Ghostbusters Movie Review
Ghostbusters Review
"Ghostbusters" Overview

Rating: PG
1984
Cast and Crew
Director : Ivan ReitmanProducer : Ivan Reitman
Screenwiter : Dan Aykroyd,Harold Ramis
Starring : Bill Murray,Dan Aykroyd,Sigourney Weaver,Harold Ramis,Rick Moranis,Annie Potts,William Atherton,Ernie Hudson
Films like Ghostbusters are inseparable from the '80s -- self-mocking and
smart, yet lowbrow and mainstream, they rescued us from the unfunny film
comedies of previous times. (If Ghostbusters had been made earlier, it would
have been much less funny. If it were remade today, it would probably be much
dumber, like TV's Buffy the Vampire Slayer.)
Like Bill Murray's other top comedies, the slightly more subversive Caddyshack
and Stripes, Ghostbusters passes the most important test of cinematic greatness
-- no matter how many times you've seen it, you may end up watching it again
when it comes around on TV. Murray, Aykroyd, and Ramis are postgraduates in
"parapsychology" who pretend to investigate paranormal phenomena (the movie
begins with Murray trying to pick up a coed by convincing her she's psychic)
until they're kicked off campus. So they start a business and become
celebrities when they start capturing real ghosts. This cheesy premise is
handled so smoothly that there is never a confusing moment, something
screenwriter Ramis would achieve again with Groundhog Day, an equally odd
concept which also worked. Unlike Groundhog, Ghostbusters is strictly for
laughs -- which doesn't mean that it's dumb.
Ghostbusters is Bill Murray's movie all the way -- Ramis and Aykroyd wrote it
and costar, but they mostly serve as straight men for Murray's irony-soaked
one-liners. Everything about the movie is goofy but somehow irresistible, from
the Ray Parker Jr. theme song to the climactic marshmallow man. The supporting
characters are likewise wacky but logical, including Potts as the jaded
receptionist who puts the moves on Ramis ("Do you have any hobbies?" "I collect
spores, molds, and fungus.") and Moranis' nerdy tax consultant who ends up
possessed by a Mesopotamian demigod.
The script is not flawless -- in an unnecessary subplot that stalls the movie
in the middle, the boys get busted by the EPA. (Only in the '80s could
everything, even ghosts, be blamed on too much government.) Otherwise, the
movie is fun from start to finish, when the 'busters destroy the evil Sumerian
demigod atop a Central Park high-rise and Ernie Hudson (as the token
African-American ghostbuster) jumps in the air and yells "I love this town!" --
reducing the whole movie to a New York City joke.
One of the most popular comedies ever, Ghostbusters inspired many subsequent
blockbusters (most obviously Men in Black, which even threw in a couple of NYC
jokes itself) plus a children's cartoon. The entire cast reunited for an
uninspired, but not bad, sequel in 1989.
Now available on a two-DVD set with the sequel, you get not only a collectible
booklet of drawings and errata, but also a commentary, deleted scenes, and
various featurettes.
Aka Ghost Busters.
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Review by David Bezanson
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