Editorials
Gale & Dewey’s Relationship In Scream Was Actually Terrible
Look, it’s hard for me to say this, but it probably would be best for us all to avoid a relationship like the iconic romance at the center of the Scream movies. One of the cornerstones of the franchise is the love that slowly blossomed between hard-nosed reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) and charmingly dopey Woodsboro police officer Dewey Riley (David Arquette) while avoiding being slaughtered in various Ghostface rampages. Well, mostly avoiding being slaughtered. Spoiler alert. However, being a cornerstone does not preclude Gale and Dewey from having an incredibly toxic relationship. To help illuminate my argument, I’ve broken their relationship into three distinct eras.

Look, it’s hard for me to say this, but it probably would be best for us all to avoid a relationship like the iconic romance at the center of the Scream movies. One of the cornerstones of the franchise is the love that slowly blossomed between hard-nosed reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) and charmingly dopey Woodsboro police officer Dewey Riley (David Arquette) while avoiding being slaughtered in various Ghostface rampages. Well, mostly avoiding being slaughtered. Spoiler alert. However, being a cornerstone does not preclude Gale and Dewey from having an incredibly toxic relationship.
To help illuminate my argument, I’ve broken their relationship into three distinct eras.
The Will-They-Won’t-They Era
This era is where the foundation of their relationship was built, from their tentative flirting in Scream to their acrimonious reunion in Scream 2 to their also acrimonious reunion in Scream 3. It makes narrative sense why they would keep breaking up in between movies. Even though it’s a trope that I hate, screenwriters know it’s easier to get audiences invested in a new couple getting together (even if it’s their third go-round) rather than an established couple staying together.
Needs of the narrative arc aside, this on-again-off-again approach is a bad omen for their relationship. It makes sense why they wouldn’t have stayed together after the first movie. They were barely even together in the first place. They had a spark, but they lived in different towns and decided not to go for it. Also Gale wrote mean things about him in her book. People drift apart. People call you “dim-witted” in a New York Times best-seller. It happens to the best of us.
But the fact that they have had another split as of Scream 3, after that huge moment at the end of 2 where she chooses Dewey over her work, belies the problem at the core of their relationship. Because of the ministrations of a cadre of Ghostfaces, they keep trauma-bonding and trying to make their romance happen. But you can’t build a relationship off of sexy red streaks and surviving a serial killer. That’s proven by the fact that they keep failing to actually make it last.
The They-Finally-Did-And-They-Hate-It Era
As if we needed more proof that their romance is far from perfect, the one time they did make it last, it was a total disaster. Scream 4 picks up a decade and change after Scream 3 and sees that Gale and Dewey have gotten married in the interim, but things have quickly grown stale. Gale feels penned in by her Woodsboro life and finds that she can’t channel herself via writing in the way that she used to. Meanwhile, she has to compete for her husband’s attention with that lemon-square-baking siren Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton).
Frankly, their marriage was always doomed to fail. Gale is an on-the-go city gal, always on the hunt for the next big story. Her approach was brusque, and those stories were exploitative, for sure. But no matter how much she cleans up her act, she is still hardwired to stay moving, like a shark. In Woodsboro, she’s a very big fish in a teeny tiny pond, and her husband doesn’t seem to have any aspirations to rising any higher than sheriff and maintaining the quiet lifestyle he grew up with, give or take a few dozen stabbings every couple of years.
Instead of meeting her where she is and – I don’t know – getting a job as a police grunt in Los Angeles, he drags her into his sphere and tries to stuff her into the tiny box known as Woodsboro. You can’t hide your light under a bushel, Dewey, and Gale is your light. You’d think the highlighter-yellow pantsuit would have reminded you of that, but whatever.
The Post-Breakup Era
Their fundamental incompatibility is highlighted by how things shake out once they actually do break up. As revealed in the 2022 legacy sequel Scream, Dewey’s vision for his life stays small-scale. He can’t imagine a life without Gale and lets himself go to seed, watching her television show and never quite getting the guts to send that reconciliation text. Tragically, this is the last version of Dewey we ever get to see.
