[75 years ago this week, operator-assisted toll dialing was introduced to make long-distance phone calls much easier. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy some classic phone calls in American culture, leading up to a special tribute to what phones mean in my own 21st century life!]
On one
thing that’s really changed since the first Scream,
and one that hasn’t.
I wrote
about the most important conceit of the Scream
series of horror films, their metatextual commentary on the tropes and
traditions of the horror genre, in this 2020
post. I think that element relates closely to the way the films use
phones, so I’ll ask you to check out that post and then come on back here for
this related topic.
Welcome
back! One of the many, many many many, horror movie tropes on which Scream (1996) was commenting was the
external yet intimate threat posed by horror monsters and killers, a threat
exemplified by Halloween’s Michael Myers looking into windows but also
captured quite nicely by a threatening phone call (whether or not it’s “coming from inside the house!”).
There’s a reason, after all, why Scream begins with the
sound of a phone ringing followed by a young woman’s screams, before the
audience even sees the specific, threatened young woman (Drew Barrymore) who
will unfortunately answer this call and provide her own screams. But it’s
pretty telling that that call comes in on a landline, and one without caller ID
at that—if Barrymore’s Casey Becker and her family had that technology, and/or
if she had a cell phone with caller ID as well, she’d likely not pickup a call
from a strange number, eliminating the entire premise of the killers toying
with her over the phone.
Yet even
as the Scream series has evolved into
the smartphone era (with both 2011’s Scream
4 and, even more fully, 2022’s Scream
and 2023’s Scream VI set in that brave new world), a time when virtually
everyone has both a cell phone and the ability to see and screen our calls, it
has apparently maintained this central trope of the killers calling on the
phone (I haven’t seen any of those films, so as always I welcome corrections
and comments of all kinds!). I’m sure the filmmakers have found specific ways
to explain how these smartphone-era killers are maintaining their anonymity
(even in the original Scream there’s an
elaborate plotline about a cloned cell phone, for example). But
to my mind, the more important point is that the scary phone call trope
endures, and perhaps has even deepened in the smartphone era—I know for me,
almost every time my phone rings these days (unless it’s my kids calling to say
goodnight when they’re with their mom) it feels at best unnerving and at worst
potentially threatening. It doesn’t have to a psycho killer on the other end to
make the phone an external yet intimate and potentially invasive technology, it
turns out.
Next
famous phone calls tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Famous cultural phones you’d highlight?
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