![]() While Michael Meyers is once again stalking his way through suburban neighborhoods, few other slasher series have survived into modern times. ![]() The Scream franchise has always been a satire of horror’s slasher subgenre, and while they may have ruled the decades before the first Scream’s 1999 release, they aren’t exactly thriving anymore. “For us, it was like, if the blueprint is there, if it feels like a Scream movie on the page, we know this is the right group to go and execute that,” co-director Tyler Gillett said. The two penned the sequel before Radio Silence was even involved. “So I think we would have been disappointed in ourselves and feel like we let down Wes, if we made a movie that was 100 perecent homage and just about the past.”Īccording to everyone on the Radio Silence team, getting the new Scream right really came down to the script, which was penned by Ready or Not producer James Vanderbilt (known best for writing Zodiac) and the horror comedy’s writer, Guy Busick. “I think one of the things that is so embedded in all of Wes Craven’s work, that kind of allowed us to do our own thing, and kind of hopefully push the franchise forward, is that his movies always take risks,” said Bettinelli-Olpin. ![]() Instead, they wanted to make sure they did something authentic rather than simply relying on pure homage for the movie’s style. While it would be impossible to make any horror movie - let alone a Scream sequel - without Craven feeling like an influence, it wasn’t really the focus of the team during production. is just kind of built into the way that we approach things from jump before we ever thought we’d be involved in Scream.” “We can name our top five directors, and he’s one of them. So they’re just kind of in our DNA in a way that a very few directors are because we just love all these things,” said Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, a member of Radio Silence and the new Scream’s co-director. But they also had more than just the past on their mind when making the movie. While taking over a franchise from a master horror filmmaker isn’t easy, the members of Radio Silence explained in an interview with Polygon that Craven’s influence will be easy to see in the new Scream movie. Taking over for the Nightmare on Elm Street director is Radio Silence, the directing and production team behind 2019’s great horror-comedy Ready or Not. While few slasher franchises ever bring back directors, Craven directed all four of the previous Scream movies. One member of the original Scream team that isn’t involved in the sequel is horror legend Wes Craven, who passed away in 2015. By passing this legacy of killers and victims down to a new generation, it seems this latest entry might also serve as a bit of a reboot, giving us a bigger cast of young characters than previous movies, while still letting series’ staples like, Sidney, Gale Weathers (Courtney Cox), and Dewey Riley (David Arquette) share the spotlight. Of course, it’s also a Scream movie, so that cousin turned out to be in on the plot to kill Sidney the whole time.īased on the movie’s trailers, a new Ghostface has begun targeting relatives of former victims. The films picks up after the events of 2011’s Scream 4, which saw series’ protagonist - and seemingly eternal Ghostface target - Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) unite with her cousin (Emma Roberts). The biggest exception to that rule, ironically, is the slasher-parody series Scream, which will return next week for its first sequel in over a decade.ĭespite the somewhat confusing title, Scream (2022) is more like Scream 5 than a new beginning. From the four alternate Halloween universes, to all three Slumber Party Massacres, just about every franchise has at least a few follow-ups, and most of them prioritize wacky kills over tension and big ideas. Since their rise in popularity in the 1980s, slasher movies have been known for their deluge of sequels.
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