Scream VI
Scream VI is a 2023 American slasher horror film directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, serving as the sixth installment in the Scream franchise created by Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson.[1] The story centers on survivors of the Woodsboro killings—Samantha Carpenter (Melissa Barrera), Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega), Mindy Meeks-Martin (Jasmin Savoy Brown), and Chad Meeks-Martin (Mason Gooding)—who relocate to New York City for college, where they are pursued by a new iteration of the masked killer Ghostface, with returning character Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) becoming involved in the ensuing murders.[1] Produced by Spyglass Media Group and distributed by Paramount Pictures, the film emphasizes heightened violence and urban settings as departures from prior entries, while continuing the series' meta-commentary on horror tropes and true crime fascination.[2] Released theatrically on March 10, 2023, Scream VI achieved the franchise's strongest opening weekend, grossing $44.4 million domestically, and ultimately earned $108.4 million in North America alongside international totals exceeding $169 million worldwide.[3] Critically, it received generally favorable reviews, holding a 77% approval rating from 316 critics on Rotten Tomatoes and a Metacritic score of 61 out of 100 based on 53 reviews, with praise for its inventive kills, ensemble dynamics, and escalation of tension, though some noted formulaic elements in the whodunit structure.[2][4] Audience reception was stronger, reflected in an IMDb user rating of 6.4/10 from over 143,000 votes, underscoring its appeal to fans despite mixed scholarly analysis of the series' evolution post-Covid production shifts.[1] The film's success marked a commercial rebound for the requel format, prioritizing younger casts while integrating legacy elements amid broader industry scrutiny of horror revival trends.[5]Synopsis
Plot
One year after the Woodsboro murders depicted in Scream (2022), sisters Sam Carpenter and Tara Carpenter, along with friends Chad Meeks-Martin and Mindy Meeks-Martin, relocate to New York City to attend Blackmore University, seeking a normal life away from their traumatic past.[6] Meanwhile, film studies professor Laura Crane is murdered in an alley by her student Jason Carvey, who dons the Ghostface mask with accomplice Greg Bruckner to target Sam and Tara, aiming to complete a film intended by the late Richie Kirsch as part of a twisted "requel" narrative.[7] However, an unknown Ghostface later kills Greg by dismembering him in a dumpster and stabs Jason to death in his apartment, carving a message into his corpse directing the next killer to begin with Sam.[7] Sam, struggling with her biological connection to original killer Billy Loomis and experiencing hallucinations of him, attends therapy sessions with Dr. Christopher Stone.[7] Ghostface soon attacks Sam and Tara in a bodega, where they defend themselves with improvised weapons until police intervention; the bodega owner later disappears.[7] The group's circle expands to include Tara's roommate Quinn Bailey, her brother Ethan Landry, Sam's boyfriend Danny Brackett, and returning figures like Gale Weathers, who investigates after being stabbed during a restaurant attack, and Kirby Reed, now an FBI agent.[6] Further killings include Anika Kayoko in a ladder chase across an apartment and Dr. Stone via stabbing, escalating suspicions among the friends who identify movie trope violations, such as the absence of Sidney Prescott early on.[7] The survivors discover a shrine apartment filled with Ghostface memorabilia and the bodega owner's body.[7] They lure the killer to a derelict theater rigged as a trap. The Ghostfaces are revealed as Detective Wayne Bailey, Quinn (who faked her death), and Ethan, motivated by revenge for Richie's death at Sam's hands, with Bailey as Richie's father and the others his children.[7] In the ensuing confrontation, involving Sidney's late arrival for backup, Sam stabs Bailey fatally after channeling Billy's aggression, Tara kills Ethan, and Kirby dispatches him with a falling television; Quinn is shot by Gale.[7] Survivors include Sam, Tara, Chad, Mindy, Kirby, Gale, and Danny, with Sam discarding Billy's mask into the theater rubble, symbolizing rejection of her legacy.[7]Cast and Characters
Principal Cast
The principal cast of Scream VI consists of returning survivors from the previous film alongside franchise veteran Courteney Cox and select new additions portraying key characters in the narrative set in New York City.[1][8]| Actor | Role | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Melissa Barrera | Sam Carpenter | Lead protagonist and half-sister to Tara; returns from Scream (2022) as the group's de facto leader haunted by her familial ties to serial killer Billy Loomis.[1][9] |
