Casper
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Brad Silberling
Amy Brenneman
Mr Rogers
Devon Sawa
Eric Idle
Wesley Thompson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Casper is a friendly but lonely young ghost who can't seem to help scaring people. Then, one day, two new visitors show up on the doorstep of his fantastically haunted house, Whipstaff Manor: Kat Harvey and her eccentric dad, Dr. Harvey, a self-styled "ghost therapist." Whipstaff's scheming owner, Carrigan Crittenden, has hired Harvey to exorcise the house's spectral inhabitants so that she can get her hands on the manor's fabled treasure. Unfortunately for Dr. Harvey, the Ghostly Trio--Fatso, Stinkie, and Stretch--have their own methods of getting rid of unwanted visitors--and a certifiably twisted sense of humor.
Director
Brad Silberling
Cast
Amy Brenneman
Mr Rogers
Devon Sawa
Eric Idle
Wesley Thompson
Michael Mccarty
Ernestine Mercer
Christina Ricci
Terry Murphy
Brad Garrett
J J Anderson
Joe Alaskey
Michael Dubrow
Malachi Pearson
Ben Stein
Rodney Dangerfield
Cathy Moriarty
Garette Ratliff Henson
Jessica Wesson
John Kassir
Douglas J O Bruckner
Micah Winkelspecht
Don Novello
Jess Harnell
Mike Simmrin
Bill Pullman
Chauncey Leopardi
Joe Nipote
Spencer Vrooman
Crew
Mike Nick Adams
Todd Adelman
Laura Albert
Jon Alexander
Philip Edward Alexy
Yarek Alfer
Alexandra Altrocchi
Robert Alvarez
Mike Amron
David Andrews
Steve Andrews
Michael D Antunez
Barry Armour
Christopher Armstrong
Eric Armstrong
Seth Arnett
Rich Arons
Lori Ashcraft
Steven J Assony
John Geoffrey Atkinson
Mark Anthony Austin
Dan Aykroyd
William Ballard
Craig Tex Barnett
Leslie Barnett
Kevin Barnhill
Greta Rose Bart
Tom Barwick
Carlo Basail
Ron Batzdorff
Michael Bauer
Randall K Bean
Donna Ashley Beard
Cheryl Beasley-blackwell
Linda Bel
Jeffrey Benedict
Tom Bertino
John Andrew Berton
George Bess
Ken Beyer
Patricia Blau
John Blausay
Toby Blue
Jonathan Bobbitt
Russell Bobbitt
Sara Bolder
Christopher Boyes
Rosemary Brandenburg
Elena Holden Bress
Danny Briggs
Robert Brophy
David Byers Brown
Jeffrey S Brown
Judy Brown
Lindakay Brown
Clyde E Bryan
Bruce D. Buckley
Michael B Bunch
Steven Bunyea
Gary Burritt
Randy Cabral
Denny Caira
Talentino Caira
Susan Campbell
Steve Caradelli
Ron Cardarelli
Megan Carlson
Mike Cassidy
Pamela Cederquist
Lanny Cermak
Steve Chandler
Philip Marc Chapnick
Eric Chauvin
Jerry Yu Ching
Lisa Chino
Terry Chostner
Dan Chumley
Dennis R Clark
Alan Cody
Lara Cody
Kevin Conlin
Vincent Contarino
Marc Cooper
Judith A. Cory
Sharon Iris Crall
Patrick Crane
Dean Cundey
Dean Cundey
Gail Currey
Bonnie Curtis
Mike D'isa-hogan
Bruce Dahl
Rodney Dangerfield
Don Davis
Sandy De Crescent
Paul Deason
Paul Deason
Lou Dellarosa
Mitch Deoudes
Debbie Derango
David Deuber
Maria Devane
Leslie Dilley
Marty Dobkousky
Loring Doyle
Dean Drabin
Ed Dunkley
William Dunn
Georgia Durante
Russell Earl
Clint Eastwood
Tony Eckert
Terri Eckton
Selwyn Eddy
Tyruben Ellingson
Donald Elliott
John Ellis
Mike Ellis
Eric Enderton
Vicki L Engel
Dan Engstrom
Raul Essig
Frank Eulner
Donna Evans Merlo
Michael Fallavollita
Peter Fandetti
Stefen Fangmeier
Scott Farrar
Cory Faucher
Andre Fenley
Bill Fletcher
Jeffrey Franklin
Walt Freitas
Wally Frick
Miguel Fuertes
David Gabrielli
George Gambetta
Craig Garfield
Lee Garibaldi
Tim Geideman
Mel Gibson
Michael Gleason
Jane Goe
Susan Goldsmith
Cesar Gonzales
Rene Gonzalez
Bridget Goodman
Antoinette Gordon
Rhona Gordon
Ben O Graham
Dorie Greenberg
Timothy A Greenwood
Paul J Griffin
Paul Grimshaw
J R Grubbs
Gerald Gutschmidt
Mark Gutterud
Roger Guyett
Ann Hadsell
James Hagedorn
Michael Halsted
David Hanks
Rusty Hanson
Erik Haraldsted
Robb Hastigan
Ruth Hasty
Jeff Hatten
Annette Haywood-carter
Angela Heald
Janet Healy
Matthew Hendershot
Andy Hendrickson
Jim Henrikson
Christophe Hery
Clark Higgins
James Horner
James Horner
Casey Hotchkiss
Jeff House
George Hull
Ssteve Fireplug Hunter
Greg Hyman
Gary Hymes
Gary Hymes
Richard Hymns
John Isham
David James
Daniel Jeannette
Christopher W Johnson
Keii Johnston
Keith Johnston
Doug Jones
Kay Jordan
Lorin Jordan
Zoran Kacic-alesic
Michael Kahn
Paula Karsh
Doug Kay
Pamela J Kaye
Ian C Kelly
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Rodney Dangerfield, (1921-2004)
He was born Jacob Cohen in Babylon, Long Island, New York on November 22, 1921. His father was a vaudevillian performer who played professionally as Phil Roy. Known as something of a cut-up in high school, he started performing comedy when he was 20, and spent the next 10 years working alongthe Atlantic coast under the name Jack Roy.
