Tag: scream-queens

  • ‘2 Broke Girls’ & ‘Scream Queens’ Canceled, and the Fan Reactions Are Priceless

    Honestly, the response to Fox cancelling “Scream Queens” has been better than most of the episodes. Fox just announced the show would not be coming back for a third season. On Friday, CBS announced it would not be renewing “2 Broke Girls” for a seventh season. The two shows are on separate networks, with different fan bases, but the reactions shared a similar meta wit.

    Here’s the most common “Scream Queens” response:

    It’s like that GIF was specifically created for the show’s eventual cancellation.

    Here are more reactions:

    And here are some reactions for “2 Broke Girls”:


    Here’s a post from star Kat Dennings on the sad news:

    According to TVLine, Cher was in talks to play the mother of Kat’s character, Max, if they did a Season 7. Pick it up, some other network!

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  • 11 Reasons Chanel Is Our ‘Scream Queens’ Spirit Animal

    Chanel Oberlin (Scream Queens,” but she’s a spoiled brat after our own hearts. She’s got one-liners for days and never fails to make us laugh. Honestly, we kind of love her.

    These are the 11 times Chanel just really spoke to us.

  • Taylor Lautner Leans Into ‘Scary’ Challenges With ‘Scream Queens’ and ‘Run the Tide’

    The “Twilight” saga may be behind Taylor Lautner, but a new dawn is breaking in his acting career.

    Lautner, of course, earned insta-fame through his role as lycanthropic heartthrob Jacob Black over the course of the five-film series, and now he’s focusing on perfecting his chosen craft in as many formats as possible: he’s discovered a facility for comedy that he’s put to work first in the quirky BBC series “Cuckoo” and currently in the second season of Fox’s horror/comedy “Scream Queens”; next he takes on the leading role in the gritty, emotional drama “Run the Tide,” playing the eldest of two young brothers struggling to get by during their mother’s stint in prison for drug charges, and her impending return only threatens to upend the life they’re clinging to.

    In a candid conversation with Moviefone, the 24-year-old actor reveals why he’s chosen to pursue creative challenges over celebrity, keeping up with “Scream Queens’” endless curveballs, and living up to his early fanbase’s faith in him over the years.

    Moviefone: This is probably the most challenging role, I’m guessing, that you’ve had to take on?

    Taylor Lautner: Absolutely. No question.

    How did you start prepping? Not just for this role only — it’s clear see that going deeper as an actor, digging deeper and coming up with new approaches to your technique. Tell me where you were, coming into this.

    When I read the script, I fell in love with the story, and you could really tell that the writer just put his heart on the paper. It’s based off of his life. I fell in love with Rey’s character, and all of the characters really, but it was intense, and it scared me. I recently have noticed that when I take on something that scares me, and I’m not sure if I can do, that’s when I find the most fulfillment.

    I used to like look for projects that I thought were cool, and entertaining, or something I could really, really relate to. There’s a lot about Rey that I can relate to, but there’s just as much that I can’t. So to be able to have to dig deep and find things within yourself that you haven’t even realized yet was scary, it was a lot of fun for me and extremely fulfilling.

    Was there a scene or an aspect of Rey that said that to you; a scene or aspect where you went in terrified, like “Can I pull this off?” and then you felt very satisfied with where you got with it?

    I think probably the fact that Rey really is, he’s a father figure. He was forced to grow up very quickly, and essentially raise his brother since he was four years old, Oliver. And for me, I didn’t know how quite I was going to do that.

    I was able to pull from my relationship with my younger sister. I have a younger sister and we’re almost seven years apart, and we’re extremely close. So I was able to use that, but I think that parental aspect of Rey and that journey with him and his brother was definitely one of the things that worried me most, and I was very happy with it by the end. Me and Nico [Christou], who played Oliver, became very close and we bonded, so that made it easier.

    How hard was that big confrontation scene the two of you had?

