Sunday, September 8, 2013

Every Horror Movie Ever Made

0-9

  • 13 Ghosts (1960)
  • 1408
  • 28 Days Later
  • 30 Days of Night
  • 100 Feet
  • 11 11 11 [2011]

A

  • Abominable Dr. Phibes
  • Apartment 1303
  • Alice, Sweet Alice
  • Alien
  • Aliens
  • Alien 3
  • Alien Resurrection
  • All the Boys Love Mandy Lane
  • American Gothic
  • American Gothic (TV Series)
  • American Werewolf in London
  • An American Werewolf in Paris
  • The Amityville Horror (1979)
  • The Amityville Horror (2005)
  • Amityville II: The Possession
  • Amityville 3-D
  • Amityville 4: The Evil Escapes
  • The Amityville Curse
  • Amityville 1992: It's About Time
  • Amityville: A New Generation
  • Amityville Dollhouse
  • Amityville Horror- `The Lost Tapes` [2012]
  • Amusement
  • Army of Darkness (Evil Dead III)
  • Audrey Rose
  • The Awful Dr. Orlof

B

  • Beetlejuice
  • Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon
  • Bikini Bloodbath
  • The Birds
  • Blade
  • The Blob, (1958)
  • The Blob, (1988)
  • Blood and Chocolate
  • Bones
  • Boogeyman
  • Boogeyman 2
  • Boogeyman 3
  • Botched
  • Braindead (Dead Alive)
  • Brainscan
  • Brandon Mollica's New Nightmare
  • The Bride
  • The Burning
  • Bad Taste
  • Black Sheep (2006 film)
  • Bless The Child
  • Black Christmas
  • Black Christmas (2006)

C

  • Carrie
  • Children of the corn
  • Children of the corn II: The Final Sacrifice, 1993
  • Children of the Corn III: Urban Harvest, 1995
  • Children of the Corn IV: The Gathering, 1996
  • Children of the Corn V: Fields of Terror, 1998
  • Children of the Corn 666: Isaac's Return, 1999
  • Children of the Corn: Revelation, 2001
  • Choking Hazard
  • Christine
  • Cloverfield
  • Cold Creek Manor
  • Constantine
  • Cottage
  • Covenant
  • Craft
  • Creature from the Black Lagoon
  • Creepshow
  • Creepshow 2
  • Creepshow 3
  • Critters
  • Crow, The
  • Cube
  • Cube 2: Hypercube
  • Cube Zero
  • Cujo
  • Cursed
  • coffin [2008]

D

  • Damien: Omen II
  • Dance of the Dead
  • Dark Mirror
  • Dark Night
  • Dark Rising
  • Darkness Falls
  • Daybreakers
  • Dead and Breakfast
  • Deadly Eyes
  • Demonwarp
  • Devour
  • Doghouse
  • Doom
  • Dr. Giggles
  • Dracula
  • Dracula's Curse
  • Dracula vs. Frankenstein
  • Drag Me to Hell

E

  • Evil Dead
  • The Exorcist
  • The Eye

F

  • Feast
  • The Final Terror
  • The Fly (1958)
  • The Fog
  • Frankenstein
  • Freddy´s Dead: The Final Nightmare
  • Freddy vs Jason
  • Friday the 13th
  • Friday the 13th Part 2
  • Friday The 13th Part 3
  • Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter
  • Friday the 13th: A New Beginning
  • Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives
  • Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood
  • Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan
  • Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday
  • Full Eclipse
  • The Funhouse
  • Fury of the Wolfman
  • Final Destination 4

G

  • The Gate
  • The Gate II: Trespassers
  • Girls Night Out
  • Ginger Snaps
  • Ginger Snaps II: Unleashed
  • Ginger Snaps Back: The Beginning
  • The Golem
  • Gothic
  • Graduation Day
  • Ghost Hunt
  • Ghoulies
  • Ghoulies II
  • Ghoulies III
  • Ghoulies IV

