"Horror movie sequels suck," says a film student at one point. "The entire horror genre was destroyed by sequels." I couldn't agree more considering the junk that preceded the original "Scream" such as "Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers" or "Wes Craven's New Nightmare" to name a few. I approached "Scream 2" with the same kind of dread: why make a sequel to a self-referential movie that didn't exactly ask for a follow-up? Surprisingly, "Scream 2" is that rare sequel that is far superior to the original in every aspect - it is wittier, funnier, bloodier and, double surprise, more cunning and clever. It's also a more effective commentary on teens and twentysomethings who get wrapped up in the mundane slasher/horror films of yesteryear.
"Scream 2" brings back Sidney (Neve Campbell), the strong screaming heroine from the original Scream, who now has a new boyfriend (Jerry O'Connell), and is attending a midwestern school called Windsor College. This time, she has caller-ID and can tell when someone is playing a prank on her. Jamie Kennedy is also back as the geeky survivor from the original who is now a geeky film student at the same college. All is well until someone dressed in the Edvard Munch-like mask and black cape begins to stalk the streets again. The killer is now hacking off girls at the college's sorority, a group whom Sidney wisely decided not to join (Shades of "Black Christmas"). The corpses begin to pile up forcing tabloid reporter/superstar Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) to unwisely report on the murderous news, once again. These incidents also bring the former police officer Dewey (David Arquette), another survivor from the original, back to visit his old friends and to rekindle his romance with the unwilling Gale. And we also see Liev Schreiber (he had a brief cameo in "Scream") as the wrongly convicted Cotton who's looking for a little pay back.
"Scream 2" might seem like just another slasher picture with better actors, but it is more than that - it manages to be a sequel-within-a-sequel film that keeps referring back to itself in clever, original ways. For example, we see that Gale's book on the events in the first film had been made into a feature film called "Stab." We see clips from the film starring Heather Graham ("Boogie Nights") in the Drew Barrymore role, and Tori Spelling as Sidney, an actress whom the real Sidney had scoffed at in the first film. And then we have the coup de resistance: the opening sequence set in a movie theatre showing the film "Stab" where most of the audience is in costume waving fake knives. However, the real killer may be somewhere in the theatre.
And there are the requisite in-jokes and little asides. My favorite is when Gale refers to her nude Website as her head on "Jennifer Aniston's body." I also liked the scene where the geeky film student is talking to the killer on a cell phone: "My favorite scary movie is 'Showgirls'. Very frightening." And the aforementioned sequel discussion in film class is a classic.
"Scream 2" is very effective in establishing its characters including Sidney, the 90's horror version of Jamie Lee Curtis impressively played by Neve Campbell, who still harbors certain doubts about the people in her life, such as her boyfriend who may or may not be the killer. Campbell has several good scenes, and she, once again, makes Sidney a sympathetic, heroic character. She has a very moving scene where she is performing the part of Cassandra on stage stalked by actors in demon outfits. One of them turns out to be the killer wearing the mask, or was it just a hallucination? Courteney Cox is more animated and hilarious, this time, as the media-obsessed Gale who has a fixation on the killer and can't wait to see when he'll strike next. She has a hysterically funny scene where she hires a new cameraman who's hesitant to work for her because he might get killed like the last one. "He wasn't gutted. I made that up. His throat was slashed," admits Gale. The cameraman's response: "Gutted, slashed - the guy is not in the union anymore. Besides, brothers don't last long in situations like this." Isn't that the truth?
"Scream 2" is strictly by-the-numbers in terms of plot structure and story, but it also tends to be unpredictable. There are the usual scares but some of them are unexpected. Basically, it's a sequel about a sequel being made as we are watching it - you can almost feel the giddiness in Gale's character as she becomes aware that the events happening around her is good material for her next book that will eventually be made into a movie sequel to "Stab." Get it? "Scream 2" is part of the 90's postmodern movement where we are consistently reminded we're watching a movie about a movie-within-a-movie.
Director Wes Craven still knows how to build suspense and thrills better than any other horror director: the opening pre-credit sequence with Jada Pinkett as a moviegoer at the "Stab" screening is one of the most frightening and compelling scenes I've ever seen, certainly topping the Barrymore opening from the original. Screenwriter Kevin Williamson, who also helmed the original, has crafted a smarter, more character-oriented script with sharper dialogue and a keener eye for detail. "Scream 2" also succeeds in pinpointing the problem of teenagers and twentysomethings obsessed with violence in American movies today, especially horror movies, and how many of them will blame the entertainment industry for their own blood lust.
"Scream 2" was easily one of the most entertaining movies of 1997, and it is Wes Craven's best work since the original "Nightmare on Elm Street." Neve Campbell and the whole cast bring a sense of humanity and pathos that definitely makes this a cut above the rest. As a character rightly suggests at the end of the film: "It's going to be one hell of a movie."
For more reviews, check out JERRY AT THE MOVIES at http://buffs.moviething.com/buffs/faust/
E-mail me with any questions, concerns or general complaints at faustus_08520@yahoo.com or at Faust667@aol.com
The review above was posted to the
rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the
review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright
belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due
to ASCII to HTML conversion.
Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews