Film Review
Having brought a measure of respectability back to the slasher genre in
the mid-1980s with his horror masterpiece
A Nightmare on Elm Street
(1984), director Wes Craven achieved pretty much the same result with
Scream a decade later, although he
did so by coming at it from a totally different angle. At the
time, the genre had been pretty well mined out and audiences had long
grown tired of watching badly trained actors running up and down stairs
pursued by a monosyllabic knife-wielding madman enacting his own
personal stab-a-thon. The slasher film was ripe for parody, and
this was what Craven delivered - a brilliantly executed send-up of the
very same genre that he had once given the kiss of life to, and which
found a new lease of life as a result.
Because
Scream is a Wes
Craven film, it cannot help being a decent, full-blooded horror-thriller as well as a
magnificent spoof. The humour is underplayed to the extent that
anyone unfamiliar with the genre will probably not find the film
remotely funny and will only see it as an ingeniously constructed mix
of suspense thriller, whodunit murder mystery and gory horror
film. Those who have already lost their slasher virginity to
the likes of John Carpenter, Sean S. Cunningham and Wes Craven will see
a totally different film, one that is absolutely awash with in-jokes
and overt references to the best (and worst) slasher movies.
Things get scarily funny when all the characters start to act as if
they are aware of being in a slasher film, something which makes sense
after you've seen the twist, or rather twisted, ending. One
character gives his mates instructions on how to survive a slasher
movie - so formulaic has the genre become that if you are a teetotal,
drugs-clean
virgo intacta you are guaranteed to survive, otherwise you are
almost certainly dead meat. Having written off the genre as
exploitation trash because the heroines in such films always do silly
things like panic, run upstairs and lock themselves in the bathroom,
the heroine of this film does exactly this when the Casper-mask wearing
killer shows up on her doorstep and starts to give her the full Michael
Myers treatment. Wes Craven even puts in a fleeting appearance
as a Freddy Krueger lookalike, just one of the innumerable cheeky nods to
A Nightmare on Elm Street. It must
have been something to watch this film
at the cinema on its first release, with one half of the audience
shrieking in terror, and the other half shrieking with laughter.
If you have never seen a slasher film before,
Scream is both compelling and
genuinely frightening, a truly visceral cinema experience. Craven's slick
and imaginative direction, complemented by a well-honed script
and some gripping performances,
sustains the pace and tension right to the end and delivers plenty of
shocks along the way. Slasher
habitués
are far less likely to be scared and more likely to end up laughing out
their guts at the sight of all those self-consciously planted
clichés and references, which pile up faster and more gratuitously
than the gore-soaked bodies. The one problem with this film is that, having
seen it, you are unlikely ever again to be thrilled by a slasher film.
Like a magician foolishly revealing the secrets of his art
in the course of his act, Wes Craven rips out and displays too many
vital organs of the slasher beast for it to have quite the same effect
again.
In an era when the slasher movie was well on the road to extinction,
Scream could have been an
enormous flop. In fact, it proved to be a massive box office hit,
eventually grossing over 170 million dollars worldwide (a handsome
return on a 14 million dollar budget). Critically acclaimed in
its day,
Scream is now almost
universally acknowledged as one of the best (if not
the best) horror films of the 1990s
and has so far spawned two reasonably popular sequels (with a third due
to be released in 2011). This is
the film that revived a dying genre and inspired a new generation of
filmmakers, whilst putting the final nail in the coffin of those
shallow exploitation shockers that had given horror a bad name over the
preceding decade. Slashing is a serious business, too serious
to be left to amateurs...
© James Travers 2010
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