“It’s your turn to scream…” A brief history of the final girl

The last man standing in a horror film is often a badass woman like Jamie Lee Curtis or Neve Campbell

Film Features Scream
“It’s your turn to scream…” A brief history of the final girl
Neve Campbell (right) in Scream (Dimension Films); Mia Goth in X (A24) Graphic: AVClub

If you and your buddies were being hunted down by a psychopathic serial killer, who do you think would be most likely to survive? Is it the physically imposing jock who’s always in a fight, or the loner bad boy who could plow the killer over in his muscle car? How about the snobby rich kid with the massive mansion everyone could hide in? Nope! Your best bet is the shy, skinny girl who’s never held a weapon or thrown hands in her life.

The concept of horror cinema’s “final girl” was first coined in 1992 by film professor Carol J. Clover in her book Men, Women, And Chainsaws: Gender In The Modern Horror Film. However, the term quickly escaped the pages of feminist academia and became a well-known trope among even the most casual of scary movie fanatics. That’s because these women show up everywhere–especially if you’re a follower of the slasher subgenre.

Although the term “final girl” was coined in the ’90s, its tropes had become well-worn as early as 1980. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre has one. So does Halloween, Alien, Friday The 13th, A Nightmare On Elm Street, Hellraiser, Scream, I Know What You Did Last Summer, You’re Next, and X … all of them use this well-worn but effective convention.

So, what exactly is a “final girl”? What made them a cornerstone of early slashers? And why, both literally and as a decades-spanning cliche, do they simply refuse to die?

What makes a great final girl?

Clover summarizes the final girl as “the one [character] who encounters the mutilated bodies of her friends and perceives the full extent of the preceding horror and her own peril; who is cornered, wounded; whom we see scream, stagger, fall, rise and scream again. She is abject terror personified.” All true, yet most importantly, she’s the girl who survives to the end and escapes and/or defeats the killer–until said killer inevitably returns for a cash-cow sequel, but that’s a topic for another day.

Clover came up with the trope specifically in reference to the slasher genre, which ruled the late ’70s and early ’80s. The first examples are Sally Hardesty (Marilyn Burns) in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and Jess Bradford (Olivia Hussey) from the lesser known but equally influential Black Christmas. Those roles were echoed by Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) in Halloween, Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) in Alien, Alice Hardy (Betsy Palmer) in the first Friday The 13th, and so on.

The defining trait of the final girl is her innocence. She’s young and pretty, but– unlike her drunken and sexed-up pals, who are destined to join a serial killer’s body count—she indulges in no taboo behavior and is either a virgin or uninterested in sex. She also doesn’t have a male savior to rely on until the very end of the movie, hence why somebody like Lila Crane (Vera Miles) from Psycho doesn’t fit the parameters.

Final girls beat the odds—and the killer

The final girl is the ultimate underdog. Just look at Halloween’s Laurie Strode. She is a docile, teenage babysitter who somehow has to elude Michael Myers, a faceless murderer whose strength and ability to stab people out of nowhere border on the superhuman. On top of that, she has to protect two children, Tommy and Lindsey, from Michael’s rampage. Those seemingly insurmountable odds make Michael and Laurie’s closing game of cat and mouse all the more tense. The gender and age differences only add to how predatory and inhuman Michael seems. Plus, Laurie is still acting selflessly to protect two other, even iller-equipped people. That is heroism in its simplest, basest, yet strongest, form.

The evolution of the final girl as slasher films became self-aware has been fascinating as well, giving the trope a generation-transcending life. In Scream, audiences were conditioned to believe that Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore) would be the protagonist. She was young, blonde, attractive and played by a big-name star. Oh, and she was the only person on the poster! But then she dies before the opening credits roll. Similarly subversive was Allison (Katrina Bowden) from Tucker & Dale Vs Evil. The final girl of that 2009 horror-comedy was a quick-witted psychology student who goes against all slasher cliches by falling in love with the hillbilly her friends mistook for a serial killer.

Are final girls defined by victimhood or strength?

Although the “final girl” was first characterized more than three decades ago, there’s still plenty of discourse around what these characters are supposed to represent. Are they powerfully feminist figures that defy their predators, or are they victims defined by their screaming and virginity? Well …

Clover didn’t think the final girl was feminist. “To applaud the Final Girl as a feminist development […] is, in light of her figurative meaning, a particularly grotesque expression of wishful thinking,” she wrote. She viewed the character as someone given the “privilege” of surviving because of what male filmmakers liked in their women: attractiveness, virginity, no taboos, and so on.

