Paul Feig
Author of Kick Me: Adventures in Adolescence
About the Author
Image credit: Paul Feig
Series
Works by Paul Feig
Arrested Development: Seasons 1-4 — Director — 15 copies
4 Film Favorites: Holiday Comedy Collection: Fred Claus/Just Friends/Christmas Vacation 2/Unaccompanied Minors (2012) — Director — 4 copies
Unaccompanied Minors (DVD) (WS/FS) 2 copies
A Dennis the Menace Christmas [and] Unaccompanied Minors (Double Feature Video) (2012) — Director — 2 copies
Melissa McCarthy COLLECTION Spy/The Heat/Identity Thief/THE BOSS — Director — 1 copy
Associated Works
Fired! Tales of the Canned, Canceled, Downsized, and Dismissed (2006) — Contributor — 97 copies, 6 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Feig, Paul
- Birthdate
- 1962-09-17
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- film director
screenwriter
actor
author - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Royal Oak, Michigan, USA
- Places of residence
- Michigan, USA
Los Angeles, California, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- Michigan, USA
Members
Discussions
Who you gonna call? in Pro and Con (July 2016)
Reviews
I was hesitant about seeing this, for a lot of reasons. I vaguely remembered having seen at least one of the original Ghostbusters movies but didn't have any particular attachment to or love for the franchise. I haven't been wild about the last few hyped movies I've seen, and I was a little worried that this one was getting most of its viewer hype because of the all-female main cast. Also, a lot of the people who were raving about it were also fans of several of Kristen Wiig and Melissa show more McCarthy's other movies. I loathed Bridesmaids, winced a lot during Spy, and just generally didn't want to see a repeat of the sort of humor I saw in those movies. Thankfully, this turned out to be a lot better than I was expecting.
The story: Erin is a professor who's being considered for tenure. Unfortunately, an embarrassing piece of her past, a book on the paranormal that she co-wrote years ago with her best friend Abby, has come back to haunt her. She's worried that she'll be seen as a crackpot, so she tracks Abby down in order to ask her to please stop selling the book. Abby has since teamed up with Jillian Holtzmann, a nutty and brilliant scientist, and Erin accidentally gets all three of them involved in a paranormal investigation at a museum. The team is later joined by Patty, a transit worker who is an absolute fount of historical facts and knowledge, and their new receptionist, Kevin, who is gorgeous but very stupid. The group finds themselves dealing with more and more ghosts, not realizing that all these recent incidents are due to the machinations of a nobody who feels he isn't getting all the recognition and attention he deserves.
Like I said, this was actually pretty decent. I don't know that I want to own it, but it was worth seeing. Kristen Wiig (Erin), as usual, was involved in a lot of the grosser jokes (mostly involving ectoplasm), but none of it left me with the feeling of horror and pity that many of the “jokes” in Bridesmaids did. I don't recall Melissa McCarthy's weight being a factor in any of the jokes involving her, and Kate McKinnon was positively gleeful as Holtzmann. I was expecting to cringe at Leslie Jones' character (Patty), but she was handled better than I expected. I do wish that the movie had done a better job of establishing her purpose in the team, though. I've seen fan comments stating that Patty's knowledge of odd historical details was due to her love of reading, but I don't think this was ever mentioned in the movie. Maybe she was reading when she first appeared on-screen? I don't know, but her background felt less solidly established than Erin's, Abby's, or even Holtzmann's.
The movie meandered a bit, as the team played around with Holtzmann's various new toys, investigated random ghost sightings (which were all tied in with the movie's Big Bad, although his details weren't revealed until later), and tried to establish themselves. There were things I wasn't entirely clear on, like how the group could afford the rent on even the little place they ended up finding for themselves, why Patty would quit (I assume?) her job as a transit worker for something that I couldn't imagine would pay very well, and how they were managing to pay Kevin. Basically, most of my questions had to do with money. But in the end, if I turned off my brain a bit, it was fun. I enjoyed the various cameos from the original movies, liked the humor more than expected, and laughed at Chris Hemsworth's over-the-top portrayal of stupid, pretty Kevin. The scene with the lens-less glasses just about killed me.
If I could change one thing, it would be Erin's embarrassingly obvious drooling over Kevin. It was painful to watch. I've seen lots of comments to the effect of “well, it's just a gender-flipped version of how women are always treated in movies.” True, but flipping the genders doesn't make me any happier about having to watch it. The group's decision to hire Kevin could have been explained away as the result of there being no other applicants, and, honestly, Erin had better and less cringe-worthy chemistry with Holtzmann.
All in all though, this was fun. If another new Ghostbusters movie gets made with this cast, I plan to go see it.
(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) show less
The story: Erin is a professor who's being considered for tenure. Unfortunately, an embarrassing piece of her past, a book on the paranormal that she co-wrote years ago with her best friend Abby, has come back to haunt her. She's worried that she'll be seen as a crackpot, so she tracks Abby down in order to ask her to please stop selling the book. Abby has since teamed up with Jillian Holtzmann, a nutty and brilliant scientist, and Erin accidentally gets all three of them involved in a paranormal investigation at a museum. The team is later joined by Patty, a transit worker who is an absolute fount of historical facts and knowledge, and their new receptionist, Kevin, who is gorgeous but very stupid. The group finds themselves dealing with more and more ghosts, not realizing that all these recent incidents are due to the machinations of a nobody who feels he isn't getting all the recognition and attention he deserves.
