It's that day of the year again: when Punxsutawney Phil the groundhog (seer of seers, prognosticator of etc etc) pokes his head out of his hole and blah blah blah something about the weather.
The point is, it's Groundhog Day - the day Bill Murray fans gather around the world, hold hands and share their love of his crumply face. Join us in our celebration…
Caddyshack (1980). Is this where the crumples came from? A youth spent gurning like a tranquilized sharpei?
Ghostbusters (1984). Don't trust that smile, fella.
Ghostbusters 2 (1989). Where did all the crumples go? He was crumplier in the first Ghostbusters. It's almost… supernatural.
Groundhog Day (1993). "I'm a god. I'm not the God. I don't think…"
What to Read Next
The Royal Tenenbaums (2001). That beard transforms him. It does though, doesn't it? Doesn't it, though?
Coffee And Cigarettes (2003). He's reached the crumply tipping point here, transitioning from mid-period mainstream comedy crumple to latter-day arthouse crumple.
Broken Flowers (2005). The exasperation is palpable. Ten years earlier, a rant would have followed, but late-period Bill is all about the silences.
Get Low (2009). Is that moustache dyed? Yeah, it's dyed. That's a dyed moustache. Well, everyone gets old eventually.
Of course, while Bill's movie face is good, don't forget that his actual life is even better – catch up on his awesomely eccentric behaviour here and check out what he and his fellow Ghostbusters have been up to lately.
Editor, Digital Spy Chris has over 25 years' experience as a writer and editor, having worked as a journalist covering TV and movies since the '90s. Starting out as a TV listings editor at the Press Association, he was quickly hired by the nascent Heat magazine, where he rose to become Senior Editor, interviewing the likes of Simon Cowell, Boris Johnson and Paris Hilton. Over the years he has written about entertainment with clarity and wit for Heat, Elle, Q, The Telegraph and of course Digital Spy, and has served many times as a judge in the Royal Television Society awards. He has written and recorded a novelty single with Lord Lloyd-Webber, written scripts for the National TV Awards, made Noel Edmonds cry, accidentally punched an Inbetweener and stolen a small piece of rubble from the Battle of Hogwarts movie set. (They can't have it back.) LinkedIn




















