We Have a Deal: How to Negotiate with Intelligence, Flexibility and Power
Book
SHORTLISTED FOR 'BEST COMMUTER READ', CMI MANAGEMENT BOOK OF THE YEAR 2017 How do you ask for a...
What is Sound Healing?
Book
Cast your mind back to the last time a sound affected you. Perhaps birdsong set a positive tone for...
Your Middle Years: Love Them. Live Them. Own Them
Book
A book for the menopause years and beyond. Authors Paula Mee and Kate O'Brien had a lot of questions...
Contingent Citizens: Professional Aspiration in a South African Hospital
Book
Over the past decade, South Africa has experienced widening inequality. The ostentatious lifestyles...
Evangelical Gotham: Religion and the Making of New York City, 1783-1860
Book
At first glance, evangelical and Gotham seem like an odd pair. What does a movement of pious...
LeftSideCut (3776 KP) rated I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) in Movies
Mar 2, 2021
This film is rightly considered a bit of a classic these days, and there's really not a whole bunch to complain about. It has well written characters, a decent cast, a visually creepy villain, an engaging whodunit plot, one of the best chase scenes in slasher movie history (that's right), and still manages to stand on its own two feet in a world where it's constantly compared to Scream.
I find this to be an unfair comparison. Beyond the 90s setting, teen characters, slasher tropes, and shared writer in Kevin Williamson, there's not much else that ties them together. Scream is of course a fantastic horror, but relishes in being satire, whereas IKWYDLS is a straight shooting horror. Its the exact kind of film that Scream takes aim at, but it still manages to be a decent slasher without feeling silly, and delivers some well earned jump scares for good measure. I also really enjoy it's fishing town setting and the hole movie is accompanied by a hilariously epic score courtesy of John Debney. It's great.
I will always have a lot of time for IKWYDLS, overshadowed by some of its contemporaries, but a hugely satisfying and entertaing horror in its own right.




