10 Movies That Peaked In Their Opening Scene

9. Scream

Scream Drew Barrymore
Dimension Films

The Movie

Wes Craven's Scream is without question the quintessential horror satire, a deliciously inventive skewering of slasher movie tropes that also managed to serve up inventive death scenes and memorable, likeable characters.

Scream is also credited with killing the serious-minded slasher flick while revitalising more ironic, tongue-in-cheek genre fare in the late-90s, even if the glut of copycats couldn't hold a candle to the classic original.

The Opening Scene

The film's iconic opening scene sees Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore) receiving a seemingly flirtatious phone call from a charming stranger, who soon enough reveals himself to be the movie's murderous antagonist - Ghostface.

Ghostface toys with Casey by asking her questions about horror movies, before murdering her boyfriend and eventually gutting Casey, who is found hanging from a tree by her (naturally) horrified parents.

The white-knuckle 10-minute sequence honestly might be the best thing Craven ever directed - it's basically a short film that stands tall on its own.

It delicately blends self-aware writing with dread-soaked direction, and with Barrymore being unexpectedly killed off so early on, it sets a grim, expectation-defying tone from the outset.

As a whole, Scream certainly delivers a deft blend of genre-lampooning comedy and genuine horror, but this opening scene was the ultimate breath of fresh air, and one hell of a statement-of-intent.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.