Category: Scream 4

Cox:What It Was Like Filming ‘Scream’ With David Arquette

Thursday, Apr 7, 2011

The fourth ‘Scream’ installment is about to open on April 15th and this movie has an added wrinkle: the impending split of the two movie’s stars: Courteney Cox and David Arquette.

Cox tells Entertainment Weekly:

“Some times were really fun. Sometimes we had a ball there! But it definitely was the beginning of some issues. I don’t have the fondest memories of [filming] those particular moments,” says Cox. “The movie was just a little bit of a tough time. I would say we’re probably better now than we were during that movie. I love him so much. We are the closest of friends.” Arquette says the Scream films have become incredibly personal for him: “This is a series of films that have spanned 15 years of my life and my marriage, and we have a daughter.”

Wes Craven and Cast talk Scream 4

Thursday, Apr 7, 2011
More than a decade ago Wes Craven transformed horror forever with the divinely intelligent, appreciably self-referential and deliciously plotted “Scream”. A couple of sequels later, not to mention the odd spoof (“Scary Movie”), and Craven’s returned to the fold to give audiences another bout of Ghostface.

After ten years, how did the idea of Scream 4 come into fruition and will there be a Scream 5?

Craven: How did it come about? I don’t know, how do these things come about… Bob Weinstein, of the two Weinstein brothers, is kind of the Godfather of Scream. He’s the man who bought the original script from Kevin. I think he and Kevin were talking he felt it was time. I think he originally told us after Scream 3 that there weren’t going to be any for a long time, that we didn’t want to give the idea that we were just knocking them out just to make money. And of course there was the “Scary Movie” sequence, so we needed to get some distance from that… But I think that at the end of the decade, there was just the perfect time to turn around and look at the first decade of the twenty-first century. It was quite distinctive from others and certainly the presence of the electronic media being brought down to the people, to the level where everybody is online. That’s totally different. It was time to take that into account, and at the same time the cinemas were changing very much. My step daughter’s 20 years old, she’s watching movies on her computer or her phone. The whole business, as you well know, is changing dramatically and the way the fans follow the movies and participate in the movies and make their own movies to emulate those movies is profoundly different. And it was time to make a “Scream” that could perfect all this newness.

There were a lot of rumors flying about the script, it changing or being worked on. Is it true? How did you feel about it and were you satisfied with the results?

Craven: We’re all pleased the way the script turned out. It was result of Kevin’s original master script and Aaron did a decent amount of work on specific scenes and areas of it. I wrote some of the film myself but it’s very much Kevin’s concept, characters, situations…framework.

What sort of lengths did you go to in order to keep everything under wraps?

Craven: Keeping things secret was kind of spy work, you know it was… everything from when we did original casting… with hundreds of young actors reading pages from the script, we couldn’t have them reading pages from the actual script. So we had them reading pages from Scream one, which was kinda bizarre. But, I don’t think we ever read with actors the actual pages from the script. So there were a lot of things like that that were kinda annoying, but necessary to keep things secret.

None of you have played these characters for a while, – was it easy to get back all the mannerisms and get your head back into the franchise?

Campbell: Yeah (laughs). I mean, yeah. It’s been 15 years now we’ve been doing these characters and so it’s not difficult to jump into. I mean, I had fun watching the films again before we started doing this, just to get a sense of it. It’s still really nice to see they’ve held up really well. But no, it wasn’t difficult to get into the characters. For Sidney, it’s just imagining her circumstances and doing it.

Cox: You always play it so real. Neve was good.

Campbell: Yeah, thanks. So were you.

Cox: Aww. Yeah. (laughs)

Read the full interview..

Neve Campbell Talks Courteney Cox

Friday, Apr 1, 2011

Neve Campbell made a short mention about working with Courteney in a recent interview..

Is it true this was the first time you and Courteney Cox really bonded?“Absolutely. We didn’t have a lot of scenes together in the other films, and maybe the age gap seemed vaster then. [Cox is 46.] Now I’m more grown up and we have a lot to relate to each other. But I absolutely love that woman.”

Source

Wes Craven And Scream 4 Cast Talk Horror Franchise’s Impact

Wednesday, Mar 30, 2011

With its deft handling of humor, suspense and horror-movie cliches, the Scream franchise gave a much-needed hit of adrenaline to a flagging horror genre when it debuted in 1996. The series centers on cinema’s ultimate Final Girl, Sidney Prescott, (Neve Campbell), as she becomes the target of a set of tenacious serial killers in her small suburban hometown.

In Scream 4, which opens April 15, Sidney returns to Woodsboro as a successful self-help author on a book tour, and it doesn’t take long before she’s reunited with old friends Dewey Riley (David Arquette) and Gale Weathers-Riley (Courteney Cox), and, of course, the latest incarnation of Ghostface.

“I think we’re all amazed that we’re in this drama, really, that is taking place over 15, 16 years. It’s just extraordinary,” director Wes Craven said last week during a press gathering in Hollywood. “I don’t know of another film that has done this, so I think we’re all pretty damn excited about being part of it.”

Arquette was visibly moved when he spoke about what the film franchise has meant to him. “I just love working with all these amazing people and, you know, we’ve developed this family not only, you know, of fellow actors and directors, but, you know, the crew — all of this crew — that we’ve shared 15 years together,” he said.

“Wes was instrumental in us being together,” Cox explained, gesturing to her husband Arquette. “He was, you know, he’s like, kind of our mentor in relationships and growing. And to come back and do it again, it was just really fun.”

Cox also confided that there was another benefit of returning to the franchise after 10 years. “I became closer with Neve during this movie than I did in the first three, and I just enjoy that girl,” she said.

Along with its cast of long-suffering veterans, the latest installment introduces the audience to a new cast of victims and suspects, including Hayden Panettiere (Heroes), Emma Roberts (Unfabulous, Nancy Drew), Rory Culkin (Signs, You Can Count On Me) and Anthony Anderson (Law & Order, Transformers).

“It was lovely to have a new cast come in,” Campbell said. “They were great. They came in with great enthusiasm, and they were excited to be a part of it. And as actors I don’t think we really needed to teach them the ropes in any way. They’re all professionals in their own right and did a great job.”

Read the rest of the story here

Scream 4 Co-stars Talk Courteney and David

Monday, Mar 28, 2011

Original cast members Courtney Cox, David Arquette, Neve Campbell and newcomer Emma Roberts spoke about their involvement in the film and how Cox and Arquette’s recent separation had little impact on its shooting.

Watch the video here

Exclusive Scream 4 DVD Bonus Footage

Monday, Mar 28, 2011

Thanks to Christine,I’ve just uploaded an exclusive video from some of the Scream 4 DVD Bonus Features on our youtube channel. You can view the B-Roll with Courteney,David,Wes and crew behind the scenes filming the movie.This is a courteney-cox.com exclusive,so do make sure to credit if reposting.thank you.