John Young, creator of West Chester Guerilla Drive-In, poses for a photo with a copy of the film Ghostbusters inside Fort Mifflin in Philadelphia on Friday May 29, 2009. For the last four years or so, the 38-year-old Web developer has been showing 16mm films from a 1970s school projector mounted on the sidecar of his 1977 BMW motorcycle. He's presented more than a dozen movies at locations suited for the theme: "Meatballs" at a canoe rental center, "Caddyshack" on a golf course, and most recently, "Ghostbusters" at Fort Mifflin, a favorite haunt of paranormal investigators. AP Photo logo AP Photo 6 months ago

John Young, creator of West Chester Guerilla Drive-In, poses for a photo with a copy of the film Ghostbusters inside Fort Mifflin in Philadelphia on Friday May 29, 2009. For the last four years or so, the 38-year-old Web developer has been showing 16mm films from a 1970s school projector mounted on the sidecar of his 1977 BMW motorcycle. He's presented more than a dozen movies at locations suited for the theme: "Meatballs" at a canoe rental center, "Caddyshack" on a golf course, and most recently, "Ghostbusters" at Fort Mifflin, a favorite haunt of paranormal investigators.