| Jenna Ortega | Tara Carpenter | Sam's half-sister and a core survivor; reprises her role from Scream (2022), central to the group's dynamics amid new attacks.[1][9] |
| Jasmin Savoy Brown | Mindy Meeks-Martin | Horror enthusiast and twin sister to Chad; returns from Scream (2022), providing meta-commentary on slasher tropes.[1][9] |
| Mason Gooding | Chad Meeks-Martin | Mindy's twin brother and athlete; reprises his role from Scream (2022) as part of the endangered friend group.[1][9] |
| Courteney Cox | Gale Weathers | Veteran journalist and franchise staple; returns for the first time since Scream 4 (2011), aiding the protagonists with her investigative experience.[1][8] |
| Hayden Panettiere | Kirby Reed | FBI agent and returning character from Scream 4; elevated to principal status in this installment, assisting in the Ghostface investigation.[1][8] |
Production
Development
Following the commercial success of Scream (2022), which grossed $137.2 million worldwide against a $24–30 million budget, Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group greenlit a sixth installment in the franchise on February 3, 2022.[10][11] The decision capitalized on the film's revival of the series, directed by the duo known as Radio Silence—Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett—who were announced to return for the sequel.[10] Screenwriters James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick, who penned the fifth film, were also retained to write the script.[10][12] Series co-creator Kevin Williamson served as an executive producer, alongside returning producers William Sherak, Paul Neinstein, and Chad Villella.[10] Pre-production advanced rapidly, with principal photography scheduled to begin in summer 2022 in Montreal, Canada, reflecting the studios' intent to maintain momentum from the prior film's positive reception among audiences and critics.[12] The project emphasized continuing the meta-horror elements while relocating the narrative to New York City, diverging from the series' traditional small-town settings.[10]Writing
James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick penned the screenplay for Scream VI, marking their second consecutive collaboration on the franchise following the 2022 reboot. The script shifts the narrative from the small-town confines of Woodsboro to New York City, emphasizing the survivors Sam and Tara Carpenter, along with Mindy and Chad Meeks-Martin, as they attempt to rebuild their lives in an urban college environment stalked by a new iteration of Ghostface. This relocation was selected to exploit the anonymity and scale of a metropolis for heightened tension, drawing partial inspiration from slasher precedents like Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan while avoiding direct replication.[13] The writers initially conceived the antagonists as a vague "secret family" driven by undisclosed motives, without predetermined identities, but refined this during scripting to center on Detective Wayne Bailey, his daughter Quinn Bailey, and son Ethan Landry—revealed as relatives of Richie Kirsch from the prior film—seeking vengeance for his death. This pivot provided a "primal" personal stake, interconnecting with the 2022 entry and aligning with recurring franchise motifs of familial retribution seen in earlier installments. The opening sequence subverts expectations by unmasking Ghostface early, only to kill him off, prompting audience uncertainty about narrative perspective before escalating to multiple killers.[14][15][16] Revisions transformed the climax from a generic warehouse confrontation to a theatrical shrine housing Ghostface memorabilia, enhancing thematic resonance with Scream 2's cinema setting and amplifying the killers' obsessive fandom. Meta-commentary remains integral, exemplified by Mindy Meeks-Martin's exposition on "requel" rules for franchise extensions, tailored to actor strengths for authentic delivery. Legacy characters like Gale Weathers receive pivotal moments, including her first direct Ghostface phone call and physical showdown, while Kirby Reed's return as an FBI agent builds on prior teases, balancing continuity with fresh arcs amid challenges of limited availability for figures like Sidney Prescott, whose role was curtailed in final drafts following Neve Campbell's departure due to a salary dispute.[15][17][16]Casting
