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We really are just looking at the moment when the audience realizes that a character is a killer. What happens after that (e.g. their death) didn’t factor in nor did their overall memorability as a killer. For instance, Scream 4‘s Jill Roberts is one of the best Ghostface killers. Her motive is perfectly morbid, the scene where she beats herself up couldn’t be more fun, and Emma Roberts’ performance is exactly what the character needed. But those factors didn’t enter the conversation of where she ranked.
15) Marco

Scream 7‘s main Ghostface reveal sequence kicks off with a reference to Steve Orth’s being tied up in the original film as if that moment would be important to Sidney, even though she wasn’t present for that in 1996. The tied-up thing was already done way better in Scream 4, so this is a very standard character unmasking themself scene. Worse yet, it holds no power considering we saw Marco exactly once before he does so.
14) Karl Gibbs

Karl Gibbs’ attack on the Prescott-Evans house is one of Scream 7‘s stronger set pieces, but its end result lands with a bit of a thud. He stumbles back into the street after being overpowered by Sidney, Mark, and Tatum, and, because it’s happened in 10,000 movies, we’re just waiting for him to get hit by a vehicle. He does, and then he’s unmasked. And, gasp, it’s a guy we saw once in Sidney’s cafe who was blatantly creepy and fully expected to be a killer. It’s a Chekov’s Gun thing. Why show him being creepy unless he’s going to be either a victim or a Ghostface?
13) Ethan

We’ve gone up a quality notch here, but it’s a tip toe, not a leap. Ethan Landry is creepy the entire time he’s onscreen in Scream VI. He’s conveniently missing while Quinn (who ends up being his sister) is “attacked” for instance. However, points go to the reveal for having the subway scene with him and Mindy. At least for a second we’re thrown off his scent. But the scene still raises the question of how he went with Mindy to the hospital then left and came to the theater. Furthermore, how did Mindy, upon showing up, know he was one of the killers? Because she said so. Did he try to get her at the hospital? It’s a Ghostface reveal that is mostly memorable for the questions it raises, and they’re unanswered ones.
12) Jessica

Throughout Scream 7, fans are led to believe Stu Macher is back. Scarred and killing. Thankfully, he’s not. More fans were hoping the sequel wasn’t going that direction than there were those hoping it was. Instead, we get Sidney’s next-door neighbor, Jessica. We’ve gotten to know her more than Karl or Marco, but still not enough for the reveal to really matter. Then she lists her three meh motives. Extra credit for the fact she killed her own son, though. That’s a character detail that builds up her fear factor.
11) Quinn

Consider Quinn Bailey’s reveal basically tied with the next entry. There’s one element to it that really works and one that really does not. The one that works is that the audience is led to believe Quinn is dead, and that’s done effectively. As for the part that doesn’t, it’s the fact that the other characters assume it’s Mindy Meeks-Martin. But the audience knows it’s not Mindy. For one, we just saw her get stabbed on the subway. And, even if we hadn’t, we wouldn’t have bought it. Just by the process of elimination, it was obvious it was Quinn as soon as Ethan’s mask was already off.
10) Detective Bailey

Scream VI wants us to believe that Kirby Reed is the killer because Detective Wayne Bailey wants the protagonists to believe the same. It doesn’t quite work because we as the audience know and trust Kirby more than him, but there were worse directions to go. We also like Dermot Mulroney’s little smile and shrug as he says, “Of course it’s me.”
9) Jill

Again, Jill is a top-tier Ghostface, but she doesn’t have the best reveal of her film. It’s a shock to Sidney (and 2011 theatergoers) when she unmasks herself, but it’s still a pretty standard self-unmasking. However, her monologue revelation about how it was she who killed her mother was an effectively sick addition.
8) Roman Bridger

Like the film as a whole, the Ghostface reveal of Roman Bridger in Scream 3 isn’t quite as good as those that came before him. The big issue is that it’s so obvious it’s Roman. Gale goes downstairs, finds him in a fake casket, checks for a pulse, and doesn’t find one. When he’s the only character who gets a fully off-screen death and it’s in the middle of the third act, it’s clear that’s your killer. However, the location of John Milton’s screening room is a great stage for the reveal and the home movies being displayed help build up the scene’s importance.















