It seems that when Scream 5 finally arrives, it will have David Arquette’s Sheriff Dewey Riley to help handle whatever version of its stabby iconic Ghostface killer ultimately manifests.

Spyglass Media Group, the company that acquired the Scream IP from its brand-tainted original home of The Weinstein Company, has officially announced Arquette’s return for his classic film franchise role of Dewey. The casting will continue a tradition that goes back to 1996’s original Scream, in which the character debuted as a boyish, diffident deputy during the initial Ghostface killings in the film’s small-town setting of Woodsboro, California, evolving over the course of the subsequent films. Thus, while Arquette’s return is not an astonishing surprise, it likely cements the fifth film’s heretofore mystery status as a proper sequel, rather than a reboot.

As Arquette expresses in a statement of his Scream 5 role reprisal, also giving due respect to the franchise’s original director, the late Wes Craven:

With the Scream franchise left without Craven, who passed away back in 2015, having directed the four existing films—Scream (1996), Scream 2 (1997), Scream 3 (2000) and Scream 4 (2011)—the director’s chair(s) for Scream 5 will be occupied by members of a filmmaker trio Radio Silence, in this case Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, who ride recent acclaim from last year’s comedic-horror hit, Ready or Not, along with 2012’s V/H/S, and recently became attached to crime thriller The Ice Beneath Her, which will star Daisy Ridley. The directors will work off an original story screenplay by James Vanderbilt (Murder Mystery, The Amazing Spider-Man) and Guy Busick (Ready or Not, Castle Rock). Also onboard is executive producer Chad Villella, rounding out Radio Silence’s main trio. Additionally, the franchise’s original screenwriting visionary, Kevin Williamson, returns to executive-produce.

As Radio Silence collectively express in a statement:

Williamson also chimes in, stating:

With Arquette now the first official member of the Scream 5 cast, the studio has also teased more prospective “legacy cast” members for the film; an aspect that seems to validate the recent report that the headlining star of the films, Neve Campbell, is also in talks to reprise her role as Sidney Prescott, the constant target of the Ghostface killer(s), prospectively continuing what would be a 25-year ordeal of being stalked by various versions of the mask-and-robe-wearing assailant, which—in a manner that’s meta to various heyday entries of slasher genre—typically ends up being eccentric copycats, each motivated by unique reasons.

It will be interesting to see if there’s a desire among the movie-going (well, these days movie-streaming) public for a fifth Scream film. While it’s been nearly a decade since the last film, 2011’s Scream 4, arrived, the franchise hasn’t exactly been dormant, having been represented on the small screen with the Scream television series, which launched on MTV in 2015, and concluded—after years of delays—on VH1, which aired its third and final season in an understated manner across three nights last year. While that rather ignominious end to the TV series might not be directly attributed to the state of the franchise, it is, nevertheless, a valid variable in the Scream 5 equation.

While the current global health crisis might make an inauspicious atmosphere for the production of Scream 5, Spyglass has revealed that plans are in motion to begin principal photography in Wilmington, North Carolina sometime later this year, specifically when safety protocols have been implemented. Consequently, a cautiously optimistic timeline could see the film hit by the appropriate Halloween season in 2021, although that might require the filmmakers to rush things.