Cheap Scream 2 (Dimension Collector's Series) (DVD) (David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox) Price
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| ACTORS: | David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox |
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 12 December, 1997 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Dimension |
| MPAA RATING: | R (Restricted) |
| FEATURES: | Closed-captioned, Collector's Edition, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC |
| TYPE: | College Life, Color, Comedy, Creepy, English, Feature, Graphic Violence, Haunted By the Past, High Production Values, Horror, Horror / Sci-Fi / Fantasy, Irreverent, Media Satire, Menacing, Movie, Mystery, Mystery / Suspense, Not For Children, Paranoid, Profanity |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| MPN: | D20361D |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 717951009951 |
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Customer Reviews of Scream 2 (Dimension Collector's Series)
More scream, less theme Just as they did in the first film, director Wes Craven and screenwriter Kevin Williamson have some witty, metacognitive fun with the conventions of the horror genre in this tale of survivors from the original "Scream" facing off against a copycat. Points made include how African Americans are thought to have a more realistic responses to horror situations yet are always among the first characters to die, the need for sequels to be gorier than originals, and the commercialization and packaging of spectacular cases of real-world violence. Unfortunately, the rule most effectively dramatized is the one that tells us that sequels are never as good as the original. All of the wit is packed into the first 40% of the film. By the time we get to the end, it has degenerated into a lot of running and stabbing and pointless plot twists.
Probably the best of all three Scream movies!!
The first Scream was fine, very cool, with scenes that could scare you to death...great.. The third and last Scream was maybe the worst, a little too predictable and boring sometimes, plus funny in other scenes. But this one, Scream 2, is the most terrifying of all them. The ways Ghostface appears are very horrifying, and you literally are on the edge of your seat the whole time....
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>One thing I have to mention is that the music they used in this movie was perfect. In a horror film, the music helps a lot, to remark the suspense, and that works amazingly good in this movie. Maybe the scene that scares the most is the one in which Sydney is at the theatre....with Ghostface chasing her. That scene is great!
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>The whole movie is great!, I hadrly recommend this movie, and this is not one of those trilogies in which you must see the first part otherwise you won't understand anything, that doesn't happen with Scream. If you want to see a good quality horror film, see Scream 2.
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>Greetings from Chile :)
Wes' highly ambitious mess
Wes Craven's follow-up to his highly successfull 1996 self-referential groundbreaker is a big-budget gaudy mess of a movie, albeit an ambitious one. As with the previous film, the best part is at the beginning: a surreal Rocky-Horror like parody of a sneak preview of "Stab," that chronicles the events of the first Scream film with gleeful self-parody and brazen exploitation (featuring Heather Graham doing some really sly comic work in the now-famous Drew Barrymore Gets Killed opening sequence). From that point out, the film degenerates into a somewhat routine self-parody as well, though this one not as funny or as shocking as the scene in the cinema. It's not bad, not at all....there are some good bits. However the overall tone is smug and a bit too forced, as screenwriter Williamson repeatedly tries to outdo his script for the previous Scream. Things get more and more chaotic (this has got to be one of the LOUDEST films in recent memory), but to no real satisfying end. The momentum doesn't hold this time and it plays like a made for TV film at some points. Neve Campbell, David Arquette, and Courtney Cox all wear on the nerves as their character's plot-lines and dialogue become so cloying and comfy-cozy we begin to realize they'll definitely be around for future installments, and given their limited ranges as performers, that's not necessarily a good thing. On the other hand, there are good solid turns from Jamie Kennedy (livening things up again as movie freak Randy) and from the supporting cast which includes Sarah Michelle Gellar in a "When a Stranger Calls" type homage, and Laurie Metcalf, who looks like she's having the time of her life serving up a very cold hammy casserole.
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