Producers confirmed on May 10, 2022, that Melissa Barrera, Jenna Ortega, Mason Gooding, and Jasmin Savoy Brown would reprise their roles from Scream (2022) as siblings Sam and Tara Carpenter and Mindy and Chad Meeks-Martin, forming the film's central core group of survivors.[18] Courteney Cox, the sole returning legacy cast member at that stage, committed early to again portray journalist Gale Weathers, citing her enduring affinity for the character.[1] Neve Campbell, however, declined to return as Sidney Prescott, announcing her exit on June 6, 2022, after negotiations revealed a salary offer she viewed as undervaluing her foundational contributions to the franchise over five prior films; she emphasized that the decision stemmed from equitable compensation concerns rather than disinterest in the project.[19][20] Casting director Sarah Katzman, alongside directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, prioritized actors capable of blending horror intensity with the series' meta-humor, drawing from recent genre successes. On June 3, 2022, Dermot Mulroney joined as Detective Wayne Bailey, a law enforcement figure investigating the New York-based killings.[21] Subsequent additions included Jack Champion as student Ethan Landry, Liana Liberato as Quinn Bailey, Devyn Nekoda as student Anika Kayoko, and Henry Czerny in an undisclosed role, all announced around mid-June 2022 to support the ensemble dynamic.[22] By July 14, 2022, Samara Weaving—previously directed by Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett in Ready or Not (2019)—and Tony Revolori were cast in key supporting parts, with Weaving selected specifically for her proven rapport with the filmmakers in high-stakes opening sequences.[23][24] To preserve plot secrecy, particularly regarding Ghostface killers, auditions eschewed character-specific scenes in favor of a neutral monologue delivered in the killer's voice, ensuring no unintended leaks during the selection process.[25] Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett disclosed killer identities to cast members post-casting, often individually before filming or collectively at the table read, allowing performers to adjust portrayals without prior knowledge compromising authenticity.[26] This approach aligned with the franchise's tradition of misdirection, prioritizing narrative surprise over conventional audition transparency.Filming
Principal photography for Scream VI commenced on June 9, 2022, and concluded on August 22, 2022.[27] The production took place predominantly in Montréal, Québec, Canada, which was dressed to represent New York City, the film's primary setting.[28][29] Specific sites included urban areas around 5701 Sherbrooke Street West in Montréal to simulate Manhattan environments.[27] A limited number of establishing shots were filmed in actual New York City locations to enhance authenticity.[30] The choice of Montréal as a filming hub allowed for efficient production during the summer months, leveraging the city's architecture and infrastructure for the slasher sequences amid faux urban Halloween decorations.[29] No major delays or on-set incidents were reported during the principal shoot.[31]Music and Sound Design
Score
The musical score for Scream VI was composed by Brian Tyler and Sven Faulconer.[32][33] The score incorporates elements of the franchise's legacy motifs while introducing original material tailored to the film's urban New York City environment and heightened suspense, featuring orchestral arrangements with electronic accents to underscore tension and chases.[33] The soundtrack album, Scream VI (Music from the Motion Picture), was released digitally on March 10, 2023, by Paramount Music, coinciding with the film's theatrical debut.[32][34] It comprises 38 tracks spanning approximately 95 minutes, including a 6-minute opening suite that medleys thematic callbacks to prior entries alongside new cues.[32][35] Notable tracks encompass "Prelude" for introductory dread, "Something Red" evoking the killers' masks, "Warmer Colder" for gameplay-inspired suspense sequences, and "Ghostface Attack Machine" highlighting action set pieces.[32] A physical edition on double LP and CD followed later in 2023 via Varèse Sarabande and Craft Recordings, with custom artwork depicting the Ghostface mask in green tones.[35][36]Soundtrack
The soundtrack of Scream VI incorporates licensed contemporary songs to heighten tension and underscore character moments, without a dedicated commercial album compiling them, unlike earlier franchise entries that released punk- and alt-rock-focused compilations.[37] Key tracks include "when the party's over" by Billie Eilish, played during an emotional scene; "October Passed Me By" by girl in red; "Blow the Whistle" by Too $hort; "Picaflor" by Lao Ra featuring C. Tangana, featured in the film's bodega sequence; "Sí o No" by Tatiana Hazel; and "In My Head" by Mike Shinoda featuring Kailee Morgue.[38][39] The primary promotional single, "Still Alive" by Demi Lovato, serves as the end-credits theme and was released digitally on March 3, 2023, ahead of the film's theatrical debut.[37] The song blends pop-rock elements with horror-themed lyrics referencing franchise motifs, peaking at number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100. Additional cues draw from prior horror scores, such as elements from Friday the 13th Part VIII, to nod to slasher genre history.[39]Release and Distribution
Theatrical Release