    So brutal! One of the things we did with this movie is we filmed it pretty much in sequential order, which is so rare to be able to do that. I remember when I was first talking with our director Soham [Mehta] about it, he said that he intended on doing that if we could. So it allowed me and Nico to establish our relationship, and we became very close throughout filming.

    So I think it was the second to last day that we had to film that scene, and it was just so tough. Me and Nico have so much fun off set, and we’re joking around, and then that day, I remember, we kind of just stayed away from each other, because we knew it was going to be difficult, and we knew we would not be able to go in and out of making fart jokes to that scene.

    I remember as soon as they would call cut, we would kind of just like turn away from each other and walk away and not really speak. It was very strange, and kind of heartbreaking for me.

    There’s an aspect of your career that has come with a large degree of fame. With this movie, you get to kind of put that aspect aside and do some hard work. Tell me about how those two things fit in your life: where you have to have perspective about what fame brings to you and makes some things easier — and some things harder, I’m sure. And then work, which also might be great one day and really difficult one day. Tell me how that all fits in your life.

    Yeah, it is true, this thing called fame — it was thrown to me at such a young age. It hits you like a ton of bricks over the head and you’re not really sure what to do with it. And it’s true there’s a lot of aspects that fame can make your life easier and more enjoyable, but it also can present a lot of challenges.

    The biggest thing for me is being able to use your fame, or your popularity, to be able to affect people in a positive way, and that’s kind of one of the reasons I chose to do this movie is the message in it. I feel like a lot of people my age, teens and young 20s, can relate to Rey in the sense that he just wants to run away, and he just wants to start over. Whatever that pain is that’s in his life and his past, he just wants a new, fresh start.

    I think a lot of people can relate to that. But they don’t know: are they going to find that light at the end of the tunnel? This story really gives that glimpse of hope.

    You’ve got fans that have followed you from the moment they discovered you. What do you hope that they find in performances like these and the future projects that they’re going to follow you to? What are you hoping that they are enjoying out of staying loyal to your “brand” in a sense?

    I think it’s exactly that: I do want to do projects that they’re going to enjoy and be entertained by. But I think the biggest thing is being able to play roles and do projects that just affect people in a positive way.

    Recently, I’ve been choosing things that allow me to do that. It’s cool just to know that you can affect people like that, get messages across to them and teach life lessons. We’re all learning and growing together.

    You mentioned that fear factor being enticing to you now. What was scary about “Scream Queens”?

    Because it’s something I’ve never done before. I do a small British show called “Cuckoo,” but besides that, it’s really the first TV I’ve done. So that in itself was foreign to me. Being thrown into a cast that is already a family, and me being the new one was scary for me.

    And an all-star cast at that.

    Exactly. And to be jumping into a cast like that, just such terrific actors, it was intimidating at first. I was like, “How am I going to fit in? I don’t know.” But I kind of just trusted Ryan Murphy, which is easy to do. It’s turned out well. I’ve had so much fun, personally and creatively, and I’m so glad that I did it.

    What did you find out about your own comedic aptitude? Most of the material that you’d done hadn’t been comedy-centric, really. So to figure out how you were funny and the ways you were going to be funny for this show — what was the fun discovery in that?

    I have recently done a couple comedy things that I’ve really enjoyed. I had so much fun with it. This specifically, my character Cassidy Cascade is very real. There’s so many big characters in the show, just, like, otherworldly. Cassidy is kind of real. That’s kind of where I had to find the comedy, surrounded by the huge, crazy personalities, finding the comedy in just the actual realness of the show.

    And yet he’s dead.

    And yet he is dead!

    Or so we all — and he — presumes.

    Right.

    So tell me about figuring out how you were going to come at that.

    “Scream Queens” is so insane because it’s true that they don’t tell you what is happening next. You literally are given a script for one episode, and you read it, and you film that, and they don’t tell you where you’re character is going to go, they don’t tell us who the killers are, they don’t tell us anything at all. They keep us in the dark. So it does make it challenging to play some of the things.

