The original Ghostbusters is one of my all-time favorite movies. Ghostbusters II? Not so much. But I enjoyed the 2016 all-female film (especially the extended cut, which let the cast cut loose a bit more), and I am not one of those overly nostalgic sorts who fetishize the films of my youth. So I was truly rooting for Ghostbusters: Afterlife. The trailers were promising, the casting was spot-on, and I loved the kid-centric premise of a new generation picking up the ghostbusting mantle of Bill Murray and the original gang.
There’s much to like about this sequel from Jason Reitman (son of Ivan Reitman, who directed the first two films): great performances, nimble direction, and some humorous callbacks to the original beloved film. Unfortunately, all of that sinks under the weight of a clunky script and a tired, predictable plot that takes the fan service to downright treacly levels.
(Major spoilers below the gallery. We’ll give you a heads-up when we get there.)
The official synopsis is short and sweet: “A single mother and her two children move to Summerville, Oklahoma, after inheriting property from a previously unknown relative. They discover their family’s legacy to the original Ghostbusters, who have become something of a myth, as many have long since forgotten the events of the ‘Manhattan Crossrip of 1984'”—i.e., the events of the original film.
Carrie Coon (The Leftovers) plays mom Callie, who has some serious abandonment issues where her dad, Egon Spengler, is concerned. Mckenna Grace (The Haunting of Hill House) plays her science-loving daughter Phoebe, who struggles to make friends or even tell a decent joke. Finn Wolfhard (Stranger Things) plays Callie’s mechanically inclined son, Trevor. Paul Rudd (Ant-Man) plays summer school teacher (and mom’s love interest) Gary Grooberson, a seismologist and a science nerd who is also a big, goofy Ghostbusters fanboy.


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