The Ghost in the Old Mill Tavern

(This is another version of the script that I intend to film shortly)

 

SCENE 1: Old Mill Tavern – evening

 

EST: Old Mill exterior

 

 

-- Interior shot of Tommy, the bartender, wiping down the bar with tavern reflected in the mirror behind him.

-- Various bar shots

-- Shot of someone at the jukebox playing a selection

-- Shot of Ken and Hank seated at one of the tables.

-- over the shoulder shot of Ken

 

KEN:

            I don’t know how it happened, Hank, it just did.

            And I can’t tell you how sorry I am.

 

(Hank slumps forward, his head hitting the table hard)

 

            Hank?

            Are you all right?

 

(Long shot of Ken waving for Tommy)

 

            Tommy!

 

(Tommy comes over shaking his head)

 

TOMMY:

            Don’t tell me Hank has passed out again.

 

KEN:

            I don’t think he’s passed out

            I think he’s dead.

 

(long shot of table, Ken, Tommy in background, Hank in Foreground, an electrical charge rises from Hank’s slumped body and into the jukebox.)

 

(fade)

 

Scene Two: Funeral – Day light

 

Shots of exterior of church. Hearse. Graveyard burial.

Close up of Ken mourning.

 

(fade)

 

SCENE 3 Tavern night

 

(long shot of Tommy moving to a table to collect bottles. The bar is empty. The clock shows the time as 4 a.m.

-- match cut of Tommy at table.

-- shot of hand wiping the table with a rag.

-- shot of bottle moving out of his way.

-- reaction shot of Tommy looking puzzled.

-- medium shot of him shrugging

-- close up of his hand and rag

-- bottle moves again

-- reaction shot of him looking startled

-- shot of jukebox coming on with warbly voice

-- reaction shot of Tommy’s face concerned then stunned as he looks off street.

-- POV shot of Hank’s ghost appearing.

-- reaction shot of Tommy

 

TOMMY:

            I’ll be a monkey’s uncle.

 

(fade)

 

SCENE 4: Ken’s bedroom – early morning

 

-- shot of phone ringing

-- shot of clock saying 4:15 a.m.

-- very close shot of Ken’s eyes opening

-- medium match cut of him in bed reaching off screen

-- shot of telephone ringing and hand grabbing receiver

-- close shot of him pulling the receiver to his hear

 

KEN:

            Hello?

 

(Cross cut to Tommy with phone at bar)

 

TOMMY:

            I want you to get down here, Kenny

 

KEN: (squinting off screen – shot of clock – then Ken’s face again)

            But It’s four thirty in the morning

 

TOMMY:  (back to Tommy)

            I know what time it is.

            But Hank’s haunting my bar and since he’s your friend, you’ve got to get him out of here.

 

KEN: (cross cut back)

            All right. I’ll be there first thing after work tomorrow.

 

(fade)

 

scene 5: OLD MILL TAVERN – EVENING

 

-- external shot of the bar with 1950s car parked out front.

 

-- Ken and Pauly walk through tables and settle at one.

-- match cut of Ken at table lifting his hand to wave off screen

-- eye line match of Tommy waving back from behind bar.

-- two shot of Ken and Pauly at table.

-- Tommy enters frame

-- shot of Tommy looking down

 

TOMMY:

            About time you got here.

            My customers have been complaining all night

 

(shot of Ken looking up)

 

KEN

            About what?

 

(shot of Tommy)

 

TOMMY:

            Your friend, the ghost, of course.

(various shots around the bar with Tommy voice bridge)

            He’s been causing havoc all night, moving glasses when people try to pour beer in them.

 

(Three shot of table with Pauly and Ken seated and Tommy standing)

 

PAULY

            Sounds like Hank, all right

 

(solo of Pauly)

            But are you sure it’s him and not some other spirit?

 

(shot of Pauly over the shoulder of Tommy looking down at him)

            Like some other guy you sold a bad drink to.

 

(reverse over Pauly’s shoulder looking up at Tommy)

 

TOMMY:

            Don’t get cute, Garley

 

(solo of Tommy)

 

            I know who it is.

 

(shot of Tom approaching jukebox.

