In Ghostbusters (1984) there's a running joke about Rick Moranis's character locking himself out of his apartment. Later, he becomes the Keymaster, and doors literally fly open for him.

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image showing In Ghostbusters (1984) there's a running joke about Rick Moranis's character locking himself out of his apartment. Later, he becomes the Keymaster, and doors literally fly open for him.

JelloDarkness on July 25th, 2018 at 19:15 UTC »

There's something very strange about that man...

Listen, I'm usually very psychic, and I'm have a terrible feeling that something awful is going to happen to you. I'm afraid you're going to die.

necromundus on July 25th, 2018 at 19:22 UTC »

I just thought "Keymaster" and "Gatekeeper" were low-key innuendo.

sweetcuppingcakes on July 25th, 2018 at 19:41 UTC »

I also read that Dan Aykroyd really didn't want to do Ghostbusters II because he and Harold Ramis felt the first one should be a contained thing with a conclusion. They only did it because the studio kept putting pressure on them after the success of the animated series and the first film.

Later, in 2014, he said he wanted Ghostbusters to be a whole Universe with tons of sequels and spinoffs like the MCU and DCU.