Tag Archives: Ghostbusters

Ask Trev: Would you collect anything besides Transformers?

This question comes from master filmographer Pieter:

If The Transformers never existed do you think you would you have become a die hard collector of anything else like perhaps Robotech, Star Wars/Trek etc?

I’m going to have to give a big YES to that, though I’m sure never to the extent I have Transformers.  I’ve collected various other things over the course of my life, and if I didn’t have Transformers I think my collections of them would be a lot bigger than they are.  Given how much I spend per month on Transformers, the rest of my nerdy passions don’t get much of a look in.

 

Mid 90’s: Home Improvement Merchandise

Remember the 90’s sitcom Home Improvement?  Back in the day I LOVED that show!  Maybe it was because from 1987 onwards I lived away from my father, who had tried to be a good Dad in his way, but was 50 when I was born and already suffering from Paranoid Schizophrenia and Manic Depression.  Thus he wasn’t a father who was overtly loving or would play catch with me at the park.  So watching a TV Dad who openly loved, played and did activities with his sons, as well as being funny, perhaps was a substitute for something my own life was missing.

During the 90’s I wasn’t collecting Transformers as I wasn’t a big fan of Beast Wars, so for a while I collected Home Improvement merchandise.  This included everything from collector cards, posters, jumpers, t-shirts, socks and even a board game.

 

Mid 90’s:/2000’s: The Tick

I love The Tick!  He is by far and away my very favourite super hero and has been since the cartoon came out in the 90’s.  I don’t have a great deal of The Tick merchandise, but truthfully in part that’s because there isn’t that much out there, as super heroes go he is on the obscure side.

 

Late 90’s: X-Men Comics

I used to collect X-Men comics in the late 90’s.  Sadly when I moved in with a girl I gave a ton to a mate to hang onto who subsequently lost them, and now only have the special edition ones I kept for myself.

 

Early 2000’s: Men’s G-Strings

Wow – the ‘Censored’ sign somehow makes this photo look way worse than it actually is, you’d see worse at any swimming pool (maybe).

Hold up!  This isn’t as pervy as it sounds! And they were all mine, not someone else’s!

When backpacking around Europe in my mid 20’s I had to lug all the clothing I had in my backpack and didn’t get to wash clothes that often.  And two or 3 thongs would take up the same amount of space in my swag as one pair of boxer shorts would.  So by wearing mens g-strings I could triple the amount of underwear I had before I had to find a laundromat in whatever country I happened to be in – now that’s just good common sense for a world traveller.  As I traversed Europe I would occasionally pick up a new one at places like a fancy men’s underwear store in Florence.

When I arrived back in Australia I found I had accrued quite a few.  The oldest have been tossed now.  Back then I was young and very fit, these days it would look like wrapping a rubber band round the bottom of a pear.  Ah but back in the day, it was amazing how many bar patrons across Europe would buy drinks all night for a Mad Aussie dancing round in a blokes thong – a great money saver!

 

90’s/2000’s: Star Trek

Yes, VHS Tapes. Yes, I am that old.

I’ve seen most everything made in both franchises, though admit to being far more of a Trekkie than a Star Wars fan.  I bought nearly every Star Trek book written by Shatner, but never collected Star Trek merchandise in a huge way.  Back in the 90’s I collected the ‘Star Trek Fact Files’ that came out each week for $5 and could be put into associated binders.  Considering that there were a bit over 200 issues I guess that was a thousand bucks over 4 years which was a decent bit of cash.  Sadly I had them stored in a shed and mice got into them so they are pretty wrecked now.

Star Trek V: Kirk vs God

 

2000’s: Anime Statuettes

They’re from Japan – that makes them cultural instead of pervy.

For a while about 15 years ago I collected Anime Statuettes from some of my favourite Japanese cartoons and ended up with maybe a couple dozen.  However parenthood changes ones perspective, and given the… ahem… proportions of many anime girls, they didn’t seem appropriate to have on display anymore, so I stopped collecting and those I had got packed away and have spent a decade in a box in the storage shed.  I might get around to selling them off one day as I don’t think I’ll really ever want to display them again.

 

2010’s: My Little Pony

When I was the househusband and not working for 6 months when we first moved to NSW I used to watch My Little Pony with my young daughter each morning, and found it to be very entertaining and something we could share!  So both she and I started collecting MLP figures, myself specializing in Rarity figures since I found her hilarious!

Movie Review – My Little Pony

However the cartoon came to an end and she got older and lost all interest.  She actually donated her MLP toys to me and I was a bit sad to see something we had enjoyed together cast aside.  I kept a bunch of the Rarity ones, the rest went to goodwill as the joy for me came from collecting them with my daughter and sharing the hobby rather than the figures themselves.

