All the Groundhog Days: Every possible answer to the movie's biggest question (2024)

All the Groundhog Days: Every possible answer to the movie's biggest question (1)

Bottomless coffee: Bill Murray casts caution to the wind, to the horror of Andie MacDowell, in 'Groundhog Day.'Credit: columbia pictures / Getty Images

Well, it's Groundhog Day. Again. And that means we're up here in our own private Gobbler's Knobs, rewatching the classic Harold Ramis movie, starring Bill Murray and Andie MacDowell, about a selfish weatherman trapped in a time loop until he learns how to be of service to his fellow humans.

Which, in turn, means it's time to ask the question that has sat in the minds of viewers since 1993: How many times does weatherman Phil Connors repeat the same day in his purgatorial Punxsutawney?

The question is repeatedly asked, but is not — cannot — be categorically answered. Screenwriter Danny Rubin has one vague answer. Ramis had another, which he changed. The studio had a third. And an army of online sleuths think they've got it figured out, too, often based on the most tenuous theories of how long it takes to master skills like ice sculpting. (This is the internet, after all.)

Like every other movie fan, I have my own preferred answer. But in the spirit of service, I present it in the context of every major answer ever mooted, and what evidence that answer relies upon. Beginning with the only one that cannot be true anymore:

14 days

Columbia Pictures' notes on the movie included a request that the number of days in Phil's time loop be cut way down. "According to them, Phil couldn’t be stuck in the time loop for longer than two weeks because it was just too much for the audience to handle," Danny Rubin says in How to Write Groundhog Day (a highly entertaining book on how the movie came into existence and was shepherded by many parents).

This was, after all, a way less nerdy era. Most U.S. audiences had never come across Doctor Who or time travel tropes in general. I can't have been the only viewer to have watched it with an American family that was initially baffled by the bar scene, the first of many in the film that repeats dialogue multiple times. Keeping the total number of days to 14 may, in a 1990s studio exec's thinking, have been more palatable to the average sitcom audience.

Luckily, Harold Ramis stuck to his guns, and produced a movie in which the answer is more ambiguous — but definitely longer than two weeks.

Between 34 and 44 days

The first step in figuring out Phil's time loop is to answer an apparently simple question: How many Groundhog Days are shown on screen? But the answer is not as clear as you might think. You find yourself forced to make many interpretations about the available evidence. For example:

Does Phil sabotage the TV van to keep Rita in town the same day he hits on her while stuffing his face in the diner, or is that the next day? Does Rita slap Phil's face, rebuffing his desperate advances, once per day or multiple times a day? (There are eight slaps in total.) Does he smash his bedside clock for the third and final time the day before he kidnaps the groundhog, or the same day? Is his corpse in the morgue the same Phil that fell from the tower (it's unusually clean if so)? Is the day Phil brings coffee and pastries to his crew the same day he's sitting in the diner reading and listening to Rachmaninov, and is that also the same day he starts piano lessons?

By my count, the most miserly interpretation of the visual evidence is 34 days. The most expansive is 44 days. But if we tweak the count just a little in our interpretation of the above questions, we get to my favorite answer of all.

42 days

This is also the number you get if you take one popular online account of number of days on screen (36), and add the number of suicide attempts Phil mentions but are not seen ("stabbed, shot, poisoned, frozen, hung...burned").

To stop the count at 42, you'd have to assume that Phil was a natural at the various skills he develops (the perfect robbery, card-tossing, ice sculpture, piano). But there is still a certain poetry in sticking to 42, and not just because it's Douglas Adams' answer to the ultimate question of Life, the Universe and Everything.

Why? Because 42 days is six weeks. And what did the groundhog predict? Six more weeks of winter.

In a movie with more than its fair share of poetry quotes, a movie obsessed with just desserts, this is at least the most poetical and judicious answer.

8 years, 8 months, 16 days

This was the first major online estimate, one that hails from a widely-cited post on a blog named Wolf Gnards in 2008. It's also the first to include some creative accounting. Sure, Phil estimates his card-tossing skills as requiring at least six months to master, so that helps. But how long does it take to master the piano or ice sculpting? This being years before the popular "10,000 hours" theory of skill mastery gained hold in the public mind, Wolf Gnards ballparks the figure at three years apiece.

