The internet is firing on all cylinders
lately as the Ghostbusters reboot looms ever-closer. Shouting matches
between Paul Feig apologists and 80s-purists are reaching a fever
pitch and accusations of sexism and bar-lowering fly back and forth
because it's the internet, and on the internet you can get away with
calling people pretty much whatever you want with zero proof.
I'll go on the record and say that I
don't think this reboot is a good idea, but when pressed, it's been
hard for me to articulate why. Something about it just doesn't sit
well with me. Do I hate women? Do I think they're innately less funny
than men? Am I secretly one of those guys that the cartoon character
Tumblr-ites demonize? I don't think so. I don't want to be. That's
not something I'd be proud to be known for. So what is it? If there's
no good reason for it to not exist, shouldn't it have the right to
exist? After all, it doesn't erase the 1984 classic. That movie has
so permeated pop culture that it could never be undone. So what is
it? I think I know.
Before we get to the heart of this,
there are a few arguments, good and bad, that I've seen people lob
around about the new Ghostbusters movie. The first one is that there
shouldn't be a reboot because the original movie is “perfect” the
way it is.
I guess?
I mean, Ghostbusters is a fantastic
movie. One of my favorites. I've been a Ghostbuster for Halloween
pretty consistently since college. I've owned toys, video games,
comics, DVDs... all of it. I'm a little more than a casual fan. I
think it's great. That said, it hasn't aged as well as you might
think. And some of that is simply a product of the time and what was
expected of movies in the 80s.
I have a cousin who hadn't seen
Ghostbusters. They've missed out on a few classics, somehow. This
wasn't the first time we've done this, either. They hadn't seen Back
to the Future until we sat down and watched the trilogy together. I
think that they enjoyed BttF. I never heard otherwise. But their
dislike for Ghostbusters was made apparent throughout. The biggest
complaint was the Bill Murray/Sigourney Weaver relationship. Watch
the movie without those rose-tinted glasses. It's completely
shoehorned in. Venkman is horribly obnoxious to Dana through the
whole movie. They have zero moments where they actively try to get to
know each other and form any kind of bond. Venkman is a creeper who
wants to bone Dana, and she sees right through it and rolls her eyes. Sure, it's a classic comedy-romance setup, but it's trite now, and wasn't ever really that believable in the first place. I mean, Bill Murray may be the funniest man on the planet,
but he's not great looking. He's no Oscar Isaac. Sigourney wouldn't put up with that.
Especially not in her prime. And yet, after Stay Puft's demise, they
share a kiss, and presumably go off to make a baby.
Totally not a page from my diary |
But it's an 80s comedy. A love interest
was expected. And as the lead, Bill was going to get her. Standard
movie fare. But to modern audiences, it doesn't hold up. And that's
ok. That wasn't what the movie set out to do. When Ghostbusters does sci-fi and comedy, the genres it set out to do, it pulls them off spectacularly. When it does a secondary genre, it's kind of meh. It's still a great, funny movie. It doesn't have to be a perfect one on all counts.
Do I, personally, think the shallow romance is a strike against the movie? Not
really. Nobody dislikes Casablanca because the fight scenes are boring. That's fine. Ghostbusters still stands on its own despite
that, and I'd argue that most people who see it for the first time understand or ignore it. The rest of the film is so good that you forgive the things that don't quite work.
My point is, this is an emotional
argument. It's nostalgia. It's not a great one to sway people. Just because you grew
up with the franchise doesn't mean others did. They don't have the
emotional connection to it that you do. They see the cracks in the movie. And that's fine. It has
flaws, and seeing those flaws in their context helps those flaws make
sense.
The second argument, and the one I
found myself making on Twitter, was that the reboot is a cynical cash
grab. People have been asking for a third Ghostbusters movie for
about 30 years. Something always got in the way. Usually Bill Murray
and his hatred of how the second one turned out. He famously hated it
because the film had more focus on the special effects than on the
character interaction that made the original so great. I don't think
he's completely right there, as the second one has great moments, but
he made the thing, and there were probably behind the scenes fights
about this argument that tarnished his view.
Good thing the new movie doesn't seem
to be falling into the same trap. Right?
Hmm... |
At any rate, the idea of the
Ghostbuster is still in the public consciousness. The brand never
went away. People still know who they are. The jumpsuits, the proton
pack, the laser gun, etc. People know it. Hollywood knows this. They
exploit this. It's what they do. So since the original group can't
get together to make a new one (or have died since then, RIP Harold
Ramis), they look for someone who will.
Enter the Feig.
Paul Feig stepped up and decided to
push forward with his own version. Based on what I've read, it hasn't
been a quest for this man to undo the Ghostbusters and replace it
with his all-female version because the other one sucked. Based on
interviews, he genuinely thinks the original is brilliant, but
couldn't rationalize a 30-year gap in the movie canon's timeline.
Some of us may say that that's where a “writer” would step in and
fill in some gaps, but who knows where Hollywood could find one of
those?
So it's a cash grab. Yes. All movies
are. We all implicitly know this. It's Hollywood's job to pitch it to
us. A “Yeah, we know, but look!” attempt to get asses in seats.