Pictorial Toys Review – My Little Prime & Plasmane

Now my daughter is into Lilo & Stitch and I do try to share the hobby with her as best I can, but for my money the Ponies were more fun.

Video – Stitch: Toys and Facts with Acacia!

 

80’s/90’s/2000’s: Ghostbusters

‘Who ya gonna call? A middle-aged man cosplaying!’

If I didn’t collect Transformers, I think this would be mainly what I would collect now.  I adore Ghostbusters, it is definitely my No.2 pop culture love.  I’ve got a full uniform (gets busted out once a year to take my kids Trick’or’Treating), a few toys, DVD’s, video games, a board game etc.

Though nothing will ever equal the the first two movies for me, I love that the franchise is still kicking strong today.

Ghostbusters Movies: All 5 ranked from Worst to Best!

 

Hooray for Crossovers!

Two times the fun, wrapped up and rolled into one!

So while I may not be able to afford to collect much outside of Transformers, luckily there are Transformer Crossovers!  Between comics and toys Transformers has crossed over with the likes of Star Wars, Star Trek, Jurassic Park, Avengers, X-Men, Mr. Potato Head, Ghostbusters, Street Fighter, Back to the Future, Terminator….  heck, even Angry Birds!  

So these crossovers have enabled me to dip my toe into other sci-fi genre’s without having to compromise my Transformers budget.

Toys Review – Street Fighter Transformers

Toy Review – Ectotron

So yep Pieter, I would definitely still collect something.  And maybe its in the blood because my son also collects Transformers and my daughter collects Stuffed Animals & Stich merchandise.  But would I have a Ghostbustertorium Shed or MyLittlePony Stable?  Probably not.  Transformers have been producing toys for the last 40 years and never so much as in the past 20, and with dozens of different cartoons and movies, hundreds of different characters and thousands upon thousands of different toys, I don’t know how many other passions could have offered so much variety – it’s a lot of fun!  But there will always be one small cabinet in the corner of The Transformatorium for those little extra’s from my other nerdy loves.

Thank you Pieter for your question.

If you would like to see some of Pieter’s great work, check out the short film he did about my Transformatorium! 

Video: The Transformatorium: EXTENDED CUT

Do you collect something interesting?  Why not tell us about it in the comments section below!

Transformer Fan Interview – Chris Bishop

It’s time for another Transformer Fan Interview, and once again this one comes from overseas, the good ol’ US of A.  Chris has some of the most brilliant looking Transformers displays I have ever seen, and he’s sharing photos of it as well sharing the history of his hobby with us today.

 

Name and/or nicknames:

Chris Bishop.  I used to go by makoaspire as a customizer, but not so much anymore.

Family?

Married man, nearly 20 years this go round. Two teenage daughters.

Career?

I own and operate my own full service sign company. I do the little stuff  – like banners and such, and the big stuff – like shopping center monuments. As well as all the stuff in between. Having the equipment and the background I do from the sign business has helped incalculably in creating the collection display space that I have now.

 Website/Fan-pages?

Well I basically live on Facebook, so all of my content is there.  You can see my customs work, which includes exhaustive photos of my collection as well at: https://www.facebook.com/LNOWcustoms

I’m going to be starting up a side venture selling my background prints and creating dio pieces for anyone who wants them. I’m sluggish on the start, but hope to get that running soon.

How would you rate yourself on a C scale, C10 being MISB Mint perfection, to the lowest C1 ‘junker not worth it even for parts’?

I’m a 50 year old man. I’ve got more dents and dings in my packaging than I care to admit, but you see, the inside’s gone to pot as well.  I’m not a total loss though, so I’ll give myself a C5+

Fan/Collector since (year)?

September 17, 1984. The day the G1 cartoon premiered in the US.  A week earlier, a kid in my class had the first TF toy I had ever seen, a Buzzsaw cassette.  Up until that point Star Wars was the top dog in my toy arsenal. Then I see this thing, that’s TWO things.  And one was a robot bird! I was intrigued.  Then he told me a cartoon was coming out for these toys and it was gonna start the following week. I was hooked.

Transformers Allegiance, if you had one?

Decepticon. I have a tattoo of the symbol on my shoulder, a badge on the front of my truck, Devastator adorns my shop’s garage door.

I’m not all good. I’ve done some untoward stuff in my life. I love dark humor. The darker the better. I cannot suffer fools easily or at least without making my disdain known. I complain a lot, but I love cats, am exceedingly helpful and don’t want to cause any unnecessary pain.

Your Techspec motto if you had one?

Be nice, until it’s time to not be nice.

What existing, official Transformers character best describes you?

Blitzwing.  Has leadership goals, has a few sides to him, can avoid a hit when necessary, has his own mind, but is ultimately loyal and honorable in the end.

