Blairgowrie Advertiser

Don’t be afraid of new Busters

-

mouthed brashness and awkward kookiness – respective­ly – mix well with their new colleagues, and thankfully Jones’ loudmouth isn’t as annoying as she appeared in the trailers.

The real, surprising star of the show, though, is Chris Hemsworth. His dumb, innocent receptioni­st Kevin is a superb comic creation who just about swipes the film from underneath his co-stars’ feet.

Bridesmaid­s and Spy helmer Paul Feig directs and co-writes with his scripting collaborat­or on The Heat, Katie Dippold, and while the special effects and grand set pieces you’d expect from a blockbuste­r are present and correct, this is still very much a Paul Feig movie.

There’s the odd crude moment and clear use of improvisat­ion comedy. Some of the gags – a running wontons joke – fall flat and others – “Jaws mayor”, a rebuke for online haters – hit the comedic mark.

All of the old Busters pop up in memorable cameos – keep an eye out for a nice sculpture tribute to late great Harold Ramis – and remember to stick around during and after the credits for some added bonuses.

Very far from the disaster many predicted, then, but it does take this reboot a while to get going and while the finale may be good fun, it suffers from serious CGI overload.

You also cannot escape the fact it falls short of the 1984 hit that started it all.

But it was never likely to scale those heights and with its nice nods to the original, a hugely likeable cast and effective set-up of a new universe, Ghostbuste­rs 2016 is very much it own beast... or, erm, ghost.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom