R.I.P. Harold Ramis (1944-2014)

It is with the utmost sadness that we report that Harold Ramis, the co-writer and star of Ghostbusters, the co-writer of StripesMeatballs and Animal House, and the co-writer and director of Groundhog DayCaddyshack​ and Analyze This, died today at the age of 69. The cause of death has been reported as complications arising from autoimmune inflammatory vasculitis. The world of comedy has, in no uncertain terms, lost one of its greatest treasures.

Harold Ramis emerged from the “SCTV” school of comedy, along with his many Canadian sketch comedy alums John Candy, Eugene Levy, Rick Moranis, Catherine O’Hoara, Joe Flaherty, Dave Thomas and Andrea Martin. Their inventive sketches brought them to Hollywood’s eye, providing ample opportunities to craft a career both in front of and behind the cameras. Harold Ramis first debuted as a screenwriter whose films frequently revolved around “Us vs. Them” themes, typified as “The Party Animals vs. The Bourgeois” – a trope still copied to this day – but more significantly they focused on the nobility of the underclass, the philosophy of living freely without much regard for oppressive social convention. And he managed to evoke all that meaning with the simple image of a turd afloat in a posh swimming pool.

Harold Ramis was one of the most beloved comedy filmmakers on the planet, but like many artists his achievements were overshadowed in later years by a series of well-meaning but unimpressive misfires. The prevailing attitude amongst pundits is too often “but what have you done for me lately,” ignoring the bulk of a director’s spectacular career just because his last couple of movies didn’t blow audiences away, only then to about-face when they pass away. True, Harold Ramis’s last few films The Ice HarvestAnalyze That and Year One were among his worst, but they don’t erase the enormous influence and entertainment generated by Caddyshack​, National Lampoon’s Vacation and Groundhog Day, or the many comedy classics he scripted, like Animal HouseMeatballsStripes and Ghostbusters. His place in the comedy firmament is secure, his star will shine brightly.

Join us now for a brief look back at the best and most underappreciated films from a multitalented filmmaker and cherished on-screen performer.

Slideshow: The Essential Harold Ramis


William Bibbiani is the editor of CraveOnline’s Film Channel and co-host of The B-Movies Podcast. Follow him on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.

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