H

  • Halloween
  • Hannibal Rising
  • Hatchet
  • Haunted World of El Superbeasto, The
  • Haunting, The
  • Hellraiser
  • House of 1,000 Corpses
  • House on Haunted Hill (1959 original)
  • House on Haunted Hill ( 1999 remake)
  • Return to House on Haunted Hill (2007)
  • Howling, The
  • Hell Night
  • Humongous
  • Halloween
  • Halloween II
  • Halloween III: Season of the Witch  
  • Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers
  • Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers
  • Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers
  • Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later
  • Halloween: Resurection
  • Halloween (2007) remake
  • Halloween II (2009) remake
  • Halloween III (2011) remake Upcoming

I

  • I Know What You Did Last Summer
  • I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
  • I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer
  • Insidious
  • It

J

  • Jaws
  • Jeepers Creepers
  • Jennifer's Body
  • Jason X

K

  • Kill Theory
  • The Killing Room
  • Killer Cobbler (2015 film)

L

  • Land of the Dead
  • Leprechaun
  • Leprechaun 2
  • Leprechaun 3
  • Leprechaun 4: In Space
  • Leprechaun In The Hood
  • Leprechaun Back 2 Tha Hood
  • Let Me In
  • Let The Right One In
  • Lips of Blood

M

  • Madhouse
  • Mama
  • Man Made Monster
  • Man's Best Friend
  • Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994)
  • Maximum Overdrive
  • May
  • Mirrors
  • My bloody Valentine
  • My Bloody Valentine (2009 remake)

N

  • Necromentia
  • Night of the Creeps
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street
  • Night of the Living Dead
  • Nosferatu, a Symphony of Horror
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child
  • New nightmare
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010)

O

  • The Omen
  • Omen III: The Final Conflict
  • Omen IV: The Awakening
  • The Orphan

P

  • Pandorum
  • Paranormal Activity
  • Paranormal Activity 2
  • Paranormal Activiy 3
  • Paranormal Activity 4
  • Pathology
  • Pet Sematary
  • Pet Sematary Two
  • Phantasm
  • Phantasm II
  • Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead
  • Phantasm IV: Oblivion
  • Poltergeist
  • Poltergeist II: The Other Side
  • Poltergeist III
  • Psycho
  • Puppet Master
  • Prom Night (1980 film)
  • Prom Night (2008 film)
  • Piranha

Q

  • Q

R

  • Resident Evil
  • Ringu
  • Rosemary´s Baby

S

  • Saw
  • Saw II
  • Saw III
  • Saw IV
  • Saw V
  • Saw VI
  • Saw: The Final Chapter
  • Scream
  • Scream 2
  • Scream 3
  • Scre4m (aka Scream 4)
  • Scream and Scream Again
  • The Screaming Dead
  • Scream and Scream Again
  • Shaun of the Dead
  • The Shining
  • The Silence of the Lambs
  • Silent Night, Deadly Night
  • Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2
  • Silent Night, Deadly Night 3: Better Watch Out!
  • Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: Initiation
  • Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker
  • Sinister
  • Sleepaway Camp
  • Sleepaway Camp 2: Unhappy Campers
  • Sleepaway Camp 3: Teenage Wasteland
  • See No Evil
  • Stir of Echoes
  • Stir of Echoes: The Homecoming
  • Stay
  • Son of Dracula
  • Son of Frankenstein
  • Sorority Row
  • The Stepfather
  • Squirrels (2019 film)
  • Space Ranger (2021 film)
  • The Swarm

T

  • The Ring
  • The Rage: Carrie 2
  • The Ring Two
  • A Tale of Two Sisters
  • The Messengers
  • The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2
  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 3
  • Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation
  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003)
  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning
  • The Thing (1982 remake)
  • Thinner
  • Thirteen Ghosts (2001)
  • Trick 'r Treat
  • Triangle
  • Trucks

U

  • Unholy Women (Kowai Onna)
  • Underworld
  • Underworld: Evolution
  • Underworld: Rise of the Lycans

V

  • Valentine

W

  • When a Stranger Calls
  • The Wicker Man
  • Wishing Stairs
  • Wishmaster
  • The Witches
  • The Wolf Man
  • Wrong Turn


