Ghostbusters: Afterlife
I despised the "reboot" of the franchise with the doughy, unfunny turd, the leering lesbian and the shrieking black woman. I hated everything about it. That being the case, I was inclined to appreciate this course correction - one that completely ignores that abomination and veers back into the original lane.
It wasn't a bad movie. It wasn't a great movie. It was a leisurely nostalgic stroll through all the pieces and parts that made the original Ghostbusters the cinematic icon that it is. Truth be told, the original Ghostbusters wasn't a great movie either, it was dragged into significance by the performances of Ramis and Murray (see also Stripes) and to a lesser degree Dan, Ernie, Sigourney and Rick. That and the epic (for the time) special effects carried the film.
This movie suffers a bit because while the kid characters are pretty good, they don't have the easy, snarky charm of Murray, the deadpan absurdity of Dan, or the nerdy focus of Ramis (although the girl channels that extremely well). When the orginals show up ready to get back into the fight -- some in an extremely odd way -- it's the same kind of emotional charge us old timers got when Han and Chewie walked into the Falcon. I wish they'd been given more to do, but they did look pretty old and stiff so....
Storyline is pretty simple: Egon disappears into the spirit world leaving all his possessions (a decrepit house and weird farm) to his daughter and her two nerdy kids. Financially bereft and facing eviction, they move to his dilapidated digs, the nerdy daughter meets Ant Man, and they discover that all these years good ol' estranged dad/grandpa was obsessed with Gozer and her minions. His life was dedicated to preventing her return even as almost everyone decided he might be crazy. But maybe he was right.
Along the way, the movie folds in almost every facet of the 1984 touchstones -- Ecto1, the traps, Gozer, the dogs, "are you a god", proton packs -- there are so many references it would be impossible to list them all. That's what keeps this movie afloat. It will be interesting to see if a planned sequel can hold up on its own without the nostalgic trappings.
The cast is solid. The nerd girl kid was completely believable as a Spengler grandchild. She was the best part of the movie. She and her snarky podcasting sidekick held it all together. The nerd boy I didn't like as much. The mom (Carrie Coon) I found oddly attractive even though she's really plain. She wasn't bad.
I generally don't care for reboots or re-launches. This one, though, was done about as well as it could possibly have been. It was faithful to the original and crafted a story that honored that legacy while opening doors to a future beyond it. In a lot of ways it felt like a legitimate passing of the torch.
NOTE: The one thing I didn't see in the film was Slimer -- which leads me to believe he held out for more money and is waiting on the inevitable sequel.
With this one in the books, I hope the shit-splattered Chubs McFarty version from 2016 will be burned from existence and never shown again.