Like I said, this was actually pretty decent. I don't know that I want to own it, but it was worth seeing. Kristen Wiig (Erin), as usual, was involved in a lot of the grosser jokes (mostly involving ectoplasm), but none of it left me with the feeling of horror and pity that many of the “jokes” in Bridesmaids did. I don't recall Melissa McCarthy's weight being a factor in any of the jokes involving her, and Kate McKinnon was positively gleeful as Holtzmann. I was expecting to cringe at Leslie Jones' character (Patty), but she was handled better than I expected. I do wish that the movie had done a better job of establishing her purpose in the team, though. I've seen fan comments stating that Patty's knowledge of odd historical details was due to her love of reading, but I don't think this was ever mentioned in the movie. Maybe she was reading when she first appeared on-screen? I don't know, but her background felt less solidly established than Erin's, Abby's, or even Holtzmann's.
The movie meandered a bit, as the team played around with Holtzmann's various new toys, investigated random ghost sightings (which were all tied in with the movie's Big Bad, although his details weren't revealed until later), and tried to establish themselves. There were things I wasn't entirely clear on, like how the group could afford the rent on even the little place they ended up finding for themselves, why Patty would quit (I assume?) her job as a transit worker for something that I couldn't imagine would pay very well, and how they were managing to pay Kevin. Basically, most of my questions had to do with money. But in the end, if I turned off my brain a bit, it was fun. I enjoyed the various cameos from the original movies, liked the humor more than expected, and laughed at Chris Hemsworth's over-the-top portrayal of stupid, pretty Kevin. The scene with the lens-less glasses just about killed me.
If I could change one thing, it would be Erin's embarrassingly obvious drooling over Kevin. It was painful to watch. I've seen lots of comments to the effect of “well, it's just a gender-flipped version of how women are always treated in movies.” True, but flipping the genders doesn't make me any happier about having to watch it. The group's decision to hire Kevin could have been explained away as the result of there being no other applicants, and, honestly, Erin had better and less cringe-worthy chemistry with Holtzmann.
All in all though, this was fun. If another new Ghostbusters movie gets made with this cast, I plan to go see it.
(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.) show less
A suburban mom's mysterious new friend disappears.
4/4 (Great).
It has a cool, bright, modern sense of style that looks and feels nothing like film noir, and a protagonist who, on the surface, couldn't be further from the classic hard-boiled detective. But it has all of the elements that actually make a classic noir mystery work. It takes the bones and puts them in its own unique skin.
4/4 (Great).
It has a cool, bright, modern sense of style that looks and feels nothing like film noir, and a protagonist who, on the surface, couldn't be further from the classic hard-boiled detective. But it has all of the elements that actually make a classic noir mystery work. It takes the bones and puts them in its own unique skin.
B (Good).
A suburban mom's is dragged to the wedding of her murderer "friend."
It's more comedy than mystery, but a comedy that usually relies on charm over jokes (a formula that suits everyone involved). The original was a Great Movie; this is just a good time.
(May 2025)
A suburban mom's is dragged to the wedding of her murderer "friend."
It's more comedy than mystery, but a comedy that usually relies on charm over jokes (a formula that suits everyone involved). The original was a Great Movie; this is just a good time.
(May 2025)
Honestly, I simply went into this with one thought, (okay, three technically, but they all connect). Blake Lively, Anna Kendrick and some supposed lesbian action. I think that I'll watch some bad movies for all three of those reasons (it's a weakness). This was most definitely not bad, it was pretty interesting actually, and half the time I had no clue what in the world was going on.
At its core it's a story about Emily and Stephanie. Emily is a rich, fasionable woman with a son, Nicky. show more Stephanie is a single Mom who has a vlog (do people still have vlogs?) and a son named Miles. She and Em get thrown together when their two boys become friends. They are different as differetn can be-- or are they? Once they start to become friends it gets even more super twisty when Emily goes missing. And then it's just a ride to the end (I will say I didn't 100% love the ending, maybe 80%, but I definitely liked how it ended compared to how it was going to end as seen in the extras).
The first thing that comes to mind when I think on this movie is the amazing chemistry between the two female leads. Blake Lively (I think that the last thing I saw her in was Private Lives of Pippa Lee), and Anna Kendrick chemistry jumped off the screen and astounded me. The second thing that came to mind was the character of Emily's clothes. Holy crap. They were amazing, blew my mind out past Pluto. Awesome (and seeing the extra about the costume choice made it even better).
It was a crazy movie and while (of course) I wish it had had more of certain things, it was a wild ride of a movie. show less
At its core it's a story about Emily and Stephanie. Emily is a rich, fasionable woman with a son, Nicky. show more Stephanie is a single Mom who has a vlog (do people still have vlogs?) and a son named Miles. She and Em get thrown together when their two boys become friends. They are different as differetn can be-- or are they? Once they start to become friends it gets even more super twisty when Emily goes missing. And then it's just a ride to the end (I will say I didn't 100% love the ending, maybe 80%, but I definitely liked how it ended compared to how it was going to end as seen in the extras).
The first thing that comes to mind when I think on this movie is the amazing chemistry between the two female leads. Blake Lively (I think that the last thing I saw her in was Private Lives of Pippa Lee), and Anna Kendrick chemistry jumped off the screen and astounded me. The second thing that came to mind was the character of Emily's clothes. Holy crap. They were amazing, blew my mind out past Pluto. Awesome (and seeing the extra about the costume choice made it even better).
It was a crazy movie and while (of course) I wish it had had more of certain things, it was a wild ride of a movie. show less
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