    Like, I hear that I’m dead. I’m like, “Do I actually think I’m dead? Maybe I’m not really dead. So how do I play it? Am I going to pretend that I am dead?” It allows you to use your imagination, and I think that’s what they kind of want.

    But it definitely is challenging, because with a movie script, you see where your character is going to go. You know where he begins and where he ends. It’s quite the opposite with this.

    You don’t know necessarily if they’re going to change up anything or if there are characters on the show that you’re going to be working with more so than you have before? You don’t really know anything ahead?

    Correct. They don’t tell us anything. As soon as we get the script for the next episode, we all go into our trailers during lunch and read it as fast as possible. One, to see who dies, so we can start saying goodbye to them. And two, yeah, there’s always some sort of jaw-dropping moment in every episode that you don’t see coming. So they keep us on our toes for sure.

    It looked like, before the second season premiered, that the cast was hazing you a little bit. They were playfully giving you a hard time in interviews, teasing you — was that also going on while you were shooting?

    I don’t think there has been too much hazing. Me and [John] Stamos were pretty much the new guys. So we’re surrounded by a lot of estrogen and a lot of big personalities. Everybody is nice. They welcomed us with open arms. They didn’t make it too rough. They definitely could have made it a lot worse!

    “Run the Tide” opens in theaters and On Demand / Digital HD on December 2. “Scream Queens” airs Tuesdays on Fox.

  • Kirstie Alley to Cause Trouble in ‘Scream Queens’ Season 2

    Celebrities Visit SiriusXM Studios - January 6, 2016We’ve seen Kirstie Alley in a lot of reality TV over the past several years, but lately, she has been taking on more scripted roles.

    The actress is adding to the hilariously scary cast of Fox’s “Scream Queens” Season 2 as a series regular, reports Variety. With the show moving from a sorority house to a hospital, Alley will play an administrator at the C.U.R.E. Institute. It sounds like she’ll be stirring up trouble, given that her character is described as “brilliant and devious.”

    Alley will be in good company on the show. The cast is bringing back Jamie Lee Curtis, Emma Roberts, Lea Michele, Abigail Breslin, Keke Palmer, Billie Lourd, Glen Powell, and Niecy Nash for Season 2. She also joins fellow newcomers John Stamos, Taylor Lautner, and James Earl.

    Like sorority row in Season 1, the hospital will be visited by all kinds of strangely funny horror as the anthology series continues. We can expect plenty of laughs and screams as Cathy Munsch (played by Curtis) takes over running the medical center and the Chanels go from convicts to medical students.

    “Scream Queens” Season 2 premieres on Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 9 p.m. ET on Fox.

    [via: Variety]

  • ‘Scream Queens’ First Look: Season 2 Gets Scarier, Funnier

    When you move from a sorority house to a hospital, things are bound to get scarier, and that will be the case in “Scream Queens” Season 2, according to a new first look video. Luckily, the funny factor will be ratcheted up, too.

    Fox released the preview Wednesday, offering insight into the upcoming season with clips as well as interviews with members of the comedy horror series’ cast, including returning stars Lea Michele, Emma Roberts, and Keke Palmer, and newcomers Taylor Lautner and John Stamos. They promised a hilarious second season, one that will also be darker and push more boundaries.

    When “Scream Queens” returns, we’ll get to see the Chanels take on medical school at a hospital bought by Jamie Lee Curtis‘ character, Cathy Munsch. That is scary in itself, but just wait till people start “dropping like flies,” as Michele says.

    “Scream Queens” Season 2 premieres on Fox on Sept. 20.

  • ‘Everybody Wants Some!!’ Star Glen Powell Says ‘Scream Queens’ Season 2 Is ‘Damn Good’

    There are times when an actor on the verge of big things first steps into his moment, and Glen Powell has certainly stepped into his.

