Have finally seen Ghostbusters: Answer The Call (as it's been retitled for home video)
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Well, I guess that beats "Ghostbusters: Electric Boogaloo," but really, how demeaning. Can you imagine if Psycho can out on video as "Psycho: The Scary Old Lady."
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and will now compare notes with ecarle's original review:
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Uh oh. I shudder. When/if you ever get to the Mag 7, "Please be kind." "Girl on the Train," I don't care what you say. Hah.
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Kate MacKinnon is Bill Murray. Its her movie.
Just as Kate has been the break-out star of SNL the past few years, so does she take this movie(her debut?) over from her more stellar co-stars.
I've read a lot of reviews of the new "Ghostbusters" and almost all of them singled out MacKinnon for her manic scene-stealing. But ONE reviewer said she ruined the movie with her "Three Stooges" mugging. There's always one. And I'm afraid I kept thinking about THAT review as I watched MacKinnon.
Well, she DOES mug. But with great skill...perhaps a bit more Jim Carrey than Bill Murray, but she stays hip. It IS her movie. You always look at HER in a scene. She will be the star born out of this, depending on the next vehicle.
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I guess I'm with the skeptical reviewer here - MacKinnon did strike me as mugging most of the time.... to the point where I never bought her character *as* a character at all.
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Well, at least I was even-handed and QUOTED that "mugging" review. I think its what Al Pacino said when an interviewer said he'd been accused of being a "ham": "Well, as I long as I'm a flavorful, well-seasoned ham."
Sometimes, mugging works. It worked for Jim Carrey(but not for me there.) Bill Murray did it sometimes(like as the idiot greenskeeper Karl in Caddyshack) and it was great. MacKinnon worked for me, here. She certainly outshone her co-stars in even HAVING a screen presence..with the possible exception of Leslie Jones, who CAN play big, but who actually "dialed it down a bit" for the big screen.
Oh, well. You say tomato. I say tomahto...
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Meanwhile, Kristen Wiig is reduced to straight womanhood
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Absolutely I'm afraid... in a couple of different ways: not only is she asked to be fairly po-faced throughout, the one flamboyant character trait they give her is that she throws herself at Kevin/Thor at every opportunity. I never bought that at *all* about her character. She starts as a pretty controlled academic woman after all, so how then can we accept that *that character* would just lose her mind over a super-hunky guy (particularly over a super-dummy)? This struck me as really terrible character writing.
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Well, the big, big, BIG problem with this new Ghostbusters is the script. Again, we have to focus on the fact that Animal House, Caddyshack(most of it), Stripes, and the original Ghostbusters had great scripts or actors who really knew how to improvise(Bill Murray above all, but Belushi and his Animal Housers, too.) The new Ghostbusters has no real comic chops in the lines and the ladies are left to "work the material." Hence, perhaps, the mugging from MacKinnon.
Someone wrote that all four of the Lady Ghostbusters "didn't really know how to act for the movies," and that's kinda rich given how many movies MM and Wiig have made. But there was a weakness to all four in having to "act exposition" -- and MM looked lost at sea to me.
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Melissa McCarthy fights valiantly to impose HER comedy chops on a character who can't support the usual MM persona
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I agree that MM's character felt a bit dialed-down compared to her normally R-rated personae.
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Its funny. In the new Streisand/MM duet "Anything I Can Do, You Can Do Better," La Babs calls MM "a potty mouth." Maybe the line stung?
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Still, I believed her character
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OK.
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(with one big proviso that I'll get to later).
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OK.
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As expected, Leslie Jones (like MacKinnon, a "new" SNL star) is funny in her big ol' loud way.
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She was my favorite out of the main four. I found her less grating than she often is on SNL, and a pleasant surprise throughout really.
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Well, she "dialed it down" most of the time, played to her loud strengths when she could and found a way for us to sympathize with her. (That she spent the summer being trolled and hacked and insulted allowed her to debut on the new Seasson of SNL like a returning hero...beloved by all.)
