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Cops

    Mark Kincaid 

Detective Mark Kincaid

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kincaid_8.png
"All I know about movie trilogies is that in the third one, all bets are off."

Played By: Patrick Dempsey

A detective assigned to work on the murders happening on the set of Stab 3.
  • Fair Cop: Mark Kincaid is a handsome detective.
  • Friendly Address Privileges: Allows Sidney to address him by his first name. By the fifth film, the privilege extends to Dewey as well.
  • Genre Savvy: He watches a lot of movies and knows what to expect from them. He arrives at Milton's mansion near the end of the film because he believes that it is the location of a potential third-act celebration.
  • Implied Love Interest: He and Sidney get along fairly well during their conversations, and there are some subtle signs of flirting between the two of them. In the ending of the film, he joins the main trio at Sidney's house to watch a movie. The fifth film confirms that they are married.
  • Last Guy Wins: He is the last love interest that Sidney meets, and is the one who ends up with her for good.
  • Made of Iron: Mark gets stabbed several times and has his head concussed twice, but still survives.
  • Offscreen Romance: In the fifth film, he and Sidney have been married for several years (their children are mentioned), meaning that they got together after the events of Scream 4.
  • Police Are Useless: Averted, as he is the one of the most competent cops in the entire franchise. He holds his own against Ghostface even when ambushed, and hands off weapons to the other characters that help them finish off Ghostface.
  • Put on a Bus: Despite his role as a potential love interest in the third film, he doesn't appear in the fourth film, and his absence is never addressed. The fifth film eventually addresses his fate; while he himself doesn't appear, he is said to have married Sidney sometime after Scream 4.
  • Red Herring: A not insignificant amount of screentime is spent casting suspicion on him. His demand to find Sidney Prescott stirs Dewey's suspicions due to the knowledge that Ghostface was specifically looking for her location, he's shown to have a folder of newspaper clippings and photos of her that's quite extensive, he has a bit of a creepy and somber response when talking about how Hollywood to him means death, and he shows up in the third act suspiciously alone. He's not the killer, obviously; his demand for Sidney's location is genuinely due to her being a person of interest, the folder is genuinely just his research for the case and its so extensive because he does his homework thoroughly, his attitude towards Hollywood is genuinely built on the trauma of investigating homicides in the area and the affect its had on him, and he arrived alone because he was aware it was dangerous for two cops to show up as one of them was liable to die.

    Joshua Wallace 

Detective Joshua Wallace

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/detective_wallace.png

Played By: Josh Pais

Another detective working with Kincaid.


  • All There in the Script: The script refers to him as a Family Man.
  • Deadpan Snarker: He comments on the irony of an actor in a Stab movie being stabbed to death, and quips "This is the scene where you come with us" at one point.
  • Genre Savvy: Wallace points out that cops typically die in horror films (with Kincaid trying to calm him by saying that "at least one of them" survives in the end). Both survive the film.
  • Sour Supporter: While he finds Gale's help on the case rather intrusive and snarks about it, Wallace is still on the side of the heroes.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Wallace doesn't show up to participate in the climax, something Sidney specifically finds odd, and asks Kincaid about him, which he brushes off due to the danger they're in at the moment.

Stab 3 Cast

    Jennifer Jolie 

Jennifer Jolie (Judy Jurgenstern)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jennifer_jolie.png
"Where? Nancy Drew wants to know where."

Played By: Parker Posey

The actress playing Gale Weathers in the first three Stab movies.