Which special ability of any Transformers character would you want to have for yourself? 

I’m a Skywarp fan and hate long car trips so, teleportation would be great.

Do you think you will collect Transformers until you die?

Difficult to see.  Always in motion, is the future. Just as you have with your Transformatorium, I have spent an inordinate amount of time and effort, as well as money and other intangibles to create the setup I have, so I’m definitely “pot committed” to use a poker term. AFTER I die, well, that’s my survivor’s problem.  But I have all the boxes in the attic for them to pack everything into to sell.

Do people outside of the hobby know you collect TFs (like at work/school)?

Yes. Several do, but I am of a generation where being a nerd was not something that you ever wanted to be labeled. So I still find myself low key ashamed to be into this sort of thing, especially at my age. I don’t broadcast it beyond the “community”. However, you make allowances for always loving what you grew up with and I love these things.

Were your family/parents supportive of collecting toys or did you have to hide your passion from them and friends?

I would say in retrospect, that I was spoiled with toys as a child. I was a good kid, definitely not a Veruca Salt, but I had a lot of stuff.  I was the first kid, first grandchild, so a lot of gifts at birthdays and holidays.  Not the rest of the year.  We were lower middle working class, but somehow my family provided plenty. Though there was always that one figure, or playset, or whatever, that I didn’t have or wanted, but didn’t get.

What does your partner think of your hobby?

She supports me, whatever.  She’s not into the hobby by any means. But she appreciates the effort and the artistry that I bring to it, because for me, it’s not just about the collecting, it’s about creating things and marrying the two.

Have you attended any fan-meets, Fairs, Conventions, Special Events?

I’ve been to many local cons, as well as a few TFCons.  Next up is TFCON Baltimore in November.

Favourite series/era/year, and why?

Geee-Wunnnnn!  Because it was the right time, I was the right age, it was made for me, crafted to manipulate me into loving these characters, watching their cartoon exploits, reading their comics (and shrugging off the differing from the cartoon storylines). And ultimately BUYING (or being gifted or stealing) the toys.

I know it wasn’t the best written thing. I cringe at AKOM episodes, or laugh at all the animation errors. But it was FOR me…at the time. And generationally as a whole,  Xers and Early Millenials are so entangled in their own pop culture nostalgia. Moreso than any previous or subsequent generation. Perfect storm, man.

Collect any comics?

None beyond the original TF ones, but I’ve read everything that’s come down the pike about the G1 characters. Dreamwave, IDW, Image.

Favourite Comic issue/story, and why?

I realize that when it comes to the original G1 comics continuity we have Marvel US and UK titles.  As an American, I’m always talking about the US title.  The comic stories didn’t really move me in any particular way, but Issue #9 with Circuit Breaker stands out, as well as the cover for issue #5. And of course the abomination in issue 70.

Favourite Cartoon episode/story, and why?

Don’t have a favorite, but I have ones that I don’t really like. Most of those are in Season 3 or by AKOM studios. Lol.

Favourite Character, and why?

If you could combine Shockwave, Skywarp and Motormaster into one badass hombre, then that’s my guy!

Which Transformers character would you want to exist for real?

Huffer or Gears.  He can help me work and complain all day with me.

Approx TFs toy collection count (or give a range like 200s, 300s, 2000s etc): 

Including items not on display I’d estimate in the 300-400 range.

Sealed collector or out-of-packaging collector?

I have done both.  But mainly out and displayed. The current Mainline/Studio Series 86 bots all remain MISB and packed away in the attic.

How much do you think you’ve spent on your collecting habit?

Including the lumber, supplies, lighting, toys and all the display redos since the Ikea Detolf days of 2014 – roughly $25 – $30K

Any rare/expensive figures in your collection? 

I have a few exclusives.  The most recent pickup was the Yolopark Clear Purple Megatron.

What interesting Licensed Merchandise items do you have?

I stay away from non-figure purchases.  I used to heavily collect Star Wars stuff in my 20s.  Had a display space similar to what I have for the TFs without all the dios and backgrounds, though.  I bought EVERY. THING. Star Wars branded and it had to stay MISB.  Of course I had ALL of the figures and playsets. But then I started buying scented markers, collectors plates, store displays, Bags of chips and Pepsi products, bookmarks.  It became untenable. It swallowed my time and was a small, but contributing factor to the disintegration of my first marriage.

First Transformers toy?

G1 Trailbreaker was the first one I unwrapped that Xmas.

One toy you most want?

I don’t have a grail. I’ve bought everything I want…so far.

The centrepiece/favourite toy in your collection at the moment (and why)?

