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IMDbPro

La ville fantôme

Original title: Ghost Town
  • 2008
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
80K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,400
1,397
Greg Kinnear and Ricky Gervais in La ville fantôme (2008)
Bertram Pincus, is a man whose people skills leave much to be desired. When Pincus dies unexpectedly, but is miraculously revived after seven minutes, he wakes up to discover that he now has the annoying ability to see ghosts.
Play trailer2:32
12 Videos
41 Photos
ComedyDramaFantasyRomance

Bertram Pincus is a man whose people skills leave much to be desired. When Pincus dies unexpectedly, but is miraculously revived after seven minutes, he wakes up to discover that he now has ... Read allBertram Pincus is a man whose people skills leave much to be desired. When Pincus dies unexpectedly, but is miraculously revived after seven minutes, he wakes up to discover that he now has the annoying ability to see ghosts.Bertram Pincus is a man whose people skills leave much to be desired. When Pincus dies unexpectedly, but is miraculously revived after seven minutes, he wakes up to discover that he now has the annoying ability to see ghosts.

  • Director
    • David Koepp
  • Writers
    • David Koepp
    • John Kamps
  • Stars
    • Ricky Gervais
    • Greg Kinnear
    • Téa Leoni
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    80K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,400
    1,397
    • Director
      • David Koepp
    • Writers
      • David Koepp
      • John Kamps
    • Stars
      • Ricky Gervais
      • Greg Kinnear
      • Téa Leoni
    • 208User reviews
    • 206Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos12

    Ghost Town: Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Ghost Town: Trailer
    Ghost Town
    Clip 0:40
    Ghost Town
    Ghost Town
    Clip 0:40
    Ghost Town
    Ghost Town
    Clip 0:43
    Ghost Town
    Ghost Town
    Clip 0:56
    Ghost Town
    Ghost Town
    Clip 0:53
    Ghost Town
    Ghost Town
    Clip 1:00
    Ghost Town

    Photos41

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    Top cast70

    Edit
    Ricky Gervais
    Ricky Gervais
    • Pincus
    Greg Kinnear
    Greg Kinnear
    • Frank
    Téa Leoni
    Téa Leoni
    • Gwen
    Jordan Carlos
    Jordan Carlos
    • Young Husband
    Dequina Moore
    Dequina Moore
    • Young Wife
    Joseph Badalucco Jr.
    • Accident Bystander
    • (as Joe Badalucco)
    Brian Hutchison
    Brian Hutchison
    • Accident Bystander
    Tyree Michael Simpson
    • Sneezy Cop
    • (as Tyre Simpson)
    Julia Murney
    Julia Murney
    • Sneezy Lady
    Claire Lautier
    Claire Lautier
    • Upper East Side Lady
    Aasif Mandvi
    Aasif Mandvi
    • Dr. Prashar
    Bridget Moloney
    Bridget Moloney
    • Receptionist
    Raymond J. Lee
    Raymond J. Lee
    • Greenpeace Guy
    • (as Raymond Lee)
    Joey Mazzarino
    • Food Delivery Guy
    Brad Oscar
    Brad Oscar
    • Day Doorman
    Kathleen Landis
    • Resident
    Audrie Neenan
    Audrie Neenan
    • Admitting Nurse
    Kristen Wiig
    Kristen Wiig
    • Surgeon
    • Director
      • David Koepp
    • Writers
      • David Koepp
      • John Kamps
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews208

    6.779.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7scoutcraftpiratess

    Tried-and-true storyline spiced with plenty of quirkiness

    I have seen this movie twice, once in theatres and now on DVD. I'm happy to say that I still find it very enjoyable, a quirky blend of supernatural and humor that happily finds its groove. I realize that the idea of a person communicating with the dearly departed is hardly original in Hollywood--however, the majority of the time it works great and this is no exception. The setup here is an antisocial dentist who walk the thin line of keeping the obnoxious population off his back without thoroughly hurting them. It's difficult and he often fails. A near-death experience in an operating room leave him with veil opened and every annoying ghost in New York City seeking him for help. It's funny, it truly is, and finds plenty of fairly original details to keep it from being just another ghost story. The cast is marvelous, the characters clever, and the aura mozies along as if this is nothing but a romp rather than an innocent man being haunted. Delightful and definitely a DVD keeper.
    7jaddison383

    Delightful Little Film!!!

