Plot Structure (The Frighteners) The Frighteners (1996)
Quadrant. Better tools, sufficient — classical comedy / redemption arc.
Initial approach. Use the gift as a hustle. Run ghost partners as employees. Keep the living, the dead, and Debra at arm's length. Be the operator at the edge of death, never inside it.
Post-midpoint approach. Inhabit the gift as a calling. Cross willingly into the death-realm. Take the stakes onto your own body. Be the partner — to Lucy, to the dead, to the case.
Equilibrium. Frank arrives at the Lynskey house to "exorcise" a haunting his ghost crew has staged. The patter is fluent — "Persistent residue of the departed, always a problem this time of year" — and Lucy pays. He's in his element: practiced spiel, fluent disrespect for Cyrus, Stuart, and the Judge, professional irritation with the Judge's drinking. The ledger is the equilibrium.
Inciting Incident. During the Lynskey exorcism Frank sees the number 37 glowing on Ray's forehead. Two days later, in the street outside the house, Frank meets Ray's confused ghost: Ray has just died of a "heart attack" on his rowing machine. A Reaper Frank does not own is in the field.
Resistance / Debate. Frank tries to keep running his cons (the Waterhouse house), is dressed down by Magda for "preying on the bereaved," watches Ray's burial from the graveyard, and is warned by Sheriff Walt that the FBI is now interested in the heart-attacks pattern. He doesn't want the case.
Commitment. At the restaurant where Lucy was supposed to celebrate her wedding anniversary, Frank sits across from her and stops conning. He tells her he was in a car accident five years ago and can see spirits; he relays — honestly — Ray's confession that he lost her sixteen thousand dollars on a bad investment. The off-ramp closes on the con-man's stance toward Lucy.
Rising Action / Initial Approach. Frank runs the case the way he runs the cons — work through his ghost crew, keep himself peripheral, treat Cyrus, Stuart, and the Judge as field assets. He warns Lucy, gathers fragments, dodges the FBI agent Dammers, leans on his ledger.
Escalation 1. At the library where Magda is working late, the Judge takes possession of Frank's body to fight the Reaper — and is destroyed for it. Magda is killed in the same scene (victim #40). The first crew member off the board, and the threat now reaches the people Frank knows.
Midpoint. Frank lies in a domestic freezer while Lucy lowers his body temperature to clinical death so his spirit can leave his body and chase the Reaper directly. The transactional operator becomes a participant. The new approach is taken in one bounded scene: Frank crosses the threshold he had been monetizing.
Falling Action / new approach. In spirit form Frank pursues the Reaper through the hospital, damages its form, sees the face underneath: Johnny Bartlett. He returns to his body, learns Patricia has been using Bartlett's ashes to summon him from Hell, and reorients the case around the living partner-on-Earth.
Escalation 2. At the Bradley house Patricia is revealed as Bartlett's active partner, kills her own mother in front of Frank and Lucy, and takes the urn of Bartlett's ashes. The case reframes from "stop a revenant" to "separate the partner from the partner."
Climax. In the abandoned hospital chapel, Patricia strangles Frank until he is dead. Frank's freed spirit catches Patricia's soul as it leaves her body and drags her — and Bartlett's — through the demonic worm-mouth that opens beneath them, returning both to Hell.
Wind-Down. Frank's spirit arrives in Heaven, reunites with Cyrus, Stuart, and Debra, is told to be happy, and is restored to life. Some time later he demolishes the unfinished house and is with Lucy, who can now also see spirits. The new equilibrium incorporates the shift: the gift is shared, the grief is released, the partner is alive and seeing too.