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TWELVE MONKEYS |
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An original screenplay by |
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David Peoples |
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& |
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Janet Peoples |
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Inspired by |
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LA JETEE, a Chris Marker Film |
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Production Draft |
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June 27, 1994 |
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FADE IN: |
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INT. CONCOURSE/AIRPORT TERMINAL - BAY |
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CLOSE ON A FACE. A nine year old boy, YOUNG COLE, his eyes wide |
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with wonder. watching something intently. We HEAR the sounds of |
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the P.A. SYSTEM droning Flight Information mingled with the |
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sounds of urgent SHOUTS, running FEET, EXCLAMATIONS. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: twenty yards away, a BLONDE MAN is sprawled on |
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the floor, blood oozing from his gaudy Hawaiian shirt. |
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A BRUNETTE in a tight dress, her face obscured from YOUNG COLE'S |
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view, rushes to the injured man, kneels beside him, ministering |
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to his wound. |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, flanked by his PARENTS, their faces out of |
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view, as they steer him away. |
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FATHER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Come on, Son --this is no place for us. |
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YOUNG COLE resists momentarily, mesmerized by the drama. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: intermittently visible through a confusion of |
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FIGURES rushing through the foreground, the BLONDE MAN reaching |
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up and touching the cheek of the kneeling BRUNETTE in a gesture |
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of enormous tenderness, a gesture of farewell, while the P.A. |
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SYSTEM continues its monotonous monotone... |
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P.A. SYSTEM |
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Flight 784 for San Francisco is now |
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ready for boarding at inmate number |
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66578, Greely. |
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INT. PRISON DORMITORY/FUTURE - ETERNAL NIGHT |
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PRISON P.A. SYSTEM |
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--number 5429, Garcia -- number 87645, Cole... |
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COLE, late thirties, dark hair, comes awake in a bunk cage, one |
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of many stacked four high along both sides of a long dim |
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corridor. He blinks in the near dark, shaken, disoriented. |
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Then, as he "recovers" from his very vivid dream, WE GET OUR |
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FIRST LOOK AT HIS ENVIRONMENT...A WINDOWLESS UNDERGROUND WORLD OF |
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ETERNAL NIGHT SOMETIME IN THE FUTURE...AN ALMOST COLORLESS |
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"REALITY" OF BLURRED EDGES AND ECHOEY SOUNDS, MUCH MORE |
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"DREAMLIKE" THAN HIS DREAM. |
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Flashlights glare. In the half-light, COLE sees spooky figures, |
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GUARDS, moving among the locked bunk/cages. |
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COLE turns and whispers to the occupant of the next cage, JOSE... |
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COLE |
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Ssssst! Jose, what's going on? |
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JOSE's face is almost lost in shadow. What there is of it is |
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youthful. He's just a scared Puerto Rican kid! |
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JOSE |
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"Volunteers" again. |
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JOSE immediately rolls over and feigns sleep as SCARFACE, a |
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menacing guard with a jagged scar running down his cheek, looms |
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close to COLE's cage and unlocks it. |
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SCARFACE |
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"Volunteer duty". |
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The PRISONERS in the other cages watch silently with narrowed eyes. |
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COLE |
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I didn't volunteer. |
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SCARFACE |
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You causing trouble again? |
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COLE |
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(controls his temper) |
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No trouble. |
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INT. EQUIPMENT ROOM - ETERNAL NIGHT |
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COLE's alone, struggling to get into what looks like a space suit |
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in a room where suits hang like ghosts with blank eyes. |
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TITLES BEGIN SUPERED OVER THE SCENE |
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COLE has the torso of the suit on now and is trying to close it. |
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OFFSCREEN VOICE (o.s.) |
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All openings must be closed. |
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COLE looks for the source of the voice, a tiny grate in the wall. |
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OFFSCREEN VOICE (o.s.) |
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If the integrity of the suit is compromised |
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in any way, if the fabric is torn or a zipper |
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not closed, readmittance will be denied. |
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INT. SEALED CHAMBER - MINUTES LATER (ETERNAL NIGHT) |
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COLE, wearing the "space suit" and a helmet with a plastic visor, |
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steps into a tiny chamber, a kind of air lock. The heavy door |
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clangs shut behind him. He's alone. COLE'S breath comes quicker |
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now as he sucks oxygen from the air tanks on his back. |
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On the opposite wall is another door with a huge wheel lock. |
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COLE turns the heavy wheel, opens the door, steps through It |
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INT. ELEVATOR - SECONDS LATER (ETERNAL NIGHT) |
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COLE'S in an ascending elevator that groans and creaks. He looks |
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down at a crudely drawn map he holds in his gloved hand. |
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The map shows a series of tunnels and ladders. |
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INT. SEWER PIPE - MINUTES LATER (NIGHT) |
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COLE pans a flashlight, probing the filthy sewer he's wading |
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through |
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RATS flee the blade of light, scurry across islands of rusting |
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junk. |
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The flashlight beam settles on a ladder mounted in the wall. |
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Reaching the rusted ladder, COLE starts to climb awkwardly. |
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EXT. CITY STREET/FUTURE - MOMENTS LATER (NIGHT) |
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A SCRAPING NOISE as a heavy man-hole cover is pushed up and moved |
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aside. COLE'S helmeted head emerges from below. |
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COLE'S POV THROUGH HIS PLASTIC-VISORED HELMET: a city in |
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moonlight! A surreal image of abandoned buildings. No people |
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anywhere. The only sounds are the WIND and COLE'S BREATHING. |
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EXT. ANOTHER CITY STREET - MINUTES LATER (NIGHT) |
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COLE'S light reveals abandoned vine-covered automobiles. |
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Moving to the nearest car, COLE searches in the vines for |
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something. Finds it. An insect. |
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COLE takes the bug in his gloved hand. As he clumsily inserts it |
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into a collection tube, something makes him turn. |
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There's something across the street in the dark. Something alive. |
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COLE points his flashlight and reveals...a BEAR! Startled by the |
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light, the animal blinks, then stands on its rear legs and ROARS. |
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ANGLE ON COLE, staring wide-eyed. |
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Then, the BEAR sinks down onto all fours and, trying to avoid the |
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flashlight, it pads quickly down the street. |
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INT. SUBTERRANEAN PARKING GARAGE - NIGHT |
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Using the flashlight to see, COLE reaches down to the cracked |
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floor and gets another specimen. DOGSHIT! |
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The only sound is COLE'S labored BREATHING. |
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Then, a different SOUND. GRRRR! A dog. More GRRRRS. More |
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dogs. Then, a YIP. Then, VICIOUS GROWLS. It's a DOGFIGHT! |
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EXT. STREET - NIGHT (FIRST LIGHT) |
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A giant OWL, perched on an overhead traffic light, raises its |
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wings |
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and lifts off...rising higher and higher into the brightening sky. |
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Below, on the street, COLE trudges along, passing deserted |
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buildings, windows broken, rusted signs dangling. |
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INT. DEPARTMENT STORE - NIGHT (FIRST LIGHT) |
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COLE'S light reveals a spider web just inside the store. A large |
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SPIDER tries to hide from the light. |
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COLE reaches carefully into the web and plucks the spider and |
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puts it into one of his specimen tubes. |
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Then, he shines his light all around the once elegant store. |
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There's |
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nothing but aisle after aisle of moldering consumer goods. |
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EXT. DEPARTMENT STORE - DAWN |
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As COLE comes out of the store, the first rays of the sun hit the |
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building. COLE stops, squints into the light through his visor. |
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COLE'S POV: spray-painted on the wall a long time ago is a |
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stenciled |
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logo of twelve monkeys holding hands in a circle. Over it is |
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written, "WE DID IT!" |
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COLE looks up. |
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COLE'S POV: high up on a building across the street, a LION |
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patrols a ledge, pauses, looks out majestically over his world. |
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TTTLES END |
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INT. FIRST UNDERGROUND DECONTAMINATION CHAMBER - ETERNAL NIGHT |
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ROARING WATER, powerful torrents gushing from nozzles in the |
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wall, pummel the still-suited COLE. |
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INT. SECOND UNDERGROUND DECONTAMINATION CHAMBER - ETERNAL NIGHT |
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Stark naked and shivering, COLE is being scrubbed with brushes on |
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long poles (like the ones used to wash cars) wielded by two |
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HULKING |
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FIGURES in bulky decontamination suits, their personas lost in |
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their |
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windowed masks. It's a grim scene in a grim cement room with |
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damp, |
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dripping walls. From an unseen source comes an AMPLIFIED VOICE, |
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AMPLIFIED VOICE (o.s.) |
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Raise your arms above your head. |
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COLE lifts his arms and the FIGURES start scrubbing his armpits. |
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INT. TINY CHAMBER - SHORTLY (ETERNAL NIGHT) |
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Still naked, COLE is seated on a stool while a MASKED TECHNICIAN |
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in a less elaborate, less bulky decontamination outfit draws |
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blood from COLE'S arm with an old-fashioned hypodermic needle. |
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COLE glances toward a single, nearly opaque "window" of thick |
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plastic in the rusty iron wall. VAGUE FIGURES seem to lurk |
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behind the translucent aperture, studying him. |
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The TECHNICIAN slips the blood sample through a slot in the wall. |
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INT. ENGINEERING OFFICE/FUTURE WORLD - ETERNAL NIGHT |
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Ushered in by two guards, TINY and SCARFACE, COLE looks around. |
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COLE'S POV: wails hidden by old headlines, articles, maps, |
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charts... |
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a blackboard covered with elaborate, sophisticated |
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formulae...surfaces |
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heaped with cracked monitors, gerry-rigged computers held together |
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with |
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string, lasers lost in tangles of cable, ancient tube amplifiers, |
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a |
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dilapidated cardboard reconstruction of a city, stacks of |
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moldering |
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books and tattered computer printouts...and, seated at a long |
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conference |
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table, staring at COLE, six SCIENTISTS: an ASTROPHYSICIST, |
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ENGINEER, |
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BOTANIST, MICROBIOLOGIST, ZOOLOGIST, and a GEOLOGIST. They |
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represent |
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a "modern" science where brilliant new ideas interface with crude, |
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outdated, patched-together technologies. |
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TINY |
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James Cole. Cleared from quarantine. |
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MICROBIOLOGIST |
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Thank you. You two wait outside. |
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SCARFACE |
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He's got a history, Doctor. Violence. |
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COLE'S eyes return to the walls. |
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Headlines: "CLOCK TICKING! NO CURE YET!" |
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SCARFACE |
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Anti-social six -- doing 25 to life. |
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ENGINEER |
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I don't think he's going to hurt us. You're |
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not going to hurt us, are you Mr. Cole? |
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COLE'S head turns quickly to the ENGINEER. |
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COLE |
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No, sir. |
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The GUARDS exchange a look, shrug, exit, closing the door. |
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MICROBIOLOGIST |
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Why don't you sit down, Mr. Cole. |
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COLE goes to the empty chair at the conference table, sits down. |
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ASTROPHYSICIST |
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We want you to tell us about last |
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night. |
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COLE |
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I went to the surface and I collected |
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specimens like I was told. |
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The SCIENTISTS don't say anything. They just study him carefully. |
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COLE |
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(worried) |
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I mashed the spider, didn't I? |
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MICROBIOLOGIST |
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We'll get to the spider later, Mr. |
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Cole. Right now, we want to know |
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everything that you saw. |
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INT. ENGINEERING OFFICE - AN HOUR LATER (ETERNAL NIGHT) |
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COLE, starting to look very tired now, stands at the blackboard |
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sketching a detailed map of exactly where he was last night. |
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ASTPOPHYSICIST |
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Where you collected sample #4, what |
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street was that? |
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COLE |
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Uh... |
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BOTANIST |
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It's important to observe everything. |
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COLE |
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I think it was...I'm sure it was 2nd Street. |
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As the SCIENTISTS start to whisper animatedly among themselves, |
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COLE'S eyes drift across the newspaper clippings taped to the |
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wall. One headline screams, "VIRUS MUTATING!" Another features |
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a photo of an OLD MAN (DR. MASON, who we'll see again later on) |
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and the words, SCIENTIST SAYS, "IT'S TOO LATE FOR CURE". |
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ASTROPHYSICIST'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Close your eyes, Cole. |
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Startled, COLE closes his eyes obediently. |
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BLACKNESS. Like COLE, WE SEE NOTHING. But we HEAR their VOICES. |
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ENGINEER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Tell us in detail what you've seen in |
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this room. |
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COLE'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Uh, in this room? Uh... |
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MICROBIOLOGIST'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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How many of us are there? |
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COLE'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Six...seven, if you count me. |
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ASTROPHYSICIST'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Tell us about the pictures on the wall... |
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COLE'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Uh, you mean the newspapers? |
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A MONTAGE OF OVERLAPPING VOICES (o.s.) |
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Tell us about the newspapers. Can you |
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hear my voice? What do I look like? |
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What does he look like, the man who |
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just spoke? How old were you when you |
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left the surface? |
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The VOICES blur into a cacophony and FADE INTO the droning P.A. |
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SYSTEM at the airport. |
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INT. CONCOURSE/AIRPORT - DAY |
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THE DREAM AGAIN! But at an earlier moment. YOUNG COLE, flanked |
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by his PARENTS, whose faces are out of view, is watching a PLANE |
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land through one of the big glass windows that lines the concourse |
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leading to the departure gates. |
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P.A. SYSTEM (o.s.) |
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Flight 784 now boarding at gate... |
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Suddenly, a SHOUT, followed by raised VOICES, interrupts the |
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monotonous airport routine. As YOUNG COLE and his PARENTS turn |
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to see what's going on, a man we'll call MR. PONYTAIL, his face |
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averted, hurries past them, bumping YOUNG COLE with a Chicago |
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Hulls Sports Duffle Bag. |
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MR. PONYTAIL |
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WATCH IT! |
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YOUNG COLE sees little more than the gaudy pants, the duffle, and |
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the man's ponytail flopping as he rushes towards the gates. |
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Just then, a WOMAN'S VOICE cries out, "NOOOOOOOOO!" |
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YOUNG COLE turns back toward the Security Check Point just as |
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TRAVELERS scatter madly, some diving to the floor, others |
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running. A TERRIFIED TRAVELER, hitting the floor close by, looks |
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up at YOUNG COLE with panicky eyes, and asks.... |
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TERRIFIED TRAVELER |
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Just exactly why did you volunteer? |
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INT. ENGINEERING OFFICE/FUTURE WORLD - (ETERNAL NIGHT) |
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COLE comes abruptly awake. Seated now, he's facing the |
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SCIENTISTS. |
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ASTROPHYSICIST |
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Wake up, Cole. |
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COLE |
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Uh, I didn't hear the... |
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MICROBIOLOGIST |
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(tapping a pencil on the table) |
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I asked you, why did you volunteer? |
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COLE |
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Well, the guard woke me up. He told me |
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I volunteered. |
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The SCIENTISTS react, whispering urgently among themselves. |
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COLE starts to nod off again, then comes awake with a start as |
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the ENGINEER speaks to him. |
