The original’s suburban town of Woodsboro.

Scream 2’s finale manages to deliver a satisfying and tense showdown between Sidney and the two killers, even if the revelation isn’t quite as rewarding the second time around. While the original film ends with Sidney managing to dispatch the killers, the second finds her in more dire circumstances. However, when the mastermind turns on the secondary killer, Sidney’s powers of negotiation — and some unlikely help from Cotton Weary (Liev Schreiber) — deliver her from a vengeful death. The film’s chaotic ending merits a closer inspection of who kills who, who survives, and why.

Scream 2's Ghostface Identity Reveal Explained

Nancy Loomis Is Billys Mother

Laurie Metcalf as Nancy Loomis aiming a gun in Scream 2

Scream 2 follows in the tradition of killer reveals set up in the original Scream, with some key differences. The film continues the trend of Ghostface being revealed as two different characters. It’s a core part of the Ghostface killer’s M.O., one that complicates the series’ whodunit mysteries by allowing suspicious characters to establish alibis. In Scream 2, the killers are revealed to be Sidney’s college friend, Mickey Altieri (Timothy Olyphant), and reporter Debbie Salt (Laurie Metcalf). The latter turns out to be Nancy Loomis, Billy Loomis’ mother.

Movie

Killer(s)

Scream

Billy Loomis & Stu Macher

Scream 2

Nancy Loomis & Mickey Altieri

Scream 3

Roman Bridger

Scream 4

Jill Roberts & Charlie Walker

Scream

Richie Kirsch & Amber Freeman

Scream VI

Detective Bailey, Quinn Bailey & Ethan Landry

With Nancy Loomis as the mastermind and Mickey as the unstable maniac, Scream 2’s killer reveal upholds the dynamic of original Scream killers Billy and Stu. However, the sequel’s twist is slightly less satisfying. The revelation that Debbie Salt is the killer doesn’t play fair with the audience, as no clues point to Debbie secretly being Billy’s mother. The Mickey reveal has the opposite problem: it’s too obvious. Granted, there’s a case to be made that Mickey’s creepy demeanor makes viewers more likely to write him off as a red herring. Still, it’s not exactly a rewarding twist.

Nancy Loomis & Mickey's Ghostface Motivations Explained

Nancy Wanted Revenge & Mickey Just Wanted To Kill

Timothy Olyphant as Micky Altieri unmasked as the killer in Scream 2

The respective motives of Scream 2’s killers once again uphold a Scream tradition. One killer is motivated by a personal connection to Sidney, while the other is motivated by simple bloodlust. Nancy Loomis initiates the plot against Sidney out of revenge. Not only did Sidney kill Nancy’s serial killer son, but her mother broke up Nancy’s marriage. When Randy (Jamie Kennedy) is on the phone with the killer, he declares that Billy Loomis was a “rat-looking, homo-repressed mama’s boy,” provoking Ghostface to snatch him in broad daylight. It's foreshadowing, even if Scream writer Kevin Williamson regrets killing Randy.

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Kevin Williamson Is Wrong: Scream 2's Randy HAD To Die

Scream 2 screenwriter Kevin Williamson has regrets about killing fan favorite Randy in the sequel, but his demise was key to the franchise.

The element that distinguishes Scream from other horror franchises is its satirical edge. The series delivers a sharp meta-commentary on the horror genre while offering chilling installments in that category. Mickey's motivation fulfills this meta-purpose. The character’s killing spree is primarily motivated by a desire to cause a media sensation by blaming his acts of violence on movies. It’s a cynical motivation that plays into the 1990s’ widespread moral panic over the supposed corruption of America’s youth through violent film and TV content. In this way, Scream 2 gives a sly nod to the likely reaction to its subject matter.

Why Cotton Weary Helps Sidney In Scream 2's Ending

Cotton's Hunger For Fame Made Him Heroic

Cotton Weary (Liev Schreiber) holding up a gun in Scream 2

Cotton Weary is a suspicious and highly unlikeable figure for most of Scream 2. Liev Schreiber puts in a great performance as the shifty-eyed, fame-hungry Cotton, who’s fresh out of jail after the original Scream proved he didn't murder Sidney's mother, Maureen Prescott. Cotton's aggression and resentment toward Sidney places him high on the list of suspects. However, Cotton emerges as an unlikely hero of Scream 2 when he shoots Nancy Loomis, saving Sidney from her knife.

