The first two Scary Movie films had quite the reputation for their crude humor, so it’s no shock that people were a little pissed off when it was announced that Scary Movie 3 would be slapped with the dreaded PG-13 rating. But it wasn’t just the rating that changed.
After their miserable experience on Scary Movie 2, the Wayans Brothers left the project entirely. What’s often overlooked, though, is who replaced them: David Zucker. If that name doesn’t ring a bell, maybe these will: Airplane!, The Naked Gun, Top Secret!, BASEketball. This guy helped define the parody genre. So, pardon my French, but… F the PG-13 rating.
Because Scary Movie 3 manages to parody the biggest movies in the horror landscape of 2003, while still throwing in its usual love for The Matrix. And it’s shockingly good.
It might surprise you to hear that Scary Movie 3 was originally going to avoid horror entirely. That’s right. The initial concept was a parody of Star Wars, The Lord of the Rings, and Harry Potter, under the title Scary Movie 3: Episode I – Lord of the Brooms.
Yeah… thankfully, they scrapped that terrible idea. Instead, they returned to what the franchise does best: parodying horror. With a script by Pat Proft and Craig Mazin (yes, that Craig Mazin), they were off to the races.
Zucker brings a completely different comedic sensibility than the Wayans Brothers. Where the earlier films leaned heavily into crude humor, Zucker goes full slapstick, more in line with The Naked Gun. And it works perfectly.
Anna Faris, a master of physical comedy, is the ideal match for this style. She fully commits, throwing her entire body into every joke. She returns as Cindy Campbell, alongside Regina Hall as Brenda.
Cindy’s storyline closely follows The Ring, even down to her going blonde. There’s a cursed videotape. A creepy long-haired girl. And if you watch it, you die in seven days. Cindy is trying to protect a young boy named Cody, the son of her secret, meth-addicted sister (a creative way to give her a kid without messing with continuity).
Meanwhile, a second storyline follows Tom and George (Charlie Sheen and Simon Rex), parodying Signs. Crop circles. Strange happenings. Farm life. It’s basically Graham and Merrill with way more absurdity. The two plots eventually collide, with Cody acting as the connective thread.
The film opens with a parody of The Ring, replacing the original teens with Jenny McCarthy and Pamela Anderson, a callback to Carmen Electra in the first film. It’s a great tone-setter and delivers some genuinely funny moments.
There’s also a quick parody of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake, which had only been released one week earlier. That turnaround is impressive.
With the Wayans gone, we lose Ray and Shorty but gain a whole new ensemble.
And then there’s Leslie Nielsen. As President Harris, he’s exactly what you’d expect; completely ridiculous, constantly misreading situations, and stealing every scene.
Like the first film, Scary Movie 3 can’t resist taking shots at The Matrix. With The Matrix Revolutions releasing just two weeks earlier, the timing was perfect.
We get:
There was originally even more Matrix Reloaded parody, including a full Agent Smith battle, but it was cut after poor test screenings.
The film is packed with early-2000s rap cameos:
It feels like a time capsule from that era. There’s even a parody of 8 Mile, complete with a rap battle.
The final act leans heavily into absurdity:
And in true Zucker fashion, it’s actually President Harris who saves the day.
Fun fact: the Michael Jackson parody wasn’t actually him, it was impersonator Edward Moss, but audiences (and even the studio) were fooled.
Scary Movie 3 hit theaters on October 24, 2003.
Huge financial success. But at the time? Not well-liked.
However, like many comedies, it’s been re-evaluated over time. The release of Scary Movie 3.5 (with added crude content) helped, and today it has a much stronger reputation.
In many ways, Scary Movie 3 feels closer to the original than Scary Movie 2 ever did.
It may drift a bit away from pure horror at times, but it always circles back. And it works.
Where do you rank Scary Movie 3 in the franchise? Should the series have ended here? Let us know.
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