  • Alliterative Name: Jennifer Jolie. Her real name, Judy Jurgenstern, and her actress' name, Parker Posey, count as well.
  • Bare Midriffs Are Feminine: She is no Tomboy, and when she isn't in her Gale costume, Jennifer wears shirts that only go down to around her navel.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished: Averted in a downplayed fashion. Gale punches her in the mouth due to anger at Jennifer blowing up at Dewey when her house is blown up, and Jennifer spends the rest of the movie with a noticeable cut on her lip.
  • Big Bad: In-universe. Her role in "Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro" is apparently the killer.
  • Brainy Brunette: Albeit one wearing a blonde wig. She's a relatively intuitive character with a witty store of dialogue.
  • Cigarette of Anxiety: She's seen smoking a cigarette, bitterly calling it her first in a year and a half, due to the killings and how they seem to be in the order the characters died in the movie (which would make her next).
  • Cowardly Lion: She tries to run away from Ghostface (and hire bodyguards in case she comes after her), and screams for help when she's in danger. But, she ultimately gathers enough courage to help investigate, and when cornered, punches Ghostface several times rather than just cower.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Much like the woman she portrays in the Stab films, Jennifer can make acerbic and witty remarks on a dime.
  • Death by Irony: The woman she is portraying in a film gets to live, while she does not.
  • Fire-Forged Friends: There's a lot of jealousy and annoyance between her and Gale at first, and Gale punches her at one point, but they begin to work well as a pair once things get more serious.
  • Heroic BSoD:
    • As the murders start up again in the order of the characters' deaths in the script (with hers rapidly approaching) there's a scene of her smoking, nervously pacing and fretting, and then randomly jumping into Stone's arms.
    • After her house gets blown up and the explosion knocks her off her feet, she goes into a brief rant (not helped by how one of her co-stars and her other bodyguard were also just killed) at Dewey for failing to stop that (and for being distracted by kissing Gale in the aftermath of the explosion) and punches him, for which Gale punches her in turn.
  • Hidden Depths: Behind the veneer of a typical self-absorbed Hollywood starlet lies a surprisingly intuitive and empathetic woman who wants to help out with the investigation. Additionally, if Roman's snark about "Must See TV" is correct, Jennifer was apparently a television actress before joining the Stab franchise.
  • Hope Spot:
    • She manages to hide in the closet, away from Ghostface, while he gets distracted chasing someone else. Then she tries to sneak out at the wrong time, and runs right into Ghostface. This is followed by..
    • Her managing to alert Gale and Dewey from behind a two-way mirror and Dewey shooting through it to try and get to her. Right as he's getting to the right mirror, Jennifer is stabbed in the stomach and tossed through the glass by Ghostface, dead.
  • Jaw Drop: She's visibly slack-jawed and stunned for a moment when Angelina reveals that she slept with Milton to be cast as Sidney.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Is constantly at odds with the woman she's portraying, and has a big rant after Ghostface blows up her house, but is more than willing to help Gale and does care about the others, which isn't too far off from Gale anyway.
  • Let's Split Up, Gang!: Subverted and played straight. She tries to stick close to Gale and not split up, but does end up ducking into a closet off on her own by necessity while evading one of Ghostface's attacks when Ghostface steps between her and the others.
  • No Kill like Overkill: Stabbed repeatedly by Ghostface and then thrown through glass doors in front of Gale and Dewey.
  • The Other Darrin: invoked It is notably averted in her case as she played Gale in the prior two Stab films and is the only returning actor to reprise her Stab role whereas Tori Spelling and David Schwimmer dropped out, forcing the studio to cast new actors for Sidney and Dewey. However, her death meant that the Stab studio also had to replace her with a new actress.
  • Pink Means Feminine: Wears several pink shirts and jackets and comes across as a Girly Girl for a lot of the movie.
  • Plucky Comic Relief: Her Nervous Wreck / Large Ham mannerisms and constant butting heads with Gale make Jennifer one of the most comical characters in the film.
  • Properly Paranoid: She hired bodyguards in case Ghostface poses a threat to her, which he does.
  • Sacrificial Lion: The last victim before The Reveal.
  • Stage Name: Her real name is Judy Jurgenstern.
  • Theme Naming: Her name is a portmanteau of Jennifer Aniston and Angelina Jolie's names.
  • Wrong Genre Savvy: When Ghostface catches up to her, she says she can't die because she's the In-Universe film's killer. Ghostface disagrees.

    Angelina Tyler 

Angelina Tyler

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/angelina_tyler.png
"I did not fuck that pig Milton to get a leading role just to die here with second rate celebrities like you two!"

