Tag: scream

  • 25 Best Teen Horror Movies to Watch

    25 Best Teen Horror Movies to Watch

    Here are the best slasher pics that all fans of the horror movie genre should see.

    25. ‘Disturbing Behavior’ (1998)

    Katie Holmes on the movie Disturbing Behavior in 1998
    Dimension

    Not a great film, but a decent premise, at least — it’s a high school version of “The Stepford Wives,” with delinquent teens turned into overachieving, fascist automatons. Katie Holmes and James Marsden are the well-scrubbed leads, but Nick Stahl steals the movie as the most tormented of the teens.
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    24. ‘The Slumber Party Massacre’ (1982)

    This chiller, about teen sleepover guests menaced by a power-drill-wielding serial killer, was written as a genre parody (by “Rubyfruit Jungle” novelist Rita Mae Brown, of all people), but it was shot as a straight horror film. It works on both levels, scary and tongue-in-cheek.
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    23. ‘Urban Legend’ (1998)

    urban legend movie 1998
    Dimension

    Here’s one about a copycat killer whose murders mimic famous urban legends. A cast that includes Jared Leto, Joshua Jackson, Alicia Witt, and Rebecca Gayheart give this premise more credibility than it merits.
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    22. ‘My Bloody Valentine’ (1981)

    Not just the name of a cool band, “My Bloody Valentine” was also perhaps the goriest of the early wave of holiday-themed slasher movies. Here, the target is a Valentine’s Day dance in a mining town beset by gruesome tragedy. The killer is armed with a miner’s pickaxe and has a fondness for cutting out people’s hearts and putting them in candy boxes. How festive.
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    21. ‘Sleepaway Camp’ (1983)

    You’d think “Friday the 13th” would have had this territory covered, but you’d be wrong. Typical exploitation fare, but for a gender-bending shocking-twist finale worthy of “Psycho.”
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    20. ‘The Faculty’ (1998)

    Elijah Wood on the Faculty movie in 1998
    Dimension

    Robert Rodriguez’s tongue-in-cheek teen horror movie, written by “Scream” scribe Kevin Williamson, probably deserves a better reputation than it’s earned over the years. The tale of a high school whose students believe their teachers have been taken over by alien parasites is not that original, but it’s well-executed — thanks to Rodriguez’s inventive direction and a cast of future all-stars that includes Elijah Wood, Jordana Brewster, Josh Hartnett, and Jon Stewart.
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    19. ‘I Was a Teenage Werewolf’ (1957)

    I was a teenage werewolf movie 1957 Today, it’s considered camp, but back then, the idea of a teenage monster was actually considered shocking. This movie launched a series of similar exploitation films in which puberty, adolescence, and delinquency are conflated with monstrous metamorphoses. It was a huge hit, and it made a star out of Michael Landon in the lead role.
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    18. ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ (1992)

    Yeah, this horror-comedy lacks the dark brilliance of the TV adaptation that followed, but the original movie, for all its “Valley Girl”-with-vampires silliness, is actually not that bad. That climactic prom night vampire attack certainly hints at where Joss Whedon would go with the series.
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    17. ‘Last House on the Left’ (1972)

    This early Wes Craven film is adapted from no less arty a source than Ingmar Bergman’s “The Virgin Spring.” Two teenage girls are tortured, raped, and murdered by a Manson-like gang, but their parents capture the killers and wreak bloody vengeance. Craven later remade the movie when he could command a real budget, but the original, in all its cheap, exploitative glory, is the one to watch.
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    16. ‘Prom Night’ (1980)

    Jamie Lee Curtis in Prom Night movie in 1980
    Sony

    Long before “I Know What You Did Last Summer” came this cult-fave entry in the group-secretly-responsible-for-manslaughter-stalked-by-vengeful-killer genre. Jamie Lee Curtis cemented her early scream-queen reputation as the dead girl’s sister, whose prom night is ruined by the relentless slasher.
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    15. ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ (1997)

