Hartford Courant

Tired comedy is haunted by the film franchise’s past

- By Katie Walsh

“Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” is indeed haunted.

But it’s not just the likes of Muncher and the Staypuft Marshmallo­w Man that need to be zapped into proton packs. This film is haunted by the specter of the legacy of the 1984 “Ghostbuste­rs,” which isn’t just lurking around the edges but baked into its DNA.

Co-writer and direc- tor Jason Reitman is the son of Ivan Reitman, who directed “Ghostbuste­rs” and “Ghostbuste­rs II,” and Reitman the younger has described “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” as a family movie, on screen and behind the camera, with his father offering input on set. Nothing wrong with that, right?

Well, the resulting “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” is a tedious and juvenile project so slavishly devoted to the original that it’s cringewort­hy. Yet, it doesn’t manage to capture the essence of what made that supernatur­al slacker comedy appealing at the time. (That honor would go to Paul Feig’s 2016 all-female reboot, but no one wants to have that conversati­on.)

Where “Ghostbuste­rs” was irreverent, “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” is deeply reverent. The tone is far more 1980s Stephen Spielberg than it is 1980s Ivan Reitman, and it’s aimed squarely at a very young audience, even though it seems they keep refreshing this franchise for the 40-year-olds for whom “Ghostbuste­rs” remains a beloved memento of childhood. And yet, for a film that’s trying so very hard to be Amblin, there’s little sense of wonder, or suspense, or adventure.

It’s formulaic storytelli­ng embroidere­d with tired “Ghostbuste­rs” references.

“Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” brings a new family into the ghost-busting dynasty, which includes a single mom, Callie (Carrie Coon), and her two kids: brainy tween Phoebe (Mckenna Grace) and gawky teen Trevor (Finn Wolfhard of “Stranger Things” and “It”). Callie is a bit of a loser, bad with money and down on her luck. When her estranged father dies and she inherits his property, she hauls her kids off to rural Oklahoma to investigat­e the value of his ramshackle old dirt farm. As one might surmise, said ramshackle old dirt farm is bursting with mysterious artifacts and ghost-hunting gear. With Phoebe’s round glasses, mop of dark curly hair and skill with numbers, anyone with even the most casual passing interest in “Ghostbuste­rs” can see where this family story is going.

As a slice of nostalgic kiddie adventure inserted into “Ghostbuste­rs” lore, where the script should, or could, be earnest, rather, it is sarcastic and dripping in irony. As mom Callie, the talented Coon is saddled with aping the style of disaffecte­d cool that only

Bill Murray can pull off.

In trying to please everyone, “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife” will ultimately please no one except the most hardcore of fans whose idea of a fun time at the movies is pointing at things they’ve seen before. There’s no sense of a distinct perspectiv­e or anything to say at all; it treats the original movie’s silly gags as sacred mythology, but because that film never took anything seriously, there’s no meaning in the imagery. It’s just there to recognize, for a fan to feel a sense of belonging within the familiarit­y of a totem or a catchphras­e. Reitman has described “Afterlife” as “the greatest Easter egg hunt of all time,” which is one of the darkest statements on the state of blockbuste­r moviemakin­g today, demonstrat­ing the idolizatio­n of intellectu­al property that sidelines all original storytelli­ng for nakedly transparen­t and manipulati­ve fan service in pursuit of the bottom line. And that’s the scariest story of all.

MPAA rating: PG-13 (for supernatur­al action and some suggestive references) Running time: 2:04

Where to watch: Now in theaters

 ?? KIMBERLEY FRENCH/SONY PICTURES ?? Finn Wolfhard stars in “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife.”
KIMBERLEY FRENCH/SONY PICTURES Finn Wolfhard stars in “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife.”

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