In an old Hollywood mansion, the spirit of an old family retainer inhabits an old grandfather clock. When a movie company uses the mansion for a film, the spirit inhabits the body of an alien and persuades the two filmmakers to track down an old house that will resolve a family scandal.
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Reviews
An Exercise In Nonsense
Absolutely the worst movie.
It's an amazing and heartbreaking story.
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Cash strapped actor Warren McCloud (a likable portrayal by Jason Lively) and his struggling filmmaker buddy Fred (the equally engaging Tim McDaniel) find themselves in possession of a pawn ticket left to Warren by his grandfather. Said pawn ticket sends the duo on a wild ghost chase through Hollywood. Moreover, Warren and Fred are assisted by the wizened little old man ghost of the grandfather's Brit-accented butler Lewis. Director/co-writer Roland Emmerich relates the entertainingly goofy story at a steady pace and maintains an amiable lightweight tone throughout. The ever-adorable Jill Whitlow perks things up considerably with her cute and radiant turn as spunky actress Laurie. Paul Gleason does well as mean jerk studio head Stan Gordon and Leonard Lansink contributes a funny turn as Gordon's bumbling flunky Karl. Popping up in nifty bits are Chuck "Porky" Mitchell as huffy diner owner Mr. Rosenbaum and veteran character actor Larry Pennell as a booze-sodden bum. Karl Walter Lindenlaub's slick cinematography gives this picture a nice glossy look. The bouncy soundtrack and the groovy-bumpin' score by Joel Wachbrit and Hubert Bartholomae keep things bubbling along. Moreover, there's a good-natured easy'n'breezy quality to this movie that's impossible to either resist or dislike. The special effects are pretty cool as well. A pleasant diversion.
"Ghost Chase" was an early effort by director Roland Emmerich before he moved onto big-budget Hollywood movies, and when he was turning out German-financed movies derivative of famous Hollywood movies. While this movie isn't as derivative as some of his other movies made at this time, you can still see influences, ranging from "Halloween" to "E.T." Actually, this unoriginality is one of the lesser problems I had with this movie. It's a pretty cheap-looking movie, for one thing, with poor cinematography and lighting. Much of the dialogue seems post-dubbed, and many of the special effects are tacky. And they apparently couldn't afford a decent-sounding musical score. But most of the blame falls on Emmerich's direction and script. Emmerich doesn't seem to know how to stage scenes many times (look at how the bicycle crash and the overpouring of coffee in a mug is filmed.) The script almost seems to have been written as the movie was filmed, with the plot taking forever to get going and then progressing at a sluggish pace when it's not being confusing. If you hate Emmerich's major Hollywood studio movies, take a look at this, and you'll see what real bad movie making is like.
this movie exemplifies the captivating adventure a ridiculous ghost/beast to can add to a somewhat atrocious plot. this ghost is a recipe for fun and comedy as jason lively and friends search for the MILLIONS. as this high-tailed hilarity becomes almost unbearable, this fun loving ghost materializes and just about makes you choke on your own laughter. fun for children and senior citizens, but not middle aged soccer moms. what makes this even better.....jason lively is the pompous idiot from european vacation, only now he has a mullet! pure casting genius! amen.
This film is BAD. All the ingredients that add up to make a good film are lacking here, the script - terrible, the acting? - worse. And if you can find a worse director doing (financially) well in Hollywood, I applaud you.