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ENGINEER |
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We appreciate you volunteering. You're |
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a very good observer, Cole. |
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COLE |
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Uh, thank you. |
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ENGINEER |
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You'll get a reduction in sentence. |
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COLE keeps his face impassive. |
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ASTROPHYSICIST |
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To be determined by the proper authorities. |
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ENGINEER |
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You don't want to jeopardize that reduction, |
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do you, Cole? Have it taken away? |
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COLE |
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No, sir! |
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ASTROPHYSICIST |
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We have a very advanced program, something |
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very different, requires very skilled people. |
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MICROBIOLOGIST |
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An opportunity to reduce your sentence |
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considerably... |
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ZOOLOGIST |
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And possibly play an important role in |
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returning the human race to the surface |
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of the earth. |
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ENGINEER |
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We want tough minded people. Strong |
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mentally. We've had some...misfortunes |
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with "unstable" types. |
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ASTROPHYSICIST |
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For a man in your position...an opportunity. |
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BOTANIST |
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Not to volunteer could be a real mistake. |
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MICROBIOLOGIST |
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(tapping his pencil again) |
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Definitely a mistake! |
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COLE gives away nothing. He's in a box here. He has no choices. |
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He stares at the tapping pencil. |
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INT. ART GALLERY - NIGHT |
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A strikingly "real" world of bright colors. Extravagant paintings |
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adorn the walls. A POET, tiny and ruddy faced, squints over his |
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glasses as he reads in a booming voice to an AUDIENCE of thirty |
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seated on folding chairs. |
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POET |
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Still among the myriad microwaves, the |
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infra-red messages, the gigabytes of ones |
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and zeroes, we find words, infinitesimally |
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small, byte-sized now, tinier even than |
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science lurking in some vague electricity |
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where, if we listen we can hear the solitary |
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voice of that poet telling us, |
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"We are no other than a moving row |
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Of Magic shadow-shapes that come and go |
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Round with the Sun-illumined Lantern hold |
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In Midnight by the Master of the show." |
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As the POET reads, we STUDY the audience, mostly YUPPIE CULTURE |
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JUNKIES or BOHEMIANS. Among them, a light-haired woman of twenty- |
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eight, soberly dressed, wearing glasses. She's KATHRYN RAILLY. |
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And |
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it's her beeper that suddenly BEEPS. BEEP! BEEP! |
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POET'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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"The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, |
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Moves on: nor all your Piety nor Wit |
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Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, |
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Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it." |
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BEEP! BEEP! Scowling at the outrageous interruption, the POET |
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looks up from the text just as RAILLY, tumbling, shuts off the |
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beeper and rises, embarrassed. As she makes her way to an exit, |
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the glaring POET continues... |
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POET |
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"Yesterday This Day's Madness did prepare; |
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Tomorrow's Silence, Triumph or Despair: |
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Drink! for you know not whence you came, nor why: |
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Drink! for you know not why you go, nor where." |
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INT. CORRIDOR/POLICE STATION - NIGHT |
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DETECTIVE FRANKI leads RAILLY past crowded holding cells. |
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FRANKI |
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-- so they get there and they ask the guy |
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real nice for some kind of i.d., and he gets |
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agitated, starts screaming about viruses. |
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Totally irrational, totally disoriented, |
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doesn't know where he is, what day it is, |
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alla that stuff. All they got was his |
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name. They figure he's stoned out of |
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his mind, it's some kinda psychotic |
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episode, so they're gonna bring him... |
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RAILLY |
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He's been tested for drugs? |
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FRANKI |
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Negative for drugs. But he took on |
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five cops like he was dusted to the |
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eyeballs. No drugs. You believe that? |
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FRANKI pauses, indicating a tiny observation window of thick |
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meshed |
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glass in an otherwise solid door, and RAILLY looks through it. |
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RAILLY'S POV THROUGH THE WINDOW: a MAN, his back to her, in |
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strait-jacket and prison denims, examining the wall of the padded |
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cell with the distorted intensity of a "mental case". |
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RAILLY |
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You have him in restraints. |
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FRANKI |
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Were you listening? We got two officers in |
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the hospital. Yeah, he's in restraints, plus |
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the medic gave him enough stellazine to kill |
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a horse. Look at him! Still on his feet. |
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RAILLY'S POV THROUGH THE WINDOW: the MAN in the cell turns, looks |
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right at her. In spite of the cuts and welts, it's clearly COLE. |
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RAILLY |
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That would explain the bruises, I |
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guess. The struggle. |
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FRANKI |
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You want to go in? Examine him? |
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RAILLY |
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Yes, please. You said he gave a name... |
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FRANKI |
|
(unlocking the door) |
|
James Cole. That's everything we got. None |
|
of the James Coles on the computer match him. |
|
No license, no prints, no warrants. Nothing. |
|
You want me to go in with you? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(entering) |
|
No, thank you. |
|
|
|
FRANKI |
|
I'll be right here...just in case. |
|
|
|
INT. ISOLATION CELL |
|
|
|
COLE stares at RAILLY. The environment is intensely real...vivid |
|
colors...each sound, however slight, very distinct, almost loud... |
|
and yet she appears to him almost like a vision. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Mr. Cole? My name is Doctor Railly. |
|
I'm a psychiatrist. I work for the |
|
County -- I don't work for the police. |
|
My only concern is your well being -- |
|
do you understand that? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I need to go now. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I'm going to be completely honest. I'm |
|
not going to lie to you. I can't make |
|
the police let you go...but I do want |
|
to help you. And I want you to trust |
|
me. Can you do that, James? May I |
|
call you "James"? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
"James"! Nobody ever calls me that. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(frowns, studies him) |
|
Have you been a patient at County? |
|
Have I seen you someplace? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, not possible. Listen, I have to |
|
get out of here. I'm supposed to be |
|
getting information. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What kind of information? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It won't help you. You can't do anything |
|
about it. You can't change anything. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Change what? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I need to go. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Do you know why you're here, James. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Because I'm a good observer. Because I |
|
have a tough mind. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I see. You don't remember assaulting a |
|
police officer...several officers? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
They wanted identification. I don't have |
|
any identification. I wasn't trying to |
|
hurt them. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You don't have a driver's license, |
|
James? Or a Social Security card? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Why not? Most people have some ID. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You wouldn't understand. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You've been in an institution, haven't |
|
you, James? A hospital? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I have to go. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
A jail? Prison? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Underground. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Hiding? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I love this air. This is wonderful air. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What's wonderful about the air, James? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It's so clean. No germs. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You're afraid of germs? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I have to go. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Why do you think there aren't any germs |
|
in the air, James? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
This is April, right? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
July. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(sudden panic) |
|
July?! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Do you know what year it is? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What year is it? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What year do you think it is? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
1995? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You think it's July of 1995? That's |
|
the future, James. Do you think you're |
|
living in the future? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(slightly confused) |
|
No, 1995 is the past. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
1995 is the future, James. This is 1989. |
|
|
|
COLE looks stunned. |
|
|
|
INT. POLICE STATION CORRIDOR - MORNING |
|
|
|
COLE, bound tightly by the strait-jacket, heavy manacles on his |
|
ankles, is being escorted down the corridor by two surly |
|
POLICEMEN. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Where are you taking me? |
|
|
|
POLICEMAN #1 |
|
South of France, buddy. Fancy hotel. |
|
You're gonna love it. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
South of France?! I don't want to go |
|
to the South of France. I want to make |
|
a telephone call. |
|
|
|
POLICEMAN #2 smirks as he unlocks a heavy steel door. |
|
|
|
POLICEMAN #2 |
|
Zip it, scumbag -- you fooled the shrink |
|
with your act, but you don't fool us. |
|
|
|
Then, POLICEMAN #2 swings the steel door open and sunlight |
|
overwhelms COLE, blinding him in a dazzling fury of white light. |
|
|
|
EXT. CITY STREET/MINI-VAN - DAY |
|
|
|
A Mini-van, the kind of vehicle used to transport a half dozen |
|
prisoners, crawls through a busy street. The Police Department |
|
logo is prominent on the side of the van beneath barred windows. |
|
|
|
INT. COUNTY HOSPITAL/SHOWERS - AN HOUR LATER (MORNING) |
|
|
|
Fierce spray recalls the decontamination in the future. COLE |
|
stands stark naked under the shower while two muscular attendants, |
|
PALMER and BILLINGS, supervise. |
|
|
|
As PALMER shuts off the water, BILLINGS hands COLE a towel and |
|
starts inspecting his scalp... |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
Lemme see your head, Jimbo, see if you |
|
got any creepy crawlies. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I need to make a telephone call. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
(pulling Cole's head) |
|
Gotta work that out with a doctor, Jimbo. |
|
Can't make no calls 'til the doctor says. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It's very important. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
What chew gotta do, Jimbo, is take it |
|
easy, relax into things. We all gonna |
|
get along fine if you just relax. |
|
|
|
COLE gets the hint of menace in the message and submits to the |
|
lice inspection, only his eyes revealing his frustration. |
|
|
|
INT. HOSPITAL/DAYROOM - HALF AN HOUR LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
COLE stands in the doorway, stunned by his first sight of the |
|
large room. His eyes go to the heavily-grilled windows where |
|
light pours in from outside. Then, to the TV, where a CARTOON |
|
COMMERCIAL makes raucous noises. |
|
|
|
PATIENTS, in K-Mart street clothes or ratty robes, stare gloomily |
|
at the TV, or play cards, pace, or just stare blankly. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS is at COLE'S side, beckoning to a patient, JEFFREY MASON, |
|
a twenty year old white youth dressed in khakis and a plaid shirt. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
Jeffrey. Yo! Jeffrey. This here is James. |
|
Whyncha show James around? Tell him the TV |
|
rules, show him the games an' stuff, okay? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(with a sly look) |
|
How much you gonna pay me? Huh? I'd |
|
be doing your job. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
Five thousand dollars, my man. That |
|
enough? I'll wire it to your account |
|
as usual, okay? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Okay, Billings. Five thousand. That's |
|
enough. Five thousand dollars. I'll |
|
give him the Deluxe Mental Hospital Tour. |
|
|
|
As BILLINGS walks away chuckling, JEFFREY turns to COLE. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Kid around, kid around. It makes them feel |
|
good, we're all pals. We're prisoners, they're |
|
the guards, but it's all in good fun, you see? |
|
|
|
COLE nods and JEFFREY indicates card tables where PATIENTS are |
|
playing cards, checkers, chess, or working on jig saw puzzles. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Here's the games. Games vegitize you. |
|
If you play the games, you're |
|
voluntarily taking a tranquilizer. |
|
|
|
COLE sees a partially completed puzzle of the well-known painting, |
|
THE PEACEABLE KINGDOM, depicting a serene world of animals in |
|
harmony. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
What'd they give you? Thorazine? How |
|
much? Learn your drugs -- know your doses. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I need to make a telephone call. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
A telephone call? That's communication |
|
with the outside world! Doctor's |
|
discretion. Hey, if alla these nuts |
|
could just make phone calls, it could |
|
spread. Insanity oozing through telephone |
|
cables, oozing into the ears of all those |
|
poor sane people, infecting them! Whackos |
|
everywhere! A plague of madness. |
|
(suddenly sly and confidential) |
|
In fact, very few of us here are actually |
|
mentally ill. I'm not saying you're |
|
not mentally ill, for all I know you're |
|
crazy as a loon. But that's not why |
|
you're here. Why you're here is because |
|
of the system, because of the economy. |
|
(indicating the TV) |
|
There's the TV. It's all right there. |
|
Commercials. We are not productive |
|
anymore, they don't need us to make |
|
things anymore, it's all automated. What |
|
are we for then? We're consumers. Okay, |
|
buy a lot of stuff, you're a good citizen. |
|
But if you don't buy a lot of stuff, you |
|
know what? You're mentally ill! That's |
|
a fact! If you don't buy things...toilet |
|
paper, new cars, computerized blenders, |
|
electrically operated sexual devices... |
|
(getting hysterical) |
|
SCREWDRIVERS WITH MINIATURE BUILT-IN |
|
RADAR DEVICES, STEREO SYSTEMS WITH |
|
BRAIN IMPLANTED HEADPHONES, VOICE- |
|
ACTIVATED COMPUTERS, AND... |
|
|
|
A woman orderly, TERRY, turns from the feeble PATIENT she's |
|
helping. |
|
|
|
TERRY |
|
Take it easy, Jeffrey. Be calm. |
|
|
|
Abruptly, JEFFREY stifles his hysteria, takes a deep breath and |
|
continues, completely calm now. But COLE isn't listening. He's |
|
mesmerized by the TV. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
So if you want to watch a particular |
|
program, say "All My Children" or |
|
something, you go to the Charge Nurse |
|
and tell her what day and time the show |
|
you want to see is on. But you have to |
|
tell her before the show is scheduled |
|
to be on. There was this one guy who |
|
was always requesting shows that had already |
|
played. He couldn't quite grasp the |
|
idea that the Charge Nurse couldn't |
|
just make it be yesterday for him, turn |
|
back time ha ha. What a fruitcake!! |
|
|
|
This last thought actually penetrates COLE'S focus on the TV and |
|
he turns to JEFFREY who's picking up speed again. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Seriously, more and more people are |
|
being defined now as mentally ill. Why? |
|
Because they're not consuming on their |
|
own. But as patients, they becone |
|
consumers of mental health care. And |
|
this gives the so-called sane people work! |
|
(hysteria again) |
|
WHOOO! SHOCK THERAPY! GROUP THERAPY! |
|
HALLUCINATIONS! THERAPEUTIC DRUGS! |
|
IGGIDY DIGGIDY DIG! PERFECT! THE |
|
SYSTEM IN HARMONY LIKE A BIG MACHINE... |
|
|
|
TERRY |
|
Okay, that's it, Jeffrey, you're gonna |
|
get a shot. I warned you... |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(calming himself, smiling) |
|
Right! Right! Carried away, heh heh. |
|
I got "carried away". Explaining the |
|
workings of...the institution. |
|
|
|
Just then, TJ WASHINGTON, a somber-looking African American in a |
|
bathrobe, taps COLE on the shoulder. |
|
|
|
TJ WASHINGTON |
|
I don't really come from outer space. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
This is TJ Washington, Jim -- he |
|
doesn't really come from outer space. |
|
|
|
TJ WASHINGTON |
|
Don't mock me, my friend. |
|
(to Cole) |
|
It's a condition of "mental divergence". |
|
I find myself on another planet, Ogo, |
|
part of an intellectual elite, preparing |
|
to subjugate barbarian hordes on Pluto. |
|
But even though it's a totally convincing |
|
reality in every way...I can feel, breathe, |
|
hear...nevertheless, Ogo is actually a |
|
construct of my psyche. I am mentally |
|
divergent in that I am escaping certain |
|
unnamed realities that plague my life |
|
here. When I stop going there, I will |
|
be well. Are you also divergent, friend? |
|
|
|
The P.A. SYSTEM interrupts, startling COLE. |
|
|
|
P.A. SYSTEM (v.o.) |
|
James Cole. Report to Staff. James Cole! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Staff! Whoo! Time for Staff. Now the |
|
geniuses cure you. Hallelujah! |
|
|
|
INT. PSYCH WARD CONFERENCE ROOM - MINUTES LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
COLE is agitated, speaking forcefully. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
This is a place for crazy people! I'm |
|
not crazy! |
|
|
|
RAILLY, four other PSYCHIATRIC RESIDENTS, including RAILLY'S best |
|
friend, MARILOU MARTIN, and their chief, DR. OWEN FLETCHER, sit |
|
around a beat-up conference table, watching COLE, who sits facing |
|
the doctors, with BILLINGS looming behind him. (Some of the |
|
DOCTORS |
|
bear a strong resemblance to the SCIENTISTS OF THE FUTURE.) |
|
|
|
RESIDENT #1 |
|
We don't use that term..."crazy", Mr. Cole. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Well, you've got some real nuts in here! |
|
Listen to me, all of you -- I have to |
|
tell you something that's going to be |
|
difficult for you to understand, but... |
|
|
|
DR. RAILLY |
|
James...please. These are all doctors |
|
here and we want to help you. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
Mr. Cole -- last night you told Dr. |
|
Railly you thought it was... |
|
(checking a file) |
|
1995. ... How about right now? Do you |
|
know what year it is right now? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
1989. Look, I'm not confused. There's been |
|
a mistake, I've been sent to the wrong place. |
|
|
|
Suddenly, COLE reaches out and BILLINGS lunges forward, but COLE |
|
is just grabbing a pad and pencil. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Hey, I'm not going to hurt anybody. |
|
|
|
FLETCHER restrains BILLINGS with a hand signal. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(drawing) |
|
Do any of you know anything about the |
|
Army of the Twelve Monkeys? They paint |
|
this, stencil it, on buildings, all |
|
over the place. |
|
|
|
COLE waves a sketch of the dancing monkey logo we saw earlier. |
|
|
|
DR. CASEY |
|
Mr. Cole... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Right. I guess you wouldn't, this is |
|
1989, they're probably not active yet. |
|
That makes sense! Okay. Listen to me, |
|
three billion people died in 1995. |
|
Three billion, got that? Almost |
|
the whole population. Of the world! |
|
Only about one percent survived. |
|
|
|
DOCTORS exchange knowing looks. This is an old story, apparently. |
|
|
|
RESIDENT #2 |
|
Are you going to save us, Mr. Cole? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Save you? How can I save you? It |
|
already happened! I can't save you. I'm |
|
simply trying to get some information for |
|
people in the present so that someday... |
|
(sees their eyes) |
|
You don't believe me. You think I'm |
|
crazy. But I'm not crazy. I'm a convict, |
|
sure, I have a quick temper, but I'm as |
|
sane as anyone in this room. I... |
|
|
|
COLE stops, sees DR. FLETCHER tapping his pencil. COLE'S seen |
|
that tapping before -- in the future! It disorients him. |
|
|
|
DR. RAILLY |
|
Can you tell us the name of the prison |
|
you've come from? |
|
|
|
COLE doesn't answer. He's staring at the tapping pencil. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
Does this bother you, Mr. Cole? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(recovering, new tack) |
|
No! Look, I don't belong here! What I |
|
need to do is make a telephone call to |
|
straighten everything out. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
Who would you call, Mr. Cole, who would |
|
straighten everything out? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Scientists. I'm supposed to report in |
|
to them. They'll want to know they |
|
sent me to the wrong time. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
So you could talk to these scientists |
|
and they do what? Send you to the future? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, no. I can't talk to them. It's called, |
|
"voice mail". I'm supposed to leave messages. |
|
They monitor it from the present. |
|
|
|
RESIDENT #2 |
|
"From the present." We're not in the |
|
present now, Mr. Cole? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, no. This is the past. This has |
|
already happened. Listen... |
|
|
|
RESIDENT #3 |
|
Mr. Cole, you belong in 1995 -- that's |
|
the present, is that it? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, 1995 is the past, too. Look... |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
These scientists, Mr. Cole? Are they |
|
doctors like ourselves? |
|
|
|
Two of the residents exchange quick knowing looks. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No! I mean yes, but... Look, I've been given |
|
a lot of drugs but I'm still perfectly lucid. |
|
You have to let me use the phone. One call! |
|
|
|
COLE looks desperately toward RAILLY, pleading eyes meeting hers. |
|
|
|
INT. LOW RENT APARTMENT - DAY |
|
|
|
Four little KIDS SCREAM and SQUABBLE while the phone CHIRPS |
|
insistently in the tiny, cluttered apartment and a harried MOTHER |
|
lunges for the phone, answers sharply... |
|
|
|
MOTHER |
|
Yes? |
|
(listens, frowns, then) |
|
Whaaaaat? "Voice mail"! I don't know |
|
what you're talkin' about. ... Is this |
|
a joke? I don't know any scientists. |
|
James who? Never heard of you! |
|
|
|
The MOTHER slams down the phone. |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S OFFICE/COUNTY HOSPITAL - DAY |
|
|
|
A dismayed COLE still has the receiver in his hand. |
|
Sympathetically, |
|
RAILLY takes it from him. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It wasn't who you expected? |
