Tag: ghostbusters

  • 19 Movies You Probably Memorized Because They Were on Cable

    19 Movies You Probably Memorized Because They Were on Cable

  • Summer Movie List: 19 Great ’80s Movies You Should Binge This Summer

    Summer Movie List: 19 Great ’80s Movies You Should Binge This Summer

  • 7 Things You Need to Know Before Watching ‘Stranger Things’ Season 2

    “Stranger Things” easily ranks among the most popular of Netflix’s many original series, and fans have been waiting more than a year for new episodes to finally hit the streaming service.

    Thankfully, Season 2 is finally dropping on Friday, October 27. Here’s everything you need to know to get ready for the show’s return.

    1. It’s Just in Time for HalloweenNot only is the series conveniently returning in time for Halloween, Season 2 will feature a lot of Halloween trappings itself.

    Season 2 will pick up in October 1984, roughly a year after the return of Will (Noah Schnapp). Early footage showed the series’ young cast dressed as Ghostbusters, so expect plenty of references to period-appropriate pop culture as everyone gets into the holiday spirit.

    2. Everyone’s Back (Except Barb)All of the major surviving characters from the first season are back, including Winona Ryder as Joyce Byers, David Harbour as police chief Jim Hopper, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven, Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson, Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas Sinclair, Natalia Dyer as Nancy Wheeler, and Charlie Heaton as Jonathan Byers.

    Unfortunately, that leaves one notable hole in the lineup. Despite becoming a fan-favorite in Season 1, it doesn’t sound like Shannon Purser’s Barb will be cheating death. That’s already led fans to create the #JusticeforBarb hashtag.

    But then again, you never know what weird twists might unfold on this series.

    3. There Are Two New CharactersBoth of new additions are played by actors with serious ’80s movie pedigrees. First is Sean Astin‘s Bob Newby, a former classmate of Joyce and Hopper, who now runs the local RadioShack. Do we sense a love triangle forming?

    Second is Paul Reiser as Ownes, a Department of Energy representative who is tasked with covering up the strange events that lead us to paying the Upside Down a visit.

    4. There’s a Heavy James Cameron Influence“Stranger Things” proudly wears its influences on its sleeve, with the show owing a huge debt to “E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial” and the works of Stephen King. However, co-creator Matt Duffer said that Season 2 will be pulling from a different source.

    Duffer revealed to Entertainment Weekly that this season will draw inspiration from James Cameron‘s films, both in terms of their general appeal and Cameron’s willingness to differentiate his sequels from the originals.

    5. Say ‘Hello’ to Hopper’s DaughterWhile much of the focus in Season 1 centered around the search for Will, the series also explored Hopper’s lingering trauma as a father grieving for his dead daughter. Expect that to become an even bigger focus in this new season.

    “Hopper’s daughter will be the primary focus of Season 2, but not in the way that you think it will be,” Harbour told TV Guide. “Hopper’s understanding of that relationship — and Hopper’s understanding of being a father — and of being a man grows deeper and deeper in Season 2, and we get a lot of time to explore what that is, but it won’t be in the literal way that you think it is.”

    6. The Upside Down Is Back (Duh)Don’t think that just because Will is back, he and his friends are done with the twisted realm that is the Upside Down.

    The gang will continue to explore the mysteries of that realm and face a new foe that will “make that Demogorgon look quaint.” Co-creator Ross Duffer also teased that the season will open on a very disturbing note, so get ready for a dark road ahead.

    7. There Are More Seasons PlannedUnsurprisingly, Netflix plans to continue making this show a major part of its TV arsenal. Expect plenty more of the series after Season 2 wraps. At first, the Duffer brothers indicated that they had a four-season road map for the series, but now it sounds as though they may be planning a fifth season, too.

    That’s a good thing, because fans won’t be getting much closure for the next round of episodes. The show will end on another big cliffhanger this year. Hopefully, the wait for Season 3 won’t be quite as long.

