Category: Media

Courteney on David :’We’re better now than during the movie’

Tuesday, Apr 12, 2011

Courteney Cox reprises her role as tabloid reporter Gale Weathers in Scream 4, out this Friday, but it’s a very different Gale than we’ve seen in the other films. “Her life is pretty dull and she wants some excitement,” says the Cougar Town star. “She’s been married to Dewey for like 10 years. She’s been writing books. She’s completely tapped out and going through a major dry spell. Sidney comes into town to promote her book.” And that’s basically when all hell breaks lose and folks start dyin’. EW talked to Cox about the movie’s difficult production, her memories of the original film, and the status of her relationship with husband David Arquette.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Do you remember reading the original Scream script for the first time?
COURTENEY COX:
Oh yeah. I went after it! I wanted to play that part. I loved it. I thought the script was funny and scary, and the opening with Drew Barrymore was insane. I was such a huge fan.

Why did you want to do Scream 4?
I just enjoy doing all three of them. That’s where I met David. Each Scream represents a huge turning point in my life: I met David on 1. We did not like each other on 2. We got married right before on 3. And [Cox and Arquette’s daughter] Coco was born right before 4. This series of movies means a lot to me. I loved Scream 1 so much and the thought of being able to do it again with the original cast, Wes Craven, Kevin Williamson, just bringing that back was really exciting to me.

How was the production of this one in comparison?
I would say the first Scream was the easiest production. This was par for the course for all the other Screams. It just seems like it’s just the way it goes when you make these Scream movies: the scripts aren’t ready, they’re difficult, the scripts aren’t ready, it’s ever changing. The only one I remember being real simple was the first one.

Probably because the script was done.
Yeah. I remember we socialized a lot [on the first film]. We actually had fun, we went out. I remember Wes hanging out and we used to go to this Italian restaurant in Santa Rosa. Wes wouldn’t have had a moment to have one bit of social life during this last film.

In the movie Dewey and Gale are going through marital issues and you and David were going through your own issues during production — was that awkward? Or cathartic?
I don’t think it was cathartic. The thing is David and I love each other so much and we get along so well.

You’re so affectionate with each other.
I love him so much. We are the closest of friends. I would say we’re probably better now than we were during that movie. The movie was just a little bit of a tough time. I don’t have the fondest memories of those particular moments during that film.

Does that make it hard to watch?
No, not at all. It’s not hard to watch because we’ve moved past that phase. Some times were really fun. Some times we had a ball there! But it definitely was the beginning of some issues.

Does that at all cloud the filming for you?
No. No. Because we did have a great time no matter what, but there were some awkward moments. I don’t remember us ever getting into a fight. It wasn’t like that.

You told me last summer that you bonded more with Neve Campbell on this film than any of these previous ones. Why is that?
I don’t know. For some reason, I just think maybe our lives are different now. We really had a great time. I did get to know her for the first time, and now she will forever be my friend and I feel very close with her. We’re getting older and the kids were much younger. Before she was the kids’ age and I was the older woman. Now I’m the much older woman and she’s more where I was.

What’s your relationship with Wes like?
I feel like Wes was very instrumental in David and I getting married. I feel Wes is like family. We even kind of argue like family. We’ve just known each other so long. It’s almost like I could have been his kid and now I’m grown up. I don’t think this was his easiest shoot either. It was intense. All the way around. But I think he did an amazing job.

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Courteney Cox on “Scream”: “Wes Craven’s the Master”

Tuesday, Apr 12, 2011

The actress, and co-stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell and Emma Roberts, talk about the scary movie franchise that has spanned 15 years.

Watch the video HERE

Scream 4 Premiere Red Carpet Videos

Tuesday, Apr 12, 2011

Below you can view some red carpet videos of Courteney at the Scream 4 Premiere last night… photo coverage is on it’s way..


Wes Craven on How Online Spoilers Have Shaped Scream

Tuesday, Apr 12, 2011

The fourth Scream arrives Friday, with a reliably meta script (the plot hinges on the characters’ knowledge of new slasher-film conventions, which include the recent trend of franchise reboots) and a few fresh horrors of its own. Still, despite the reunited cast and crew, it wasn’t all smooth sailing: Reports of behind-the-scenes squabbling escalated after screenwriter Kevin Williamson was replaced, as he had been on Scream 3, by Ehren Kruger. We asked Wes Craven, director of all four Screams, about that — and about how you keep a whodunit from being spoiled in the age of Twitter.

Does it worry you that so much of the essence of a Scream movie is that it’s a whodunnit, but now Twitter can spoil those secrets on the very first day of release?
It does bother me, but that’s the facts of life. I think it’s always been true of any whodunnit — it’s just that the information can spread so much more rapidly now.

The Scream 2 script actually leaked onto the Internet way back in the day, right?
We weren’t very far along in the process, but it was the very first pages Kevin sent us, the first 40 pages of the first draft of his script. They were terrific and we were celebrating, and then someone called up later that day and said, “They’re on the Internet.” And the only place they’d been was at his agency, so we figured it was someone in the Xerox room, that somebody decided it would be cool to put it on the Internet. It totally ruined that version of the script, frankly. We had to go back and change everything, and it set us back about two months. Kind of a pain in the neck, and thereafter, we had scripts with a big purple stripe down the middle that covered the dialogue so you could barely read it and if you Xeroxed it, it would turn out black.

Have you become more sanguine about spoilers since then? No pun intended.
Sanguine … that’s my job! [Laughs.] We do have a positive approach to it now. When I make appearances, I tell the fans that this is not cool, that it hurts the process. We also are very, very careful. For the first time on this movie, we did all the auditions without using actual pages from the script.

