Showing posts with label Melissa Barrera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melissa Barrera. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 March 2023

Review: Scream VI


Scream VI
Cert: 18 / 122 mins / Dir. Tyler Gillett & Matt Bettinelli-Olpin / Trailer

Being a relative civilian at these things and not having perused the film's IMDB page in advance, I wasn't far into Scream VI's runtime before the thought occurred to me that 'oh, that's why this was double-billed with the fifth movie'. Because this new entry features a lot of the prominent (and crucially under-developed) characters from last time, whom I would have otherwise completely forgotten about in the intervening fourteen months. Emotional continuity dictates recent re-watching, here.

It's also worth noting that many of these players were not standing waving in the final frame of that film, suggesting that the Scream-verse is now closer to the Marvel model where central characters apparently never actually die. Not ideal for a slasher. Bonus casting-points should be awarded for the traditional semi-detached opening sequence starring Samara Weaving and Tony Revolori, suggesting that Scream has become Last Of The Summer Wine for millennial actors. Still, fans of arch scripting will be pleased with the line where Courtney Cox explains that Neve Campbell won't be showing up for this one, with all the subtlety of Christopher Lee being announced out of Return Of The King...


GUY


But I digress. To New York now, as 5quel scribes Guy Busick and James Vanderbilt return with directors Tyler Gillet and Matt Bettinelli-Olpin for a tonal reboot of the spiritual reboot which does exactly the same thing but different. Basically, a slasher movie which is in love with itself. And yet with the exception of the first act's Annoying Film Studies Geeks™, the extraneous structural introspection of the last outing is all but jettisoned as the film commits to continuing the storyline of 5, and bringing 4 closer into the ongoing continuity. Because there's little time for meta-smartarsery when you're crafting a convoluted whodunnit*1.

Ironically, this stripping-down makes Scream VI a far better movie for not constantly talking about how the movie will unfold, but also a more ordinary slasher and arguably far worse Scream movie as a result. I guess you can use that knife to cut the cake but the mask means you can't eat it, or something.


DOLL


And it's... okay. Engaging enough all the time the film is playing, but most viewers will take little away from this. The action and the set-pieces work well (earning that 18 certificate with gleefully exploitative violence), but as welcome as Hayden Panettiere's return is, the whole thing feels like it's running on fumes. Like a series which was relaunched Because Of The Money is already desperately scrabbling around for ideas to justify its existence. Convention would dictate at least one further entry under the title (just to act as a trilogy for this set of characters*2), but it already feels like there's little actual need for that. Not that need was ever an obstacle to a property's rights-owners.

Crucially, Scream V had a superbly climactic ending. This doesn't. It's as muddled and nonsensical as everything leading up to it, where the only redeeming feature is the enthusiasm with which it's executed (much like Ghostface's unfortunate victims).


Ultimately, Scream VI is absolutely fine for an audience who aren't expecting very much, although that hardly feels like the energy to be bringing to part six of an ongoing series (sorry, 'franchise', my bad. I'm never to proud too be schooled by characters smart enough to know they're in a movie, but dumb enough to repeatedly trip up a masked assassin and then run away instead of immediately stoving in his/her head with the nearest fire extinguisher, or at the very least use that to break their wrists or elbows or something, the one flaw of slasher-lore that even this lot haven't noticed).

But hey, those who do not learn from their mistakes are doomed to reboot them...


And if I HAD to put a number on it…




*1 Without wading into spoiler territory, it was quite delicious to watch the scene unfold where Ghostface uses a gun to despatch victims in the convenience store, not least because that same moment in the trailer threw up an online spat with some fans arguing this was out of character, against others pointing out that in the first movie he'd used a garage door as a weapon. In the film itself, it's revealed that this particular iteration of Ghostface isn't really Ghostface which works as a get-out, until you think about the wider format of the movies and realise that this actually is Ghostface in a very real sense, because they all are. That's the point. This, and discussions of collective vs individual identity thereafter, is probably the most interesting thing that Scream VI does in its entire run-time, because it's also the thing the film barely seems to notice has happened, never mind actually spending the time explore it... [ BACK ]

*2 It does seem weird that 2023's Scream VI is scripted to be set one year after 2022's Scream V, and yet all of the returning school and college students from that movie now look about 30. Where were they studying, Rydell High? [ BACK ]

DISCLAIMERS:
• ^^^ That's dry, British humour, and most likely sarcasm or facetiousness.
• Yen's blog contains harsh language and even harsher notions of propriety. Reader discretion is advised.
• This is a personal blog. The views and opinions expressed here represent my own thoughts (at the time of writing) and not those of the people, institutions or organisations that I may or may not be related with unless stated explicitly.

