![: Scream 3 [2000]](http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B000059H5L.02._SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg)
Amazon.co.uk Review:
What should have been an explosive finale to the trilogy
in Scream 3 ends up becoming something of a damp
squib, with little of the suspense that made the first
two so memorable. Kevin Williamson, creator of the
original Scream, claimed he always saw the
series as a trilogy, so it's a pity that he couldn't have
had more of a hand in the last of the series, settling
for a producer credit while the screenplay is penned by
Ehren Kruger (ironic in itself, given director Wes
Craven's most famous creation). When a crucial player in
the first two movies is killed in the now obligatory pre-credit
murder sequence, the attention switches to the set of Stab
3, the third in the fictional film series based on
the original Woodsboro murders of the first Scream
movie. Sydney Prescott, who has spent the last few years
targeted by the Ghost-faced killer, is drawn out of
hiding in the Californian hills to face the killer one
last time. Along the way she is re-united with old
friends, (both living and dead) and discovers more about
her family history than she ever wanted to know.
Most of the players look a little bored with the whole
thing now and Craven just doesn't inject any pace into
the proceedings, happy, it seems to produce virtually
carbon copy set pieces from the previous instalments. The
film sags incredibly in the second act and when a
convenient "pre-recorded" message from the late
Randy Meeks turns up, it's not so much evidence of that
character's forethought, more of the scriptwriter's
laziness. It has its moments though: Jenny McCarthy
hiding from the killer in a wardrobe room filled with
Ghostface costumes, a great cameo from Carrie Fisher and
the constant bitching between Cox and the wonderful
Parker Posey, who plays Gail Weathers in the fictional Stab
3. Ultimately, though, as the closing chapter in a
great horror series, Scream 3 fails to live up
to its predecessors. --Jonathan Weir
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