|
|
|
COLE is clearly agitated, starts to pace, upset. Nuts? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It was some lady. She didn't know anything. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Perhaps it was a wrong number... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No. That's the reason they chose me -- |
|
I remember things. |
|
|
|
RAILLY frowns, studying the distracted man with intense interest. |
|
It's clear COLE is becoming a special patient and RAILLY'S cool, |
|
detached demeanor is giving way ever so slightly. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, where did you grow up? Was it |
|
around here? Around Baltimore? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(lost in thought) |
|
What? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I have the...strangest feeling I've met |
|
you before...a long time ago, perhaps. |
|
Were you ever...? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Wait! This is only 1989! I'm supposed |
|
to be leaving messages in 1995. It's |
|
not the right number yet. That's the |
|
problem. Damn! How can I contact them? |
|
|
|
RAILLY recovers her distance, her poise, as she takes a bottle, |
|
pours out some tablets, and holds them out to COLE. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, take these. |
|
(watching him step back) |
|
Please -- I helped you like I said I |
|
would. Now I want you to trust me. |
|
|
|
INT. AIRPORT CONCOURSE - DAY (THE DREAM) |
|
|
|
MR. PONYTAIL races past the startled YOUNG COLE. |
|
|
|
MR. PONYTAIL |
|
WATCH IT! |
|
|
|
Was it JEFFREY wearing gaudy pants and a ponytail? It was |
|
definitely JEFFREY'S VOICE. |
|
|
|
TRAVELERS dive for cover as a WOMAN'S VOICE cries out... |
|
|
|
WOMAN'S VOICE |
|
NOOOOOOOOOO! |
|
|
|
The TERRIFIED TRAVELER looks up at YOUNG COLE, makes eye contact, |
|
but |
|
doesn't speak. The TERRIFIED TRAVELER looks a lot like DR. |
|
FLETCHER! |
|
|
|
Just then, YOUNG COLE is distracted by a running figure. It's |
|
the BLONDE MAN in the Hawaiian shirt, but he's not injured. He's |
|
sprinting toward the gates, glancing back over his shoulder, his |
|
moustache slightly askew! |
|
|
|
A sharp CRACK of a GUNSHOT rings out! Then, DAZZLING LIGHT. |
|
Everything goes white! |
|
|
|
INT. DORMITORY (PSYCH WARD)/COUNTY HOSPITAL - NIGHT |
|
|
|
COLE'S eyes blink awake, blinded by a flashlight. |
|
|
|
He's lying in one of thirty beds in a darkened ward. Disoriented. |
|
Which world is this? The room is full of BREATHING, SNORING, |
|
occasional MOANS. He can barely discern the shadowy figures of |
|
an ORDERLY and a NURSE, making their rounds, checking each bed. |
|
|
|
His eyes adjusting to the darkness, COLE watches them exit. |
|
|
|
He turns and sees a patch of moonlight coming in a barred window. |
|
|
|
With a quick glance at the sleeping PATIENTS, he slips out of |
|
bed, makes his way stealthily to the window, peers out. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: the moon, glowing in the sky, illuminating a single |
|
tree. Under the tree, in silhouette, a COUPLE embraces, kisses. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, looking out the window, absorbed. |
|
|
|
VOICE (o.s.) |
|
It won't work. You can't open it. |
|
|
|
Alarmed, COLE turns, sees JEFFREY in the next bed. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You think you can remove the grill but |
|
you can't. It's welded. |
|
|
|
COLE checks the grill anyway. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
See? I toldja. And all the doors are |
|
locked, too. They're protecting the |
|
people on the outside from us. But the |
|
people outside are as crazy as us. |
|
|
|
COLE has become preoccupied with a small SPIDER creeping along |
|
the window sill. He's staring at it when he's distracted by a |
|
sudden SOUND. Grabbing the SPIDER, COLE scrambles back into bed |
|
just as the door opens and an ORDERLY probes the dark room with |
|
the blade of his flashlight. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, in bed, feigning sleep. |
|
|
|
The flashlight clicks off and COLE hears the door close. |
|
|
|
For a long moment the ward is silent except for BREATHING, |
|
SNORES, occasional MOANS. Then, COLE hears JEFFREY'S hoarse |
|
whisper, picking up right where he left off. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You know what "crazy" is? "crazy" is |
|
"majority rules". Take germs for example. |
|
|
|
Although COLE is preoccupied with the SPIDER struggling to get |
|
out of his fist, he can't help reacting to the word, "germs"! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Germs?! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
In the 18th century there was no such |
|
thing! Nobody'd ever imagined such a |
|
thing -- no sane person anyway. Along |
|
comes this doctor...Semmelweiss, I |
|
think. He tries to convince people... |
|
other doctors mostly...that there are |
|
these teeny tiny invisible "bad things" |
|
called germs that get into your body and |
|
make you...sick! He's trying to get |
|
doctors to wash their hands. What is |
|
this guy...crazy? Teeny tiny invisible |
|
whaddayou call 'em?..."germs"! |
|
|
|
As JEFFREY warms to his subject, getting excited, COLE tries to |
|
figure out where to put the SPIDER. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY (cont.) |
|
So cut to the 20th century! Last week |
|
in fact, right before I got dragged |
|
into this hellhole. I order a burger |
|
in this fast food joint. The waiter |
|
drops it on the floor. He picks it up, |
|
wipes it off, hands it to me...like it |
|
was all okay. |
|
|
|
No alternative. COLE pops the SPIDER in his mouth and swallows |
|
it as JEFFREY prattles on... |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
"What about the germs?" I say. He |
|
goes, "I don't believe in germs. Germs |
|
are just a plot they made up so they |
|
can sell you disinfectants and soap!" |
|
Now, he's crazy, right? Hey, you |
|
believe in germs, don't you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I'm not crazy. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Of course not, I never thought you were. |
|
You want to escape, right? That's very |
|
sane. I can help you. You want me to, |
|
don't you? Get you out? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
If you know how to escape, why don't you...? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Why don't I escape, that's what you |
|
were going to ask me, right? 'Cause |
|
I'd be crazy to escape! I'm all taken |
|
care of, see? I've sent out word. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What's that mean? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
I've managed to contact certain underlings, |
|
evil spirits, secretaries of secretaries, and |
|
assorted minions, who will contact my father. |
|
When he learns I'm in this kind of place, |
|
he'll have them transfer me to one of those |
|
classy joints where they treat you...properly. |
|
LIKE A GUEST! LIKE A PERSON! SHEETS! |
|
TOWELS! LIKE A BIG HOTEL WITH GREAT DRUGS |
|
FOR THE NUT CASE LUNATIC MANIAC DEVILS... |
|
|
|
PATIENTS are waking up as the NURSE and two ORDERLIES burst into |
|
the |
|
dorm and head straight for JEFFREY who's struggling to calm |
|
himself. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Sorry. Really sorry. Got a little |
|
agitated. The thought of escaping |
|
crossed my mind and suddenly...suddenly |
|
I felt LIKE BENDING THE FUCKING BARS |
|
BACK, RIPPING OFF THE GODDAMN WINDOW |
|
FRAMES AND...EATING THEM, YES, EATING |
|
THEM, AND LEAPING, LEAPING... |
|
|
|
COLE watches the ORDERLIES grab JEFFREY and haul him away. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You dumb assholes! I'm a mental patient! |
|
I'm supposed to act out. Wait til you |
|
morons find out who I am. My father's |
|
gonna be really upset. AND WHEN MY |
|
FATHER GETS UPSET, THE GROUND SHAKES! |
|
MY FATHER IS GOD! I WORSHIP MY FATHER. |
|
|
|
INT. WARD DAYROOM - MORNING |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON TV SCREEN/A VIDEO IMAGE OF A LAB MONKEY, convulsing |
|
pathetically, a victim of shocks from the numerous wires attached |
|
to his tiny, restrained body. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, sitting, writing intensely in a magazine with |
|
crayon, surrounded by dull-eyed PATIENTS in pajamas and ratty |
|
robes, staring at the shuddering LAB MONKEY on the TV screen. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Torture! Experiments! We're all |
|
monkeys |
|
|
|
COLE locks up, startled, as JEFFREY, one eye bruised black, takes |
|
the seat next to him. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
They hurt you! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Not as bad as what they're doing to |
|
kitty. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON TV, showing a laboratory CAT turning in mad circles, |
|
eating its own tail, while a NEWS REPORTER narrates. |
|
|
|
TV NEWS REPORTER (v.o.) |
|
These video tapes were obtained by |
|
animal rights activists who worked |
|
underground as laboratory assistants |
|
for several months. Authorities say |
|
there is little they can do until... |
|
|
|
The video footage now shows LAB WORKERS watching the results of |
|
their experiments passively. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, reacting angrily. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Look at those assholes, they're asking |
|
for it! Maybe people deserved to be |
|
wiped out! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(startled, turning) |
|
Wiping cut the human race! That's a |
|
great idea! But it's more of a long |
|
term thing -- right now we have to |
|
focus on more immediate goals. |
|
(sudden whisper) |
|
I didn't say a word about "you know |
|
what". |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What are you talking about??? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You know -- your plan. |
|
|
|
As COLE stares, befuddled, JEFFREY sees COLE'S magazine. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
What're you writing? You a reporter? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(shielding the magazine) |
|
It's private. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
A lawsuit? You going to sue them? |
|
|
|
Just then BILLINGS looms over COLE, extending a cup full of pills. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
Yo, James -- time to take your meds. |
|
|
|
INT. DAY ROOM/HOSPITAL - THIRTY MINUTES LATER (MORNING) |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE TV, a commercial playing: a beautiful couple romps |
|
in the surf in slow motion while an eager NARRATOR encourages... |
|
|
|
NARRATOR (v.o.) |
|
Take a chance. Live the moment. Sunshine. |
|
Gorgeous beaches. The Florida Keys! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, very drugged, seated in front of the TV along with |
|
other drugged PATIENTS, staring at the screen. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE TV, showing a picture of the Marx Brothers. |
|
|
|
TV AWNOUNCER (v.o.) |
|
We'll return to the Marx Brothers in |
|
"Monkey Business" following these |
|
messages. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Monkey Business! Monk Key Business. |
|
|
|
COLE sees JEFFREY sliding into the next chair and smirking. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Get it? Monk - Key. Monk! |
|
(big grin) |
|
Key! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY flashes his palm open for one quick moment. A KEY! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(groggy) |
|
What....??? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Wooooo, they really dosed you, bro. |
|
Major load! Listen up -- try and get |
|
it together. Focus! Focus! The plan! |
|
Remember? I did my part. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What...??? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Not, "what", babe! When! |
|
|
|
"When???" |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(pressing the key into Cole's hand) |
|
Now! |
|
|
|
VOICE/TV (o.s.) |
|
Let us guide you to the stocks and |
|
bonds that will enhance your portfolio. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(leaping to his feet) |
|
YES -- NOW! BUY NOW! STOCKS AND BONDS! |
|
NO MORE MONKEY BUSINESS -- BUY NOW. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON TV, almost mimicking JEFFREY with an ad...a BULL and a |
|
BEAR and a computer screen showing stock prices fluctuating. |
|
|
|
VOICE/TV (v.o.) |
|
A portfolio tailored to your specific |
|
needs and the needs of your loved ones... |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, dumbfounded, watching JEFFREY dance crazily. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
YES, YES. ENHANCE YOUR PORTFOLIO NOW! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON BILLINGS, across the ward, reacting to JEFFREY, lets go |
|
of the OLD MAN he's helping as another orderly, TERRY, presses a |
|
beeper, calling for help. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, flabbergasted, as JEFFREY cavorts around the room. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
BUY! SELL! SEIZE THE OPPORTUNITY! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON A HAND, inserting the last piece into the PEACEABLE |
|
KINGDOM JIGSAW PUZZLE. Just then, JEFFREY'S HAND sweeps the |
|
puzzle off the table, scattering it into a thousand pieces. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON JEFFREY, dancing away while the PATIENT who just |
|
completed the puzzle stares, very upset. |
|
|
|
Other PATIENTS are getting agitated, too, as JEFFREY avoids a |
|
lunge by BILLINGS and dances off, using PATIENTS as a shield. |
|
|
|
HEAVY WOMAN PATIENT |
|
I'M GETTING DIZZY. MAKE HIM STOP! |
|
|
|
SKINNY MAN PATIENT |
|
HERE THEY COME! THEY'RE COMING! |
|
|
|
OLD MAN PATIENT |
|
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS! I GOT FIVE |
|
HUNDRED DOLLARS! I'M INSURED! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
OPPORTUNITY! DEFINITELY! A WINDOW OF |
|
OPPORTUNITY! OPENING NOW! NOW'S THE TIME |
|
FOR ALL GOOD MEN TO SEIZE THE MOMENT! YES! |
|
YES! MASTERCARD! VISA! THE KEY TO HAPPINESS! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, realizing through the haze of drugs that JEFFREY |
|
is sending a message to him. COLE looks at the ward door. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: the WARD DOOR opens and two husky ORDERLIES enter. |
|
One locks the door with a key, one of many on a key ring attached |
|
to his belt, as the other ORDERLY rushes to join the pursuit. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
SEIZE THE MOMENT! GET RICH! NOW'S THE |
|
TIME! GO FOR IT! |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
(missing a tackle) |
|
God damn you, Jeffrey, quit playing the fool. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, hesitating. He locks at the door...blurring in |
|
and out of focus. He looks down at the key in his hand. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON JEFFREY, being grabbed by the ORDERLIES. JEFFREY |
|
resists wildly as they struggle to overpower him. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
LAST CHANCE! LAST CHANCE! HEY -- OW! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, moving to the door. He reaches it and tries to |
|
insert the key in the lock. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON LOCK, as the key keeps missing the hole. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, glancing nervously over his shoulder. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: ORDERLIES swarm over JEFFREY, don't notice COLE. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, managing to insert the key. It won't turn. |
|
|
|
A PATIENT, close at hand, startles COLE, speaking into his ear. |
|
|
|
PATIENT |
|
Place to go would be...Florida. The |
|
keys are lovely this tine of year. |
|
|
|
COLE, unnerved, desperate tries the key again. It turns. |
|
|
|
PATIENT |
|
Be careful. J. Edgar Hoover isn't really dead. |
|
|
|
COLE pauses, stares, not understanding. Then, he opens the door. |
|
|
|
INT. CORRIDOR/COUNTY HOSPITAL |
|
|
|
Stepping through the door, COLE finds himself in an ante-room |
|
facing several elevators. |
|
|
|
A uniformed SECURITY MAN sitting at a near-by desk doesn't even |
|
lock up from the magazine he's reading. |
|
|
|
Barely daring to breathe, COLE steps toward the elevators so his |
|
back is to the SECURITY MAN. But he doesn't know how to control |
|
this elevator. What should he do? |
|
|
|
SECURITY MAN'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Two's not working today. Use one. |
|
|
|
COLE freezes, sneaks a glance over his shoulder. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: the SECURITY MAN continues his reading. He's a big |
|
guy with reading glasses perched on his nose. He looks exactly |
|
like the MENACING GUARD IN THE FUTURE...SCARFACE! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, stunned! |
|
|
|
Just then, an elevator door slides open. The elevator's empty. |
|
|
|
COLE steps into it. |
|
|
|
INT. ELEVATOR/COUNTY HOSPITAL |
|
|
|
The door closes, isolating COLE in the elevator. |
|
|
|
COLE finds the down button, is about to push it when the elevator |
|
springs to life. The numbers on the indicator over the door |
|
start to rise. 7...8...9. |
|
|
|
Then, the elevator stops and the door opens. |
|
|
|
Two DOCTORS and an AIDE stand in front of the door, waiting. |
|
|
|
COLE hesitates. |
|
|
|
They look at him. They seem to expect him to exit. |
|
|
|
Avoiding eye contact, COLE exits the elevator. |
|
|
|
As they enter the elevator, the DOCTORS look back at COLE and |
|
frown. |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S OFFICE - MORNING |
|
|
|
RAILLY has just arrived for work. She's slipping on her white |
|
doctor's coat when... |
|
|
|
DR. CASEY, one of the other residents, sticks his head in the |
|
door waving a crayoned message on a page torn from a magazine. |
|
|
|
DR. CASEY |
|
This was in my box, but I have a slight |
|
suspicion it wasn't meant for me. |
|
|
|
CASEY enters the room, reading the scrawled words dramatically. |
|
|
|
DR. CASEY |
|
"You are the most beautiful woman I have |
|
ever seen. You live in a beautiful |
|
world. But you don't know it. You have |
|
freedom, sunshine, air you can breathe." |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(smiling) |
|
Cole. James Cole -- right? |
|
|
|
She reaches for the note but CASEY moves it out of her grasp. |
|
|
|
DR. CASEY |
|
"I would do anything to stay here, but |
|
I must leave. Please, help me." |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Poor man... |
|
|
|
CASEY is handing her the note when another resident, DR. GOODINS, |
|
sticks his head in the door. He's upset. |
|
|
|
DR. GOODINS |
|
Hey, Kathryn, James Cole is one of |
|
yours, right? |
|
|
|
RAILLY and CASEY stare at him. |
|
|
|
DR. GOODINS |
|
He got out. Took off. Last seen, he |
|
was up on nine. |
|
|
|
INT. X-RAY DEPARTMENT/BASEMENT - DAY |
|
|
|
A PATIENT is being swallowed by a large tube, a CAT SCANNER, |
|
while a DOCTOR in a white coat speaks reassuringly. |
|
|
|
DOCTOR |
|
Just relax -- don't fight it. We have |
|
to know exactly what's there so we can... |
|
|
|
The DOCTOR stops, astonished, as the door bursts open. |
|
|
|
It's COLE! He stares at the PATIENT and the Cat Scanner. |
|
|
|
The PATIENT lifts his head up and stares at COLE. |
|
|
|
DOCTOR |
|
Eh, excuse me. Can I help you? |
|
|
|
COLE turns and rushes back out the door. |
|
|
|
INT. CORRIDOR/COUNTY HOSPITAL |
|
|
|
COLE steps into the corridor, turns to his right, freezes. |
|
|
|
A POSSE of SECURITY GUARDS is headed in his direction. |
|
|
|
COLE turns to his left. |
|
|
|
Four ORDERLIES are coming that way. |
|
|
|
COLE'S trapped. A beat. He attacks the nearest man. BILLINGS. |
|
|
|
INT. TECH ROOM/PSYCH WARD - SHORTLY (DAY) |
|
|
|
RAILLY prepares a hypo, turns to COLE who is strapped tightly on |
|
a gurney with BILLINGS and an RN standing on either side, tense |
|
for more trouble. One of BILLINGS' eyes is starting to swell |
|
shut. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It's just a shot to calm you. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No more drugs. Please... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I have to do this, James. You're very |
|
confused. |
|
|
|
RAILLY pushes the needle into COLE'S skin. |
|
|
|
INT. CONFERENCE ROOM/PSYCH WARD - LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER faces RAILLY across the conference table. DR. |
|
CASEY, DR. GOODINS, DR. MARILOU MARTIN are also there. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
Don't be defensive, Kathryn, this isn't |
|
an inquisition. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I didn't think I was being defensive. |
|
I was just... |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
He should have been in restraints. It |
|
was bad judgment on your part, plain |
|
and simple. why not just cop to it? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Okay, it was bad judgment. But I have |
|
the strangest feeling about him -- I've |
|
seen him somewhere and... |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
(impatient, not interested) |
|
Two policemen were already in the |
|
hospital and now we have an orderly |
|
with a broken arm and a Security |
|
Officer with a fractured skull. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I said it was bad judgment! What else |
|
do you want me to say? |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
You see what I mean? You're being defensive. |
|
(to Dr. Casey) |
|
Isn't she being defensive, Bob? |
|
|
|
But just then, BILLINGS sticks his head in the door. |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
Uh, Dr. Fletcher -- we got another... |
|
situation. |
|
|
|
INT. CORRIDOR/PSYCH WARD - MOMENTS LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER looks into an empty padded cell as RAILLY, MARTIN, |
|
GOODIN, BILLINGS, PALMER and the NURSE crowd behind him. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
He was in full restraints? And the |
|
door was locked? |
|
|
|
BILLINGS |
|
Yes, sir. Did it myself. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
And he was fully sedated? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
He was fully sedated! |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
Then are you trying to tell me that a |
|
fully sedated, fully restrained patient |
|
somehow slipped out that vent, replaced |
|
the grill behind him and that he's wriggling |
|
through the ventilation system right now? |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER indicates an impossibly tiny vent high in the wall. |
|
|
|
INT. CONCOURSE/AIRPORT - DAY (THE DREAM) |
|
|
|
Seen through the glass windows, a 747 takes off, climbing into |
|
the sky as the airport P.A. System drones... |
|
|
|
P.A. SYSTEM |
|
Flight 784 to San Francisco now |
|
boarding at Gate 38... |
|
|
|
YOUNG COLE, watching the 747, whirls at the SOUND of a COMMOTION. |
|
|
|
MR. PONYTAIL bumps him. |
|
|
|
The BLONDE MAN sprints past. The WOMAN'S VOICE calls out! |
|
|
|
WOMAN'S VOICE |
|
NOOOOOOOOOO! |
|
|
|
TRAVELERS dive for cover briefly revealing the mysterious BRUNETTE |
|
running after the BLONDE MAN! But this time, YOUNG COLE catches |
|
just a glimpse of her face. She looks a little like RAILLY except |
|
for the dark hair, the make-up. and the flashy earrings. She |
|
calls out, her VOICE blending weirdly with the P.A. SYSTEM... |
|
|
|
BRUNETTE/P. A. SYSTEM |
|
The Freedom For Animals Headquarters |
|
now boarding on Second Avenue. The |
|
Army of the Twelve Monkeys... |
|
|
|
ENGINEER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Cole, you moron -- wake up! |
|
|
|
INT. ENGINEERING OFFICE - ETERNAL NIGHT OF THE FUTURE |
|
|
|
As COLE blinks awake, the digitized monotone of the P.A. SYSTEM |
|
continues to drone in an unearthly VOICE... |
|
|
|
UNEARTHLY VOICE/P.A. SYSTEM |
|
-- they're the ones who are going to do it... |
|
|
|
COLE'S eyes seek the source of the sound and find it on the table |
|
in front of the panel of disapproving SCIENTISTS facing him. It's |
|
a beat-up old tape recorder. |
|
|
|
UNEARTHLY VOICE/TAPE RECORDER |
|
I can't do anything more. The Police |
|
are after me. |
|
|
|
The tape ends, runs off the reel, flap...flap...flap... |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
Well? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Uh, what? |
|
|
|
ENGINEER |
|
He's drugged out of his mind! He's |
|
completely zoned out. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
Cole, did you or did you not record |
|
that message? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Uh, that message...me? |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
It's a digital reconstruction of a |
|
message, Cole, from a weak signal on our |
|
contact number. Did you make that call? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(angrily) |
|
I couldn't call! You sent me to the |
|
wrong year! It was 1989. |
|
|
|
SCIENTISTS |
|
1989! |
|
|
|
The SCIENTISTS react, exchanging looks, whispers. Then, |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
You're certain of that? |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
(before Cole can answer) |
|
What did you do with your time, Cole? |
|
Did you waste it on drugs? Women? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
They forced me to take drugs. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
Forced you! Why would someone force |
|
you to take drugs? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I got into trouble. I got arrested. |
|
But I still got you a specimen -- a |
|
spider -- but I didn't have anyplace to |
|
put it, so I ate it. It was the wrong |
|
year anyway, so I guess it doesn't matter. |
|
|
|
The SCIENTISTS stare incredulously, then turn, exchange knowing |
|
looks, huddle, start whispering to one another. |
|
|
|
Struggling to stay awake COLE sees, blurrily, the MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
staring at COLE intently. For one moment, the face belongs to |
|
DR. FLETCHER! |
|
|
|
COLE blinks hard...and the MICROBIOLOGIST has his own face, again. |
|
|
|
COLE'S head slumps forward now...and everything goes dark. |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Cole! |
|
|
|
INT. ENGINEERING OFFICE - ETERNAL NIGHT OF THE FUTURE |
|
|
|
COLE comes awake with a start. The room is dark now, except... |
|
|
|
a slide is being projected on a torn screen. It's a picture of a |
|
stenciled graffiti...the logo of The Army of the 12 Monkeys. |
|
|
|
ENGINEER |
|
What about it, Cole? |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
Did you see it? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Uh, no, sir. I... |
|
|
|
Another slide CLICKS into place. Youthful PROTESTERS, their |
|
placards featuring slogans and images of Animal Atrocities, |
|
confront POLICE in riot gear. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
What about these people? Did you see |
|
any of these people? |
|
|
|
Zooming in, panning, the SCIENTISTS emphasize the FACES of the |
|
PROTESTERS. The FACES are unfamiliar to COLE (though WE will |
|
recognize some of them later on). |
|
|
|
COLE (o.s.) |
|
Uh, no, sir, I...wait! |
|
|
|
The image pans back to a much enlarged blurry FACE among the |
|
PROTESTERS. In spite of the poor image, the expression of rage |
|
is clear, and it seems to resemble a somewhat older JEFFREY MASON. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
Him? You saw that man? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Uh, I think so. In the mental hospital. |
|
|
|
MICRO3IOLOGIST |
|
(switching on the light) |
|
You were in a mental institution?! |
|
|
|
The SCIENTISTS MUTTER disapprovingly among themselves. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
You were sent to make very important |
|
observations! |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
You could have made a real contribution. |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
Helped to reclaim the planet... |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
As well as reducing your sentence. |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
The question is, Cole -- "Do you want |
|
another chance?" |
|
|
|
COLE stares at them, trying to figure out what they mean. |
|
|
|
INT. CONCOURSE/AIRPORT - DAY (THE DREAM) |
|
|
|
The BRUNETTE runs up the concourse, her back to YOUNG COLE, as |
|
frightened PASSENGERS duck for cover, SHOUTING! |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Hey! Who's that? |
|
|
|
