Summary

From an incredible Cinderella tarradiddle to the ill-famed burn “ This man has no d***,”Bill Murrayhas bring sight of screaming , quotable personal credit line to all his Hellenic movies . Murray first wear out out when he was cast to exchange Chevy Chase onSaturday Night Livein 1977 . After a couple of years on the show , he quickly transitioned to the liberal screen with star roles inMeatballs , Caddyshack , andStripes . Murray promptly became one of the most dear clowning movie stars in the creation .

He busted ghosts inGhostbusters , he invaded Richard Dreyfuss ’ living inWhat About Bob ? , and he reduplicate the same day over and over again for decades inGroundhog Day . When he startle collaborating with indie auteur like Wes Anderson , Sofia Coppola , and Jim Jarmusch , Murray won over the arthouse crowd , too . Murray is a sea captain of deadpan line obstetrical delivery , whether he ’s interpret the words of a great author like Harold Ramis or ad - libbing a sardonic one - lining on the spot .

Bill Murray ’s best movies showcase his key signature dash of deadpan comedy , but he has also proven to be a capable dramatic histrion over the yr .

Bill Murray looking ahead in The French Dispatch.

10"Don’t Cry In My Office."

Arthur Howitzer, Jr. in The French Dispatch (2021)

No one knows how to pen for Murray like Wes Anderson . Murray has been in all of Anderson ’s movies except forBottle RocketandAsteroid City , with part ranging from the title character ( Steve Zissou ) to a memorable cameo ( a passenger who lose the train inThe Darjeeling Limited ) . InThe French Dispatch , Anderson ’s affectionate cinematic ode to the passionate employment of journalists , Murray plays Arthur Howitzer , Jr. , the editor of the eponymous publication . Arthur is a classical Murray curmudgeon .

Murray ’s curmudgeonly characters have gotten even more uproariously acerbic with age

In one of his earlier aspect , he callously fires his copy boy . As the fired copy boy begins to shoot down up , Arthur severely reminds him not to cry in his office and points him to a sign above the room access that simply learn , “ No crying . ” Murray ’s curmudgeonly character have gotten even more hilariously acerb with age .

Bill Murray and Willem Dafoe in a submersible in The Life Aquatic

9"That’s Life In The Fast-Paced, Slam-Bang, Live-On-The-Razor’s-Edge, Laugh-In-The-Face-Of-Death World Of Junior League Soccer."

“Tripper” Harrison in Meatballs (1979)

Murray first introduced the moviegoing populace to his razor - penetrative wit and biting sensory faculty of sense of humor with his breakout role as“Trapper ” Harrison in the furore classical summer camp comedyMeatballs . Trapper is the epitome of Murray ’s sardonic aesthesia . He does n’t take anything seriously and he insults everyone who happens to pass over his path . Whatever come about at his anarchical summer camp , he always has a sarcastic epigram up his arm .

It ’s easy to see why this is the role that made Murray a star ; he steals every single tantrum he ’s in . When the campers and the advocate are take things too seriously , Trapper swoops in to turn it into a joke . He cue them that there ’s no use getting worked up or panic about anything , because nothing really matter – especially the cutthroat earth of third-year conference soccer .

8"You Want More Mysterious? I’ll Just Try And Think, ‘Where The Hell’s The Whisky?'"

Bob Harris in Lost in Translation (2003)

Murray first demonstrate his power to give a soulful , minimise striking execution with his crook as fading moving picture whiz Bob Harris in Sofia Coppola’sLost in Translation . Scarlett Johansson star as the neglected wife of a celebrity lensman . Like Bob , she ’s know finish shock and sombre during a protracted stay in Tokyo . These two souls find each other and make a powerful link . Lost in Translationis a really sad movie , but it also has some hilarious moment .

The role of Bob combines two of Murray ’s strongest suits : virtuoso big businessman and cynicism . Bob is in Tokyo to shoot a commercial message for Suntory ’s Hibiki whisky , and he ’d rather be doing anything else . He ’s being given direction to be more secret , but he points out that there ’s only so much mystique he can take to a glass of whisky .

7"You Can’t Go! All The Plants Are Gonna Die!"

John Winger in Stripes (1981)

Murray ’s military farceStripesbegins with his character John Winger , a Louisville taxi driver , sustain through the worst day of his life . He lose his job , his car , his apartment , and his girlfriend Anita all in the infinite of 24 hour . Anita leaves John because she ’s grown fed up with his immatureness . As she leaves , he begs her to stay because if she goes , “ All the plant are gon na die ! ”

This is a great argumentation because it represent why Anita is leaving John in the first stead . She ’s leaving him because he ’s immature , and he directly admits that he ca n’t take care of his own plant and she ’s the only one who irrigate them , raise her point that she ’s the only grown - up in the relationship . This prompts John to search some discipline and responsibility by join the military machine .

6"What Would Be The Scientific Purpose Of Killing It?" “Revenge.”

Steve Zissou in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004)

Although it was n’t appreciate in its meter , The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissouis a unambiguously wonderful , deep dissemble movie – and one of Wes Anderson ’s very best . It ’s a sport , capricious , absurdist comedy and a restrained , touching drama all at once . Steve is the ultimate Bill Murray role : he ’s a zany , deadpan comic personality like Peter Venkman and a soulful , melancholic dramatic character like Bob Harris rolled into one .

