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RomanceFantasyDramaComedy

Groundhog Day

- He’s having the worst day of his life… Over and over again.

A narcissistic TV weatherman, along with his attractive-but-distant producer, and his mawkish cameraman, is sent to report on Groundhog Day in the small town of Punxsutawney, where he finds himself repeating the same day over and over.

Release Date : 1993-02-11

Language :EnglishFrenchItalian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Columbia Pictures

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Bill Murray

Character Name : Phil Connors

Original Name : Bill Murray

Gender : Male

Andie MacDowell

Character Name : Rita Hanson

Original Name : Andie MacDowell

Gender : Female

Chris Elliott

Character Name : Larry

Original Name : Chris Elliott

Gender : Male

Stephen Tobolowsky

Character Name : Ned Ryerson

Original Name : Stephen Tobolowsky

Gender : Male

Brian Doyle-Murray

Character Name : Buster Green

Original Name : Brian Doyle-Murray

Gender : Male

Marita Geraghty

Character Name : Nancy Taylor

Original Name : Marita Geraghty

Gender : Female

Angela Paton

Character Name : Mrs. Lancaster

Original Name : Angela Paton

Gender : Female

Rick Ducommun

Character Name : Gus

Original Name : Rick Ducommun

Gender : Male

Rick Overton

Character Name : Ralph

Original Name : Rick Overton

Gender : Male

Robin Duke

Character Name : Doris the Waitress

Original Name : Robin Duke

Gender : Female

Carol Bivins

Character Name : Anchorwoman

Original Name : Carol Bivins

Gender : Female

Willie Garson

Character Name : Phil's Assistant Kenny

Original Name : Willie Garson

Gender : Male

Ken Hudson Campbell

Character Name : Man in Hallway

Original Name : Ken Hudson Campbell

Gender : Male

Les Podewell

Character Name : Old Man

Original Name : Les Podewell

Gender : Male

Rod Sell

Character Name : Groundhog Official

Original Name : Rod Sell

Gender : Male

Tom Milanovich

Character Name : State Trooper

Original Name : Tom Milanovich

Gender : Male

John M. Watson Sr.

Character Name : Bartender

Original Name : John M. Watson Sr.

