Director: Kevin Williamson
Notable Cast: Neve Campbell, Courtney Cox, Isabel May,
Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding, Roger L. Jackson, Anna Camp, Joel McHale,
Celeste O’Connor, Sam Rechner, Asa Germann, Mckenna Grace, Mathew Lillard,
Kraig Dane, Ethan Embry
You know, just when you thought things were going pretty
fuckin’ well, Paramount and Spyglass had to go and do something real dumb and
fire Melissa Barrera. The ‘rebooted’ Scream series found a lot of
interesting paths to address creatively with both Scream (2022) and Scream
VI for its new characters, and the producers/studio decided it would be a
great idea to just detonate a landmine under the whole thing. The ripple effect
of that decision was wild. They lost Jenna Ortega (who had found a very strong
following in young viewers), and they lost their director, Christopher Landon,
who went on to make the highly entertaining Drop in 2025. It didn’t
quite look like the Scream franchise was, perhaps like Scream 4,
going to be able to see this new era through.
However, Scream VI did make a franchise high best in theaters, so never count out the bean counters when it comes to a horror franchise. Thus, Scream 7 exists. To be fair, while this seventh entry into the meta-slasher iconic series does rank towards the bottom, it isn’t the horrific train wreck that I was expecting. Bringing back Kevin Williamson and Neve Campbell is one hell of a pivot, particularly since producers/studio seemingly gave the latter the middle finger regarding her involvement in Scream VI, and there are a lot of interesting aspects of this film that carry it through. Sure, it's very obvious that this was a script rushed through into production, and the overall thing feels more like a spin-off than a legitimate sequel, but it features some fantastic kill sequences, and Kevin Williamson is bringing a lot of old-school solid filmmaking to it, so it doesn’t feel quite like a side dish. For that, I will give it credit.
















