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  3. What Is So Bad About Roman's Motive, Exactly?

What Is So Bad About Roman's Motive, Exactly?

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    Stratego — 10 years ago(October 19, 2015 01:59 PM)

    Roman's motive was actually one of the biggest problems I had with the movie. It was soapy, unrealistic, contrived, whiny and much too vague. And it tried to tie into the first movie, but it just failed. Roman's supposed involvement in Maureen's murder plan just made it also seem very soapy, unrealistic and contrived.

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      Klockard23 — 10 years ago(October 19, 2015 06:25 PM)

      Well, there's only so many different ways you can tie the third film back into the original. Plus, it's not like the other ideas they had for the third movie were any better. Stu surviving the first movie and masterminding the attacks from prison? A whole group of people being behind the third Ghostface killings, only to reveal at the end that no one actually died and that it was all just a huge prank (i.e. a revision of the twist from April's Fool Day from 1982)? Meh.

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        Stratego — 10 years ago(October 19, 2015 07:08 PM)

        Those other two scenarios are absolutely awful. But did the third movie really HAVE to tie into the original? It seems pointless now with the fourth movie. I think I even prefer Angelina's motive from an earlier draft, maybe Roman should've had a similar motive as a movie director. I also seem to remember some talk about a scrapped idea (don't remember if it was for 3 or 4) with one of the characters being a former classmate of Sidney who was upset that her mother's death got no attention because of the whole media circus surrounding Maureen's death or something? That actually seems like a better motive to me.

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          Klockard23 — 10 years ago(October 19, 2015 10:12 PM)

          Well, three was meant to be the final one, so they wanted to do something that felt like closure and signified that everything might finally be over for good. Just having a couple of random killers with random motives wouldn't have been satisfying enough unless Sidney was killed at the end (since the Ghostface killings always center around her, her death might have plausibly brought an end to any more Ghostface murders happening in the future.)

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            Stratego — 10 years ago(October 20, 2015 03:31 AM)

            Well, I'm sure there are far less soapy, unrealistic, contrived, whiny and vague possible motives. It's up to the writer to be more imaginitive than I am.

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              Axle_Starr — 10 years ago(October 20, 2015 10:07 AM)

              They were IMO because Roman's motive was one of the more purely realistic ones of the bunch
              I'll take a potato chipand
              EAT IT!!

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                Stratego — 10 years ago(October 20, 2015 11:27 AM)

                It was the least realistic and completely soapy. It's absurd that some grown up guy gets so upset, because of his birth mother not welcoming him immediately after showing up at her doorstep, that he wants her dead. It's even more absurd that instead of just strangling her or hitting her on the head or something in a fit of rage, he concocts a plan to convince a teenage boy he doesn't even know to kill her without getting his hands dirty himself. It's worse that he even succeeds in that.
                To top all of that, he then cries over the half-sister he never met getting attention because of the mess he created himself and for some reason feels entitled to have everything she has (What? A slutbag whore for a mother and media attention for her and her friends being the victims of a serial killer?) And then we have to believe that just because his birth mother rejected him, he goes on to kill a bunch of innocent people just so he can blame everything on his half-sister and kill her as well.
                All that, without even explaining why he overreacts in such a disproportionate way. Sorry, but I can't find anything about that realistic.

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                  InTheHub — 10 years ago(October 23, 2015 02:30 AM)

                  At the heart Roman's is the most understandable.
                  The problem is the long way around we get to it.
                  But I've said it before and I'll say it again, I prefer this motive tied to the past than some new idiot doing it for some inpersonal reason.
                  People act like they didn't want the final film to have any personal weight for SidneyAre they serious????
                  Did they really want the trilogy to end with Bob the janitor being the killer?
                  "See it with someone you loveGo by yourself"

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                    Stratego — 10 years ago(October 23, 2015 08:28 AM)

                    No, I think it's the least understandable. I don't understand at all why someone would be so upset about their birth mother rejecting them that they concoct some complicated murder plane and years later go on a murder spree killing innocent people crying over their half-sister getting attention because of the mess they made themselves. Especially with no explanation or background information on why they act so disproportionately.
                    People act like they didn't want the final film to have any personal weight for SidneyAre they serious????
                    Did they really want the trilogy to end with Bob the janitor being the killer?
                    I don't think I ever suggested that. But it would've made more sense if Dewey, Gale or her father had been the killer. A half-brother, whom she's never met or even knew about, being the instigator of it all hardly carries any personal weight.