INT. CELL - ETERNAL NIGHT |
|
|
|
COLE opens his eyes. Where is he? Silence as he examines the |
|
tiny cell. Bare cement walls. High ceiling. Same color and |
|
size as the isolation room at the county hospital. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Hey, Bob...what's your name? |
|
|
|
COLE looks around frantically. Up, down. Where is the VOICE |
|
coming from? Maybe from that tiny vent high in the wall... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Where are you? |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
You can talk! Wah'dja do, Bobby boy? |
|
Volunteer? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
My name's not "Bob". |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Not a prob, Bob. Where'd they send you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Where are you? |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Another cell. ... Maybe. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What do you mean, "maybe"? What's that |
|
supposed to mean? |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Maybe. Means "maybe" I'm in the next cell, |
|
another "volunteer" like you -- or "maybe" |
|
I'm in the Central Office spying on you |
|
for all those science bozos. Or, hey, "maybe" |
|
I'm not even here. "Maybe" I'm just in |
|
your head. No way to confirm anything. |
|
Ha Ha. Where'd they send you? |
|
|
|
COLE doesn't answer. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Not talking, huh, Bob? That's okay |
|
I can handle that. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
1989. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
89! How was it? Good drugs? Lotsa |
|
pussy? Hey, Bob, you do the job? D'ju |
|
find out the "big info"?...Army of the |
|
Twelve Monkeys...where the virus was |
|
prior to mutation? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It was supposed to be 1995. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Science isn't an exact science with |
|
these clowns. You're lucky you didn't |
|
end up in ancient Egypt! |
|
|
|
INT. LAB - ETERNAL NIGHT OF THE FUTURE |
|
|
|
COLE is strapped on a gurney. SCIENTISTS hover near-by, |
|
whispering. The walls of the gloomy chamber are damp, sweating. |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
No mistakes this time, Cole. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
Stay alert. Keep your eyes open. |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
Good thinking about that spider, Cole. |
|
Try and do something like that again. |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
Just relax now -- don't fight it. We |
|
have to know exactly what's there so we |
|
can fix it. |
|
|
|
The gurney is being wheeled into a crudely welded steel tube... |
|
reminiscent of the cat scanner in County Hospital. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: a last glimpse of anxious FACES, then the chamber |
|
door is CLANGED shut. |
|
|
|
EVERYTHING IS BLACK. A HUM BUILDS. THE BLACKNESS VIBRATES, THE |
|
HUM REACHES A DEAFENING LEVEL, THEN DIMUENDOS. WE BEGIN TO HEAR |
|
BURSTS OF MACHINE GUN FIRE, VOICES SHOUTING IN FRENCH, A SUDDEN |
|
HUGE EXPLOSION! THEN... |
|
|
|
EXT. TRENCH/FRANCE - DAY |
|
|
|
DRIZZLING RAIN. And SCREAMS. COLE'S in a deep trench, naked, |
|
eyes wide with terror. What's going on? Where is he? SOLDIERS |
|
in gas masks push urgently past him rushing toward their injured |
|
COMRADES who've been ripped apart by the shell that just hit |
|
fifteen yards away. Muffled VOICES shout through gas masks... |
|
in FRENCH. COLE doesn't know it, but this is World War I! |
|
Suddenly, a SERGEANT confronts him, shouting in French. |
|
|
|
SERGEANT |
|
(FRENCH, subtitled) |
|
Where's your mask?! And your clothes... |
|
and your weapon, you idiot?! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What? What?? |
|
|
|
COLE looks around desperately. A horribly WOUNDED MAN is being |
|
stretchered past them in the narrow trench. Machine guns chatter |
|
close at hand. AAK AAK AAK. A grenade EXPLODES. Reacting to the |
|
foreign word, the SERGEANT jams his bayonet into COLE'S ribs... |
|
|
|
SERGEANT |
|
(FRENCH, subtitled) |
|
Captain! A Kraut! We got a Kraut! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I don't understand. Where am I? |
|
|
|
The CAPTAIN hurries over, snapping at COLE in German. |
|
|
|
CAPTAIN |
|
(GERMAN, subtitled) |
|
How'd you get here, soldier? What's |
|
your rank? Where are your clothes? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I...don't understand. |
|
|
|
CAPTAIN |
|
(frowning, GERMAN, subtitled) |
|
German! Speak German! What are you |
|
doing here? |
|
|
|
VOICE (o.s.) |
|
(pleading in English) |
|
I gotta find 'em. I gotta find 'em. |
|
Please, you gotta help me! |
|
|
|
COLE turns, sees... |
|
|
|
It's his friend, JOSE, the Puerto Rican kid from the next cell in |
|
the "underground" time. He's being carried past COLE now on a |
|
stretcher, blood all over his torso, horribly wounded. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
JOSE! |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
Cole! Oh, God, Cole, where are we? |
|
|
|
JOSE reaches out to COLE just as a PHOTOGRAPHER takes a FLASH |
|
PICTURE of the kid being carried off on the stretcher. SUDDENLY, |
|
SHOTS RING OUT. COLE goes down. Hit in the leg! |
|
|
|
SOLDIERS in gas masks rush past him like giant insects. |
|
|
|
Looking to his left, COLE sees the CAPTAIN lying beside him, dead |
|
from a chest wound, his gas mask half off. |
|
|
|
COLE is reaching for the mask when... |
|
|
|
A SHELL HITS CLOSE BY WITH AN ENORMOUS EXPLOSION. |
|
|
|
EXT. COLLEGE CAMPUS - NIGHT |
|
|
|
Stunningly quiet. We are on a placid campus looking at the |
|
dignified architecture of Breitrose Hall. MOVING IN we FOCUS ON |
|
a large poster advertising "The Alexander Lectures, Spring 1995". |
|
WE SKIM the listings (Jon Else on The Nuclear Agony, Dr. Andrew |
|
Miksztal on Biological Ethics, etc.) until we SETTLE ON... |
|
|
|
DR. KATHRYN RAILLY |
|
MADNESS AND APOCALYPTIC VISIONS |
|
MAY 17 |
|
|
|
INT. AUDITORIUM/BREITROSE HALL - NIGHT |
|
|
|
A large screen dominates the auditorium stage. On the screen is |
|
a slide of an engraving from the Middle Ages showing a MADMAN in |
|
apparent agony, his mouth shaped to a scream, as he is restrained |
|
by PEASANTS. The projector ZOOMS slowly in on the agonized FACE |
|
of this MADMAN as we HEAR RAILLY'S VOICE lecturing. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
According to the accounts of local |
|
officials at that time, this gentleman, |
|
judged to be about forty years of age, |
|
appeared suddenly in the village of Wyle |
|
near Stonehenge in the West of England in |
|
April of 1162. Using unfamiliar words and |
|
speaking in a strange accent, the man made |
|
dire prognostications about a pestilence |
|
which he predicted would wipe out humanity |
|
in approximately 8OO years. Deranged and |
|
hysterical, the man raped a young woman of the |
|
village, was taken into custody, but then |
|
mysteriously escaped and was not heard of again. |
|
|
|
WE DISCOVER RAILLY, six years older now, standing at a lectern |
|
in a pool of light. She's dwarfed by the giant screen where the |
|
engraving is replaced by a series of slides of woodcuts showing |
|
scenes of pestilence in the Middle Ages as she lectures to an |
|
audience of mostly SCHOLARLY TYPES. |
|
|
|
RAILLY (cont.) |
|
In 1841, Mackay wrote, "During seasons |
|
of great pestilence, men have often |
|
believed the prophecies of crazed |
|
fanatics, that the end of the world was |
|
come." Obviously, this plague/doomsday |
|
scenario is considerably more compelling |
|
when reality supports it in some form, |
|
whether it's the Bubonic Plague, smallpox, |
|
or AIDS. In addition to these "natural" |
|
contagions, there are now technological |
|
horrors as well: besides radiation, |
|
consider our lurking fear of germ |
|
warfare and its close approximation, |
|
chemical warfare, which first reared |
|
its ugly head in the deadly mustard |
|
gas attacks during the First World War. |
|
|
|
ON THE SCREEN, a SERIES of SLIDES show images of WORLD WAR I |
|
SOLDIERS in gas masks, in death throes, etc.. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S VOICE (cont. o.s.) |
|
During such an attack in the French |
|
trenches in October, 1917, we have an |
|
account of this soldier... |
|
|
|
ON THE SCREEN, a slide of an old deteriorated photograph shows |
|
JOSE, the Puerto Rican kid, strapped to a stretcher, being carried |
|
by SOLDIERS through the trenches during an attack. JOSE appears |
|
to be ranting madly as the projector ZOOMS CLOSER on his face |
|
until |
|
the image approximates Munch's famous painting. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S VOICE (cant. o.s.) |
|
-- who, during an assault, was wounded |
|
by shrapnel and hospitalized behind the |
|
lines where Doctors discovered he had |
|
lost all comprehension of French but |
|
spoke English fluently, albeit in a |
|
regional dialect they didn't recognize. |
|
The man, although physically unaffected |
|
by the gas, was hysterical. He claimed |
|
he had come from the future, that he was |
|
looking for a pure germ that would |
|
ultimately wipe mankind off the face of |
|
the earth in the year... 1995! |
|
|
|
The AUDIENCE gives a nervous CHUCKLE. |
|
|
|
ON THE SCREEN, a different old photograph of JOSE. This time |
|
he's in a military hospital, gaunt, haunted, very ill. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S VOICE (cont. o.s.) |
|
Although seriously injured, the young |
|
soldier disappeared from the hospital |
|
before more data could be gathered. No |
|
doubt, he was trying to carry on his |
|
mission to warn others, substituting |
|
for the agony of war...a self-inflicted |
|
agony we call the "Cassandra Complex". |
|
|
|
As RAILLY continues, we SCAN the AUDIENCE and DISCOVER MARILOU |
|
MARTIN, |
|
RAILLY'S friend, and MARILOU'S HUSBAND, WAYNE CHANG, both |
|
listening |
|
attentively. Further away, another MAN listens intently. A MAN |
|
with |
|
shoulder-length carrot-colored hair. His name is DR. PETERS. |
|
|
|
RAILLY (cont.) |
|
Cassandra, in Greek legend you will recall, |
|
was condemned to know the future but to be |
|
disbelieved when she foretold it. Hence, |
|
the agony of foreknowledge combined with |
|
impotence to do anything about it. |
|
|
|
INT. RECEPTION ROOM - AN HOUR LATER (NIGHT) |
|
|
|
A stack of new books. THE DOOMSDAY SYNDROME, Apocalyptic |
|
Visions of the Mentally Ill by Dr. Kathryn Railly |
|
|
|
Surrounded by enthusiastic members of the audience, RAILLY is |
|
seated at the table signing books but DR. PETERS has her ear. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
I think, Dr. Railly, you have given |
|
your alarmists a bad name. Surely |
|
there is very real and very convincing |
|
data that the planet cannot survive the |
|
excesses of the human race: proliferation |
|
of atomic devices, uncontrolled breeding |
|
habits, the rape of the environment, the |
|
pollution of land, sea, and air. In this |
|
context, isn't it obvious that "Chicken |
|
Little" represents the sane vision and |
|
that Homo Sapiens' motto, "Let's go |
|
shopping!" is the cry of the true lunatic? |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS smiles self-importantly at RAILLY as an elderly |
|
disheveled PROFESSOR elbows in front of him. |
|
|
|
DISHEVELED PROFESSOR |
|
Doctor Railly -- please! I wonder if |
|
you're aware of my own studies which |
|
indicate that certain cycles of the |
|
moon actually impact on the incidence |
|
of apocalyptic predictions as observed |
|
in urban emergency rooms and... |
|
|
|
As the PROFESSOR babbles, MARILOU MARTIN and her husband, WAYNE |
|
CHANG, appear and whisper... |
|
|
|
MARILOU |
|
You were great. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You're leaving? |
|
|
|
MARILOU |
|
The reservation's at nine thirty -- |
|
it's getting late. |
|
|
|
DISHEVELED PROFESSOR |
|
Doctor Railly -- please -- this is very |
|
important! |
|
|
|
WAYNE CHANG |
|
(checking the professor) |
|
You sure you're gonna be all right? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(smiles, checks her watch) |
|
I'll be there in twenty minutes. |
|
|
|
DISHEVELED PROFESSOR |
|
Dr. Railly, I simply cannot understand |
|
your exclusion of the moon in relation |
|
to apocalyptic dementia... |
|
|
|
EXT. PARKING LOT/BREITROSE HALL - NIGHT |
|
|
|
A full moon. |
|
|
|
COLLEAGUES in a VOLVO pull out of the parking lot, calling, |
|
"Congratulations" to RAILLY. |
|
|
|
She waves back as she hurries to her black ACURA, one of the last |
|
cars left in the lot. |
|
|
|
The outside lights of Breitrose Hall go off. |
|
|
|
RAILLY seems to be alone in the lot as she fishes keys from her |
|
purse, unlocks her car door, starts to open it when... |
|
|
|
Suddenly, she's grabbed from behind in a choke-hold by a large |
|
shadowy MAN looming out of the darkness behind her. |
|
|
|
MAN'S VOICE |
|
Get in! |
|
|
|
Unable to scream, she writhes and kicks as he forces her into the |
|
front seat. |
|
|
|
MAN'S VOICE |
|
I've got a gun. |
|
|
|
RAILLY freezes, terrified, as he opens the rear door and |
|
scrambles in behind her. |
|
|
|
INT. ACURA/PARKING LOT |
|
|
|
Fighting to suppress the quaver in her voice, RAILLY says... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You can have my purse. I have a lot of |
|
cash and credit... |
|
|
|
MAN'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Start the car. |
|
|
|
Glancing in the rear view mirror, RAILLY sees penetrating eyes |
|
peering out of the shadows, no other features. |
|
|
|
Half-turning in the seat, she holds out the keys to him. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Here! You can have the keys. You can... |
|
|
|
He grabs her hair and yanks her head back hard, speaking fiercely |
|
into her ear, his face last in shadow. |
|
|
|
MAN |
|
START THE CAR! NOW! |
|
|
|
EXT. ACURA/PARKING LOT |
|
|
|
The engine STARTS, the Acura backs up, then heads for the exit. |
|
|
|
INT. ACURA |
|
|
|
Steering fearfully, RAILLY hears him speak more calmly now. |
|
|
|
MAN'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
I don't want to hurt you. But I will. |
|
I've hurt people before when...when I |
|
had no choice. Turn left. |
|
|
|
As she makes the turn, RAILLY glances in the rear view mirror, |
|
sees him unfolding a tattered map. His face is lost in darkness |
|
but she glimpses ragged, torn clothing as he tries to read the |
|
map by the intermittent glow of passing street lights. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Where... where are we going' |
|
|
|
MAN |
|
I need you to drive me to Philadelphia. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(startled, horrified) |
|
But that's... that's more than 200 miles! |
|
|
|
MAN |
|
That's why I can't walk there. Turn |
|
here... I think... |
|
|
|
RAILLY obeys. She glances in the mirror again, hesitates, then |
|
boldly switches on the dome light, holding her breath fearfully |
|
for his reaction. |
|
|
|
He grunts appreciatively. Relieved, she looks in the mirror |
|
again, trying to get a better look at him, but now his features |
|
are concealed by the map. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
If you make me go with you, it's |
|
kidnapping. That's a serious crime. |
|
If you let me go, you could just take |
|
the car and... |
|
|
|
MAN |
|
I don't know how to drive! We went |
|
underground when I was nine, I told you |
|
that. When you come to the corner, |
|
turn right. |
|
|
|
Startled, RAILLY whirls, looks right at him. |
|
|
|
He's lowered the map. It's COLE! Haggard, unshaven, dirty. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Cole! James Cole! You escaped from a |
|
locked room six years ago. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
1989. Six years for you. There's the |
|
sign! Right here! |
|
|
|
COLE is indicating a freeway entrance. |
|
|
|
RAILLY turns the wheel sharply. |
|
|
|
EXT. FREEWAY - NIGHT |
|
|
|
The Acura veers up the ramp and onto the freeway. |
|
|
|
INT. ACURA/FREEWAY - NIGHT |
|
|
|
RAILLY glances in the mirror, sees COLE settling back wearily |
|
against the seat. She says carefully... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I can't believe this is a coincidence, |
|
Mr. Cole. Have you been...following me? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You told me you'd help me. I know this |
|
isn't what you meant, but...I was desperate... |
|
no money...bum leg... sleeping on the streets. |
|
I probably smell bad. Sorry about that. |
|
But then I saw your book in a store window |
|
with a notice about your lecture. |
|
(sudden pride) |
|
I can read, remember? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Yes, I remember. |
|
(a beat, then) |
|
Why do you want to go to Philadelphia? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It's the next step. I checked out the |
|
Baltimore information, it was nothing. |
|
It's Philadelphia, that's where they |
|
are, the ones who killed everyone. |
|
(pointing suddenly, eagerly) |
|
Zs that a radio? Does it play music? |
|
|
|
RAILLY turns on the radio and immediately WE HEAR the SOUND of |
|
SURF |
|
and the CRIES of gulls, background to an oozing baritone |
|
COMMERCIAL. |
|
|
|
COMMERCIAL/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
This is a personal message to you. |
|
|
|
COLE sits up, alert, listening intently. |
|
|
|
COMMERCIAL/RADIO (cont. o.s.) |
|
Are you at the end of your rope? Are |
|
you dying to get away? |
|
|
|
COLE'S eyes narrow, concentrating on this personal message. |
|
|
|
COMMERCAIL/RADIO (cont. o.s.} |
|
The Florida Keys are waiting for you. |
|
|
|
COLE frowns as the SOUND of breaking SURF and crying GULLS fills |
|
the car. It's confusing! He blurts out... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I've never seen the ocean! |
|
|
|
Observing his confusion in the mirror, RAILLY assumes her |
|
professional tone. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It's an advertisement, Mr. Cole. You |
|
do understand that, don't you? It's |
|
not really a special message to you. |
|
|
|
COLE frowns. He did think it was for him, but she's probably |
|
right. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You used to call me "James". |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You'd prefer that? ... James...you |
|
don't really have a gun, do you. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(cynical laugh) |
|
Everybody's got a gun. In this city... |
|
|
|
He breaks off reacting to the RADIO MUSIC! FATS DOMINO singing |
|
"BLUEBERRY HILL"! COLE grins, mouth agape, eyes wide like a |
|
kid's. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Can you...can you make it louder? I |
|
love hearing twentieth century music! |
|
Hearing music and breathing air! |
|
|
|
As RAILLY cranks up the volume, she watches the mirror |
|
incredulously, sees him stick his head out the window into the |
|
wind, mouth open, "eating" the air hungrily. |
|
|
|
EXT. FREEWAY/ACURA - NIGHT |
|
|
|
"BLUEBERRY HILL" BLARES as the Acura, COLE'S head out the rear |
|
window, zips past a sign at 65 mph. |
|
|
|
The sign says, "PHILADELPHIA 233 MILES." |
|
|
|
INT. ACURA/FREEWAY - NIGHT |
|
|
|
RAILLY glances in the mirror at the nut in the rear seat with his |
|
head out the window. what can she do? Just then, while she's |
|
trying to figure something out, an ANNOUNCER'S VOICE breaks in... |
|
|
|
ANNOUNCER/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
This just in from Fresno, California: |
|
emergency crews are converging on a |
|
cornfield where playmates of nine year |
|
old Ricky Neuman say they saw him |
|
disappear right before their eyes. |
|
|
|
COLE pulls his head back inside with a frown, troubled now. |
|
|
|
ANNOUNCER/RADIO (cont. o.s.) |
|
Young Neuman apparently stepped into an |
|
abandoned well shaft and is lodged somewhere |
|
in the narrow 150 foot pipe, possibly alive, |
|
possibly seriously injured. Playmates claim |
|
they heard him cry out faintly but since then |
|
there has been no contact with... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
"Never cry wolf!" |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
My father told me that. "Never cry |
|
wolf." Then people won't believe you |
|
if...something really happens. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
"If something really happens"...like |
|
what, James? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Something bad. Is that all the music? |
|
I don't want to hear this stuff... |
|
|
|
RAILLY glances at him as she scans stations. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Did something terrible happen to you when |
|
you were a child? Something so bad...? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Ohhhh, that one! Can we hear that one? |
|
|
|
It's IVORY JOE HUNTER singing, "SINCE I MET YOU, BABY". |
|
|
|
IVORY JOE/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
"Since I met you, baby, |
|
My whole life has changed... |
|
|
|
Ecstatic, COLE sticks his head out the window again. |
|
|
|
EXT. ACURA/FREEWAY |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: the heavens, glittering with a million stars and a |
|
lover's moon as IVORY JOE croons the achingly romantic lyrics... |
|
|
|
IVORY JOE/RADIO (cont. o.s.) |
|
"-- cause since I met you, baby. |
|
All I need is you..." |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, wind in his hair, eyes shining, gulping air |
|
blissfully. |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S APARTMENT - MORNING |
|
|
|
Two POLICE OFFICERS and an anxious MARILOU MARTIN listen to an |
|
answering machine's message while a hungry CAT cries plaintively. |
|
|
|
ANSWERING MACHINE |
|
Dr. Railly -- this is Palmer from Psych |
|
Admitting. There was a guy here this |
|
afternoon looking for you. He seemed |
|
very agitated. We tried to keep him, but |
|
he refused 'n I kept thinking, I know |
|
this guy. Then, just a few minutes ago, |
|
it came to me. It's Cole! James Cole. |
|
Remember him? The paranoid who pulled |
|
the Houdini back in '89. Well, he's |
|
back and he's...cuckoo...and he's looking |
|
for you. I thought you oughta know. |
|
|
|
The machine switches off. The POLICE OFFICERS exchange a look. |
|
|
|
MARILOU MARTIN |
|
It's just as I told you -- my husband |
|
and I had gone ahead -- she never |
|
showed. That's totally unlike her! |
|
|
|
OFFICER TWO |
|
(pulls out his notebook) |
|
Do you happen to know the make of her car? |
|
|
|
MARILOU MARTIN |
|
Um...Acura...'92 Acura. ... Also, that |
|
cat's starving! She would never neglect |
|
her cat! |
|
|
|
EXT. MOTEL - MORNING |
|
|
|
The ACURA is parked outside room 46 of the HIGHWAYS & BYWAYS |
|
MOTEL, which has definitely seen better days. |
|
|
|
INT. MOTEL ROOM 46 |
|
|
|
The TV is on. A commercial is just starting. A catfood jingle. |
|
|
|
The sound of HEAVY BREATHING. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, sweating, BREATHING HEAVILY, sprawled on one side |
|
of the double bed, sound asleep. |
|
|
|
INT. CONCOURSE/AIRPORT - DAY (THE DREAM) |
|
|
|
GUNSHOT! YOUNG COLE glimpses the BLONDE MAN staggering, wounded. |
|
|
|
The mysterious BRUNETTE races past him toward the BLONDE MAN, and |
|
YOUNG COLE again glimpses the resemblance to RAILLY, in spite of |
|
the dark hair, the make-up, the flashy earrings. |
|
|
|
Close at hand, YOUNG COLE'S FATHER, his face still out of view, |
|
says, |
|
|
|
FATHER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Son, it's important for your cat to |
|
have the nourishment necessary for |
|
healthy bones and a rich coat. |
|
|
|
INT. MOTEL ROOM 46 |
|
|
|
COLE comes awake with a start. He stares, disoriented, at the |
|
CATFOOD COMMERCIAL on the TV. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Please untie me. I'm very uncomfortable. |
|
|
|
COLE turns to RAILLY, beside him on the bed, frightened and |
|
helpless, her jacket arranged to restrain her like a |
|
strait-jacket. |
|
|
|
COLE'S instinct is to free her at once, but he controls his |
|
impulse. He looks away, gets up, and, wincing, limps to the |
|
dresser, stepping around empty fast-food cartons. He pulls a |
|
razor and shaving soap from a paper bag, then goes into the |
|
bathroom, leaving the door open, and starts to shave. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You were in my dream just now. Your hair |
|
was different, but I'm sure it was you. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
We dream about what's important in our lives. |
|
And I seem to have become pretty important |
|
in yours. What was the dream about? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
About an airport...before everything |
|
happened. It's the same dream I always |
|
have -- the only one. I'm a little kid |
|
in it. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
And I was in it? What did I do? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You were very upset. You're always |
|
very upset in the dream, but I never |
|
knew it was you before. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It wasn't me before, James. It's |
|
become me now because of...what's |
|
happening. Please untie me. |
|
|
|
Finished shaving, COLE re-enters the bedroom, toweling his face. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, I think it was always you. It's |
|
very strange. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You're flushed. And you were moaning. |
|
I think you're running a fever. What |
|
are you doing? |
|
|
|
COLE is rummaging through RAILLY'S wallet, pulling out money. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I'll be back in a minute. |
|
|
|
He heads for the door. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
No! Don't leave me here like this! |
|
|
|
Too late! He shuts the door behind him, leaving her alone. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE TV SCREEN, where an ANCHORMAN sits at a News Set. |
|
|
|
TV ANCHORMAN |
|
And in Fresno, California...crews |
|
continue to attempt to rescue nine year |
|
old Ricky Neuman. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, twisting and struggling on the bed, trying to |
|
get loose, tears welling in her eyes. |
|
|
|
TV ANCHORMAN (cont. o.s.) |
|
The boy was playing ball with four |
|
other children when he literally |
|
disappeared off the face of the earth. |
|
|
|
EXT. MOTEL CORRIDOR - MORNING |
|
|
|
COLE puzzles over a junk food vending machine, inserts coins |
|
tentatively. |
|
|
|
INT. MOTEL ROOM |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON TV, the picture of RAILLY filling the screen. |
|
|
|
|
|
----------------------- PAGE 52 MISSING ----------------------- |
|
|
|
|
|
COLE |
|
My notes. Observations. Clues. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Clues? What kind of clues? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
A secret army. The Army of The Twelve |
|
Monkeys. I've told you about them. |
|
They spread the virus. That's why we |
|
have to get to Philadelphia. I have to |
|
find them -- it's my assignment. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What will you do...when you find |
|
this...secret army? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I just have to locate the virus in its |
|
original form before it mutates. So |
|
scientists can come back and study it |
|
and find a cure. So that those of us |
|
who survived can go back to the surface |
|
of the earth. |
|
|
|
RAILLY maintains a professional deadpan, says nothing as they pass |
|
a pickup truck with a MOTHER, FATHER, and five KIDS in the back. |
|
|
|
COLE stares at the KIDS, a sad look in his eyes. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You won't think I'm crazy next month. |
|
People are going to start dying. At |
|
first the papers will say it's some |
|
weird fever, some virus. Then they'll |
|
begin to catch on. They'll get it. |
|
|
|
RADIO NEWSCASTER (o.s.) |
|
We interrupt this program with a |
|
special bulletin... |
|
|
|
RAILLY and COLE both react to the radio, suddenly alert. |
|
|
|
RADIO NEWSCASTER (o.s.) |
|
This report just in from Fresno, |
|
California. Naval sonar specialists |
|
who were flown to the site... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I thought it was about us. I thought |
|
maybe they'd found us and arrested me |
|
or something. |
|
|
|
RAILLY stares at COLE. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Just a joke. |
|
|
|
RADIO NEWSCASTER (o.s.) |
|
-- an hour ago have been unable to |
|
determine the location of the boy in the |
|
150 foot shaft...but a TV sound man who |
|
lowered an ultra-sensitive microphone into |
|
