The Scotsman

Greg Hemphill’s haunted house tale set to send shivers down the nation’s spines

- By BRIAN FERGUSON bferguson@scotsman.com

He is best known as one half of the partnershi­p behind the hit Scottish comedy Still Game.

Now a haunted house story inspired by years of watching horror films in his basement is set to send shivers down the spines of his fans.

Greg Hemphill has mastermind­ed a new dark comedy about a band of Scottish ghostbuste­rs who get much more than they bargained at a rundown stately home.

His love of horror classics like Psycho, The Blair Witch Project, Don’t Look Now, The Wicker Man and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is reflected in a series of chilling sequences which build up to a nerve-shredding climax.

Long Night at Blackstone also lifts the lid on the behindthe-scenes fakery involved in TV shows exploring paranormal phenomena by turning the tables on a team of tricksters when they least expect it.

The cast includes Gregory’s Girl star John Gordon Sinclair, Taggart favourite John Michie, Scot Squad actress Julie Wilson Nimmo and Deacon Blue singer Lorraine Mcintosh.

Hemphill, who co-wrote Long Night at Blackstone with Donny Mcleary, deployed a real-life mansion for the BBC Scotland show, which goes out on Easter Monday, and has reunited the cast from his first feature-length drama, West Skerra Light, which focused on a cursed lighthouse.

In Long Night at Blackstone, Mcintosh plays Faye Bowers, the cynical yet convincing host of Ghost Hunt Live, which she fronts with Sinclair’s psychic sidekick Pat Tomorrow, another master of fakery.

Hemphill and Mcleary completely re-wrote their script after coming across 18th century Hunterston House, in Ayrshire, which stands in for the fictional Blackstone Manor, run by Michie’s sinister laird.

Hemphill said: “When we went there we just fell in love with it and rewrote the whole story around it. It literally did become a character. It was such a beautiful, atmospheri­c place. The original idea was to do a straight haunted house story. But as we started to work on it we thought we would put our own twist on it.

“It’s not really a parody of those paranormal activity shows. The story is just set in that world. I actually love them. There’s something hugely entertaini­ng about them. I wanted to doff my cap, in a way. It’s easy to be cynical about ghosts, so we thought we would have a bit of fun.

“We went away to stay by the sea in Elie, in Fife, and wrote it in the haar. We could start at ten in the morning and keep going until ten at night. If you do that you can have these amazingly productive days. You can immerse yourself in the story and when you go to bed it’s all you’re thinking about. It’s quite good fun for a couple of geeks like me and Donnie.”

Hemphill admitted he and Mcleary, who collaborat­ed previously on a musical inspired by the Scottish horror film The Wicker Man, had enjoyed creating subtle tributes to some of their favourite horror movie moments.

He added: “You really put them in for fans of the genre, but they really have to fit in with the story. Donnie and I spent 15 years in my basement watching horror movies every Sunday night. If you’re going to steal from anybody you should steal from the masters like Tobe Hooper, John Carpenter and Wes Craven. You like to put something in there that people will recognise.

“It’s a bit odd that there have not been more horrors made in Scotland, considerin­g the locations we have and the events that have happened here. Anywhere with as old a history as Scotland should be a great place to tell ghost stories. We really just need the industry to support that.

“We’d love to do a feature film. Donny and I are actually developing a script at the minute. We love the genre. It’s one of the few genres that benefits from having a low budget. You have to be inventive. What you don’t see and what the audience fills in with its imaginatio­n is even more scary. We didn’t really want to make an out-and-out horror film. Blood and guts coming into your living room is a bit weird unless you’ve gone out to find it yourself. If we’d made something with limbs getting cut off and chainsaws and all that kind of stuff, which is magic by the way, I think they’d have asked for the money back.

“We wanted to make something that people who are maybe a bit squeamish could still enjoy. It’s more of a dark and creepy story that you can watch late at night with the sound turned up and the lights down low.”

 ??  ?? Julie Wilson Nimmo, Lorraine Mcintosh and John Gordon Sinclair in Monday’s dark comedy about a group of Scots ghostbuste­rs, Long Night at Blackstone
Julie Wilson Nimmo, Lorraine Mcintosh and John Gordon Sinclair in Monday’s dark comedy about a group of Scots ghostbuste­rs, Long Night at Blackstone
 ??  ?? Greg Hemphill says he loves watching paranormal shows
Greg Hemphill says he loves watching paranormal shows

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