    The kids-stalked-by-hook-handed-killer plot is no more original than the urban legend that spawned it. Still, as with other Kevin Williamson horror movies, this one benefits a lot from the casting, which includes Jennifer Love Hewitt (in her first ghoulish role), “Scream” alumna Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze, Jr., and Ryan Phillippe.
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    14. ‘The Blob’ (1958)

    The blob movie 1958
    Fox

    Steve McQueen’s first feature film lead came as the teen hero in this tale of a small town whose populace is rapidly being consumed by a mass of alien Jell-O. The film’s clever centerpiece involved the blob attacking an theater full of teens watching a horror movie. (Meta!) The 1988 remake with Kevin Dillon and Shawnee Smith isn’t bad, either.
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    13. ‘The Craft’ (1996)

    The craft movie 1996
    Sony

    A coven of teen witches uses magic to obtain the usual teen-girl wants: boyfriends, clear skin, etc. Of course, they go too far (especially freaky Fairuza Balk), and a cosmic comeuppance is in order. Known more for its style than its scares, this one was still frightfully influential.
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    12. ‘Fright Night’ (1985)

    This fondly-remembered horror comedy about a teenage boy who discovers that his suave neighbor, played by Chris Sarandon (“The Princess Bride”), is a vampire but can’t convince anyone except for a cheeseball TV horror-movie host (Roddy McDowall). Pick this over the Colin Farrell remake.
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    11. ‘Final Destination’ (2000)

    final destination movie 2000
    New Line

    A nightmare vision keeps a group of teens from boarding what turns out to be a doomed plane, but Death will not be cheated. It soon picks off the survivors one by one, by staging a series of elaborate, lethal accidents. As the franchise continued, the killings became increasingly complex — and far-fetched. Still, there’s much to be said for a horror villain that can’t be defeated, only put off for a while.
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    10. ‘Ginger Snaps’ (2000)

    ginger snaps movie 2000
    Motion International

    This Canadian cult-classic launched a franchise and brought something fresh to the werewolf genre. Here, the afflicted heroine’s monstrous changes are linked to her beginning menstruation and burgeoning sexuality. The result is both scary and a smart critique of the horrors of puberty for girls in our society.
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    9. ‘The Lost Boys’ (1987)

    the lost boys movie 1987
    WB

    This horror comedy earned a lot of derision for giving us the Coreys (Haim and Feldman), but it works on many levels — gothic teen romance (between bitten Jason Patric and Jami Gertz), teen peer pressure cautionary tale (if a gang of teen vampires tries to recruit you, just say no — especially if creepy Kiefer Sutherland is the gang leader) — comic-book parody, and seedy frightfest.
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    8. ‘Friday the 13th’ (1980)

    You never forget your first visit to Camp Crystal Lake, especially if you’re a promiscuous teen. Before Jason became an unstoppable, hockey-masked killer in the later entries, it was his mom who did the slashing, back when the premise was still fresh.
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    7. ‘It Follows’ (2014)

    it follows movie 2014
    RADiUS

    This bare-bones teen horror thriller centers on a young teen and her friends plagued by some sort of curse (its origins and specifics are intentionally, terrifyingly, vague) that spreads like an STD. That aspect makes the film even more relevant and clever as it slow-burns toward one hell of an unsettling climax.
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    6. ‘IT’ (2017)

    It movie 2017
    WB/New Line

    Stephen King scored his most successful (commercially) adaptation with this record-breaking hit, that pit the teens of Derry against the murder-fueled clown Pennywise. The rest is box office history.
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    5. ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ (1984)

    If other slasher films implicitly punished teens for bad behavior, this one went after them merely for thinking bad thoughts. Not even your subconscious is safe from Freddy Krueger. Yeah, this franchise-launcher has a lot of lame imitators to answer for. On the other hand, it also gave us Johnny Depp. So there’s that.
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    4. ‘The Cabin in the Woods’ (2011)

