EPISODE · Apr 21, 2025 · 1H 45M
The Frighteners (1996): The Ghosts We Refuse to Let Go
from Cozy Quilt Cinema · host PeaPod Productions
Beth and Michelle talk about Peter Jackson’s The Frighteners, a supernatural comedy about murderous spirits, unfinished business, questionable ghost-hunting ethics, and Michael J. Fox carrying far more grief than the movie’s playful effects initially suggest. They discuss the film’s strange balance of Disney-like ghosts and serial-killer horror, Jeffrey Combs’s wonderfully unhinged performance, and why its mixture of dread, comedy, and emotional pain still works despite some very dated CGI. At its heart, the episode becomes a conversation about guilt and the ghosts people keep alive because they are afraid to move forward. Frank’s unfinished house, fading spectral companions, and self-imposed isolation all reflect a man punishing himself for a loss he cannot fully remember or understand. The Frighteners also passes the Castellini Test: Lucy and Patricia are both central to the story, and without Patricia the murders, and therefore the entire ending, could not exist. As mentioned in the episode: Sean Astin's "A Bad Case of Stripes" can be found Here Jim Fyfe's Leaf Erickson skit in Encyclopedia can be found Here
What this episode covers
Beth and Michelle talk about Peter Jackson’s The Frighteners, a supernatural comedy about murderous spirits, unfinished business, questionable ghost-hunting ethics, and Michael J. Fox carrying far more grief than the movie’s playful effects initially suggest. They discuss the film’s strange balance of Disney-like ghosts and serial-killer horror, Jeffrey Combs’s wonderfully unhinged performance, and why its mixture of dread, comedy, and emotional pain still works despite some very dated CGI. At its heart, the episode becomes a conversation about guilt and the ghosts people keep alive because they are afraid to move forward. Frank’s unfinished house, fading spectral companions, and self-imposed isolation all reflect a man punishing himself for a loss he cannot fully remember or understand. The Frighteners also passes the Castellini Test: Lucy and Patricia are both central to the story, and without Patricia the murders, and therefore the entire ending, could not exist. As mentioned in the episode: Sean Astin's "A Bad Case of Stripes" can be found Here Jim Fyfe's Leaf Erickson skit in Encyclopedia can be found Here
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The Frighteners (1996): The Ghosts We Refuse to Let Go
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