Given that they worked together on two Scream movies beforehand, it's impossible not to compare Melissa Barrera's newest horror collaboration with directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett to the Ghostface-fronted franchise. Abigail, the trio's latest, is similar in tone, too, as its characters try to make sense of the bonkers situation they've found themselves in through vampire pop culture.
In early reviews, it's been likened to titles such as The Lost Boys and From Dusk Till Dawn for obvious reasons as well, but it turns out the film, which was written by Stephen Shields and Guy Busick, was actually inspired by an unlikely cult classic: The Breakfast Club.
"The 'ensembleness' of it all was a big conversation," Gillett tells GamesRadar+. "We talked a lot about The Breakfast Club, which is one of our favorite movies of all time, and the idea of the cast of The Breakfast Club being hired to kidnap a young woman, who is then revealed to be a vampire for us was like, 'Boy, yeah, that's fucking awesome.' Like, that just seemed like such a hilarious idea for a movie."
"For us, it was like, if we felt like we've seen a particular thing before, we'd go, 'Well, how can we change this? How can we subvert the audience's expectations here?'" Bettinelli-Olpin chimes in. "'We've seen that happen in The Usual Suspects, so let's throw this twist on it. Or, you know, 'In Lost Boys this happens, so we'll do a version that you think is going that way and then it goes this way.'"
Also starring Dan Stevens, Kathryn Newton, and Alisha Weir in the titular role, Abigail sees a ragtag team of criminals discover that the young girl they've been tasked with kidnapping is actually a ballet-dancing bloodsucker. In their attempt to ditch the mission, they realize that someone has trapped them inside the manor house they were meant to keep their new fanged foe hostage in, prompting a manic, gory overnight fight for survival.
"It's very different to Scream in a lot of ways; I think the
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