It’s quite literally the entire centerpiece of my display. In 2020 during the pandemic time off I built a Legends scale G1 cartoon centerpiece display unit for the space.  It is comprised of 4 sides, each with 3-4 shelves that have dios of G1 cartoon scenes populated with legends figures. I intentionally built it with differing composition angles that force you to keep looking and moving around the unit. I feel it’s the finest work I will ever do. And I already did it… So I’m done, I guess. Lol.

Side 1: The Ark & Sherman Dam

Side 2: The Oil Rig and the Decepticon Underwater Base

 Side 3: The 86 Movie

Side 4: Cybertron, the Space Bridge and Season 4

Favourite toy in your early years of collecting?

Soundwave was always a banger to have on hand.

Worst toy(s) ever in your opinion?

Dino-Riders. Shout out to my buddy Gort. Lol.  But I assume you meant worst TF toy.  I personally dislike the pretenders, especially the mega super pretenders or whatever they called them. I was out of TFs by that point, trying to catch the ladies.

Toy(s) that were most disappointing when you got them?

All of the G1 toys, really.  Even then I held the toys up and compared them to the toon, and found them lacking.  Don’t get me wrong, I loved they toys then, but I was keenly aware they didn’t match the characters on the show.  I mean Where TF are Ironhide & Ratchet’s heads??  It started me on the road to customization.  Not knowing any different I would regularly repaint my figures with house paints or even one time I glued lego bits to Blaster to make him combine with the Throttlebots.

Thoughts on gimmick and non-convertible Transformers toys?

A gimmick is only cool if it doesn’t take anything away from the figure. I couldn’t care less about opening doors and hoods, or steering wheels on car robots. When you start making sacrifices to include a gimmick, that’s when the toy IS the gimmick and not the character. As far as non-converting – that’s a case by case basis, but I don’t prefer it unless it is a definitive representation of the character.  I’m slavish to G1 toon accuracy if you haven’t come to that conclusion yet. However you still have to straddle the line sometimes when it comes to Devastator.

Which single TFs toy should every fan own?

A Prime. For better or worse, he’s the sigil of the franchise.

Which Transformers toy/product would you give as a wedding present?

I can’t imagine that being a possible scenario in my life. LOL. My TF collecting friends already have everything.

Do you collect other toys? 

Minimally.  I have small collections or single shelves of various 80’s pop-culture properties.  Back to The Future, They Live, Aliens, Ghostbusters, Jaws (70s) Flash Gordon and others.

I also have 3 shelves of Indiana Jones.  Artifacts from the films and the recent 6” figure line. I had to make custom figures of several of the characters that Hasbro left out.  All the shelves have some sort of backgrounds or dioramas. I can’t help myself 😉

­­

How did you find out about www.bigangrytrev.com?

I’ve seen your Transformatorium photos in the groups before, and just watched your video.  It’s a massively, impressive collection you’ve amassed. Now it’s got it’s own orbit with people sending you stuff all the time to add to it. But to also be able to share it with your kids is golden, and best of all. I’m sure you’re supremely proud of it all, and you SHOULD be!

Thanks for requesting the interview. I’m quite proud of what I’ve done and like to show it off. I guess it’s the equivalent to gearheads and their rides and car shows or burning donuts. Except our collections can’t go anywhere to show off, we just get to post cool pics.

 Additional photos

Thank you so much to Chris for sharing his AMAZING Transformer displays with us!  If there is anything else you’d like to know about Chris and his hobby, pop it in the comments section below!

Ghostbusters Movies: All 5 ranked from Worst to Best!

The Ghostbusters franchise has been running for 40 years, with two hit movies in the 80’s, then introduced to a whole new generation with three more movies from 2016 onwards.

Unlike my Transformers Movie rankings where it was easy to rate all 8 movies in order from worst to best, I found this list of 5 Ghostbusters movies quite hard.  There is a general consensus about what constitutes the worst Ghostbusters movie and which was the best, but the middle three could arguably be swapped around according to the individual viewers proclivities.  So just because one movie is listed here at 4 and another at 2, there isn’t a gigantic gap between them.

So lets rank them – the 5 Ghostbusters Movies from Worst to Best!

 

Number 5 – Ghostbusters: Answer the Call (2016)

There is a contingent of fans who loved this movie and still do, and more power to them.  Unfortunately for the movie itself, it came out during a year with a Presidential Election in the USA.  When one candidate professed their delight at the upcoming movie and the other their disapproval, before it even hit cinemas the flick was dragged into a political culture war which gave it a handicap it didn’t deserve.

