"The Ghost and Mr. Chicken" is a 1966 American comedy-drama film starring Don Knotts
as Luther Heggs, a newspaper typesetter who spends a night in a haunted
house, which is located in the fictitious community of Rachel, Kansas. The working title was Running Scared.
Theatrical Release Poster |
To increase newspaper sales, Luther is assigned to spend the night in
the house on the 20th anniversary of the murders. At midnight, Heggs
sees the old organ begin to play by itself, as well as other ghostly
happenings. His story gets the town abuzz and Nicholas Simmons (Philip Ober), nephew of the deceased couple, sues Heggs for libel.
In the courtroom, Heggs is made out to be a fool, but the judge
orders the courtroom to the Simmons house at midnight to allow Heggs to
prove his story. Nothing happens, and everyone leaves except for Heggs.
Soon after, when he notices the old organ playing again, Heggs discovers
Mr. Kelsey, the newspaper's janitor,
producing the creepy tune from an additional keyboard located under the
pipes. The typesetter and janitor then confront Nicholas Simmons, who
killed his aunt and uncle and has been trying to cover up the story all
this time. A secret passage from the study up to the organ loft had been
Simmons' alibi, and Mr. Kelsey was the last one who knew the secret.
Luther knocks Simmons out with a body slam, and the case is closed. At
the end of the film, Heggs marries his sweetheart, Alma Parker (Joan Staley)
and the church organ begins to play the same spooky tune that came from
the Simmons house, with the keys moving, but no one there.
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