  • Chronically Ill Boy Gets to be a Ghostbuster for a Day

    Thanks to Day Aykroyd and For the Win Project, an eight-year-old boy obsessed with “Ghostbusters” was able to be a Ghostbuster for the day.

    Braeden Rios, who suffers from the chronic respiratory disease bronchomalacia, and his family were flown from their home town in Iowa to Los Angeles for the big day. On the Sony lot, Braeden suited up in his own pint-sized Ghostbusters suit and photon pack. He then received a call to action from Ray Stanz himself (Aykroyd) to save Hollywood from the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man.

    There was also a video greeting from Ivan Reitman (who directed the 1984 original film) and Paul Feig (director of the 2016 remake).

    Sony supplied some real props (and that awesome Ghostbusters car) for the shoot. And For the Win created an awesome poster with Braeden facing down the Marshmallow Man. The movie is rated “B” for “Bustin’,” because “Bustin’ ghosts makes Braeden feel good and he’s mighty good at it.”

    The organization has also helped kids become Wonder Woman, “Super Juan,” the Hulk and “Elihuverine.” Find out more at their site: For the Win Project.

    [Via i09]

  • Meet the Newly Discovered Dinosaur That’s Named After ‘Ghostbusters’ Demon Dog

    Remember when Sigourney Weaver turned into a demonic dog in “Ghostbusters“? Well, in honor of that supernatural hound from hell, a newly discovered dinosaur that kind of looks like it has been dubbed Zuul crurivastator. After the Sumerian (not Babylonian) god Zuul, of course.

    Dan Aykroyd introduced the critter in a video just released by the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. Aykroyd (who happens to hail from Canada) says he’s very honored that scientists named this “magnificent creature” after their own “terror dog” in the 1984 comedy-horror classic.

    The museum describes the newly dug-up beast thusly: “Like Zuul, the new species has a short, rounded snout and prominent horns behind the eyes. The shape of the horns and the ornaments on the skull are what identified Zuul as a species new to science. Its species name, crurivastator, means ‘destroyer of shins’ and references the incredible weapon-like tail club found with the skeleton.”

    Hey! “Destroyers of shins” is what we call our glass coffee table. Curse you, crurivastator!

    According to the Museum — in a press release that sounds like it was written by Egon (the late Harold Ramis) — the dino’s tail “could inflict serious damage on opponents, such as predatory theropods or maybe even other ankylosaurs competing for mates or territory.”

  • Paul Feig Trolls Twitter With All-Female ‘Back to the Future’ Reboot 

    Great Scott, this might’ve been the best prank of April Fools’ Day 2017. Rebel Wilson pulled a quality stunt on the set of “Pitch Perfect 3,” but Paul Feig‘s meta-trolling of his “Ghostbusters” haters was just next-level perfect.

    Here’s the director announcing his new project:

    The reactions! People hoping it’s not true, hoping it is true, pretty sure it’s not true, but it sounds like it could be true, so they don’t know. (Funny how people only really question news announcements on April 1st.)

    Actor Chris O’Dowd took the baton from there, announcing he’d play the newly male version of Mom Lorraine McFly:

    Some fans started thinking fourth-dimensionally about the whole thing, dream casting the fake “Back to the Future” reboot with Kate McKinnon as Doc Brown and Melissa McCarthy as a female Biff, among others. Hey, we’d watch the heavy heck out of it.

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  • The Importance of Being Ernie Hudson

    ENTERTAINMENT-US-FILM-PREMIERE-SPACEMANErnie Hudson‘s been at this acting thing for four decades now, and it’s certainly paying off.

    Not only has Hudson racked up credits in projects that are acclaimed (“Oz”), beloved (“Grace and Frankie,” Epix’s “Graves”; Showtime’s upcoming “Twin Peaks” revival; and, most recently, Fox’s offbeat crime procedural “APB,” playing the grounded voice of an experienced law enforcement veteran who is nevertheless intrigued by the plans of a tech billionaire (Justin Kirk) to introduce some innovative crime-fighting tools to a crime-ridden district in Chicago.