Ironically, the 10,000-hour skill-learning estimate — which was only ever supposed to be an average — comes from a paper published the same year as Groundhog Day, 1993. But it wasn't popularized until Malcolm Gladwell's book Outliers published at the end of 2008.

Ten years

This was Harold Ramis' figure that he had in his mind during shooting, the director (who died in 2014) said in his DVD commentary. However, Ramis upped his number in the wake of the Wolf Gnards estimate. "Allotting for the downtime and misguided years he spent, it had to be more like 30 or 40 years," Ramis told Heeb magazine. Which puts the total more in line with...

33 years, 350 days

In 2011, a WhatCulture editor made his own estimate that has been widely reported every year since. This time the 10,000-hour skill-learning concept was applied, as was an estimate of how long it would take Phil to plan the robbery, and taking him literally on one scene where he says he'd seen the fake movie "Heidi 2" a hundred times.

'More than one lifetime'

This is as close to a definitive answer as Danny Rubin gives us. His original intention, which Ramis nixed, was to have scenes showing Phil reading one page a day from an entire wall of books at his bed & breakfast, in order of placement — then starting over again at the first book.

"We already have plenty of stories generated by characters who have lived one lifetime," Rubin writes. "I wanted to see what more time would provide... It wasn’t important to me exactly how long it was, only that it exceeded a single lifetime."

Ultimately, Rubin was delighted by Ramis' more ambiguous screen version. And it's probably a good idea that the bookshelf scene was lost, or we'd have internet nerds spending years identifying and counting the page length of every book Phil reads.

10,000 years

This also wouldn't be the internet if fake news didn't circulate on a popular topic. The most false, when it comes to Groundhog Day, is the widely-reported notion that an early version of Rubin's script had Phil explicitly saying to Rita that he had been "waiting for you every day for 10,000 years."

SEE ALSO:

How the pandemic will change our relationship to time forever

Rubin was delighted by the idea that he'd written this even as he destroyed it: "I find that so incredibly cool that I put no effort into disputing it," Rubin wrote on his blog in 2008. "But it’s not true."

On his way to demolishing it, Rubin pauses to note that the figure of 10,000 years has "Buddhist overtones." Which is true — it's the length of the "third period in the life span of the dharma" before the Buddha will supposedly return to Earth in a new form.

So perhaps it's not surprising that this fake news would swirl around a movie that has seen many religious interpretations. In 2003, Ramis told the New York Times that Christian ministers contacted him first — purgatory and redemption being an important part of various church doctrines — and rabbis called next, and Buddhists after that.

Whichever doctrine you apply to Groundhog Day, then, it seems possible that religious scholars will still be arguing about the movie — and coming up with new estimates for the amount of time it shows — in another hundred centuries' time.

All the Groundhog Days: Every possible answer to the movie's biggest question (2)

Chris Taylor

Chris is a veteran tech, entertainment and culture journalist, author of 'How Star Wars Conquered the Universe,' and co-host of the Doctor Who podcast 'Pull to Open.' Hailing from the U.K., Chris got his start as a sub editor on national newspapers. He moved to the U.S. in 1996, and became senior news writer for Time.com a year later. In 2000, he was named San Francisco bureau chief for Time magazine. He has served as senior editor for Business 2.0, and West Coast editor for Fortune Small Business and Fast Company. Chris is a graduate of Merton College, Oxford and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He is also a long-time volunteer at 826 Valencia, the nationwide after-school program co-founded by author Dave Eggers. His book on the history of Star Wars is an international bestseller and has been translated into 11 languages.

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All the Groundhog Days: Every possible answer to the movie's biggest question (2024)

FAQs

What is the hidden message in Groundhog Day? ›

There is contentment and meaning to be found in even the worst of situations. Intentionally looking for the good things, even if you're simultaneously working to change the situation, can save you heartache, time, and money.

How many days did he live in Groundhog Day? ›

Well, a film blog has worked it out for you: 33 years and 350 days. WhatCulture.com calculated just how long Phil Connors spent in limbo back in 2013 to mark the film's 20th anniversary. Amazingly, the time equates to repeating the same day a torturous 12,395 times.

How many times did Phil Connors relive the same day? ›

Summary. Phil relives the same day approximately 12,400 times in Groundhog Day, equating to almost 34 years.

What was the meaning of the movie Groundhog Day? ›

Aside from plenty of laughs, “Groundhog Day” delivers powerful messages about change, love and being a good person. Phil is unable to break the time loop until he totally changes who he is.

