Shelter: Getaway Series Book 2
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Sutton Warner is a mess. Everything in his life feels like it’s unraveling. He’s let a lot of...
romance
Red Dwarf - Season 1
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It was a script rejected by everyone at the BBC for three years. It starred a poet, an...
This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate
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Naomi Klein's new international bestseller This Changes Everything is a must-read on our future, one...
100 Shakespeare Films
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From Oscar-winning British classics to Hollywood musicals and Westerns, from Soviet epics to...
LeftSideCut (3778 KP) rated Scream 3 (2000) in Movies
Nov 7, 2020 (Updated Nov 7, 2020)
Scream is known for being a meta commentary on the general ins and outs of the horror genre, but I would argue that it goes a little overboard this time around. A big part of the plot revolves around a huge retcon, changing the established backstory set up in the first movie. Cue a somewhat forced cameo from fan favourite character Randy to explain the rules of a trilogy to the surviving leads (and poke fun at this plot development) but it fails to distract from the fact that this narrative is a complete mess.
The killers motives and patterns are unclear and constantly change, and the eventual twist and identify reveal of this movies Ghostface is hugely underwhelming, and is just re treading ground that has already been explored in the previous Scream films. Also, that voice changing plot device is just dumb.
In response to the public outcry of media violence following the Columbine shootings, there is a lot less gore this time around which also hurts the overall experience. It loses its shock factor that was particularly prevalent in the original, and gives the film a sort of blunt edge, and instead focuses on the hit and miss comedy aspect.
All this being said, Scream 3 is still enjoyable when it needs to be. The returning trio of Neve Campbell, Courtney Cox, and David Arquette is essential to that particular element. These characters have been fleshed out well over these movies, and seeing them together on screen is always a treat. Everyone else is largely forgettable, but the film manages to shoehorn in cameos from Jay and Silent Bob, and Carrie Fisher, which just adds to surrealism of it all.
Not Wes Craven's finest hour by a long shot, but still an enjoyable enough slasher, and still a part of a hugely important horror series.
Jacqueline Stewart recommended Fieldwork Footage (1928) in Movies (curated)
NOAA Weather Radar
Weather and Utilities
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GET WEATHER ALERTS PUSHED TO YOUR DEVICE FROM THE NWS! WE PUSH ALERTS FASTER THEN ANY OTHER APP! ...
iParadox – Alarm System Control
Utilities and Business
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2016 and before H/W may be upgraded to connect with Swan service additional costs apply in this...
The Comfort Food Diaries: My Quest for the Perfect Dish to Mend a Broken Heart
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In the tradition of Elizabeth Gilbert and Ruth Reichl, former New Yorker editor Emily Nunn...
Biography food