Except one of the many aborted scripts planned around that by having Venkman dead (the Venkman is a ghost script). Whether that would have worked remains to be seen, but Sony continually used that as a crutch to keep from doing it until Remakes became a big thing in Hollywood and by then it was too late.
What l heard the movie was bad l thought it couldn't be that bad. When l saw it conclusion was it was bad. How they made the script worse than the original is unforgivable,
Outside of the house blowing up and the car scene at the start, almost the entire movie is Keanu walking from room to room as squibs go off. Not terribly expensive to do I'd imagine.40 million just for reshoots. That's the budget for John Wick 2. Yeah the whole movie.
I'm pretty sure that's backwards. Murray was the one who was saying he'd only do it if he died in the first 10 minutes. It was one of the many requirements he said over the years would get him to be in a third movie.
You might be right but the point still stands. They had an easy work-around for Murray and Ivan WAS working on a GB script before they passed it off to Feig.
Aykroyds comments are contradictory to his praise for the film when it initially released in 2016.
I mean Ghostbusters as a concept is one of the most easily franchisable things you can think of.
...I now really want that. Man Sony screwed up hard.It baffles me how his is so easily missed. I think a GB movie without the original cast is easily doable, I'd love to see different takes on the idea in different locations/eras, What GB84 means to New York, do it to another city, LA, London, you name it.
Give me an Edgar Wright UK based GB franchise filled with British comedians. Not only do you get different comedy sensibilities, you get the history and mythology of the region to draw from for ghosts. Ghostbusters at Stonehenge? sign me up
This is some fun revisionist history.
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/bridesmaids_2011
https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/spy_2015
I remember watching the RedLetterMedia Half in the Bag. I think they liked Aykroyd's vodka more than anything else. The bottle has been a prop on their table ever since.
![]()
It baffles me how his is so easily missed. I think a GB movie without the original cast is easily doable, I'd love to see different takes on the idea in different locations/eras, What GB84 means to New York, do it to another city, LA, London, you name it.
Give me an Edgar Wright UK based GB franchise filled with British comedians. Not only do you get different comedy sensibilities, you get the history and mythology of the region to draw from for ghosts. Ghostbusters at Stonehenge? sign me up
Ghost Corps, a division of Columbia Pictures Industries Inc., is focused on expanding the Ghostbusters brand with live-action feature films, animated motion pictures, television, merchandise, and other new entertainment products. Headed by Ivan Reitman and Dan Aykroyd, Ghost Corps is headquartered on the Sony Pictures Studios lot in Culver City, Calif.
He's not wrong. Opinions about the movie aside, it seemed like a giant disaster financially and cost-investment wise. This is something Sony has a recurring problem with in general, along with desperation to create a hit franchise. Feig not having a steadier hand on the film was certainly a huge problem.
Im always worried Sony Pictures is going to take down the rest of Sony. But from what i understand it is a totally aepwrate business? Can anyone explain
Isn't that why Tom Rothman was hired? Because Sony Pictures was bleeding money everywhere?
This is EXACTLY what I'm talkin about! Sometimes friends and others give me weird looks when I tell them Ghostbusters is my #1 favorite movie/concept but it's because it's just so ripe for imagination. Aykrody and Ray are like kids when it comes to ghosts, Ghostbusters is to him what Toy Story is to John Lasseter, it's their inner passion. Aykroyd is obsessed with the paranormal, I'm sure he could come up with ideas for so many movies (which is also partly why I can't fathom GB II turned out the way it did or why the GB III script I've read had some of the SAME tropes and story beats as the first two, wtf Dan) if they could break away from GB having to follow Peter/Ray/Egon/Winston, and even if they didn't and just (gulp) recast the Real Ghostbusters cartoon already proved there are tons of interesting stories to tell with them. And that's all just stuff in New York. What about a group of southern GBs fighting the Mothman, or LA GBs exploring haunted hotels on skid row. Do aliens exist in the world of Ghostbusters or are they just a myth? I don't know why the fuck Sony is trying to cross over MiB and Jump Street when they could much more easily fit Ghostbusters in with Men in Black.
Uhhhh no not really, every story I've heard is that Murray didn't want to do it (he complained endlessly about GBII and also only made it to get another movie made) and he was the constant holdout, always moving the goalpoast for what would get him to be in it.
Before Feig came on and convinced Sony to let him do a reboot, Sony was reportedly looking for a way to sue Bill Murray to force him to sign off on a GB III since they could only ever make a sequel with his approval because of the way the contract was set up (everyone had to be in on it for it to be made).