    Joss Whedon co-wrote with director Drew Goddard one of the best modern horror films, full of meta references to many movies on this list. In doing so, they successfully pay homage to — and subvert — the genre. Ever wonder why so many teens meet stab-happy deaths at the titular location? “Cabin” answers that question with an intricate (and terrifying) “upstairs, downstairs” mythology that involves zombie pain worshipers, werewolves and, of course, a mer-man.
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    3. ‘Carrie’ (1976)

    Carrie movie 1976
    MGM

    The first Stephen King novel to be translated to the screen, “Carrie” remains a well-executed film of bullying and horrific revenge. It’s a cautionary tale about religious extremism, an allegory about the terrors of puberty and female adolescence, a hear-wrenching showcase for Sissy Spacek in the title role, a source of iconic moments (Worst. Prom. Ever.), and a brutally effective Brian De Palma scare machine, right down to that shocking final shot.
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    2. ‘Halloween’ (1978)

    Halloween movie 1978
    Universal

    John Carpenter’s classic pretty much wrote the rules for teen slasher films as we know them. Michael Myers is, of course, one of the scariest horror villains ever, and Jamie Lee Curtis is one of the great scream-queens of all time. The rest of the franchise may have come to seem rote, but the original is still plenty terrifying.
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    1. ‘Scream’ (1996)

    Scream movie 1996
    Dimension

    Before the franchise descended into (deliberate?) self-parody, Wes Craven‘s slasher saga managed to spoof a tired genre while revitalizing it for a new generation. It works as both a parody and a damn scary movie on its own terms.

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  • The 21 Best ’90s Horror Movies, Ranked

    The 21 Best ’90s Horror Movies, Ranked

  • ‘Scream’ Reboot Gets Premiere Date, First Trailer

    ‘Scream’ Reboot Gets Premiere Date, First Trailer

    VH1

    Get ready to “Scream” in a few weeks.

    The long-in-the-works television reboot of “Scream” is finally going to terrorize fans this July in a three-night event.

    The project is moving from its original home on MTV to VH1 and will premiere July 8. The six-episode season, titled “Scream: Resurrection, will run two hours a night, starting at 9 p.m., through Wednesday, July 10.

    The third season of “Scream” was announced in October 2016. The reboot would feature a brand-new cast, premise and location — as well as the actual Ghostface mask for the first time on television.

    Roger Jackson, who voiced the killer in the “Scream” film franchise, will reprise the role for the VH1 version.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Xn9bE4z7_8&feature=youtu.be

    Season 3 centers on Deion Elliot (RJ Cyler), a local star football running back, whose tragic past comes back to haunt him and threaten his hard-earned plans for the future — and the lives of his unlikely group of friends.

    Also staring are Mary J. Blige, Keke Palmer, Tyler Posey, Tyga, Giorgia Whigham, Jessica Sula, C.J. Wallace and Giullian Yao Gioiello.  The first-look teaser trailer also reveals that Paris Jackson will make a cameo.

  • Here Are 7 Hidden Gems From Your Favorite Horror Directors

    Here Are 7 Hidden Gems From Your Favorite Horror Directors

    It’s easy for horror directors to be pigeonholed. It seems to come with the territory.

    If they’ve had success with one film, then that film winds up defining their entire career, whether that filmmaker likes it or not. Sometimes, though, these horror filmmakers make wild attempts with audacious films that, while they might not necessarily connect with audiences, make a big impact on those that see them. Its in this spirit of adventurousness — and coinciding with the imminent release of Shout Factory’s amazing new “Drag Me to Hell” Blu-ray — that we look at lesser known films from some of your favorite horror filmmakers that you might have missed. Just be sure to watch with the lights on.Tobe Hooper

    Best Known For:The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974)

    Our Recommendation:The Funhouse” (1981)

    Texas-born, Dr. Pepper-loving Tobe Hooper is best remembered for his groundbreaking “Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” and for directing at least part of Steven Spielberg‘s “Poltergeist.” But he had a long and varied filmography, from his big budget movies with Cannon Films to his return to independent features towards the end of his career. But our recommendation is 1981’s “The Funhouse.”

