On Wednesday, the all-female stars of the summer reboot of “Ghostbusters” appeared on the same episode of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” as Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton, and the confluence of gender politics and the cultural zeitgeist was not lost on the show’s host.
“Get your Woman Cards ready,” DeGeneres tweeted in anticipation of the show, while an apparent Clinton supporter shared an image of the presidential contender dressed in a Ghostbusters uniform, with her likely Republican rival Donald Trump cast as the gluttonous apparition “Slimer.”
@TheEllenShow @HillaryClinton @Ghostbusters pic.twitter.com/mqKpaqTwcf
— Jayson Evans (@JaysonEvans1971) May 17, 2016
Trump — like many, mostly male, critics — has already expressed skepticism over the new film, a $150 million production helmed by “Bridesmaids” director Paul Feig. “They’re remaking Indiana Jones without Harrison Ford, you can’t do that,” he said in an Instagram video early last year. “And now they’re making ‘Ghostbusters’ with only women. What’s going on?!”
What’s going on is a massive backlash. After just two trailers and a few commercial spots, legions of fanboys have taken to comment sections to lambaste the project. Its first trailer, released in March, set a record for most dislikes on YouTube and prompted one popular online critic to refuse to even review it. Complaints range from criticism of the CGI-heavy special effects, the replacement of the original cast (although some stars of the original films, including Bill Murray, are expected to make cameos), the lack of solid laughs and the commercial motivations for making it in the first place. But underneath it all, some see an unabashed undercurrent of sexism.
“The backlash is like they’re remaking the Bible with Lady Jesus,” stand-up comedian Elise Valderrama told MSNBC on Wednesday. “A small group of trolls are either angry or trying to make people angry.”
Valderrama, a five-year veteran in comedy, is supportive of the project and attributes some of the opposition to people’s general antipathy towards remakes and childhood nostalgia for the originals. Still, she thinks if the movie under-performs with critics and at the box office, it could have a net negative effect on women in her field.
RELATED: All-female ‘Ghostbusters’ already fending off controversy
“I feel like we established ourselves as funny a long time ago,” she said. “Women in comedy are having to re-prove ourselves over and over again. To a certain extent every comedian has to win over an audience, but if I was a mediocre white male comic, I could probably slide by a lot more.”
The new “Ghosbusters” film boasts some heavy hitters: In addition to “Saturday Night Live” stars Kristen Wiig, Leslie Jones and Kate McKinnon, the film stars Melissa McCarthy, one of the most bankable comedy stars in Hollywood, male or female. And it still faces an uphill battle.
“Anytime a movie [starring], directed or written by a woman does well they kind of brush that under the rug,” comedian and vlogger Marie Faustin told MSNBC on Tuesday. “As soon as a female-led anything does badly, that’s all that they focus on.”
And in an industry where female-driven projects are still surprisingly rare — 20th Century Fox doesn’t have a female director attached to a film until 2018 and director Shane Black recently admitted a scripted female villain in “Iron Man 3” was scrapped when toy makers protested that her likeness wouldn’t sell — there is a lot riding on this film.
“If the movie sucks they’re probably not going to put a woman in a movie for the next 75 years,” joked Faustin.
By any measure, the film’s initial rollout has been rocky at best. Before the ongoing gripes about the mediocrity of the trailer and arguments over whether the project is trying to promote political correctness, the new “Ghostbusters” was knocked for making its only African-American star, Jones, the lone non-scientist in the line-up. The film’s director, stars and producers have vehemently pushed back against the negative buzz, pleading with audiences to wait and see the movie first before drawing conclusions.









