the series who plays more of a mopey supporting role until the film's (admittedly exciting) climax. The psychological trauma of her coming home to face her past demons is touched on briefly, then discarded simply because there's just too much other stuff going on and the kills are occurring at a mile a minute. The increase is reasonable given the new "rules" but that doesn't change the fact that so many of them happening in such rapid succession lessens the impact and tension. The idea of the killer recording the murders this time around is a really good one, but clumsily introduced and not developed with enough consistency to pack the punch it should, which is a shame considering the interesting places they could have gone with it.

Say what you want about Campbell as an actress (and I happen to think she's an underrated one) but there's always been a strong, tough presence about her, along with with just the right amount of vulnerability, that seemed to make her the ideal scream queen. Maybe that's why Emma Roberts seems like such a lousy choice for the lead. Much more believable as Julia Roberts' niece than Sidney Prescott's cousin, she just doesn't have that presence Campbell had and looks to young for the part. Supposedly Twilight's Ashley Greene was originally considered for her role and with no familiarity of her work I'd still go out on a limb and say she could have possibly been a better fit. But it's of little difference since Hayden Panettiere feels like the true lead as Kirby, owning every scene she's in and out-acting everyone else in this enormous cast by just simply being real, which might be the hardest thing to do in this genre. The movie's biggest surprise might just be how much of an impact she makes with her limited screen time and the firm grasp she has on the material, especially evident in one sensational scene toward the end. Almost single-handedly saving this entire movie, I started to wonder if they'd actually be dumb enough to kill her off since her presence is clearly the best shot this series has at another installment. It's difficult recalling another character in the Scream saga I wanted to pull through more, knowing that the second she dies this franchise is probably going with her.

As for the rest, Arquette and Cox slide back into their old, familiar roles with relative ease, even if Gail Weathers seems a bit more irritating than I remember. In addition to Shelton's deputy (undeniably a comic highlight) you can count Culkin and Knudsen's film geeks as two of the new characters that work well enough to wish even more could have been done with them. Much of the new cast isn't a disaster, with the exception of Tortorella's Trevor who's so bland he actually makes you miss Skeet Ulrich's Johnny Depp impersonation from the the original. Anthony Anderson and Adam Brody also show up as two bumbling cops and it's kind of a shame nothing is really done with the latter since Brody could have easily been set up as the logical successor or sidekick to Arquette's character if the series continues (a big "if" at this point). Then again, with a running time of only 111 minutes it's almost impossible to squeeze all these characters in with speaking parts. Two big name actresses provide an early cameo and I still couldn't help but think it was a total waste of their talents, even by cameo standards.

The ending's a hoot that's for sure. As far as the revelation of the killer(s) it stands among the more clever surprises in the series in that it holds up, partially eliminating some of the bigger story problems up until that point, with one performer somewhat redeeming themselves with an over-the-top turn I didn't think was in them. But the script jammed too much in until then and was already lost in meta nonsense to such a point that it eventually grows indistinguishable from what it's parodying by the finale. Count me among the few looking forward to a Scream reboot, anticipating enough time had passed for a fresh shine to be put on the franchise, especially if the key original cast members were to return, which they did. While I still think this was a great idea and it's not the weakest entry in the series (see the third), it's the first where the tone seems off, alternating unevenly between comedy and horror throughout. It strangely disappoints in a fashion similar to J.J. Abram's Spielberg throwback Super 8 from earlier in the year in that both films had massive built-in nostalgia that could have yielded greatness if only small mistakes were corrected at the screenwriting stage before they became bigger ones on screen. More closely resembling a limp third sequel of an ailing horror franchise than a full-on revitalization, Scream 4 is an entertainingly jumbled mess that had me wishing for more and wondering what should have been.