However, even observed dispassionately without the lense of US culture war politics, this was not a good movie.  Ghostbusters movies are almost always comedies, but even in films where people get doused with liquefied Marshmallow Man or Mood Slime, the jokes have always been more character and situation driven.  Answer the Call treated the franchise like one long SNL sketch, trying to play each scene for big laughs which inevitably always fell flat.  The characters were one dimensional and uninteresting, the CGI was cartoony, the plot uninspired and overall this felt like a parody of the Ghostbusters franchise instead of a reboot. The majority of fans didn’t like it, and neither did the film critics, resulting in a poor box office showing.

There was the odd highlight here and there; the characters of Erin Gilbert and Jillian Holtzmann were amusing on occasion, and the idea of Ghostbusting knuckle-dusters was an interesting concept.  The movie did try to pay homage to what had come before, with cameos by many of the original cast as well as Slimer and Ecto-1.  But none of this was able to save what was a poorly executed and lampoonish take on a beloved franchise.  At least the comics have retroactively made Answer the Call a different universe from the original, thereby placating some of the more rabid fans who saw it as a stain on the Ghostbusters cinematic legacy.

Pictorial Toys Review – My Little Prime & Plasmane

 

Number 4 – Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire (2024)

(If you have not yet seen this movie then spoilers ahead – you’ve been warned!)

Now remember at the start when I said spots 2, 3 & 4 could be swapped around according to your proclivities, and also when I said Ghostbusters movies are almost always comedies?  Well if comedies are your thing then Frozen Empire could easily be moved up from it’s 4th spot into 3rd, being a far funnier film than Ghostbusters: Afterlife.

The latest film of the franchise serves as a sequel to Afterlife and the 4th film of the original universe.  This movie is a true blend of the original cast and the newest characters, and whilst the focus of the movie remains on Pheobe and the other descendants of Egon Spengler, the like of Ray and Winston get a proper outing and there are plenty of side characters to enjoy.

This film runs at a good pace, has lots of laughs threaded throughout, plenty of action and does it’s best to bring the Ghostbusters franchise into the 21st century.  Add to that a splash of other original characters such as Peter, Janine and Slimer and a new bad guy who can control other ghosts as well as literally turn fear into ice, and you’ve got yourself one entertaining movie!

Movie Review – Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

Where this movie lets itself down is trying to cram in too much.  There are some side plots that don’t go anywhere and seem to have only been included so that all the members of the huge cast have something to do, whereas other side plots take up a ton of screen time for very little payoff.  The stakes never feel particularly high – even Walter Peck shutting down the Ghostbusters is solved in mere moments with the picking of a padlock and a van full of new equipment arriving.  And whilst all the movies are about ghosts, they always approached the spiritual realm from more of a scientific standpoint than magical, thus the inclusion of someone who can bend fire like they are out of an Avatar cartoon feels as out of place as aliens did in the Indiana Jones franchise.

All this said, it is still a really fun movie, and perhaps the most funny we’ve had since the 1980’s.  While fans on the internet are still divided on how they feel about this latest installation of the franchise, if you love Ghostbusters it’s highly recommended that you get to your nearest cinema while it is still showing.

 

Number 3 – Ghostbusters: Afterlife (2021)

If you watch Ghostbusters primarily for a laugh, then shift this movie down your personal list to at least Number 4.  However if you love the franchise as a whole, then Ghostbusters: Afterlife is the movie that is going to tug at your heartstrings and make you go ‘The world still remembers!’

Afterlife is, more than anything, a love letter to the original movies and the departed Harold Ramis.  It is set decades after the events of Ghostbusters 2, with the Ghostbusters being disbanded by Egon Spengler having abandoned the team to live on a dirt farm in order to prevent the latest coming of Gozer.  However we find all this out via, after the subsequent death of Egon at the start of the film, his estranged daughter and her family coming to pick through the remnants of his life.

The star of the movie is Pheobe Spengler, Egon’s granddaughter and the similarities between the characters are played up from the get-go.  She is an awkward but incredibly endearing character and she is guided by the ghost of her Grandfather to thwart Gozer once again, along with the help of her family and some new friends.  We see Ecto-1 resurrected along with all the old equipment Egon scarpered with, a good analogy for the original Ghostbusters cinematic universe being dusted off and made use of once again  This film also contains a million Easter Eggs for fans – everything from the dancing toaster to Egon’s collection of Spores, Mould and Fungus!

This movie has funny parts, mainly provided by the interactions between Pheobe and her new friend Podcast, but it is much more of a nostalgic drama, thematically setting it apart from the rest of the movies.

Movie Review – Ghostbusters: Afterlife

What let this movie down more than anything, besides not a lot of busting going on, was the return of Gozer.  In the original Gozer was exciting – controlling things from afar through his Keymaster and Gatekeeper only to eventually appear itself on a rooftop in New York, nearly blasting the Ghosbusters off said rooftop with lightning and then turning into The Destructor – in this case a gigantic Marshmallow Man!  In this newest outing Gozer is already a known quantity, sits about in a cave when summoned and then has a less than thrilling fight with the Ghostbusters – both old and new.  No rooftop lightning or candy-based kaiju here.  The movie was stuffed with nostalgia already, it really needed a new baddie to fight to give it that fresh feel as well.