the narrow tube claims he heard breathing |
|
sounds coming from approximately seventy |
|
feet down... |
|
|
|
COLE reaches over and changes stations. MUSIC again. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Does that disturb you, James? Thinking |
|
about that little boy in the well? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
When I was a kid I identified with that |
|
kid, down there alone in that pipe...a |
|
hundred feet down -- doesn't know if |
|
they're going to save him. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What do you mean -- when you were a kid? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Nevermind. It's not real -- it's a |
|
hoax. A prank. He's hiding in a barn. |
|
Hey, turn left here. Left! |
|
|
|
COLE quickly checks the map as RAILLY stares, then turns left. |
|
|
|
EXT. SKID ROW STREET/PHILADELPHIA - DAY |
|
|
|
An elderly EVANGELIST with long stringy hair, wearing a tattered |
|
bathrobe, stands on a Skid Row corner WAVING a worn Bible as he |
|
rants at disinterested DERELICTS, WINOS, and BAG LADIES. |
|
|
|
EVANGELIST |
|
"And the wild beasts of the islands |
|
shall cry in their desolate houses and |
|
dragons in their pleasant palaces: and |
|
her time is near to come, and her days |
|
shall not be prolonged." |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY'S ACURA, crawling down the street, RAILLY driving, |
|
COLE, beside her, staring out the window. |
|
|
|
INT. ACURA/SKID ROW STREET |
|
|
|
COLE is scrutinizing the crumbling walls, boarded-up store |
|
fronts, tattered posters, decaying signs, miserable "RESIDENTS". |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Where I come from we think of this as Eden. |
|
If we could just see the sun, eat sun-grown |
|
food. Eden! Look at them! They donut |
|
know what they have. They don't see the |
|
sky. They don't feel the air! |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: a BMW speeds toward them, passes, its radio BLARING! |
|
|
|
COLE (o.s.) |
|
And the ones who aren't hungry are so smug |
|
they haven't a clue. WAIT! STOP! |
|
|
|
EXT. ACURA/SKID ROW |
|
|
|
On foot now, COLE pulls an astonished RAILLY to a wall covered |
|
with |
|
graffiti, a hopeless tangle of symbols, words, and crude pictures. |
|
|
|
Clueless, RAILLY stares at the wall, then at COLE. |
|
|
|
COLE touches a bit of red-stenciled graffiti hidden under gang |
|
insignias. We can just see TWELVE MONKEYS holding hands in a |
|
circle. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
The Twelve Monkeys!!! They're here. |
|
(looks around) |
|
Somewhere. Come on! |
|
|
|
He pulls her along the sidewalk. No question, he's insane. |
|
|
|
At the next alley entrance, COLE stops abruptly. Then, still |
|
keeping a firm grip on RAILLY'S arm, he starts ripping down newly |
|
tacked-up posters announcing a Rap concert. |
|
|
|
RAILLY stares at him, then turns and is looking all around when, |
|
suddenly, COLE pulls her up tight and threatens... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Look, I'm warning you. You do anything, |
|
I'm going to go crazy -- hurt people! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I'm not going to "do" anything, I |
|
promise. But you need help, James. |
|
None of this is what you think it is. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, not listening, staring triumphantly! He's found |
|
another partially obscured stencil of THE TWELVE MONKEYS! |
|
|
|
But just then, a raspy VOICE startles COLE. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s) |
|
You can't hide from them, Bob. |
|
|
|
COLE whirls, sees a derelict, LOUIE, leering at him, speaking in a |
|
voice eerily like the RASPY VOICE from the next cell in the |
|
future. |
|
|
|
LOUIE |
|
No, sir, Old Bob -- don't even try. |
|
(conspiratorially) |
|
They hear everything. They got that |
|
tracking device on you. They can find |
|
you anywhere. Anytime. Ha Ha! |
|
|
|
RAILLY looks from LOUIS to COLE, sees COLE'S stunned reaction. |
|
|
|
LOUIE |
|
(touches his back jaw) |
|
In the tooth, Bob! Right? |
|
(sudden triumphant grin) |
|
But I fooled 'em, old buddy! |
|
|
|
He opens his mouth wide. NO TEETH' |
|
|
|
COLE grabs RAILLY and pulls her into the alley and down it. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
They're keeping an eye on me. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Who's keeping an eye on you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
The man...with the voice. I recognized |
|
him. He's from the present. He... |
|
|
|
COLE breaks off, freezes as he sees... |
|
|
|
there on a brick wall is a stencil of the DANCING MONKEYS |
|
|
|
And further on, another red stencil! |
|
|
|
EXT. VACANT LOT - MOMENTS LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
CRACKHEADS huddle against a building, sucking their pipes, |
|
oblivious to COLE pulling RAILLY past. |
|
|
|
COLE scans the walls for messages in the confusion of graffiti. |
|
|
|
RAILLY is considering her surroundings dubiously when, suddenly, |
|
COLE pulls her toward the mouth of a dark and forbidding alley. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, no -- we shouldn't be here! |
|
|
|
COLE ignores her, yanking her after him into the alley. |
|
|
|
INT. DARK ALLEY - DAY |
|
|
|
Two TOM CATS face off, arching their backs and HISSING menacingly. |
|
|
|
COLE avoids them as he pulls RAILLY into the gloom. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, seeing something alarming twenty yards ahead! |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S POV: TWO THUGS, standing over a MAN, kicking him. |
|
|
|
RAILLY tries to stop, but COLE, intent on the wall messages, |
|
doesn't notice the THUGS. |
|
|
|
The TWO THUGS turn and spot COLE and RAILLY moving toward them. |
|
|
|
These creeps have mean eyes, predator faces. |
|
|
|
RAILLY digs her heels in, forcing COLE to stop. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James! We have to go back. Those men... |
|
|
|
Too late. While COLE turns and stares at her, uncomprehending, |
|
the TWO THUGS are approaching. |
|
|
|
FIRST THUG |
|
Hey, buddy. |
|
|
|
Startled, COLE turns to face them. |
|
|
|
The SECOND THUG lunges for RAILLY'S purse, yanks it from her. |
|
|
|
COLE reaches to grab it back, but...WHACK! The FIRST THUG smacks |
|
COLE hard across the face with something metallic. |
|
|
|
Bloody-faced, dazed, COLE doesn't even have a chance to clear his |
|
head as the FIRST THUG shoves the hard object against COLE'S |
|
cheek. It's a cheap thirty-eight pistol. |
|
|
|
RAILLY turns to run, gets two steps before the SECOND THUG knocks |
|
her roughly to the ground. |
|
|
|
SECOND THUG |
|
Stick around, bitch. |
|
|
|
Looming over her, the SECOND THUG starts to unzip his fly. |
|
RAILLY looks over to COLE, SEES... |
|
|
|
COLE dropping to his knees, groveling at the FIRST THUG'S feet. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Please! Please don't hurt me! |
|
|
|
The FIRST THUG steps close, kicks COLE contemptuously, cocks his |
|
foot for a second kick when... |
|
|
|
COLE uncoils, lunging, rising, his strong arms around the bigger |
|
man's calves, lifting him mightily, high off the ground. |
|
|
|
The gun FIRES wildly as COLE staggers forward with the FIRST THUG |
|
in his arms and smashes the man into the brick wail behind him. |
|
The FIRST THUG goes down in a heap, dropping the pistol. |
|
|
|
Zipping his fly hastily, the SECOND THUG turns to deal with COLE |
|
but COLE attacks him....rocking him again and again with savage |
|
blows that come one after another with lightning speed. The |
|
SECOND |
|
THUG staggers back, bloody and dazed as RAILLY watches, amazed. |
|
|
|
Turning back to the FIRST THUG, COLE sees the MAN reaching for |
|
the dropped pistol. |
|
|
|
COLE kicks him viciously in the jaw. The FIRST THUG'S head whips |
|
back. SNAP! He collapses against the brick wall. |
|
|
|
COLE turns back to see the SECOND THUG retreating down the alley |
|
as fast as he can stagger. |
|
|
|
RAILLY stares up at COLE. He looks very dangerous. He glances |
|
in her direction as he pockets the pistol. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Are you hurt? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Uh, no. Yes. I mean, just some scrapes... |
|
|
|
As RAILLY gets to her feet, she sees COLE bend over the |
|
motionless THUG and quickly go through his pockets. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Is he...alive? |
|
|
|
COLE ignores the question as he pockets the man's wallet and a |
|
handful of bullets, then turns and snaps at RAILLY. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Come an. We're running out of time. |
|
You can't help him. |
|
|
|
As COLE yanks her roughly away, she looks back, sees the FIRST |
|
THUG'S sightless eyes, wide open...staring blankly. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Oh, Jesus, James! You killed him! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I did him a favor. Now come on. |
|
|
|
COLE, pulling her again, sees more "12 MONKEYS" on the wall. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You didn't have a gun before, did you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I've got one now. |
|
|
|
EXT. SECOND AVE - DAY |
|
|
|
The EVANGELIST, spotting COLE and RAILLY hurrying past him, |
|
points urgently at COLE. |
|
|
|
EVANGELIST |
|
You! You! You're one of us, aren't you? |
|
|
|
But COLE has stopped and is staring at... |
|
|
|
A STOREFRONT OFFICE...its windows covered with posters. The sign |
|
over the office says, FREEDOM FOR ANIMALS ASSOCIATION. |
|
|
|
INT. FAA STORE - MOMENTS LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
Earnest young activists, FALE, deathly pale, BEN, long haired, |
|
and TEDDY, muscular, are gathered around a counter collating |
|
leaflets that demand an END TO SPECIEISM. Behind them, a large |
|
poster proclaims, "ANIMALS HAVE SOULS, TOO". Just then, there's |
|
a tremendous CLAP OF THUNDER as the ACTIVISTS look up and see |
|
COLE and RAILLY enter. |
|
|
|
COLE looks startled. It sounds like torrential RAIN POURING in |
|
here. Maintaining a tight grip on RAILLY'S wrist, he looks |
|
around frantically for an explanation for the tropical downpour. |
|
|
|
Bookshelves line two walls. The front window is blanked cut with |
|
posters of Animal Rights demonstrations, newspaper clippings, |
|
photos of animal atrocities. The fourth wall features the |
|
counter where the three ACTIVISTS face COLE as a JUNGLE BIRD |
|
SCREAMS in the DOWNPOUR. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
Uh, can we help you? |
|
|
|
COLE looks confused as the RAIN abates and an ELEPHANT trumpets |
|
an urgent warning. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
Excuse me. You looking for something |
|
in particular? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It's all right, James -- it's just a tape. |
|
|
|
COLE'S eyes follow her look. It's a tape recorder underneath a |
|
sign advertising, "THE TRUE MUSIC OF THE WORLD". |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I, uh, I'm looking for the, ah, the |
|
Army of the Twelve Monkeys. |
|
|
|
FALE glances at BEN and TEDDY. "We have a problem!" the look |
|
says. |
|
MONKEYS start CHATTERING on the tape as TEDDY comes around the |
|
counter, bigger than COLE, physically imposing, menacing. |
|
|
|
TEDDY |
|
We don't know anything about any "Army |
|
of the Twelve Monkeys", so why don't |
|
you and your friend disappear, okay? |
|
|
|
COLE backs away, a firm grip on RAILLY, as a LION ROARS. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I just need some information... |
|
|
|
TEDDY |
|
Didn't you hear me? We're not... |
|
|
|
TEDDY breaks off mid-sentence...freezes. |
|
|
|
COLE is pointing a pistol at them. A TIGER SNARLS. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, no -- don't hurt them. |
|
(to the activists) |
|
Please, I'm a psychiatrist -- just do |
|
whatever he tells you to do. He's... |
|
upset -- disturbed. Please -- he's |
|
dangerous -- just cooperate. |
|
|
|
MONKEYS CHATTER wildly as TEDDY backs up. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
What do you want -- money? We only |
|
have a few bucks. |
|
|
|
COLE is suddenly very much in charge and self-confident again. A |
|
BABOON HOWLS with laughter. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I told you what I want. |
|
(snaps at Railly) |
|
Lock the door! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, why don't we...? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Lock it now! |
|
|
|
RAILLY hurries to the door to lock it as BEN says to FALE, |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
I told you that fuckhead Mason would |
|
get us into something like this. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
Shut up! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Mason??? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Jeffrey Mason? |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
Yeah, tucking, crazy Jeffrey Mason. |
|
|
|
INT. FAA STORE BASEMENT - TWENTY MINUTES LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
The three ACTIVISTS are tied tightly together in the middle of |
|
the floor in this dimly-lit, windowless basement. They're very |
|
frightened, eager to cooperate. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
Then, Jeffrey becomes like this...big |
|
star -- the media latch on to him |
|
because he's picketing his own father, |
|
a "famous Nobel Prize winning virologist". |
|
You musta seen all that on TV. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, I don't watch TV. |
|
|
|
COLE, the gun next to him, rummages through boxes of papers while |
|
RAILLY watches helplessly. Suddenly, COLE finds something he |
|
thinks he's seen before. He holds it up. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Is this him -- Dr. Mason? |
|
|
|
It's a photograph of DR. MALCOLM MASON, being escorted by a |
|
phalanx of riot cops through a mob of raging activists. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
That's him. |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
(very frightened) |
|
What are you going to do with us? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(stares at the photo, then) |
|
Tell me more about Jeffrey. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
(a helpless shrug to his cohorts) |
|
Jeffrey started getting bored with the |
|
shit we do...picketing, leafleting, |
|
letter-writing stuff. He said we were, |
|
"ineffectual liberal jerkoffs". He |
|
wanted to do guerrilla "actions" to |
|
"educate" the public. |
|
|
|
COLE holds up a clipping showing horrified SENATORS standing on |
|
their desks as RATTLESNAKES slither along the Senate Floor. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
Yeah, that's when he let a hundred |
|
snakes loose in the Senate. |
|
|
|
TEDDY |
|
But we weren't into that kind of stuff. |
|
It's counter productive, we told him. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
So he and eleven others split off and |
|
became this underground..."army" |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
The Army of The Twelve Monkeys. |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
They started planning a "Human Hunt". |
|
|
|
TEDDY |
|
They bought stun guns and nets and bear |
|
traps. They were gonna go to Wall |
|
Street and trap lawyers and bankers... |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
But they didn't do it. They didn't do |
|
any of it. |
|
|
|
TEDDY |
|
Yeah, just like always, Mr. Big Shot |
|
sold his friends out! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What's that mean? |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
He goes on TV, gives a news conference, |
|
tells the whole world he just realized |
|
his daddy's experiments are vital for |
|
humanity and that the use of animals is |
|
absolutely necessary and that he, Jeffrey |
|
Mason, from now on, is going to personally |
|
supervise the labs to make sure all the |
|
little animals aren't going to suffer. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(holding up a rolodex) |
|
What's this? |
|
|
|
EXT. FREEWAY - AFTERNOON |
|
|
|
In the crawling traffic, WE FIND a battered FORD covered with |
|
bumper stickers and painted slogans. "I BRAKE FOR ANIMALS"... |
|
"FREE THE ANIMALS"..."WOULD YOU LET A MINK WEAR YOUR SKIN?" |
|
|
|
RAILLY (v.o.) |
|
You can't just barge in on a famous |
|
scientist. They'll have security guards, |
|
gates, alarm systems. It's insane, James. |
|
|
|
INT. MOVING FORD/FREEWAY |
|
|
|
A ROLODEX CARD with an address on "Outerbridge Road" for "Jeffrey |
|
Mason c/o Dr. Malcolm Mason" rests on a map spread across COLE'S |
|
lap. COLE is in the passenger seat, RAILLY'S at the wheel, |
|
maneuvering in heavy traffic. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
If those young men don't get loose, |
|
they could die in that basement. |
|
|
|
COLE glances out the window, indicates the PEOPLE in passing |
|
cars...COMMUTERS, FAMILIES, TRUCKERS. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
All I see are dead people. Everywhere. |
|
What's three more? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(a beat, carefully, a new tack) |
|
You know Dr. Mason's son, Jeffrey |
|
Mason, don't you, James? You met him |
|
in the County Hospital six years ago. |
|
|
|
COLE is studying the map again. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
The guy was a total fruitcake. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
And he told you then his father was a |
|
famous virologist. |
|
|
|
COLE is absorbed in the map, his finger tracing "Outerbridge |
|
Road". |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No -- he said his father was "God"! |
|
|
|
EXT./INT. FORD/COUNTRY HIGHWAY - LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
The RADIO BLARES a country song as the Ford zips along an open |
|
highway. COLE has his head out the window, sucking air, loving |
|
the music, but his bliss is feverish now -- he's not well. As |
|
the SONG ends, he pulls his head inside. An ANNOUNCER'S VOICE |
|
intones over the RADIO... |
|
|
|
RADIO ANNOUNCER (o.s.) |
|
This just in: police are widening |
|
their search for Dr. Kathryn Railly, |
|
prominent psychiatrist and author. |
|
Authorities confirm that Dr. Railly has |
|
been abducted by escaped mental patient, |
|
James Cole. The two are believed to be |
|
traveling in Railly's 1992 black Acura, |
|
license plate H-E-A-D-D-R. |
|
|
|
RAILLY glances at him, sees he's in pain. She feels so badly for |
|
him. She wants to help him. She says, tenderly... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
This can't go on, James. You're not |
|
well. You're burning with fever. |
|
|
|
COLE, refusing to succumb, instead, leans over to check the gas |
|
gauge. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
We need gas. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I thought you didn't know how to drive. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I said I was too young to drive. I |
|
didn't say I was stupid. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What's the matter with your leg? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I got shot. Look -- there's a gas |
|
station up ahead. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Shot! Who shot you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It was some kind of...war. Never mind, |
|
you wouldn't believe me. Turn off here. |
|
|
|
INT. PARKED FORD/GAS STATION - MINUTES LATER (AFTERNOON) |
|
|
|
The GAS STATION ATTENDANT checks the oil while COLE and RAILLY |
|
remain in the car. She's pulling a gas card from her wallet. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You were going to run out off gas on |
|
purpose, weren't you? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
No. I want you to turn yourself in, James -- |
|
It'll go much better for you if you do |
|
-- but I'm not going to trick you. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(sees the credit card) |
|
That has your name on it. Give him cash. |
|
|
|
RAILLY puts the card back into her wallet and pulls out cash as |
|
the GAS STATION ATTENDANT slams the hood down. |
|
|
|
RAILLY starts opening the door. Alarmed, COLE tries to stop her. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Where are you going? |
|
|
|
She looks him in the eye, then indicates the tiny Convenience |
|
Store appended to the Gas Station. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You can come with me. I have to get |
|
some things. Scissors, bandages, some |
|
alcohol or whiskey. ... I have to look |
|
at your leg, James. I'm a doctor. |
|
|
|
COLE looks helpless, hesitant. She's in charge...for the moment. |
|
|
|
EXT. CLEARING/WOODS - AN HOUR LATER (AFTERNOON) |
|
|
|
The sun dazzles through the canopy of leaves. We HEAR the CAR |
|
RADIO but not the engine. |
|
|
|
RADIO ANNOUNCER (v.o.) |
|
Meanwhile in Fresno, where mining |
|
engineers continue their desperate |
|
attempt to sink a shaft parallel to the |
|
ant in which nine year old... |
|
|
|
COLE, in his underwear, leans back on a large rock beside the |
|
Ford, his pants hanging on the car's open door. He's staring up |
|
at the sun and the sky. RAILLY finishes bandaging his thigh. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You shouldn't put your weight on it. |
|
You need stitches and antibiotics. |
|
Lucky for you it was near the surface. |
|
|
|
RAILLY wraps the bullet in some gauze and sticks it in her pocket |
|
while COLE continues staring up at the sky. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I love seeing the sun. |
|
|
|
A beat. COLE tries to stand up. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Wait -- let me help you. |
|
|
|
RAILLY puts an arm around him and helps him to his feet. A beat. |
|
They're very close. They don't move. RAILLY looks like she can |
|
barely breathe. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(leans closer, shuts his eyes) |
|
You smell so good. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(trying to concentrate) |
|
You have to give yourself up, you know. |
|
|
|
A beat. The spell is broken. He reaches for his pants, then |
|
turns back to her, suddenly grim. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I have to do something now. Something |
|
I don't want to do. I'm so sorry. |
|
|
|
RAILLY reacts, sudden fear in her eyes. He looms over her. He's |
|
cold now, steeled. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I have a mission. It's important. |
|
|
|
RAILLY steps back...horrified, realizing she's going to die. |
|
|
|
EXT. MASON MANSION - NIGHT |
|
|
|
A SECRET SERVICE AGENT ambles vigilantly among the rows of luxury |
|
cars parked beside the brightly-lit rural mansion. Encountering |
|
another AGENT, he pauses. |
|
|
|
FIRST AGENT |
|
They find him? |
|
|
|
SECOND AGENT |
|
Who?? |
|
|
|
FIRST AGENT |
|
That kid. The one in the pipe. |
|
|
|
SECOND AGENT |
|
You believe this? They're dropping a monkey |
|
down there with a miniature infra-red camera |
|
strapped on him and a roast beef sandwich |
|
wrapped in tinfoil. |
|
|
|
FIRST AGENT |
|
You're making that up! |
|
|
|
ANGLE UNDER A PARKED MERCEDES, where COLE is hiding, listening to |
|
the receding VOICES of the AGENTS. |
|
|
|
SECOND AGENT (o.s.) |
|
I shit you not. ... Man, life is weird! |
|
A monkey and a sandwich. Wonder who |
|
thought that one up. |
|
|
|
FIRST AGENT (o.s.) |
|
Probly give the sonafabitch a Nobel |
|
Prize! |
|
|
|
Quickly, COLE rolls to the next car and under it. He doesn't |
|
see...the pistol fell out of his pocket, under the Mercedes. |
|
|
|
INT. MASON MANSION/DINING ROOM - NIGHT |
|
|
|
A formal dinner for forty. Desert has been served. DR. MALCOLM |
|
MASON rises to the enthusiastic applause of the GUESTS. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
Would that I could enjoy this opulent |
|
dinner and this excellent and |
|
stimulating company for itself, with no |
|
sense of purpose. But alas, I am |
|
"burdened" with the sense that with all |
|
this excess of public attention and |
|
this cacophony of praise, there comes |
|
great responsibility. Indeed, I |
|
practically feel a soapbox growing |
|
under my feet whenever I stand for more |
|
than a few seconds. |
|
|
|
While GUESTS laugh at DR. MASON'S last remark, SECRET SERVICE |
|
AGENT #3 enters the room, scowling, looking for someone. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON (o.s.) |
|
The dangers of science are a time worn |
|
threat, from Prometheus stealing fire |
|
from the Gods to the Cold War era of |
|
the Dr. Strangelove Terror. |
|
|
|
AGENT #3 spots who he's looking for. JEFFREY MASON! |
|
|
|
DR. MASON (cont.) |
|
But never before, not even at Los Alamos |
|
when the scientists made bets on whether |
|
their first atomic bomb test would wipe out |
|
New Mexico, has science given us so much |
|
reason to fear the power we have at hand. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON JEFFREY, as AGENT #3 whispers in his ear. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
What are you talking about? What |
|
friend? I'm not expecting anyone. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON DR. MASON, reacting with irritation to the disturbance. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
Current genetic engineering as well as |
|
my own work with viruses has presented |
|
us with powers as terrifying as any... |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON JEFFREY, following the AGENT out of the dining room, |
|
grumbling loudly enough to disturb his father's audience. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
This is ridiculous. My father is |
|
making a major address. |
|
|
|
INT. HALLWAY/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
The conversation continues as JEFFREY and AGENT #3 enter the hall. |
|
|
|
AGENT #3 |
|
Normally if we caught a guy sneaking |
|
around like this with no I.D., we'd |
|
bust his ass, excuse the French, but |
|
this one said he knows you... |
|
(smirk, smirk) |
|
-- and, since you seem to have had |
|
some...uh...unusual...uh..."associates", |
|
we certainly didn't want to arrest one |
|
of your, uh, closest...pals. |
|
|
|
INT. LIBRARY/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
COLE, smudged with dirt and car grease, sitting in the shadows in |
|
a wingback chair, looks up as JEFFREY and AGENT #3 enter the |
|
room. A FOURTH AGENT looms beside the wingback chair. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(dismissing Cole casually) |
|
Never saw him before in my life. Go |
|
ahead and shoot him or torture him or |
|
whatever it is you do. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(rising) |
|
You do know me. You helped me once. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(turning to leave) |
|
That would be totally out of character. |
|
Helping people is against my principles. |
|
(to the Agents) |
|
See, he definitely doesn't know me. Now, |
|
I'm going to go back and listen to my |
|
father's very eloquent discourse on the |
|
perils of science WHILE YOU TORTURE THIS |
|
INTRUDER TO DEATH. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I'm here about some monkeys. |
|
|
|
Halfway out the door, JEFFREY freezes. A beat. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Excuse me -- what did you say? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Monkeys. Twelve of them. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY frowns, turns, considers COLE. Then, suddenly, JEFFREY |
|
rushes to COLE and embraces him. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Arnold...Arnold. |
|
|
|
COLE is astonished. The AGENTS are, too. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(stepping back) |
|
My God, Arnie, what's happened to you? |
|
You look like shit |
|
|
|
AGENT #3 |
|
(dubious) |
|
You know this man? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Of course I know him. What do you |
|
think -- I act like this to strangers? |
|
Listen -- you fellas are terrific. I |
|
thought you were pulling a number on |
|
me. What a terrible thing if you'd |
|
thrown old Arnie out. I owe you guys |
|
the big apologia! Mea culpa, fellas. |
|
(turning to Cole) |
|
Christ, Arnie, it's black tie! I mean, |
|
I said, "drop by," but, like, this is |
|
Dad's big "do"...vips, senators, secret |
|
service, and...and everything. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY throws an arm around COLE'S shoulder and starts leading |
|
him toward the door as the two AGENTS exchange narrow-eyed looks. |
|
|
|
AGENT #4 |
|
"Arnie?" |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Arnold Pettibone. Old Arnie Pettibone. |