Because the casting sides leak on the Internet?
An actor could not get the role and say, “Screw them, I’m putting it on the Internet!” So [the actors] only read scenes from Scream 1, and then you had to extrapolate from that, “I think they can do this role.” But yeah, those are sort of significant dings in the process.

How satisfied were you with the franchise after making Scream 3?
I felt pretty good. I enjoyed Scream 3, even if a lot of critics said that they didn’t think it was as good as the other two. Part of that may have been Kevin’s availability, and part of that was that Neve wasn’t available to be in as much of it as normally. She really is the heart and soul of it, so that hurt it a bit. I did feel that it would be good to come back and do a real hard-hitting one that was serious and had the core characters in it.

You have made a lot of movies with not just these actors, but with these producers, and this writer. So why did the movie go through such behind-the-scenes turmoil? Why did Ehren Kruger replace Kevin Williamson, and why did you say that this wasn’t your movie?
Well, I never said that it wasn’t my movie — I said there was trouble with the writing process, and that’s just a fact. Certainly, I had an enormous amount of input into it, and didn’t do anything I didn’t want to do. For one reason or another, Bob [Weinstein] kept ultimate control of the script, and he had much more contact with Ehren Kruger, but then they’re close friends. By the time Ehren was writing, I was already kind of shooting. It was a difficult script to figure out, but Kevin was the one who laid out the master plan and all the characters and scenes, the beginning and almost all of the ending. What we had to figure out was the relationships of the characters, how Courteney and David would intermingle with the kids. That was the tricky thing. I also didn’t have Courteney for more than a month, so I had to figure out how to use all of her time in places where we didn’t even know what was going to happen yet, like in the ending. But you know, that’s not unusual for the Scream series, with the exception of the first one. There was always a process of working on the script all the way through the picture.

I know that Kevin Williamson was very, very unhappy when Ehren Kruger was brought in to write Scream 3. It can’t have been a happy thing for Kevin to get replaced again by Ehren on this movie.
I don’t think he was replaced. It came to a position where Kevin literally had to get back to his show, where he was legally bound to get back to his show.

There were rumors that Kevin was leaking word to the site Zap2It that he had been fired and that the actors were unhappy with the script changes.
I wasn’t privy to that at all. And I wouldn’t lie about that.

The Saw movies seem to be trending down at the same time as ghost stories like Paranormal Activity are coming back into vogue. You’ve been at this for a long time. Are certain types of horror movies cyclical?
Part of it is that when there’s a very successful horror movie, it’ll sort of launch a new wave. Since Paranormal Activity was so successful and cheap to make, there will be a lot more of those, and the Saw movies are sort of nearing the end after a tremendous run. I mean, how many limbs can you separate from somebody? [Laughs.] I think that ghost stories like Paranormal Activity are much, much safer for studios to make, because the problems with censorship are lower. People may die or dissolve into goo, but normally, there’s not a knife involved. But yeah, I think the horror genre’s very cyclical. There’s usually a brilliant idea, and then there’s a series of sequels that get farther and farther from the originality of the first one. When I made Nightmare on Elm Street, Bob Shaye said to me, “You know, Wes, there’s a formula for sequels: They should have a budget that’s two-thirds of the original, and then the next sequel should be two-thirds of that.”

Things have definitely changed since then!
No, it doesn’t work that way anymore. The nice thing about doing the Screams is that Bob [Weinstein] actually increased the budgets, so we always had really good casts and serious production values.

Did you see the remake of Nightmare on Elm Street?
No.

Was that by design?
Yeah, basically. Nobody called me, and I wouldn’t have wanted them to have. In a way, I think it’s appropriate that they did it on their own. When I sold the film to New Line, basically the deal was that they owned it forever, as opposed to Last House on the Left and The Hills Have Eyes, where we found out after 30 years that our original contracts called for them to come back to us. I was like, “Really?” [Laughs.] We went into storage and dug up the old contracts and said, “My God, we own it again!” So that was a whole different thing because we were able to control the process of the remakes and had an interesting time with the young directors.

You mentioned the ratings board earlier. Did you run into any trouble getting an R for Scream 4?
No! I certainly didn’t pull any punches, and I did things that I thought would get us into trouble, like [a particularly bloody] death, for instance. And then I went to them, and we got an R without any contest. I think that’s the first time that’s ever happened to me. I can only think that after the Saw films and everything, ours suddenly seemed acceptable.

Source

Courteney and David’s First Post-Split Red Carpet Interview

Tuesday, Apr 12, 2011

“The Insider”‘s Nicole Dabeau was on the scene at the ‘Scream 4’ premiere in Hollywood on Monday night, getting some surprising details on David Arquette and Courteney Cox’s relationship.

“I love her with all my heart but people change and you sort of take times at your life where you have to evaluate if this is working for both of you,” said David. “What we are doing is treating each other with respect and kindness.”

David spilled that he and Courteney still co-run their Coquette production company and are developing a TV game show.

When we relayed David’s comments to Courteney she seemed open to the possibility of the estranged couple getting back together, saying, “I don’t know what’s going to happen, but I love him so much.”

On whether fans can look forward to a ‘Scream 5,’ Courteney said, “If [‘Scream 4’] does well, I’m sure they’ll make one.”

Check out the video to hear more from Courteney and David and then be sure to check out ‘Scream 4’ when it slashes into theaters April 15.

Being A “Scream” Fan Keeps Courteney Coming Back For More

Monday, Apr 11, 2011
This Friday, Courteney Cox reunites with Wes Craven, her estranged husband David Arquette, and Neve Campbellfor Scream 4. The last Scream movie, Scream 3, was released in 2000. Since then, so much has changed in Cox’s career.  She has co-starred in several movies, and currently stars on the ABC comedy series, Cougar Town. When we caught up with Cox, she told us what drew her back to the Scream franchise.
Click Here to hear Courteney’s audio!