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The director of Netflix’s #1 movie retaliates against trolls going out of their way to trash his work

It can't be nice having people go out of their way to tell you that your movie sucks.

We Have A Ghost. (L to R) Christopher Landon (Director), Tig Notaro as Dr. Leslie Monroe on the set of We Have A Ghost.
Cr. Scott Saltzman/Netflix © 2022.

Netflix has developed a frustratingly regular habit of churning out entirely forgettable and unstoppably mediocre blockbusters on a near-weekly basis, but for those who weren’t too keen on recent supernatural family comedy We Have a Ghost, taking those grievances directly to filmmaker Christopher Landon isn’t exactly the best course of action.

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The $70 million adaptation of short story Ernest may have been reigning supreme as the streaming service’s number one most-watched feature around the world since first premiering two weeks ago – an impressive run at the top considering how often the company unleashes a new in-house exclusive – but reviews haven’t exactly been glowing.

A 43 percent Rotten Tomatoes score is unfortunately par for the course when it comes to Netflix originals, but a 66 percent audience approval rating does hint that subscribers have found We Have a Ghost to be above average. And yet, we can infer that those aren’t the people who’ve been leaving disparaging comments on Freaky and Happy Death Day director Landon’s timeline.

You can’t fault Landon’s logic, when every film or television project involves a cast and crew that often numbers into the hundreds working painstakingly for months at a time to deliver what they believe to be the very best version of the story they’re trying to tell, only for online trolls and naysayers to get the knives out and plunge them directly into social media as soon as they’ve had a chance to see it for themselves.

Next up for Landon is a remake of cult classic terror Arachnophobia, so let’s hope he knocks it out of the park to avoid any more senseless Twitter attacks.

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