    It was Hooper’s first studio project and it’s as stunningly beautiful (the cinematography by Andrew Laszlo, who had just come off “The Warriors,” is amazing) as it is deeply scary. The plot concerns a group of teenagers stalked inside a carnival funhouse but that’s just an exclusive for Hooper to pile on the neatly stylized atmospherics and nifty suspense set pieces.Wes Craven

    Best Known for: A Nightmare on Elm Street” (1984) and “Scream” (1996)

    Our Recommendation:The Serpent and the Rainbow” (1988)

    Few horror filmmakers can lay claim to an entire franchise, let alone two huge sensations. But with “Scream” and “Nightmare on Elm Street,” Wes Craven can handily take responsibility for two of the most influential horror series ever. But some of his smaller, less well-received films are also his most interesting.

    Case in point, “The Serpent and the Rainbow.” Based on the nonfiction bestseller by Wade Davis, Craven sensationalized and embellished on that original text, amplifying an already horrific tale of zombies and voodoo in the Amazon jungle. Sometimes, this makes things somewhat wobbly, at least on a tonal level, but it’s undeniably gritty, thrilling stuff.John Carpenter

    Best Known for:Halloween” (1978), “The Thing” (1981).

    Our Recommendation:Prince of Darkness” (1987)

    John Carpenter is one of our favorite American filmmakers, period. He’s made so many great movies. But one of his most underrated, scariest, and indeed best, is “Prince of Darkness.”

    This apocalyptic tale (penned by Carpenter under a pseudonym) follows a group of grad students, scientists, and priests, as they study a vial of otherworldly green goo uncovered in the basement of an ancient church. Weird and deeply unsettling, “Prince of Darkness” goes to some genuinely unexpected places and feels formally adventurous (particularly when it comes to some early found footage-type elements). If you’ve never see it, be prepared — it’ll scare you silly.David Cronenberg

    Best Known for:The Fly” (1986)

    Our Recommendation:The Brood” (1979)

    Canadian filmmaker David Cronenberg broke through to the mainstream with his witty remake of “The Fly” and had a recent critical resurgence with a series of more traditional (but still Cronenbergian) thrillers. But if you’re looking for something more outré and, indeed, totally scary, then we suggest looking back to “The Brood,” made before he had crossed over.

    Made around the time the director was going through a bitter custody battle, “The Brood” is unnerving and unrelenting, with suitably off-the-wall performances by Oliver Reed and a fearless Samantha Eggar (there’s a moment towards the end that she totally owns that will make you go “ewwww”).Gore Verbinski

    Best Known for:The Ring” (2012)

    Our Recommendation:A Cure for Wellness” (2017)

    Gore Verbinski has always flirted with the dark side, even when making giant spectacles (see his “Pirates of the Caribbean” films) and is perhaps best remembered for his chilling remake of the Japanese horror phenomenon “The Ring.” But just last year Verbinski returned to the genre and hardly anybody noticed.

    “A Cure for Wellness” is long and baroque (you could imagine Vincent Price filling in for Jason Isaacs without issue) but it’s also incredibly rewarding. It’s a singularly visionary, uniquely stylized romp that satirizes our modern obsession with wellness while also tapping into something much more primordial.Sam Raimi

    Best Known for: The “Evil Dead” Trilogy (1981, 1987, 1992)

    Our Recommendation:Drag Me to Hell” (2009)

    Although he ushered in the modern superhero era with his beloved “Spider-Man” films, Sam Raimi got his start making down-and-dirty horror movies that both scared and delighted in equal measure. So when he got done with the web-slinger, he returned to his roots, completing the delightfully gooey “Drag Me to Hell.” And it flopped.

