Current:Home > MarketsMichael Keaton recalls his favorite 'Beetlejuice' scenes ahead of new movie -Keystone Capital Education
Michael Keaton recalls his favorite 'Beetlejuice' scenes ahead of new movie
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:35:32
NEW YORK – Watched the old “Beetlejuice” in preparation for the new sequel? You’re not the only one. So did Michael Keaton.
Keaton’s trickster demon, the Afterlife’s leading bio-exorcist and the guy who will cause unholy chaos if you say his name three times, returns in director Tim Burton’s horror comedy sequel “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice” (in theaters Friday). It’s the second iconic character in as many years that Keaton has revisited after several decades – the other being Batman in last year’s DC superhero adventure “The Flash.”
Beetlejuice is different, though, because he was an original creation from the minds of Keaton and Burton, an antagonistic weirdo obsessed with marrying teenage Lydia Deetz (Winona Ryder) and freaking out the living and the dead alike. But as great as Keaton was playing "the ghost with the most" in the 1988 original “Beetlejuice,” he worried about having the same mojo a second time.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
“I’m so excited. Then I’m like, ‘Hold on a minute. I don’t know if I can do this again,’” says Keaton, who decided to sit down and revisit the first movie. It’s not his normal approach to movies, he adds. “I don't want to go 'we comedy people,' but I hate the overanalysis of comedy or the serious breakdown. I hate to think about it. Like when I did stand-up, I liked all those people. I just didn't want to hang around and discuss it. I want to do it.”
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Keaton says he always knew he loved the movie, but what surprised him was how big a kick he got out of it so many years later. “I immediately started laughing, like I was a fan. I even laughed at what I did. I went, ‘Oh, that's really funny.’”
Does he have a favorite scene? “There's so much crazy stuff in that first one, it’s hard,” Keaton says. “It's like, who's your favorite band? Until I'm driving home later today, 3 in the morning, I won’t know what it is.”
Keaton does love the moment when, after recently deceased couple Adam (Alec Baldwin) and Barbara (Geena Davis) reject Beetlejuice’s services, he angrily kicks over a plastic tree and shouts, “Nice (expletive) model,” followed by a crotch grab. And Keaton also enjoyed filming a faux TV “ad” where Beetlejuice rides and ropes a fake cow in Western garb and sings with a drawl, “Come on down and I’ll chew on a dog!”
Keaton came up with that line on the fly doing the scene, which was inspired by the commercials of a famous Southern California car salesman named Cal Worthington that Keaton and Burton knew. “He wore a cowboy hat and he'd be like, ‘I’d eat a bug!’ ” Keaton says.
The rewatch definitely put Keaton back in the Beetlejuice groove: On the first day filming the sequel, “he shows up and, I swear, it was like demon possession. He just did it,” Burton recalls. “It was truly emotional.
“You got kind of freaked out. I mean, it was almost disturbing that he did it so quickly and so seamlessly.”
Being up close that day to Keaton’s oddball alter ego “was so amazing,” says fellow original star Catherine O’Hara. “But it wasn't fair because he didn't age. He was always dead.”
Adds Burton: “Just got a little moldier.”
veryGood! (3674)
Related
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- From the Middle East to East Baltimore, a Johns Hopkins Professor Works to Make the City More Climate-Resilient
- Shoppers Say This Large Beach Blanket from Amazon is the Key to a Hassle-Free, Sand-Free Beach Day
- California Water Regulators Still Haven’t Considered the Growing Body of Research on the Risks of Oil Field Wastewater
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- With Biden in Europe Promising to Expedite U.S. LNG Exports, Environmentalists on the Gulf Coast Say, Not So Fast
- In the Race for Pennsylvania’s Open U.S. Senate Seat, Candidates from Both Parties Support Fracking and Hardly Mention Climate Change
- Fifty Years After the UN’s Stockholm Environment Conference, Leaders Struggle to Realize its Vision of ‘a Healthy Planet’
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Oil Industry Moves to Overturn Historic California Drilling Protection Law
Ranking
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Mangrove Tree Offspring Travel Through Water Currents. How will Changing Ocean Densities Alter this Process?
- Has JPMorgan Chase grown too large? A former White House economic adviser weighs in
- Shoppers Say This Large Beach Blanket from Amazon is the Key to a Hassle-Free, Sand-Free Beach Day
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Kyle Richards and Mauricio Umansky Break Up After 27 Years of Marriage
- Adidas finally has a plan for its stockpile of Yeezy shoes
- The US May Have Scored a Climate Victory in Congress, but It Will Be in the Hot Seat With Other Major Emitters at UN Climate Talks
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Cyberattacks on health care are increasing. Inside one hospital's fight to recover
Nearly a third of nurses nationwide say they are likely to leave the profession
Misery Wrought by Hurricane Ian Focuses Attention on Climate Records of Florida Candidates for Governor
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
The Fed admits some of the blame for Silicon Valley Bank's failure in scathing report
Adele Is Ready to Set Fire to the Trend of Concertgoers Throwing Objects Onstage
Indian Court Rules That Nature Has Legal Status on Par With Humans—and That Humans Are Required to Protect It