Review: Scream V (second-pass)


Scream V
Cert: 18 / 114 mins / Dir. Matt Bettinelli-Olpin & Tyler Gillett / Trailer

And so, the double-bill to unveil the sixth entry in the Scream series involved a re-screening of the 2022's soft-relaunch*1. That this Wednesday-night fanfare attracted a little over a dozen viewers*2 might say something about the property's popularity, but that fact that its necessity would not be unveiled until the second half says far more about the creative direction as a whole.

Over-scripted, over-soundtracked and over-directed with deliberately intrusive sound design, there is, unfortunately, not much more to expand upon after watching this the first time. The film's high-points are every bit as triumphant, whereas the explaining-how-sequels-work schtick feels even more like shameless padding. While there's little to actively dislike in a movie crowded with two screenwriters and two directors, 2022's outing could only be more self-absorbed if it had a fictional director's commentary playing over the top.

That said, if all of the coy introspection was removed, the film would be around half an hour long. Quite frankly it's a miracle that the finale is as gloriously satisfying as it is*3, although that seems as much of a tribute to Once Upon A Time In Hollywood as 1996's Scream. If Scary Movie hadn't already been run mercilessly into the ground, you'd swear blind this was a parody of itself.


Ironically, 2022's Scream is far better at being the simplistic slasher it thinks it's better than, than being the intellectual thing it wants to be and that everyone's expecting anyway. The pen may be mightier than the sword, but ultimately the kitchen-knife is a far more brutal critic than the Media Studies nerd. A lesson for us all, there...



And if I HAD to put a number on it…




*1 So back in 2022 Paramount 'rebooted' the line (according to the film's own script) and called this simply "Scream". Fine, except that a) it's not a reboot it's definitely a sequel, and b) the subsequent lack of distinction between the first and fifth entries is uninspired and unhelpful. Fast forward to 2023 and this film's sequel is then called "Scream VI" which, by very definition, turns 2022's Scream back into Scream V by default, hence the title of this review post. Although fuck knows where the roman numerals have appeared from for number 6, because Screams 1-4 weren't that pretentious. But number five definitely is, hence the title of this review post. I mean, if they can work "VI" into the M of Scream for the sixth movie's logo design, it stands to reason that just putting V in there for the one before is a piece of piss. But apparently not. All in all, needlessly messy, Paramount. Do you see what you made me do? [ BACK ]

*2 Yeah, this all happened at the beginning of March; yeah this review is landing at the end of March. To paraphrase Dr Ian Malcolm, "life finds a way... of fucking everything up for itself and leaving little time - never mind concentration - for frivolities such as writing about what films you've been watching". Still, back now... [ BACK ]

*3 Yeah look, as much as I've got Opinions™ about Scream V, I defy anyone not to enjoy the last fifteen minutes, even if that carnage is just a cathartic release from all of the cinematic onanism which has led up to it. [ BACK ]

DISCLAIMERS:
• ^^^ That's dry, British humour, and most likely sarcasm or facetiousness.
• Yen's blog contains harsh language and even harsher notions of propriety. Reader discretion is advised.
• This is a personal blog. The views and opinions expressed here represent my own thoughts (at the time of writing) and not those of the people, institutions or organisations that I may or may not be related with unless stated explicitly.

Saturday, 15 January 2022

Review: Scream (2022)


Scream (2022)
Cert: 18 / 114 mins / Dir. Matt Bettinelli-Olpin & Tyler Gillett / Trailer


It is, it has to be said, not a particularly great time for fans of the picture-house. Not withstanding (understandable) audience reticence and the tug-of-war between theatrical distribution and streaming services, a glance at the scheduling for this weekend reveals Boss Baby 2, The 355, The King's Man, The Matrix Resurrections, Spider-Man: No Way Home, Clifford The Big Red Dog and West Side Story. Or, to put it another way: sequel, straight-to-video genre bilge, prequel, sequel, sequel, cinematic reboot and remake. And as satisfying as some of these are, it's hard to get excited when the message from the industry seems to be 'follow the easy money; give them what they think they want, not what cinema needs'.