Top Ten Horror Movie Characters of All Time


  1. MICHAEL MYERS (HALLOWEEN)
  2. FREDDY KREUGER (A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET)
  3. JASON VOORHEES (FRIDAY THE 13TH)
  4. JIGSAW (SAW)
  5. NORMAN BATES (PHYSCO)
  6. HANNIBAL LECTAR (SILENCE OF THE LAMBS)
  7. REGAN MAC-NEIL (THE EXORCIST) 
  8. LEATHERFACE (THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE) 
  9. PENNYWISE THE CLOWN (STEPHEN KING'S IT)
  10. BILLY LOOMIS AND STU MATCHER (SCREAM I)

Top Ten Horror Movies of All Time



  1. THE EXORCIST
  2. HALLOWEEN 
  3. A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET
  4. FRIDAY THE 13TH
  5. SCREAM
  6. PHYSCO
  7. THE SHINING
  8. ROSEMARY'S BABY
  9. CARRIE
  10. PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 







Halloween 3: Season of the Witch Review


The title is a bit of a cheat, since the indestructible psycho of the first two films plays no part here. With the possibilities of the character well and truly exhausted, Season of the Witch turns more profitably to a marvellously ingenious Nigel Kneale tale of a toymaker and his fiendish plan to restore Halloween to its witch cult origins (involving a TV commercial for toy masks that are in fact diabolical engines). Kneale had his name removed from the credits after tampering with his script had reduced O'Herlihy's toymaker - originally bathed in Celtic mists of myth and magic - to the conventional mad doctor. The end result is a bit of a mess but hugely enjoyable, and often (thanks to Dean Cundey's camerawork and John Carpenter's close supervision as producer) as striking visually as its predecessors.

Halloween 3: Season of the Witch About

On Saturday, October 23, shop owner Harry Grimbridge (Al Berry) is chased by mysterious figures wearing business suits. He collapses at a filling station clutching a Silver Shamrock jack-o'-lantern mask and is driven to the hospital by the station attendant (Essex Smith) all the while ranting, "They're going to kill us. They're going to kill us all." Grimbridge is placed in the care of Dr. Dan Challis. Another man in a suit (Dick Warlock) enters Grimbridge's hospital room and kills him, then goes to his car and kills himself through self-immolation.
Dr. Challis and Grimbridge's daughter, Ellie, investigate the incident leading them to the small town of Santa Mira, California, home of the Silver Shamrock Novelties factory. Hotel manager Rafferty (Michael Currie) reveals the source of the town's prosperity is Irishman Conal Cochran and his factory and that the majority of the town's population are descendants of Irish immigrants. Challis learns that Ellie's father stayed at the same hotel. Other hotel guests are shop owners Marge Guttman (Garn Stephens) and Buddy Kupfer (Ralph Strait), Buddy's wife Betty (Jadeen Barbor) and their son Little Buddy (Bradley Schacter). All have business at the factory and eventually meet gruesome ends through the Silver Shamrock masks and the men in suits.
A day after arriving in Santa Mira, Challis and Ellie tour the factory with the Kupfers and are alarmed to discover Grimbridge's car there, guarded by more men dressed in suits. They return to the hotel but cannot contact anyone outside the town. Ellie is kidnapped by the men in suits. Challis breaks into the factory to find her and discovers that the men in suits are androids created by Cochran. Challis is captured by the androids and Cochran reveals his plan to kill children on Halloween night. The Silver Shamrock trademark on the masks contains a computer chip containing a fragment of Stonehenge. When the Silver Shamrock television commercial airs on Halloween night, the chip will activate, killing the wearer and unleashing a lethal swarm of insects and snakes, killing those around the wearer. Cochran explains his plan to resurrect macabre aspects of Gaelic festival Samhain, which he connects to witchcraft.
Challis escapes and rescues Ellie. They destroy the factory and Cochran, then flee the town. While driving away, Challis is attacked by "Ellie", causing him to crash his car. He finds that she is an android copy and destroys it in a brief struggle. On foot, Challis returns to the filling station, where Ellie's father had come to eight days earlier, and contacts the television stations, convincing all but one to remove the commercial. Challis screams into the telephone to stop the commercial as the film abruptly ends.