    Ricky Gervais, the star of the British "The Office" and "Extras", is someone you wouldn't really expect to be on the big screen. Yet here he is, delivering an hilarious and heartfelt performance in what one would usually consider the most clichéd of genres: the romantic comedy.

    In Ghost Town, Gervais plays Bertram Pincus, a socially awkward prick of a dentist who dies for seven minutes while going in for a routine colonoscopy. Through this miraculous experience he gains the annoying ability to see ghosts- all of whom want him to finish their business on Earth. In particular is Frank, the unfaithful husband of Gwen, a woman who lives in Bertram's building. Frank needs Bertram to separate Gwen from her new self-righteous do-gooder fiancé, and if Bertram can accomplish this Frank will make all the other ghosts go away.

    Greg Kinnear and the wonderful Tea Leoni round out the lead characters as Frank and Gwen. All three (Gervais, Kinnear, and Leoni) get big laughs and are utterly charming. Indeed, it is no overstatement to call Ghost Town riotously funny- the laughs come big and often. Too often it turns out, because when Ghost Town tries to stray into the more dramatic or tender areas of the story it feels somewhat awkward and forced. The mistake was made of focusing too much on broad hilarity, so that when the movie really attempts to focus on story it seems strange that the humor is suddenly gone. The film never becomes anything more than just a silly little trifle.

    Yet there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. What we get is a thoroughly entertaining tale with a fascinating lead character. Add in the performances of the three leads and you have a fully satisfying movie-going experience. I would probably give this film a 7.5 rating, but since that isn't allowed and I'm not feeling an 8, I'll go with- 7/10 stars!!!

    Jay Addison
    Otoboke

    Charming, delightful and full of life.

    The morbid comedy or, the comedy in which half of its characters are actually ghosts, can be a tough sale for most audiences, and amongst the biggest cynics of anything to do with cinematic spirits haunting the screen is I. The reasoning behind this hard-to-sell concept is simple; the dead, that is, the spirit likeness of a human being, in modern society are usually treated with grave seriousness. From the grim tales of the Bible to images of mourning families trying to 'celebrate' during a wake; the concepts of the afterlife and comedy quite often juxtapose to the point where bemusement brought on through absurdity is more commonplace than laughter. Therefore it was no surprise earlier this year when romantic comedy Over Her Dead Body failed to deliver much laughs or even romance at all, instead only taking the two clashing ideas and, well, clashing them together hoping it would all work out in the end (it didn't). While Ghost Town doesn't necessarily do anything remotely different from the aforementioned feature –at least concerning the script's comedy department- it is in the movie's emotional core and characters present that such clashing of half-baked spiritual plotting with slapstick comedy gets softened into something a lot more digestible. The result is a story that fails to register on an engaging level based upon its basic premise alone, but eventually more than makes up for it with a sweet romance that tickles just as much as it warms the heart.

    Bertram Pincus (Ricky Gervais) is a sad, lonely man, and although he would argue otherwise, has nobody to blame but himself. A cynically jaded misanthrope who goes out of his way to avoid all human contact, Pincus doesn't necessarily describe himself as a people person and doesn't want others to think so either. After a routine colonoscopy goes wrong in the anaesthetic department, Bertram clinically dies for seven minutes and wakes up a changed man; or at least the same man in a changed world. Now blessed with the ability to see the dead and communicate with them, Pincus not only has to deal with the living, but the dead too. Sure enough, it's pure baloney, and it certainly starts off that way with little hints at going anywhere else. Thankfully however, it's not long until certain romantic elements creep in involving recently widowed (you can hopefully see how this occurs) Gwen which allows both Bertram and the movie as a whole to shed their silly outer layer to reveal some emotional depth. Of course, the walking dead thing continues on throughout the entire feature, but thankfully it isn't as tacked on as you might imagine. Plus, linking the ghost plot with a living, breathing core, the movie brings both elements to a close effectively that capitalises on the development that was given to each beforehand. Yes, it's possibly the weakest element of the feature, but that's not really saying much at all.

    By the far the greatest thing about Ghost Town however lies in its comedy, which is fronted by lead man Ricky Gervais, who teams up alongside Greg Kinnear to create a movie with both class and wit, not to mention a little bit of welcome shtick. Gervais, who goes about his role here with about the same mentality as he has so far implemented in his TV roles, delivers a wonderful performance here that embodies his character's comedic cynicism with absolute precision. If you already know the comedian then you know that much of his charm and natural comic ability comes from his timing and delivery; he doesn't necessarily try to make you laugh, and it isn't in the things he says, but how he says them, and when he does so. Through this Gervais makes sure not only to deliver his jokes with enough frequency to keep amusement levels high, but he crafts a character out of such moments too; the jokes never cheapen his persona, but only strengthen it.

