When a new Ghostface killer emerges in the quiet town where Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) has built a new life, her darkest fears are realized as her daughter (Isabel May) becomes the next target. Determined to protect her family, Sidney must face the horrors of her past to put an end to the bloodshed once and for all. Directed by Kevin Williamson, the cast also features Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding, Anna Camp, David Arquette, Roger L. Jackson, Michelle Randolph, Jimmy Tatro, Mckenna Grace, Asa Germann, Celeste O’Connor, Sam Rechner, Ethan Embry, Mark Consuelos, Tim Simons with Matthew Lillard with Joel McHale and Courteney Cox.
SCREAM7 IS ONLY IN THEATRES, DOLBY CINEMA, 4DX, SCREENX, PREMIUM LARGE FORMATS AND IMAX ON FEBRUARY 27, 2026!
WAMG is giving away 10 pairs of Fandango Codes to see the film in theaters.
EMAIL michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com to enter. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
Fandango Promotional Code (“Code”) is good for up to $20 off (total ticket price and associated fees and charges) the purchase of one movie ticket to see Scream 7 at participating Fandango theaters in the US.
“People aren’t always what they appear to be. Don’t forget that.”
Denise Richards and Matt Dillon Get Wild in WILD THINGS (1998) will be available on 4K Ultra HD May 24th from Arrow Video
A spoiled rich kid, a troubled teen from the wrong side of the tracks, a carefree playboy and a dogged detective find themselves all caught up in the sex crime of the century in this steamy star-studded crime thriller from the director of Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer.
Popular and charming, student counsellor Sam Lombardo (Matt Dillon) is no stranger to being the focus of female attention within the moneyed cliques of Florida’s Blue Bay. His fortunes are about to change dramatically, however, when one of the wealthiest students at his high school, sultry siren Kelly Van Ryan (Denise Richards), accuses him of rape. The charge looks sure to stick when another girl from the other end of the social spectrum, Suzie Toller (Neve Campbell), steps forward with her own allegations, but Detective Duquette (Kevin Bacon) smells something fishy, and the truth is as murky and dangerous as the alligator-infested swamps in the hinterlands of this affluent beach community.
Presented in new 4K restorations of its original theatrical version and extended ‘Unrated Edition’, Wild Things is a classic piece of sexy late-90s neo-noir from director John McNaughton and writer Stephen Peters, whose serpentine plotting will keep you on the edge of your seat until the end credits roll.
4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS
New 4K restorations of both the Original Theatrical Version and the Unrated Edition from the original camera negatives by Sony Pictures Entertainment
4K (2160p) UHD Blu-ray presentation in Dolby Vision (HDR10 compatible)
Original uncompressed stereo audio and DTS-HD MA 5.1 surround audio
Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing
Exclusive new audio commentary by director John McNaughton and producer Steven A. Jones
Commentary by director John McNaughton, cinematographer Jeffrey Kimball, producers Steven A. Jones and Rodney Liber, editor Elena Maganini and score composer George S. Clinton
Exclusive new interview with John McNaughton
Exclusive new interview with Denise Richards
Making of documentary
An Understanding Lawyer outtakes
Trailer
Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Anne Billson and Sean Hogan
Double-sided fold-out poster
Six double-sided, postcard-sized lobby card reproductions
Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Sam Hadley
Hailed as “a breathless, razor-sharp slasher worthy of the legacy” (Meagan Navarro, Bloody Disgusting), the much-anticipated new SCREAM from Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group arrives for purchase on Digital* March 1, 2022 with killer bonus content. The terror comes home on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on April 5 from Paramount Home Entertainment. In addition, fans can own both the new 2022 movie and the original 1996 hit in a Scream 2-Movie Collection on 4K Ultra HD or Blu-ray.
Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, the new SCREAM reunites Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, and David Arquette who come together to help a group of fresh victims…and uncover a host of new suspects. The Digital, 4K Ultra HD, and Blu-ray releases are gushing with to-die-for bonus content, including deleted scenes, interviews with the new and returning cast, plus a look at the legacy of horror legend Wes Craven:
Filmmaker Commentary—The directors, writers and filmmakers reveal the unwritten rules for surviving this genre-busting horror movie.
Bloodlines—Catch up with Scream stars Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, and David Arquette for a deep dive into their characters and why they came back for a fresh stab at their favorite horror franchise.
New Blood—Meet the new generation of Woodsboro victims and potential killers!