    Powell became an overnight sensation with his alternately cocky and clueless portrayal of the verbose, sexually indiscriminate frat boy Chad Radwell on executive producer Scream Queens,” a role he’ll be reprising in the show’s second season. And the actor followed up with a standout performance among the soon-to-be-all-star ensemble of filmmaker Richard Linklater‘s ’80s-era college comedy “Everybody Wants Some!!” as Finnegan, the centered, smooth-talking undergrad everyone wished they were in school.

    With “Everybody Wants Some!!” debuting on Blu-ray July 12th, Powell joined Moviefone for a look back at his game-changing year — AND, having just perused the early scripts for “Scream Queens” Season 2, he offers a hint of what he thinks may be an even superior set-up for the slasher series.

    Moviefone: You’ve known Richard Linklater a long time!

    Glen Powell: I knew Rick from “Fast Food Nation,” when I was like 14 or 15. Yeah … I was 15 years old! So I knew Rick from that, but we literally hadn’t kept in touch. We just kind of saw each other around Austin every once in a while. But I had to go through [a lot] — I felt like I definitely jumped through more hoops than anybody to get this gig. That’s for sure.

    But you know what? That’s the great part about Rick, is he’s all about performance. He doesn’t care about the resume. Most of these guys, it was their first movie ever. So it’s really nice when a director has such confidence in themselves that they don’t feel like they need to cast the flavor of the week, or who they can market, or who’s got an Instagram presence or whatever the hell that people do now.

    It’s that he just casts the right person for the role, which is how it should be, and that’s why I think Rick is obviously one of the best that’s every been. It’s because it’s all about the product on the screen. He doesn’t think like a marketing person, he thinks like a real auteur.

    When you see this movie, you do get that feeling of like, the cast of “Dazed and Confused,” or movies like “American Graffiti” and “Diner,” where everybody is going to have a nice long run in Hollywood. What was it like to be around that kind of energy, where everybody knew that this was a good moment in time for them?

    That’s what I kind of kept telling everybody. I’ve been doing this a long time — I’m still relatively a young pup, but what you start to realize — and actually Quinton [Johnson’s] walking in the room right now, and I’ve told him this a million times, this is his first movie — I said, “It’s all downhill from here. You’re going to do a lot of movies, and for the most part this is the best business to be in in the world, and the happiest you’ll ever see me is when I’m on a film set.” But I said, “This is something that’s really, really special, and just live in the moment.”

    Just like we were in the movie: “Just live in the moment and understand what it is, and that you are living the greatest period of your entire life. Because no matter how big of a film career you have, or however many franchises you star in or you become Tom Cruise or whoever, this is like the really special moment in time. There’s nobody in this movie that anybody recognizes right now. We’re all kind of unknowns, and we’re kind of in the same boat. This group of strangers that kind of got put together and kind of bonded to create something I think is going to stand the test of time.”

    As you said, you’ve been doing this for a while, but you’ve had this amazing sort of one-two punch with this movie and with “Scream Queens” in the last several months. What that’s meant to you, and how has that kind of propelled your career forward?

    Man, it’s been a nice change of pace! I think, when you move out to L.A., you’ve got to have confidence in what you do and your ability and whatnot, but you realize very, very quickly that it’s not up to you. That a lot of other people have to grant you the right to act. It’s really been a nice change of pace in terms of obviously getting the opportunity from Rick, and then the opportunity from Ryan [Murphy] to do this.

    Now, I’m getting to be in rooms with really amazing filmmakers that I’ve looked up to for a long time. Like I said, that’s the dream, and I don’t take it lightly. You’ve got to make the right decisions, and you’ve got to keep working with people that are your heroes, because just working for the sake of working doesn’t keep you around the club, and honestly, just because you’re there doesn’t mean you’re in the club forever. So you’ve got to keep the same amount of work ethic and do the same thing.