    But already it seems that there is a small but vocal group that considers “Drag Me to Hell” a lost classic (because it is). Smartly adapted for the financial crisis, a young bank worker (Alison Lohman) is cursed by a vengeful gypsy. After that, well, it all goes to hell. You can feel Raimi’s looseness and joy coming through in every frame. He’s so excited to scare an audience again. It’s a blast.George A. Romero

    Best Known for:Night of the Living Dead” (1968)

    Our Recommendation:Monkey Shines” (1988)

    When George A. Romero passed away last year, most zeroed in on his zombie films, which served as both socio-political allegories and midnight movie freakouts. But there were a number of fascinating one-offs in his career, some more celebrated than others. “Monkey Shines” is most definitely not all that appreciated, but it’s still scary as hell and very much worth a watch.

    The set-up is undeniably goofy (a quadriplegic man develops a psychic and sinister bond with his service monkey) but Romero commits to the premise fully and the slick production (it was Romero’s first studio film) is undeniably impressive. (That David Shire score!) While some last-minute tinkering from the studio robbed the movie of its more moody tone, it’s still scary as hell.

  • 14 ’90s Movies That Are So ’90s It Hurts

    14 ’90s Movies That Are So ’90s It Hurts

  • 14 Horror Movies That Were Total Game Changers

    14 Horror Movies That Were Total Game Changers

  • MTV Rebooting ‘Scream’ TV Series in Season 3 With New Cast, Story

    http://brooklynbrainery.com/courses/classic-charcoal-drawing-for-beginnersMTV wants a whole new “Scream.”

    The network wants to overhaul the horror TV series with a new cast and storyline for its upcoming third season , Deadline reports.

    MTV ordered a six-episode third season last fall, despite flagging ratings. The second season averaged 377,000 viewers in Live+same day, half of what season 1 drew. Still, the network remains committed to “Scream,” and the studio, Dimension TV, is looking for a new showrunner who can provide a new take on the show, which itself is a reimagination of the film franchise. It’s unlikely that events and characters from seasons 1 and 2 would be incorporated or even mentioned.

    Cast members from seasons 1 and 2 have reportedly been given permission to seek other work, and star Willa Fitzgerald has booked the Fox pilot “Behind Enemy Lines.”

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  • 22 Most Satisfying Movie Villain Deaths

    22 Most Satisfying Movie Villain Deaths

  • How Kevin Williamson Turned a Cult-Classic Movie Into ABC’s ‘Time After Time’

    There’s something a little meta already built into ABC’s new time-travel series, “Time After Time”: not only does it reach back to a cult-classic 1979 film for its foundation, it also takes the concept forward into a brand-new future.

    The original “Time After Time” movie — directed and adapted for the screen from Karl Alexander’s novel by filmmaker Nicholas Meyer (the even more classic “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan“) — has endured as a perfect, precise example of inventive time-travel plotting and endearingly rendered historic characters come to life: in the film, pioneering 19th century sci-fi novelist and futurist H.G. Wells (Malcolm McDowell), author of “The Time Machine,” actually devises his own working time travel device, which is hijacked by his friend and colleague, who turns out to be the now-legendary Victorian serial killer Jack the Ripper (David Warner) and who finds a new, fertile hunting ground in 1979 San Francisco. The film emerged as a critical sensation and a modest commercial success, its reputation and stature only increasing in the decades to follow.

    The film provides the basis for the series — which debuts March 5th and stars The Vampire Diaries”), who uses the basic premise for the pilot episode but immediately begins building out brand-new extensions to its mythology, as well as many subtle and not-so-subtle nods to the entirety of Wells’s works.

    Teaming with executive producer and director Marcos Siega, a veteran of “The Vampire Diaries” and a host of iconic music videos, Williamson reveals his plans to build a rich and complex world from the juicy set-up — as well as why he loves the original so much.

    Moviefone: By coincidence, I recently interviewed Nicholas Meyer about “Time After Time” for the Blu-ray edition, so it was really interesting to get his take on why the movie has survived.

    Kevin Williamson: Because it’s awesome! It’s great, and he’s a genius. That’s why.

    One of the things he thought, too, was that it’s because time travel is the one type of travel that we haven’t mastered in real life. So it’s still so rich, and there are so many things that you can fantasize about with time travel.

