Scream Trilogy David Arquette 2005 DVD Top-quality Free UK shipping

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Wes Craven’s smash hit horror trilogy is a post-modern take on the slasher cycle of the late Seventies and early Eighties, which included the director’s own ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’. In ‘Scream’ (1996), a psychotic freak with a love of horror flicks murders teenager Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore) in the small American town of Woodsboro. The killer then begins terrorising Casey’s classmate, Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), whose mother was murdered a year earlier. When Sidney encounters the stalker and escapes, her boyfriend Billy (Skeet Ulrich) is arrested. However, the phone calls and killings continue. The sequel, ‘Scream 2’ (1997), takes place a year on from the events of the first film. Survivors Sidney Prescott and Randy Meeks (Jamie Kennedy) are now students at the same college. A movie based on the Woodsboro murders, ‘Stab’, sparks off a series of copycat killings, and soon the nightmare is beginning all over again. While Sidney wonders who she can really trust, Randy teams up with former police deputy Dewey (David Arquette), still recovering from the effects of his stabbing the first time round, to work out the rules of a real-life horror sequel. One thing’s for sure: the body count has to be higher. Also back on the scene are reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox Arquette), who has successfully published her own account of the original killings – sacrificing her romance with Dewey in the process – and Cotton Weary (Liev Schreiber), the man Sidney had wrongfully imprisoned for her mother’s murder. The third and final instalment is ‘Scream 3’ (2000). When talk show host Cotton Weary – the man once wrongly suspected of carrying out the first of the notorious Woodsboro killings – is himself murdered by a masked figure, plenty of free publicity is provided for ‘Stab 3 – Return to Woodsboro’, the third in a series of films based around the real-life events. When two of the film’s cast are also murdered production is called to a halt, and the three remaining Woodsboro survivors – recluse Sidney Prescott, television reporter Gale Weathers and fomer police deputy Dewey Riley – join forces to find the killer.
When Randy the video geek rattles off the rules of surviving a horror movie in Wes Craven’s Scream, he speaks for a generation of filmgoers who are all too aware of slasher-movie clichs. Playfully scripted by Kevin Williamson with a self-aware wink and more than a few nods to its grandfathers (from Psycho to Halloween to the Friday the 13th dynasty), Scream skewers teen horror conventions with loving reverence while re-creating them in a modern, movie-savvy context. And so goes the series, which continues the satirical spoofing by tackling (what else?) sequels while sustaining its own self-contained mythology. Catty reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) turns grisly murders into lurid best-sellers, a cult of killer wannabes continues to hunt spunky psycho-survivor Sydney Prescott (Neve Campbell) for their 15 minutes of fame, and a cheesy movie series (Stab) develops within the movie series.
Scream remains the high point of the series–a fresh take on a genre long since collapsed into routine, but Scream 2 spoofs itself wittily (“Why would anyone want to do that? Sequels suck!” opines college film student Randy), and delights with more elaborate set-pieces and all-new rules for surviving a horror movie sequel. The endangered veterans of the original film reunite one last time for Scream 3, which plays out on the movie set of Stab 3 (it’s a trilogy within a trilogy!). With Williamson gone, replacement screenwriter Ehran Kruger tries to mine the formula one more time. It’s a little tired by now, and pale imitations (Urban Legend, I Know What You Did Last Summer) have further drained the zeitgeist, but the film bubbles with bright humour and director Craven is stylistically at the top of his game. As a trilogy, it remains both the most consistently entertaining and self-aware horror series ever made

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