    But, I’ve got to say, I know exactly where I could be. I know more talented actors than me that are waiting tables right now. I know I could easily be waiting tables right now. So I really appreciate guys like Rick and guys like Ryan Murphy for taking shots on me.

    Ryan and Brad Falchuk and their team can definitely keep their actors in the dark, and I know you were told almost nothing about “Scream Queens” Season 2 by the time they announced you’d be returning. Have they shed any light on how you’re going to figure into the new scenario?

    It’s really funny: I literally just read the first two episodes on the train. It is fresh on the brain. I’ve got to say, what’s really crazy is I think this could be a better season. I really do!

    It feels very much like the sorority aspect of the Greek system was very fun and it has a certain amount of style and sex appeal to it that I thought was really, really fun. But I’ve got to say, this takes place at a hospital for like weird diseases and things like that. Where, inherently, terrible people that you saw in that other season, I feel like can thrive in an even better way.

    So it’s really, really fun. It’s really … it’s damn good. The only thing that was a little shocking is how naked Chad Radwell is, so I’m going to have to start cutting carbs and sugar and figure out how to do a crunch in the next month!

    That character could have easily been a one-off, and you certainly made the most of it. Are you creatively energized to be able to have a chance to take him to an even further level next time around?

    The cool part about a guy like Ryan Murphy is he gives you, just like Rick, a pretty long leash on being able to kind of collaborate on stuff, and have my input in terms of flavor. If I had ideas, there were a lot of ideas that actually incorporated, that I was, like, sitting in bed at night being like, “Oh!” and I’d text Ryan or text Brad and Ian [Brennan]. A lot of it, they were very, very generous in that regard.

    But I’ve got to say, there’s a certain amount of … you’ve got to figure out, just like making a sequel to these hit movies, they’re rebooting everything, you’ve got to figure out what people like. You want to obviously change the character in ways that creatively energize you, but you’ve got to still stick with the greatest hits. So that’s just the tightrope I guess you walk. I’ve never really done more than an episode of television, ever. So now I was on a show for a season, and now I’m going into Season 2. You just have to kind of figure out how to keep it fresh and fun, and still stick with the flavor that people dug before.

  • Fox Announces Fall 2016 Premiere Dates

    Like NBC before it, Fox has become the next network to announce its slate of premiere dates for the fall 2016 schedule.

    The network unveiled its lineup on Thursday, which includes several new shows: sports drama “Pitch,” animated-live action hybrid comedy “Son of Zorn,” and series adaptations of movies “The Exorcist” and “Lethal Weapon.”

    Looking ahead, the hotly-anticipated revival of drama “Prison Break” will debut sometime during the midseason in 2017, as will the 12th and final season of “Bones” and the fourth season of “Sleepy Hollow.” Those midseason premieres will be announced at a later date.

    Here’s the full rundown of Fox’s fall 2016 premiere dates:

    Monday, Sept. 19
    8:00-9:00 PM — GOTHAM (Season Three Premiere)
    9:00-10:00 PM — LUCIFER (Season Two Premiere)

    Tuesday, Sept. 20
    8:00-8:30 PM — BROOKLYN NINE-NINE (Season Four Premiere)
    8:30-9:00 PM — NEW GIRL (Season Six Premiere)
    9:00-10:00 PM — SCREAM QUEENS (Season Two Premiere)

    Wednesday, Sept. 21
    8:00-9:00 PM — LETHAL WEAPON (Series Premiere)
    9:00-10:00 PM — EMPIRE (Season Three Premiere)

    Thursday, Sept. 22
    8:00-9:00 PM — ROSEWOOD (Season Two Premiere)
    9:00-10:00 PM — PITCH (Series Premiere)

    Friday, Sept. 23
    8:00-9:00 PM — HELL’S KITCHEN (Season 16 Premiere)
    9:00-10:00 PM — THE EXORCIST (Series Premiere)

