Scream’s Carpenter Sisters Shouldn’t Just Be Forgotten
This article contains spoilers for Scream (2022) and Scream VI but NOT Scream 7.
Even before the 2022 movie called Scream hit theaters, most anticipated how it would begin. A young woman gets a call from a stranger speaking in the voice of Roger L. Jackson. The stranger asks the young woman about her favorite scary movie, and then begins quizzing her on horror trivia, with the threat that wrong answers will end the life of a loved one. When the stranger gets bored by the game, someone in a Ghostface mask will attack the woman, stabbing her several times as the sound of her shrieks accompanies the movie’s title card.
Everyone knew Scream 2022 would begin this way because the first Scream began that way in 1996. In the first movie, the death of Casey Becker, played by big-name ’90s girl Drew Barrymore established the slasher’s stakes. 2022’s Scream threatened to do the same with Tara Carpenter, played by Generation Z it girl Jenna Ortega. But when Tara survives, and especially when she and her sister Sam (Melissa Barrera) are revealed to be the daughters of original killer Billy Loomis (Skeet Ulrich), the later movie moves into new territory, even for a legacy sequel.
From that moment on, the Carpenter sisters became a different type of Scream final girl, one that deserves more than the offhand reference they receive in Scream 7.
The Rules Have Changed
At the end of Scream (2022), one of the Ghostface killers, Amber Freeman (Mikey Madison), strangles Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) and gloats about killing her ex-husband Dewey Riley (David Arquette). Amber had just beaten down original final girls Gale and Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) and was ready to take control of the franchise. “Time to pass the torch!” she sneers, just before Gale recovers and she and Sidney both shoot Amber and set her ablaze.
Amber’s death fits perfectly with the legacy sequel narrative that the movie set up about an hour earlier, when everyone except Sidney and Gale gathered together to discuss the plot of Scream. After realizing that the most recent victim, Vince Schneider (Kyle Gallner), was the nephew of Matthew Lillard‘s character Stu Macher, cinephile Mindy Martin-Meeks (Jasmin Savoy Brown) concludes that the killer is creating a “requel” or legacy sequel. Mindy postulates that the latest Stab film—the franchise-within-the-franchise based on the Woodsboro Murders of Scream (1996)—has disappointed some fans so much that they’re bringing things back to the first film by murdering people involved with the franchise.
That’s bad news for most people in the living room, as it includes Dewey, Billy Loomis’s daughter Sam, Wes Hicks (Dylan Minnette), daughter of Sheriff Judie Hicks (Marley Shelton) from Scream IV, in addition to Mindy and her brother Chad (Mason Gooding), children of Martha (Heather Matarazzo) and relatives of the first guy to explain the horror rules, Randy Meeks (Jamie Kennedy).
Mindy’s theory makes perfect sense for a legacy sequel like Scream (2022). As Mindy herself points out, everything from Halloween to Star Wars had been following those rules, and the 2022 movie was executing it well. The franchise had always been self-aware, ever since screenwriter Kevin Williamson began penning a film called Scary Movie, which he and Wes Craven would bring to the screen as Scream. New directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett and screenwriters James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick followed that lead by having the Meeks-Martin twins and Sam’s boyfriend Richie (Jack Quaid) comment upon the state of horror, before revealing that Richie was the other Ghostface, mirroring the romantic partner twist from the first movie.
Just like Sidney, Sam has to kill her boyfriend Richie, while it’s up to Gale and Sidney to take down Amber. Except, that’s not what happens. Before the credits roll, a burned and bloody Amber pops up for one more attack, and Tara grabs a gun and shoots her. Moreover, Sam doesn’t just kill Richie out of self-defense. She stabs and slices him with the brutality she inherited from her father Billy, who appears as a hallucination and stares in approval.
Tara prefaces her attack with a new rule, adding and expanding on the franchise’s vernacular: “Never fuck with the daughter of a serial killer.”
New Kids in New York
Of course, the rules line and the Carpenter girls’ connection to Billy are all knowing winks to the rest of the franchise, an expected part of any legacy sequel. However, the ending to Scream (2022) went far beyond simply commenting on genre. It turned the Carpenter girls into complex characters, very different from Sidney or even the oft-prickly Gale.
Nowhere is that more clear than in Scream VI, which moved Sam and Tara out of Woodsboro and relocated them to New York, leaving Sidney behind. Certainly, Scream VI had its connections to earlier in the franchise, as Gale returns, as does Kirby Reed, Hayden Panettiere’s fan-favorite from Scream IV. Moreover, the climax takes place in a theater playing the Stab movies, filled with memorabilia from previous murders.
Yet, within that overabundance of references, Scream VI gives Sam and Tara room to breathe. The killers this time are Richie’s father Wayne (Dermot Mulroney) and his siblings Quinn (Liana Liberato) and Ethan (Jack Champion). The trio seek revenge for Richie’s death, which they undergo by staging an elaborate campaign to convince her that she’s a killer.
The plan works, but not in the way that the family intended. Sam once again gives into the urgings of her father, going so far as to put on the Ghostface mask and to make threatening phone calls to Wayne and his family before killing them. The movie ends on an ambiguous note, suggesting that Sam may not be able to resist her legacy much longer.
By focusing on Sam’s deteriorating mental condition, these two Scream movies add something new to the franchise. No longer are the movies about people who take their love of scary movies too far. Now they’re about someone who cannot escape the legacy of violence her father left to her, a legacy that not even her sister’s love can break. The Carpenter sisters deepened the themes of the franchise and moved them into a new direction, reviving the franchise once more.
And then, they were tossed away because studio heads got their feelings hurt.
Goodbye, Carpenters; Hello, Sidney
It’s hard to be excited about the return of Sidney Prescott for Scream 7, but it’s equally hard to hate her return too. Campbell was an integral part of the franchise’s success, and Sidney remains a compelling final girl.
But the Carpenter sisters were something different, something new to the Scream franchise and something rarely seen in horror in general. Sam’s fight against her father’s memory and the connection she had with Tara made her distinct from Sidney, Gale, and any other character who came before her.
With the Carpenter sisters at the center, Scream could still deliver all the great kills and smart commentary that people wanted. But they could also deliver a depth and complexity that no Scream fan anticipated.
Scream 7 is now playing in theaters worldwide.