-- shot of quarter in slot

-- shot of finger punching button

-- shot of full jukebox with warbly voice coming out of it

-- solo shot of Pauly

 

PAULY:

            That’s sweet of you, Tommy,

 

-- shot of table with Pauly and Ken with Tommy entering frame

 

            You putting Hank on the jukebox like that

 

(solo of Tommy looking down)

 

TOMMY

            I did no such thing

 

(over Pauly’s shoulder looking up at Tommy)

            That’s supposed to be the Rolling Stones.

 

(three shot of table)

            But it doesn’t matter what button you push, they call come up with Hank.

 

PAULY:

            And you want us to do what?

 

(solo of Tommy)

 

TOMMY:

            Get rid of him.

 

(over Tommy’s shoulder looking at Pauly)

 

PAULY:

            Don’t you think a ghost will lend a little character to this place?

 

(reverse over Pauly’s shoulder looking up at Tommy)

 

TOMMY:

            This place has got enough characters without Hank’s ghost scaring people off

 

(Three shot of table)

 

            Get rid of him

 

(Tommy exits shot)

 

-- solo shot of Pauly at table looking off screen towards Ken

 

PAULY  

            And you wonder why I hate this place

 

(over Ken’s shoulder shot looking at Pauly)

 

            So what now, bright boy?

 

KEN:

            We find out why he’s so upset and help him

 

(reverse over Ken’s shoulder of Pauly)

 

PAULY:

            We both know why he’s upset.

 

(solo shot of Pauly)

            That girl he was always going on and on about.

 

(solo shot of Ken looking down at his drink)

 

KEN

            Her name was Peggy.

 

(over Pauly’s shoulder of Ken)

 

            Hank never got over losing her

 

PAULY:

            So?

           

KEN:

            We should go find her and bring her back here

 

 

(fade)

 

SCENE 6 Greenwich Village day time

 

Montage of scenes from Washington Square, St. Marks Place, and eventually, to East. 5th Street, where Pauly and Ken come to the front door of Hank’s old haunt, then into the hall and up the stairs, pausing before a tenement door

 

 

PAULY:

            You must be out of your freakin mind.

            It’s been more than 30 years since they lived here.

            She can’t still be here.

 

KEN:

            Maybe not.

            But someone might remember here and where she went

 

(Ken knocks on the door. A muffled voice sounds from behind)

 

RESIDENT:

            Go away

 

KEN:

            I’m looking for Peggy.

            She used to live here.

 

RESIDENT:

            Go away or I’ll call the cops

 

(The door across the hall opens slightly, a nose and eye appear at the opening)

 

 

MAN:

            I know where she went

 

 

SCENE 6: Upstate New York – Day time.

 

ETAB: Ken and PAULY and KEN are standing in front of a deserted farm – foreclosure sign posted on the fence

 

PAULY:

            I told you, this was crazy.

            It’s been 30 years

            Communes are a thing of the distance past.

 

KEN:

            I suppose we can go back to the little town we passed through to see if anyone knows where this group went.

 

PAULY:

            You saw how the locals eyed us when we passed through.

            We start asking questions, they might burn us at the stake.

 

 

SCENE 7  the small town, afternoon

 

ETAB: Car parked in front of a new age shop called “the witch’s Brew”

 

MASTER: Ken and Pauly in car.

 

PAULY:

            You’re kidding me, right?

 

KEN:

            Peggy always fancied herself as a white witch.

            This would make sense.

 

SCENE 8: The shop – afternoon

 

ETAB:  a pan shot of a store full of dream catchers, fairy statues, dragons, unicorns and such.

 

MASTER: (Ken and Pauly at counter, behind which is a middle aged, but clearly still hippie-like Peggy stands)

 

 

PEGGY:

            I wondered how long it would take for you to find me

 

KEN:

            Hank’s dead.

 

PEGGY:

            I know, I felt his passing.

 

PAULY:

            The problem is he hasn’t completely passed.

 

PEGGY:

            What do you mean?

 

 

KEN:

            We think he’s haunting The Old Mill, and we need your help to set him free.

 

 

PEGGY;

            No way, I’m through with you guys.

            I have my own life here, a good life, more than I ever had back there.

 

KEN:

            You must have loved Hank once.

 

PEGGY:

            Of course, I loved him.

            The trouble is, he didn’t live me.

 

PAULY: (Snorts)

            You’re crazy, Lady.