    Sunday, Sept. 25
    7:30-8:00 PM — BOB’S BURGERS (Season Seven Premiere)
    8:00-8:30 PM — THE SIMPSONS (Season 28 Premiere)
    8:30-9:00 PM — SON OF ZORN (Series Premiere)
    9:00-9:30 PM — FAMILY GUY (Season 14 Premiere)
    9:30-10:00 PM — THE LAST MAN ON EARTH (Season Three Premiere)

    [via: Variety]

    Photo credit: Fox

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  • 13 Greatest TV Devils of All Time

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    Yes, we know Fox’s new series “Lucifer” (debuting Jan. 24) has a lofty pedigree, with Tom Ellis‘s bored Beelzebub having originated as a character in Neil Gaiman’s “Sandman” comic series. But still, you have the ruler of Hell on your show, and the best you can think of to keep him occupied is to have him hang out in Los Angeles and solve crimes? Isn’t that Chris O’Donnell‘s job?

    Besides, TV has a long history of handling the Devil with wit and creativity, as this list of our 13 favorite TV Devils shows.

  • Lea Michele Teases ‘Scream Queens’ Season 2: Will Hester Return?

    Warning: Spoilers ahead from the “Scream Queens” Season 1 finale.

    “Scream Queens” Season 1 just ended, with the revelation of multiple Red Devil killers: Boone (Nick Jonas), Gigi (Nasim Pedrad), Pete (Diego Boneta), and Boone’s twin sister, Hester (Lea Michele), who was the only (known) Red Devil left alive after the FOX comedy’s season finale.

    Lea Michele’s Hester was the mastermind behind the killings and also the framing of the Chanels, who ended up in an asylum where — surprise! — they were actually happy. (Emma Roberts’s Chanel Oberlin may not stay happy since the Red Devil found her in the end.)

    Now what?


    Before Season 1 started, Ryan Murphy told Entertainment Weekly, “Whoever survives—and there will be people who will survive—they will go on next season to a new location and a new terror. Unlike ‘American’ Horror Story, which completely reboots, this has some of the continuity in that some of the characters and some of the relationships continue into a new world.”

    On that note, after the finale, Entertainment Tonight talked to Lea Michele about the future of her character. If there is a “Scream Queens” Season 2 (which is not official at this point), would Lea be up for bringing Hester back?


    Here’s Lea’s enthusiastic reply: “Of course! What do you mean? I’m already waiting, I’m patiently waiting! Obviously, Ryan has shared with a few of us what his ideas for next year are and I think that they’re so exciting and I’m down. I think it will be really great too to see Hester in that environment. Ryan shared that next year there would be a whole new killer and so to see her really in the position of being the victim, I think would be really fun to play.”

    ET asked for any predictions on the next killer. “Oh my gosh, I don’t think it gets any better than the Red Devil, but we’ll see. I’m sure whatever Ryan has in his mind is better than anything I could think of on my own.”

    If Lea wants Hester to return, she probably will, but who else might be back? The Chanels? The Dean? Grace? Zayday? Please bring back Glen Powell’s Chad Radwell and Niecy Nash’s Denise Hemphill. They. Are. Gold.

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  • 25 Greatest Horror Movie Heroines Ever, Ranked

    %Slideshow-334070% Why is the horror audience mostly female? One reason has to be the genre’s long tradition of heroines, scream queens, or final girls.

    They’re the last ones left standing in the movie’s final act, taking on the killer or monster while — armed with little more than pluck and righteous anger (and the occasional sharp object). Then again, who doesn’t enjoy watching a horror movie lead character overcome their fear and act like a badass? While not all horror movie heroines face-off with the Big Bad by the end of the film, they do suffer through all the jump-scares with us. It’s a miracle we they come out alive.

    Here are 25 of the best horror movie heroines who conquered demons — both internal and external — before conquering the multiplex.