Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 - Box set
 
  
 Description:
  When Randy the video geek rattles off the rules of surviving a horror  movie in Wes Craven's Scream, he speaks for a generation of filmgoers  who are all too aware of slasher movie clichés. Playfully scripted by  Kevin Williamson with a self-aware wink and more than a few nods to its  grandfathers (from Psycho to Halloween to the Friday the  13th dynasty), Scream skewers teen horror conventions with loving  reverence while re-creating them in a modern, movie-savvy context. And so  goes the series, which continues the satirical spoofing by tackling (what  else?) sequels while sustaining its own self-contained mythology. Catty  reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) turns grisly murders into lurid  bestsellers, a cult of killer wannabes continues to hunt spunky  psycho-survivor Sydney Prescott (Neve Campbell) for their 15 minutes of fame, and a  cheesy movie series (Stab) develops within the movie series. Scream remains the high point of the series--a fresh take on a genre  long since collapsed into routine, but Scream 2 spoofs itself  with witty humor ("Why would anyone want to do that? Sequels suck!" opines  college film student Randy), and delights with more elaborate set pieces and  all-new rules for surviving a horror movie sequel. The endangered veterans of  the original film reunite one last time for Scream 3, which plays  out on the movie set of Stab 3. (It's a trilogy within a  trilogy!) With Williamson gone, replacement screenwriter Ehran Kruger tries  to mine the formula one more time. It's a little tired by now, and pale  imitations (Urban Legend, I Know What You Did Last Summer) have  further drained the zeitgeist, but the film bubbles with bright humor, and  director Craven is stylistically at the top of his game. As a trilogy, it  remains both the most consistently entertaining and self-aware horror series  ever made. --Sean Axmaker
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