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"Ghost Town" co-writer and director David Koepp shares Gervais' skepticism about spirits and hauntings. "I don't believe in ghosts, but I believe fervently in ghost stories," said Koepp, who also made the ghost tale "Stir of Echoes." "They have this bigger-than-life premise that people will accept and drama that can be neatly structured around it, because they're about loss and longing and love. They touch on so many deeply felt human emotions." Among Koepp's favorite ghost stories: the 1930s and '40s supernatural fantasies "Topper," "Blithe Spirit" and "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir." For scary ghost stories, he prefers the classics over modern Hollywood's special-effects extravaganzas, hushed tales such as 1963's "The Haunting," whose fear factor arose more from what remained unseen than any actual manifestations. "There's another good one, the Ray Milland movie 'The Uninvited.' It has one of the best ghost or haunted-house moments I remember," Koepp said. A failed songwriter, Milland's character initially is charmed by his new working space, an attic in a seaside house, and he gushes enthusiastically about how he'll be able to write there. Over the course of a few minutes, though, some sinister presence changes his mood. "He starts saying stuff like, 'Well, who am I kidding, I'm never going to write a song. I'm a miserable failure.' By the end of this four-page scene, he's sort of looking down at the rocks on the beach and contemplating suicide, and he just looks and says,
'I hate this room,'" Koepp said. "It's great, because it's the house working on you. Great. No special effects. Just creepy."
[Associated
Press;
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