Here’s a feature-style look at What About Bob? (1991), focusing on its enduring appeal, performances, and themes. How a neurotic comedy became an unlikely manual for human connection In the summer of 1991, moviegoers were treated to a battle of wills unlike any other. On one side: Dr. Leo Marvin (Richard Dreyfuss), a smug, bestselling psychiatrist with a pristine lakeside vacation home and a brand-new book, Baby Steps . On the other: Bob Wiley (Bill Murray), his most persistent, unshakable, and seemingly unhinged patient. The result was What About Bob? — a comedy that, thirty-plus years later, still feels less like a simple farce and more like a strange, subversive fable about the tyranny of control and the liberating power of neediness.
The film’s comic engine is exquisite cruelty: Dreyfuss’s Marvin descending from smugness into sputtering, red-faced psychosis, while Murray’s Bob remains blissfully, annoyingly, triumphantly calm. The famous scene where Bob, at the town parade, is strapped to a mast on a small sailboat and shouts “I’m sailing!” as Marvin loses his mind on the dock is a masterpiece of comic reversal. The “sane” man is now the raving lunatic. The “patient” has never been freer. What About Bob
At its core, the film is a two-hander about the collision of two pathologies. Dr. Marvin is a narcissist who mistakes professional success for emotional health. His therapy methods are textbook; his empathy is a prop. When Bob, a bundle of phobias (germs, elevators, vomiting, leaving the house), follows him to his family’s vacation in Lake Winnipesaukee, Marvin doesn’t see a cry for help. He sees an invasion. Here’s a feature-style look at What About Bob
The film’s climax — Marvin holding a shovel, having faked his own death to scare Bob away, only to be arrested while Bob waves goodbye — is a darkly perfect ending. The professional is exposed as the dangerous one. The “crazy” man walks off with a new family, a new life, and a lesson Marvin could never teach: that healing begins when you stop pretending you’re fine and start taking real, wobbly, ridiculous steps toward another person. On one side: Dr
What About Bob? is not a subtle movie. It’s broad, loud, and occasionally cringe-inducing. But beneath the slapstick is a radical idea. Sometimes the most annoying person in the room is also the most honest. And sometimes the greatest threat to your carefully constructed life isn’t chaos — it’s someone who actually needs you.