In the Shadow of the Master—The cast honor movie maestro Wes Craven and look back on his incredible legacy as the director who redefined horror.
Deleted Scenes—Look out! They’re back from the dead: see the scenes slashed from the movie.
The SCREAM DVD includes the feature film in standard definition.
Twenty-five years after a streak of brutal murders shocked the quiet town of Woodsboro, a terrifying new killer resurrects the Ghostface mask. As the deaths mount, Woodsboro’s new targets must seek help from the survivors of the original Ghostface attacks. Now, only Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), former sheriff Dewey Riley (David Arquette), and reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) can find a way to stop the killer when everyone is a suspect. The film also stars Melissa Barrera, Mason Gooding, Jenna Ortega, Jack Quaid, and Marley Shelton.
So, for the last four weekends, one film has dominated, really ruled the box office. I’m talking about the latest installment of a near twenty-year-old franchise. So, what could possibly challenge this “rock-solid” tentpole and knock the “webhead’ off his perch? Perhaps the “de-throner” will be the latest installment of a franchise that’s over twenty-five-years-old. Oh, and it’s far less “family-friendly”, so maybe it’s not for the same audience. So, leave the kiddos home, when this masked knife-wielding maniac starts stalking the teens once again. “Ghostface” returns, hoping to make movie audiences (and studio coffers) SCREAM.
Alright, who’s “dying’ to revisit Woodsboro? Well your wish is granted with this flick’s opening sequence, which harkens back to a familiar night in 1996. Phone “tech” is a lot different now (texts, video chat, etc.), but it finishes with a brutal attack on young Tara (Jenna Ortega). Several miles away a frantic call sends her sister “Sam” (Melissa Barrera) sharing a ride home with boyfriend/co-worker Richie (Jack Quaid). When they arrive, a mini-reunion begins with Tara’s over-protective BFF Amber (Mikey Madison), twins Mindy (Jasmine Savoy Brown) and Chad (Mason Gooding) who’s never far from his “bae” Liv (Sonia Ammar), and Wes (Dylan Minnette), the son of Sheriff Hicks (Marley Shelton). She and Sam clash immediately, so the still-stunned big sister decides to consult with the “vets”. But the bitter reclusive former lawman Dewey Riley (David Arquette) is at first hesitant, but he sends a message to ex Gale (Courtney Cox), now a network tv news “morning anchor” in the Big Apple. The chain begins when she in turn calls Sydney Prescott (Neve Campbell), now a busy big city mom. So will the trio reunite in their old “stomping grounds” before Ghostface slices and dices the “new kids”? And what about the “ghost of movies past’ who pops up to haunt Sam?
Oh, but she’s also haunted by memories as Barrera makes Sam a more complex screen “scream queen”, a young woman who wants to escape her hometown. But she’s pulled back by that burg’s history forcing her into action. Barrera has us investing in the heroine who’s not sure of herself. Plus Ortega as Tara truly tests that sisterly bond, resenting Sam but still needing her nurturing nature, Ortega turns Tara from “fodder’ into a fiesty spitfire, almost matched by Madison’s snarky, acid-spewing Amber. Quaid is quite entertaining as the beau who feels out of place, wanting to be there for Sam, but fearful of being “fresh meat’ for the deadly village. Ably filling the role of pop culture savant is the engaging Brown who seems more than a bit giddy to be part of the “re-qual”. But the movie’s “heavy lifting” is done by the tired but still standing original trio. Arquette’s Dewey has a world-weary affability, knowing of the threats but ready to put a stop to the “legacy”. As with previous incarnations, Cox’s Gale seems to be using the tragedies as a “self-promotion” until her inner-defender is awakened. It’s Campbell as Sydney that sounds that alarm, making her one of the genre’s greatest survivors, always thinking ahead and never backing down. Perhaps she can be spun off for a horror/road trip series, bashing creeps all over the globe.
The producers faced a big challenge as the series original scribe, Kevin Williamson, stepped down and the director of the previous entries, Wes Craven, sadly passed away in 2015. Stepping up are the directing team of Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillet (READY OR NOT) who recreate the pacing and action dynamic of the first entry. Though it feels familiar they’re able to give each scene an air of dread and doom. Ultimately they’re tripped up by the sneering script from James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick that feels the need to drag down the midsection in a “meta mess”, skewering online trolls, while poking holes in the “fake Stab” movie series, which echoes the previous entries of this one, while also name-dropping other horror franchises. It all becomes tiresome very quickly giving the last act a “not as clever as they think they are” vibe. This leads to a final sequence denouncement that’s just plain silly and sophomoric (that’s the force, or farce, behind the body count). And though most thriller fans don’t find it a problem, the aggressive, extreme violence just seems to be a celebration of vicious cruelty. But I did like Tara’s admiration for “art-house horror” and Campbell is always a welcome movie presence. The fervent fanbase of the franchise will no doubt revel in this, but if I had to endure another “inside joke”, I was afraid that I’d clear out the theatre with a loud SCREAM.