Played By: Emily Mortimer

The actress playing Sidney Prescott in Stab 3, substituting for Tori Spelling.
  • Aborted Arc: Early in the film, Tom Prinze wonders if Cotton's killer is Sidney Prescott, whom Angelina plays. This was intended foreshadowing for Angelina being the killer in the original screenplay, alongside secret boyfriend Roman, but this was changed due to the studio's dislike of the incest subplot.
  • All in the Manual:
    • The DVD/Blu-Ray boxset trilogy booklet reveals she did not die, indicating her "death" was staged, and she was the secret accomplice of the film all along. Her death scene is also dubious to the film's editor, Patrick Lussier and Marianne Maddalena (according to the audio track commentary of the film with director Wes Craven). Whether this is actually canon is questionable.
    • The sixth movie confirms that Roman acted alone, meaning she was never a Ghostface.
  • Blood from the Mouth: Blood is dripping from her corpse's mouth as she is dragged out of sight.
  • Casting Couch: How she allegedly got the part of Sidney in Stab 3, claiming that she slept with "that pig" Milton. Considering Milton had already by this point been revealed to have sexually exploited actresses in the past and may in fact have raped Maureen Prescott himself back in the day, it's not hard to imagine she's telling the truth.
  • Dies Wide Open: Her "corpse" stares up at Gale and Jennifer as Ghostface drags her out of sight.
  • Final Girl: Subverted, depending on multiple character interpretations. She's playing one in Stab 3, and she's initially presented as such. However, she is killed during the third act, though for much of the film’s production, was also intended to be the film's Hidden Villain.
  • Hidden Depths: She has fun searching for secret passages at the mansion, which contrasts with both her assumed persona as The Ingenue. Right before her death, she also reveals that she was sexually exploited by Milton to get where she is.
  • The Ingenue: What she presents herself as.
  • The Other Darrin: invoked She's initially set to replace Tori Spelling as Sidney for Stab 3. However, due to the film's cancellation and her apparent demise, another actress, possibly a returning Tori Spelling, replaced Angelina as Sidney for Stab 3: Hollywood Horror, a Stab movie based on Roman's killing spree.
  • Pet the Dog: She's upset about the idea of continuing to film after people have been murdered and does urge Gale and Judy to get out of the mansion when the killer starts attacking people there.
  • Red Herring: Despite many clues, she was not given a killer reveal. Much of the film was produced with her role as the second killer.
  • Sex Signals Death: She gets stabbed to death seconds after revealing that she had been groomed by Milton to get the part of Sidney. Damn, do the rules strike fast!
  • Theme Naming: Her name is a portmanteau of Angelina Jolie and Liv Tyler's names.

    Tyson Fox 

Tyson Fox

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tyson_2.jpg

Played By: Deon Richmond

An actor who is a cast member of Stab 3, playing an Expy of Randy Meeks.
  • Advertised Extra: Though he's merely part of the "Stab" cast ensemble with no direct relevance to the film's plot, he’s featured on the main poster, and his actor Deon Richmond is credited with the lead actors.
  • Classically-Trained Extra: Zigzagged, as he's a Shakespearean performer, but apparently just for minor performances, so he's happy to have a job in a big-budget movie, even if it is a slasher.
  • Disney Villain Death: He suffers a heroic inversion of this when he gets thrown off a balcony by Ghostface.
  • Genre Savvy: He points out how dangerous it is to split up when there's a killer on the loose.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: When Ghostface is about to finish off Dewey, Tyson tackles Ghostface into the wall and gets stabbed for his heroism. Ghostface shortly kills him afterwards.
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: His character in "Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro" is killed by getting stabbed in the head with scissors, as shown with the prop pair of scissors stuck in his head in one of his first scenes.
  • Made of Iron: After being punched halfway across a room, he gets back up and tries to tackle Ghostface, then puts up a decent chase after being stabbed.
  • Meta Guy: Invoked in-universe; his character is supposed to be based on Randy Meeks, the main Meta Guy for the first two films. And he's not half-bad, since he's familiar with the "Stab" films (plus the events of the films themselves) and is not enthusiastic about walking around Milton's mansion all willy-nilly.
    "You wanna go traipsing around this gigantic mansion? Have you ever actually seen the Stab movies? Every time [Dewey] enters the room, he ends up becoming a goddamn shish-kebab!"
  • The Prankster: Tyson surprises Sarah while the former is still wearing the fake blood and special effects prosthetics from his death scene.
  • Rasputinian Death: Gets stabbed in the gut, followed by a short chase on foot (which is quite hard if you've been stabbed in the gut), lands on his neck after Ghostface pulls a carpet out from under him, gets slammed headfirst into a glass cabinet, and is finally thrown off a balcony.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Averted. While Tyson recognizes that the new Ghostface is targeting the cast of Stab 3, he stubbornly states that he can't abandon his Stab 3 role because black actors like him can't afford to turn down job opportunities.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Zigzagged.
    • In-Universe, his Stab 3 character Ricky is blatantly a replacement for Randy after the Stab fans complained about his death in Stab 2. When Sarah points out that Ricky works at a video store just like Randy did, Tyson lamely replies that it's just a homage.
    • As for Tyson's actual personality, Tyson hardly resembles the socially awkward Randy. Furthermore, while Tyson is Genre Savvy, he lacks Randy's encyclopedic movie knowledge; in fact, Randy still retains his role as the Meta Guy by posthumously instructing the Woodsboro trio the rules of a horror trilogy. Later Randy surrogates—such as Robbie and Mindy—are cinephiles like Randy, which makes Tyson stand out more as a subversion.
      Tyson: I am not a Randy substitute. I am my own character.
  • Token Good Teammate: Though not without his own brand of sass, Tyson is the only one involved with Stab 3 who doesn't have any sort of mean streak.
  • Token Minority: Not only is he the only minority character in Stab 3, he is also the only minority character in Scream 3.