Of course, Cotton’s resentment nearly gets the better of him during the climactic showdown. Nancy’s reminder that Sidney, who sent Cotton to prison for a year, will always be the top story nearly sways him. Yet Sidney’s able to pull it back by agreeing to do a Diane Sawyer interview with Cotton. The climax plays into Scream’s cynical sense of humor, with the promise of TV attention, rather than altruism, saving Sidney’s life. However, Cotton somewhat redeems himself in Scream 3, when he refuses to give up Sidney’s location to a new Ghostface killer.

Dewey's Survival Twist Explained

Dewey's Scar Tissue Saved Him

Dewey and Gale looking up at the killer in Scream 2
Paramount Pictures

Scream 2 sees Deputy Dewey (David Arquette) almost die once again. After his near-fatal stabbing in Scream, it seems the nerve-damaged cop has finally met his end after Gale (Courtney Cox) sees him stabbed numerous times through soundproof glass in the sequel. It’s a tragic scene, but the tragedy is somewhat undercut when the final moments of Scream 2 show a still-living Dewey being loaded into an ambulance. Of course, it’s good to see Dewey alive, but it plays into a somewhat frustrating trend of major characters surviving fatal stabbings.

Dewey finally died in Scream 5.

In Scream 2, it’s explained that Dewey was ironically saved from death by the scar tissue from his stab wounds in the original Scream. This detail can be read as a wry joke, wherein the filmmakers acknowledge that Dewey’s fates in Scream and Scream 2 are so similar that the knife even went into the same spot. However, Dewey’s repeated survival in Scream 2 is the first step in normalizing major characters constantly living through almost-fatal stabbings. When the trend is repeated again and again, it starts to lower the stakes of the Scream movies.

How Scream 2 Sets Up Scream 3's Twists

Cotton's Fate & A Similar Twist Follows

Scream 3 is considered something of a dark horse in the Scream series. It’s the only one of the Wes Craven Scream movies not written by Kevin Williamson, and it’s often cited as the weakest installment. Nevertheless, some of the film’s twists find their groundwork laid, for better or worse, in Scream 2. The movie begins with Cotton Weary, who, having leveraged the fame of his actions in Scream 2 into a TV talk show, meets his end while setting up a new location in Los Angeles.

The third film’s killer, Roman Bridger, is revealed to be Sidney’s secret half-brother.

The events of Scream 2 have left Sidney traumatized and unwilling to leave her house for long stretches of time in Scream 3. Scream 2 also sets up one of Scream 3’s worst twists. Scream 2’s secret relative revelation, while roundly criticized, gave Scream 3 permission to repeat the turn. The third film’s killer, Roman Bridger, is revealed to be Sidney’s secret half-brother.

What’s more, Roman explains that the action of the last two films was, in fact, set in motion by him when he showed Billy Loomis footage of Maureen Prescott having an affair with Billy’s father. While Scream 2 is upheld as one of the best installments in the franchise, it’s responsible for laying the seeds of absurdity that come to bloom in the follow-up.

How The Scream 2 Ending Compares To Other Endings In The Series

The Franchise Has Changed Over The Years

Quinn Bailey with a knife in Scream 6

The Scream franchise can be split into two parts at this point. The first three movies tell one story in which the killers mostly line up, and the reveals all tie together. However, starting with Scream 4, it is all about the "legacy" of Sidney's story. The first three movies have a pretty similar ending to each other. In the first, it was Sidney's boyfriend, who wanted revenge and killed Sidney's mother since she broke up his dad's marriage and his mother left as a result. This led them to enjoy killing, and they kept it up.

Scream 2 was the exact same, this time with Billy's mother coming back and wanting revenge against Sidney for killing her son, while still feeling anger at her broken marriage caused by Sidney's mom. As for Mickey, he plays the same role as Stu in the first movie - someone who just likes to kill. The third movie followed the same story, with this one being Sidney's half-brother who hated his mother for abandoning him and wanting revenge against Sidney for having the family he couldn't.

Both Scream 2 and Scream VI had the parents of the Ghostface killer wanting revenge.

Everything changed with Scream 4, and while it kept is in the family with Sidney's cousin as one of the killers, this was just a chance for the killers to become "famous." That is what played out in the fifth movie, with people still wanting to relive the original killings from the first movie. However, with the sixth, things compared better to Scream 2, where it saw Detective Bailey as Ritchie's dad, and looking for revenge after his serial killer child was killed in the previous movie.

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Scream 2
Release Date
December 12, 1997
Runtime
120 minutes
Director
Wes Craven

WHERE TO WATCH

Scream 2 continues the saga of Sidney Prescott, who faces a new series of murders while adjusting to college life. Released in 1997, the film follows her as a masked killer, donning the infamous Ghostface costume, resurfaces, reigniting fear and chaos among her and her friends.

Distributor(s)
Dimension Films