I love “Ghostbusters”
more now than when I was 10 and bowled over by special effects, action, and
dirty jokes meant for adults. Sure, this is still a kid’s flick, but it’s
brilliantly written and peppered with wicked satire. The plot relies on digs at
the EPA and IRBs! Name another Hollywood movie that trusting of the audience to
get the jokes? Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis, and Bill Murray are the heroes, fired
academics who take to hunting the ghosts that plague New York City. And why
not, it’s New York. Heaven for hell. And if they get laid along the way, go for
it. Their proton pack arrival is perfectly timed as a Manhattan apartment high-rise
with Sigourney Weaver as a tenant has just popped open a portal to a demonic
realm. From the start in a library with book cards tossed all crazy right up to
the finale with a white puffy giant ghoul with a grin, “Ghostbusters” rocks
with never-better New York “F” the system eternal cool. Those days are gone.
Conformity reigns now. Dig Murray riffing strong improve on the street, or Rick
Moranis’ apartment geek king, and that dangling cigarette trick Aykroyd beautifully
pulls… Classic! A+
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Ghostbusters (1984)
Labels:
1984,
action,
Bill Murray,
childhood,
classic,
comedy,
Dan Aykroyd,
favorite,
Ghostbusters,
Harold Ramis,
New York City,
Sigourney Weaver,
spoof
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