Gender : Male

Peggy Roeder

Character Name : Piano Teacher

Original Name : Peggy Roeder

Gender : Female

Harold Ramis

Character Name : Neurologist

Original Name : Harold Ramis

Gender : Male

David Pasquesi

Character Name : Psychiatrist

Original Name : David Pasquesi

Gender : Male

Lee Sellars

Character Name : Cop

Original Name : Lee Sellars

Gender : Male

Chet Dubowski

Character Name : Bank Guard Felix

Original Name : Chet Dubowski

Gender : Male

C.O. Erickson

Character Name : Bank Guard Herman

Original Name : C.O. Erickson

Gender : Male

Sandy Maschmeyer

Character Name : Phil's Movie Date

Original Name : Sandy Maschmeyer

Gender : Male

Leighanne O'Neil

Character Name : Fan on Street

Original Name : Leighanne O'Neil

Gender : Male

Evangeline Binkley

Character Name : Jeopardy! Viewer

Original Name : Evangeline Binkley

Gender : Male

Samuel Mages

Character Name : Jeopardy! Viewer

Original Name : Samuel Mages

Gender : Male

Ben Zwick

Character Name : Jeopardy! Viewer

Original Name : Ben Zwick

Gender : Male

Hynden Walch

Character Name : Debbie

Original Name : Hynden Walch

Gender : Female

Michael Shannon

Character Name : Fred

Original Name : Michael Shannon

Gender : Male

Timothy Hendrickson

Character Name : Waiter Bill

Original Name : Timothy Hendrickson

Gender : Male

Martha Webster

Character Name : Waitress Alice

Original Name : Martha Webster

Gender : Male

Angela Gollan

Character Name : Piano Student

Original Name : Angela Gollan

Gender : Male

Shaun Chaiyabhat

Character Name : Boy in Tree

Original Name : Shaun Chaiyabhat

Gender : Male

Dianne B. Shaw

Character Name : E.R. Nurse

Original Name : Dianne B. Shaw

Gender : Female

Barbara Ann Grimes

Character Name : Flat Tire Lady

Original Name : Barbara Ann Grimes

Gender : Male

Ann Heekin

Character Name : Flat Tire Lady

Original Name : Ann Heekin

Gender : Male

Lucina Paquet

Character Name : Flat Tire Lady

Original Name : Lucina Paquet

Gender : Female

Brenda Pickleman

Character Name : Buster's Wife

Original Name : Brenda Pickleman

Gender : Female

Amy Murdoch

Character Name : Buster's Daughter

Original Name : Amy Murdoch

Gender : Male

Eric Saiet

Character Name : Buster's Son

Original Name : Eric Saiet

Gender : Male

Lindsay Albert

Character Name : Woman with Cigarette

Original Name : Lindsay Albert

Gender : Male

Roger Adler

Character Name : Guitar Player

Original Name : Roger Adler

Gender : Male

Ben A. Fish

Character Name : Bass Player

Original Name : Ben A. Fish

Gender : Male

Don Riozz McNichols

Character Name : Drum Player

Original Name : Don Riozz McNichols

Gender : Male

Brian Willig

Character Name : Saxophone Player

Original Name : Brian Willig

Gender : Male

Richard Henzel

Character Name : D.J. (voice)

Original Name : Richard Henzel

Gender : Male

Rob Riley

Character Name : D.J. (voice)

Original Name : Rob Riley

Gender : Male

Tony DeGuide

Character Name : Reporter (uncredited)

Original Name : Tony DeGuide

Gender : Male

Reni Santoni

Character Name : State Trooper (voice) (uncredited)

Original Name : Reni Santoni

Gender : Male

Reviews

A

Andres Gomez

@tanty

2021-06-23

Funny story done to fit on Bill Murray's shoes. It is good enough and with a moral for the family but I don't get it what this is such a famous movie.

M

markuspm

@markuspm

2021-06-23

I can watch this movie again and again and again. Just trying to imagine what I would do in such a situation. And who doesn't like groundhogs?

T

tmdb39513728

@tmdb39513728

2021-06-23

**The Future is Not a Given** _Groundhog Day_ sets out to accomplish the inconceivable, where few comedies, or movies of any kind, or art forms of any device dare to tread. It is determined to ultimately answer: How does one find true happiness. The kind of baby that might have been hatched by crossing Woody Allen and Dali Lama. What's truly amazing is that it pretty well achieves this without being pretentious or portentous. Its humble, pedestrian style coincides with it's charitable message. Furthermore, it's a riot! What do you do when the snowstorm of life traps you into a place you don't want to be? Self-destructive anarchy is an option: drinking, stealing, screwing, lying, joyriding and suicide. But this is a big storm so long-term solutions are required. The good news if you're lonely and unhappy? You probably have more time to dedicate to self- improvement (music lessons, ice sculpturing). But challenging the self must have worthwhile outcomes. Phil, believing he's magical, challenges himself to get Rita to sleep with him within 24 hours. He's being dishonest, still playing games and ends up getting slapped in the face repeatedly. It appears that Phil's obstinate pattern of narcissistic behaviour is the cause of this inert existential loop, and one that traps everyone he is in contact with. When he finally realizes that while money, sex and immediate self-gratification might have their perks, they are short-lived and vastly overrated, and a major personality overhaul will be required to escape this Kafkaesque nightmare. An endless, insanely frigid winter is bound to contain him (them (us)) unless new strategies are introduced, alternative energies adopted, the shift away from a self-serving paradigm sustained. To his credit, Phil refuses to be cornered into the status quo and become one in a million zombies chanting “it is what it is”. Phil actually starts to recover when he gives up trying. When he dismisses the quick fixes (sex, booze, anger, lying and fighting), when he relinquishes his ego and lets go of his smarmy King Joffrey-Justin Bieber juvenility, when he learns to be himself, like himself, settle into his own skin so he can thrive in and, in turn, improve his surroundings. In a reversal of _It's a Wonderful Life_, rather than Bedford Falls being worse off from George's absence, Punxsutawney is better off with Phil's presence. Routine days require routine acts of kindness and Phil and the entire town collectively benefit from it. Phil is a born-again humanist, one who rescues himself from himself, escaping a solipsistic rotation of mutually-destructive behaviour simply by being a good Samaritan. The forecast: many rewarding days of sunshine. I always had a bit of a problem with the ending. That the cycle of unhappiness only ends when the guy gets the girl. But now I see that getting the girl was coincidental (and symbolic). Before he gets the girl he has to get himself. That's how you put a reverse spin on a downward spiral. The girl is now able to love the boy because he is love-worthy. The boy could be anyone. A politician. A corporation. You.