Which brings us to the next point I often hear.
Movie trailers can
make or break a film. That's the whole reason they exist. I thought
the idea for The Peanuts movie was a complete disregard for Charles Schulz's wishes for the franchise to stop after
his death. And it kind of was. But when the trailer came out, it
swayed me. Schulz's family was involved, the studio knew what they
characters meant to the general audience, and they made a pitch to
let people know that the Peanuts were in good hands. And it worked.
Audiences loved the movie. The studio proved that not everything has to be a
cynical cash grab. Sometimes a movie is made from the heart. Made from a place that respects the property and wants to see a property live on and find a home with future generations.
I'd argue that Ghostbusters 2016's trailer didn't
do that. To me, a lot of the clever writing and interplay from the 1984 original was gone and replaced with one-liners that didn't work,
visual gags that failed, and under-written, flat characters all
mugging for focus. The pitch to the built-in fanbase wasn't there. It seems like the studio took those fans for granted and tried to made jokes more catered toward a mass audience, not realizing that A) Those fans like the original because it made the audience bend to the movie, not vice-versa, and B) Ghostbusters was the highest-grossing comedy of all time when it came out (Until Beverly Hills Cop beat it a couple weeks later). That proves that the movie doesn't have to talk down. It just has to be good. The audience is clearly there.
But maybe I'm wrong. Let's look at the trailers.
Even if you think it's good, you have to know there's a major difference in tone there.
But maybe I'm wrong. Let's look at the trailers.
Even if you think it's good, you have to know there's a major difference in tone there.
So how could this miss the mark by so
far? Why do people seem so hell-bent on seeing Ghostbusters 2016
fail?
I think Paul Feig, well-intentioned or
not, is completely missing the point of Ghostbusters as a franchise.
Sure, everyone knows the car and the packs and the jumpsuits, but
that's not why that movie became such a cultural touchstone.
Ghostbusters is Ghostbusters because of the Ghostbusters. You can
emulate that formula as much as you want, but you're never going to
duplicate what made that first movie work.
Ghostbusters was a passion project for
Dan Aykroyd. He's obsessed with the supernatural. Ghosts, aliens,
everything. And he channeled that obsession and breadth of knowledge
into a script that he cared about. Harold Ramis, one of the greatest
comedic writers and directors of all time, helped take what was, by
all accounts, a mess of a script, and hone it into a brilliant story.
Bill Murray, one of the sharpest wits around, ad-libbed much of the
way his character interacted with the world around him. The actors
informed those characters. Ernie Hudson, Rick Moranis, Annie Potts,
etc. all brought important and unique brands of comedy to the table.
Bill Murray was right. Ghostbusters is about those characters. Not
about that world. The two can't be separated.
Even when Ghostbusters was continued in different media,
the people at the helm knew that the characters created for that
movie were the glue that held that world together. They were all
adapted to cartoons, video games, and recently, a comic book series.
The actors and original creators aren't involved, but those
characters live on because that world is nothing without them.
When the Extreme Ghostbusters premiered
on television, they linked it to the originals by having them in the
same world. And people accepted it as part of the canon. That's all
it takes. As long as the old characters are there to welcome the new ones into the fold, people generally accept the new characters with no problem. Just be respectful of the property. Don't wipe away the efforts of the people who did the real work for you.
When people call the reboot
unnecessary, dissenters often point to other franchises that are
rebooted all the time: James Bond, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,
Spider-Man. The main difference here is that all of these are adapted
works. Sean Connery may have been film's Bond, but he existed as a
book before that. Fans lamented the new Turtles movie for sexing up
April, but she's just another version of the character who has seen
different interpretations in page, cartoon, and previous films. Even
Spidey has had three silver screen actors portray him, but he's had
countless comic and television incarnations as well (and alternate
universes, but now's not the time). The Ghostbusters had no
predecessor. This was it. These characters and this world was
constructed for the screen.
Instead, Feig opted for a reboot. Don't let the intro to the 2016 trailer fool you. It implies that the new movie takes place in the same universe as the old one, but every interview (and the structure of the trailer) tells you that it doesn't. He
took a world that was molded for a specific group of characters to
inhabit, and he's retro-fitting it for his own means. And it just
isn't working. Those characters aren't meant for that world. The fact
that he's rebooting and cutting all canon ties with the original
drives home the idea that he just doesn't grasp what makes this
franchise work on a fundamental level. If he had built upon what had
been established by the owners of the coattails he's riding, I think
fans would have been more accepting of his idea. Even if this group
was on the west coast and never had any contact with the originals,
just that fact that Feig was bringing back that world would have sat
better with fans.
Instead, the new Ghostbusters inhabits
a strange plane of existence where it stands on the shoulders of its
predecessors, all the while trying to convince you that it got there
by its own merit. It's an ouroboros, existing only on the
sustainability of the franchise, all the while distancing itself from
the very benefits it used to get here. It'll continue to eat itself
to hide its shame until it busts wide open.
And Bustin' makes me feel good.