Imagine twelve people thinking a ghost town is the perfect spot for a camping trip. Now imagine that somewhere in the shadows, an invisible killer—yes, invisible—decides to make them its midnight snack. Scream’s premise is deceptively simple: go somewhere creepy, get hacked, repeat. But the execution is less “slasher masterpiece” and more “director Byron Quisenberry forgot the script and then everyone just tried to improvise murder.”
The deaths are creative, in the same sense that stepping on a Lego is “creative pain.” People are hanged, hacked, axed in the face, thrown through doors, decapitated, and generally massacred with all the care of a toddler wielding a butter knife. And yet, miraculously, no one ever seems to leave footprints. Our killer, it turns out, is invisible, which is a bold choice for a slasher film—mostly because it looks exactly like nothing is happening. Suspense here is created by imagining the horror rather than seeing it, which may have been cheaper than actually hiring a stunt coordinator.
The survivors flail about trying to trap this phantom menace, but mostly they flail at each other and their own terrible decision-making. Leadership switches hands like a bad game of musical chairs: Bob, then Rudy, then apparently nobody of note. Meanwhile, a mysterious cowboy named Charlie Winters shows up, talks for a bit, shoots the invisible force, and rides off into the sunset like he’s auditioning for Ghostbusters: Western Edition.
The cast deserves a medal for commitment, if only because they attempt to emote over nonsense exposition and invisible assailants. Hank Worden looks confused, Ethan Wayne looks tired, and the rest look like they just realized they signed up for Butcher, Baker, Candlestick Maker: The Movie. It’s almost charming how little the audience is expected to care about anyone; by the time the scythe is dropped, you’re wondering if it’s worth rescuing them—or just leaving them for the invisible killer.
Shot over eleven days at Lake Piru and a Paramount ranch, the film has all the polish of a community theater production on a Friday night with leftover Halloween props. The script was unfinished during filming, which explains why character motivation feels like it was decided by rolling dice. And yes, the title The Outing is somehow less terrifying than Scream, which is saying something.
At the end, Charlie guns down the invisible killer, rides off, and everyone survives just in time for a pickup truck ride to nowhere. It’s a film that makes you wonder if Byron Quisenberry was secretly critiquing slasher films by making one where the killer is literally nothing. Or maybe he just didn’t care. Either way, Scream is less a horror film and more a cautionary tale: never trust a ghost town, never trust a film shot in eleven days, and never, ever assume the invisible will make a compelling villain.


