400
700
900
Scream 7

Scream 7

Paramount Distribution (2026)
Paramount+ Xvid
Horror | Mystery
USA | English | Color | 01:49

When a new Ghostface killer emerges in the quiet town where Sidney Prescott has built a new life, her darkest fears are realized as her daughter becomes the next target. Determined to protect her family, Sidney must face the horrors of her past to put an end to the bloodshed once and for all.


Cast View all

Neve Campbell Sidney Evans
Courteney Cox Gale Weathers
Isabel May Tatum Evans
Jasmin Savoy Brown Mindy Meeks-Martin
Mason Gooding Chad Meeks-Martin
Roger L. Jackson The Voice
Anna Camp Jessica Bowden
Joel McHale Mark Evans
Celeste O'Connor Chloe Parker
Sam Rechner Ben Brown
Asa Germann Lucas Bowden
Mckenna Grace Hannah Thurman
Matthew Lillard Stu Macher
Kraig Dane Karl Gibbs
Ethan Embry Marco
Mark Consuelos Robbie Rivers
Victor Turpin Deputy Meadows
Amy Louise Pemberton Deputy Cooke
Cyle Winters Aaron
Anah Diamanty Bella
Josh Thrower Timmy
Timothy Simons George Willis
Jason Burkey Woody
Carol Hickey Junie
David Arquette Dewey Riley

Trailer

Edition details

Packaging MKV
Nr Discs 1
Audio Tracks English (EAC3 5.1)
Subtitles Many

Personal

Owner Jackmeats Flix
Location Horror Disk 1
Purchased On Apr 02, 2026 at NeoNoir
Watched Apr 04, 2026
Index 12406
Added Date Apr 02, 2026 12:31:17
Modified Date Apr 05, 2026 07:05:52

Notes

My quick rating - 5.4/10. Scream 7 kicks off exactly the way every Scream movie since the Clinton administration has begun. Someone picks up a phone and soon regrets picking up the phone. At this point, the franchise could open with a cooking montage and we’d all still be waiting for the knife to enter frame like it’s a contractual obligation. But hey, the good news? Once that familiar Scream 7 title card slashes across the screen, Neve Campbell shows up. Yes, returns. As in, she’s finally back, playing Sidney Prescott again, and immediately giving the movie a boost it desperately clings to. She’s living her best suburban life with Mark, played by Joel McHale, which is either perfect casting or a cosmic prank, and their daughter Tatum (Isabel May) completes the Evans household. Cute family, shame one of them instantly becomes Ghostface’s new hobby.

Kevin Williamson returning to direct was one of those decisions that made fans whisper, “Okay, we might actually be cooking again.” In a way, he does bring Scream 7 closer to the vibe of the early entries, though he also looks like someone who rewatched the classic trilogy and said, “Ah yes, nostalgia. Let’s dump the entire bucket in.” Strangely, despite the franchise’s rep for meta humor, this one plays like a straight-up slasher. It sprints out of the gate, throws the killer on-screen almost immediately, and dares us to question whether we should trust our own eyes. Or did we just get pranked by someone who spent too long on Reddit conspiracy boards? Hard to say.

The opening sequence? Easily one of the best in years. Big, bold, bloody, and genuinely gripping. But once the movie starts racking up bodies like it’s trying to beat its own high score, the pacing gets wobbly. There’s a difference between suspense and “Wait, who died? Was that the barista from earlier?” And then we reach the Ghostface reveal, which lands somewhere between a shrug and an accidental spoiler in a YouTube comment. It’s less “OMG!” and more “Wait…who?”

Still, Neve Campbell remains the beating heart. Time has treated her so well that she could headline Scream 14 and still be the definitive final girl without breaking a sweat. She carries Scream 7 through its weaker spots, proving the series really does work best when she’s the one on the hitlist. It may not be at the level of the original Scream, but Campbell immediately makes this sequel better.

There’s nothing groundbreaking here. No reinvention, no surprising twists, no fresh angle. But fans of the original run will find enough nostalgia, familiar faces, and callbacks (Courteney Cox, Matthew Lillard, Laurie Metcalf, to name a few) to keep the ride fun. And yes, AI finally gets dragged into the plot, though in the most predictable, “Yep, that tracks” way possible. If you expected Skynet, you’ll be disappointed. If you expected something you’ve seen in five Black Mirror episodes already, congratulations.

Scream 7 may not carve a new path, but it slices through 2 hours with enough style, legacy, and Neve-power to make it worth the watch. Especially for those of us who keep showing up for Ghostface like we never learn. And since this was clearly a long sequel setup for the future of Isabel May, I'll be in line.

Tags

1920x800 23fps x265 10bit