Scream 7 Chaos Unleashed: Melissa Barrera Fired Over Gaza Posts, Jenna Ortega Bolts in Solidarity, Neve Campbell Scores $7M Return – Franchise Teeters on Edge Amid Boycotts and Mixed Reviews

The Scream franchise, a slasher empire that’s grossed nearly $1 billion worldwide since Wes Craven’s 1996 original, has never shied from real-world drama—but Scream 7 has plunged into unprecedented turmoil. What was meant to continue the successful requel run with rising stars Melissa Barrera and Jenna Ortega has morphed into a controversial reboot centered on legacy icon Neve Campbell’s Sidney Prescott. The film, directed by franchise creator Kevin Williamson, hits theaters today amid protests, boycotts, costly rewrites, and sharply divided reviews—proving that Ghostface isn’t the only thing stabbing the series in the back.

The nightmare began in November 2023 when Spyglass Media fired Barrera, who played Sam Carpenter (Billy Loomis’s secret daughter) in Scream (2022) and Scream VI (2023). Spyglass cited her social media posts condemning Israel’s actions in Gaza as “genocide and ethnic cleansing,” labeling them antisemitic and crossing into “hate speech.” Barrera’s exit threw production into disarray: the script, built around Sam and her sister Tara (Ortega), required a massive pivot.

Scream 6' lead actor Melissa Barrera says this time around 'anyone is  expendable'
nbcnews.com

Scream 6′ lead actor Melissa Barrera says this time around ‘anyone is expendable’

Just one day later, Ortega—whose star had exploded with Wednesday—announced her departure, initially blamed on scheduling but later confirmed as solidarity with Barrera. Original director Christopher Landon also walked, citing death threats tied to the firing.

The fallout was brutal: a reported $500,000 script rewrite by Williamson and Guy Busick shifted focus to Sidney Prescott, with the Carpenter sisters’ fates left ambiguous or off-screen. Campbell, absent from Scream VI over a pay dispute where she felt undervalued despite anchoring five films, returned triumphantly—securing a staggering $7 million payday, a massive leap that sources call a “hefty raise” for horror. Courteney Cox pocketed $2 million to reprise Gale Weathers.

Scream 7 Trailer: Neve Campbell's Sidney Returns, Confronts Ghostface
hollywoodreporter.com

Scream 7 Trailer: Neve Campbell’s Sidney Returns, Confronts Ghostface

The pivot revived legacy players like David Arquette (Dewey, in flashbacks or new role), Matthew Lillard, and others, while introducing newcomers including Isabel May as Sidney’s daughter Tatum.

But the controversy exploded anew at the February 25 premiere at Paramount Pictures Studios, where pro-Palestinian groups—including Entertainment Labor for Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace—protested outside, calling for a boycott over Barrera’s firing more than two years prior. Barrera responded publicly, expressing gratitude for supporters while maintaining her stance. Online fury has simmered, with fans decrying the “censorship” and others defending Spyglass’s decision.

Reviews are equally polarized on opening day. Some praise Campbell’s commanding return and Williamson’s nostalgic direction, calling it a “bloody good” throwback with Sidney front and center as a trauma-scarred mom facing new horrors—including deepfake tech resurrecting old killers. Others slam it as “clumsy and thin,” the “worst in the franchise,” and a “zombie” gasping for relevance without the fresh energy of Barrera and Ortega.

New 'Scream' Movie: Neve Campbell to Reprise Role as Sidney Prescott
variety.com

New ‘Scream’ Movie: Neve Campbell to Reprise Role as Sidney Prescott

Box office tracking predicts a solid but underwhelming $30-45 million domestic opening—impressive for horror but below expectations for a legacy revival.

The Scream saga has always meta-commentated on horror tropes, sequels, and reboots—now it mirrors its own chaos: pay fights, political firestorms, cast exits, and desperate pivots. With an eighth film already brainstormed, the question looms: Can Sidney’s resilience save the franchise, or has the knife finally struck too deep? As theaters fill today, audiences will decide if Scream 7 screams triumph—or just screams.