|
Used to be my best friend. Still is. |
|
What've you lost, Arnie -- forty pounds? |
|
No wonder I didn't know you. You hungry? |
|
Lots of dead cow, dead lamb, dead pig. |
|
Real killer feast we're putting on tonight. |
|
|
|
The AGENTS watch JEFFREY lead the limping, disheveled COLE out. |
|
|
|
AGENT #4 |
|
These people -- all of 'em -- are true |
|
weirdoes! |
|
|
|
AGENT #3 |
|
(moving to the phone) |
|
I'm gonna call in a description of this |
|
"Pettibone" character. You go keep an |
|
eye on him. Make sure he doesn't do |
|
one of the guests with a fork. |
|
|
|
INT. HALLWAY/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
GUESTS pouring from the dining room into the hall meet JEFFREY |
|
and a very disconcerted COLE. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Hey, nice ta see ya. Lookin' good! Hi, |
|
there. Yes, it has been a long time. |
|
|
|
In the b.g., too far away to hear them, AGENT #4 trails JEFFREY |
|
and |
|
COLE as they maneuver through the GUESTS toward the grand |
|
staircase. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(whispers to Cole) |
|
County Hospital, right? 1989. The |
|
"Immaculate Escape" -- am I right? |
|
(smiling to guests) |
|
Why, thank you -- you look wonderful, too. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Listen to me -- I can't do anything |
|
about what you're going to do. I can't |
|
change anything. I can't stop you. I |
|
just want some information... |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
We need to talk. Come on. Upstairs. |
|
(to a guest) |
|
I am a new person! I'm completely |
|
adjusted. Witness the tux. It's Armani. |
|
(whispers to Cole) |
|
Who chattered? Goines? Weller? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I just need to have access to the pure |
|
virus, that's all! For the future! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY studies COLE. COLE doesn't just talk crazy. He looks |
|
crazy! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Come on, follow me. You don't lock so good. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY starts guiding COLE up the grand staircase as COLE, |
|
glancing |
|
back, spots AGENT #3 and AGENT #4, both keeping an eye on him now. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I don't have time to go upstairs. The |
|
police are looking for me. I need to |
|
know where it is and exactly what it is. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(brightening suddenly) |
|
I get it! This is your old plan, right? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Plan? What are you talking about? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Remember? We were in the dayroom, |
|
watching TV, and you were all upset |
|
about the...desecration of the planet. |
|
And you said to me, "Wouldn't it be |
|
great if there was a germ or a virus |
|
that could wipe out mankind and leave |
|
the plants and animals just as they |
|
are?" You do remember that, don't you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Bulishit! You're fucking with my head! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
And that's when I told you my father was |
|
this famous virologist and you said, "Hey, |
|
he could make a germ and we could steal it!" |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(grabbing Jeffrey) |
|
Listen, you dumb fuck! The thing mutates |
|
We live underground! The world belongs |
|
to the fucking dogs and cats. We're |
|
like moles or worms. All we want to do |
|
is study the original... |
|
|
|
AGENT #4'S VOICE |
|
Okay -- take it easy. We know who you |
|
are, Mr. Cole. |
|
|
|
COLE feels a firm grip on his shoulder, turns and sees AGERT #4 |
|
|
|
AGENT #4 |
|
Let's go somewhere and talk this thing |
|
over. Okay? Just come with me... |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You're right! Absolutely right. Me's |
|
a nut case, totally deranged. Delusional! |
|
Paranoid. HIS PROCESSOR'S ALL FUCKED |
|
UP, HIS INFORMATION TRAY IS JAMMED. |
|
|
|
AGENT #4 is wishing JEFFREY would chill out even as the THIRD |
|
AGENT is climbing up the staircase to help. |
|
|
|
COLE is like a trapped animal. He's being led down the staircase |
|
now with JEFFREY, right on his heels, yelling so EVERYONE can |
|
hear. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS, THE "ARMY OF THE |
|
TWELVE MONKEYS"? IT'S A COLLECTION OF |
|
NATURE KOOKS WHO RUN A STORE DOWNTOWN. |
|
SPACE-CASE DO-GOODERS SAVING RAIN |
|
FORESTS. I HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH |
|
THOSE BOZOS ANYMORE. I QUIT BEING THE |
|
RICH KID FALL GUY FOR A BUNCH OF |
|
INEFFECTUAL BANANAS. SO MUCH FOR YOUR |
|
GRAND PLOT! |
|
|
|
COLE stares back at JEFFREY as both AGENTS hustle COLE down the |
|
stairs. It sounds true! JEFFREY'S so confident. |
|
|
|
AGENT #3 |
|
Take it easy, Mr. Mason, we've got him. |
|
Everything's... |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
MY FATHER HAS BEEN WARNING PEOPLE ABOUT |
|
THE DANGERS OF EXPERIMENTATION WITH |
|
VIRUSES AND DNA FOR YEARS. YOU'VE |
|
"PROCESSED" THAT INFORMATION THROUGH |
|
YOUR ADDLED PARANOID INFRA-STRUCTURE AND |
|
LO AND BEHOLD, I'M FRANKENSTEIN AND THE |
|
"ARMY OF THE TWELVE MONKEYS" BECOMES |
|
SOME SORT OF SINISTER REVOLUTIONARY |
|
CABAL. THIS MAN IS TOTALLY BATSHIT! YOU |
|
KNOW WHERE HE THINKS HE COMES FROM??? |
|
|
|
Suddenly, COLE, catching the AGENTS by surprise, wrenches free, |
|
shoves them aside, and stumbles down the rest of the staircase. |
|
|
|
INT. FOYER/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
COLE heads for the front door, but there's an AGENT there! COLE |
|
turns and limps madly toward the dining room, pushing his way |
|
through the crowd of amazed GUESTS. |
|
|
|
INT. DINING ROOM/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
SERVANTS, clearing the table, look up astonished as two AGENTS |
|
burst into the room. |
|
|
|
AGENT #4 |
|
Did a man just come through here...limping? |
|
|
|
INT. KITCHEN/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
COOKS stare, amazed, as two OTHER AGENTS burst into the kitchen |
|
and look about urgently. |
|
|
|
INT. DEN/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
A large projection TV is on and a knot of GUESTS is gathered in |
|
front of it...watching the spooky VIDEO IMAGES. |
|
|
|
TV REPORTER (v.o.) |
|
These pictures we are seeing are coming |
|
to us live from deep inside the pipe. |
|
You can just make out the metal wall |
|
behind those roots and I guess those |
|
must be spider webs. |
|
|
|
MRS. McCANN, a guest, watching the TV, expresses concern... |
|
|
|
MRS. McCANN |
|
Well, if you ask me, I think that monkey |
|
is going to eat the sandwich himself. |
|
|
|
Just then, two AGENTS burst into the den. |
|
|
|
The GUESTS turn from the TV, startled, stare open-mouthed, but |
|
the AGENTS have spotted an open window and are hurrying to it. |
|
|
|
AGENTS POV OUT THE WINDOW: the rows of expensive parked CARS. |
|
|
|
ON THE TV SCREEN, RAILLY'S photograph appears. |
|
|
|
TV ANCHOR (v.o.) |
|
This just in: Police say that the body of |
|
a woman found strangled in the Knutson state |
|
Park could be kidnap victim, Dr. Kathryn Railly. |
|
|
|
As the AGENTS run out of the room, a photo of RAILLY'S abandoned |
|
Acura comes up on the TV screen. |
|
|
|
TV ANCHOR (v.o.) |
|
Earlier in the day, police located |
|
Railly's abandoned car not far from a |
|
building where three animal rights |
|
activists were found bound and gagged... |
|
|
|
EXT. MASON MANSION - MINUTES LATER (NIGHT) |
|
|
|
Pistols drawn, AGENTS move cautiously among the rows of parked |
|
luxury cars, checking inside and under the vehicles. |
|
|
|
AN AGENT'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
COME ON OUT, MR COLE -- WE'RE NOT GOING |
|
TO HURT YOU. |
|
|
|
INT. PARKED GREEN JAGUAR |
|
|
|
COLE, scrunched down on the floor next to the driver's seat, |
|
spots the key dangling from the ignition, then lifts his head |
|
slightly to study the shift mechanism, trying to figure it out. |
|
|
|
EXT. PARKED CARS/MASON MANSION |
|
|
|
AGENTS continue to move cautiously among the parked cars. |
|
|
|
INT. PARKED GREEN JAGUAR |
|
|
|
COLE eases himself into the driver's seat, tentatively slides the |
|
shift into "Drive", then turns the key. Nothing happens. |
|
|
|
Panic. COLE studies the shift again. |
|
|
|
EXT. PARKED CARS/MANSION |
|
|
|
AGENT #5 approaches the row where the Jaguar is parked. |
|
|
|
INT. PARKED GREEN JAGUAR |
|
|
|
COLE slides the shift from D (Drive) to N (Neutral). He twists |
|
the key again. The engine ROARS...SEVEN THOUSAND RPM! |
|
|
|
EXT. LAWN/MANSION |
|
|
|
AGENT #5 whirls at the sound. |
|
|
|
SMASH. The JAGUAR clips the Mercedes parked in front of it and |
|
accelerates right at him! |
|
|
|
AGENT #5 dives aside just as the speeding JAGUAR whizzes past |
|
him, slams into a parked Cadillac, bounces off, grinds between |
|
two other parked vehicles with a fierce scream of tearing metal. |
|
|
|
INT. MOVING JAGUAR |
|
|
|
Caught between two cars, COLE can only lean on the gas pedal. |
|
|
|
The JAGUAR comes free with a great SCCCREEEEECH... |
|
|
|
COLE sees the driveway ahead in the moonlight. Steering madly, |
|
he plows through shrubs and gardens heading for the driveway. |
|
|
|
EXT. MASON MANSION - NIGHT |
|
|
|
Lights off, veering wildly, the JAGUAR reaches the driveway. |
|
|
|
AGENTS are leaping into cars and a HELICOPTER is coming to life, |
|
its rotors whipping around. |
|
|
|
INT. SPEEDING JAGUAR/OUTERHRIDGE ?OAD - NIGHT |
|
|
|
COLE turns onto the road, careening crazily from one side to the |
|
other, unable to see ahead with no headlights. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
LIGHTS! LIGHTS! |
|
|
|
He starts hitting switches. The wipers come on, the RADIO BLARES. |
|
|
|
RADIO REPORTER'S VOICE/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
---when they pulled the monkey out, it |
|
was still clutching the tinfoil wrapped |
|
sandwich. |
|
|
|
Rounding a bend, an ONCOMING CAR heads straight at COLE. |
|
|
|
COLE yanks the wheel as the OTHER CAR, horn BLARING, just misses |
|
him. |
|
|
|
Recovering, COLE loses the road, speeds crazily along the |
|
shoulder. |
|
|
|
INT. FLYING HELICOPTER - NIGHT |
|
|
|
The PILOT, an agent, steers the chopper while the CO-PILOT pans a |
|
spotlight over the two lane road beneath them. |
|
|
|
Just then, the PILOT sees headlights below. |
|
|
|
PILOT |
|
There! He's showing lights. |
|
|
|
INT. SPEEDING JAGUAR - NIGHT |
|
|
|
COLE can see the road now in his headlights as the windshield |
|
wipers scrape frantically and the RADIO BLARES... |
|
|
|
RADIO REPORTER'S VOICE/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
We don't know what to think. They |
|
didn't locate him and they don't know |
|
how much longer he can last, that's |
|
assuming the boy is still alive. |
|
|
|
A spotlight hits the car and COLE hears the sound of the |
|
HELICOPTER as it lowers over him! |
|
|
|
EXT. OUTERBRIDGE ROAD |
|
|
|
The HELICOPTER maneuvers over the speeding JAGUAR. |
|
|
|
INT. SPEEDING JAGUAR |
|
|
|
COLE can see the underbelly of the HELICOPTER a few feet above |
|
his front windshield. |
|
|
|
Desperate, he yanks the wheel hard, veering off the road. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV THROUGH THE WINDSHIELD: dense woods ahead. |
|
|
|
EXT. HELICOPTER/WOODS |
|
|
|
The chopper pulls up sharply, avoiding the trees, then levels out. |
|
|
|
INT. HELICOPTER |
|
|
|
The PILOT skims the top of the trees while the CO-PILOT rakes the |
|
forest below with his spotlight. |
|
|
|
PILOT |
|
Goddamnit! Where is he? |
|
|
|
The CO-PILOT gets a brief glimpse of headlights through the |
|
leaves. |
|
|
|
CO-PILOT |
|
There! Over there. |
|
|
|
PILOT |
|
Where? |
|
CO-PILOT |
|
Eight o'clock! He was right there. |
|
|
|
The headlights are gone. Nothing but darkness below. |
|
|
|
PILOT |
|
He musta turned his lights of if. |
|
|
|
CO-PILOT |
|
Couldn't drive down there without |
|
lights. We just can't see 'em. |
|
|
|
PILOT |
|
Maybe he's not driving! |
|
|
|
EXT. WOODS - LATER (NIGHT) |
|
|
|
A weather forecast BLARES from the radio of the steaming Jaguar, |
|
crumpled into a tree, the driver's door open. |
|
|
|
A POLICE OFFICER, pistol drawn, approaches the car cautiously, as |
|
OTHER OFFICERS and AGENTS stay behind trees, weapons ready. |
|
|
|
The POLICE OFFICER lunges forward, pointing his weapon into the |
|
Jaguar. He inspects the car, then turns and calls out... |
|
|
|
POLICE OFFICER |
|
He's not in here. |
|
|
|
EXT. WOODS/CLEARING - NIGHT |
|
|
|
Limping, bleeding from various cuts, COLE CRASHES through |
|
underbrush as he follows a stream through the woods. |
|
|
|
Suddenly, he sees what he's looking for. |
|
|
|
The FORD...barely visible in the moonlight, parked in the trees |
|
beside the stream. The car looks empty. |
|
|
|
INT. TRUNK/FORD |
|
|
|
Total blackness! The sound of keys in the lock. |
|
|
|
Then, the trunk swings open and COLE stands in the moonlight, |
|
looking down |
|
|
|
RAILLY is in the trunk, tears of rage and frustration in her eyes. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You bastard! You total bastard! |
|
|
|
EXT. FORD |
|
|
|
COLE backs away, as RAILLY scrambles out of the trunk, swinging. |
|
|
|
He slips, falls, and she starts kicking him as she rants |
|
hysterically. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I could have died in there. If something |
|
had happened to you I would have died. |
|
|
|
COLE is lying on the ground, looking up, his lip caked with blood. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I...I...I'm really sorry. |
|
|
|
Noticing his cuts and torn clothes, she stops kicking him. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What have you done? Did you...kill someone? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(getting to his feet) |
|
No! I...don't think so. I stole a car |
|
and they chased me. I hit a tree. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
See -- you can drive after all! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Yeah, sort of, I guess. I...I'm sorry |
|
I locked you up. I thought...I thought... |
|
I think maybe I am crazy! |
|
|
|
She looks at him. Breakthrough? Very calm now, the doctor. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What made you think that? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Jeffrey Mason said it was my idea about |
|
the virus. And suddenly, I wasn't |
|
sure. We talked when I was in the |
|
institution, and it was all...fuzzy. |
|
The drugs and stuff. |
|
(horrified) |
|
You think maybe I'm the one who wiped |
|
out the human race? It was my idea? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Nobody is going to wipe out the human |
|
race. Not you or Jeffrey or anybody |
|
else. You've created something in your |
|
mind, James -- a substitute reality. |
|
In order to avoid something you don't |
|
want to face. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I'm..."mentally divergent". I would |
|
love to believe that. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It can be dealt with, but only if you |
|
want to. I can help you. |
|
|
|
COLE reacts to the sound of VOICES in the woods, dogs BARKING. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I need help all right. They're coming |
|
after me. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
First, it's important that you |
|
surrender to them instead of them |
|
catching you running. Okay? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(brightening) |
|
It would be great if I'm crazy. If I'm |
|
wrong about everything...the world will be |
|
okay. I'll never have to live underground. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Give me the gun. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
The gun! ... I lost it |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You're sure? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(showing her) |
|
No gun! |
|
(looking up) |
|
Stars! Air! I can live here. Breathe! |
|
|
|
RAILLY starts around to the front of the car. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I'm going to attract their attention, |
|
let them know where we are, okay? |
|
|
|
RAILLY gets in the driver's seat...and starts to HONK the horn. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(calling out) |
|
They'll tell you to put your hands on top |
|
of your head. Do what they tell you. You're |
|
going to get better, James -- I know it! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, spotting something on the ground. An insect! He |
|
reaches down to grab it, but, instead, grins, grabs some grass, |
|
stands, and starts rubbing it happily all over his face. The |
|
HORN BLARES as COLE looks up at the sky. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE NIGHT SKY, the moon full, the sky rich with stars. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, tears of joy running down his face. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I love this world! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, in the driver's seat, hearing near-by SHOUTS |
|
from the woods. The police are almost here. She gets out of the |
|
car, starts around toward COLE. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Remember, I'm going to help you. I'll |
|
stay with you. I won't let them... |
|
|
|
She breaks off mid-sentence...stares, stunned! |
|
|
|
COLE is gone. Disappeared. |
|
|
|
INT. POLICE STATION OFFICE - MORNING |
|
|
|
RAILLY is being "debriefed" by POLICE OFFICERS and FBI AGENTS. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Then I said something to him about |
|
cooperating and he said he would do |
|
that, so I got in the car and started |
|
honking the horn. When I got out, he |
|
was gone. |
|
|
|
LIEUTENANT HALPERIN |
|
You lucked out. For a while we thought |
|
you were a body they found down state... |
|
mutilated. |
|
|
|
A COP enters, hands a photo to LIEUTENANT HALPERIN who studies it. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
He wouldn't do something like that -- he... |
|
|
|
LIEUTENANT RALPERIN |
|
(interrupts, hands her the photo) |
|
This the man he attacked? |
|
|
|
RAILLY looks at the photo, an 8 x 10 of the FIRST THUG, slumped |
|
against the alley wall, obviously dead. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I'd like to be clear about this. That |
|
man and the other one were..."severely" |
|
beating us. James Cole didn't start |
|
it. In fact -- he saved me! |
|
|
|
LIEUTENANT RALPERIN |
|
Funny thing, Doctor, maybe you can |
|
explain it to me, you being a psychiatrist |
|
-- why do kidnap victims almost always |
|
try to tell us about the guys who grabbed |
|
'em and try to make us understand how |
|
kind these bastards really were? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(as if reciting) |
|
It's a normal reaction to a life- |
|
threatening situation. |
|
(suddenly animated) |
|
He's sick. He thinks he comes from the |
|
future. He's been living in a carefully |
|
constructed fantasy world and that world |
|
is starting to disintegrate. He needs |
|
help! |
|
|
|
INT. AIRPORT CONCOURSE/THE DREAM |
|
|
|
YOUNG COLE stares, eyes wide. |
|
|
|
He sees the BRUNETTE, cradling the head of the BLONDE MAN as he |
|
sprawls on the concourse... |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST'S VOICE (O.S.) |
|
Wake up! Wake up! |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST'S VOICE (O.S.) |
|
I think we gave him too much. |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST'S VOICE (O.S.) |
|
WAKE UP, PRISONER! |
|
|
|
INT. SCIENTISTS' CHAMBER - ETERNAL NIGHT |
|
|
|
COLE blinks awake. All he can see are blurry faces hovering over |
|
him, hammering him with questions. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
Come on, Cole, cooperate! |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
Spit it out... you went to the home of |
|
a famous virologist... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(weakly) |
|
You...don't...exist! You're in |
|
my mind... |
|
|
|
SCIENTISTS (IN RAPID SUCCESSION) |
|
What? What's that? What did he say? His |
|
brain's fried. Give him another shot! |
|
SPEAK UP, COLE. WHAT DID YOU DO NEXT? |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S APARTMENT - EVENING |
|
|
|
The TV shows film of RAILLY leaving the police station. |
|
|
|
TV REPORTER (v.o.) |
|
The kidnap victim seemed exhausted but |
|
apparently unharmed by her 30 hour ordeal |
|
as she left the police station in |
|
Philadelphia this morning. So far she |
|
has refused to make a public statement. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S friends, MARILOU and WAYNE, are watching the TV. |
|
|
|
A door opens and KATHRYN RAILLY, wearing a robe, comes out of her |
|
bedroom. She still looks exhausted Followed by her cat, she |
|
enters the kitchen area and turns on the kettle as WAYNE hastily |
|
turns down the TV. |
|
|
|
WAYNE |
|
Sorry. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
No -- I'm in a state of hyper- |
|
alertness. I can't sleep. |
|
|
|
MARILOU |
|
Did you take the sedative? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I hate those things. They mess my head |
|
up. |
|
|
|
The old mug shot of COLE appears on the screen and RAILLY remotes |
|
the volume up. |
|
|
|
TV REPORTER (v.o.) |
|
Along with the kidnapping of the Baltimore |
|
woman, James Cole is now also wanted in |
|
connection with the brutal slaying of |
|
Rodney Wiggins, an ex-convict from... |
|
|
|
RAILLY goes to the window, pushes aside the drape, and sees... |
|
|
|
HER POV: ACROSS THE STREET...A COP keeps watch. |
|
|
|
RAILLY (o.s.) |
|
Do they really expect him to come here? |
|
|
|
RAILLY returns to the kitchen area where MARILOU is getting the |
|
tea things out. |
|
|
|
TV REPORTER on air |
|
And in Fresno, California... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(glances sadly toward the TV) |
|
He's dead, isn't he -- that little boy? |
|
|
|
WAYNE |
|
He's fine. It was just a "prank" he |
|
and his friends pulled. |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON RAILLY'S FACE... SHOCKED. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE TV SCREEN, showing footage of a sheepish nine year |
|
old boy being led out of a barn by the police. The cops look |
|
grim. |
|
|
|
TV REPORTER (v.o.) |
|
Authorities have so far been noncommittal |
|
about whether they will try to file |
|
charges against the families of the |
|
children involved in the hoax. |
|
|
|
RAILLY stares at the TV, stunned. |
|
|
|
INT. "HOSPITAL" ROOM - ETERNAL NIGHT |
|
|
|
VOICES! SINGING! COLE blinks awake, looks around, confused, then |
|
stares in disbelief.... |
|
|
|
Crowded around COLE'S bed, the SCIENTISTS are concluding a |
|
ragged, out of tune, rendition of "BLUEBERRY HILL." |
|
|
|
SCIENTISTS |
|
---found my thrills on Blueberry Hill... |
|
|
|
Seeing he's awake, SCIENTISTS break off the song and applaud. |
|
|
|
SCIENTISTS |
|
Well done, James! Well done! Nice |
|
going! Congratulations! Good for you! |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
During your "interview," while you |
|
were..."under the influence," you told |
|
us you liked music! |
|
|
|
COLE, confused, looks around, sees he's in a one-bed windowless |
|
room adorned with cheap reproductions of 19th and 20th century |
|
landscapes. |
|
|
|
The BOTANIST responds to COLE'S obvious disbelief with a |
|
friendly smile and the others join in rapid fire, overlapping. |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
This isn't the prison, James. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
This is a hospital. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
But just until you recover your, |
|
uh,... equilibrium. |
|
|
|
ENGINEER |
|
You're still a little... disoriented. |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
Stress! Time travel! |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
You stood up very well, considering... |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
Superior work! Superior! |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
You connected the Army of the 12 |
|
Monkeys to a world famous virologist |
|
and his son... |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
Others will take over now... |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
We'll be back on the surface in a |
|
matter of months.... |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
We'll retake the planet. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
We're very close! Because of you! |
|
|
|
ENGINEER |
|
(unrolling a document) |
|
This is it, James...what you've been |
|
working for. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
A full pardon! |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
You'll be out of here in no time. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
Women will want to get to know you... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I DON'T WANT YOUR "WOMEN," YOU |
|
BRAINLESS TWIT! I WANT TO BE WELL! |
|
|
|
Unseen until now, two guards, TINY and SCARFACE, suddenly break |
|
through the ring of SCIENTISTS, push COLE down, and tighten the |
|
loose restraints, already in place, but unnoticed before. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
(sympathetically) |
|
Of course you want to be well, James. |
|
And you will be...soon. |
|
|
|
COLE bursts into hysterical laughter. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
YOU DON'T EXIST, YOU SILLY BOZOS! |
|
YOU'RE NOT REAL! HA HA HA! PEOPLE DON'T |
|
TRAVEL IN TIME! YOU AREN'T HERE. |
|
MADE YOU UP! YOU CAN'T TRICK ME! |
|
YOU'RE IN MY MIND! I'M INSANE AND |
|
YOU'RE MY INSANITY! |
|
|
|
INT. PSYCHIATRIST'S OFFICE - DAY |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON KATHRYN RAILLY, insisting fiercely to someone, |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
He not only used the word "prank" -- he |
|
said the boy was hiding in a barn. |
|
|
|
RAILLY's talking to her former boss, DR. OWEN FLETCHER, |
|
psychiatrist |
|
sitting across from her in his office, tapping his pen. |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
He kidnapped you, Kathryn. You saw him |
|
murder someone. You knew there was a real |
|
possibility he would kill you, too. You |
|
were under tremendous emotional stress. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
For God sakes, Owen, listen to me -- he |
|
knew about the boy in Fresno and he says |
|
three billion people are going to die! |
|
|
|
DR. FLETCHER |
|
Kathryn, you know he can't possibly |
|
know that. You're a rational person. |
|
You're a trained psychiatrist. You |
|
know the difference between what's real |
|
and what's not. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
And what we believe is what's accepted as |
|
"truth" now, isn't it, Owen? Psychiatry -- |
|
it's the latest religion. And we're the |
|
priests -- we decide what's right and what's |
|
wrong --we decide who's crazy and who isn't. ... |
|
I'm in trouble, Owen. I'm losing my faith. |
|
|
|
INT. "HOSPITAL" CELL - ETERNAL NIGHT |
|
|
|
Alone in his "hospital" room, COLE struggles without success to |
|
free himself from his restraints. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
You sure fucked up, Bob! |
|
|
|
Startled, COLE freezes, then ignores the RASPY VOICE and |
|
continues his feverish struggle. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
But I can understand you don't want |
|
your mistakes pointed out to you. I can |
|
relate to that, old Bob. |
|
|
|
COLE looks around in spite of himself. Nothing to see but the |
|
walls and the landscape paintings. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Hey, I know what you're thinking. You're |
|
thinking I don't exist except in your |
|
head. I can see that point of view. But |
|
you could still talk to me, couldn't you? |
|
Carry on a decent conversation? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(blurting) |
|
I saw you! In 1995! In the real world! |
|
You were a bum! You pulled out your teeth. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Why would I pull out my teeth, Bob? |
|
They don't like that. That's a no-no. |
|
And when did you say you saw me? |
|
In...1872? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
FUCK YOU! |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Yelling won't get you what you want. You |
|
have to be smart to get what you want. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Oh, yeah? What do I want? |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
You don't know what you want? Sure you |
|
do, Bob. You know what you want. |
|
|
|
