Manawatu Standard

Re-quel’s solid mix of knowing insights and modern frights

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Review

Scream (R16, 114 mins) Directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett Reviewed by James Croot ★★★

The movie series that helped to revive interest in the then virtually moribund horror genre 25 years ago is back. With Scream, Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson not only made fun of ‘‘the rules’’ of slasher flicks, they also created an iconic bogyman for a generation – in look, if not in character.

Two successful sequels followed, each increasing­ly postmodern and meta, before 2011’s Scream 4 attempted to revive the franchise for a new decade – and awhole new trilogy. A combinatio­n of relatively poor box-office performanc­e and another Hollywood monster – Harvey Weinstein – stopped that in its tracks.

Now, another 10 years have flown by, and Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega) is the latest Woodsboro, California teen who finds herself home alone and harassed by an unknown caller asking her if she ‘‘likes scary movies’’.

Threatenin­g the life of her best friend, Amber (Mikey Madison), if Tara doesn’t play ball, ‘‘the voice’’ asks her a series of questions about the Stab series of films inspired by the horrific events in the town all those years ago.

When Tara stumbles on the final hurdle regarding who the original Ghostface killer was, she attempts to warn Amber, only to find someone wearing that memorable maskwaitin­g at her front door – with a knife.

A frenzied attack follows, one she barely survives and that plunges all of Woodsboro back into a state of high anxiety.

Wes Hicks (Dylan Minnette), one of Tara’s friends who is also the son of the local sheriff, reaches out to Tara’s estranged sister, Sam (Melissa Barrera). She left five years ago to start a new life in Modesto, but now, with her sibling fighting for her life, Sam knows it’s time to return to Woodsboro and tackle the demons that drove her away in the first place.

Accompanie­d by her boyfriend, Richie (Jack Quaid), her arrival coincides with another, seemingly unconnecte­d, Ghostface attack, before Sam herself finds herself targeted for execution.

Fighting off her attacker, before revealing to Tara the truth about why she originally left, Sam finds herself increasing­ly isolated and in need of help from someone intimately familiar with the town’s troubled history.

But Dewey Riley (David Arquette) is not only no longer the town’s sheriff, but he’s also in no mood to go looking for trouble.

Attracting old fans, let alone scaring up awhole new audience, was always going to be a challenge for directoria­l duo Matt Bettinelli­Olpin and Tyler Gillett (especially with how synonymous the series was with the late ‘‘professor of horror’’ Wes Craven).

However, thanks to a combinatio­n of clever twists on the Craven and Williamson template and the same visceral thrills, tension-building and swagger that marked their last outing, Ready or

Not, they’ve managed to craft a worthy instalment suitable for a timewhen smartphone­s, elevated horror and re-quels (movies that pay homage to their original source, but not all of the sequels) are all the rage.

Tara cites The Babadook as her favourite scary movie (‘‘because it’s an amazing meditation on motherhood and grief, not just some schlocky, cheeseball nonsense’’),

Attracting old fans, let alone scaring up a whole new audience, was always going to be a challenge.

while the plot makes great use of smart home technology and phone tracking apps as both a defence against an intruder and a tool to help them in their pursuit.

Copious point-of-view shots, stalking cameras and cleverly deployed false alarms help heighten the atmosphere of dread, while there are plenty of discussion­s about horror’s new set of rules, enduring classics, contempora­ry favourites – and disasters.

Although Halloween, both 1978 and 2018, is the oft-cited exemplar forwhat’s unfolding in Woodsboro this time around, writers James Vanderbilt ( Zodiac, Murder

Mystery) and Guy Busick ( Ready or Not) have created a story that feels more akin to television’s recent

Dexter revival New Blood, with its exploratio­n of genetics and legacies.

They also offer some interestin­g meditation­s on the extremely passionate reactions that lovers of certain movies have when Hollywood dares to attempt a revisit (‘‘How can fandom be toxic?’’ one character opines). Among the Dawson’s Creekesque younger cast members, In the

Heights’ Barrera and Yellowjack­ets’

Jasmin Savoy Brown are the standouts, the latter as the guru of all things Stab and how to avoid certain death.

Among the four legacy characters returning to action, Arquette is definitely the one who makes the biggest impression.

A solid, if slightly unspectacu­lar stab attempt at reviving the series,

Scream is at least aworthy tribute to Craven. Scream is now screening in cinemas nationwide.

 ?? ?? Neve Campbell, left, and Courteney Cox are among the quartet of actors making their return to the franchise.
Neve Campbell, left, and Courteney Cox are among the quartet of actors making their return to the franchise.
 ?? ?? Clever twists on the original template and the directing duo’s trademark visceral thrills and swagger combine to create a worthy revival of Scream.
Clever twists on the original template and the directing duo’s trademark visceral thrills and swagger combine to create a worthy revival of Scream.

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