|
| Rating: |
   
|
| Run Time: |
110 min |
| MPAA Rating: |
R |
| Released: |
1996 |
| Directors: |
Wes Craven
|
| Genre/Type: |
Comedy
Horror
Teen Movie
Slasher Film
|
| Producers: |
Cary Woods
Cathy Konrad
|
Plot Synopsis by Mark Deming
Scream is at once a slasher film and a tongue-in-cheek position paper on the "dead teenagers" movies of the late 1970s/early 1980s that plays as half-parody, half-tribute. Sydney Prescott (
Neve Campbell) is having a rough time lately: she's still getting over the brutal rape and murder of her mother a year ago, and now one of her friends (
Drew Barrymore) has been killed by a lunatic who harassed her with terrifying phone calls, then stabbed her to death while wearing a Halloween costume. Soon Sydney is receiving similar phone calls, quizzing her on the arcane details of such films as
Friday the 13th and
Prom Night, and is attacked by the same cloaked maniac. With her father missing, she has hardly anyone on her side except her best friend Tatum (
Rose McGowan) and Tatum's brother Dewey (
David Arquette), a half-bright cop. As for the murderer, it could be any number of people: Syd's father; her cute but overly intense boyfriend Billy (Skeet Ullrich); Tatum's goofball boyfriend Stuart (
Matthew Lillard); or Randy (
Jamie Kennedy), who works at the local video store and seems to like horror movies just a little too much. Much like
Halloween,
Scream spawned a series of sequels and inspired a large number of similar films -- its original working title,
Scary Movie, became the title of the 2000 parody film by
Damon Wayans.
| Actors |
Character |
Born |
| Liev Schreiber |
Cotton Weary |
Oct 4, 1967 in San Francisco, CA |
| Neve Campbell |
Sidney Prescott |
Oct 3, 1973 in Guelph, Ontario, Canada |
| Courteney Cox Arquette |
Gale Weathers |
Jun 15, 1964 in Birmingham, AL |
| David Arquette |
Dewey Riley |
Sep 8, 1971 |
| Skeet Ulrich |
Billy Loomis |
Jan 20, 1970 |
| Rose McGowan |
Tatum Riley |
Sep 5, 1973 in Florence, Italy |
| Jamie Kennedy |
Randy Meeks |
May 25, 1970 in Upper Darby, PA |
| Matthew Lillard |
Stuart |
Jan 24, 1970 |
| Drew Barrymore |
Casey Becker |
Feb 22, 1975 in Los Angeles, CA |
| Henry Winkler |
Principal Himbry |
Oct 30, 1945 in New York City, NY |
| Troy Bishop |
Expelled Kid |
|
| Linda Blair |
Reporter |
Jan 22, 1959 in St. Louis, MO |
| W. Earl Brown |
Kenny |
Sep 7, 1963 in Kentucky, U.S.A. |
| Lawrence Hecht |
Neal Prescott |
|
With contemporary horror master
Wes Craven at the helm and a cheekily self-aware script by
Kevin Williamson,
Scream (1996) single-handedly resuscitated the teen slasher genre for the media-saturated 1990s. From the opening slaughter of blonde star
Drew Barrymore through the last-minute heroics of final girls
Neve Campbell and Courteney Cox,
Scream simultaneously sent up and reenacted 1970s and 1980s slasher film conventions (with a nod to founding father
Alfred Hitchcock). With a telephone-and knife-wielding psycho taunting beset babes, clueless authority figures, and references to such slasher chestnuts as
Friday the 13th (1980) and
Halloween (1978),
Scream played off the teen audience's pop knowledge while taking a jab at the debate over the effects of media violence. The teen audience responded by turning the unheralded horror flick into a $100 million smash. Along with spawning the inevitable sequels,
Scream's success reestablished the strength of the adolescent demographic and resulted in a host of teen horror movies, including the Williamson-penned
I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) and
The Faculty (1999), as well as establishing Williamson as the teen scribe for the late 1990s.