Scream 3
No matter how many times you see that ghost-face mask, it always scares the
bejesus out of you. This time around, the eeriest disguise since Jason's hockey
mask hides a Hollywood killer who stalks the cast of Stab 3, the third
film in a trilogy based on the Woodsboro murders (of Screams 1 & 2)
in the hope of discovering where Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) -- the
toughest, smartest horror heroine in recent history -- has been hiding since
Scream 2. The key to effective horror is anticipation (that's why the phone
makes such a good vehicle for fear; you never really know who's on the other
end), and Scream 3 dives into the bloodbath a little too quickly, with
the first cut made five minutes in. But director Wes Craven remains the master
of the slasher flick, using the Stab 3 set's reproductions of the
Woodsboro homes to revive creepy flashbacks of the first movie and providing
the psychological fright that was the heart of Scream but was lacking in
Scream 2. The Scream films don't take themselves or the movie
industry too seriously, so in-jokes (most of them funny) abound and rewatching
the first two Screams is recommended if you want to get half of the
humor. Let's hope this really is the last in the series, because the screams
are starting to die down. At the Campus, Harbour Mall, Holiday, Showcase,
Tri-Boro, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Jumana Farouky
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