2 Out of 4
SCREAM opens in theatres everywhere on Thursday evening, January 13, 2022
Twenty-five years after a streak of brutal murders shocked the quiet town of Woodsboro, a new killer has donned the Ghostface mask and begins targeting a group of teenagers to resurrect secrets from the town’s deadly past. Neve Campbell (“Sidney Prescott”), Courteney Cox (“Gale Weathers”) and David Arquette (“Dewey Riley”) return to their iconic roles in Scream alongside Melissa Barrera, Kyle Gallner, Mason Gooding, Mikey Madison, Dylan Minnette, Jenna Ortega, Jack Quaid, Marley Shelton, Jasmin Savoy Brown, and Sonia Ammar.
FROM PARAMOUNT PICTURES, SCREAM IS IN THEATERS ONLY ON JANUARY 14.
FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN A FANDANGO CODE GOOD FOR TWO TO SEE SCREAM IN THEATERS, ENTER YOUR NAME AND EMAIL ADDRESS IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
(Fandango Promotional Code is good toward the purchase of two movie tickets [$15 per ticket, up to $30 total ticket and convenience fee value] to see SCREAM at Fandango partner theaters in the United States. Code is void if not redeemed by 3/31/2022 or when SCREAM is no longer in theaters, whichever comes first)
RATED R.
IMMERSE YOURSELF IN THE ICONIC SCREAM FILM WITH MESSENGER’S MOVIEMATE™ FEATURE
In celebration of the 25th anniversary of Scream, Messenger, Instagram, and Facebook’s Creative Shop are launching MovieMate™, a new scary “second screen” chat experience that will bring a whole new dimension to viewing the film! More Information here.
L-r, Dylan Minnette (“Wes”), Jack Quaid (“Richie”), Melissa Barrera (“Sam”) and David Arquette (“Dewey Riley”) star in Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group’s “Scream.”
Ghostface and Jenna Ortega in Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group’s “Scream.”
Can’t wait for January when the new SCREAM movie debuts in theaters? Here’s a featurette on what makes Ghostface a horror icon, as well as new character posters, to tide you over until then.
Twenty-five years after a streak of brutal murders shocked the quiet town of Woodsboro, a new killer has donned the Ghostface mask and begins targeting a group of teenagers to resurrect secrets from the town’s deadly past.
Neve Campbell (“Sidney Prescott”), Courteney Cox (“Gale Weathers”) and David Arquette (“Dewey Riley”) return to their iconic roles in Scream alongside Melissa Barrera, Kyle Gallner, Mason Gooding, Mikey Madison, Dylan Minnette, Jenna Ortega, Jack Quaid, Marley Shelton, Jasmin Savoy Brown, and Sonia Ammar.
DO YOU LIKE #SCARYSTORIES? SCREAM TAKES OVER TIKTOK’S TEXT-TO-SPEECH FUNCTION WITH THE VOICE OF GHOSTFACE! SCREAM stars David Arquette and Drew Barrymore have already put the feature to good use. Paramount and TikTok have delivered a text-to-speech feature that reads your own words in the iconic antagonist’s voice.
Check out the trailer for the new SCREAM movie, opening January 14th:
To celebrate the trailer release of the newest “SCREAM” installment, TikTok and Paramount Pictures have dropped a Text-to-Speech option featuring the iconically creepy voice of masked killer Ghostface.
And click HERE for the TikTok newsroom post, for more information.