The snippets of Gale’s life in New York City, which we get to see in Scream VI, tell a completely different story. She has a high-rise apartment, a handsome new boyfriend, and she stays booked and busy. And that’s not to say this is the case because she never cared about Dewey. Of course she cared about Dewey. He’s adorable. A real nice guy. And she’s not unaffected by his death, naturally. She even has that moment where the Broken Arrow theme plays on the soundtrack that makes me cry every time. But she has always fundamentally been able to stand on her own and build a life around herself in a way that Dewey never was. But that life needs to be her own. She doesn’t need a man, it’s just nice to have one. She needs space to thrive, and that’s something that Dewey never recognized about her while trying to force her into the mold of his own small world.
Frankly, I don’t know that they could have made it work even if they’d tried a half dozen more times, which surely would have happened if the franchise hadn’t taken so many long breaks between 2000 and 2022. Opposites attract at first, sure, but if you keep them together long enough, sometimes they begin to repel each other like reverse polarity magnets. Unfortunately, that is exactly the case with Gale and Dewey’s relationship, as sharp as their banter is and as cute as they are together.
Editorials
Finding Gender Freedom in ‘The Curse of the Cat People’ (1944)

“I’m going to make a deer hunter out of you,” my father told me right after I was born. This was by way of my mother, of course. I had just popped into the world, and already, I was slapped with gender stereotypes of what it means to be a “man.” My father would become woefully disappointed when he later learned I hate hunting. Instead, I played with Barbie dolls, choreographed dances to Britney Spears, and generally did everything a boy or man wasn’t supposed to do. Although I don’t mind fishing and love camping/hiking, the point still stands: I didn’t turn out the way my father (or society) wanted me to. That’s perhaps why I gravitate so much to 1942’s Cat People and its genre-swerving sequel, The Curse of the Cat People (1944).
Exploring Gender Roles in The Curse of the Cat People
Amy is an outsider, ostracized by the other girls, and turns to animals and insects for companionship. Her peculiar behavior not only draws attention from the teacher but her father, who, as we’ve learned already, adheres to strict societal expectations. A young girl should be happy, skipping down the street–gleeful and popular–not detached and “strange.”
Growing Up Different: My Own Gender Identity Journey
It took time for me to come to such a realization. I grew up in your typical country town where machismo and camo were rewarded, while femininity was frowned upon. My friends were predominantly girls, and our play-pretend frequently saw me taking on roles of female characters, including Kelly from Saved by the Bell and T-Boz from TLC. I no longer have shame in that. But I also played with trucks, cars, and Power Rangers. There’s a duality that’s always been integral to who I’ve been. Much like Amy, I didn’t fit what society expected of me. My father never had a sit-down with me about how I was acting–except one summer, he forced me to play baseball, where I was bullied by a kid named Chance. The godawful experience taught me who I wasn’t and that there were shades to my identity.
The two decades that followed proved to be tricky. In 2006, when I first came out as a gay man, we didn’t have terms like non-binary. I accepted what society told me about identity; I’ve always landed somewhere in between male and female. I’ve felt a strong sense that my slider scale, so to speak, pushed tightly on the side of womanhood. It wasn’t until 2015 that I began questioning my transness, after seeing the controversial film, The Danish Girl, starring Eddie Redmayne. The way he caressed fabric, an electricity rocketed through my body. “That’s me!” I said to myself. It wasn’t exactly accurate, but I felt a certain type of way.
I was living in New York City at the time, and I can recall every single detail about that night – the way the street smelled on the walk home, the crispness in the winter hair, and the suffocating inner tension that nearly snapped in half. My body, once broken, felt renewal wash over my bones and flesh. The blurriness of my self-portrait became crisper, more detailed, and less fuzzy.
Finding My Truth: The Power of Queer Representation
Queerness comes in fractured neons. Each ray scatters a million particles, and all you can do is collect up the pieces that fit and move on. Much like Morales, “I thought I was sick. I know I thought something was really wrong with me,” she continued. “I was ashamed, and I thought I was dirty. I knew that the church said it was wrong and that God said it was wrong (even though I couldn’t exactly figure out why, if it wasn’t hurting anyone).”
I was practically in tears after reading such brutal, self-exposing honesty. It shattered me. Society’s skin-cutting chains rusted through and fell to the ground in that moment. Morales’ queer confession then sent me down a long, winding rabbit hole until I came across the term, genderqueer, or non-binary as it’s also called. There it is, I thought. That’s what I am. I’m both genders at once, existing in a once-non-existent space between the two that has now opened up like a gushing waterfall. All of it, my entire life, came crashing down upon my head, and everything I had ever felt made sense.