However it is this last fight that also really tugs on the hearstrings more than anything.  The ghost of Egon Spengler materializes to help his granddaughter fight Gozer, and then does so alongside the other original Ghostbusters – Ray, Winston and Peter.  Watching the four onscreen together for the first time since 1989 was by far the biggest tearjerker in Ghostbuters history, especially given that Harold Ramis passed many years ago.  Even my wife who is just a casual fan of the franchise had tears in her eyes and I’m not sure I’ve ever shed so many watching a film myself since Optimus Prime died back in 1986.

So is this a great comedy?  No.  Is it startlingly original?  No.  What it served as was a perfect link between what Ghostbusters had been, what it had meant to the fandom, and what it could become moving into the future.

 

Number 2 – Ghostbusters 2 (1989)

If you are after a drama-themed and streamlined plot, Afterlife is better.  If you are after a fast paced movie with lots of intertwining subplots and individual character arcs then Frozen Empire is better.  If you are after awesome Ghostbusting action combined with hilarious cast interactions, then Ghostbusters 2 beats all the new movies hands down!

Ghosbusters 2 had Bill Murray and Rick Moranis at what could be argued were their comedic peaks.  Combine those with the stellar performances of Harold Ramis, Ernie Hudson, Annie Potts, Sigorny Weaver and Dan Ackroyd – all from the first movie – and the highly underrated performance of Peter MacNicol as a new bad guy, and this brilliant ensemble of actors simply blow away anything that has come since in the Ghostbusters franchise.  Nadeem and Podcast might be funny supporting characters, but they have nothing on Luis Tully.  The interactions between the Spengler family might be interesting, but they pale in comparison when compared to the banter between the four original Ghostbusters.

Now this is not to say this movie was perfect, it was far from so.  Despite having a new bad guy in the form of Vigo (cue angry man in painting) and his lackey Janosz, this movies plot mirrored the first flick far too much: Ghostbusters getting their business going (again), Peter pursuing Dana, the guys getting locked up by a mid-level government official only to be summoned and pardoned by the Mayor, then capped off by a giant figure stomping down the street.  It’s like Ackroyd and Ramis went ‘Hey the first movie was a hit, lets just do that again!’.

Still, there was enough new stuff in this movie to make it entertaining, and the aforementioned fantastic cast make this a beloved part of the franchise.

Toy Review – Ectotron

 

Number 1 – Ghostbusters (1984)

“Who ya gonna call?”

A true pop-culture icon of a movie! A behemoth of sci-fi comedy!  The film that has inspired 40 years worth of movies, cartoons, comics and toylines.  The original Ghostbusters is still the best and still eminently watchable to this day.  The storyline, the pacing, the jokes, the scares, the dialogue, the characters – everything about this movie works, everything!

I didn’t care much for the joke where Luis Tully gets dragged down the glass window of the restaurant, then all the music and talking starts up again.  That’s it – that’s the entirety of things I can personally nitpick about this film – I have nothing else.  Well, maybe all the cigarette smoking too, but it was the 80’s, you were hard pressed to find a movie or even TV show where half the characters didn’t smoke.

I was too young to see it at the cinemas so had to wait for it to be aired on TV and I still remember the excitement of watching it, even getting in trouble with my mother for telling the rest of the family off any time someone made a noise.  This movie is full of iconic scenes, everything from the Library Ghost to the catching of Slimer, right up to the final showdown with a giant Marshmallow Man.  And what other movie could make a giant Marshmallow Man not seem completely ridiculous?  There are so many quotable lines in this movie; ‘What about the Twinkie?’ ‘I collect spores, mould and fungus’, ‘Are you a god?’ and of course ‘Yes its true, this man has no dick’.

It’s hard to critique a movie one loves so much and feels so passionately about.  But perhaps it is a testament to how good the original Ghostbusters is that even in my own family, if asked if they would like to watch a GB movie that my wife, son and daughter will always want to watch the original above all others, and no one ever complains that we’ve seen it a hundred times before – we just grab the popcorn, plunk ourselves on the couch and prepare to be thoroughly entertained for the next few hours.  This movie has a worldwide cult following and even 40 years later remains one of the most beloved films of its genre, helped by having perhaps the most catchy movie theme song in history.

“They’re the best, they’re the beautiful, they’re the only – Ghostbusters”

 

Would you list the Ghostbusters films in a different order?  Pop it in the comments section below!