Now Sony finally bought out the rights so they can do whatever they want with the IP without needing the original people to sign off on everything. They set up GhostCorps to oversee the GB franchise and put Aykroyd and Reitman in charge of it and even though Answer the Call failed they're still gonna pump out more stuff, like the animated GB film, the Ecto Force animated series, supposedly a live action show and undoubtedly more to announce with the anniversary coming up in a week or two.
I mean Ghostbusters as a concept is one of the most easily franchisable things you can think of, I find it hard to believe Sony would drag their feet over making countless sequels and spinoffs especially since they were the ones that demanded GBII after they saw the success the first movie and TV show had.
Probably nothing. We know they're working on an animated movie, an animated TV show called Ghostbusters: Ecto Force, and I think I've heard rumors about a possible live-action tv show too? The Ghostbusters anniversary is coming up really soon, if they have any new stuff to announce I feel like they'll announce it then. They've been pretty active on Facebook.I'm wondering what's going to happen to Sony's exclusively Ghostbusters production division Ghost Corps who was tasked to make a Ghostbusters Cinematic Universe with multiple live-action movies.
Here's Ghost Corps' description: https://www.facebook.com/pg/ghostcorps/about/?ref=page_internal
Yes, the basic concept is men armed with science battling all manner of supernatural terrors, from all over the world's various folklore and mythology. That setup is limitless in story possibilities, and different projects could tackle it with different ratios of humor to horror to science fiction to drama.
The Real Ghostbusters did just that in the confines of Saturday morning cartoon. And that cartoon was huge in the 80's, the biggest during it's peak.
I'd argue that the cartoon has as big a place in defining Ghostbusters as the first film did. I really enjoy the original film, and like it as a kid, but it was the cartoon that made Ghostbusters such a big deal for myself and many other kids of the era.
Probably nothing. We know they're working on an animated movie, an animated TV show called Ghostbusters: Ecto Force, and I think I've heard rumors about a possible live-action tv show too? The Ghostbusters anniversary is coming up really soon, if they have any new stuff to announce I feel like they'll announce it then. They've been pretty active on Facebook.
Sony, aside from their PS division, is just a fucking mess of a company. Sony Pictures sounds like a prime example of simply stumbling onto success, because whenever I hear of the decisions they make, I'm left dumbfounded
How so? He did blast Feig and it was because of Ghostbusters.
Isn't that why Tom Rothman was hired? Because Sony Pictures was bleeding money everywhere?
How much did that one lose?I was also disappointed with Feig's direction of Ghostbusters, but Dan Aykroyd, the writer/producer/director of Nothing But Trouble, should probably temper his directorial criticisms​.
I have a hard time believing they will be highly regarded comedies down the line.
Maybe for a restricted group. It certainly doesn't hold a candle to the true classics people still love after 30 yearsBridesmaids absolutely will.
Sony, aside from their PS division, is just a fucking mess of a company. Sony Pictures sounds like a prime example of simply stumbling onto success, because whenever I hear of the decisions they make, I'm left dumbfounded
How much did that one lose?
The director and the script is the problem.
One of the reasons I love GB so much is because as a concept it has so much potential for imagination and creativity. Every culture around the world has their own ghost stories, their own way of "dealing" with them. Who's to say that a group of Ghostbusters in Japan would be fighting the same kinds of ghosts with the same equipment that a group in Scoland, or Chile, or Russia were? Even just within the USA itself there's so many types of ghost stories and superstitions and urban legends across the country, why keep it locked to four guys in New York?
Replace New York with London, and don't skirt around good ideas and callbacks. Boom, you got a great Ghostbusters movie in the making.
Yep. Paul Feig and Katie Dippold really had no idea what made the original Ghostbusters special and wrote this weird script that felt more like a parody of Ghostbusters rather than a Ghostbusters film.
What he actually said doesn't seem as bad as the thread title makes it seem.
My impression is he liked the movie and he liked the cast but the $40m in reshoots kinda destroyed the movie's chances of getting a sequel and the franchise expanding and that's what he was criticising.
I think he has a reputation for getting stuff done on the cheap. But he's also pretty difficult to work with I thought, it seem like that was something that came up a lot while he was at Fox.
As far as I remember, part of the reason Rothman was hired is that his history at Fox was for being a bit of a penny pincher, with some people thinking he might be there to get their financials in better shape as a prelude to a sale. But Kaz is still saying publicly that they aren't selling, and the other part of Rothman's history at Fox (him not getting along very well with creatives) has followed him to Sony as well.