Scream 4 Review

In “Scream 4,” the recently-released thriller directed by Wes Craven, a publicist refers to Sydney Prescott (Neve Campbell) as a “victim for life.” For Prescott, who was attacked and nearly murdered in the original "Scream" trilogy, the characterization rings true. In "Scream 4," victimhood and the publicity that accompanies it are major themes as a new killer emerges in Woodsboro, the site of the original murders. 

On a publicity tour to promote her new book “Out of Darkness,” Prescott returns to Woodsboro where she reunites with former tabloid reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) and Dewey Riley (David Arquette). Weathers and Riley are married and while the former is writing a novel, the latter spends his time as the town sheriff. Even before Prescott starts signing books at a local store, a new killer has already struck. That killer is soon hunting down some of the local teenagers and trying to murder Prescott. 

As I previously noted, I enjoyed the original “Scream” trilogy. Like a lot of horror movies, the series features a lot of violence and gore but the stories are well-told. The trilogy was created to serve a certain audience and they do that well. While “Scream 2” was the best of the original trilogy, “Scream 3” was the weakest. “Scream 4” should be rated beneath the original two “Screams” but above “Scream 3.” 

One of the reasons for this distinction is because Kevin Williamson, who wrote the original two "Screams" wrote the screenplay for "Scream 4." Like the first two films, the newest one features a few solid supporting characters that viewers get to know before some of them are killed. The supporting cast includes the webcast-obsessed Robbie Mercer (Erik Knudsen), the creepy Trevor Sheldon (Nico Tortorella), and the always-perky Deputy Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton). All of these characters are stronger than the supporting cast of “Scream 3,” which featured Jenny McCarthy as a bland actress and the nearly unwatchable Parkey Posey as a Gale Weathers-wannabe. 

“Scream 4” pokes fun at the horror genre and some of its newest entries. There are a few nicely-timed jokes about the seemingly-unending “Saw” franchise. (For critics who think the “Scream” franchise has gone on too long, try watching the latest “Saw” movie. It's nearly unwatchable.) 

“Scream 4,” like its predecessors, also includes some thoughtful ideas. A few of the earlier “Screams” included ideas about media violence and people blaming parents for their children’s misdeeds. "Scream 4" explores the idea of victimhood and how society often celebrates it. Although Prescott is a real victim, there are side plots in the story about people wanting to be “victims” for publicity. Considering how politically-correct and easily-offended some people can be, it seems like "victimhood" is a timely theme. One prime example of this is Ryan Murphy, the creator of "Glee," who seemingly claims victimhood when bands reject his show. For a man whose show is a huge hit, one would hope that he would focus more on the people who love his show rather than the few that don't want their music used on it. 

As with some other horror movies, “Scream 4” has a few weak characters and some terrible dialogue. Nevertheless, it rises above its peers in the genre and proves itself as a film that is worth screaming about. 

