I just love Ryan Murphy, first American Horror Story and now Scream Queens. The show is gold. Fun, funny and creepy, all at the same time. I kinda feel like the show is a mixture of PLL and AHS and the result is amazing, 8/10
EW review:
For the first time in forever, weâre seeing that kind of quasi-glamorized, quasi-vilified mean girl again, on Foxâs new horror-comedy Scream Queens. It follows blonde-haired, black-hearted sorority fascist Chanel No. 1 (Emma Roberts), whoâs been forced by the universityâs Dean Munsch (Jamie Lee Curtis) to open Kappa House to all students â even âfatties and ethnics,â as Chanel calls them â while a devil-masked killer knocks off pledges and Kappa sisters alike. The pilot flashes back and forth between 1994, when a sorority girl died mysteriously at Kappa House, and the 20th anniversary of her death â a savvy way to appeal to both college-age viewers and their parents, who will recognize many of Scream Queenâs pop-culture references. When a security guard (Niecy Nash) lists all the ineffective ways sheâs prepared to protect Kappa House, sheâs winking at the self-aware genre comedy of Scream. Chanelâs archenemy, nice girl Grace (Skyler Samuels), has a make-out scene set to the closing song from Sixteen Candles. And, just like in Heathers, all the Kappa sisters have the same name. Thereâs airhead Chanel No. 2 (Ariana Grande), sassy Chanel No. 3 (Billie Lourd), and ambitious Chanel No. 5 (Abigail Breslin). No one seems to know what happened to Chanel No. 4.
Still, watching the Chanels work their magic, itâs obvious why this vintage mean-girl archetype is not as popular now, in this It Gets Better era when every queen bee from Jennifer Lawrence to Taylor Swift claims she was bullied in high school. We live in a time when itâs cool to be different and inclusive. And, ironically, thatâs partly thanks to Scream Queenâs creators, Ryan Murphy, Brad Falchuck, and Ian Brennan.
Murphy, Falchuck, and Brennan created Glee, a show so insistent upon its love of nerds and outcasts that it literally aired anti-bullying PSAs. But with its sharp wit and rat-a-tat dialogue, Glee sometimes sounded like it was longing to laugh at these nerds as often as it laughed along with them. Such outright spitefulness wouldnât have fit the showâs warm-fuzzy message, but on Scream Queens, thatâs no longer a problem. The over-the-top violence and campy comedy allow the writers to unleash their most evil dialogue. Case in point: Chanel No. 1 greets Kappaâs recruits by barking, âGood evening, idiot hookers!â
At times, itâs hard to tell if Scream Queens is satirizing mean girls or acting like a mean girl itself. The most interesting characters are the misfit pledges: Grace, her black roommate Zayday (Keke Palmer), a deaf woman named Tiffany (Whitney Meyer), the neck-braced Hester (Lea Michelle), the lesbian âPredatory Lezâ (Jeanna Han), and Jennifer (Breezy Eslin), a âcandle vloggerâ who reviews candles on YouTube. (âI call this one the Nancy Meyers Experience, because it smells like creamy couches and menopause.â) These women get all the best one-liners, and they also serve up the smartest meta-commentary about race, gender, sexuality, and class, which might make you assume that the show sides with these so-called losers.
But thatâs not the case when Scream Queens pushes easy shock value for its own sake, as when Chanel repeatedly insists that Kappaâs maid call her âwhite mammyâ and the other sorority sisters force the poor woman to say she âdonât know nothinâ bout birthinâ no babies.â (Also: todayâs sorority girls still quote Gone with the Wind? WTF? LMAO!) The show itself encourages us to mock Tiffany for being deaf, just like Chanel does. One scene finds Tiffany mistaking her fellow Kappa pledgesâ screaming for a Taylor Swift sing-along â a joke so tasteless, I almost turned off my TV.