            He went to the grave talking about nobody but you.

 

PEGGY: (After a pause)

            All right

            I’ll come

 

 

SCENE 9  Graveyard night

 

Etab: Gate to graveyard.

 

Master shot: Ken, Pauly and Peggy making their way through the graves to the right one

 

PAULY:

            Are you sure all this is necessary?

 

PEGGY:

            We have to get soil from his grave for this to work.

 

PAULY:

            Can’t we do this in day light?

 

PEGGY:

            It’s midnight or never.

 

(But when Peggy reaches out to pinch some dirt, skeletons and spirits come out of the dark.)


PAULY:

            RUN!

 

(the three flee as the monsters pursue until the three are out of the graveyard and leaning against a tree.)

 

PEGGY:

            It’s worse than I thought.

 

KEN:

            What do you mean?

 

PEGGY:

            There’s a dark force guarding Hank

            And it’s a woman.

 

SCENE 10: The old mill, evening

 

ETAB: A shot of the old mill with Ken’s old car parked out front.

            Interior of bar, others at table, reflected in the mirror,

            Table is covered with burning candles.

 

MASTER: Ken, Pauly, on either side with Peg in the middle of the round table.

 

TOM (Cut away to Bar)

            You sure this séance is necessary?

 

PAULY:

            If you want Hank to leave, this is the way Peg says we have to do it.

 

PEGGY: (in a trance-like state)

Hank’s here.

            So is the woman

 

KEN:

            Who is she?

 

PEGGY:

            An old lover?

            A demon?

            I can’t tell.

            But she’s latched onto Hank and won’t let him go.

KEN:

            So what do we do?

 

PEGGY:

            We have to take him away from her

 

KEN:

            How?

 

PEGGY:

            By showing how much we care about him

 

PAULY:

            For Christ’s sake

            Hank was a barfly.

            Nobody cares about him.

 

KEN:

            Of course, we care about him.

            That’s why we’re here.

 

PAULY:

            Then we’re the only friends he’s got – since he’s not around to buy anybody else a round a drinks.

 

KEN:

            There’s more to Hank than just the booze.

 

PAULY:

            Name something.

 

KEN:

            He liked to sing.

 

PAULY:

            Don’t I know it.

            He haunted me with that even before he died.

            If I heard him sing “Take me home Country Roads,” one more time, I might have killed him myself.

 

PEGGY:

            Maybe if we sing to him, he’ll get the message.

 

PAULY:
            No way I’m singing that song – even for Hank.

 

KEN:

            He used to sing other songs.

 

PEGGY:

            I remember him singing “Born Free”

 

PAULY:

            That’s just as bad.

 

PEGGY:

            If we don’t free him, things could get worse around here.

 

KEN: (lowering his voice and glancing over at Tommy who is washing the bar)

            Worse?

            How?

 

PEGGY:

            He could haunt more places and people.

 

PAULY:

            Why the hell would he do that?

 

PEGGY:

            For vengeance.

 

PAULY:

            Hank doesn’t have any gripes with me.

            I’m not the one who messed around behind his back

 

KEN:

            That’s old news, Pauly.

            I never meant for it to hurt him like it did.

 

PAULY:

            None the less, he ached over it – right up to the night he died.

 

PEGGY:

            This isn’t helping.

            Let’s just sing and set him free.

 

 

PAULY:

            And if I sing, he won’t haunt me?

 

PEGGY:

            He won’t haunt anybody.

            He’ll go home to a more peaceful place.

 

PAULY:

            Fine!

            I’ll sing.

            But you start, Ken.

 

KEN: (With a wavering uncertain voice)

            Born Free, as free as the wind blows

 

PAULY:

            As free as the grass grows

 

PEGGY:

            Free to follow your heart…

 

 

(The room starts to go nuts. Chairs fly. Bottles break. Tom yells from behind the bar)

 

TOMMY:

            You’re wrecking my place!

 

(But the three continue to sing, and then a evil woman’s face appears like a cloud exploding from one wall)

 

DEMON:

            No, you can not have him!

            He’s mine!

 

PEGGY:

            Keep singing!

            It’s working!

 

(The three keep singing. Camera cuts away to outside and above the roof as a single light rises, Hank’s face showing in the beam as it vanishes into the sky)

 

 

 

---- END ---

 


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