What I Liked: Famously Drew Barrymore dies in the opening of the first movie as most likely a nod to Psycho. Dispatching your biggest name star right at the top tends to throw the audience for a loop. They continue that trend here by knocking off several well established actors in the first act who would certainly have stuck around longer in any other horror picture. Not only that but they also kill some of the survivors from the previous film signaling to you that no one is safe.
Ok this is a weird one but Dewey’s (David Arquette (part
time wrestler)) theme music is the same as Broken Arrow the year before. It’s that twangy heavily reverbed guitar that
sounds like it’s straight out of a western.
It was supposed to be temp music but they ended up leaving it in. Marco Beltrami did write a theme for Dewey
only for it to be ignored by the producers.
What I Didn’t Like: Uninteresting plot. We follow Sidney (Neve Campbell (Titanic:
Blood and Steel)) and the leftovers from the first picture wander around a
college campus while Ghostface does his thang.
So more of the same. Nothing new
is done with the characters or the story.
This could’ve been a result of the script being leaked during production
forcing major rewrites. We’ll never
really know how that film would’ve turned out but from what I gather it wasn’t
a significant departure from the established formula and may have even been
worse. It seems the biggest problem they
had was changing around who the original killer was supposed to be and removing
some extra plot twists.
Ghostface is even more of a klutz than the first time. For example when he’s chasing Sidney around
her house he plows into an armchair like a charging bull knocking it, the side
table and a lamp over. He looks like
such a fuckin’ goof. Why couldn’t he push
the chair out of the way or something?
Why does he have to crash into it and flip over? While that got a good laugh out of me I don’t
think these moments are supposed to be funny.
The other crap like the sequel talk and Jamie Kennedy’s (Three Kings)
impressions are the comedy bits. I
believe whenever Ghostface is on screen shit’s supposed to be serious.
Overall Impressions: This is a much blander version
of its predecessor and more like what that film probably should’ve been if the
stars hadn’t aligned.
I don’t really know what else to say about this one because
it’s sorta boring. The picture rhymes to
a degree with the first and that’s tricky to do well. Most of the time it’ll be an obvious rehash
which is the case here. I’m disappointed
the filmmakers played it safe instead of taking a risk with a new direction.
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