Sony Pictures has delivered another trailer for Ghostbusters: Afterlife that shows a greater amount of what’s in store from the creepy spin-off.
The trailer closes with an unexpected scene that focuses on the arrival of Dan Aykroyd as Ray Stantz, so make certain to watch through until the finish to get every one of the products. “In Ghostbusters: Afterlife, when a single parent and her two children show up in a humble community, they start to find their association with the first ghostbusters and the mysterious inheritance their granddad abandoned,” peruses a line from its depiction.
While Rudd, Wolfhard, and Coon burn through the majority of the trailer retaliating against spooky dangers unleashing destruction on their little Oklahoma town, the review closes as Rudd apparently makes a last-ditch endurance call to the veteran entertainers’ famous characters Dr. Peter Venkman and Dr. Beam Stantz after he finds an old promotion for their soul pursuing business.
The trailer additionally includes an expanded film of the new Mini-Pufts, which Rudd sees as they transform each other into s’mores inside a supermarket.
Ghostbusters: Afterlife further reunites Aykroyd and Murray with unique Ghostbusters series stars like Sigourney Weaver, Ernie Hudson, and Annie Potts. However Harold Ramis — who balanced the triplet of paranormal agents at the top of the initial two movies — kicked the bucket in 2014, Aykroyd recently disclosed to EW the late entertainer would be “respectfully addressed” in the new film.
Ghostbusters: Afterlife is co-composed and coordinated by Jason Reitman, child of co-essayist/head of the initial two movies. Notwithstanding Paul Rudd, the celebrities Finn Wolfhard (Stranger Things), McKenna Grace (Annabelle Comes Home), and Carrie Coon (Avengers: Infinity War). Close by Aykroyd, other unique establishment stars expected to return incorporate Bill Murray, Ernie Hudson, Sigourney Weaver, and Annie Potts.
Ghostbusters: Afterlife will be released in venues on November 11 after numerous deferrals because of COVID.