Watched: 04/28/2024
Format: AMC+/ Shudder trial
Viewing: First
Director: Lesley Manning
So, I was watching the Half In the Bag guys discuss Late Night With the Devil, and they brought up a BBC TV special (that for our purposes I'm calling a movie) from 1992. I'd heard of Ghostwatch and seen it cited multiple places over the years, but I couldn't say exactly where or when. What I recalled was that, much like the Mercury Theatre's famed War of the Worlds Halloween radio play that emulated a real broadcast, Ghostwatch did same on BBC, but with video, presaging both found footage movies like The Blair Witch Project, and the frenzy for supernatural investigation reality TV shows that I feel started with Ghost Hunters (which I watched, and there's a whole arc there).
If I took Late Night With the Devil to task for not sticking with the bit, and it making things not work as a movie (and keep it from ever feeling scary) I'm doubling down on that idea. Ghostwatch is clearly staged - the line delivery is too smooth, things are happening quickly and conveniently, etc... But, dammit, they commit to the bit. And they hired presenters instead of actors in key roles.
A few things that make this work: the show originally ran on BBC on Halloween night 1992. We were only a few years away from TV stunts like Al Capone's Vault at this time, wherein cameras would go live to some extraordinary event (although as someone who watched the vault business live, I can say - it could be a tremendous bust). The show was hosted by Michael Parkinson, a legitimate television presenter. This would have been a bit like having Barbara Walters host your made up Halloween special here in the US. And they also have real presenters Mike Smith in studio and Sarah Greene as their reporter in the field - and Smith and Greene were well known TV presenters/ personalities already in 1992.