    It’s the latest addition to the array of cop types played by Hudson, who shared memories of his own volunteer service and points out some of his favorite roles in conversation with Moviefone.

    Moviefone: You’re busy all the time … always! What was it that you saw in this character and in “APB.” that made you want to be a part of it?

    Ernie Hudson: If I’m honest, I love the fact that they liked me enough to offer me the role, and to not bite me for what I asked for. I read the script, loved the script. I thought it was really wonderful. I was a fan of Justin Kirk, but my character, I wasn’t sure what it was in the beginning because it just wasn’t really clear. I had so many questions, that have been since answered very well, very nicely, so I’m really excited.

    I love this character, and I love this guy who I’ve sort of discovered as we’ve gone along. About the third episode, they begin to really write and bring the character forward. I was sitting there going, two guys, “What am I doing here? I know they’re paying me a lot of money” — or they’re paying me a fair amount of money! — but yeah, I get the importance of this guy, and I get this character, and it’s probably one of the most enjoyable roles I’ve played anywhere. But it took me a while.

    I can’t say that’s the reason I took the part, but I always appreciate when people say, “OK, we like your work and we want to work with you.”

    I like the energy that you brought to Conrad, the voice of reason in this high-energy, turn-on-a-dime scenario.

    Yeah. I think so much stuff is going on, some of it I don’t totally understand, certainly the character doesn’t understand. But I think he’s a guy who has to say, “Wait a minute, we’re grounded in something and we can’t lose that. We can’t lose our place.” I think he wants to support this change. It’s a big change, but he also recognizes that the old way doesn’t work, and we’re losing ground every day. So the idea of something new coming in, but also doesn’t want to just sort of let everything just go.

    So he’s the guy who has to say “no” sometimes, and he’s the guy who brings things back to the reality. And there’s a reason why we do procedure the way we do, and it’s important, so we can’t lose that. But on the other hand, we have to go to a different place. And this guy has some ideas and things that my character’s feeling is, if it works, I want something that works. He’s never been in a position to be able to say that.

    Before [Justin Kirk’s character, Gideon Reeves] comes along and I’m made captain, I’m sergeant, and I’m following orders that I don’t particularly agree with, seeing things happen in the department that I don’t like. He also lives in the neighborhood that is least served, having seen it fall apart over the last 50 years, but he still lives there. So it’s personal to him, that my other captain and a lot of the other people did get why it was so personal. So this is a chance that he never thought he’d have.

    He was really ready to throw the cards in and go, “You know what, I’ve been here, I’ve seen it.” He’s been passed over, and has to work out in his head, why I didn’t get that promotion. And I think there’s a resignation. And when [Gideon] comes in and everybody’s up in arms and doesn’t want to work with him, there’s a part of my character who goes, “Wait a minute, maybe this can be the difference that we need.”

    You’ve seen stuff that you had to turn and look another way. To my wife, who’s about to have a stroke with this whole turn of events and the political scene, I keep going, “Let it go, because we know what we had doesn’t necessarily work. We need something, whether this something, but maybe this something will lead to something else. I don’t know. But sometimes things turn, and that’s OK. I’m going to have to be OK with that.”

    So that’s kind of where my guy is, and to me it’s a wonderful character because he’s in a different place, and a place that he never, maybe on some level he thought he’d be, but it’s a chance to do something radical.

    Did they bring you anybody like him in real life to talk to or study?

    I met some of the other police people in Chicago, a couple of captains. In fact, we had a couple people working on the show. But I haven’t really met anyone. When I did “Oz,” I met the warden who I kind of based my character on, but I haven’t met anybody like this guy.

