Casper (film)

This article is about the film. For the character, see Casper the Friendly Ghost. For the video game, see Casper (video game). For the medical school admissions test, see CASPer. For other uses, see Casper (disambiguation).
Casper

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Brad Silberling
Produced by Colin Wilson
Written by Sherri Stoner
Deanna Oliver
Based on Casper the Friendly Ghost 
by Seymour Reit
Joe Oriolo
Starring Christina Ricci
Bill Pullman
Cathy Moriarty
Eric Idle
Amy Brenneman
Voices:
Malachi Pearson
Joe Nipote
Joe Alaskey
Brad Garrett
Music by James Horner
Cinematography Dean Cundey
Edited by Michael Kahn
Production
company
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release dates
  • May 26, 1995 (1995-05-26)
Running time
101 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $55 million[1]
Box office $287.9 million[1]

Casper is a 1995 American live-action and computer animated family comedy fantasy feature film directed by Brad Silberling, based on the Harvey Comics and cartoon character Casper the Friendly Ghost by Seymour Reit and Joe Oriolo. The film stars Christina Ricci, Bill Pullman, Cathy Moriarty, Eric Idle, and Amy Brenneman. The film also stars the voices of Malachi Pearson as the titular character as well as Joe Nipote, Joe Alaskey, and Brad Garrett. The film makes extensive use of computer-generated imagery to create the titular character and the other ghosts alongside him. It is much darker in tone in comparison to the cartoons, comics, sequels and spin offs. The film was released in cinemas on May 26, 1995 by Universal Pictures. Casper received mixed reviews from critics and it earned $287.9 million[1] on a $55 million[1] budget.

Plot

Following the death of her father, gold digger Carrigan Crittenden discovers he has only left her Whipstaff Manor in Friendship, Maine. Carrigan and her attorney Dibs discover a vast treasure allegedly is in the manor, but they find it is haunted by a friendly ghost named Casper and his obnoxious prankster uncles, the Ghostly Trio, who scare the two off the property. A lonely Casper watches a news report of paranormal therapist James Harvey, instantly smitten with his teenage daughter Kat, and inspires Carrigan to summon Dr. Harvey to Whipstaff. Harvey and Kat have an estranged relationship due to the former’s reputation, and searching for the ghost of his late wife Amelia. Moving into Whipstaff, Kat and her father quickly encounter Casper, who tries to befriend them, while his uncles try to scare them out of the house.

After befriending Casper over breakfast, Kat goes to school and becomes popular when her class agree to host their Halloween party at Whipstaff upon learning she lives there. Amber, Kat’s classmate, envious of Kat stealing her spotlight, plots with her boyfriend Vic to humiliate Kat during the party. Harvey attempts to have therapy sessions with the Ghostly Trio, who reveal they know Amelia, but when they pull a prank on him, Harvey becomes dispassionate, encouraging the trio to take him out for a night on the town. At a bar, Harvey gets drunk and falls down a manhole. Meanwhile, Kat learns Casper has no memory of his life, and unlocks his old bedroom to remind him. Casper comes across a sled, recalling his father bought it for him, only for Casper to have died of an illness and became a ghost to keep his father company. A newspaper article reveals that Casper’s father built a machine called Lazarus, which could bring the dead back to life.

Casper and Kat venture down into the manor’s basement, discovering Lazarus. Carrigan and Dibs sneak in, stealing the formula that powers Lazarus and plot to use the machine to essentially become immortals and commit crimes. However, the two attempt to kill each other as an experiment, Carrigan falling off a cliff to her death and rising as a ghost. She confronts Casper and Kat, launching Dibs out of a window when he tries to double-cross her. Casper tricks her into stating that she has no unfinished business in the afterlife, causing Carrigan to be involuntarily ejected into the afterlife. The alleged treasure is revealed to be Casper’s prized baseball signed by Duke Snider. Harvey and the trio appear, Casper sacrificing his last chance for life to restore Harvey.

The Halloween party kicks off upstairs, Amber and Vic’s prank thwarted by the trio. Casper is visited by Amelia’s ghost, who briefly transforms him into a human as a reward for his sacrifice until ten o’clock. Casper dances with Kat, while Amelia speaks with Harvey, revealing that she was so content alive that she had no unfinished business, encouraging him to move on. Amelia departs as the clock chimes ten, Casper transforming back into a ghost and playfully scares off the party guests, leaving him, and the Harveys to dance while the trio play music.

