Forbes -
31 Aug 2015 15:00

I have spent the last ten years hoping that Wes Craven had one last masterpiece left in him. Surely the man who redefined the horror film at three times (Last House on the Left in 1972, A Nightmare On Elm Street in 1984, and Scream in 1996) over the course of his career had enough juice left in him to do it one more time, no? It was my arguably naive hope that he still had one gem left in him, one grand horror classic that would once again redefine the genre for a new generation of scar...
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