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                      Klockard23 — 10 years ago(October 23, 2015 04:22 PM)

                      lol Roman being tilted psychologically because the mother he spent years trying to track down rejected him is too far fetched, but Dewey (who has a very bad limp), Gale, or Sidney's father suddenly deciding to kill isn't?

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                        Stratego — 10 years ago(October 23, 2015 04:48 PM)

                        I did not say it would not be far-fetched. Guy wanted a killer who would add "personal weight" for Sidney, so in that case any of those characters would've made MORE sense than a half-brother she never even knew about and had no interaction with. At least those three had some history that could offer some sort of explanation.
                        lol

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                          Klockard23 — 10 years ago(October 23, 2015 08:12 PM)

                          But Roman never knowing her personally didn't subtract from his disdain for her, all the while him being the orchestrator behind her murder as well as being a sibling of Sid's still means they're connected to one another.

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                            Stratego — 10 years ago(October 24, 2015 03:54 AM)

                            Ofcourse she would feel disdain for a killer, but how much personal weight does it really carry?

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                              InTheHub — 10 years ago(October 24, 2015 01:40 AM)

                              No, I think it's the least understandable
                              Here's the problemBilly and Roman have essentially the same motive. But I find Billy's less understandable because it's a common thing to have an affair, and the person Billy Should hate more than anyone is his dad(who stays alive and apparently bares no responsibility).
                              Why he decides his girlfriend and high school friends deserve to die because his parents broke up is truly mind boggling.
                              Roman wanted Maureen dead and then her daughter, he didn't turn on his friends or have someone more responsible who he let live for no reason. Hell Roman even killed Milton, the man who technically caused everything.
                              "See it with someone you loveGo by yourself"

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                                Stratego — 10 years ago(October 24, 2015 04:22 AM)

                                Billy and Roman have essentially the same motive.
                                I don't think they really do. Billy killed because the family he grew up in was destroyed. Roman killed innocent strangers because some woman he never met before didn't immediately welcome him as her son.
                                But I find Billy's less understandable because it's a common thing to have an affair, and the person Billy Should hate more than anyone is his dad(who stays alive and apparently bares no responsibility).
                                As I said, it wasn't just the affair, it was because his family had fallen apart and his mother was gone. While he should blame his father, it's really not that strange for a child to hate "the other woman" more and see her as a seductress and homewrecker.
                                Why he decides his girlfriend and high school friends deserve to die because his parents broke up is truly mind boggling.
                                Not as much as some grown up guy killing innocent people and a half-sister who didn't even know about him because some woman he never met before didn't immediately welcome him as her son.
                                Billy started out just wanting Maureen dead. But his issues weren't resolved when she was dead, so he transferred his hate for her onto her daughter and her family. He also ended up liking the taste of killing, and he had a partner who was only in it for the thrill of it. When and how did Roman transition from orchestrating the murder of the birth mother who rejected him to resenting the half-sister who never even knew about him and viciously killing many innocent strangers?
                                Roman wanted Maureen dead and then her daughter, he didn't turn on his friends or have someone more responsible who he let live for no reason. Hell Roman even killed Milton, the man who technically caused everything.
                                Wait. Roman killing innocent strangers makes sense, but Billy killing people he or Stu had beef with or who were simply in the way doesn't? Did you miss the major theme of teen violence in the first movie? I have no idea what Roman was a comment on. Bad storylines in soap operas?

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                                  InTheHub — 10 years ago(October 25, 2015 02:57 AM)

                                  Wait. Roman killing innocent strangers makes sense?
                                  He was doing it to try and guilt Sidney out of hiding. Billy and Stu were killing their own "friends". Casey made sense, but Tatum? Randy? His own girlfriend?
                                  The cast of Stab were nothing to Roman.
                                  Bad storylines in soap operas?
                                  It's funny how you always take the soap opera jab at Scream 3. There is an interview with Wes Craven himself from the first Scream stating how much it is like a soap opera storyline, the affair, the murder the revenge.
                                  There's also podcasts out there which state "Scream is a melodramatic overblown soap opera storyline masquerading as a horror film"
                                  Why you have such a beef with the third film in a franchise for stretching is beyond me.
                                  Like I said before, it's as if you think the film suffered no handicapp going in whatsoever.
                                  "See it with someone you loveGo by yourself"

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                                    Stratego — 10 years ago(October 25, 2015 04:19 AM)

