The Sunday Rewatch: ‘Ghost World’

Before “main character energy” became a meme, there was Enid Coleslaw—green-haired, sarcastic, alienated, and iconic. This Sunday, we’re revisiting Ghost World (2001), the indie gem that nailed the weirdness of post-high school limbo long before social media could memeify it.

Directed by Terry Zwigoff and based on Daniel Clowes’ graphic novel, Ghost World is a cult classic that still hits in all the right awkward, funny, and soul-searching places.

At its core, the film is a coming-of-age story, but it stubbornly refuses to follow any conventional arc. Enid (Thora Birch) and her best friend Rebecca (a pre-superstar Scarlett Johansson) have just graduated high school and are stuck between the comfort of shared cynicism and the terrifying unknown of adulthood. They pull pranks, drift through diners and thrift stores, and eventually fixate on Seymour (Steve Buscemi), a middle-aged loner whose life seems just as off-track as theirs.

What makes Ghost World a perfect rewatch isn’t just its deadpan humor or razor-sharp dialogue—it’s the mood. That feeling of drifting, of being hyper-aware yet completely unsure of where you’re headed. It’s timeless, especially for creatives, outsiders, and anyone who’s ever felt too weird for the world they’re in.

Visually, the film pops with color and texture, thanks to its graphic novel roots. But there’s a melancholy underneath the kitsch—one that feels even more profound 20+ years later. In a world now obsessed with hustle culture and identity curation, Ghost World is a quiet, rebellious act of just… being.

So this Sunday, rewatch Ghost World. Remember what it felt like to be lost, sharp-tongued, and searching. It’s still weirdly comforting.

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