Scream VI had its world premiere on March 6, 2023, at the AMC Lincoln Square Theater in Manhattan, New York City.[40] The film was theatrically released in the United States on March 10, 2023, distributed by Paramount Pictures.[2] [41] Originally scheduled for March 31, 2023, the release date was advanced by three weeks to capitalize on market conditions.[42] Internationally, the film began rolling out on March 8, 2023, in markets including France and Belgium, with Paramount Pictures handling distribution in key territories.[43] [3] A special 3D fan event screening was held on March 9, 2023, in select theaters, marking the franchise's first presentation in that format.[44]Marketing
The marketing campaign for Scream VI, handled by Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group, emphasized interactive horror elements to build anticipation ahead of the film's March 10, 2023, theatrical release.[45] Promotional efforts included a website allowing fans to request personalized phone calls from Ghostface, which heightened the franchise's signature taunting motif.[45] Street-level activations featured actors dressed as Ghostface appearing unannounced in U.S. cities such as Sonoma, California, and others, prompting public reactions including reports to 911 emergency services; these were confirmed as orchestrated stunts by sources close to the production. An immersive "Scream VI Experience" event in Santa Monica, California, showcased the film's deteriorated Ghostface mask—revealed in promotional materials as originating from the New York setting—and drew attendees for hands-on interactions.[46] Additional in-person promotions occurred in Los Angeles, incorporating new posters and appearances by cast members like Melissa Barrera and Jenna Ortega.[47] Trailers played a central role, with a teaser released on December 14, 2022, highlighting the urban relocation to New York City and teasing the mask's weathered design to signal a narrative evolution.[48] A set of character posters featuring the core ensemble—Barrera, Ortega, Jasmin Savoy Brown, Mason Gooding, Liana Liberato, Dermot Mulroney, Jack Champion, and others—was unveiled in early 2023 to personalize the promotion.[49] Brand tie-ins extended the campaign, including a partnership with Espolòn Tequila as the official spirit, featuring co-branded packaging and ads tying the product's smoothness to the film's screams, launched February 16, 2023.[50] These efforts, blending digital interactivity with real-world scares, were credited by industry observers for generating buzz without relying on overt controversy, aligning with the franchise's meta-horror self-awareness.[45]Home Media
Scream VI became available for digital purchase and rental on April 25, 2023, through platforms including Amazon Video and iTunes.[51][52] Physical home media releases followed on July 11, 2023, encompassing DVD, Blu-ray Disc, and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray formats distributed by Paramount Home Entertainment.[53][54] A limited-edition 4K Ultra HD SteelBook was included among the physical options.[54] The releases featured bonus materials such as deleted scenes, featurettes on the production, and commentary tracks.[53] In its debut week, Scream VI topped the Blu-ray sales chart in the United States, with high-definition formats comprising 65% of total unit sales and 32% from 4K UHD.[55] Domestic video sales ultimately totaled $5,596,618.[43]Commercial Performance
Box Office
Scream VI was released theatrically in the United States and Canada on March 10, 2023, in 3,675 theaters.[5] The film opened at number one at the domestic box office, grossing $44.4 million over its three-day debut weekend from Friday to Sunday, surpassing the previous franchise record of $34.7 million set by the 2022 Scream reboot.[5][43] This performance outpaced projections of around $43.5 million and outperformed competitors like Creed III, which earned $27.5 million in its second weekend.[56] The film's domestic run totaled $108.4 million, achieving a multiplier of 2.44 times its opening weekend.[3] Internationally, it earned $58.2 million across markets including France ($4.1 million), Mexico ($3.8 million), and the United Kingdom ($3.7 million).[3] Worldwide, Scream VI accumulated $166.6 million in ticket sales against a reported production budget of $35 million, excluding marketing costs.[3][57] The results marked the strongest financial performance in the franchise to date, driven by strong word-of-mouth among younger audiences and the appeal of its New York City setting.[58]Reception
Critical Response