Lessons from Amy: Self-Love and Breaking Gender Norms
Every time I watch The Curse of the Cat People, I’m always reminded that my identity journey is never really over. I’m just happier now than I was yesterday. Baby steps. Like Amy, I’ve stepped into the sunlight for the first time. My face grows warm by the soft, golden radiance, and I can finally discard everything society has ever had to say about gender. I no longer need those misguided, harmful words filling up my heart and mind. In their place, I’ve fit new puzzle pieces together – gratitude, hope, compassion, love, and freedom – and each day offers exciting possibilities. Dear Amy, I hope you’ve lived a life you had only dreamed of, and that you’re happy. We all deserve to be.
Editorials
The Evolution of Female Cannibals in Horror Films and TV

[This article contains spoilers]
Prior to the disestablishment of the Hays’ Code, filmmakers had to make depictions of cannibalism more palatable, diluting the depravity of the act with humor by concealing body parts in pies. Cannibal horror didn’t truly emerge as a subgenre until 1972’s Man From The Deep River drew controversy and intrigue alike. This film jumpstarted the trend of cannibal films centering on your so-called “civilized man” venturing into desolate, often foreign landscapes, only to be cannibalized by the natives. Modern cannibal media has pushed beyond this cliché narrative, depicting sophisticated cannibals that cook their food like fine dining or turn the horror of the act into something frighteningly sexy. But the kinds of cannibalism we see in film differs significantly depending on the cannibal’s sex.
Evolution of Cannibalism in Horror Media
From Grotesque to Sophisticated Cannibals
Cannibalism media used to be a genre divided into extremes. Your cannibal either had a grotesque, animalistic habit like Leatherface or a deviously delicious and sophisticated palate like Hannibal Lecter; however, as we’ve entered the 21st century, this binary has become more of a spectrum. Audiences don’t want to watch the same reveals of flesh furniture or dinner parties that serve human flesh to unknowing guests. They want cannibalism as metaphors, cannibalism as erotic fixation, and even cannibalism as a connection to the supernatural.
Male Cannibals: Power and Brutality
Be it Hannibal Lecter, Alfred Packer, or a member of the Sawyer family, the first cannibal you think of is likely a man. While most cannibal media has departed from stereotypical portrayals of cannibalism as indicative of some non-Christian barbarity, sterilized, almost surgical cannibalism has become more common but not the norm. Wes Craven’s The Hills Have Eyes (1977) present cannibals as inbred savages, trapping and tearing apart whoever comes across their path, yet films like Antonia Bird’s Ravenous (1999) and Jonathan Demme’s The Silence of the Lambs (1991) portray cannibals as calculated, intelligent, and capable of seizing power despite their brutal actions. The sheer number of cannibal films centering male cannibals has allowed more opportunity to test the boundaries of the genre, but that doesn’t mean we should discount the more recent wave of female-centered cannibal movies.
Rise of Female Cannibals in Modern Media
Female Cannibals in Yellowjackets
Female cannibalism is just now hitting the mainstream as Yellowjackets (2021-present) captivates its audience as it tells the story of what happened to a girls’ soccer team lost in the wilderness. However, while Yellowjackets lets its female protagonists be ravenous and brutal, female cannibals in film are often portrayed as sympathetic and less monstrous than their male counterparts.
Sympathetic Portrayals in The Hills Have Eyes

Cannibalism as Metaphor in 21st-Century Film
Raw: Cannibalism and Sexual Awakening
As we enter the 21st century, cannibalism in literature and film has evolved, often being a stand-in for sex as a character consumes the flesh of another to satisfy a deep, carnal appetite. Julia Ducournau’s Raw (2016) tells the story of a first-year veterinary student and long-time vegetarian Justine (Garance Marillier), who finds herself with an insatiable hunger for meat after a hazing incident gone wrong.
As she navigates the sexual and ritualistic traditions of the program, Justine often finds her new cravings for flesh, coinciding with sexual pleasure as she attempts to consume her sexual partners. The version of cannibalism created by Raw is sympathetic, humanizing Justine by creating parallels between an obscene act and one that is normalized and commonplace in our society.
