Showing posts with label Finn Wolfhard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Finn Wolfhard. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 May 2022

Ghostbusters: Afterlife

 Year:  2021

Director:  Jason Reitman

Screenplay:  Gil Kenan and Jason Reitman, based on Ghostbusters written by Dan Ackroyd and Harold Ramis

Starring:  Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard, Mckenna Grace, Paul Rudd, Logan Kim, Celeste O'Connor, Annie Potts, Ernie Hudson

Running Time:  124 minutes

Genre:  Fantasy, comedy

Single mother Callie (Coon) and her two children, teenager Trevor (Wolfhard) and precocious 12 year old Phoebe (Grace), inherit a lonely farmhouse from Callie's estranged father.  After being evicted from their Chicago apartment, the family move in to the house, which Phoebe quickly realises is haunted.  As she investigates she realises that her grandfather, who she never met, was a Ghostbuster.  Soon the nearby town and the area around it become plagued with strange supernatural activity  and Phoebe and Trevor dust off and repair their grandfather's old equipment and, along with some of their new friends, set out to do some ghostbusting of their own.


The 1984 film Ghostbusters remains one of the most beloved films of the 1980s.  A sequel, Ghostbusters II, was released in 1989, and a controversial remake of the first film was released in 2016.  Ghostbusters: Afterlife follows on from the first two films, and has no connection to the 2016 Ghostbusters.  Despite the trappings of the present day, there is a character called Podcast, people watch YouTube videos and use Google etc. this could almost be a 1980s kids movie.  And for the most part, the film seems to be heading in it's own direction, albeit one heavily influence by the films of the 1980s.  This is emphasised by the casting of Finn Wolfhard (star of 1980s-set science-fiction show Stranger Things (2016- ))in a lead role.  Towards the end however it settles into a heavily sentimentalised  retread of the end of Ghostbusters.  However, for all the film's flaws, it has a real charm to it.  Personally, I sat down to it not expecting much, but by the end it had won me over.  Similar to Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), the film breathes life into the franchise with new characters and a new set-up, while still providing enough cameos and call-backs to the first film to satisfy anyone's nostalgia cravings.  Finn Wolfhard is good as the teenager trying to impress local girl Celeste O'Connor.  Logan Kim is funny as an aspiring podcaster, and Mckenna Grace is very good as the scientifically minded Phoebe.  Among the adults, Carrie Coon grounds the film as the struggling single mother, trying to deal with her long standing resentment of her father for abandoning the family, and Paul Rudd is funny as the nerdy geology teacher who shows the kids horror movies such as Cujo (1983) and Child's Play (1988) on VHS, and develops a crush on Callie.  Jason Reitman, son of Ivan Reitman who produced and directed the first Ghostbusters, directs with obvious affection for the material, and there is a sweet tribute to the late Harold Ramis, who co-wrote and starred in the first two films.  The film is tonally uneven, some of the humour is a little too broad and silly, and, of course, it lacks Bill Murray, although he does appear in a cameo.  Another thing is that some of the fan service, and references to the earlier films are pretty heavy handed.  For the most part, however, it is a very enjoyable, light-hearted family adventure, which should appeal both to children and nostalgic adults.    It's no masterpiece, but it is a good piece of entertainment.



Finn Wolfhard, McKenna Grace and Logan Kim in Ghostbusters: Afterlife

Saturday, 9 September 2017

It

Year of Release:  2017
Director:  Andy Muschietti
Screenplay:  Chase Palmer, Carey Fukunaga and Gary Dauberman; based on the novel It by Stephen King
Starring: Jaeden Lieberher, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis, Finn Wolfhard, Wyatt Oleff, Chosen Jacobs, Jack Dylan Grazer, Bill Skarsgard
Running Time:  135 minutes
Genre:  Horror

This is an adaptation of the 1986 novel by Stephen King.  Set in 1989 (as opposed to the novel's 1958 setting) in the small town of Derry, Maine, which has been terrorised by a spate of mysterious disappearances of children.  Seven young outcasts, who call themselves "The Loser's Club" decide to put a stop to it:  Bill Denbrough (Lieberher) has a bad stutter and his younger brother, Georgie, is among the missing; Ben Hanscom (Taylor) is picked on because he is overweight; Beverley Marsh (Lillis) is abused by her father and is the subject of cruel rumours; Richie Tozier (Wolfhard) is the group clown, often getting in trouble due to his loud mouth and foul language; Stan Uris (Oleff) is picked on because he is Jewish; Mike Hanlon (Jacobs) is subjected to racist bullying; and Eddie Kaspbrak (Grazer) has become a hypochondriac due to his over-protective mother.  They discover that the culprit is Pennywise the Dancing Clown (Skarsgard), who is in reality an evil, shapeshifting entity which feeds on fear, particularly children's fear.

Previously adapted as a two part TV miniseries in 1990 which was re-edited into a feature film; It is one of Stephen King's best known books.  The film lacks the richness of the book, but is an effective horror film, although, like many horror films, it relies too much on sudden jump scares and CGI trickery, and  there is less of the idea that was depicted so well in the book, of It mining the deepest subconscious fears of it's victims.  It is well acted, and the film really shines in  the quieter character moments.

Clowing around:  Bill Skarsgard is It