Bill Murray

Bill Murray Explains Why He Agreed to Make a ‘Ghostbusters’ Cameo
Bill Murray Explains Why He Agreed to Make a ‘Ghostbusters’ Cameo
Bill Murray Explains Why He Agreed to Make a ‘Ghostbusters’ Cameo
There’s one reason and one reason only why we’re getting a Ghostbusters remake in 2016 instead of an actual Ghostbusters 3 five years ago. That reason is named Bill Murray and he’s been the not-so-secret sequel roadblock for as long as we can remember. But then he accepted a small role in the new reboot, because he’s Bill Murray and Bill Murray does whatever he wants. Sometimes that means randomly showing up at your birthday party. Sometimes that means popping up in a film franchise that he seemingly had zero desire to revisit. Now, Murray explains his reasons for joining a new Ghostbusters movie he was so vocally against.
‘Groundhog Day’ Is Coming to Broadway (Over and Over and Over and Over…)
‘Groundhog Day’ Is Coming to Broadway (Over and Over and Over and Over…)
‘Groundhog Day’ Is Coming to Broadway (Over and Over and Over and Over…)
We’re big fans of Groundhog Day here at ScreenCrush — I mean, we did just pick it as number one on our list of the 25 Best Comedies of the Last 25 Years — so this news, via The Hollywood Reporter, has us excited: Groundhog Day is coming to Broadway on January 23, 2017. A new version of Groundhog Day! It feels like we’re living the same story over and over and over again! But with, like, music this time.
There’s Still a Role in the New ‘Ghostbusters’ For Bill Murray
There’s Still a Role in the New ‘Ghostbusters’ For Bill Murray
There’s Still a Role in the New ‘Ghostbusters’ For Bill Murray
So Sony and director Paul Feig have found their new Ghostbusters: Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones, and Kate McKinnon. This whole idea of an all-female ‘Ghostbusters’ reboot came together after the passing of original series star and co-writer Harold Ramis, when director Ivan Reitman relinquished the franchise’s director’s chair and everyone involved finally gave up on trying to convince stubborn (and probably very wise) Bill Murray to make a second sequel to the original film.