Jennifer’s Body: Cannibalism as Revenge
Karyn Kusama’s Jennifer’s Body (2009) takes a supernatural approach, recounting the tragic story of Jennifer (Megan Fox), a teen girl who is sacrificed to a demonic entity only to be resurrected as a man-hungry succubus. When Jennifer rises from the dead, her acts of cannibalism invert the power dynamic imposed on her human body earlier in the film when a band drugs and sacrifices her body to gain a deal with a demonic entity.
Jennifer then seeks revenge on the male sex, consuming them in ways that are just as destructive as the way they imposed themselves upon her. Her cannibalism is an inversion of the violence she suffered as the band overpowered, bound, and sacrificed her to reach musical fame.
Exploring Cannibalism in Yellowjackets
Season 1: Power Dynamics and Survival
As Yellowjackets has completed its third season, the show has attempted to explore cannibalism in relation to queerness, psychology, and pack dynamics. In the show’s first season, we see the formation and shifting of power dynamics within the social structure of the girls’ soccer team, as captain Jackie (Ella Purnell) finds herself ousted from the group’s cabin by Shauna (Sophie Nélisse), resulting in her death. As the Yellowjackets begin to starve, cannibalism is thrust upon them as Jackie’s corpse becomes engulfed in flames, breaking the animal part of the teams’ brains and causing them to feast on their teammates’ flesh. After this shocking finale, the group finds themselves at a crossroads, having to choose their humanity or their survival, with most choosing the latter.
However, Assistant Coach Ben (Steven Krueger) refuses the ritual consumption of Jackie’s flesh, putting him at odds against Shauna and the other Yellowjackets. In this case, cannibalism becomes a rite of passage, drawing a line between those who are willing to survive by any means necessary and those who would rather die than commit such an act.
Seasons 2 and 3: Guilt and Pack Dynamics
In some ways, the consumption of Jackie serves as a means of keeping her at the forefront of Shauna’s attention, her guilt corrupting and turning her into a more cruel, violent version of herself to align with how she is portrayed in the show’s adult timeline. In some ways, this psychological effect of cannibalism mirrors that seen by more sophisticated cannibals such as Hannibal Lecter in the TV series Hannibal.
While Shauna isolates, the group finds themselves battling with the nature of their survival, with the other girls conspiring to create a method for fairly determining who they’ll have to cannibalize next. The group settles on a game of cards, where one unlikely drawer will be hunted for sport by the group, either ending up the groups’ next meal or successfully escaping into the freezing wilderness.
This kind of organized game displays a unique example in the context of female cannibalism, marrying the more cerebral decision-making seen in other female cannibals with the pack dynamics seen in movies like Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
Queerness and Cannibalism in Season 3
As Van struggles with a cancer battle, Taissa finds her mind drawn back to the wilderness, wondering if a sacrifice of blood is what is needed to prevent the nebulous entity known as the Wilderness from claiming Van’s life; however, while this theory proves at least somewhat correct, Van dies by another Yellowjackets’ hand, but the grief-stricken Taissa performs one last sickening act, consuming one of Van’s raw organs in almost a means to remain ever close with her now lost love.
Redefining Female Cannibals in Horror
Justified Violence and Human Complexity
Female cannibals in film are often justified in their violence, slicked in gore, but excused of the filth of the act. They don’t often get to keep heads on plates in their freezers or wear a necklace of their victims’ ears. The brutality of their acts can’t be reduced to shock value, because these films acknowledge that there is a human component to their violence. They aren’t animals reduced to eating human flesh for the sake of it. They make the decision to do so.
While there aren’t many female cannibals that lean into the filth of the act, maybe it is better that way. This archetype of a disgusting, subhuman cannibal who savors the act and displays heads on sticks is one based in historical assumptions of what it meant to be a cannibal. There is a racial component to attributing cannibalism to a foreign savagery, contradictory to the fact that many classic cannibal movies like The Hills Have Eyes are based on American or European accounts of cannibalism. Reducing cannibals to caricatures turns them trope-y and repetitive.
Modern cannibal stories, especially those centering on female characters, push the boundaries of the genre. Cannibalism can also be a trauma response, a devastating outcome to an unfortunate circumstance, or something that empowers and flips power structures. While the cannibal subgenre may be looked down upon due to its history, modern filmmakers continue proving that cannibalism isn’t as simple as eating human flesh.