COLE, agitated, rocks back and forth. Then... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Tell me. Tell me what I want. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
To see the sky -- and the ocean -- to |
|
be topside -- breathe the air -- to be |
|
with her. ... Isn't that right? Isn't |
|
that what you want? |
|
|
|
Completely shaken, COLE hesitates for a long moment. When he |
|
speaks, it comes out of him like air...a whisper. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
More...than...anything. |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S BEDROOM - MORNING |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S in bed, asleep, having a very bad dream. Suddenly, the |
|
bedside phone RINGS. Her eyes snap open. A beat to orient |
|
herself. RING. She reaches for the phone. |
|
|
|
INTERCUT LIEUTENANT HALPERIN'S OFFICE/RAILLY'S BEDROOM |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON HALPERIN, at his desk, talking into the phone. |
|
|
|
LIEUTENANT HALPERIN |
|
Dr. Railly? Jim Halperin, Philly P.D.. |
|
Sorry to call so early but... |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON RAILLY, eager, concerned. into the phone, |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You found him? Is he all right? |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON HALPEPIN, noting her reaction with raised eyebrows |
|
giving an "I told you so" look to the BLACK PLAINCLOTHES cop |
|
across his desk, then continuing into the phone, |
|
|
|
LIEUTENANT HALPERIN |
|
Au contraire, Doctor. No sign of your |
|
good friend, the kidnapper. However, |
|
the plot thickens. I have a ballistic |
|
report on my desk that says the bullet |
|
you claim you removed from Mr. Cole's |
|
thigh is an antique...and all indications |
|
are it was fired...sometime prior to 1920. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, reacting, stunned. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON HALPERIN, continuing soberly now, |
|
|
|
LIEUTENANT RALPERIN |
|
So what I was thinking was, maybe if I |
|
sent a detective down there to talk |
|
with you, you could maybe revise or |
|
amplify on the circumstances.... |
|
Hello? Hello? Dr. Railly? |
|
|
|
HALPERIN considers the dead phone, glances at the COP again. |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S BEDROOM/STUDY |
|
|
|
Her hand still on the receiver, RAILLY looks shocked. Then, she |
|
hurries into her study and starts frantically pulling neatly |
|
arranged piles of papers and books from a bookcase until she |
|
finds a copy of her book. She leafs through it hurriedly, |
|
locates the picture of the Puerto Rican KID (JOSE) in WWI. |
|
|
|
Peering closely, she tries to see everything in the picture. |
|
Then, she turns and reaches for a research folder of old |
|
photographs and rummages through it until she finds...!!! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
No! |
|
|
|
It's an uncropped shot of JOSE being carried on the stretcher in |
|
the trenches. And there in the corner with no helmet, no gas |
|
mask, and just a bit of bare shoulder showing...it's COLE!!! |
|
|
|
INT. SCIENTISTS' CHAMBER - ETERNAL NIGHT |
|
|
|
Clean shaven, clear eyed, COLE sits before the frowning |
|
SCIENTISTS. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
The food, the sky, the certain, uh, |
|
sexual temptations -- you haven't |
|
become "addicted" have you, Cole? To |
|
that "dying" world' |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, sir! I just want to do my part. |
|
To get us back on top...in charge of |
|
the planet. And I have the experience, |
|
I know who the people are... |
|
|
|
BIOLOGIST |
|
He really is the most qualified... |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
But all that..."behavior"... |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
(to Cole, a little hurt) |
|
You said we weren't "real," Cole... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Well, sir, I don't think the human mind |
|
was built to exist in two different... |
|
whatever you call it..."dimensions." |
|
It's stressful, you said it yourselves, |
|
it gets you confused. You don't know |
|
what's real and what's not. |
|
|
|
MICROBIOLOGIST |
|
But you know what's real now? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Yes, sir. |
|
|
|
The SCIENTISTS start to confer openly among themselves |
|
|
|
GEOLOGIST |
|
He'd have to bone up, catch up to our |
|
research, the latest clues... |
|
|
|
ZOOLOGIST |
|
He's proved to be a quick study... |
|
|
|
The ASTROPHYSICIST fixes COLE with a sharp, penetrating look. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
You can't trick us, you know. It |
|
wouldn't work. |
|
|
|
BIOLOGIST |
|
And why would you want to? It'll be |
|
dangerously close to the end. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I understand. There'd be no point. |
|
|
|
ASTROPHYSICIST |
|
We're going to think about it, Cole. |
|
Among ourselves. We'll get back to you. |
|
|
|
INT. DR. MASON'S OFFICE - DAY |
|
|
|
Standing in front of a wall of glass in his office, overlooking a |
|
hi-tech lab below where WORKERS in white "space suits" work |
|
methodically, DR. MASON speaks angrily into a phone. His male |
|
ASSISTANT, whose features we don't see, stops writing a formula |
|
on a blackboard and listens. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
You have reason to believe that my son |
|
may be planning to do what?!!! |
|
|
|
INT. RAILLY'S APARTMENT/STUDY |
|
|
|
RAILLY, trying to stay calm, is talking to Dr. Mason on the phone. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Please, I know it sounds insane but... |
|
|
|
INT. DR. MASON'S OFFICE |
|
|
|
Dr. Mason on the phone. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
(into the phone) |
|
I'm afraid this doesn't seem very |
|
professional to me, in fact it's |
|
distressingly unprofessional for some- |
|
one who treated my son briefly (if |
|
indeed you actually are who you say you |
|
are) to take a sudden unsolicited interest |
|
in his mental health six years later, |
|
and to telephone a parent to express |
|
opinions that would be inappropriate... |
|
(breaks off, listens, then) |
|
I don't know anything about "Monkey |
|
armies", Doctor. Nothing whatsoever. |
|
If my son ever was involved in... |
|
(listens, then,) |
|
It would be doubly inappropriate to |
|
discuss matters of security with you, |
|
Dr. Railly, but if it will put you at |
|
ease, neither my son nor any other |
|
unauthorized person has access to any |
|
potentially dangerous organisms in this |
|
laboratory. Thank you for your concern. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON hangs up angrily and glares. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON'S ASSISTANT (o.s.) |
|
Dr. "Kathryn" Railly???? |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
The psychiatrist who was kidnapped by |
|
that man who broke into my house. She |
|
seems to have been suddenly struck by |
|
the most preposterous notion about Jeffrey. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON'S ASSISTANT (o.s.) |
|
I attended a lecture once...Apocalyptic |
|
visions. |
|
|
|
We see Dr. Mason's ASSISTANT now. It's DR. PETERS, the red- |
|
haired man who insisted to Dr. Railly you didn't have to be |
|
insane to think the world was coming to an end. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS (cont.) |
|
Has she succumbed to her own |
|
theoretical..."disease"? |
|
|
|
But DR. MASON is lost in thought, not listening. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
Given the nature of our work, we can't ever |
|
be careful enough. I think we should review |
|
our security procedures, perhaps upgrade them. |
|
|
|
INT. SCIENTISTS' CHAMBER - ETERNAL NIGHT |
|
|
|
COLE is facing the BOTANIST who's using a pointer to indicate |
|
various fading photos and newspaper clippings tacked on the wall. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
Let's consider again our current |
|
information -- if the symptoms were |
|
first detected in Philadelphia on June |
|
28, 1995, that makes us know that...? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It was released in Philadelphia, |
|
probably on June 14, 1995. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
And it appeared sequentially after that |
|
in...? |
|
|
|
With a quick glance at the panel of SCIENTISTS staring at him |
|
from behind the long table, COLE replies like a good pupil, |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
San Francisco, New Orleans, Rio de |
|
Janeiro, Rome, Kinshasa, Karachi, |
|
Bangkok, then Peking. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
Meaning...??? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
That the virus was taken from Philadelphia |
|
to San Francisco, then to New Orleans, |
|
Rio de Janeiro, Rome, Kinshasa, Karachi, |
|
Bangkok, then Peking. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
And your only goal is...??? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
To find out where the virus is so a |
|
qualified scientist can travel back into |
|
the past and study the original virus. |
|
|
|
BOTANIST |
|
So that...??? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Uh, so that a vaccine can be developed |
|
that will, uh, allow mankind to reclaim |
|
the surface of the earth. |
|
|
|
COLE glances nervously at the suspicious SCIENTISTS as the |
|
BOTANIST switches on a slide projector and projects... |
|
|
|
a magazine photo of wall graffiti: "ATTENTION!!! POLICE ARE |
|
WATCHING! IS THERE A VIRUS? IS THIS THE SOURCE? 3 BILLION DIE?" |
|
|
|
BOTANIST (o.s.) |
|
This is from a magazine printed in late |
|
September, 1995. The writer speculated |
|
that this graffiti might be related to |
|
the epidemic that by that time had |
|
already killed thirty million people |
|
world-wide and was getting worse. He |
|
says, certain people, unnamed, were |
|
questioned, but what came of that is not |
|
known. But it is a clue you should pursue. |
|
|
|
COLE stares at the picture. |
|
|
|
EXT. FAA STOREFRONT - DAY |
|
|
|
LOUD BANGING! The storefront window, completely covered with |
|
posters, quivers violently. Images of MONKEYS covered with |
|
electrodes, BABY SEALS being viciously clubbed, DOGS jammed into |
|
tiny cages quiver as somebody beats on the window. It's RAILLY. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
IS ANYBODY IN THERE? HELLO? IS |
|
SOMEONE IN THERE? IF YOU'RE IN THERE, |
|
I NEED TO TALK TO YOU. |
|
|
|
INT. FAA STORE |
|
|
|
JEFFREY, BEN, TEDDY, and two of JEFFREY'S youthful cohorts, SANDY |
|
and KWESKIN, wait motionless beside a heap of cardboard cartons |
|
as FALE peeks out the front window through a slit between posters. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
It's the kidnap woman -- the one who |
|
was with the guy who tied us up. |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
What's she doing? |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
She's drawing attention to us, that's |
|
what she's doing. ... I don't know what |
|
you're up to this time, Mason, but |
|
you're gonna get us in deep shit! |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Whine, whine, whine. What about walkie |
|
talkies? We used to have walkie talkies. |
|
|
|
EXT. FAA STOREFRONT |
|
|
|
From littered doorways, DERELICTS sneak peeks at RAILLY as she, |
|
seemingly mad, shakes the doorknob, then hammers on the door. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I SAW YOU! I SAW SOMEONE MOVING. I |
|
KNOW YOU'RE IN THERE! |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s) |
|
Secret experiments! |
|
|
|
RAILLY whirls, sees LOUIE, the raspy-voiced toothless derelict. |
|
|
|
LOUIE |
|
That's what they do -- secret weird stuff! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You! I know you! |
|
|
|
But LOUIE is studying the pictures of the tortured animals now. |
|
|
|
LOUIE |
|
Not just on them. Do 'em on people, |
|
too -- down at the shelters. Feed 'em |
|
chemicals 'n take pictures of 'em. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Have you seen James Cole? The man...? |
|
|
|
LOUIE |
|
They're watchin' you. Takin' pictures. |
|
|
|
RAILLY follows his look. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON AN OLD CHEVY, parked across the street, the PLAINCLOTHES |
|
COP slouched at the wheel, pretending to read a newspaper. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
The police. I know. Listen, I need to |
|
talk to James, but he has to be careful |
|
how he contacts me. He mustn't get |
|
caught. Do you understand me? |
|
|
|
LOUIS |
|
Uh, yeah, sure. Uh...who's James? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
He was with me, he spoke to you. |
|
Several weeks ago. He said you were |
|
from the future...watching him. |
|
|
|
LOUIS gives her a look that says, "I'm outta here!" |
|
|
|
But just then, RAILLY spots two TEZNAGE PUNKS surreptitiously |
|
"tagging" their way along the street with cans of spray paint. |
|
|
|
RAILLY stares at the PUNKS. |
|
|
|
INT. FAA STORE |
|
|
|
FALE watches JEFFREY go over a check list while KWESKIN, SANDY, |
|
and TEDDY organize materials, and BEN peeks out the small opening |
|
between posters at the front window. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You get the bolt cutters? |
|
|
|
KWESKIN |
|
One dozen. They're in the van. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
One dozen bolt cutters! Whadda you |
|
gonna do with one dozen bolt cutters? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(grins) |
|
You really want to know? |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
No! Absolutely not. Don't tell me anything. |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
Hey! Do you know what she's doing? |
|
|
|
Everybody freezes, looking toward 3EN, who's peeking outside. |
|
|
|
Then, except for JEFFREY, they all crowd around BEN to get a look. |
|
|
|
POV THROUGH SLIT: a glimpse of RAILLY, spray painting the front |
|
of the store! |
|
|
|
TEDDY |
|
What's it say? |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
I can't see it. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
(erupting) |
|
WHY DON'T WE FORGET MY GODDAMN |
|
PSYCHIATRIST AND DEAL WITH THE TASK AT |
|
HAND. THIS IS IMPORTANT. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
(spinning around) |
|
Your psychiatrist? Did you just say, |
|
"your psychiatrist"? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Ex-psychiatrist! Now, what about |
|
flashlights? How many flashlights...? |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
That woman is...was...your... |
|
psychiatrist? And now she's spray- |
|
painting our building? |
|
|
|
EXT. FAA STOREFRONT/SECOND AVENUE |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON SLACK PLAINCLOTHES COP, across the street in the CHEVY, |
|
amazed, watching RAILLY spray painting. He shakes his head |
|
wearily. |
|
|
|
ANGLZ ON STREET TYPES, inching closer, watching RAILLY with |
|
amazement, too. They include... |
|
|
|
an IRISH DRUNK, white haired, red-faced, bloated... |
|
|
|
a NATIVE AMERICAN with tormented eyes and a mangled ear... |
|
|
|
an AFRICAN AMERICAN with one eye... |
|
|
|
the TEENAGED PUNKS... |
|
|
|
a WHITE MAN, shabbily dressed, joining the knot of ONLOOKERS, |
|
reacting at the sight of RAILLY. It's COLE! He pushes toward |
|
her. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Kathryn! |
|
|
|
RAILLY stops spraying, whips around at the sound of his VOICE. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James! |
|
|
|
With a quick glance toward the PLAINCLOTHES COP, RAILLY takes |
|
urgent charge of the situation. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James! That's a policeman. Pretend |
|
you don't know me. If he sees you... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(turning, looking) |
|
No, I want to turn myself in. Where is he? |
|
(placing his hands on his head) |
|
Don't worry -- it's all okay now. I'm |
|
not crazy any more! I mean, I am |
|
crazy, mentally divergent, actually, |
|
but I know it now and I want you to |
|
help me. I want to get well... |
|
|
|
ANGLE on RAILLY, desperately pulling COLE'S hands off his head as |
|
she tries to block the COP'S view of COLE. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James -- put your hands down and listen |
|
to me. Things have changed! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE PLAINCLOTHES COP, checking the mug shot of COLE on |
|
his clipboard, then reaching for his radio mike. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, reacting to the COP speaking into his mike: she |
|
tosses the spray paint can aside, grabs COLE and tries to pull |
|
him along...but COLE isn't moving. He's staring at the front of |
|
the FAA Store with disbelief! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, come on! We have to get out of here! |
|
|
|
COLE looks from the wall to the can rolling on the sidewalk, |
|
then back to the wall where RAILLY has sprayed the huge words: |
|
|
|
ATTENTION!!! POLICE ARE WATCHING! |
|
IS THERE A VIRUS? IS THIS THE |
|
SOURCE? THREE BILLION DIE? |
|
|
|
It's the graffiti COLE saw in the future, in the picture! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I've seen that...before. |
|
|
|
But RAILLY'S total attention is on their dilemma. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, trust me. We're in terrible |
|
trouble. We have to run. |
|
|
|
Very confused, COLE lets her drag him along the sidewalk, past |
|
ONLOOKERS. She looks crazier than he does. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE CHEVY, making a sudden, urgent u-turn, almost |
|
colliding with a passing car. BRAKES SQUEAL and a HORN BLARES. |
|
|
|
INT. FAA STORE - DAY |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON BEN, peeking out, reacting to the drama. |
|
|
|
BEN |
|
Wow, a guy in a Chevy is chasing her |
|
and some other guy I can't see. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
Hey, no problem, it's probably just |
|
another kidnapping featuring Jeffrey's |
|
shrink, pardon me, make that ex-shrink. |
|
(indicating Jeffrey to the others) |
|
This is your leader, a certifiable lunatic |
|
who told his former psychiatrist all his |
|
plans for God knows what whacko irresponsible |
|
schemes, and now who knows what she's |
|
painted out there on our wall? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
WHO CARES WHAT PSYCHIATRISTS WRITE ON |
|
WALLS? |
|
(moves to Fale, jabs him with a finger) |
|
You think I told her about the Army of |
|
the 12 Monkeys? Impossible! Know why, |
|
you pathetically ineffectual and |
|
pusillanimous "pretend-friend-to- |
|
animals"?! I'll tell you why: because |
|
when I had anything to do with her six |
|
years ago, there was no such thing -- I |
|
hadn't even thought of it yet! |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
(triumphant) |
|
Then how come she knows what's going on? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY abruptly switches from rage to good humor, adopting a |
|
supercilious smile and a patronizing tone. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Here's my theory on that. While I was |
|
institutionalized, my brain was studied |
|
exhaustively in the guise of mental health. |
|
I was interrogated, x-rayed, studied |
|
thoroughly. Then, everything about me |
|
was entered into a computer where they |
|
created a model of my mind. |
|
|
|
They all stare, mesmerized, at the strutting JEFFREY. Is he |
|
serious? Is he crazy? Doesn't matter -- he's charismatic. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY (cont.) |
|
Then, using the computer model, they |
|
generated every thought I could possibly |
|
have in the next, say ten years, which |
|
they then filtered through a probability |
|
matrix to determine everything I was |
|
going to do in that period. So you |
|
see, she knew I was going to lead the |
|
Army of the Twelve Monkeys into the |
|
pages of history before it ever even |
|
occurred to me. She knows everything |
|
I'm ever going to do before I know it |
|
myself. How about that? |
|
|
|
JEFFREY smiles smugly into FALE'S flabbergasted face. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Now I have to get going -- do my part. |
|
You guys check all this stuff out and |
|
load up the van. Make sure you have |
|
everything. I'm outta here. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY exits. The others stare at the door. |
|
|
|
FALE |
|
He's seriously crazy -- you know that. |
|
|
|
EXT. SKID ROW ALLEY - DAY |
|
|
|
An overflowing dumpster squats near the mouth of an alley. |
|
|
|
The unmarked CHEVY crawls slowly past the alley, the PLAINCLOTHES |
|
COP'S eyes searching everywhere. |
|
|
|
Trash stirs in the dumpster and RAILLY'S eyes peer up out of the |
|
torn cardboard boxes, rotting food, and styrofoam litter. |
|
|
|
HER POV: the POLICE CAR passes from view. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, emerging from the refuse, hissing, |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James! Come on. |
|
|
|
A confused COLE emerges from the opposite end of the dumpster, |
|
bits of lettuce in his hair. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I don't understand what we're doing. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(climbing out of the dumpster) |
|
We're avoiding the police until I |
|
can....talk to you. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(climbing out after her) |
|
You mean, treat me? Cure me? Kathryn, |
|
those words on the wall -- I've seen |
|
them before... I...I...dreamed them. |
|
|
|
But she's not listening. She's peeking out the alley entrance. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S POV: across the street is a run-down skid row hotel, |
|
THE GLOBE, ROOMS WEEKLY, DAILY. |
|
|
|
INT. GLOBE HOTEL/LOBBY - MINUTES LATER |
|
|
|
The DESK CLERK, an old alkie who hates trouble but finds it often, |
|
stares across the counter suspiciously at RAILLY and COLE. |
|
|
|
DESK CLERK |
|
Twenty five bucks an hour. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
An hour?! |
|
|
|
DESK CLERK |
|
You want quarter hours, go someplace else. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(catches on, pulls out her last bills) |
|
Here's ninety eight. For the night. Deal? |
|
|
|
The DESK CLERK squints warily at this turn of events. Then, he |
|
turns, gets a key, turns back and hands it to her. |
|
|
|
DESK CLERK |
|
Forty four. Fourth floor, turn right. |
|
Elevator's busted. |
|
|
|
RAILLY turns, COLE follows, and they walk quickly to the stairs |
|
passing the stares of gloomy RESIDENTS sitting on torn sofas |
|
chairs in front of an old TV with hideous color. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE DESK CLERK, watching RAILLY and COLE climb |
|
stairs. As they disappear from view, he picks up the phone, |
|
punches a number, speaks into the phone. |
|
|
|
DESK CLERK |
|
Tommy? This is Charlie at the Globe. |
|
You know if Wallace has a new girl? |
|
Sort of a rookie type? Blonde? |
|
|
|
INT. GLOBE HOTEL ROOM 44 - MINUTES LATER (DAY) |
|
|
|
COLE sits on the lumpy bed in the dingy room, watching RAILLY |
|
pace back and forth like a mad woman. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Okay...you were standing there looking |
|
at the moon...you were eating grass... |
|
then what? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I thought I was in...prison again. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Just like that? You were in prison? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
No, not really. It's...it's in my |
|
mind. Like you said. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You disappeared! One minute you were |
|
there, the next minute you were gone. |
|
Did you run through the woods? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I don't know -- I don't remember. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
The boy in the well. How did you know |
|
that was just a hoax? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It was? I didn't...know. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, you said he was hiding in the barn... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I think I saw a TV show like that when |
|
I was a kid. Where a boy... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
IT WASN'T A TV SHOW! IT WAS REAL! |
|
|
|
COLE looks at her. She's really upset. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Well, maybe that kid saw the same TV |
|
show and copied it. Listen, you were |
|
right, it's all in my head. I'm mentally |
|
ill, I imagine all that stuff. I know |
|
they're not real, I can trick them, make |
|
them do what I want. I just worked on |
|
them in my head and I got back here. I |
|
can get better. I can stay here. |
|
|
|
RAILLY pulls a photo from her purse, shows it to COLE. |
|
|
|
It's the uncropped picture from her book, the photo of JOSE in |
|
WWI with a fuzzy image of COLE on the edge of the frame, |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What does this mean to you? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
...I had a dream about...something |
|
like that. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You had a bullet from World War One in |
|
your leg, James! How did it get there? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You said I had delusions -- that I |
|
created a world -- you said you could |
|
explain everything... |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Well, I can't. ... I mean...I'm trying |
|
to. I can't believe that everything we |
|
do or say has already happened, that we |
|
can't change what's going to happen, |
|
that I'm one of the three billion |
|
people who are going to die...soon. |
|
|
|
COLE stands, moves close to her. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I want to be here. In this time. With |
|
you. I want to become...become a whole |
|
person. I want this to be the present. |
|
I want the future to be unknown. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(sudden hopeful idea!) |
|
James...do you remember...six years |
|
ago...you had a phone number! You |
|
tried to call and... |
|
|
|
WHAM! The door flies open, kicked violently, the flimsy lock not |
|
holding. A menacing figure stands in the doorway. WALLACE. A |
|
wiry biker-type with jail house tattoos and mean eyes. |
|
|
|
COLE and RAILLY are too stunned to say anything as WALLACE looks |
|
them over coldly, insolently, then advances on RAILLY. |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
This is my territory, bitch! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(confused, turns to Railly) |
|
Is this real -- or is this one of my |
|
delusions? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
This is definitely real: |
|
(to Wallace) |
|
Excuse me, I think we have a little |
|
misunderstanding here... |
|
|
|
WALLACE smashes RAILLY in the face. She flies back against the |
|
wall and onto the floor as WALLACE spins around to COLE who is |
|
stepping toward him, but WALLACE is now holding a knife |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
What're you -- some kind of tough guy? |
|
You wanna be a hero? You gonna try and |
|
mess with me? Come on... |
|
|
|
A beat. COLE puts his hands up placatingly as he backs around |
|
WALLACE and moves to RAILLY, whose eye is already swelling. |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
Now that's a smart boy. But you, |
|
honey, you think you can go 'round |
|
me and peddle your fancy ass in this |
|
part of town, you bet your life we got |
|
what I would call a major goddamn |
|
misunderstandin'. |
|
|
|
RAILLY reaches a hand up to COLE for assistance, but, he grabs |
|
her purse instead, swings it around, SMASHES WALLACE in the face |
|
with it, then grabs the pimp's arm and SNAPS it like it was a |
|
twig! The knife clatters to the floor as WALLACE yelps in pain |
|
and COLE slams him to the floor, straddles his chest, retrieves |
|
the near-by knife, and presses it sharply against WALLACE'S neck. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
JAMES -- DON'T! |
|
|
|
COLE hesitates. |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
(eyes bulging) |
|
You...heard...her. Don't do it, man. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(gets up, looks around) |
|
Put him in the closet, ... But get his |
|
money first. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(amazed) |
|
You want me to rob him? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I...I...We need cash, James. |
|
|
|
A shadow. RAILLY turns toward the door and glimpses a FACE |
|
disappearing, then hears SHOUTS from the hallway... |
|
|
|
