Why is SCREAM 3 (2000) so LAME?!? | Confused Reviews

Описание к видео Why is SCREAM 3 (2000) so LAME?!? | Confused Reviews

The 'final' Scream is going to be the lamest... 📞

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Featuring Screaming Soup! ► ‪@ScreamingSoup‬

Timestamps ►
0:00 Intro
0:51 Screaming into a Success
3:40 Review Part 1
7:40 The 'STAB' Series
10:26 Review Part 2
15:18 A Night of Total Terrible
17:53 Slightly Less Sidney
18:55 Review Part 3
22:39 Clumsy Climax & Original Killers
29:12 Recap/Rating & Nostalgia Clouding
32:28 Outro

Music Used:
Drum Loop 95 - Mavis Paoletti
Endless Night - White Bat Audio
Rock Funk Syncopated - Drum Tracker
Saturn - Dedevided
Toad Factory - Mario Kart Wii
Black Cream - White Bat Audio
NYSE - HGTV
I’m Shady - Eminem Instrumental
Huey Lewis & the News - Hip to be Square (MIDI version)
Fat Funky 80’s Beat - dismunk
MASSA (Instrumental) [Prod. RACHELWHC] - Tyler, The Creator
Jason Goes to Hell - White Bat Audio
Firecracker - LEMMiNO
Hot Life - Infraction
Celebrate - Kool & the Gang 8bit
Chill Indie Drums - The Backbeat
Dust Devil - D-Code

The footage and images featured in the video were for critical review and parody, which are protected under the Fair Use laws of the United States Copyright act of 1976.

Confused Reviews - Episode 84 - Scream 3 (2000)

Scream 3 is a 2000 American slasher film directed by Wes Craven and written by Ehren Kruger. It stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox Arquette, Parker Posey, Patrick Dempsey, Scott Foley, Lance Henriksen, Matt Keeslar, Jenny McCarthy, Emily Mortimer, Deon Richmond, and Patrick Warburton. It is a sequel to Scream 2 (1997) and the third installment in the Scream film series. The film's story takes place three years after the previous film's events and follows Sidney Prescott (Campbell), who has gone into self-imposed isolation following the events of the previous two films but is drawn to Hollywood after a new Ghostface begins killing the cast of the film within a film Stab 3. Scream 3 combines the violence of the slasher genre with comedy and "whodunit" mystery, while satirizing the cliché of film trilogies. Unlike the previous Scream films, there was an increased emphasis on comedic elements in this installment; the violence and horror were reduced in response to increased public scrutiny about violence in media, following the Columbine High School massacre.

Scream (1996) screenwriter Kevin Williamson provided a five-page outline for two sequels to Scream when auctioning his original script, hoping to entice bidders with the potential of buying a franchise. Williamson's commitments to other projects meant he was unable to develop a complete script for Scream 3, so writing duties were undertaken by Kruger, who discarded many of Williamson's notes. Craven and Marco Beltrami returned to direct and score the film, respectively. Production was troubled, including script rewrites, occasions when pages were only ready on the day of filming, and scheduling difficulties with the main cast. Principal photography took place from July to September 1999, and the ending was re-filmed in January 2000.

Scream 3 premiered on February 3, 2000, in Westwood, Los Angeles, and was theatrically released the following day, grossing $162 million worldwide on a budget of $40 million. The film received mixed reviews and is often cited as the weakest film in the series, though it has been reappraised in recent years. Scream 3 was originally intended to be the final installment of the series until the franchise was revived in 2011 with a sequel, Scream 4.

#scream #ghostface #moviereview

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