However, that was in 1992. For 1996’s Scream, final girl Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) became a more confident and assertive character as the film progressed. Although she starts as the timid virgin, she transforms into a one-liner-spouting, gun-toting badass: “Not in my fucking movie,” she quips before blasting lead between the eyes of her boyfriend-turned-serial killer. And by the time of Scream 3 in 2000, Sidney has hardened even further, staring down the killer with the line, “It’s your turn to scream, asshole.”

Meanwhile, in X, it’s the killer who’s driven to madness by sexual repression, envious of final girl Maxine’s (Mia Goth) youth and freedom. At this point, the final girl has evolved into a complex and increasingly self-aware character. Gender and sex are inherently a part of her identity, but in the right hands, she can say so much about both of those things. How malleable she is, and her nonstop underdog status, means that she deserves her exalted place as a horror movie cornerstone.

17 Comments

  • teageegeepea-av says:

    I think of Black Christmas as being even less of a slasher than Texas Chainsaw Massacre, which is itself merely a proto-slasher. TCM ends with its final girl escaping the (masked) killer. Black Christmas does not (the emphasis on a mistaken identity for the killer puts it a little bit closer to giallo). The character in that film is emphatically NOT a virgin: a plot point is her decision to get an abortion. Friday the 13th, having a serial killer motivated to punish young people for having sex & goofing off, also didn’t have a virgin final girl: she’s having an affair with her boss (she also plays strip poker with her colleagues while they all drink).I would also question Hellraiser’s inclusion. It’s not in the slasher mold where a group of friends are getting picked off, instead it’s a domestic situation in which the protagonist has a wicked stepmother carrying on an affair with her husband’s brother. The early victims being picked up to revive Frank are completely unknown to the “final girl”, and she never sees them.

  • jackechambers-av says:

    Betsy Palmer, pretty famously, does NOT play the Final Girl in “Friday the 13th,” FWIW…Also, I super-duper recommend Grady Hendrix’s “Final Girl Support Group.” So, so good and digs deep into all of this.

  • smittywerbenjagermanjensen22-av says:

    Barbara Crampton and Linnea Quigley are two of my favorite “scream queens” but interestingly they often don’t fit the “final girl” mold exactly

  • big-spaghetti-av says:

    No love for Kristen Connolly from The Cabin in the Woods?

    • CashmereRebel-av says:

      “me, a virgin?”-“We have to work with we got”

      • big-spaghetti-av says:

        And discussing it with Sigourney Weaver who was never much of a final girl but a damn fine final woman.

        • CashmereRebel-av says:

          Cabin in the Woods really nailed the ending, didn’t it? 

          • big-spaghetti-av says:

            It’s a great take on horror, I’m not sure they did enough with the ideas behind it, but it was a lot of fun.

          • heathmaiden-av says:

            While I’m totally on board with “no sequels” as per Drew Goddard, I would love to see movies about some of the other failed scenarios from that last ritual.

  • frogan-av says:

    Juliet Capulet was the original Final Girl. Didn’t end well, unfortunately.

  • fever-dog-av says:

    There’s a fun comic series that features a “final girl” battling with slashers called Hack/Slash. It’s quite fan-service-y (i.e. pervy) but the writing is of good quality.

  • cura-te-ipsum-av says:

    I highly recommend this film which was also very good with the meta commentary on top of being a lot of fun.

  • TimothyP-av says:

    Just a quick FYI–the photo of Mia Goth is from Pearl, not X (same universe, different character–and arguably the better movie).

  • heathmaiden-av says:

    If you like horror, I do recommend reading Clover’s book. I was a weirdo who stumbled across the book and read it during college just for funsies (it is actually a fairly easy read that doesn’t get too heavy in the weeds with academic-ese). I only discovered years later that it was actually this really important work in film theory that is now commonly taught in film and gender studies courses.Clover also has chapters in the book that discuss possession/haunting horror and the rape-revenge subgenres. Her focus was really only on the horror boom during the 1970s and 80s, so it’s really interesting to see how horror has evolved, possibly in response to some of the theories Clover posited. As the article notes, final girls definitely seem to have embraced their power in slashers since the late 90s. (Another great subversion is Sharni Vinson’s Erin in You’re Next.) For example, I feel like 2017’s Revenge, a rape-revenge movie that one can very much argue is feminist (or at least far more so than a lot of earlier entries in the subgenre), might not exist like it does if it weren’t for Clover.I do often find myself wanting Clover or someone else like her to write a follow up work that talks about gender in horror with the new wave that started in the late 90s and in what one might call a third wave (would we call it that? I know the 70s didn’t start horror, but I feel like it started what we’d consider modern horror) that started with prestige horror in the 2010s.

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