Transformers Movies: All 8 ranked from Worst to Best!

Movie Review – Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

In 2016 we saw Ghostbusters rebooted, which did not go down well with a goodly portion of the fans or at the box office.  In 2021 we saw the original continuity resurrected with Ghostbusters: Afterlife, showing what happened to our most beloved paranormal investigators in the decades since having a smackdown with a guy in a painting.

Now in 2024 we get the sequel to Afterlife, the 4th movie of the original timeline and the 5th movie overall – so lets take a look at Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire.

Before continuing a reminder: this is a movie review so that means SPOILERS AHEAD.

 

We catch up with the Spengler family two years after the events of Afterlife.  Gone from hating her father, Callie Spengler has, for reasons unspecified, moved her family and her boyfriend into the old Firehouse in New York and taken over the Ghostbusters franchise.  Unlike Afterlife which was required to spend a great chunk of the movie setting up the story and characters, we are treated to busting right from the get-go as they chase a ghostly dragon through the streets, causing a great deal of collateral damage along the way.  This results in the Ghostbusters old nemesis Walter Peck, gone from an Environmental Assessor to Mayor, telling the family to bench daughter Pheobe or be put out of business.

Thus starts a series of events that see’s Pheobe make friends with a ghost-gal Lind, the old Containment Unit about to burst and the return of the old cast as Winston introduces the Spengler’s to a new generation of Ghostbusting research and equipment.

Pictorial Toys Review – My Little Prime & Plasmane

The story arcs for most characters follow a logical and interesting progression, spliced equally with ghostbusting sci-fi and humour.  Trevor is busy trying to trap Slimer, who evidently has been living in the attic of the Firehouse since the events of GB2, Grooberson is trying to be less a friend and more a father, Winston is attempting to bring Ghostbusting into the 21st century, Pheobe is chafing at not being allowed to bust ghosts while simultaneously making friends with one and Ray and Podcast are on the trail of the new big bad – Garraka.

Talk, dark and horny

All of these arcs run simultaneously and intertwine, leading up to the final confrontation with the new bad guy, a cold fellow who can turn fear into ice and make other ghosts do his bidding.  Whilst I loved Afterlife for what it was, a love letter to the original movies and Harold Ramis, I had felt that bringing back Gozer had been a mistake.  Thus it was nice to see the team have a new enemy to fight with new powers and abilities, perhaps making him/it the most chilling enemy in the franchise to date.

Another thing Afterlife was missing was humour.  Oh there was some here and there, but whilst Answer the Call pushed the needle too far in one direction, with cringeworthy forced jokes and slapstick comedy, Afterlife went a tad to far in the other direction, perhaps in direct reaction to the negativity surrounding ATC. Afterlife was by far the most serious of the GB movies and seemed to forget that at their core the originals were comedies.  Frozen Empire returns the GB franchise to its roots with lots of humour interspersed throughout the movie, without taking it to a zany place that nobody wants to see.

Movie Review – Ghostbusters: Afterlife

Both the original and new casts do a great job in Frozen Empire, with well-rounded and relatable characters.  Admittedly Venkman and Janine add little to the overall story and similarly Lucky and Podcast seem more along for the ride.  That said, it’s a big cast of characters – there is only so much you can fit into a 2-hour flick and the absence of the aforementioned characters would have been something negatively commented upon had they been left out.  One is left wondering how many more Ghostubusters movies Bill Murray will show up for before, like Rick Moranis, he decides he’s had enough of the franchise, as Venkman puts in far less of a showing than the other original cast members.

We are introduced to some new characters; Lars Pinfield who is the head researcher for Winston and Nadeem Razmaadi who apparently took his cues from watching the Avatar cartoon and can bend fire.  Both these characters work well with Lars adding some much needed scientific paranormal examination which was previously Egon’s domain, and Nadeem being a weird guy played solely for laughs, taking the place of Luis Tully.

Is this the perfect Ghostbusters movie?  No.  Some of the story plots feel contrived, such as it never being spelled out why the family decided to take up Ghostbusting and Pheobe deciding it would be a grand idea to turn into a ghost for a few minutes.  Walter Peck is a far less interesting foe as the Mayor – he’s more mellow and thus more boring.  His shutting down of the Ghostbusters is a total non-event – they simply pick the lock and a van full of new Proton Packs shows up almost immediately.  Peter and Janine felt shoehorned in, as did Slimer though it was wonderful to see him back and he arguably did more than he did in GB2.  The new big bad being able to freeze the proton streams rendered the Ghostbusters too impotent far too easily, thereby leaving the gang with their throwers in their hands and too obviously setting Pheobe up to save the day.  And really, that ghost-girl hung about for decades just so she could light a match – that was her arc? Don’t get me wrong, the frienship/budding romance was sweet, but still.

