
a private writing blog for sidney prescott of the scream franchise. established november 2016. written by selena. inbox: 000 / drafts: 000 #SERIALFAME
81 posts
I Pulled Up Scream 3 To Cut Clips For Gifs And I Love The Part Where Sidney Is In Kincaids Office And
i pulled up scream 3 to cut clips for gifs and i love the part where sidney is in kincaid’s office and she’s snooping through her file but good god some of the headlines on those newspaper clippings are clunky and on top of that there’s an article that was supposed to be written during the events of the first movie about how she’s under police protection and that’s weird to me because, while sidney is well-known for her mother’s murder and being the only key witness in the trial that found cotton weary guilty, she’s still a private citizen AND a minor at that time and the fact that a newspaper published her name in connection with an attack as well as noted that she’s under police protection is, at the very least, dancing on ethical and legal lines, if not full-on crossing them.
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countdown to halloween | Scream (1996)
We’re gonna play a little game. It’s called “Guess Who Just Called the Police and Reported Your Sorry Motherfucking Ass!”
sidney was incredibly close with maureen.
since neil’s job places him on business trips semi-frequently, going as far as across the country or even out of the states, and presumably generates a lot of income, maureen was a stay-at-home mom, deciding to devote her time to raising sidney and taking care of the house. as such, sidney’s spent a lot of time with maureen over the years; sitting in the kitchen and doing homework while she cooks dinner, going out to dinner and a movie on friday nights as a kid, spending saturday tending to the plants, going on bike rides, or curling up on the couch with a pizza, a bowl of popcorn, and some old hollywood movies for the night.
in a way, maureen was sidney’s first friend—while sidney always saw maureen as her mother and never just a friend, she was always comfortable going to maureen for advice, or if she just needed to vent about one thing or another. if sidney expressed interest in something, maureen was always supportive, enrolling sidney in dance classes at when she was six years old because sidney had expressed interest in learning.
as such, maureen’s death was nothing short of devastating to sidney. her mother was a perfectly kind and lovely person, in her eyes—she couldn’t fathom why anyone would want to hurt her in such a way, and being the person to discover maureen’s body so soon after she had been killed positively shook sidney to her core. she became more reserved, and she dropped a lot of her hobbies and activities. the one thing she continued to stick with was theater; it provided a safe space where she wasn’t limited to the role of LOCAL SLAIN WOMAN’S DAUGHTER; she could explore her emotions and her trauma in a healthy way.
still, she was also very adamant about everyone knowing the truth, or what she perceived to be the truth: that maureen was wholesome and good, that she was targeted for no reason, that she saw cotton weary leaving the house that night, the events lining up precisely to where he had to be the one behind it all. losing her mother was hard for her, but watching the media (specifically gale weathers) paint maureen as an adulteress and sidney as a liar only fueled her further dedication to defending her mother’s memory.
@virginrule
solitude is easier to stomach on her own terms; at least, that’s what she tells herself when she decides she’s better off sitting in one of the many ‘ social ’ rooms the delta lambs’ expansive sorority house has to offer. greek row isn’t sidney prescott’s scene at all, and yet she had let hallie drag her along to a party---something she regretted the moment they set foot over the threshold. the moment she saw the opportunity to retreat, she took it, placing herself beside a window that had one helluva view of campus, observing the partygoers below, and the stragglers making their way toward the action.
and when an old floorboard creaks several feet behind her, she sits up straighter, spine turning, eye line landing on a familiar face; and then shoulders relax, and there’s almost a smile on her lips as she exhales. ‘ randy, ’ thank god it’s you, and not---no. no. don’t say it. don’t even think it. ‘ don’t tell me you’ve had your fill of the fun already. ’

` * ii. TATUM RILEY‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. STU MACHER‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. BILLY LOOMIS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. RANDY MEEKS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. DEWEY RILEY‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. GALE WEATHERS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. MICKEY ALTERI‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. HALLIE MCDANIEL‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. DEREK FELDMAN‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. MRS. LOOMIS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. ROMAN BRIDGER‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. MARK KINCAID‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. MAUREEN PRESCOTT‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. NEIL PRESCOTT‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. JILL ROBERTS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. KIRBY REED‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. OLIVIA MORRIS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. CHARLIE WALKER‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. ROBBIE MERCER‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. JUDY HICKS‚ CONNECTION . ` * ii. REBECCA WALTERS‚ CONNECTION .
` * iii. DON’T FEAR THE REAPER‚ BILLY LOOMIS . ` * iii. I THINK I LOVE YOU — ISN’T THAT WHAT LIFE IS MADE OF‚ DEREK FELDMAN . ` * iii. I’D LET THE GEEK GET THE GIRL‚ RANDY MEEKS .