10 Things to Know About "Ghosted"7 of 10
7. "Ghosted" is an ode to all our favorite action comedies.
"They're constantly butting heads," Adam Scott says of the very different Max and Leroy. "But they also need each other and the friendship kind of immediately sprouts from all this conflict. What we've been saying is that, at our best, it'll be Midnight Run meets 'Stranger Things.'"
"Leroy doesn't like Max right away," adds Craig Robinson about the built-in conflict between the two. "He wants to do his own thing." The show ends up referencing such classic buddy comedies as 48 Hrs., Lethal Weapon, and Beverly Hills Cop, and even some action classics. "We had a moment [on set the day of the Paley Fest] that felt like some Pulp Fiction," Robinson relates.
"They're constantly butting heads," Adam Scott says of the very different Max and Leroy. "But they also need each other and the friendship kind of immediately sprouts from all this conflict. What we've been saying is that, at our best, it'll be Midnight Run meets 'Stranger Things.'"
"Leroy doesn't like Max right away," adds Craig Robinson about the built-in conflict between the two. "He wants to do his own thing." The show ends up referencing such classic buddy comedies as 48 Hrs., Lethal Weapon, and Beverly Hills Cop, and even some action classics. "We had a moment [on set the day of the Paley Fest] that felt like some Pulp Fiction," Robinson relates.