Ghost Town is a
cute, cute, cute little movie with lots of comedy and pathos. Frank (Greg
Kinnear) is a not so great husband who meets his untimely death one afternoon,
leaving his widow Gwen (Tea Leoni) behind.
Dr. Bertram Pincus, DDS, (Ricky Gervais) is a less than happy
individual who finds he can see ghosts following what should have been a
routine colonoscopy, during which he died for a few minutes. He and his surgeon/physician
(Kristen Wiig) have some of the best comedic scenes in this film together.
Really priceless, spot on dialogue between them that will have you laughing out
loud.
Frank tries to enlist Pincus to help him break up the
relationship and pending marriage between his wife and her new boyfriend Richard
(Billy Campbell), a human rights attorney. Pincus reluctantly agrees, and
surprisingly, he is charming in a very odd way, which begins to endear him to
Gwen. She is an Egyptologist and when dentist Pincus offers to look at a
mummy’s dental work, she agrees, resulting in yet another very funny encounter
in the story.
Other ghosts pursue Pincus in a manner not unlike the ghosts
who haunt Whoopi Goldberg’s character, Oda Mae, in the classic film Ghost. Ghost Town is lighter, will make you smile and laugh out loud,
especially due to Ricky Gervais, who delivers his lines like a standup comic
should.
What is keeping all these ghosts earthbound? What are they
hoping to get from Pincus that he rarely gets any space to himself in the real
world sans ghosts? That’s a question you will have to see answered for yourself
when you watch Ghost Town.
Ghost Town was
written and directed by David Koepp, whom I discovered was born in Pewaukee,
Wisconsin. This interests me as I am from Wisconsin, and am quite familiar with
Pewaukee. David Koepp has quite the writing credits in his bio, including Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal
Skull, War of the Worlds, Spider-Man, Jurassic Park, and more. Most impressive. Despite all those
blockbusters, I will argue that Ghost
Town, this sweet, witty, character driven piece, has all of those other
films beat. No over the top special effects to carry the film along, it relies
on great dialogue, a good premise and fine comedic timing and acting.
The film is rated PG-13 for some strong language, sexual
humor and drug references, and was released in 2008. This time of year, with
Halloween preparations coming up, you could probably watch this with family and
not scare anyone to bits, or offend anyone for that matter. You may even shed a
few heartfelt tears near the end. The writing is very good, and the actors are
really doing their best, and it all pays off in a very enjoyable film, more of
a romantic comedy than a true ghost story. Even Ghost was scarier than this film.
Watch it when you want to feel all happy/good inside. It
would make a good date night film.