    Williamson: There’s something dreamy about it. What our characters do in the course of the mythology of our show is there’s certain characters that want to fix something. They have something empty, or they have something missing inside, and they’d like to just go back and fix this, then it’ll make everything right, it’ll make me complete. I’m talking about that one particular character who’s ultimately our villain.

    Maros Siega: But it’s escapism as a genre. I think that’s smart. It is the one thing we can’t do.

    Williamson: I do it all the time, I don’t know about you. [Laughs]

    The source material is this perfectly constructed movie, playing with those little paradoxes and fun time travel elements.

    Williamson: We’re very faithful to it. I hope we do Nicholas Meyer proud. I think we really honor his work. We try to.

    What I enjoyed about your take was that you do all of those things in the pilot, and then we’ve got so much other things to do.

    Williamson: “Then it begins …”

    When did it click, how do we go from this ingenious little story to a bigger world? How did you guys land on your path?

    Williamson: For me, it was the very same way that I discovered the movie, is that I saw the movie, I went, Jack the Ripper, H. G. Wells, and then I read the book, then I started looking up H. G. Wells and read “The Time Machine” and “The Island of Doctor Moreau,” watching all the movies and realized, “Oh, there’s a whole world here.”

    So in the same way that the time travel launches the series in Episode 1, I wanted to take that same idea with a young H. G. Wells and tell all the stories, and tell all of his books. The same way that if you’ve read “The Time Machine,” Nicholas Meyer has made a wink and a nod to a lot of moments in the book. H. G. Wells is very dense, but he explored a lot of themes.

    I feel like Nicholas Meyer touched on a lot of them in his movie, [author] Karl Alexander also in the book. I thought we could do the same on a weekly basis with all the various other shows, all various other books. Long-winded answer to say that.

    Did you see the same potential in this vast amount of Ripper lore that we have today? Did you want to look at that and say, “Let’s take a little inspiration here and there”?

    Williamson: We do. Like Nicholas Meyer did, we take upon the idea that he’s a doctor and a surgeon. We also play with the idea of Jack the Ripper as he’s defined in the traditional sense. We don’t take any special mythology to it, but then we create a character arc for him, and a character journey for him that takes him to a very interesting place.

    The very concept of the source material gives you permission to bring in historical characters. Tell me about the allure of that, because you’ve got the two at the center, but do you want to say “And here’s where Abraham Lincoln comes into our story … ?” Or is it better to have characters like Genesis Rodriguez’s character, with whom you can go anywhere?

    Williamson: Aren’t other shows doing that, where they’re doing period events?

    Siega: Yeah, that’s what it seems, and how we’re not really a time travel show. Because when we time travel, it’s very specific to our characters, and their journey, and their story, and not so much event-driven.

    Williamson: We’re a love story. We’re a story of family, and people, relationships.

    And those relationships are so important to driving everything, and you’ve got to find actors where the love story is as important as the “hate story” with these three characters. Tell me about finding that delicate mix: first in the writing, and then in the casting.

    Williamson: The pilot is very faithful to the original movie and book, so I wanted to keep that intact. That was very important to me, because what I loved about the characters that Nicholas Meyer had created was this idea that if a man who believed in utopia, and came to modern day, and was profoundly disappointed. And meanwhile, his adversary thrives and falls right in step.

    I really responded to those characters in a big way, and I wanted to do it in a modern context. So we tried to hold true to that. And then casting, the directing took over.

    Siega: In the casting, you come right off page with the charismatic Jack the Ripper, and in meeting Josh, he walked in and embodied that, the same with Freddie. They’re very much like their characters in real life. Freddie is a very sweet, wide-eyed, light, and Josh is cynical, and little dark, a little edgier. So we got really lucky with the cast. Then Genesis as Jane, that was a harder one to cast, but she’s great. It really works. A lot of chemistry with the three of them.

    From her past work, I would never have consciously equated Genesis with Mary Steenburgen, they’re individuals, but there’s a quirkiness they share that I really saw in the pilot.