Is Groundhog Day about God? ›

But now you know that Groundhog Day (at least the roots of Groundhog Day) once celebrated an important event in the early life of Jesus. The day commemorates the first New Testament promise that Christ would also be the Savior of the Gentiles. And here's hoping the groundhogs see shadows a mile long today.

What is the moral of the story Groundhog Day? ›

We only live in the present

Phil Connors is doomed to live the same day over and over for decades. There is no future for him, as the next day will still be the 2nd of February, Groundhog Day, and the past doesn't count. He can only live in the present. This is something that happens to us all the time, actually.

How did Phil break the loop? ›

On their date, Phil uses his newly honed skills at sculpture to carve Rita's perfect likeness into a column of snow. He sincerely professes his love and affection for her. Climactic Moment: Phil awakens, believing the day has reset, only to discovery Rita lying in bed with him. The repetitive cycle is broken.

Did Phil see his shadow in 2024? ›

(CBS) -- Groundhog Punxsutawney Phil did not see his shadow on Groundhog Day 2024, meaning an early spring is on the way. Like most Feb. 2s in the past 137 years, crowds gathered at Gobbler's Knob to hear Punxsutawney Phil make his prediction.

Did Phil save the old man? ›

Phil decides to use his knowledge of the loop to change himself and others: he saves people from deadly accidents and misfortunes and learns to play the piano, sculpt ice, and speak French. But regardless of his positive actions, he is unable to prevent a homeless old man from dying of natural causes.

How old is Punxsutawney Phil? ›

Punxsutawney Phil has two kids growing up in his 138-year-old shadow. The actor Al Pacino was 83 when he welcomed his fourth child. The rock star Mick Jagger was 73 when he had an eighth. And the meteorologically gifted rodent known as Punxsutawney Phil became a father for the first time at age 138.

Did the bartender know Groundhog Day? ›

I decided the bartender at the Pennsylvanian hotel is clearly aware of Phil's predicament (make note of his knowing looks and how quickly he serves them their favourite drinks), and that one of the Punxsutawney townspeople is clearly having an affair, as he can be seen visiting the Groundhog festival with his wife and ...

What town was Groundhog Day filmed in? ›

1: None of the scenes from the 1993 film Groundhog Day, starring Bill Murray and Andie MacDowell, were filmed in Punxsutawney, PA. Most of the film was shot in Woodstock, IL, which is close to Chicago, the home base of director Harold Ramis.

How long was Bill Murray stuck in Groundhog Day? ›

But for just how long was the character trapped in the time loop? Well, a film blog has worked it out for you: 33 years and 350 days. WhatCulture.com calculated just how long Phil Connors spent in limbo back in 2013 to mark the film's 20th anniversary.

How did Groundhog Day end? ›

After being stuck in the time loop for decades, Phil learns he has fallen in love with his producer Rita (Andie MacDowell) and confesses his feelings. The next morning, Phil wakes to find Rita in bed next to him on Feb. 3, the curse apparently broken.

Why did the days stop repeating in Groundhog Day? ›

Phil Connors learns to use his time to better himself and help others, ultimately breaking the Groundhog Day time loop. The number of times Phil lives through the time loop is not explicitly given, but it is implied to be longer than what is shown on screen.

What is the lesson in Groundhog Day? ›

There are times to be single-mindedly goal-oriented and times to be more accepting and receptive; cultivate the wisdom to tell how much of each is needed. If something is just not meant to be, as when Phil tried over and over to save the homeless man's life, all your efforts will not lead to the end you want.

What is the saying behind Groundhog Day? ›

It derives from the Pennsylvania Dutch superstition that if a groundhog emerges from its burrow on this day and sees its shadow, it will retreat to its den and winter will go on for six more weeks; if it does not see its shadow, spring will arrive early.

What is the implicit meaning of Groundhog Day? ›

The implicit meaning of the film Groundhog Day (Harold Ramis, 1993) would be just a movie where the main character Phil ( Bill Murray) is reliving the day over and over almost as if he is the director and can choose what the outcome will be.

Why was he stuck in Groundhog Day? ›

He gives a half-hearted report on the groundhog Punxsutawney Phil and the festivities. Contrary to his prediction, the blizzard strikes the area, preventing all travel out of Punxsutawney, and although he desperately searches for a way to leave, he is forced to spend the night in the town.

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