Ghostbusters: Afterlife

Recently I went to see the Ghostbusters Afterlife film. I’ve watched Ghostbusters 1 and 2 but haven’t seen the Ghostbusters Reboot but might watch it soon.

It was my first time to see a film at the cinema for ages. The film is about a brother and sister going to live in a broken down house with a farm in Summerville. It was funny, scary and exciting. My favourite bit was when the brother and sister go on the Ghostbuster Cadillac and nearly catch Muncher(The iron eating ghost). They use Proton packs to stun Muncher then they try and catch it with a ghost trap.

Later they find Egon Spengler had been pushing back a demon called Gozar from coming out of a deep hole in Ivo Shandor’s mine in Summerville with 4 proton packs attached to the ceiling. The system automatically pushes the demons back for a while.

However in 2021 Gozer was planning to take over the world once again. Egon Spangler knew this so he built a ghost trap in an old farm. The trap was made using many ghost traps parallel to each other and a switch to activate all the ghost traps at once. When Egon Spangler used his trap the power failed and he locked all the GhostBuster’s equipment away. He then got killed by a weird creature which he lured in his farm to capture with his parallel ghost traps.

One thought on “Ghostbusters: Afterlife”

  1. Heya Edward! I enjoyed Ghostbusters Afterlife … and your review of it! I was probably your age when I saw Ghostbusters 1 and of course it was so good my brother and I would watch it over and over and at this point I have probably seen it 50 times. I also didn’t mind number 2 although critics always point out how bad it was. Anyway Afterlife was fund because they used a new story but they kept the events of the 1980’s as part of it. Honestly I wanted to know more about Ivo Shandor, I think that story on its own could have been fun, scary and strange. Maybe my favorite scene was the simplest — the phone call to the ghostbusters phone line and you see the phone and you hear the voice that was so important to my childhood — loved it!

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