Probe Droid
Master Member
Re: Ghostbusters 3
I won't be calling. Nope.
I won't be calling. Nope.
Isn't making this new Ghostbusters movie a reboot technically not messing with the old movies?
I have nothing against the actresses chosen as I know almost nothing about them. I'm against the whole reboot idea because the original still stands the test of time and deserves to be discovered by new audiences. The original was one of those things that just sorta came together in that magical-movie-way whereas this just feels... artificial and exploitative. While I applaud including female Ghostbusters and am all-for equality, the all-female angle they seem to be pursuing feels very "gimmicky" and political in nature. Younger generations are only going to see the new version because Sony will quietly try to "forget" the old one in order to push the new.
I think a continuation could work. Just forget all the cartoons and all that stuff. You had the first two movies, the guys did their thing and then there just seemed to be no more ghosts around. Ghostbusters goes out of business and the guys go off into obscurity, no paranormal activity for thirty years. By this time the original stuff has become almost urban myth, mostly forgotten. Then something happens, ghosts start coming back and these gals pick up where the others left off. Maybe make one of them the daughter of one of the original members or something. Then you could have a good cameo by Murray, or Ackroyd, or Romanis, or even Weaver, and then just pick up from there.
The problem is, it will taint what is already in existance because they want to try and "top" it. You can't tell me they aren't.
Best way to explain is a quote below:
The problem is, it will taint what is already in existance because they want to try and "top" it. You can't tell me they aren't. There are too many reboots out there that, while they make me appreciate the originals even more, that they make me cringe thinking this younger generation will look to these new ones vs the originals that were worth a damn.
Like Star Wars, know how many younger people I hear talking about the prequels or clone wars because they were introduced to them due to time of release? That is another argument for another time though.
@Satxer, don't know where that quote came from but yes, yes and more yes!!! This is a subject I have been frustrated with for a long while. Purposefully changing a character's race or sex isn't being progressive-minded. It is gimmicky at best but sadly, it really falls more into the category of being exploitative... all the while the sheep are cheering it on as being so forward-thinking and equality-minded. If these things were truly as progressive as they like to think they are, they wouldn't care what the sex or race of the character was, but when you go out specifically looking for one thing, that smacks of political correctness and exploitation.I have nothing against the actresses chosen as I know almost nothing about them. I'm against the whole reboot idea because the original still stands the test of time and deserves to be discovered by new audiences. The original was one of those things that just sorta came together in that magical-movie-way whereas this just feels... artificial and exploitative. While I applaud including female Ghostbusters and am all-for equality, the all-female angle they seem to be pursuing feels very "gimmicky" and political in nature.
*quote.
The idea that Ray and Winston might take blind applications or interviews, and put together a new team of mostly or all women could still factor into that -- but only if it wasn't commented on at all in the story. For it to be progressive casting/storytelling, their gender needs to not matter to Ray and Winston. ANd, further, I'd love to see Rick Moranis back as a permanent staff member of the team, even if he rarely goes out on calls. Rick Moranis said back in 2013 -- back when a sequel was looking to be an actual sequel, still -- that someone connected with Dan Ayroyd had called to ask if he'd be interested in coming back. He said he "wouldn't not do it, but it's got to be good". I hadn't thought of him at first because he's been amost entirely out of acting for over fifteen years, but the fact that he'd be interested in a good Ghostbusters sequel... *sigh* Well, this, to me, is yet another, borked opportunity for something really cool...Five minutes in my kitchen brainstorming out loud led me to this:
So Bill Murray isn't interested. Let Venkman have drifted away from the other three. He can have a glorified cameo, or just be mentioned by the others. Have Egon have died recently, since Harold has, and maybe they saw him at the funeral and it was awkward because they were all still into that and he just wants to move on in his life with Dana. So Winston and Ray realize they need to get some new blood in. The world has changed, though. Parapsychology is more mainstream. They wouldn't have gotten evicted from the campus these days for what they were doing -- they'd be having regular classes and lectures on it. So maybe what the Ghostbusters are now is guys who work with paranormal investigation teams and get called in when a haunting is persistent and won't yield to cleansing rituals or trying to communicate with the deceased or whatever. And the tech has gotten better and more streamlined and amplified and miniaturized over the last couple decades, too. Like the whole thing is now a sort of large bullpup handheld unit. Something happens. Hijinks ensue.
So for this to be going in the direction it is is utterly unjustified. That was a couple minutes of thinking out loud. These are supposed to be professional writers, for chrissake.
That. Exactly that.It'll certainly be interesting to see how the rest of the cast falls into place, and I certainly like Feig and Dippold and the cast. I'm just not sold yet on the idea of continuing this series in a way that tries to both play to nostalgia and do things differently. One or the other, folks, because trying to do both may be impossible."
I'll quote myself from a few months ago, as it still seems like the best way to treat Ghostbusters going forward, apart from just letting it go.
The idea that Ray and Winston might take blind applications or interviews, and put together a new team of mostly or all women could still factor into that -- but only if it wasn't commented on at all in the story. For it to be progressive casting/storytelling, their gender needs to not matter to Ray and Winston. ANd, further, I'd love to see Rick Moranis back as a permanent staff member of the team, even if he rarely goes out on calls. Rick Moranis said back in 2013 -- back when a sequel was looking to be an actual sequel, still -- that someone connected with Dan Ayroyd had called to ask if he'd be interested in coming back. He said he "wouldn't not do it, but it's got to be good". I hadn't thought of him at first because he's been amost entirely out of acting for over fifteen years, but the fact that he'd be interested in a good Ghostbusters sequel... *sigh* Well, this, to me, is yet another, borked opportunity for something really cool...
--Jonah
If these things were truly as progressive as they like to think they are, they wouldn't care what the sex or race of the character was, but when you go out specifically looking for one thing, that smacks of political correctness and exploitation.![]()
A lot of users don't like this new Ghostbusters because it's going with an all female team and you're coming up with lame excuses like "political correctness" and "exploitation" to instantly write it off.
And it's a ridiculous argument anyways since is no proof that the film's intent is to exploit the fact that the new cast is female.