    I’m in Chicago, I don’t know if you saw the “60 Minutes” report a couple weeks ago, about the police there, arrests have been dropped by two-thirds. The shootings — and I’m standing on the streets, I’m there — it’s definitely a disconnect. So yeah. We’re shooting in Chicago. Part of it is just how I reason or imagine, but I haven’t met anybody yet quite like that. I’ve done police roles, and did the ride-alongs. I think if I were a captain, this is how I’d feel.

    Tell me about those ride-alongs. I used to cover police and crime and used to go out with the undercover guys. What’s fun and maybe scary about a ride-along for you?

    Yeah. The hardest part for me in doing the ride-alongs, I did a television show called “10-8” a few years back. We were in Compton, and then we were — a couple different ride-alongs over the years. Also, I was with the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department. I was a volunteer Sheriff for about 20 years, actually. It’s interesting. It’s not the kind of work I could do.

    Also, it’s part of a system. It’s not just a cop who makes a decision, but it’s a cop who’s doing his part of the job, but then once you introduce this person to this other part, then it can get out of control. It’s a very complicated business, and I could not do it. I’ve talked to a lot of cops. I used to, because I’m not with them anymore, have to go and qualify. The choices that they make, yeah, I don’t totally understand it. It’d be a little hard.

    It’s interesting. There’s something, especially in Chicago, because the possibility that something can go wrong, and suddenly, what seems like a typical thing turns into a life/death thing. Yeah, it’s not a life I want. I appreciate those who do.

    You’ve had such a busy career, and everybody knows you from “Oz,” everybody knows you from “Ghostbusters.” But if people are fans of that work or find you on this show, what are some of your favorite jobs — projects that you’d say, “Hey, check out this movie? I really like that movie. I really like what I did in that movie.”

    Right. Maybe that’s a good thing, because people don’t always connect the characters — big fans of “The Crow,” but didn’t know that it was the guy from “Ghostbusters.” Or “Oz” or whatever, “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle.”

    There are a few movies: I love “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle,” and I love “Congo.” I love “Congo.” “Congo” was so much fun. People either love “Congo,” or really hate it. I thought, “What’s the hate? I had a great time!” “The Substitute.” There’s been a few.

    I’d like to do more feature stuff. I’ve got three TV shows going right now. But it would be great to find a great feature to kind of get in. It’s a whole different kind of work. Yeah, but also, I’m at a point now I’m not worrying about it. It’d be great if it happens, but I’m good.

    Justin Kirk brings such a fun energy to anything he does. What’s fun about taking your guy’s energy and bouncing it against Justin’s?

    I love Justin. I will say this. I don’t think I’ve ever told him this, so it’s kind of odd saying in public: what I like about Justin is he brings this unique energy to his character, which makes, obviously, my guy is a kind of grounded guy, so essentially to play off of that kind of reminds me of my kids in a way. So that’s all well and good.

    What I really admire about him, two things: he’s always on point. We’re working, people come in and they’re kind of not — Justin is always prepared. I’ve never seen him not on point. That’s kind of unusual, especially for young people. I do “Grace and Frankie.” Those guys are always on point — that’s the old school. You better be on point when you show up there. Justin is always there.

    But what I really like most about him? I like the way he treats the crew and the extras, and just people in general. He’s just such a nice person, and not because he has to be. I don’t know how that sounds. I’ve worked with a lot of people. Some people have a different approach. Some actors feel they can’t talk to anybody or whatever. I like the way he carries himself, and I appreciate it, because I haven’t seen that in a lot of people I’ve worked with. To me, it’s important.

    When you’re the first guy on the call sheet, it sets the tone.

    Yeah, absolutely. I’ve worked on some shows that people are like insane. I’m like, really? But you’re right. It gives everybody else the excuse to be, and he does it. He’s there, he’s 100%. Yeah. I don’t normally say that about many people, but I do appreciate him. But it’s a great cast. Everybody is. But he does set the tone.