His career was temporarily sidelined with family responsiblities - he married Joyce Indig in 1949 and she soon gave birth to two children: Brian and Melanie. With a family to support, he sold aluminum siding and lived in New Jersey, yet still held onto his dream of being a stand-up comic. In 1961, he divorced his wife (by all accounts his marriage had been an unhappy one), and he hit the road again as Rodney Dangerfield. By the mid-60s, Rondey was hitting his stride, following a some successful nightclub appearances in Manhattan and Atlantic City. At this point, he had developed his stage persona as a harassed schmo, always tugging at his tie and padding down his sweated brow. His persistancy paid off when he made his first television appearances in 1967: The Ed Sullivan Show and The Merv Griffin Show both raised his profile, but what really made Rodney was his July 29, 1969 debut on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. With his flurry of one-liners, goggle eyes and, of course, "I don't get no respect!" plea, audiences loved him and Rodney would make over 70 appearances over the next 30 years on The Tonight Show for both Johnny and eventual host, Jay Leno.
Around this time, Rodney garnered his first film role, as an irritable theater manager in The Projectionist (1971), but he would have to wait almost 10 years later before he struck box-office gold. The film was Caddyshack (1980), and as Al Czervik, the loudly dressed, obnoxious but lovable millionaire who crashes a snotty Golf Club, Rodney may not have displayed great acting skills, but his comic personality was vibrant and engaging, and with the comedy being one of the biggest hits of the year, he was now a star.
His follow-up to Caddyshack, Easy Money (1983), followed the same formula (he played a baby photgrapher who inherits money), but the tone was much nastier, and the crirtics panned it. He rebounded though with the biggest hit of his career, Back to School (1986). The plot was simple, a self-made millionaire goes back to college to prove his son his worth only to fall in love in the process, grossed over $100 million. Indeed, it looked like Rodney Dangerfield had all the respect in the world.
His career kept taking surprise turns in the '90s: he was an in-demand "guest voice" on such animated projects like Rover Dangerfield, The Simpsons, and Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist. Yet, the biggest surprise by far was his dramatic turn as an abusive, alcoholic father in Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers (1994). For his performance, he received glowing reviews, but ill-health was becoming an issue for him, and Rodney had to curtail his schedule considerably after this.
He returned to the screen as the Devil in the Adam Sandler comedy Little Nicky (2000), but on his 80th birthday (November 22, 2001), he suffered a mild heart attack, and in the Spring of 2003, he underwent brain surgery to improve his blood flow in preparation for an upcoming heart-valve replacement surgery. This year started off brightly for him: he made another film appearance, Angles with Angles; released his autobiography in May entitled It Ain't Easy Being Me and in just the past two months appeared on television for Jimmy Kimmel Live, and in an episode of the CBS sitcom Still Standing playing a wisecracking, next-door neighbor. Sadly, this flurry of reactivity was not to last. On August 24, he entered UCLA Medical Center for heart valve-replacement surgery, but complications from an infection after the operation led to a coma, and he reamined in vegetative state for the last six weeks of his life. He is survived by his wife of 11 years, Joan Child; his son, Brian; and daughter, Melanie.
by Michael T. Toole
Rodney Dangerfield, (1921-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Feature directorial debut for Brad Silberling. Alex Proyas was originally attached as director.
Began shooting January 27, 1994.
Released in United States Summer May 26, 1995
Released in United States on Video October 8, 2013
Released in United States on Video October 13, 1995
Released in United States on Video October 8, 2013
Released in United States Summer May 26, 1995
CASPER was created in the early 1940's by Joe Oriolo who, together with Sy Reit, wrote a children's book featuring the character. In 1945, Paramount Pictures released the first Casper cartoon, "The Friendly Ghost," with story and adaptation by Bill Turner and Otto Messmer. The ghost segued to his first comic book in 1949, when Jubilee published "Casper the Friendly Ghost". The concept was expanded into a television series in 1950.
Completed shooting June 8, 1994.
Released in United States on Video October 13, 1995