Scream 4 About

On the fifteenth anniversary of the original Woodsboro murders by Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, two high school girls - Marnie and Jenny - debate the quality of the dwindling Stab series after watching the opening scene of Stab VII. Jenny goes upstairs to try and prank Marnie. She attempts the Ghostface voice but reveals herself by laughing before Marnie mysteriously goes silent. Her voice is replaced by that of the real Ghostface, who taunts Jenny until she steps in near the front door. Marnie's bloodied corpse flies through the glass and Ghostface chases Jenny into the renovated garage. This is where she is stabbed and partially crushed by a falling automated garage door before being stabbed again.
The following morning, Sheriff Dewey Riley is awakened by his cell phone and he's called down to the main street of town to sort out a prank involving Ghostface costumes being put on the lamp posts. Dewey arrives to find his deputy, Judy Hicks, waiting. They share saucy banter over Judy's lemon squares while Dewey receives a call about the murders of Jenny and Marnie.
Meanwhile local teenager, Kirby Reed picks up Sidney Prescott's younger cousin, Jill Roberts, and her friend, Olivia Morris, who lives next door. Jill gets a weird, threatening call from Ghostface using from Jenny's phone and Olivia reveals that she got a similar call from Marnie's phone earlier that morning. They arrive at school, flocked by film geeks and avid bloggers, Robbie and Charlie, who question what their favorite scary movie is in honor of it being the anniversary of the events from the first film.
At home, Gale Weathers-Riley attempts to begin writing again after seeing Sidney on television, promoting her autobiography/self help book. She comes up with nothing. Across town, Sidney and her publicist, Rebecca Walters, arrive at a book store for the final stop on Sidney's tour. However, Sidney's pep-talk ends and she sees Gale has arrived. After a very little small talk, Dewey and Hicks storm in claiming that the cell phone used to call the two murdered girls is somewhere in the area.
Outside, a cell rings and Rebecca tosses Dewey the keys to Sidney's rental car. He opens the trunk to reveal a bloody knife, the cell phone, and pictures of Sidney, smeared with the girls' blood. There are also a couple of copies of Sidney's new book. At the station, Gale has a fight with Hicks, claiming her pastries "taste like ass" followed by a disagreement with Dewey, who refuses her offer to help solve the case. Jill, Olivia, and Kirby are interviewed about the phone calls and Sidney is told she can't leave Woodsboro since she is technically a suspect. Sidney elects to stay with Jill and Jill's mother, Kate.
That night, Jill gets a visit from her ex, Trevor, who is scared away by Sidney. Later, while Kirby and Jill are watching Shaun of the Dead, Jill talks to Olivia, who is changing next door, while Kirby deals with a call from Ghostface, who seems to be calling from Trevor's phone. Ghostface gets serious and claims that he's in the closet. Kirby checks but finds no Ghostface. Upon calling him a liar, he counters with, "I never said I was in your closet!" As Kirby realizes his meaning, he breaks out of Olivia's closet, proceeding to stab her and knock her around her room with Jill, Kirby, and Sidney watching.
Rushing over, Sidney breaks in and gets upstairs in time to find Olivia's corpse, laid out on the bed with her intestines in a pile beside her. Ghostface calls her this time and Jill arrives, remembering Olivia's tendency to dub Sidney as "The Angel of Death". Ghostface pops out again, this time slashing Jill's arm, before being tackled and thrown down the stairs by Sidney. In the ensuing fight, Sidney seemingly knocks Ghostface unconscious but he disappears when she turns to see Detective Hoss and Deputy Perkins arrive, along with Kirby and Trevor.
Outside Olivia's house as the police investigate the crime scene, Jill apologizes to Sidney after many neighbors shout things at Sidney about her being just like her mother and that this was her fault. Later at the hospital, Sidney fires Rebecca after she tries to take advantage of the current murders to sell Sidney's book and, obviously, her career. Heading to her car, Rebecca is attacked and thrown off the parking garage's roof onto a news van during Dewey's press conference regarding the murders. Meanwhile, Gale makes a deal with Robbie and Charlie: if they let her get an insight into the killings, since they know the conventions of modern horror, they get her and Sidney to appear at their school's Cinema Club as special guests.