    Tom Prinze 

Tom Prinze

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tom_2.png
"Is this a wrap party or is this a wrap party?"

Played By: Matt Keeslar

The actor playing Dewey in Stab 3.


  • Ambiguous Situation: It's never confirmed if his car accident was actually a tire blowout as he said and that Gale was lying about it being related to drugs/alcohol to sensationalize the story or if was a drunk driving incident as Gale implied, although considering he spends the wrap party drinking its safe to say it wouldn't be out of character for Tom if it was the latter nor would it be out of character for Gale to make up details to sell a more interesting story.
  • Asshole Victim: Downplayed. Tom was an abrasive, spiteful, drunk-driving prick who was constantly rude to everyone. Granted, Angelina mourns his explosive end despite ironically being the main target of his bile, and when things start getting bad, he does show some concern for the others, showing he wasn't without good qualities. Overall, it's clear that while Tom was an asshole, he didn't really deserve to die, especially compared to John Milton.
  • Deadpan Snarker: A good portion of his dialogue is just him snarking at everyone around him.
  • Drunk Driver: He caused a car accident while driving drunk that Gale wrote a story about.
  • Jerkass: He insults Angelina for her newcomer status, doesn't care about his dead co-stars, drives drunk and threatens to key Gale's car because of the story she wrote about it, and mocks Sidney's mental psyche.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: Tom's belief that Angelina's Ingenue personality is just an act turns out to be spot on, albeit this suspicion is implied to have occurred because Angelina rejected him when he asked her out.
  • Lack of Empathy: He doesn't show any sadness or concern about what happened to Cotton and Christine.
  • The Other Darrin: invoked Tom replaces David Schwimmer for the role of Dewey Riley. It ends up subverted since Ghostface kills him before Stab 3's filming can resume.
  • Stuff Blowing Up: Ghostface kills him by pumping gas into a house; when Tom pulls out his lighter to read the next page, the gas is ignited, and the house explodes.

    Sarah Darling 

Sarah Darling

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/sarah_darling.jpeg
"I'm not happy that I'm a 35 playing a 21-year-old. I'm not happy that I have to die naked and I'm not happy that my character is too stupid to have a gun in the house after her boyfriend has been cut into fishsticks."

Played By: Jenny McCarthy

An actress who plays Candy, a Ghostface victim of Stab 3.

Sunrise Studios Employees

    Roman Bridger 

Roman Bridger

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/image_045.jpg
"Not only did they...did they kill the film, but they killed my cast. You know, nobody's gonna work with me. Variety called me a "pariah". I don't even know what a "pariah" is. Why, why couldn't somebody have killed the cast of Stab 1, huh? Or Stab 2? Why me? What, John? What did we do wrong?"