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And oh: one of those Hemsworth brothers as the "dumb blond male secretary." I can't remember if this is the one who plays Thor. The part is dumb.
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Not funny either. I'd heard pretty good things about Hemsworth in this, and was very disappointed - as with Wiig's and Mackinnon's I just never bought his character for a minute. Kevin kind of fuses Ric Moranis's and Annie Potts' characters from the original but manages to feel much less real than either of them and only about 10% as funny.
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Hah. Well said. I suppose somebody at the studio said, "there's got to be a man in this, and let's make him hunky and dumb." That's it.
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Well, the effects ARE right for this one and we get -- another 2016 CGI battlefest.
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Unbelievable isn't it? Yet another column of light going up in to the sky that ends up sucking up buildings etc.. Make it stop Hollywood!
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I'm starting to suspect some sort of kickback system when the studios contract these sequences out to the effects houses. 1,000's of worker bees work(paid well? I don't know)...but somebody's gotta be making money off it.
Shall we harken back to the truly enthralling effects that recreated Mount Rushmore -- with meaningful suspense and character arc development -- in 1959 with NXNW? Now, THAT's an effects sequence!
What remains funny is that the effects in the 1984 version were kinda shoddy, right down to the StayPuft Marshmellow Man -- but that made them FUNNY.
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Its pretty bad.
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Agreed. Completely unfunny.
But this:
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Bill Murray shows up.... he's in it for a little bit, and he IS funny.
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Didn't work for me. I though both his scenes were bad. I wasn;t close to laughing.
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Well, first, I was just surprised to see how long he stayed on screen(two scenes). Remember, he not only wouldn't appear in any Ghostbusters sequel after the lousy 2 -- he used his contract rights to stop everybody else from making one. Times have changed, people have died(Harold Ramis), Murray came back and was nice enough to do this scene. (Someone suggested because Murray worked with MM on that Bad Uncle movie a few years back, maybe he relented.)
I suppose I was laughing at the idea that he was there, after all. And trying to act, after all. And then blown away.
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Ackroyd shows up. Signourney Weaver shows up(how soon we forget she had THIS franchise, too.) Ernie Hudson shows up(and he was cool in Ghostbusters, too; just not in it enough.) Annie Potts shows up.
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I though these cameo were all pointless except perhaps for the Ermie Hudson one at the end of the film.
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Agreed in general but...the point, I suppose , was simply that they all showed up. Except for Moranis, and , of course, the late Ramis(who shows up as a bust.)My problem was: every time I saw one of them, I wanted them to stay and give us a FUNNY movie. Even Ackroyd.
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Since I liked Leslie Jones's character the best I wish we'd spent some time with family and got to know Hudson earlier.
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Hudson was given the most "connection" to the new story. It would have been nice.
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PS. I noted that for once, "Psycho" jokes got a rest. We instead got one OK Exorcist joke(MM is possessed and her head turns all the way around)
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I enjoyed that whole MM possessed sequence.
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and one truly great "Jaws" joke.
Andy Garcia as the NYC Mayor, is trying to cover up all the ghost sightings in his city as a hoax. ("We don't want mass hysteria")
Kristen Wiig yells an accusation at the usually deadpan Garcia, and he gets up from his table raging at her:
Wiig: Don't go all "Jaws Mayor" on us!
Garcia: (In furious rage) Don't you EVER say I'm the Jaws Mayor!!
And the mayor sics his cops on Wiig.
I thought that was pretty funny. People forget how important the Mayor was TO Jaws. And played so weaselly by the late, great Murray Hamilton.
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That was pretty good I suppose but I'd had the joke spoiled for me....
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Sorry about that. Well, maybe it was funny when you first read it?
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As I watched the film I noticed a whole bunch of shots stealing from/referring to other movies... but I've forgotten them already. Oh well.