At the cinema club the following afternoon, Charlie goes through the horror-genre and how the rules have changed since the 1990s. During this conversation, Robbie talks about the Stab-a-thon, an annual party where the local teens get together and watch the Stab films while playing a drinking game. Gale tries to get the location but cannot convince the boys to tell her. Charlie and Robbie also say that the murders are related to the original movie of Stab, as two kids died in their house (Steve and Casey = Marnie and Jenny) then the hottest girl in school is killed (Tatum = Olivia).
Jill remains at home since her mom won't let her go while Kirby heads to the party. Gale is revealed to have followed the teenagers to the abandoned barn where the party is happening and proceeds to place cameras, her identity hidden by a Ghostface mask. Once she slips out to watch, Gale sees that someone is tampering with her cameras. She calls Dewey, convinced it's the killer, and threatens to go back inside if he doesn't get there quick. Gale investigates her cameras and finds a webcam, planted to watch her.
Outside, Dewey watches through a camera, one of Gale's that she is holding backward as the killer approaches, and rushes inside to save her. Gale is chased around the bales of hay but her cries for help aren't heard over the opening scene of the original Stab. Gale is pinned down and Dewey spots her. He yells at the killer to freeze while aiming his gun and three things happen at once: the killer stabs Gale in the shoulder, Gale pushes him away with her foot, and Dewey shoots.
Dewey misses, the killer runs off, and Gale falls into the crowd of shocked teens, blood streaming from her right shoulder. She quickly warns Dewey about the webcam on the upper level before apparently losing consciousness.
At Jill's house, Detective Hoss goes on his rounds after Perkins said the fatal words, "I'll be right back." On his rounds, Hoss sees that Jill's bedroom window is open and returns to the car, finding Perkins slumped over the steering wheel. This turns out to be a cruel prank but neither laugh when Hoss is brutally attacked from behind and Perkins is stabbed in the forehead, citing "Fuck Bruce Willis!" before dying.
Inside, Sidney takes down the wind chimes because they're off balance and she isn't sure how to fix them. A few moments later, she tenses when she hears them again. Surprising her, it's revealed that it's her aunt Kate, who comes in clutching grocery bags and leaves again to grab another one. Ghostface calls Sidney and makes a comment about her family being most important to her. This prompts Sidney to go check on Jill but she finds the room empty with Jill's laptop on the bed. Sidney opens it up and sees the messenger is left open, revealing that Kirby took Jill to her house for an after-party.
Downstairs, Kate reveals that the cops are no longer out front and Sidney grabs her hand, intending to lead the way to the car. When they open the back door, they see Ghostface's reflection on the wind chimes and turn around. At the front door, Ghostface wrestles to get inside but Kate successfully closes the door by sitting down and propping herself between the door and the nearby archway. Unfortunately, Ghostface stabs her through the mail slot killing her.
Hicks arrives and checks on Kate but Sidney runs off. At Kirby's house, Trevor arrives, causing an upset amongst the others around: Kirby, Jill, Robbie, and Charlie. He claims he was invited through a text from Jill's phone. Jill denies this and finds her phone has gone missing. She leaves for to go upstairs in an attempt to find it and Trevor follows her. Robbie heads outside, leaving Charlie and Kirby alone. They nearly have a moment but are interrupted by Trevor. Charlie leaves, clearly frustrated because his kiss with Kirby was interrupted. Trevor, partially embarrassed by what he walked in on, leaves as well.
Jill comes back downstairs, claiming Trevor didn't follow her upstairs. A drunk Robbie tries to stream his live video blog but is surprised by Ghostface, who mercilessly stabs him and leaves him to die in the bushes. Sidney arrives with news of Kate's death and Robbie struggles to the door, gasping "run" before finally dying. Jill and Sidney run upstairs (pursued by Ghostface) while Kirby runs off somewhere downstairs.
Sidney locks her and Jill in Kirby's room, ordering Jill to hide under the bed while she fakes Jill's escape out on the terrace. Ghostface seemingly buys it and Sidney calls Dewey. She is forced to let go of the terrace to escape Ghostface. Downstairs, Sidney finds Kirby and they lock themselves in a room in the basement. Charlie arrives, hands soaked in blood and begs to be let inside. Sidney warns Kirby not to open the door unless she is 100% sure she can trust Charlie. Since Kirby doesn't trust him enough, all she and Sidney can do is watch as he is attacked by Ghostface before the patio lights go out.
