Ghost Waits - A

Director Adam Stovall utilized several stylistic features to reinforce this unique premise:

The film subverts traditional horror tropes by reimagining the haunting process as a professional career with specific operational structures: A Ghost Waits

: Much of the plot tension stems from Jack and Muriel being at "cross-purposes"—Jack is hired to fix the house for new tenants, while Muriel is employed to keep them out. Artistic Presentation Director Adam Stovall utilized several stylistic features to

: Ghosts like Muriel are essentially employees "assigned" to properties to ensure they remain vacant. Their "haunting" is a job performance metric. : When Muriel struggles to remove Jack, the

: When Muriel struggles to remove Jack, the bureaucracy sends in a "reinforcement" ghost named Rosie . Rosie represents the "modern" haunting style—snappier and more aggressively terrifying—contrasting with Muriel's more "classic" or traditional methods.

: Muriel answers to a supervisor, Ms. Henry , who monitors her effectiveness. If a ghost fails to scare away a tenant, it is viewed as a job performance failure.

In the 2020 film , the narrative revolves around an unconventional relationship between a handyman named Jack and a "spectral agent" named Muriel . The film's standout "feature" is its portrayal of the afterlife as a mundane, corporate-style bureaucracy. The Corporate Afterlife Feature