Lego Ghostbusters Key Events In Two Minutes

gbsin2mincap

During Ghostbusters 30th anniversary LEGO fan and ghosthead Monsieur Caron (YouTube) made The Ghostbusters Lego Movie. (GBI Blog Post, August 18, 2014) Less than 2 years later Monsieur Caron has created a new Lego Ghostbusters fan film. This time with key events from Ghostbusters!

Monsieur Caron

Enjoy this recreation of the 1984 Ghostbuster movie all made in LEGO stop motion animation by MonsieurCaron. If the crossover between the LEGO bricks and the fan favorite ghost hunting foursome is playable in the LEGO Dimension game, it is only here that you can see the story resumed in only 2 minutes with real LEGO bricks.

Ce film en FRANÇAIS / This movie in FRENCH: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_vHj3…

You will see the famous Ecto-1 21108 come to life as it leave the Firehouse Headquarters 75827 made by The LEGO Group, but note that every scene in the brickfilm were created by MonsieurCaron using his collection of over 200 000 LEGO bricks and many official sets. It took exactly a month of construction, animation and post-production to make this project come to life. Visit monsieurcaron_brickfilm on Instagram to see all the behind the scene photos.



Source:

Ghostheads: A Ghostbusters Documentary

I heard about Ghostheads in the last year. At the time I dismissed it. Hear me out. It was and is a great idea for a documentary. With the film exploring ghostheads, franchises, and Ghostbusters culture impact from around the world unless their was expendable income, to quote Ghostbusters, “Where we gonna get the money?”

Writer and Director Brendan Mertens (also a ghosthead himself) had a plan. Use a fund raising site where ghostheads could “actually make this happen.” Ok, so I paraphrased slightly. Continue reading

If The Real Ghostbusters Had Been Anime

rgbsanime

Did you ever wonder what The Real Ghostbusters would have been like if the series had been made for Japan (instead of originally the US) and done in Japan’s known anime style? We didn’t either, the talented Shamoozal had.

Not only are the Ghostbusters real, they’re from Tokyo.

What do you think? Would you have watched an anime Ghostbusters in the 1980s? I probably would have even when I wouldn’t have understood it. Either way visually The Real Ghostbusters was basically made in Asia anyway.

Photo Source: Nacho Punch (YouTube)