Scream
"I'm pretty sure a C-section is comparable to what happened to her," Barrymore said of her iconic cold open kill in the 1996 film.
From the voice-changing lows of "Scream 3" to the high-rise horror of "Scream VI," this is the definitive ranking of Wes Craven's beloved slasher series.
The team at Project X Entertainment saw the potential in the horror franchise and have the roadmap to do it again.
Directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, Tyler Gillett, and producer Chad Villella (AKA Radio Silence) walk IndieWire through their own terrifying journey: to meet major expectations.
"If I were a man and had done five installments of a huge blockbuster franchise over 25 years," Campbell says, that "Scream 6" number would've been different.
From titular antagonists ("Carrie," "Dracula," "It") to cryptic clues ("Saw," "Jaws," "Slither"), horror captures the art of the tiny title like no other genre.
The "Scream 5" star continues her final girl status in the sixth installment, bringing back more franchise favorites.
After 26 years in the franchise, Campbell said the offer for the sixth film "did not equate to the value I have brought to the franchise."
"I can’t do a Drew [Barrymore]. I can’t touch that," said Stewart, who almost cameoed in the opening kill of "Scream 4."
Liam Neeson thriller "Blacklight" is stronger on VOD than "West Side Story" and "Licorice Pizza," all of which debuted this week at $19.99.
From "Blue Valentine" to "John Tucker Must Die," we've rounded up the best Valentine's Day movies to remind you why sometimes it's better to be single.
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