Cast

Live-action actors

Voice actors

Cameos

Production

In the mirror scene, Dr. Harvey was also supposed to transform into Steven Spielberg. According to director Brad Silberling, the cameo was filmed, but was cut for pacing reasons. Spielberg was relieved, feeling that he's not much of an actor himself and was quite nervous in front of the camera.[3] Casper is the first feature film to have a fully CGI character in a leading role.[4]

Soundtrack

The soundtrack was composed by award-winning composer James Horner, who had worked on a number of previous movies for Amblin Entertainment, including An American Tail.

Casper
Soundtrack album by James Horner
Released April 29, 1995 (1995-04-29)
Recorded 1994–1995
Genre Soundtrack
Label MCA
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic
  1. "No Sign of Ghosts"
  2. "Carrigan and Dibbs"
  3. "Strangers in the House"
  4. "First Haunting/The Swordfight"
  5. "March of the Exorcists"
  6. "Lighthouse—Casper & Kat"
  7. "Casper Makes Breakfast"
  8. "Fond Memories"
  9. "'Dying' to Be a Ghost"
  10. "Casper's Lullaby"
  11. "Descent to Lazarus"
  12. "One Last Wish"
  13. "Remember Me This Way" Jordan Hill
  14. "Casper the Friendly Ghost" Little Richard
  15. "The Uncles Swing/End Credits"

Reception

Box office

Casper opened at #1 over the Memorial Day weekend, grossing $16,840,385 over its first three days from 2,714 theaters, averaging $6,205 per theater. Over four days it grossed $22,091,975, averaging $8,140 per theater. It stayed at #1 in its second weekend, grossing another $13,409,610, and boosting its 10-day cume to $38,921,225. It played solidly all through the summer, ending up with a final gross of $100,328,194 domestically, and an additional $187,600,000 internationally, for a total worldwide gross of $287,928,194, far exceeding its $55 million budget and becoming a commercial success.[1]

Critical reception

Brad Garrett was praised by critics for his performance.

Casper received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has a rating of 44%, based on 36 reviews, with the site's critical consensus reading, "A meandering, mindless family movie that frequently resorts to special effects and transparent sappiness."[5] Time Out London described it as "an intimate and likeable film".[6] Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars, calling it a "technical achievement, it's impressive, and entertaining. And there is even a little winsome philosophy."[7] The CGI effects, which were considered cutting edge at the time, and the performances of Bill Pullman and Christina Ricci were praised, especially considering that, in the scenes where the Harveys interact with the ghosts, Pullman and Ricci were actually acting either with nothing or with stand-in maquettes used as animators' references. Cathy Moriarty's performance was criticized, with Variety saying she does "a poor woman's Cruella de Vil".[8] Many reviewers also felt that Eric Idle, being a venerable comedian, was underused in the role of Moriarty's obsequious henchman.

Legacy

TV Series

A cartoon series, The Spooktacular New Adventures of Casper, was released in 1996 based on the film. Fatso (Season 1-2), Stinkie, Stretch and Casper were all voiced by the actors from the film, while Dr. Harvey was voiced by Dan Castellaneta.

Cancelled sequel

In the mid-1990s, Simon Wells co-wrote a screenplay for Casper 2, which he was set to direct. Amblin cancelled the sequel because they did not believe there would be enough interest from moviegoers. Wells also credited the uncertainty of actress Christina Ricci returning and Fox's ill-received direct-to-video Casper films as contributing to the cancellation of Casper 2.[9]

Direct-to-video prequels

Two direct-to-video prequels to the movie were released by 20th Century Fox, Casper: A Spirited Beginning was released in 1997, and Casper Meets Wendy was released in 1998.

Video games

There were several video games based on or tied-in with the film released on the major consoles of the time, such as the 3DO, Super Nintendo, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, Game Boy Color and original Game Boy. A LCD handheld game was released for Tiger Electronics in 1995.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Casper (1995)". Box Office Mojo. 1995-09-24. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
  2. Cheng, Cheryl (2015-07-30). "N. Brock Winkless IV, the Puppeteer of Chucky in 'Child's Play,' Dies at 56". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2015-08-23.
  3. Cindy Pearlman (1995-06-21). "Ghost Busters". EW.com. Retrieved 2014-12-02.
  4. "Visual and Special Effects Film Milestones". AMC Filmsite. Tim Dirks. Retrieved 2010-12-27.
  5. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/casper/
  6. "Casper Review. Movie Reviews - Film - Time Out London". Timeout.com. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
  7. "Casper :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews". Rogerebert.suntimes.com. 1995-05-26. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
  8. Lowry, Brian (1995-05-21). "Variety Reviews - Casper - Film Reviews - - Review by Brian Lowry". Variety.com. Retrieved 2012-11-24.
  9. Armstrong, Josh (2011-08-15). "Mars Needs Moms, but Earth needs Director Simon Wells!". Animated Views. Retrieved 2013-05-05.

External links

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