When they reactivate, Charlie is duct-taped to a chair and Kirby is forced to become the new Casey Becker to his Steven Orth in order to save his life while Sidney sneaks back upstairs to find Jill. Kirby answers her first question wrong but Ghostface gives her a pity "last chance" question. Without hearing the whole question, she answers by listing every possibility there is. When Ghostface doesn't respond after she's finished, she assumes she answered correctly. Rushing outside, Kirby sees a shadow slip away and frees Charlie while claiming she won. She is surprised when Charlie stabs her in the stomach and reveals himself as one the killers. He claims that "four years of classes together" is too long for Kirby to wait before trying to make a move on him. Charlie runs inside, leaving a bleeding Kirby for dead.
Sidney, seeing Jill is gone, goes to get Kirby but is caught by Charlie, who holds Sidney at knife-point. She struggles free but runs straight into Ghostface's blade as she races for the front door. Jill reveals herself as the second killer and the mastermind behind the murders. Jill claims that she never had a true identity. She was simply the girl related to Sidney Prescott and grew up in the shadow of a woman she had never even met. Charlie and Jill voice their intentions to become this generation's Sidney Prescott and Randy Meeks.
Charlie reveals Trevor, who was gagged and bound in a nearby cupboard, and Jill says he's the one who'll take the fall for the massacre. This is meant to include the attacks on Jill and Charlie, the only survivors. Jill shoots Trevor in the groin as punishment for cheating on her after taking her virginity then shoots him in the head. When Charlie asks her to stab him in the shoulder, copying Billy and Stu's botched attempt to fake injuries in the first movie, she instead stabs him in the heart. Charlie is surprised by this and Jill informs him that being the sole survivor would win her far more fans. Sidney asks how she could have done this to all of her friends and Jill declares that she needs "fans... not friends!" He became the "Stu Macher" of the remake. Jill continues her jealous rant to Sidney before stabbing her once more for good measure.
Jill goes on to clean off the gun and leave it by Trevor's corpse. She uses his hand to scratch her cheek and pull out a handful of her hair. Jill stabs herself with the knife by running against the wall pressing the knife into her shoulder. Then she cleans the knife, runs into a glass frame, and purposely falls onto a glass coffee table to cause herself more believable injuries then collapses near Sidney. She mirrors her "death pose" exactly.
At the hospital, Jill is hailed as a hero and she jokingly says that she and Gale could write a book together due to their matching shoulder wounds. Dewey tells Jill that she might not be the sole survivor: Sidney is in the I.C.U. but hasn't woken up from surgery yet. After Dewey leaves, Jill sneaks out of her room and goes to the I.C.U determined to kill Sidney.
Jill proceeds to attack Sidney as she awakens, choking her and throwing her against the glass door of a nearby medicine cabinet. Dewey and Gale quickly realize the truth when they remember that Dewey never told Jill about Gale's attack, or about her wounds. Dewey rushes off to find Sidney, calling Hicks for back-up.
Jill hides herself in the supply closet when she hears Dewey arriving and attacks him with a bedpan when he bursts in, only to be interrupted by Sidney. Jill regains the upper hand and pushes her knee into Sidney's stitches, causing them to become undone. Gale intervenes but is nearly shot by Jill, who has stolen Dewey's gun. Hicks jumps into the room, throwing herself and Gale over the nearby bed.
Jill orders them to come out, on threat of shooting Dewey. Hicks jumps up immediately and is apparently shot dead. Gale gets up, too, and sees Sidney moving. Stalling for time, Gale fumbles over words in a poor attempt to stop Jill as Sidney silently reaches for the shock paddles. Begging for one last word, Gale says, "Clear." Jill questions this then is electrocuted by Sidney, who puts one paddle to each temple. Sidney told her she forgot the first rule of remakes: "Don't fuck with the original."
Gale and Sidney see that Dewey's alive. Behind them, a shadow moves and Jill jumps up, pouncing at Sidney with a glass shard, only to be shot in the chest by a knowing Sidney.
Sidney, in all the action, her injuries, and exhaustion, lies back down next to her cousin's body and whispers, "I don't know about you but I feel a lot better."
Outside, loads of reporters are praising Jill for having single handedly ended the Woodsboro killings and the final shot is of Jill's dead eyes, as the whole town is about to realize that their supposed "savior" is actually the mastermind behind it all.