D: Jerry Zucker
Paramount/Koch (Lisa Weinstein)
USA 🇺🇸 1990
128 mins
Fantasy/Romance
W:Â Bruce Joel Rubin
DP: Adam Greenberg
Ed: Walter Murch
Mus:Â Maurice Jarre
PD:Â Jane Musky
Cos: Ruth Morley
Patrick Swayze (Sam Wheat), Demi Moore (Molly
Jensen), Whoopi Goldberg (Oda Mae Brown), Tony Goldwyn (Carl Bruner), Rick Aviles (Willie Lopez), Gail Boggs (Louise Brown), Armelia McQueen (Clara Brown), Vincent
Schiavelli (Subway Ghost)
A love story which made women all over the world cop
and swoon is made accessible to make audiences by having a mystery element and thriller subplot growing out of its supernatural romance backbone.
Patrick Swayze plays yuppie stockbroker Sam Wheat, who
moves into a plush Manhattan apartment with his artist girlfriend, Molly, but as the paint is still drying in their new home, Sam is murdered, leaving Molly a grieving wreck while Sam is
stuck in limbo, walking the Earth as a ghostly spirit, attempting to solve his murder from the other side with the aid of a bogus medium (a scene stealing Whoopi Goldberg) who happens to
have a gift fit for a séance after all.
Sometimes silly, sometimes soppy, Ghost has the right
mix of ingredients to make a successful movie, with the added bonus of appealing to either sex, although the end will have the female half of the audience weeping while the men will
gleefully enjoy the "revenge is good for the soul" moral. A surprise smash of 1990, receiving a Best Picture Oscar nomination in the process and winning two awards (Supporting Actress
& Original Screenplay).     Â
8/10