  • Here’s a First Look at ‘Stranger Things’ Season 2 Super Bowl Ad

    Something’s strange in the neighborhood!

    The first teaser trailer for Netflix’s supernatural hit drama “Stranger Things” will air during the Super Bowl this Sunday. We aren’t expecting to see a whole lot of footage, but Entertainment Weekly has a sneak peek photo that is definitely something to get excited about:

    Stranger Things

    Yes, that’s Dustin (Gaten Matarazzo), Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin), and Will (Noah Schnapp) dressed as Ghostbusters. Maybe it’s Halloween and the three friends are heading to their school’s Halloween party. But where’s the fourth Ghostbuster, Mike (Finn Wolfhard)?

    “Stranger Things” season 2 is set a year after the events of season 1, as the kids, Joyce (Winona Ryder), and Chief Hopper (David Harbour) attempt to lead normal lives again. But of course, the Upside Down is still out there — and the fate of Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) is still up in the air. Season 2 is expected to stream later this year.

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  • 11 Things You Never Knew About ‘Space Jam’

    Need more proof that the ’90s were a crazy/awesome time for movies? We’d like to submit to evidence “Space Jam.”

    It’s been 20 years since Warner Bros. released the film, a documentary chronicling the time Michael Jordan spent his first NBA retirement teaming up with Bugs Bunny and the other Looney Tunes to defeat a group of super-powered aliens in a high-stakes game of basketball. Because a-doy!

    To celebrate that anniversary, and to fill the wait until the long-awaited remake finally materializes, here are 11 interesting facts you might not know about this ’90s classic.
    1. For whatever reason, Warner Bros. continues to maintain the official “Space Jam” website 20 years later. You can check it out here if you’re in the mood for some vintage, mid-’90s html work.

    2. Early in the film, there’s a shot of Moron Mountain in outer space with a strange, black rectangle in the corner of the screen. That rectangle is the alien monolith from “2001: A Space Odyssey.”3. When Bill Murray‘s character tells Daffy “the producer is a friend of mine,” he wasn’t lying. “Space Jam” was produced by Ivan Reitman, who’s probably best known for teaming with Murray on classic comedies like “Ghostbusters” and “Stripes.”
    4. Though they’re never actually mentioned in the film, all five Monstars have names of their own: Blanko (blue), Bupkis (purple), Bang (green), Nawt (red) and Pound (orange).

    5. Perhaps the biggest winner in the whole “Space Jam” enterprise was singer R. Kelly. He wrote the Grammy-winning “I Believe I Can Fly” specifically for the film’s soundtrack. To date, it remains his biggest hit single.6. Legendary animator Chuck Jones may have helped shape the Looney Tunes franchise, but he was critical of “Space Jam” after release. Among other complaints, Jones said that he felt Bugs should have solved his feud with the Monstars himself, rather than recruiting others to his cause.

    7. While Jordan played himself in the movie, his wife, Juanita, and their three children were portrayed by actors. Apparently, not everyone in the Jordan family is eager to be on camera.8. The Monstars’ career pretty much ended after “Space Jam,” but they did briefly return in 1998 via a cameo appearance in the “Pinky & the Brain” episode, “Star Warriors.”

    9. “Space Jam” actually served as a reunion for His Airness and Mr. Bunny. The two appeared in a series of Nike commercials, where they joined forces against Marvin the Martian and his basketball-playing alien allies.10. With “Space Jam” being such a box office success, it should come as no surprise that Warner Bros. has been trying to craft sequels and/or a remake for years. It sounds like “Space Jam” reboot/remake is finally in the works, with LeBron James apparently taking over for Jordan.

    11. Warners had some ambitious franchise plans for the film. At one point, Jackie Chan was slated to star in “Spy Jam” (with that project eventually morphing into 2003’s “Looney Tunes: Back in Action”), and NASCAR racer Jeff Gordon was rumored for “Race Jam.”
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