OK - here's a gripe I had with the whole film (incluing MM's character): despite there being a lot of *beep* scientific-talk spoken none of them felt like scientists at all. For example, they never collect any samples of the goo/mucus/ectoplasm. And they never seemed interested in exploring or trying to understand this alternative reality that was leaking through into our world. Maybe they thought that that would bring them too close to the original and to the 90's sequel.
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Interesting points.
I've been reading a book about CAA -- the agenting company built by Mike Ovitz and Company. I'll have other posts about it(and more on it in THIS post) but it covers Ghostbusters quite extensively. As it turns out, the original Dan Ackroyd script was deemed Unfunny and too "abstract," and somebody else(Ivan Reitman, I think) decided the story should be about scientists who get thrown out of their university jobs and use their wits to survive -- with Harold Ramis' character being the brainiest of them all. "Now we have a movie."
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Overall, I guess, the film reeked of not having a real script. I mean, I'm sure they *did* have script but it feels like it was slung together in a hurry *after* the project was given a greenlight with a release date already set.
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For decades now, I've read how, on the one hand "screenwriters get no respect in Hollywood" but how, on the other hand, "without a good script, you don't have a good movie...let alone a great one." As we've demonstrated here, certain "entertainments" like NXNW and Psycho, Animal House and Ghostbusters, ET and Raiders of the Lost Ark, had GREAT scripts, or at least very good ones.
But those are very hard to generate. The right writers have to be found and everything has to jell (or it isn't aspic.)
On the other hand, it seems like there is a grand history of big stars being handed "great scripts" by their agents(The Sting and The Sixth Sense come to mind) and getting it IMMEDIATELY: its a great story, its gonna be a great movie, sign me on! And of course, if a novel is great, it's a sure thing for a great movie, right? You know. The Godfather. The Exorcist...Bonfire of the Vanities. Catch-22. Oh well.
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There were no great jokey set-pieces that sold the movie, no really good jokes embedded in the action the way there were in, e.g., The Nice Guys.
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I'll need to watch The Nice Guys again soon. In this CAA book, everybody goes on and on about how Shane Black's original "Lethal Weapon" script was like THE great script of the 80's. Well, Shane Black's back with "The Nice Guys." Maybe he DOES know something about character and action and how to blend them.
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No, there was just strainign-to-be-funny schtick by the individual actresses followed by tepid action followed by more schtick. Dead in the water.
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That's it.
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It all added up to a big bowl of not funny and not really watchable for me. Ghostbusters: Answer the Call goes for me on the pile of borderline incompetent, Hollywood franchise entries that very quickly everyone who cares at all about the underlying franchise will simply agree to pretend *never happened* and to never speak of them again (Matrix 2 and above, Pirates 2 and above, The Hobbit films, Star Wars 1-3, the Thing prequel a few years ago, Batman v. Superman, and so on).
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There have been articles about the "crisis" of all the movies that failed this summer and yet I'm not so sure: its like there was only a 10% decrease in box office from last year and all it takes are two hits to bring the whole average up (its been ever thus, back to the days of Jaws and Star Wars...and Psycho.)
But -- and this book I'm reading on CAA suggests why -- there can be no doubt that very few actually GOOD movies are being made these days, and that sequels and prequels are about the worst. The actors are packaged. The screenwriters are packaged. The packages are packaged. And -- cliché though it is -- so many of the people who work in Hollywood really don't care about narrative and story. They care about deals.
Batman vs Superman made $800 million worldwide -- beating the better Suicide Squad by a lot -- and yet: what a bad movie. And yet: what a great movie it COULD have been. The world has been waiting since 1978, since Superman was released, or maybe 1989, when Batman was released , for those two to come together. What a blown opportunity! And yet. $800 million(but I think Warners was hoping on $1.2 billion so...a bomb?)
PS. Career notes in passing: it would seem to me that Kristen Wiig's star is now fading, as Kate MacKinnon's rises. Hollywood can be brutal that way. But I may be wrong.
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