
Star Cast: Chris Evans, Ana de Armas, Adrien Brody, Mike Moh, and ensemble.
Director: Dexter Fletcher.
What’s Good: Someone had the guts to approach Ana de Armas and Chris Evans with this script, and the fate that made the two say yes.
What’s Bad: EXACTLY what’s good.
Loo Break: Not sure if those breaks will be nature calling you or you wanting to reassess your life choice.
Watch or Not?: Even if you are a fan of either of its lead, this one is not even a fan service. Invest your time wisely.
Language: English (with subtitles)
Available On: Apple TV+.
Runtime: 117 Minutes.
Cole (Chris) falls for a girl, Saddie (Ana), while he thinks he is fixing her from past trauma. Little does he know that he is falling for a secret agent as just when they are about to go on their second date he is dragged into a mission with her to save the world.
Ghosted Movie Review: Script Analysis
Somebody needs to do research and probably make a true crime docu-series out of the phenomenon where creators think of an idea, hire big names to headline it, and forget to shape anything good ahead. Isn’t this a crime enough? Well, Ghosted, an emotion that the audience is supposed to feel more than a movie title, is precisely the aforementioned phenomenon where the writing digs a grave for itself and jumps in it too.
Written by Rhett Reese, Paul Wernick, and Chris McKenna, Ghosted as a premise makes for a very lucrative adventurous rom-com. A star-crossed couple is suddenly on a mission to save the world because unlikely the woman in the dynamic is a secret agent and actually the hero of the story. A week away from the release of Citadel, where Priyanka Chopra Jonas does a fabulous job at this trajectory, the Ana de Armas starrer does nothing to turn its lucrative concept into an engaging movie.
Ghosted Movie Review: Ghosted does nothing to redeem itself because there is no effort in making the action any good