K

Kamurai

@Kamurai

2021-06-23

Fantastic watch, will watch again, and do recommend. Bill Murray carries this time-shift-loop adventure in hilarious form. The writing is excellent with a "redeemable protagonist" trope mixed in. The movie is creative with it's divergent time lines and even manages to maintain proper story arcs as Phil continues to loop. The supporting cast is wonderful in each of their roles, and manage to do repeat acting excellently. This was a popularizing (if not a birth) to a genre, everyone should have watched this movie at some point.

W

Wuchak

@Wuchak

2021-06-23

_**Going ’round and ’round the mountain with Bill Murray and Andie MacDowell**_ A curmudgeonly weather reporter from Pittsburgh (Bill Murray) has to report on the Groundhog Day festivities at Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, for the fifth year in a row. He soon finds himself in some kind of strange time warp. Andie MacDowell plays a new producer for the network who joins him on the trek, along with Chris Elliott as the cameraman. “Groundhog Day” (1993) is a dramedy/fantasy with some romance about a person who has lost the joy of living and become a cranky, arrogant jerk. Is he too far gone to change? The movie’s equal parts amusing and profound. The theme revolves around getting stuck in a rut in life and desperately trying to find the way OUT. Meanwhile the woodchuck is cute. Beyond MacDowell on the female front, Marita Geraghty plays a potential date for Murray’s character; you might remember her from the Seinfeld episode “The Big Salad” as Margaret. But it’s the stunning Sandy Maschmeyer as his ‘French Maid’ date at the theater that steals the show in a brief scene. The film runs 1 hour, 41 minutes, and was shot in Woodstock, Illinois, which is just northwest of Chicago, and points nearby: Algonquin (opening scene), Rockford (quarry), Waukegan and Cary (interiors). Some stuff was done in the backlot of Universal Studios, along with establishing shots of Pittsburgh. GRADE: B-

R

RalphRahal

@RalphRahal

2025-02-15

‬⁩‬⁩Groundhog Day is one of those movies that never really gets old, no matter how many times you watch it. The premise is simple yet brilliant, a man finds himself reliving the same day over and over, but what makes it so engaging is how well the story unfolds. The pacing is solid, with a decent start that smoothly transitions into the second act, keeping things interesting without dragging. The buildup leads to a heartwarming and satisfying climax that feels well-earned rather than forced. Bill Murray absolutely owns this role, delivering a performance that perfectly balances sarcasm, frustration, and subtle character growth. His comedic timing is spot-on, making the humor feel natural rather than overacted. Andie MacDowell is a great counterpart, bringing warmth and sincerity to the screen, while the supporting cast adds to the charm without feeling like background noise. The script is sharp, filled with witty dialogue and comedic moments that don’t rely on cheap gags. It’s a rare comedy that manages to be both entertaining and meaningful without losing its fun. The directing by Harold Ramis is excellent, keeping the repetition from feeling repetitive. Each cycle through the day is presented with enough variation and energy to keep the audience engaged. Cinematography isn’t flashy, but it does what it needs to, capturing the small-town setting with just the right balance of warmth and dreariness, depending on the mood of the scene. The framing and editing make the time loop feel seamless rather than repetitive, which is key for a movie like this. The score complements the film well, though it’s not the kind of soundtrack you’d find yourself listening to on its own. It enhances the mood, subtly shifting as the story progresses. Sound design also plays a crucial role, reinforcing the sense of déjà vu without making it tiresome. Overall, Groundhog Day is a well-crafted movie that blends comedy, heart, and an engaging story into something truly timeless. It’s the kind of film that reminds you why some classics stay relevant, and honestly, I miss seeing more movies like this today.