Played By: Scott Foley

The director of Stab 3 who is worried that the murders by the new Ghostface are threatening the shutdown of his production.
  • But for Me, It Was Tuesday: At some point before the movie, Roman and Jennifer had a sexual encounter. Jennifer describes herself as the “best [Roman] ever had” but Roman states he doesn’t remember that night.
  • Creator's Apathy: In-universe. He admits that he doesn't think much of the Stab movies and only agreed to direct one so he could do a romantic movie next.
  • Died on Their Birthday: The movie's climax takes place at Roman's birthday party at John Milton's mansion. Roman ends up being the first casualty of the night, found stabbed to death in a trunk by Jennifer and Gale.
  • Hidden Depths: A horror film director, Roman has also directed award-winning music videos and wanted to direct a romance next.
  • Killed Offscreen: The last we see of him he's poking around in Milton's basement while drunk. Jennifer and Gale find his corpse with a knife stuck in his chest a short while later.
  • Punk in the Trunk: Not a car trunk, but he's found stabbed to death in, well, a trunk.
  • Skewed Priorities: His biggest problem with the Ghostface mayhem is that it's ruining his project.
  • Theme Naming: His first name is a reference to Roman Polański, a famous movie director.
  • Too Dumb to Live: Getting drunk while there's a crazed killer on the loose? Not surprising when he gets ambushed and killed by Ghostface while performing the equally unwise action of exploring a dark basement alone and unarmed.
  • The World's Expert (on Getting Killed): Despite being the director of a horror film, Roman falls victim to some of the oldest cliches in the book, namely getting drunk while there's a killer on the loose and heading into a dark basement alone and unarmed.

    John Milton 

John Milton

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/john_milton_7.jpg
"Hollywood is full of criminals whose careers are flourishing."

Played By: Lance Henriksen

"You wanna get ahead in Hollywood? You gotta play the game, or go home."

The CEO of Sunrise Studios, the production company behind the Stab film series.


  • Ain't Too Proud to Beg: His last words.
    Milton: You don't have to do this, Roman. Just tell me what you want. I can make it happen. Any picture. Name your budget. Script approval. Final cut!
    Roman: I already have it. (slashes Milton's throat)
  • Arc Welding: Milton's abuse of Maureen during her time in Hollywood prompted Roman to seek revenge on Maureen for giving him up, setting off the chain of events in the first three films.
  • Asshole Victim: As horrible as his death was, it's hard to argue he didn't deserve it.
  • Blaming the Victim: When confronted about Maureen's rape, he resorts to victim blaming and claims it was all consensual.
  • Hate Sink: While the Ghostface killers are evil, they're all over-the-top and grotesquely entertaining. Some of them even come across as sympathetic at times. The same can't be said for Milton; he's just a corrupt rapist scumbag with no likable qualities to speak of whatsoever.
  • Ironic Last Words: His method of bargaining for his life is to promise Roman the final cut of any movie he might want to make. Something that Roman already has, so it's useless.
  • I Never Said It Was Poison: When asked about Maureen Prescott/Rina Reynolds, he claims he's employed too many actors to remember. Gale quickly points out nobody said she was an actress.
  • Jerkass: The nicest way to describe Milton is that he's a rude and unlikeable asshole who is utterly unpleasant to be around.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: He gets away with sexually exploiting actresses for decades, only to finally meet his fate thirty years later at the hands of Roman.
  • Karmic Death: He gets his throat slit by Roman, who is his Child by Rape.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: He gets killed by the child conceived in the gang rape he participated in.
  • Luke, You Are My Father: He might be Roman Bridger's biological father. This was explicitly confirmed in the original script but more ambiguous in the final film.
  • Rape Is a Special Kind of Evil: He led a gangrape against Maureen Prescott, causing her to become pregnant with Roman. Not even Ghostface stoops to that level.
  • Red Herring: Due to his past affiliation with Maureen Prescott, Milton becomes a suspect for being the new Ghostface. He looks all the more guilty when Roman plants a voice changer in his house.
  • Sacrificial Lion: He's the last victim of Ghostface in the third film. And unlike most of the other victims in the series, he absolutely deserved it.
  • Slashed Throat: How Roman kills him.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Milton's rape of Maureen Prescott and siring of Roman Bridger lead to the creation of the Ghostface legacy that would haunt Woodsboro for years.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Raping Maureen and siring Roman had dire consequences for Woodsboro.

