Other deaths, like the fold-up bed scene, are particularly ingenious and raise schlocky gore to new, obscene levels. The death sequences are frequent and extremely gruesome, with bodies cut in two, decapitations and impalings galore. Robert Englund returns, having a ball as a particularly vicious Freddy, although sadly Kane Hodder has been replaced by another hulking menace behind the hockey mask. The teenage crowd that provides the focus of the film are the usual unknown bunch of intellectual bimbos, brainless jocks and topless starlets. The helmer is BRIDE OF CHUCKY's Ronny Yu, and he makes a damned good attempt at things. The plot is fairly full, too, with plenty of killing going on, with unpredictable victims for a change. Although not exactly adding any new ground to the mythos generated by twenty-odd movies, this one goes back to the basics and has plenty of inventive dream sequences to recommend it. The result? A jokey, reference-filled epic that will entertain fans of both sets of films. Now there's a novel idea: pit two iconic horror movie villains against each other in a modern, up-to-date slasher movie (refreshingly free of the annoying self-awareness that ruined the films that followed Scream) and throw in tons of gore and violence to appease jaded audiences. Reviewed by Leofwine_draca 7 / 10 A gruesome cartoon put on film
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