That said, these are minor quibbles.  Overall this is a really fun and entertaining movie with a great cast – the old and new cohorts having blended together nicely.  It’s funnier than Afterlife and has a more involved storyline than Ghostbusters 2.  And perhaps the main takeaway from this movie is that it is and is meant to be fun – it’s fantasy about catching ghosts, something your more serious critics and fans sometimes forget.  Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire walks the tightrope of treating the existing lore with respect and delving into new territory and walks it well.   If you are a spectre-head who doesn’t mind a chuckle then it is highly recommended you get to your nearest theatre, as watching all the busting will make you feel good!

Toy Review – Ectotron

 

Pictorial Toys Review – My Little Prime & Plasmane

What a wonderful time to be a toy collector eh?  Figures we only used to dream of in our geekiest fantasies are being trotted out right left and center!  A lot of that can be put down to people who loved things in their youth during the 80’s now being (supposedly) grown-ups with disposable income on their hands.

 

Well My Little Pony is happy to jump on that cash-in bandwagon with a new line of Crossover collectible figures.  These range from Dungeons and Dragons to even Power Rangers.  But today we are going to look at by far the two best of the crossover figures, because they cross over with two of the best franchises in history – Ghostbusters and Transformers.

As the only feature of these toys, besides their cool looks and packaging (I love the fact that on the boxes it says ‘approved by Optimus Prime and Peter Venkman respectively), is the fact you can move their tails, there is not really much to review here.  So enjoy the photo’s and hopefully they will help you decide if you would like these awesome figures for your collection.

 

My Little Prime

 

 

 

Plasmane

 

Friendship is Magic!

 

So do you think you will pick up these figures?  Do you love the nostalgia or would prefer the takes be more modern?  Let us know in the comments below.

 

Related Articles

Crossover Toy Review – Ectotron

Movie Review – My Little Pony

Toy Review – Ectotron

Transformers may be an intergenerationaly beloved franchise that began in 1984, but there is another that began that same year that is just as beloved and famous, and that is Ghostbusters.

Transformers rock! Ghostbusters rock! One involves giant shape-changing alien robots, the other using proton streams and containment systems to catch ghosts. Plus both have cool vehicles and catchy theme tunes!

It’s the cool vehicles (or at least one of them) we will be looking at today. Ecto-1, the Ghostbusters vehicle and a true icon of pop culture. But here Ecto-1 has been given the Transformers Crossover treatment, so for the 35th anniversary of both franchises we get Ectotron.

 

The Packaging

Oh it’s just sooo beautiful! Pure 80’s Transformers G1, right down to the transformation steps at the top. And subtly altered with the odd bit of slime and Ghostbusters symbols to show the dual heritage of this toy.

 

Vehicle Mode

Be still my beating heart! Ecto-1 looks superb here! So much detail! From the grill to the doors to all the various equipment on top, this is an incredibly faithful rendition of the original vehicle. The only downside is that there is no interior detail, but given this is also a Transformer I find this completely forgivable – all those robot pieces have to go somewhere after all.

 

Robot Mode

Who ya gonna call?

Very cool! The colour scheme is mostly white due to the vehicle form, but incorporates some brown as a shout out to the uniforms the Ghostbusters wear. The figure has great articulation which allows you to put him in all sorts of bustin’ poses. Instead of the usual robot optics, he has spectro-goggles such as Ghostbuster Ray Stanz wears. And speaking of equipment the Ghostbusters wear…

 

The Proton Pack

The roof equipment from the vehicle form transforms into a detachable Proton Pack for the Ectotron robot mode. This is very clever! Not only can he take the pack on and off, but he can also either holster the gun on his back, or can hold it in order to do some bustin’ of his own. Very, very well done – Slimer better watch out!

Back-Bling

 

Worth Getting?

This wasn’t a very hard review to write as I am absolutely in love with this figure! Could it have been better? Perhaps. Inner detail for the vehicle, maybe some more paint apps on the robot mode and some eye and mouth colour on Slimer so he is not just a green blob (though really, the character literally is a green blob). But given this figure is not that cheap as is, it would have resulted in a far higher price tag in order to accommodate all that, and I think he is fine as is.

Personally, whenever not playing with it I’ll be keeping Ectotron in the beautiful packaging as a display piece. Ectotron is currently available at multiple places online or here in Australia at Zing & EB Games stores for around $80. If you are a fan of both the Ghostbusters and Transformers franchises (and let’s face it – who isn’t), then I heartily recommend picking up what, in my opinion, is the best TF crossover toy we’ve ever had!

Got something to say about this figure?  Pop it in the comments section below!

 

Related Article

Transformers/Street Fighter II Crossover Figures