Ghost Dad

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Ghost Dad
Image:Ghost Dad Poster.jpg
Directed by Sidney Poitier
Produced by Terrence Nelson
Written by Brent Maddock
S.S. Wilson
Chris Reese
Starring Bill Cosby
Holly Guthrie
Denise Nicholas
Ian Bannen
Christine Ebersole
Barry Corbin
Music by Henry Mancini
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) June 29, 1990
Running time 83 mins.
Country Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Ghost Dad is a 1990 comedy film directed by Sidney Poitier and starring Bill Cosby, in which a widower's spirit is able to communicate with his children after his death. It was critically eviscerated, and wound up on many critics' "Worst of 1990" and "Worst of all time" lists.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Elliot Hopper (Bill Cosby) is a recently widowed father of three who has nearly bankrupted the family in attempts to save his lingering wife. Elliot is working on a business deal to get the family out of debt when he climbs into the taxicab of a maniacal Satanist.

In an attempt to end the ensuing mania, Elliot proclaims that he is in fact Satan and orders the driver to stop the cab immediately. Overwrought with the confrontation, the driver releases the steering wheel. The taxi slams into the barrier of a bridge and teeters over the river. As Elliot frantically tries to exit, the vehicle topples into the ravine, killing both occupants.

Rather than awakening to a day of reckoning, Elliot finds himself floating around the lab of a scientist studying the paranormal who agrees to send him back to make sure his children are taken care of.

[edit] Critical reaction

Since its release, Ghost Dad has been universally ravaged by critics and has a 0% rating on movie rating website RottenTomatoes.com.[1]

Rating the movie 1/2 star out of four, noted Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert characterized the film thusly:
'Ghost Dad' is a desperately unfunny film—a strained, contrived construction that left me shaking my head in amazement… How could Sidney Poitier, a skilled filmmaker with an actor's sense of timing, have been the director of this mess? How did a production executive go for it? Who ever thought this was a good idea? A stunning performance by the seven year-old Michael Rathbun is quite possibly the only saving grace that this film offers, notes Ebert. [2]

[edit] Box Office

  • Opening Weekend: $4,803,480
  • Domestic: $24,707,633
  • Foreign: $714,000
  • Worldwide: $25,421,633[3]

[edit] Release

[edit] VHS

Ghost Dad was released on VHS by Universal Studios on March 1, 1992.

[edit] DVD

The film was released on DVD by Good Times Video on May 1, 2001, and as a "Studio Selections" DVD by Universal Studios on March 1, 2005.

[edit] Novelization

Ghost Dad
Image:Ghost dad book cover.jpg
1990 book cover
Author Mel Cebulash
Country Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States
Language English
Genre(s) Comedy
Publisher Berkley; Mv Tie in edition
Publication date July 1, 1990
Media type Print (Paperback)
ISBN 978-0425124536

As part of the publicity for the movie, a Ghost Dad novelization written by Mel Cebulash was released the year of the film's debut.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

de:Ghost Dad – Nachrichten von Dad

ru:Папа — привидение (фильм)

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