How to Watch Every ‘Scream’ Movie In Order

Just going to make a bold statement here: with all due respect to Halloween, Friday the 13th, Nightmare on Elm Street, and any other worthy contender, the Scream movies are our greatest and most consistent horror franchise. That may be kind of a funny thing to think about, considering the entire premise of the Scream movies is the meta, self-referential relationship they have with basically all of those franchise we just named. But where those movies all tend to fall off a bit in one way or another, the Scream movies, really, are consistently funny and scary to the point where if you’re a fan of the series, you’re never going to have a bad time watching (or re-watching). While we know what we’re getting from the Freddys, Jasons, and Michaels of the world, we never know who’s going to be taking that Ghostface mask during the third act of a Scream movie.

Now, with Scream VI—the latest installment in the long-running franchise—coming to theaters, it’s as great a time as ever to watch each existing movie in the slasher franchise. Whether it’s your first time watching, and you only know Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox), and Dewey Riley(David Arquette) from their spoof versions in Scary Movie or you’ve watched each Scream installment 100 times each, it’s good to know that you can watch every movie in the delightful horror movie world of Woodsboro right now—and you’ll have options on where to stream.

Another good thing about the Scream movies? None of them are all that long, so it lends itself really nicely to some marathon movie nights or serial binge viewing.

So, now’s your chance: start making some popcorn and queue up a scary movie. You’ve just got to hope that a phone call from Ghostface doesn’t interrupt those plans before they even start.

Scream (1996)

scream, skeet ulrich, neve campbell, 1996

Dimension Films/Courtesy Everett Collection

While every movie in the franchise is good, there will never be a better Scream movie than the original Scream. Director Wes Craven experimented with meta, self-referential horror a few years prior with his reimagined Freddy Krueger movie New Nightmare, but Scream was a sensation from top to bottom, clearly—they wouldn’t still be making sequels 26 years later unless that was unequivocally the case. Come for the scares and the laughs, and stay for the perfect cast, obviously featuring Campbell, Arquette, and Cox, but also with dynamite turns from Drew Barrymore, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich, Matthew Lillard, Jamie Kennedy, and even Henry Winkler.

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Scream 2 (1997)

scream 2

Dimension Films

Horror sequels can get a bad rap, and sometimes that rap is warranted—sorry Halloween Kills—but it’s certainly not the case with Scream 2, which captured the same energy as the original while following Sidney Prescott to college. The supporting cast here is really just stunningly stacked: Jada Pinkett, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Timothy Olyphant, Laurie Metcalf, Joshua Jackson, Jerry O’Connell, and a returning Liev Schreiber (with a much larger role than in the original) join the fun.

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Scream 3 (2000)

scream 3

Dimension Films

Scream 3 is usually considered the weakest in the series, but even that’s not that bad. Sure, it’s a little goofier than the others, but if you like Scream movies, it’s hard to imagine you not having a good time with this one. Parker Posey is both hilarious and a perfect fit for the world Wes Craven builds here.

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Scream 4 (2011)

scream 4

Phil.Bray

It’s a conversation to be had, but some could argue that the best Scream sequel is Scream 4, which came 11 years after the previous movie and finds newcomers Emma Roberts, Rory Culkin, Hayden Panettierre, Alison Brie, and Marley Shelton joining Campbell, Cox, and Arquette. The movie keeps up with the horror of its time—as any Scream movie should—and features a dynamite, super fun plot with plenty of exciting twists.

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Scream (2022)

scream 2022

Paramount

The new Scream movie—the fifth in the series, though it’s just called Scream—hit theaters 11 years after the last movie in the series, and with a new set of directors. Craven, who directed each of the first four films in the series, died in 2015; the fifth installment is helmed instead by Tyler Gillett and Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, whose previous movie was the dark comedy horror Ready or Not. You’ll be delighted to know that the new filmmakers handle themselves wonderfully; it feels like a Scream movie, and like something Craven would’ve approved of. Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, and David Arquette all return, and the new cast for this movie includes Jenna Ortega, In The Heights star Melissa Barrera, The Boys’ Jack Quaid, Yellowjackets and The Leftovers star Jasmin Savoy-Brown, Don’t Breathe’s Dylan Minnette,and Booksmart‘s Mason Gooding, all of whom do a great job fitting into this world.

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Scream VI (2023)

scream 5 cast

Philippe Bossé

If you were cautious about Scream VI—the first film in the long-running series to not feature main character Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell)—we simply cannot blame you. But we also will vouch, heavily, for the quality of this movie. Here, we find the survivors of the previous year’s Woodsboro massacre in New York City, some living their best lives and some not so much. While we miss Campbell, Courteney Cox returned once again, and everything else feels ramped up: the chase and action scenes are tense, the mystery is fun, and the cast (including a returning Melissa Barerra, Jenna Ortega, Mason Gooding, and Jasmine Savoy Brown) are all having a blast. It’s a damn fun slasher movie, and proves that this series is a) still the best and b) has plenty of life left in it.

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Evan is the culture editor for Men’s Health, with bylines in The New York Times, MTV News, Brooklyn Magazine, and VICE. He loves weird movies, watches too much TV, and listens to music more often than he doesn’t.

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