From Deseret News archives:

Ghost Dad

Published: Tuesday, July 3, 1990 12:00 a.m. MDT
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To call "Ghost Dad" a "family" movie is a bit of an exaggeration. It's more of a "children's" movie. There's a difference.

This is a movie to send your kids to, as opposed to taking them.

To be fair, my younger children — ages 7 through 12 — enjoyed "Ghost Dad." But their parents and older brother were less enthusiastic.

This is one of those movies where the title tells all — especially when you know Bill Cosby plays the title character. "Ghost Dad" is very much like a made-for-TV movie — and if Cosby were not the star you can bet this picture would be a straight-to-video item.

Cosby's character is a widower workaholic whose three kids are raising themselves. And he has a deadline. Within a few days he must close an important business deal in order to leave his children financially secure. But, as you've no doubt guessed, Cosby dies before that deadline is reached.

Or does he?

Story continues below

He actually finds himself in some sort of limbo between heaven and earth and is given a little time to straighten things out before his actual death. But he returns to earth as a ghost, floating in the air, walking through walls and, with the help of his children, trying to close that business deal. He also interferes in his teenage daughter's love life, ignore's his son who asks for help with a school project, and inadvertently shuns the beautiful neighbor he's been dating.

The script is incredibly contrived with oddball elements that make little or no sense — as when Cosby is spirited away to London where he gets spiritual instruction from a scientist somehow in charge of those who die but don't die. And able supporting players like Ian Bannen as the British scientist and Barry Corbin as Cosby's boss are reduced to yelling a lot. (Although cabbie Raynor Scheine gets some solid laughs.)

Cosby tries hard to bring some life to all this, mugging, pratfalling and generally attempting an old-fashioned kind of comedy we don't see too often anymore. Well-done slapstick is never outdated, but as directed by Sidney Poitier — whose best directing efforts, oddly enough, were his three mid-'70s comedies with Cosby — this material never goes beyond one-note special-effects spoofery.

The press kit says the film is "in the tradition of Buster Keaton." It's more like Don Knotts.

All the characters are cardboard cutouts, the sentimental moments between pratfalls are very strained and even the special effects are sometimes gratuitous — as when Cosby is sitting on a lamp while talking to his daughter, then suddenly disappears and reappears in other parts of the room for no particular reason.

Recent comments

oh my god... can you say box office bomb? i rank this in
the realm...

Joey Joe Joe Jr. Shabadoo | Jan. 9, 2001 at 11:08 a.m.

POR FAVOR, NECESITO PHOTOS DEL FILM GHOST DAD.
PLEASE, ENVIARME...

sergio pizzi | Dec. 13, 1998 at 9:01 a.m.

It's been a while since I saw this movie, so I don't
remember all...

Sally Davis | Sept. 10, 1998 at 10:40 a.m.

Movie Info
Rated PG for mild profanity, vulgarity.

Cast: Bill Cosby, Kimberly Russell, Denise Nicholas, Ian Bannen.
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