Scream VI garnered generally favorable reviews from critics, earning a 77% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, certified fresh based on 316 reviews, with an average rating of 6.7/10.[2] On Metacritic, the film holds a score of 61 out of 100, indicating "generally favorable" reception from 53 critics, with praise centered on its escalation of violence and suspense.[4] Critics frequently highlighted the film's intensified brutality and action-oriented set pieces as strengths, describing it as "bloodier, scarier, and funnier" while nodding to series traditions through innovative kills, such as those involving a bodega and subway.[59] Reviewers commended directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett—collectively known as Radio Silence—for delivering a "brutal, top-notch addition" that improved upon the prior entry's tension and gore, with one noting its "powerful third act of grisly mayhem" as among the series' best.[60] The ensemble cast, including newcomers Jenna Ortega, Melissa Barrera, and Jasmin Savoy Brown, received acclaim for elevating emotional stakes, with the core group's dynamics providing a fresh evolution from Woodsboro to New York City.[61] Detractors argued that Scream VI leaned too heavily on franchise conventions, resulting in predictable reveals and "tiresome tropes" that diminished originality despite competent execution.[62] Some found the narrative "safe and stale" upon reflection, critiquing underdeveloped side characters and a reliance on meta-commentary that felt repetitive rather than subversive.[63] While the heightened viscera impressed, a portion of reviews suggested the slasher formula showed signs of fatigue, with the whodunit elements occasionally telegraphed early.[61] Overall, the consensus positioned it as a solid, if not revolutionary, continuation that reinvigorated the series' appeal through visceral thrills amid evolving horror trends.[60]Audience Response
Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave Scream VI an average grade of B+ on an A+ to F scale, matching the grades received by Scream 2 (1997) and the fifth Scream film (2022).[64][65] PostTrak surveys reported 87% positive overall scores among opening weekend attendees, with 74% indicating they would definitely recommend the film, marking an improvement over the prior film's 78% positive and 59% recommend metrics.[66] On Rotten Tomatoes, the film garnered a verified audience score of 92% positive based on early reviews shortly after release, reflecting strong approval from general viewers despite a more mixed critical reception at 77%.[67] User reviews on platforms like IMDb averaged 6.4 out of 10 from over 143,000 ratings, with praise frequently centered on the film's intensified action sequences, creative kills, and New York City setting as a fresh departure from Woodsboro traditions.[1] Fans highlighted the opening kill scene and ensemble dynamics as standout elements, often ranking it among the franchise's strongest entries post-original trilogy.[68] The film's box office performance, including a franchise-record $44.5 million domestic opening weekend on March 10–12, 2023, underscored robust audience turnout, particularly among viewers under 25, who comprised a significant portion of the opening demographic skewed slightly male at 51%.[69] This enthusiasm contributed to a worldwide gross exceeding $169 million, surpassing the fifth film's totals and signaling sustained franchise viability amid post-pandemic recovery.[69] Social media reactions echoed this positivity, with users on platforms like Reddit and Twitter lauding the escalation in gore and meta-elements while critiquing occasional plot contrivances, though overall sentiment favored its entertainment value over narrative purity.[67]Accolades
Scream VI received four awards and twenty-seven nominations across various ceremonies, primarily in genre-specific categories recognizing its horror elements and performances.[70] At the 2023 MTV Movie & TV Awards held on May 7, the film won Best Movie, defeating nominees including Avatar: The Way of Water, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, Elvis, Nope, and Smile.[71] It also secured Best Fight for Courteney Cox's scene against Ghostface, highlighting the film's action sequences amid competition from other genre entries.[72] Jenna Ortega won Drama Movie Star of the Year at the 2024 People's Choice Awards for her portrayal of Tara Carpenter, with the ceremony occurring on February 18, 2024; the film itself was nominated for Drama Movie of the Year but did not win.[73] The film earned a nomination for Best Horror Film at the 51st Saturn Awards on February 4, 2024, but lost to Talk to Me.[74]| Award Ceremony | Category | Result | Recipient |
|---|---|---|---|
| MTV Movie & TV Awards (2023) | Best Movie | Won | Scream VI cast |
| MTV Movie & TV Awards (2023) | Best Fight | Won | Courteney Cox vs. Ghostface |
| People's Choice Awards (2024) | Drama Movie Star of the Year | Won | Jenna Ortega |
| Critics Choice Super Awards (2024) | Best Horror Movie | Nominated | — |
| Critics Choice Super Awards (2024) | Best Actress in a Horror Movie | Nominated | Jenna Ortega |
| Saturn Awards (2024) | Best Horror Film | Nominated | — |