The knife slips in, the blood flows, and the meta-commentary chugs along. By the time a horror franchise reaches its seventh installment, the options are limited. A series can either pretend it is high art and collapse under the weight of its own unearned gravity, or it can lean into the beautiful, chaotic absurdity of its own survival. Scream 7, directed by franchise veteran Kevin Williamson, wisely chooses the latter. Following a notoriously messy production cycle that involved high-profile cast departures, director swaps, and a massive script page-one rewrite, the film arrived in theaters under a cloud of skeptical anticipation. The early critical consensus was brutal. Critics called it a tired husk, a cynical retreat to nostalgia, and a structural mess. They missed the point. Scream 7 is a lean, mean, and delightfully unpretentious slasher that works precisely because it refuses to take itself too seriously. It is a film that understands exactly what it is, a late-stage sequel desi...
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