Jun 16,1989
Five years after the events of the first film, the Ghostbusters have been plagued by lawsuits and court orders, and their once-lucrative business is bankrupt. However, when Dana begins to have ghost problems again, the boys come out of retirement only to be promptly arrested. The Ghostbusters discover that New York is once again headed for supernatural doom, with a river of ectoplasmic slime bubbling beneath the city and an ancient sorcerer attempting to possess Dana's baby and be born anew. Can the Ghostbusters quell the negative emotions feeding the otherworldly threat and stop the world from being slimed?
nudity | A male baby is shown nude in a few scenes. Nothing at all sexual. A woman is getting ready to give her baby a bath and presumably take a bath herself. In the process she takes off her shirt revealing her bra. They are interrupted before anything further. There is an entire scene (a few minutes long) where a woman is clothed only with a towel (after showering). A man watches as a woman seductively holds a large ball near her crotch, where she tells him to "baby-sit" her (implying sexual arousion) , he walks over to her and sits next to her where she puts her leg across his leg and they begin kissing and making out (off-screen). A man and a woman kiss. |
violence | Contains supernatural comic violence throughout. There is one scene which contains bloody violence. Two men see severed heads hanging on sticks or wires (blood shown) but is very brief. |
profanity | Contains infrequent mild language, including "Hell", "Crap", one use of both "shit" and "asshole", one use of the word "Bastard". |
alcohol | A couple is drinking wine at a restaurant. |
frightening | Some supernatural scenes, whilst brief and infrequent, may scare young viewers. The bathtub scene with the slime coming out of the the bathtub faucet, then forming a big hand attempting to grab the baby and the mother may be disturbing for children and sensitive people. The appearance, voice, and presence of the antagonist, Vigo, may frighten young audiences, especially at the end when he momentarily possesses Ray's body, looking quite grotesque and disturbing .. The scene underneath the sewers, and on the abandoned underground railroad track may frighten young viewers. |