A 1993 film directed by Ron Underwood and starring RobertDowneyJr. In 1959, four people riding on a bus and the bus driver get killed in a crash. The bus crashed into a car with a woman going into labor. The bus driver ascends to {{Heaven}} while the other four get stuck anchored to the newborn baby. The baby is named Thomas, and only he can see the four of them. After seven years of being his invisible friends, their effect on him is noticed and Thomas is about to be sent into a psychiatric hospital, so they resolve to become invisible to him so they don't ruin his life.

Come 1993, Thomas is a liquidator at a bank with the ghosts always watching. Then, one day, the bus driver comes back and informs them that their time is up, and they have only a few days to resolve all of their unfinished business.

The four ghosts are:

* Harrison Winslow (Charles Grodin): A singer who couldn't bring up the courage to audition.
* Penny Washington (Alfre Woodard): A woman who never got to say goodbye to her kids on the way to work.
* Milo Peck (TomSizemore): A thief who was killed before he got the chance to go straight
* Julia (Kyra Sedgewick): A waitress who let her true love get away.
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!!This movie provides examples of

* AfterlifeExpress: The bus
* DeadPersonConversation: Premise of the movie.
* DistractedByTheSexy: What leads to the accident that kills the four people.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Bob Newhart is seen in the 1959 section (played by his actual son!)
* NotSoImaginaryFriend: The ghosts.
* OffscreenAfterlife: We only ever see the five dead people in this world.
* {{Psychopomp}}: The bus driver.
* {{Reincarnation}}: The reason why it's suddenly urgent for the ghosts to finish their business - they're needed because new babies are being born soon.
* SharingABody: The ghosts borrow Thomas's body to resolve their unfinished business.
* UnfinishedBusiness: Each of the ghosts has some - it's pretty much the main plot of the film.
* VisibleInvisibility: The ghosts are invisible to the other characters (apart from Thomas), but the audience can see them just fine.
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