It's a year after the last Ghostface rampage in Woodsboro and the "Core Four" - Sam (Melissa Barrera) and Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega) and the twins, Mindy (Jasmin Savoy Brown) and Chad Meeks-Martin (Mason Gooding) - now find themselves in New York.
While the latter three are in college, at Blackmore University, Sam is doing menial jobs to cover the rent while she keeps an eye on her sister.
The film kicks off with an extended cold open, featuring cameos from
Ready or Not's Samara Weaving and Tony Revolori, from the recent
Spider-Man movies, again subverting the classic
Scream opening with what is just the beginning of a trail of obfuscation and misdirection.
Ghostface has come to New York and states - on the phone - upfront that he's targeting Sam "for what she did" and anyone, such as her sister and friends, who gets in the way.
Sam is already
persona non grata because of internet conspiracy theories that she in fact orchestrated the attacks in Woodsboro - because of her heritage - and then framed the actual killers.
This is all part of
Scream VI's evolution of the central theme that it's now no longer 'enough' to 'simply' kill a person, you also have to kill their reputation as well.
As bodies start to inevitably mount up, Mindy declares to the group that they are not in a sequel, they're now part of a franchise and thus the rules have changed again, meaning everyone is fair game.
As with the previous film,
Scream VI presents us with a broad collection of potential murderers and victims, including legacy characters such as Hayden Panettiere's Kirby Reed, from
Scream 4 (
now an FBI agent) and fresh meat, including Sam's "secret" boyfriend, Danny Brackett (Josh Segarra, who you might recognise from playing the excellent Pug in
She-Hulk, Attorney at Law, or Adrian Chase in
Arrow).
Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) returns, of course, and even the ghost of Billy Loomis (Skeet Ulrich) pops up a couple of times.
Thankfully, Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett are back as directors, working with a script, again, by James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick, which really helps ensure that
Scream VI feels like an organic continuation of
the previous instalment in the horrific murder-mystery franchise.
Whereas I posited the idea that 2022's
Scream would have provided a satisfying conclusion to the overarching story,
Scream VI now leaves the door well and truly open for a continuation of the saga of the Ghostface killings.
I would hope though that should another entry be made it would be under the auspices of the same team responsible for these last two
Scream movies.
But now it's officially a franchise, who knows what direction the story will go in?
And I must add the point that Marvel movies have broken me: I now scroll through the credits of every film I watch to see if there's a post-credit scene, and I have to say the one snuck on the end of
Scream VI is perfect.