Alright, it’s roughly the Summer midpoint, so let’s escape the “dog days” by heading into the cool confines of the local multiplex and catch a flick that practically screams, “big, loud, blockbuster”. This isn’t a new thing, for the past several decades (maybe since the late 70’s), the Summer action extravaganza has been the domain of several stars that seem to be playing much the same character in every flick (that’s the case with “movie personalities” since the dawn of cinema), who seem to have almost been biological engineered for such “heavy lifting”. For the seventies it was Clint Eastwood and Charles Bronson, then with the 80’s they “flexed” their talents to greater heights with Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger. Toward the end of the decade we got TV stars like Bruce Willis and martial arts masters such as Jean Claude Van-Damn and Steven Seagal. Now we’re getting action stars from the pro wrestling arena, and there’s no one hotter than the man formerly known as “The Rock”, Dwayne Johnson. He seems to be following Arnold’s playbook, by trying to broaden his appeal to audiences beyond the “shoot ’em up, blow ’em up” fans with comedies like CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE and even voicing an animated Disney character in MOANA. This while balancing his time between his roles in franchises like GI JOE, THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS, and now JUMANJI. He’s back doing a stand alone flick (well, it could inspire some follow-ups). This time Johnson has a co-star nearly as big as him, namely the title character. Because this SKYSCRAPER has 240 stories, and (as they said on the TV classic “Naked City”) here’s one of them.
Before the building of said co-star, ten years or so, Will Sawyer (Johnson) leads an elite FBI hostage rescue team. One snowy night, a domestic dispute goes horribly wrong for the team. As his battered body is wheeled into the OR, Will awakens just in time to see the radiant face of an angel of mercy (Neve Campbell) right before she dons her surgical mask. Flash forward to today as Will is married to that angel, Sarah, and they’ve produced an adorable set of twins, Georgia (McKenna Roberts) and Henry (Noah Cottrell). But Will still carries the scars of that fateful night, having lost his left leg just below the knee (replaced by a state-of-the-art prosthetic). Will’s left the Bureau and started a modest security consultant firm. Thanks to a recommendation from another FBI teammate, Ben (Pablo Schreiber), Will has been hired as the head of security at the deluxe 240 story skyscraper known as “The Pearl”, the brainchild of billionaire Zhao Long Ji (Chin Han). Before the upper floor apartments are leased (Will’s family are the first tenants), Zhao wants Will to inspect the off-site operations center and gives him a mini-computer “pass key” that will give Will all access to the Pearl. But on a ferry ride to the center, Will is mugged. This sets off a chain of events that leads to a take over of those upper floors by armed forces who set off a series of fires and explosions. When Will learns that his family is still in their apartment (a special panda feeding trek was cut short when Henry becomes ill), he rushes back to rescue them. But how will he make it up there, past the police who somehow think that he may be part of that armed assault squad, and get up to the top now that the entrance doors are locked and the elevators are out of commission? Well, where there’s a Will…
…and what a Will! Johnson easily balances charm and impressive physicality in this (almost) every man role. Once more, he’s an adoring daddy who’s a perfect protector while showing that those muscles can still cuddle and coddle. But he’s a bit more vulnerable this time out thanks to his memory of the night that all his training was not enough. We can see that in Johnson’s eyes as he clicks his metal foot into position. But he can still think quickly and improvise weapons out of just about anything. Plus those dizzying heights prove to be a most formidable foe, one that those granite fists can’t overpower. Luckily he’s got a terrific partner in the radiant Ms. Campbell who makes a triumphant return to the big screen (she had been on the small screen in “House of Cards” and as sexy seatmate on a flight with Don Draper in “Mad Men”). The two have a delightfully funny, sexy banter, playfully teasing as their eyes almost glow with desire. But when things go sideways, Neve’s Sarah is no cowering victim. She swiftly switches gears to “mama grizzly” mode, shielding the kids as she dropkicks the various thugs and creeps. Get Ms. Campbell her own thriller soon! Han is a mystery as the ultra-cool tycoon who toys with Will until he finally must “come clean’ and reveal the “MacGuffin” that may topple his “Pearl”. As for the intruders, Roland Moller, last seen in ATOMIC BLONDE after his stellar lead role in LAND OF MINE, is sinister and ruthless, earning the malevolent moniker Kores Botha. There are two other stand-outs in the villain army. Noah Taylor has a most impressive, ever present sneer as Mr. Pierce and Hannah Quinlivan is a seductive leader of assassins, a pouncing tigress with blasting pistols instead of claws.
