Psycho Prom Queen
- Krista Wagner
- Feb 28, 2020
- 2 min read

Writing Quality: Perfect! I mean, this script compels you all the way through. The writer uses unprecedented conventions to emphasizel the very real psychotic and scary nature of the main character, Amy. I extol the writing and direction of this wonderfully made film!
Scare Factor: Disturbing in ways you have never seen! Amy is cruel. She has her own special brand of manipulating situations and people to get what she wants: To Be The Prom Queen. This is, literally, all that matters to her. She has no care for others, not her friends, teachers, not even her own mother. She re-brands the narcissistic label in ways that will send shivers up and down your spine.
Content (sex, language, & violence): A moment where Amy and her boyfriend lie on the bed and he starts to touch her sexually, but she puts a stop to it. Three instances of bit***. The violence is up close and personal.
Values: A mom who has replaced the missing teacher. She recognizes that Amy's behavior is unsettling, but no one wants to do anything (they're too afraid). The mom acts commendably to safeguard her daughter Miya from Amy, who has befriended her, and she does everything she can to expose Amy's evil tactics, including what really happened to the missing teacher. Miya cares deeply about obeying her mom.
Acting: Superb. The three main characters-mom, daughter, and psycho, perform their roles quite credibly. Indeed, Allie MacDonald plays Amy so well it's a bit unnerving. She never breaks from her smoothness or from her cruel nature.
Bonuses: I was shocked to see that Allie MacDonald (Amy) is the same actress who plays the sweet and caring friend in House At The End of The Street. What a shift here!
You will cheer at the ending. :)
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