    Siega: That’s good. I don’t know that I saw that.

    Williamson: You didn’t see the movie.

    Siega: I didn’t watch the movie. Mostly because of execution. Kevin talks about it constantly — he really, every conversation …

    Williamson: I have it memorized!

    Siega: He actually still doesn’t believe that I didn’t watch the movie. I’m like, “I really, truly didn’t.” I was afraid of mimicking, copying, and I wanted it to have its own voice. He was so true to it and he loves it so much.

    Have you seen it yet?

    Siega: No, I haven’t. I’ve read the book.

    Williamson: You know the movie, so you know I took the bedroom scene, the bedroom scene is kind of the bar scene in our show.

    Siega: And that I know because it’s in the trailer. I did watch the trailer.

    Williamson: So it was very important to me that we capture that scene, and I wanted those lines from the original movie. I just wanted those statements made, and I wanted to make sure. I thought, that scene was so important. I was like, “Watch the movie!”

    In a way, Kevin, like “The Vampire Diaries,” I feel like this project plays to your two great strengths. The “Dawson’s Creek” side with the emotional beats, and the horror side you’re known for from “Scream.” Did you feel that way as you were working on it?

    Williamson: I did! You know what I did think, it’s a sort of return to “Vampire Diaries,” which for the first two years is very mythology-driven. And yes, that’s vampire mythology, but now we’re in more of a science-fiction mythology. And it’s five minutes in the future, but we are dealing with the good and bad of humanity as it relates to technology. That’s what I thought “The Time Machine” by H. G. Wells was openly about. It was a social class struggle, to some degree, with your Morlocks and Eloi. Weena’s showing up at some point. Do you know who she is?

    Siega: I do! I read the book!

    Williamson: But it’s not in the form of Weena. She shows up as a homicide detective.

    Siega: She was a little bit more Weena before we made the change.

    Williamson: Yes, she was. You’re absolutely right.

    I’ll close on giving you a choice, would you rather use time travel for your personal purposes, to go to an era that you always wanted to see, or to fix something that you think you might have done wrong? Like “I wish I could go back and do that over.”

    Williamson: Because I’ve lived so long in the rules of time travel, I think it’s very important to know nothing was a mistake if you learn from it.

    Siega: I agree. I feel like anything you’ve done, good or bad, had a reason.

    Williamson: It is the fabric of what made you who you are. You have to own it.

    Siega: We’ve been living in that reality in the show. It starts to make sense.

    Williamson: That’s part of the show, which is you just can’t …

    Siega: So I would go back just to see.

    If you’re time travel tourists, where would you go?

    Williamson: Time traveling tourist? Where do you go just for fun?

    Siega: Dinosaurs! I do.

    Williamson: That’s so weird!

    Siega: I feel like every other time would be smelly.

    Williamson: That’s so big and epic, and I always go small and intimate. I always go with, like, I want to meet my parents when they were teenagers — things like that. I want to see how my dad grew up. I’d go that route — but I don’t know if that’s true, if I’d actually do what Genesis said and go back and buy Apple [stock].

    “Time After Time” premieres March 5th on ABC.

  • Unforgettable Teen Movie Hotties, Ranked From Worst to Best

    %Slideshow-376025% What’s a classic teen movie without a leading man that we’re all supposed to drool over?

    History has proven that the majority of these dudes are devastatingly handsome, but that doesn’t mean they’re more than their perfectly planned haircuts. Hey, they could even be a serial killer psychopath or (perhaps worse) wear an oversized leather cuff every single day. Deal breakers alert.

    There are many teen movie babes from the ’90s/early 2000s second golden age of the beloved genre, so we’ve decided to look back at a few memorable ones and pick favorites. Note: Their positions are based on personality, heart, style, and general boyfriend material-ness. This is not a beauty contest, people. Here, we’ve ranked ten teen movie dreamboats from whatevs to all that…AND a bag of chips. Duh.