It’s surprising that this comes from writer/ director Rawson Marshall Thurber, a film maker known primarily for comedies like DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY and WE’RE THE MILLERS. Mind you, there are bits of humor to break up the tension (Will prepares to bust down a door, then finds that it’s unlocked), but the body count is very high, especially in the opening hostage stand-off. Yes, the film owes a lot to DIE HARD and THE TOWERING INFERNO, but it’s main inspiration may be the nail-biting tower-climbing sequence from MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: GHOST PROTOCOL, which itself is a modern riff on Harold Lloyd in SAFETY LAST (google him, better yet, track down a DVD). What’s really surprising is the final scene homage to the Orson Welles iconic noir THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI. And as you’ve no doubt seen in the ads, a certain “suspension of physics” is essential to your enjoyment (much like the lack of gravity in the FAST AND THE FURIOUS flicks). I had a tougher time accepting the huge “Greek chorus” of onlookers who seem to have nothing better to do that evening than watch the convenient massive monitors that give them a prime view of Will’s every move. Sure that’s nearly as nutty as the gaudy, loopy design of that building itself (who would approve such a structure, with an actual pearl-shaped globe rested near it’s top), complete with “Pandora-like” three story garden forest and waterfall. Sure it’s silly, and makes little sense, but as far as Summertime thrill-rides go, SKYSCRAPER delivers on its promise. Rock on, “Rock”, especially with a better script.
Universal Pictures has released a second, explosive trailer for SKYSCRAPER – looming over theaters on July 13.
A nostalgic throwback to the days of the Irwin Allen 70’s disaster, popcorn flicks, especially THE TOWERING INFERNO, starring Paul Newman and Steve McQueen, and EARTHQUAKE, starring Charlton Heston, Dwayne Johnson leads the cast of Legendary’s 2018 SKYSCRAPER as former FBI Hostage Rescue Team leader and U.S. war veteran Will Sawyer, who now assesses security for skyscrapers.
On assignment in China he finds the tallest, safest building in the world suddenly ablaze, and he’s been framed for it. A wanted man on the run, Will must find those responsible, clear his name and somehow rescue his family who is trapped inside the building…above the fire line.
This will be a fun movie to catch during the hot days of summer!
Written and directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber (Central Intelligence, We’re the Millers), the 3D action-thriller is produced by Beau Flynn (San Andreas, Baywatch), Johnson, Thurber and Hiram Garcia (San Andreas, Central Intelligence).
Skyscraper’s executive producers are Dany Garcia (Baywatch, Ballers), Wendy Jacobson (San Andreas), Eric McLeod (Kong: Skull Island, Pirates of the Caribbean series) and Eric Hedayat (The Great Wall, Real Steel).
Neve Campbell has had a wonderfully successful career, playing parts such as Julia (PARTY OF FIVE), Bonnie (THE CRAFT), Suzie (WILD THINGS), and of course Sidney from the SCREAM film series. One thing that the character of Sidney and her newest character of Joanna Yaeger (TITANIC: BLOOD AND STEEL) have in common is that they are both survivors. In honor of TITANIC: BLOOD AND STEEL being released on Blu-Ray (available now) we thought it would be fun to take a look back at some of Neve’s most memorable moments. But first, check out the trailer for TITANIC: BLOOD AND STEEL.
TITANIC: BLOOD AND STEEL is the untold story of the building of a legend, and the many lives it affected during its three-year construction. To its wealthy investors, it was a dream. To the middle class who oversaw the project, it was a challenge. But to the working class who built it, Titanic was the start of a revolution. With Ireland under British rule, and the Protestant and Catholic struggle intensifying, Titanic was more than a ship…it was a symbol of ambition, hope and unity.
Featuring an internationally-acclaimed cast including Sir Derek Jacobi (The King’s Speech), Chris Noth (“Sex and the City”), Alessandra Mastronardi (Woody Allen’s To Rome With Love), Kevin Zegers (Frozen) and Neve Campbell (Scream), “Titanic: Blood and Steel” is a powerful tale of love and insurrection in the heart of Belfast.
Now, on to some of Neve’s most memorable moments on-screen. Enjoy!
Julia – PARTY OF FIVE
In this clip, it shows that Julia stands up for what is right. When she sees that it’s not just her that is miserable in the new uniforms at work, she decides to speak up.
Bonnie – THE CRAFT
After years of living with painful burn scars from a fire, Bonnie and her friends use magic to rid her from the marks that defined her life for so ling. This is a clip when she finally reveals that the scars are gone, and their spell was a success.
Suzie – WILD THINGS
After thinking Suzie was dead (because he had killed her), Ray Duquette is in shock as she makes a surprise comeback.
Sidney – SCREAM
Sidney is a known fighter, and in this clip you see just that. Her fighting back!
What is your favorite Neve Campbell moment? We’d love to hear from you!
TITANIC: BLOOD AND STEEL is available now on Blu-Ray and DVD