I hope she never gets tired of telling the same stories, and answering the same questions so often. She’s such a treasure, and such an underrated actress. Such a great person. Long live Neve/Sidney! 💛
Glad to see her enjoying the modern day enjoyment of her seminal classic genre film heroine. She's a classic actress & a wonderful person. _LOVED_ her reaction to a lot of those questions and the quickie high-five at the end made me chuckle a ton. She's too cool. ;-)
I had no idea Neve began attending horror conventions. I hope she will attend more from time to time. She is first class. Another rare gem who is sweet and down to earth.
Thank you so much for sharing this I love Neve Campbell she is one of my favorite actresses in the horror genre. It sucks I couldn't be there in person to see Neve face to face I used to live in Texas but now I live in California hopefully she can make it here for a horror convention in the near future I can only hope.
It’s so crazy to think that the interviewer asked Neve if there would ever be a scream 5, 6, or 7 and she said “I don’t think so, but you never know. I never thought we’d do a 4th one but here we are 11 years later, so maybe.” It’s kind of fascinating and so surreal that now Scream 7 is about to start shooting with Neve back as the central character and this convection happened almost 9 years ago. It Really just goes to show that with time and pure fan love that the Scream franchise is really the only franchise that can come back in each new decade and have something to say. We are grateful that the series has stayed consistent in quality over all these years and having the main cast come back each time.
It Was There Year....2015 Was Texas Frightmare Weekend's Year!!! And Since Then, Texas Frightmare Has Became One Of The Most Recognizable Horror Conventions There Is!!!
Neve was about 40 or knocking on 40 when S4 came out and to me that's the most beautiful she's looked within the entire film franchise ! I would love for something for the 20th anniversary to happen
+Cj Hamilton I've seen several of these comments on here genre film convention circuit Q&A videos and agreed that she has actually aged "like a fine wine. I have a photographic memory. Can also remember her star once raising in my flannel-clad mid '90s youth and she looks uniquely better since her mid '2000s roles and beyond (e.g. the Reefer Madness remake) and the like. Actually thought that in 2011s Scream 4 that she looked the hottest hands-down since the original. Also glad that since she last guest audio commentaried since the blu rays' track live from her London home that she made that she's "owning up" to her Sidney Prescott role plus now enjoying horror conventions as well.
Great interview, bit it’s really shame and weird you didn’t make Q&F with I Know What You Did Last Summer.. especially on 20th birthday. Bringing Sarah Michelle Gellar, Jennifer Love Hewitt and Ryan Phillippe would be hit. Consider that please it’s not too late
She mentions a movie called the changeling on this and on another chat show so now I’m curious about it but also I love the scream movies and the craft
The most beautiful woman I have Ever seen in my entire life. Some guys have a hotness meter of 1-10. My hotness meter goes of 1-100. NO girl is ever perfect, but to me, Neve Campbell scored a 96 out of a 100.
I keep watching videos of these events and dreaming of one day going to one too. But in Brazil there's only Comic Con, and it's a bit inaccessible, and I don't know if the Scream cast would ever come. I just keep dreaming of going, it seems so amazing, I think I would get too emotional.
Unlike the latter movies in the saga, the original Scream is a deeply spiritual movie; a cross between a cultural and philosophical movie. Scream 2 also does spirituality - and the best setting as well - but the 1996 original is unequivocally an exploration of intersection. Of course, Scream has always been a fusion of genres, from comedy to horror suspense to meta-commentary, however Scream is actually about more than just what it's like to cross genres; I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that Scream is about violence as the spiritual, and about evil as the spiritual. In itself, the Macher house is an important and obviously deliberate act of symbolism, tying the concept of the grand house to the concept of methodical violence. The divide between the adults and the teenagers in Scream is yet another example of fusion, the former category represented adequately by Principal Himbry, Dewey, Gale and Sidney Prescott's father. Without the former category, a substantial degree of the film's thematic depth would be absent. On one level, Scream's philosophical greatness lies in the fact that it's able to feel so relevant despite revolving around insular characters and events. Despite being an utter contrast to film's like Schindler's List, The Matrix, and in a respect Alien, Scream is nevertheless nearly the same level of relevance as those movies. What's more: it's as if the very basis of Scream is to be a commentary on the very idea of relevance. To not just revolve around ideas that can be deemed relevant, but to act as a commentary on the right of relevance as a violation of itself. Scream 2 has the better setting, and in fact the better use of Ghostface (which is due to Scream 2 being more inherently focused on being a slasher movie), yet Scream has the greater emotional story, and clearly the more emphasis on the definition of data: the scope of evil. From start to finish, it's no coincidence that Scream recurringly uses houses that are isolated, and surrounded by an excess of nature. Woodsboro itself is a tour de force of nature intertwined with society, and yet the motif of houses manages to confirm the movie's agenda of using nature. To this day, knowing the true significance of the Macher house is hard, but there's no denying that the third act in and around the house is one of cinema's very best and most thoughtful third acts. The harassment and abuse that Sidney experiences in the kitchen is a call-back to one of the earliest points, about the link between spirituality and violence; Billy asks Sidney if she's seen a ghost, and the fact that the appearance of Ghostface reminds of ghosts just seems to help the argument that Scream is indeed trying to explore something truly revolutionary. One of the themes of Scream is motive - why people do what they do? When confronted with causality, one may ask whether the confrontation itself is a violation for also being a moral force, the other moral force being the rational for the confrontation. Does this violation of duplication have anything to do with the climax of Scream, and the rest of the film? Who knows. What I do know though is that the kitchen confrontation between Sidney, Stu and Billy has the power to come across as not just external to the rest of the saga it's part of, but as something that can provoke confrontation to right-wing politics in general despite not necessarily having anything to do with advocating left-wing politics. Scream can be an ideas movie, and yet it can also be a movie whose images and shapes inspire even if intelligence is about recognising that images and shapes are inherently immoral. From its haunting music, to tortured look of reality, to confusing ideas and story, Scream is a true work of art.