Ghost TownReview by Brandon Fibbs | posted 9/19/2008 12:00AM

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Ghost Town
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MPAA rating: PG-13 (for some strong language, sexual humor and drug references)

Genre: Comedy, Romance
Theater release: September 19, 2008 by Dreamworks/Paramount
Directed by: David Koepp
Runtime: 1 hour 42 minutes
Cast: Ricky Gervais (Bertram Pincus), Greg Kinnear (Frank), Téa Leoni (Gwen), Aasif Mandvi (Dr. Prashar), Billy Campbell (Richard), Kristen Wiig (Surgeon)
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Some of my favorite experiences at the movies have come as a result of stumbling across something wholly unexpected. Movies that catch us by surprise often crystallize into some of our most cherished cinematic experiences. We usually know, more or less, if the movie we're about to see will delight or disappoint. Usually it's just a matter of discovering the degree. But with the new fantasy comedy Ghost Town, the word I keep hearing on everyone's lips, critics and moviegoers alike, is "surprise." And indeed it is the best possible kind of surprise—a film at once hilarious and heartfelt.
We are predisposed to dislike the misanthropic Bertram Pincus (Ricky Gervais). After all, he's a dentist. Pincus' favorite time of the day is when he inserts his barbaric tools into his patients' mouths to stop their incessant talking. Pincus is rude and profoundly anti-social. It's not that he hates crowds, he says, just the people in them. So when a near-death experience during a routine hospital procedure allows him to see dead people, Pincus is suddenly overwhelmed with attention. It turns out Manhattan is overrun with ghosts (more ghosts than the living, it seems) seeking to remedy the unfinished business of their lives before they can slip away into the afterlife. And they see Pincus as their liaison to the living world.

Ricky Gervais as the dentist Bertram Pincus
Some spirits are more persistent than others. Enter Frank (Greg Kinnear), a philandering jerk who tells Pincus he has to break up the impending marriage between his widow Gwen (Téa Leoni), an Egyptologist who, ironically enough, works with the dead, and her new beau Richard (Billy Campbell), a third-world humanitarian lawyer. Do this, Frank says, and he and the thousands of other pleading poltergeists haunting Pincus' life will disappear forever. Reluctantly, Scrooge, er, Pincus agrees.
We know how this will end, of course. Pincus, the rotund curmudgeon, falls head over heels for the vivacious Gwen, who, coincidentally, lives in his building. It turns out Pincus has had his own fair share of heartbreak, and has isolated himself from the world in an effort to keep himself from being hurt again. But the more time Pincus spends with Gwen, the more he finds himself coming out of his shell and feeling human again.
Ghost Town isn't breaking any new ground. We've been here before, from Ghost to the more recent Over Her Dead Body. Fortunately, the time-honored formula is just dry and sardonic enough to feel reasonably fresh again. The uproarious Gervais surely deserves the lion's share of the credit.

Greg Kinnear as Frank Herlihy
Ghost Town may finally make Gervais a household name in America. The beloved star of the British The Office and Extras (not to mention an uproarious set of podcasts) certainly has a cult following in the U.S., but is still largely undiscovered. That tragedy may finally be rectified. Like Robin Williams in Aladdin, Gervais gives one the impression that Ghost Town director David Koepp took back the script, told his star roughly what the scene was about, and then let him go.
The movie is chock full of the sort of comedy only Gervais can do—caustic and sarcastic but always shot through with the light, bouncy quality of a court jester who is laughing with you every bit as much as he's laughing at you. What is, perhaps, most surprising is that Gervias, in his first leading role, is so likable and commanding. Gervais' eccentric sensibilities, perfect comic timing, and unpredictably compelling presence dominate the screen. As with most of the sad sack losers he plays, Gervais is lovable even when he's being despicable.
It doesn't hurt that Gervais is surrounded by terrific co-stars. If there is a more likable actor in Hollywood than Greg Kinnear, I don't know him. Téa Leoni, widely regarded as a gifted screwball comedienne whose elegance, intelligence and wit has never been fully appreciated, is an unmitigated delight. And SNL's Kristen Wiig is deadpan delightful.

Tea Leoni as Gwen
Director David Knoepp, known more for the things he has written (Steven Spielberg's Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, War of the Worlds and Jurassic Park) than the things he has directed (Stir of Echoes), helms his first comedy with a deft, confident hand. There's frivolous comedy and then there's light, enjoyable diversions. Ghost Town is certainly the latter, a whimsical romantic fable and endearing date movie for adults.