    Backing star Kinnear plays Gervais' ghost buddy-of-sorts, and while he does a lot of background work, nevertheless creates a strong enough character himself, doing well not to take focus from the lead, and yet making sure to create something interesting to look at when the focus shifts from time to time. Téa Leoni provides as the film's love interest for Gervais, and while the two never quite click as a romantic match per se, the director knows when to cut and call it a day, establishing romance without ever ruining the moment. Leoni is always comfortable in her position and shares some humorous and touching interplay with her co-stars which further the scripts warm, humanist tones.

    In the end I was pleasantly surprised by the time the credits rolled. Not just from the fact that I felt genuinely fulfilled by a straight forward comedy about ghosts, but that I was often moved by what was presented to me. Of course, Ghost Town, although largely a ghost movie by façade and pure premise, is actually far from such a movie. If anything, the real core here is always focused upon using the memories of those ghosts to create tangible, living breathing characters that feel emotionally resonating and of course, are side stitchingly funny. Sure enough it's over the top, silly and at times even a little tiresome, but in the end, such ideas are justified by the payoff and development of character that is established as a result. In this way Ghost Town achieves a sense of relevancy that most movies of the subgenre fail to reach, managing to speak to us through comedy and romance that comes together to create a feature that is simply good fun to watch. With an unforgettable performance by Gervais, and enough heat between characters to justify much of the film's otherwise ridiculous elements, Ghost Town is a surprise hit; charming, delightful and full of life.

    • A review by Jamie Robert Ward (http://www.invocus.net)
    7Cinemayo

    Ghost Town (2008) ***

    What really made this rather familiar story work for me was British comedian Ricky Gervais in the part of a grouchy NY dentist who starts seeing ghosts after he has a peculiar mishap during a routine colonoscopy. This is a lightweight comedy/drama/love story with elements that we've seen plenty of times before, but as I said I thought Gervais made all the difference, and it's his picture entirely. Had the part been played by Adam Sandler, Jim Carey, or some other over-exposed celebrity, it wouldn't have been as effective. Greg Kinnear is really an afterthought here as a dead man who keeps appealing to Gervais to help break up the inevitable wedding of his widow (Tea Leoni). *** out of ****
    8harrypaulson-111

    A Gem

    I can't understand how I missed it. Written and directed by David Koepp, the man who wrote "Apartment Zero" and "Death Becomes Her" with Martin Donovan, a personal hero of mine. Not to mention some of the biggest moneymakers of the last two decades. "Ghost Town" strives for something else, it pinpoints the goodness hidden in the heart of someone who, perhaps, never knew was there. A comedy of personal discovery no less. I was moved and delighted. Ricky Gervais goes through it, stumbling over himself with an innocence that is as real as it is mysterious. I connected with him half way through and it took me by surprise. I was loving a character that at the beginning I thought was funny but despicable. That for me means I've learned something. Thank you.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Beatles' "I'm Looking Through You" is used in the movie, one of the very few occasions where the original version of a Beatles song has been used in a film.
    • Goofs
      At the exhibition, when Gwen is conversing with Bertram, Gwen accidentally and briefly looks at Frank (standing in the foreground), realizes then turns away giving the appearance of an act of embarrassment.
    • Quotes

      Nurse: [after Bertram's colonoscopy] Come back soon.

      Bertram Pincus: What a terrible thing to say in a hospital.

    • Crazy credits
      Directly after the end titles fade to black, there is a brief outburst of near-hysterical laughter. Ricky Gervais provides the voice.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Lakeview Terrace/The Women/Surfer Dude/Towelhead (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      I'm Still in Love (w/You)
      Written & Performed by Mark J. Petracca (as Dusty Wright)

      Courtesy of PetRock, Inc.

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    FAQ22

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 11, 2009 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Un fantasma fastidioso
    • Filming locations
      • 60 E 54th St. New York, NY 10022, USA(Monkey Bar)
    • Production companies
      • DreamWorks Pictures
      • Spyglass Entertainment
      • Pariah
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,367,624
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,012,315
      • Sep 21, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $27,090,159
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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