Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday the 13th Movie Review
Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday the 13th Review
"Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday the 13th" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : John BlanchardProducer : Doug Blake,Harold Bronson,Richard Foos,Stephen Nemeth,Andrew Ooi,Robert Shaw
Screenwiter : Sue Bailey,Joe Nelms
Starring : Julie Benz,Harley Cross,Majandra Delfino,Simon Rex,Danny Strong,Coolio,Tiffani-Amber Thiessen,Tom Arnold
At what point do self-awareness and flip irony double back and smack themselves
in the face? The straight-to-cable Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday
the 13th (it originally aired on USA Networks) is supposedly a parody of the
teen horror genre, but considering the self-aware mockery of Scream, this film
actually attempts to parody a parody. That is a daunting, thankless task which
would require master parodists to pull it off. The makers of Shriek... are not
those people.
Shriek’s plot, as it were, is a stew of those from Scream and I Know What You
Did Last Summer, centering around five students trying to avoid The Killer, a
mysterious bungler in that now omnipresent Edvard Munch “The Scream” mask who
knows embarrassing secrets about each of the students, including the fact that
one student forgot to give her grandmother her laxative. Ha ha!
One major fault of Shriek... is that it lacks a principal sympathetic
character, a la Neve Campbell in Scream or Anna Faris in Scary Movie. The five
victims-in-waiting are horror movie archetypes – slutty blond cheerleader,
nerd, slightly punkish girl, new kid, and, well, the other guy – none of who
emerges as the protagonist. Because of this, we watch the film drift without a
storyline to follow or a character to care about, and are therefore left to
thrash hopelessly in the muck of the infantile sex and fart jokes or gags that
are just plain lazy. Tiffani-Amber Thiessen’s news reporter works for a
channel called Empty V. Another character passes gas near a fireplace, and
blows up a house. The nerd’s name is Boner (“that’s BAH-ner, sir”). There is
even an announcement over the school intercom calling for Mike Hunt and Heywood
Jablowme to come to the principal’s office. It seemed, at times, that the
movie was just a hair away from being two hours of a man making fart noises
with his armpit.
Unfortunately, even the jokes not drenched in immaturity often fall flat. At
one point, out of nowhere, the characters strut forward in slow motion, the
shot and accompanying song a rip from that now-classic scene from Reservoir
Dogs. But here, the scene has no context, and therefore no humor. Jon Favreau
parodied the exact same shot in Swingers after a discussion of those types of
films, and it was hilarious. The makers of Shriek confused funny with simply
familiar, thinking we’d laugh just because we recognize the shot. Humor
requires context, and even the most basic sight gag needs a foundation.
Ultimately, part of the blame for failed parodies like Shriek... lies in the
inspiration of the Zucker Brothers, whose Airplane! and Naked Gun films were
the high-water mark for sight gag parodies. The makers of Shriek... were
obviously inspired by the Zuckers, and even allude to Airplane! and Naked Gun
in a scene where one character recites the rules of parody.
Shriek’s creators, however, missed rule number one, a rule the Zucker brothers
mastered, which is that even a sight-gag film needs a coherent plot and “real”
(within their own universe) characters. Airplane was, from beginning to end,
the tale of a plane doomed to crash and the pilot conquering his demons to save
it, even as Leslie Nielsen appeared amongst a panicked flight crew reminding
them never to call him Shirley. The true genius of that film was that even as
we laughed our asses off, we also rooted for Robert Hays to land the plane and
resolve his relationship with Julie Hagerty. Airplane! would not have been a
classic without that, and many parody filmmakers never learned that lesson.
As such, Shriek... is little more than a series of non-sequiturs thrown at the
wall, hoping to make someone, anyone, laugh.
The movie’s most telling scene comes when, after the “rules of parody” lecture,
the characters decide to watch Airplane!. It is by far the smartest move made
by any character in this movie, and exactly what you should do, as opposed to
renting Shriek, if you desire a funny, well-made parody.
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Review by Larry Getlen
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