Steve has some of the dry one - liner of Murray ’s vocation . In the curtain raising panorama , he attends the festival of his latest documentary , about the “ jaguar shark ” that corrode his good friend Esteban . At a Q&A after the film , when the fete manager asks what he ’ll do next , Steve says he ’s go bad to hunt down the Felis onca shark and kill it . The festival director earnestly asks what would be the scientific determination of killing an endangered mintage andSteve replies , equally seriously , “ Revenge . ”

Although largely not appreciated on its initial departure , Wes Anderson ’s The Life Aquatic has since become a cult classic . Here are its best quote .

Belle superimposed in front of an angry mob in Beauty and the Beast

5"That Is One Nutty Hospital."

Jeff Slater in Tootsie (1982)

Murray is n’t the genius ofTootsie(the star of the film is Dustin Hoffman , play a struggling player who disguises himself as a woman to shoot down a part in a soap opera ) , so Murray ’s part is n’t burdened with a transformative journey to become a better mortal . As Hoffman ’s roomy who gets swing out up in the hijinks , Murraycan just stick out on the sidelines and make sarcastic remark – in other words , what Murray does best . And he has some of the best line in the motion picture .

As Murray watches the programme , he has the arrant response : “ That is one nutty hospital . ”

4"Phil? Phil Connors!"

Ned Ryerson in Groundhog Day (1993)

The funniest line inGroundhog Dayisn’t in reality spoken byMurray ’s role Phil Connors ; it ’s speak to him by Stephen Tobolowsky ’s pesky insurance salesman , Ned Ryerson . Murray has plenty of screaming lines inGroundhog Day , but Tobolowsky steals the show as everyone ’s bad nightmare . Ned went to high schooling with Phil and has adoring memory of their supposed friendship , but Phil does n’t even recognize him .

Phil is condemn to reprise this bunglesome campaign - in every single day for an timelessness . Every unmarried Clarence Shepard Day Jr. , when he steps outside his hotel , he hears Ned shout , “ Phil ? Phil Connors ! ” and has to go through the whole endless catch - up all over again . Phil ’s conversations with Ned capsulise the existential hell in which he ’s trammel . Tobolowsky gives a pitch - utter portrayalof an annoying hanger - on who continues to pester someone who just wants to be left alone .

3"Take Dead Aim On The Rich Boys."

Herman Blume in Rushmore (1998)

Murray ’s long - standing collaboration with Wes Andersonbegan when he played miserable industrialist Herman Blume in the cult get - of - long time comedyRushmore . Rushmoregave Murray ’s life history a 2nd life as he went from a leading Isle of Man in studio apartment drollery to a respected thespian in indie celluloid . Blume is introduce at the first of the movie giving a commencement spoken language at the titulary prep schoolhouse . Rather than feed the common inspirational pep talk , Blume aerate his rancor for all the kids who maturate up with a argent spoonful in hand .

Blume is a millionaire now , but he did n’t grow up rich , and he hat anyone who did . So , he tells the students who get into Rushmore on merit alone , like Max Fischer , to “ take dead aim on the rich boys . ” “ Remember , they can buy anything , but they ca n’t bribe backbone . ”

2"What An Incredible Cinderella Story."

Carl Spackler in Caddyshack (1980)

Murray ’s whole “ Cinderella story ” soliloquy from his prefatory scene inCaddyshackis pure 24 - kt comedy gold . He delivers the soliloquy in a spot - on belief of a sports observer detailing the inspirational tarradiddle of how a lowly greenskeeper rise through the ranks to become a champion golfer vie against the world ’s finest at the Masters Tournament . This words is then hilariously countermine when Murray swings the club and smashes up a beautifully tended flowerbed . He ’s not a Masters champion at all ; he ’s just a simple - apt greenskeeper violent death time .

What makes this screaming soliloquy even more telling is thatMurray famously improvise the whole thing . Any other comic doer would be lucky to delivera performance this electric automobile with scripted dialoguethey’d been rehearsing for months . It ’s one of the honest examples of Murray ’s unparalleled comedic mastermind .

1"Yes, It’s True… This Man Has No D***."

Peter Venkman in Ghostbusters (1984)

Murray was utterly placed inthe cast ofGhostbusters . Whereas Dan Aykroyd ’s Ray Stantz is the passionate team leader and Harold Ramis ’ Egon Spengler has an unironic obsession with spores , molds , and fungus , Murray ’s Peter Venkman is a happy - go - lucky quipster who does n’t take anything seriously . Venkman ’s sardonic one - line drive provided the motion picture with some of its funniest here and now – like the Ghostbusters ’ encounter with meddling bureaucrat Walter Peck at the mayor ’s office .

Ray tells the mayor they would ’ve contained the ghost if the grid had n’t been shut off by “ d***less over there , ” advert to Peck . The city manager asks if this is true and a beautifully deadpan Venkman say , “ Yes , it ’s straight … this man has no vitamin D * * * . ” This might beBill Murray ’s funniest movie quote , because the punchline is crass and juvenile , but the construction of the antic is wise , because it playact on context .

Collage of Bill Murray in The Life Aquatic, Ghostbusters, and Caddyshack

Bill Murray in Meatballs

Bill Murray as Bob Harris in a tuxedo holding a glass of whiskey in Lost in Translation

Bill Murray and Harold Ramis in army uniforms in Stripes

Steve Zissou (Bill Murray) and Ned (Owen Wilson) pointing while Jane (Cate Blanchett) stands next to them and smile in the life aquatic with steve zissou

Bill Murray in Tootsie

Bill Murray as Phil Connors and Stephen Toblowsky as Ned Ryerson in Groundhog Day

Bill Murray delivering a commencement speech in Rushmore

Bill Murray laying in front of a gopher in Caddyshack.

Bill Murray talking on the radio as Peter Venkman in Ghostbusters

Movies

Bill Murray