When people think about the early 2000s comedy boom, the Scary Movie franchise sits at the top. It was outrageous, it was silly, and it was one of the last times parody films had a real place in theaters. What many people don’t realize is that the Wayans family, who created the first two movies, didn’t get to see the series through. According to Marlon Wayans, the franchise was stolen right out from under them.
Marlon told the story recently during a live stream with Kai Cenat, and it wasn’t just a casual remark. He explained that after the massive success of Scary Movie and Scary Movie 2, the studio behind the films decided they no longer wanted to honor the Wayans’ deal. Instead of negotiating, they simply cut the family out and moved forward without them. The way Marlon describes it, they didn’t even have the courtesy to inform him directly. He and his brothers found out through the press that other writers and directors were taking over their creation.
It’s a reminder of how Hollywood often works. The people who come up with the ideas, who put in the grind and prove an audience is there, are the same people who get pushed aside once executives smell a bigger payday. The Wayans brothers weren’t just replaced; they were erased from the continuation of a franchise they built from the ground up.
The results speak for themselves. Scary Movie 3, 4, and 5 still made money, but they lost the personality and edge that defined the first two. The humor shifted from being rooted in a specific cultural voice to a broader, safer style. Fans who grew up on the original films know there’s a clear difference in quality. What started as a genuine hit that captured the pulse of the moment turned into formulaic parody that leaned on easy references instead of the sharp, lived-in comedy the Wayans delivered.
Marlon’s comments are especially relevant now as talk of a possible Scary Movie 6 floats around Hollywood. The idea that the franchise could be revived without ever acknowledging or including the family that created it only reinforces the industry’s reputation for treating talent as disposable. It also raises bigger questions about ownership in entertainment. When you create something under a studio contract, how much of it do you truly own? And when a franchise grows into a billion-dollar property, who really benefits from that success?
For the Wayans, the experience is both a cautionary tale and a badge of honor. They may have lost the rights to continue with Scary Movie, but no one can deny that they built the foundation. Without them, there is no Scary Movie franchise. The laughter, the cultural impact, and the box office numbers all trace back to their creativity. Marlon’s story isn’t just about a deal gone bad, it’s about how easily Hollywood can turn its back on the very people who made it money in the first place.