    Steven Stone 

Steven Stone

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/steven_stone.png

Played By: Patrick Warburton

A professional Hollywood bodyguard working for Jennifer.
  • Alliterative Name: Steven Stone.
  • Asshole Victim: While not nearly as bad as Milton, Stone is still an unpleasant man who is constantly rude towards Dewey (or as he calls him "Dewdrop") and even resorts to mocking the murder of Dewey's sister Tatum. Seconds after that comment he gets stabbed in the back and whacked in the head with a frying pan. Although he didn't deserve to die and Dewey is horrified by his death, no one particularly misses him afterward.
  • Big Guy Fatality Syndrome: He's the huskiest character in the movie and a hired bodyguard, who gets targeted by Ghostface early on.
  • The Comically Serious: He takes Jennifer jumping to his arms when she's stressing out about the killer in stride.
  • Cool Shades: Stone wears impressive Hollywood sunglasses.
  • Dying Moment of Awesome: Obnoxious as he is, his final moments show he's at least the real deal as a bodyguard, as he puts up a fairly good fight after being stabbed in the back, and even after being knocked out manages to walk to the front of the house and silently idenifies who he thinks is the killer (he tries to point at Dewey as Ghostface used his voice, but no one notices) before dropping dead.
  • In the Back: Killed when Ghostface stabs him in the back, then hammers the knife in with a frying pan.
  • Jerkass: Acts very condescending towards Dewey and brings up the brutal murder of his sister completely unprovoked.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: Brutal as it is, he's not wrong that Dewey is not his superior officer in any way and doesn't have any business giving him orders. Dewey is just a small town police deputy who got stabbed a bunch of times in previous Ghostface killings, he doesn't have any particular expertise on security detail or even into the psychology of the killer that would justify him giving orders, he's not even there under any kind of security position, he was only involved in the film as a research consultant who has just started living with Jennifer. Him giving Stone orders is the equivalent of taking orders from your employer's boyfriend, so his blunt though very insulting takedown of him is kind of warranted, and largely only comes off as an asshole move because Dewey is a main character. Of course, when he later mocks Tatum's brutal murder, there's not really any justifying that.
  • Speak Ill of the Dead: He mocks how Dewey couldn't protect Tatum.
  • Teeth-Clenched Teamwork: He and fellow bodyguard Dewey who Stone clearly looks down on.
  • The World's Expert (on Getting Killed): Stone is a professional bodyguard, but doesn't fare noticeably better against Ghostface than most of the civilians who are attacked, including Stone's own charge.

    Bianca Burnette 

Bianca Burnette

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bianca_burnette.png

Played By: Carrie Fisher

A former actress employed as a file clerk at the movie studio.

Others

    Christine Hamilton 

Christine Hamilton

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/christine_hamilton.png

Played By: Kelly Rutherford

Cotton's girlfriend and co-star.
  • Action Survivor: Christine briefly escapes from Ghostface by kicking him in the head, and tries to defend herself with a golf club afterward.
  • All There in the Script: According to the script, she played Cici in Stab 2.
  • Break the Cutie: She's a cheerful woman in a happy relationship with Cotton left confused and thinking he's trying to kill her due to Ghostface's voice impressions.
  • In the Back: She does make a decent effort at defending herself, but is distracted by Cotton when Ghostface attacks her from behind.
  • Lingerie Scene: She spends her screen time in a black nightgown.
  • Slashers Prefer Blondes: Unsurprisingly for the franchise. She's blonde and the first target.

    Jay and Silent Bob 

Jay and Silent Bob

Played By: Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith

"Holy shit, Silent Bob! It's that TV evening news chick, Connie fucking Chung!"

A pair of familiar stoners who encounter Gale while on a tour of Sunrise Studios.


  • The Cameo: For the characters from Kevin Smith's View Askewniverse.
  • Casanova Wannabe: Jay of course. Even after Gale shoots him the bird, he still insists it's her way of flirting with him.
  • Celebrity Paradox: A VHS tape of Clerks appears in Stu's house in Scream, along with a poster at the video store where Randy works. Additionally, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back shows that Scream (not Stab) is fictional in their universe, as the film depicts the duo stumbling onto the set of the then-equally fictional Scream 4.
  • The Quiet One: Silent Bob, who merely gives Gale a friendly wave.


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