" I felt Saw had the most original twist."
I wasn't commenting on its originality, I was commenting on how shallow it was. John laying around on the bathroom floor the whole time meant nothing, it changed nothing. Even if they'd known he were there, it would not have helped them. It's an irrelevant twist just for the sake of a twist whether it's original or not.
SAW II ends on a guy being locked away because of spending years destroying the lives of others to improve his own and not knowing how to solve any of his problems other than violence, SAW III ends with a man losing his family because he had no self control and it was a danger to not only himself but those closest to him, SAW VI ends with a man being put in the same situation he'd made a living putting others in and having to experience it from the opposite perspective...any of this is far more meaningful than "hey look! He was on the floor the whole time!"
Two of the three major tests in SAW III don't even involve human bloodshed, they're a man having to face his demons and see people that he'd been viewing as monsters presented before him as flawed people that made a terrible mistake and having his bitterness turned to sympathy...that isn't 'torture porn' (one of the most overused and falsely generalized phrases in cinema today, btw), it's psychological and emotional horror with a thematic point to make.
Hate on SAW all you want, but it's never turned into a blatant comedy with lots of blood. Scream has.
I think Scream is too good for what this franchise was lowered to with this film. This is either a really good installment of the Scary Movie franchise or a really bad installment of the Scream franchise, and I say this is a huge fan of Scream and SAW as long as they've existed.
"The worst Scream film is still 10x better than the worst Saw film. After the 3rd Saw, they were holy **** bad. Especially that last one. Talk about having an awful villain. Awful in every regard."
Hoffman is a top notch heel that's had a great arc ever since part V.
Ah, but while
Scream is the only scary one and neither
Scream 3 or
Scream 4 are that intense, all but the third film were well made. At the end of the day they're first and foremost primarily deconstructions of the genre at all levels. Even the worst of them,
Scream 3 in too-comedic a way still does a very clever job of tearing the industry that produces them apart. The fourth film is very current and topical. And it does this while being witty, well-made, well written and without me feeling like a terrible human being for watching something so pointlessly awful. The enjoyment that comes out of the
Scream films is from wit, mystery, suspense and humor.
Scream 3 at least had the last one. The only enjoyment to be found in the
Saw sequels is to watch people physically torture themselves or other human beings.
The
Scream series in a nutshell.
Scream is about teenagers who grew up watching Hollywood horror/slasher movies as part of their pop culture DNA and how that has effected them or how some (Billy and Stu) use it for other means.
Scream 2 is a deconstruction of sequels and how in what was once a cinematic product generally unique to the genre is so much about reproducing itself and trying to recreate the same thing in a different way (it opens with two random characters dying as they watch a recreation of the opening of the first film that is inspired the sequel they're living in).
Scream 3 is the logical progression of moving from the teens who grew up and are affected by horror/slasher movies to a very cynical look at the industry that churns them out. Lots of inside Hollywood humor (swinging '60s orgies, Roman sharing the name of Coppola's frustrated son filmmaker, Carrie Fisher popping up as a wise guru on the secrets of old Hollywood as she's the daughter of Hollywood royalty in real life, etc.) about the blood thirsty industry that produces these splatter films.
Scream 4 returns to a new generation that has grown up on new horror movies that literally are remakes of older ones and a comment on that unique growth to this particular genre and how it reflects the celebrity-obssesion of the Facebook generation.
It is not as if the
Scream films are lacking for themes or substance. However, that doesn't make
Scream 3 good, in my opinion.