                                    He was doing it to try and guilt Sidney out of hiding.
                                    So it makes sense that a guy who has personally never killed before starts killing innocent, random people because his birth mother rejected him and he got jealous of the attention the half-sister got for the mess he created himself?
                                    Billy and Stu were killing their own "friends". Casey made sense, but Tatum? Randy? His own girlfriend?
                                    Tatum and Randy were simply in the way. But like I said, there was a major theme about teen violence. Teens getting violent with their friends happens way too much. Randy was never their friend anyway. I already explained why Billy wanted Sidney dead.
                                    The cast of Stab were nothing to Roman.
                                    Stu was a psychopath, why would anyone mean anything to him.
                                    It's funny how you always take the soap opera jab at Scream 3. There is an interview with Wes Craven himself from the first Scream stating how much it is like a soap opera storyline, the affair, the murder the revenge.
                                    And he went into full soap opera-mode for the third film
                                    There's also podcasts out there which state "Scream is a melodramatic overblown soap opera storyline masquerading as a horror film"
                                    The first part of that sentence certainly applies to Scream 3.
                                    Why you have such a beef with the third film in a franchise for stretching is beyond me.
                                    Because it's not a good film. And I have no "beef" with it, I hardy care about it, just like other films that aren't good. But the boards are near dead right now, so on this board I at least get to discuss Scream and keep you in check.
                                    Like I said before, it's as if you think the film suffered no handicapp going in whatsoever
                                    I take those handicaps into account as much as you do with the handicaps of Scream 2. But I don't think Roman's ridiculous motive had anything to do with any setbacks the movie may have suffered.

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                                      Klockard23 — 10 years ago(October 25, 2015 07:28 PM)

                                      So it makes sense that a guy who has personally never killed before starts killing innocent, random people because his birth mother rejected him and he got jealous of the attention the half-sister got for the mess he created himself?
                                      Yes. People in real life have killed for less, and folks often act in ways that aren't entirely rational when they get fired up over something. As mentioned, Billy's ways weren't entirely rational either.
                                      Tatum and Randy were simply in the way. But like I said, there was a major theme about teen violence. Teens getting violent with their friends happens way too much. Randy was never their friend anyway. I already explained why Billy wanted Sidney dead.
                                      Tatum "got in the way" because of the way they specifically planned on how things would go down, i.e. at Stu's house on the one-year anniversary of Maureen's murder. It's not like they absolutely had to do it only one way. I also do think that Stu and Randy were friends, even though Billy and Randy didn't exactly strike me as buds.

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                                        Stratego — 10 years ago(October 26, 2015 04:49 AM)

                                        People in real life have killed for less
                                        Which doesn't make it more understandable. But it's not about his motive hardly being a reason to kill. It's about being ridiculously contrived and not making sense psychologically. As said, I can see him killing Maureen in a fit of rage, I could even see him becoming a serial killer killing random prostitutes or something. But even that, not without some sort of explanation of how he grew up, because most people don't just kill their birth mother because they weren't immediately welcomed by her.
                                        As mentioned, Billy's ways weren't entirely rational either.
                                        No, a normal person wouldn't kill for that reason. But his motive is much more realistic than Roman's.
                                        Tatum "got in the way" because of the way they specifically planned on how things would go down, i.e. at Stu's house on the one-year anniversary of Maureen's murder.
                                        Sidney was staying with Tatum who would not have just left her side, I don't really see how they could've gotten to her without Tatum getting in the way. They also wanted a big horror movie style finale with Sidney and her father ending up dead and them being the wounded survivors, so sneaking into her bedroom and stabbing her without Tatum noticing wouldn't have worked. I don't think they had a choice. Maybe originally Tatum dissing Stu's sexual performance also played a role.
                                        I also do think that Stu and Randy were friend
                                        Hmm, I can't really say I agree. They seemed to be rather antagonistic in the fountain scene.

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                                          InTheHub — 10 years ago(October 26, 2015 05:47 AM)

                                          Like I said, neither motive may be realistic or understandable but it makes "movie sense".
                                          I just think you're applying complete logical and rationality to the third film, and shrugging it off for the first. And if anything, you should be way easier on the third film for obvious reasons.
                                          The third film had a much harder job at coming up with an interesting and believable take for the 5th person attempting to kill Sidney.
                                          I think they were clever to tie it in to the original rather than make it a new person.
                                          I don't think you're giving it any credit for that. Ever. And I find that truly puzzling.
                                          "See it with someone you loveGo by yourself"

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