Oh yeah, and another Scream movie opens as well...

Old scores become ripe for settling as a figure in a notorious mask begins a new killing spree in Woodsboro, sparking fears that a decade-long cycle is just about to tick over. And as this implies, the film is very much aware of the gap between its fourth and fifth installments*1, determined to work it into the mythology as a feature rather than a bug. And it's this knowing raise of an eyebrow which sees the new entry teetering between self-referential homage and shameless retread throughout.


COMFORT


So as you can tell by this point, Tyler Gillett and Matt Bettinelli-Olpin's debut into this sporadic franchise is potentially problematic for viewers who are seeking entertainment which refreshes with something new and inventive, rather than comforts with familiarity (or as close to 'comfort' as a slasher flick can get, anyhow). But of course, how much bristling originality can a viewer really want or expect five movies into a series?

Older (Legacy™) characters return to the fray having moved on just enough to make their inclusion feel natural, while the new young protagonists drive the story through familiar streets (literally). James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick's script pushes the same buttons as its cinematic predecessors and, it's thankful to note, largely gets results thanks to the commitment of its cast. Sure, everyone's having fun, but they're taking that fun seriously. In addition to the in-universe meta references, there are of course a plethora of more subtle (ie not literally described) homages and winks to fans of the genre at large. And bonus points have to be awarded for what is probably the finest unofficial callback to Once Upon A Time In Hollywood that we'll ever see.


LENOR


But the main hurdle that the film struggles to clear is that Slasher Film Deconstruction™ has been going on for so long now (and started, specifically, by Scream) that a generation of cinemagoers have grown up with it as their default watching-mode. It's 2022 so naturally this film seems to spend longer explaining what it's going to do than actually just doing it. One almost imagines it snagged that 18 certificate for Extended Scenes Of Structural Exposition*2...

So given that dialogued references to 4Chan and the state of Re-quel™ cinema aren't quite cutting it as unique insight, what can a new chapter really bring to the table in 2022? The snark and faux-lecturing about toxic fandom and worn-out franchising is all well and good, but don't come across as particularly clever if the smart-ass characters are just verbalising what the audience is thinking at that moment anyway. But hey, as much as Scream is clearly in love with its own aura, the film at least doesn't take itself as seriously as the likes of Halloween.

And as the minutes tick along to an almost frustratingly ouroboric ending, the suspicion grows that ultimately this is just More Of The Same. Although to be fair, when The Same is done as solidly as this, things could certainly be far worse.


And yet for all the chin-stroking cynicism from me and indeed the screenplay itself, the film finally reaches its bloody crescendo of righteous retaliation and everything clicks into place. The real trick was distraction. And it worked. Because as adrenaline surges and the audience feels itself inwardly cheering along with every climactic blow, slash, stab and gunshot, they realise they've been hooked. And it's revealed that Scream has in fact worked perfectly in fulfilling its only true remit: being - against all odds - a pretty fucking great Scream movie.

The problems exist but they aren't a bug, they're a feature.



And if I HAD to put a number on it…




*1 Oh what, so you're happy to market "SCRE4M" but you draw the line at 5CREAM? Fucking cowards...
(I jest obviously, to be fair there wasn't a SCR3AM in this series, either) [ BACK ]

*2 I know I'm labouring the point, but so does the film. It really feels like Scream makes a good companion-piece with The Matrix Resurrections, just for blatantly repeating things while telling the audience that's clever rather than lazy.[ BACK ]

DISCLAIMERS:
• ^^^ That's dry, British humour, and most likely sarcasm or facetiousness.
• Yen's blog contains harsh language and even harsher notions of propriety. Reader discretion is advised.
• This is a personal blog. The views and opinions expressed here represent my own thoughts (at the time of writing) and not those of the people, institutions or organisations that I may or may not be related with unless stated explicitly.