SHOUTS (o.s.) |
|
They're killing him! Call the cops. |
|
|
|
Being very careful not to move his neck, WALLACE reaches into his |
|
pocket and produces a thick roll of bills, which RAILLY grabs. |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
You two are crazy. I got friends. You |
|
put me in a closet, they're gonna be |
|
really pissed. |
|
|
|
COLE moves off Wallace and, keeping the knife close, yanks him to |
|
his teeth while RAILLY hurries to the window and looks out. |
|
|
|
HER POV: A fire escape leads down into an alley. |
|
|
|
RAILLY turns just in time to see COLE shove WALLACE into the |
|
bathroom, follow him in, slam the door behind them, and LOCK it. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James, no! |
|
|
|
INT. BATHROOM |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S VOICE (from the other room) |
|
(rattling the door knob) |
|
James, what are you doing? |
|
|
|
WALLACE cowers back against the shower stall. |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
I have friends, man -- if you cut me... |
|
|
|
WALLACE breaks off, bug-eyed, reacting to something we don't see! |
|
|
|
WALLACE |
|
What...the...fuck..are you doing??? |
|
|
|
INT. GLOBE MOTEL ROOM 44 |
|
|
|
RAILLY is pounding on the bathroom door now as, suddenly, it |
|
opens and COLE steps out, the knife in his right hand, dripping |
|
with blood. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Oh, my God, James. Did you kill him? |
|
|
|
COLE shakes his head "no" as blood oozes from his mouth. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Just...just in case. In case I'm not |
|
crazy... |
|
(holds up two bloody molars) |
|
That's how they find us. By our teeth. |
|
(a beat, eye contact) |
|
I don't want them to find me. Ever. I |
|
don't want to go back. |
|
|
|
RAILLY's astonishment turns to emotion as it dawns on her the |
|
choice he's made. Given up the future (if it exists, and it's |
|
looking like it does)! Risking his life to be with her! For |
|
this brief time! She's overwhelmed, lips trembling, tears |
|
welling in her eyes. But just then, the SOUNDS of SHOUTS and |
|
feet THUNDERING up the stairs snap her back to reality. |
|
|
|
INT. STAIRWELL/GLOBE HOTEL |
|
|
|
COPS' boots THUNDER up the stairwell. |
|
|
|
INT. ROOM 44/GLOBE HOTEL |
|
|
|
In between nervous glances toward the door, RAILLY supervises as |
|
COLE obediently blocks the bathroom door with the bureau. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Push it tight! |
|
|
|
WALLACE'S VOICE (from the bathroom) |
|
NO PROBLEM! I'LL JUST STAY IN HERE! |
|
DON'T WORRY ABOUT ME. |
|
|
|
INT. 4TH FLOOR HALLWAY/GLOBE HOTEL |
|
|
|
POLICE OFFICERS, led by the PLAINCLOTHES COP, make a cautious |
|
entrance onto the 4th floor, guns drawn. |
|
|
|
Seedy HOTEL RESIDENTS point to Room 44, then cower back into |
|
their doorways. |
|
|
|
EXT. GLOBE HOTEL FIRE ESCAPE/ALLEY - DAY |
|
|
|
COLE and RAILLY clatter down the fire-escape, COLE in the lead. |
|
They come to the end of the metal stairway. It's a long distance |
|
to the ground. COLE jumps down, turns, reaches up to her. |
|
|
|
She lets herself down to him. Their eyes meet. He holds her in |
|
his arms for a moment. Then, reluctantly, he puts her down. |
|
They start running down the alley. |
|
|
|
INT. GLOBE HOTEL FOURTH FLOOR - DAY |
|
|
|
The PLAINCLOTHES COP has his pistol out, his back to the wall |
|
alongside the open doorway to Room 44. The UNIFORMED OFFICERS |
|
are backing him up, weapons drawn. |
|
|
|
PLAINCLOTHES COP |
|
POLICE! THROW YOUR WEAPONS OUT AND |
|
COME OUTTA THERE! |
|
|
|
No response. |
|
|
|
INT. GLOBE HOTEL ROOM 44 |
|
|
|
The PLAINCLOTHES COP charges into the room in a crouch, pistol |
|
extended in both hands. He pans the gun around the empty room. |
|
|
|
HIS POV: the open window...the blood on the floor. |
|
|
|
WALLACE'S VOICE (from the bathroom) |
|
HEY! ZAT THE POLICE! I'M AN INNOCENT |
|
VICTIM IN HERE! I WAS ATTACKED BY A |
|
COKED-UP WHORE AND A CRAZY DENTIST! |
|
|
|
EXT. BUS STOP/DOWNTOWN - LATE AFTERNOON |
|
|
|
A city bus disgorges a stream of PASSENGERS at a stop in the |
|
toney downtown shopping district. Among them, RAILLY looks |
|
furtively left and right, COLE on her heels. She's hidden her |
|
bruised eye behind sun glasses; he's holding a bloody |
|
handkerchief to his mouth. |
|
|
|
As he steps to the sidewalk, COLE is overwhelmed by the bustling |
|
city, the tall downtown buildings. His eyes go up. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: a building, towering toward the sky. A building |
|
with a ledge. The same ledge the lion prowled in the future!!! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, shaken, as RAILLY ushers him into the recessed |
|
entrance to a store. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Wait here. I'm going to try that phone |
|
number. Let's hope it's nothing! |
|
|
|
Dazed by his experience and the flow of SHOPPERS, COLE watches |
|
her hurry to a pay phone twenty yards away, his view of her made |
|
intermittent by PEDESTRIANS streaming past him, their FACES |
|
looming frighteningly close. |
|
|
|
A BUSINESSMAN jostles COLE, forcing him back against the display |
|
window. Turning, he faces the angry jaws of a BEAR only inches |
|
away |
|
|
|
Recovering from a jolt of terror, COLE realizes the BEAR is a |
|
life-size |
|
toy in the display window. Relieved, he looks back at RAILLY. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: RAILLY, well out of earshot, speaking earnestly into |
|
the phone. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, startled, as a BUSINESSMAN, mistaking him for a |
|
panhandler, shoves a dollar into his hand. Confused, COLE stares |
|
at the dollar, then turns to say something to the retreating |
|
BUSINESSMAN, but just then he sees RAILLY rushing toward him, |
|
eyes sparkling with happiness, LAUGHING, ebullient. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James! James! It's okay. We're |
|
insane! We're crazy! |
|
|
|
COLE doesn't know how to respond, but a PASSERBY gives them a |
|
look. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It's a Carpet Cleaning Company... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
A Carpet Cleaning Company? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(laughing) |
|
No superiors! No scientists. No |
|
people from the future. It's just a |
|
Carpet Cleaning Company. They have |
|
voice mail -- you leave a message |
|
telling them when you want your carpet |
|
cleaned. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You... you left them a message? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(impishly) |
|
I couldn't resist. I was so relieved. |
|
Wait'll they hear this nutty woman |
|
telling them...they better watch out |
|
for the Army of the Twelve Monkeys... |
|
|
|
Looking at her laughing face, COLE is struck with horror as he |
|
realizes the truth! He starts to recite... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
"The Army of the Twelve Monkeys -- |
|
they're the ones who are going to do |
|
it. I can't do anything more. The |
|
police are watching me." |
|
|
|
Now she's stunned. She glances back and sees the phone booth |
|
twenty yards away. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You... you couldn't have heard me. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
They got your message, Kathryn. They |
|
played it for me. It was a bad |
|
recording...distorted. I didn't |
|
recognize your voice. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S eyes fill with horror as she grasps the meaning. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON A UNIFORMED COP, staring out the window of a POLICE |
|
CRUISER as it inches along in the bumper to bumper traffic. |
|
Noticing something, he reaches for his radio. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, spotting the CRUISER, grabbing COLE, pulling him |
|
into the CROWD. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Come on. |
|
|
|
INT. DEPARTMENT STORE/MEN'S DEPARTMENT - 6:00 PM |
|
|
|
RAILLY, whose sun glasses don't really hide her bruised eye, adds |
|
a man's Hawaiian shirt to the pile of other men's things heaped |
|
on a counter in front of a very suspicious CLERK. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
And this. |
|
(turning) |
|
Anything else? |
|
|
|
But COLE'S not here. He's a short distance away...staring. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: aisle after aisle of eager shoppers and a bounty of |
|
brand new consumer goods. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, remembering another department store, dark and |
|
full of moldering merchandise. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, turning again to the CLERK. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
I guess that's it. |
|
|
|
CLERK |
|
Shall I put this on your account, Ma'am? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(producing Wallace's roll of bills) |
|
No -- I'll pay cash. |
|
|
|
The CLERK stares at the huge roll of bills! |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What floor are the wigs on, please? |
|
|
|
EXT. PEST CONTROL VAN - NIGHT |
|
|
|
Surrounded by stripped and abandoned vehicles, the VAN, with a |
|
PEST CONTROL logo on its side, is parked on a trash-littered |
|
street beside the massive pillars of a towering freeway. |
|
|
|
INT. PARKED PEST CONTROL VAN |
|
|
|
The VAN is packed with SIX ACTIVISTS, SANDY and KWESKIN among |
|
them, all wearing black. Some of them have climbing gear, tool |
|
belts, all sorts of paraphernalia. KWESKIN is telling his story. |
|
|
|
KWESKIN |
|
So then he goes into this incredible riff |
|
about how his shrink, like, replicated |
|
his brain while he was in the nut house. |
|
Turned it into a computer. |
|
|
|
WELLER |
|
And Fale believed it? |
|
|
|
KWESKIN |
|
Oh, you know Fale! He's like, "If you |
|
guys get nailed -- and I'm sure you will -- |
|
I never saw you before in nay life!" |
|
|
|
LAUGHTER from all of them. Then, there's a sharp, rhythmic |
|
series of RAPS on the side door, a signal. |
|
|
|
POPE quickly slides the door open. It's JEFFREY...grinning. |
|
|
|
Three other activists, GOINES, ICHIOKA, and BRUHNS, stagger out of |
|
the darkness behind JEFFREY, lugging a huge, squirming GARBAGE |
|
BAG. |
|
|
|
The van occupants react with murmurs of "Awwwwwright" and "Far |
|
out", then they help maneuver the writhing bag into the van. |
|
|
|
Then, JEFFREY and the other three scramble in, too. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Let's do it! |
|
|
|
EXT. VAN/FREEWAY |
|
|
|
The PEST CONTROL VAN lumbers up a ramp and onto the freeway. |
|
|
|
INT. PEST CONTROL VAN/MOVING |
|
|
|
The GARBAGE BAG squirms and grunts as JEFFREY holds a map under a |
|
flashlight and goes over "the plan" with the other ACTIVISTS. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Okay, that's Stage One. In Stage Two, |
|
Monkey Four is over here... |
|
|
|
A loud GROAN from the bag distracts the others. |
|
|
|
GOINES |
|
What's the harm in opening the bag? |
|
His eyes are taped. |
|
|
|
SANDY |
|
Yeah, it's cruel leaving him like that. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Ah, but cruelty is his specialty. |
|
|
|
ICHIOKA |
|
So why should we be like him? |
|
|
|
Shrugging cheerfully, JEFFREY tears open the garbage bag revealing |
|
DR. MASON, trussed up, duct tape covering his eyes and mouth. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
Want the full effect? |
|
|
|
Grinning wickedly, JEFFREY rips the tape from his father's mouth. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
Jeffrey? I know it's you, Jeffrey. I |
|
recognize your voice. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY puts his finger to his lips, silencing everyone. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
JEFFREY??? ... Very well. You're out |
|
of your mind, Jeffrey. I know all |
|
about your insane plan. That woman -- |
|
your psychiatrist -- she told me. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY raises his eyebrows. This he hadn't expected. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
I didn't believe her -- it seemed too crazy |
|
even for you. But, just in case, I took steps |
|
to make sure you couldn't do it. I took myself |
|
out of the loop! I don't have the code any |
|
more. I don't have access to the virus. So, |
|
go ahead -- torture me, but you can't extract |
|
anything of use to yourself. |
|
|
|
The ACTIVISTS are all exchanging puzzled looks. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
What...virus? |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
(spins his head toward Jeffrey) |
|
She knew about it, Jeffrey. She knew |
|
you were going to try this. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
What virus are we talking about, Dad? |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
You're insane, Jeffrey. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
You "develop" viruses and you're calling |
|
me insane? Typical. What does this |
|
virus attack? Don't tell me, you sick |
|
fuck, it doesn't matter. |
|
(to the others) |
|
Have I ever "developed" a virus? Do I |
|
put helpless animals in cages and measure |
|
their reactions to electrical stimuli? |
|
Do I inject radioactive substances into |
|
living creatures and examine their |
|
bowel movements? Wow! And I'm crazy! |
|
|
|
DR. MASON |
|
Please tell me, Jeffrey, what exactly |
|
are you going to do? I don't have to |
|
tell you I'm afraid. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY |
|
THIS IS A FUCKING EXPERIMENT! YOU'RE |
|
OUR HELPLESS LITTLE TEST ANIMAL, DADDY. |
|
GOT THAT? NOW -- WHAT FUCKING VIRUS |
|
HAVE YOU COME UP WITH, YOU DEMENTED |
|
FUCKING MANIAC? |
|
|
|
INT. MOVIE SCREEN/THEATER - NIGHT |
|
|
|
Spooky BERNARD HERRMAN MUSIC, giant redwoods looming skyward. |
|
It's DAYTIME in Muir Woods. SCOTTY (JAMES STEWART) AND MADELINE |
|
(KIM NOVAK) walk toward a display of a cross cut section of a |
|
redwood tree. We're watching Hitchcock's VERTIGO. |
|
|
|
SCOTTY (up on the screen) |
|
Here's a cross section of one of the |
|
old trees that's been cut down. |
|
|
|
They look at the lines of the tree marked with cards that say, |
|
"BIRTH OF CHRIST", "DISCOVERY OF AMERICA", "MAGNA CARTA SIGNED", |
|
"1066 - BATTLE OF HASTINGS", and "1930 TREE CUT DOWN". |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE THEATER AUDIENCE, empty seats dimly visible in the |
|
flickering light, a few shadowy MOVIEGOERS scattered here and |
|
there. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE SCREEN, MADELINE pointing, saying with profound |
|
melancholy. |
|
|
|
MADELINE (up on the screen) |
|
Somewhere in here I was born. And here |
|
-- I die. There's only a moment for |
|
you. You don't notice. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE AUDIENCE, a shadowy COUPLE near the back of the |
|
theater. WE CAN'T REALLY SEE THEM, but we recognize their VOICES |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Here, let me help you. |
|
|
|
The theater is briefly illuminated by a very bright scene on the |
|
screen, revealing enough of COLE and RAILLY for us to see she's |
|
doing something to his upper lip while he tries to watch the |
|
movie. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I think I've seen this movie before. |
|
When I was a kid. It was on TV. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(fussing with his upper lip) |
|
Shh -- don't talk. Hold still. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(moving his head to see the film) |
|
I have seen it, but I don't remember |
|
this part. Funny, it's like what's |
|
happening to us, like the past. The |
|
movie never changes -- it can't change |
|
-- but everytime you see it, it seems |
|
to be different because you're different |
|
-- you notice different things. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
If we can't change anything...because |
|
it's already happened, then we ought to |
|
at least smell the flowers. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Flowers! What flowers? |
|
|
|
From the darkness, a MOVIE PATRON makes a SSSSHHHHH shound. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(whispering) |
|
It's an expression. Here... |
|
|
|
She's pulling something from a shopping bag at her feet, placing |
|
it on COLE'S head, adjusting it... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Why are we doing this? |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
So we can stick our heads out the |
|
window and feel the wind and listen to |
|
the music. So we can appreciate what |
|
we have while we have it. Forgive me, |
|
psychiatrists don't cry. |
|
|
|
There are tears in her eyes. They discomfit COLE. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
But maybe I'm wrong. Maybe you're |
|
wrong. Maybe we're both crazy. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
In a few weeks, it will have started or |
|
it won't. If there are still baseball |
|
games and traffic jams, armed robberies |
|
and boring TV shows -- we'll be so |
|
happy, we'll be glad to turn ourselves |
|
in to the police. |
|
|
|
SHADOWY MOVIEGOER |
|
SHHHHHHH |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(whispers) |
|
Where can we hide for a few weeks? |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE SCREEN, where SCOTTY and MADELINE are in the |
|
foreground, |
|
the OCEAN behind them. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
You said you'd never seen the ocean... |
|
|
|
EXT. GORILLA'S PEN/ZOO - NIGHT |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON A GORILLA, by moonlight, angry, a true nightmare vision. |
|
|
|
URGENT WHISPERS off screen, RUSTLING SOUNDS. Then, METAL ON |
|
METAL. |
|
Only now are we aware that the GORILLA is in an outdoor zoo pen |
|
with phony rocks. Stalking back and forth. Huge. Upset. |
|
|
|
CLANK. CLANK. METAL ON METAL. GRUNTS of effort, then, DR. |
|
MASON'S VOICE, plaintive, frightened. |
|
|
|
DR. MASON'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
What are you doing to me? Where are |
|
we? Jeffrey, please... |
|
|
|
SANDY'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
For God's sake, put the tape back on |
|
his mouth! |
|
|
|
The GORILLA bellows angrily, beating his chest. |
|
|
|
JEFFREY'S VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Forget the tape. The monkey's louder than |
|
he is. You gonna tape the monkey's mouth? |
|
|
|
EXT. PANTHERS' PEN/ZOO - NIGHT |
|
|
|
Under the full moon, PANTHERS pace back and forth, back and |
|
forth, uttering ominous guttural SNARLS. |
|
|
|
EXT. LION'S PEN/ZOO |
|
|
|
The KING OF BEASTS gives a deep, fierce ROAR. From the darkness, |
|
unseen ELEPHANTS TRUMPET their response. |
|
|
|
EXT. AVIARIES/ZOO |
|
|
|
A PANDEMONIUM of WINGS RUSTLING, the sharp metallic CLINKING of |
|
metal on metal, the MUTTER of HUMAN VOICES, then a cacophonous |
|
CRESCENDO of frenzied SCREECHING as PARROTS, COCKATOOS and other |
|
EXOTIC BIRDS careen madly in their cages. |
|
|
|
INT. MOVIE THEATER AUDITORIUM |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON COLE, dozing fitfully, as the SOUNDS of SCREAMING BIRDS |
|
continue. Suddenly, he comes awake with a start...sees the movie |
|
filling his field of vision. |
|
|
|
HIS POV: the MOVIE SCREEN. TIPPI HEDRIN, overwhelmed by |
|
screeching BIRDS in an attic in Hitchcock's THE BIRDS. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, orienting himself, looking around. Empty seats on |
|
both sides of him. He's alone. He panics. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Kathryn?! |
|
|
|
INT. THEATER LOBBY |
|
|
|
A lobby poster boasts "Classics 24 Hours A Day" and "Hitchcock |
|
Festival". PANNING OFF the poster, passing a SNORING USHER, dead |
|
to the world in an old velvet chair, WE DISCOVER a BRUNETTE in a |
|
tight dress, just hanging up the lobby pay phone. Turning, she |
|
reveals heavy make-up, gaudy costume jewelry, and sun glasses. |
|
She's the BRUNETTE in COLE'S DREAM! Crossing the lobby toward |
|
the auditorium, it's a pleasure to watch her nice body undulate |
|
in the tight dress. |
|
|
|
Just then, the auditorium doors burst open and a BLONDE MAN in a |
|
Hawaiian shirt appears, the man from COLE'S DREAM, except this |
|
man's moustache is fixed firmly on his upper lip. The BLONDE MAN |
|
stops, stunned at the sight of the BRUNETTE. |
|
|
|
BRUNETTE |
|
We're booked on a 9:30 flight to Key West. |
|
|
|
The Brunette is RAILLY, no longer the frazzled professional, |
|
revealed now by her disguise as a sexy babe. The Blonde Man is |
|
COLE! He's confused. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
You were in my dream just now. I |
|
didn't recognize you. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Well, you look pretty different, too. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I mean in my dream -- I didn't realize |
|
it was you. Then...I woke up and I...I |
|
thought you were gone. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(studies him seriously) |
|
I remember you...like this. I feel |
|
I've known you before. I feel I've |
|
always known you. |
|
|
|
Their eyes lock. Suddenly, she backs up, gently maneuvering him |
|
with her, past the sleeping USHER, to and through an unlocked, |
|
unmarked door, then closing it behind them. |
|
|
|
INT. STORAGE ROOM/MOVIE THEATER |
|
|
|
RAILLY and COLE are in a dimly lit cluttered storage room. She |
|
kisses him hungrily amid the brooms, plastic trash barrels, other |
|
janitorial items. COLE responds to her passion as they move |
|
deeper into the room, its walls covered with old movie posters. |
|
Tearing at each other's clothes, they collapse on a rolled |
|
theater curtain among stacks of ancient theater seats. |
|
|
|
EXT. SUBURBS - DAWN |
|
|
|
The red rim of the rising sun is just becoming visible beyond the |
|
silhouetted roofs of an upper middle-class suburban neighborhood. |
|
The early light is so vague that when a huge SIBERIAN TIGER pads |
|
across a neatly-trimmed lawn, he's more a shadowy vision than |
|
reality. Did we really see him at all? |
|
|
|
EXT. CONSTRUCTION SITE - DAWN |
|
|
|
The rising sun flares behind the towering silhouette of an |
|
unfinished |
|
building, deserted in the early morning light. High up, a MONKEY |
|
his head around a girder. |
|
|
|
Four stories below, other MONKEYS are climbing. |
|
|
|
EXT. SHOPPING MALL - DAWN |
|
|
|
Deserted in the first light of dawn, the stores face each other |
|
across a broad promenade with blank staring windows. |
|
|
|
Nothing happens. For a long moment. Then, an AFRICAN BULL |
|
ELEPHANT appears, turning the corner, lumbering toward us along |
|
the promenade, raising his trunk to TRUMPET triumphantly to the |
|
other ELEPHANTS trotting into view behind him. |
|
|
|
INT. TAXICAB/CITY STREETS - EARLY MORNING |
|
|
|
A fiftyish WOMAN CABBIE with white hair and a Southern twang is |
|
at the wheel of the cab. |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBlE |
|
What time's your flight, friends? |
|
|
|
In the back seat, COLE, in the blonde wig and moustache, looks to |
|
his companion, the sexy babe in sun glasses and heavy make-up, |
|
RAILLY. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Nine thirty |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBIE |
|
Might be tight. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(startled, checks her watch) |
|
Tight? My watch says 7:30. |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBIE |
|
On your normal mornin', okay, plenty a |
|
time, but today, gotta take inta account |
|
your Army-of-the-Twelve-Monkeys factor. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
What? What did you say? |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBIE |
|
Twelve Monkeys, honey. Guess you folks |
|
didn't turn on your radio this morning. |
|
|
|
COLE and RAILLY exchange a quick look. |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBIE |
|
Bunch a weirdoes let all the animals outta |
|
the zoo last night. Then they locked up |
|
this big shot scientist in one of the cages. |
|
Scientist's own kid was one a the ones did it! |
|
|
|
RAILLY and COLE stare at the cabbie, stunned. |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBlE |
|
Now they got animals all over the |
|
place. Buncha zebras shut down the |
|
thruway 'bout an hour ago and some |
|
kinda thing called an "e-mu" it's got |
|
traffic blocked for miles over on 22. |
|
|
|
Flabbergasted, RAILLY'S eyes suddenly fill with hope. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
That's what they were up to! Freeing |
|
animals! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
On the walls -- they meant the animals |
|
when they said, "We did it." |
|
|
|
WOMAN CABBIE |
|
You can hear it on the radio all the |
|
stations... |
|
|
|
As the WOMAN CAEBIE switches on the RADIO, RA:LLY points and COLE |
|
follows her look. |
|
|
|
COLE'S POV: two CHEETAHS, sleek and magnificent against the |
|
cityscape, streaking past the cab at ninety mph! |
|
|
|
ANNOUNCER/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
In the meantime, numerous animal rights |
|
activists have joined the chorus |
|
condemning what they're calling the |
|
"loose canon" activities of Jeffrey |
|
Mason and his Army of the Twelve |
|
Monkeys. |
|
RIGHTS ACTIVIST/RADIO (o.s.) |
|
Can these fools seriously believe that |
|
releasing a captive animal into an |
|
urban environment is being compassionate |
|
to the animal? It's mindlessly cruel, |
|
almost as indefensible as holding the |
|
animal in captivity in the first place. |
|
|
|
RAILLY and COLE are watching FLAMINGOS cross the sky against a |
|
backdrop of skyscrapers in silhouette. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Maybe it's going to be okay. |
|
|
|
INT. TICKET COUNTER/AIRPORT TERMINAL - MORNING |
|
|
|
CLOSY ON copies of the mug shot of COLE and a photo of RAILLY |
|
while the airport P.A. SYSTEM DRONES in the b.g.. |
|
|
|
REVEAL a DETECTIVE, giving the flyers to the uniformed SUPERVISOR |
|
at one end of the ticket counter. |
|
|
|
DETECTIVE |
|
Tell your people if they spot either |
|
one of them, not to try and apprehend |
|
then. They should notify us and... |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY AND COLE, thirty yards away, entering the |
|
terminal. |
|
|
|
P.A. SYSTEM |
|
-- Flight 531 for Chicago is now ready |
|
for boarding at Gate Seventeen. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, reacting to the P.A., stopping, seeing the |
|
bustling airport lobby. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I know this place! ... This is my dream. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Airports all look the same. Maybe |
|
it's... |
|
(turning, reacting) |
|
James! Your moustache! It's slipping. |
|
|
|
But COLE isn't listening. He's looking around, mesmerized. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It's not just my dream. I was actually |
|
here! I remember now. My parents |
|
brought me to meet my uncle. About a |
|
week or two before...before...before |
|
everybody started dying. |
|
|
|
RAILLY glances around nervously. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S POV: two UNIFORMED POLICEMEN, strolling through the |
|
lobby, their eyes scanning the faces of TRAVELERS. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, pulling a small tube from her purse. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
They may be looking for us, James. |
|
(placing the tube in his hand) |
|
Use this. You can fix it in the Men's Room. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(confounded) |
|
I was here...as a kid. I think you |
|
were here, too. But you...looked just |
|
like you look now. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(getting desperate) |
|
James, if we're identified, they're |
|
going to send us someplace...but not to |
|
Key West! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
(snaps out of it, hand to moustache) |
|
Right! You're right. I have to fix this. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
(indicating a sign) |
|
I'll get the tickets and meet you... in |
|
the Gift Shop. |
|
|
|
COLE follows her look, nods, then heads for the Men's Room as |
|
RAILLY, in sun glasses, gaudy outfit, high heels, starts clip |
|
clopping toward the ticket counter, her ass attracting admiring |
|
glances. |
|
|
|
INT. TELEPHONES/LOBBY - DAY |
|
|
|
BUSINESS TRAVELERS huddle over pay phones, talking earnestly, as |
|
COLE walks past on his way to the Men's Room. |
|
|
|
Seeing an unoccupied phone, COLE hesitates, considers it. Coming |
|
to a decision, he reaches into his pocket, pulls out some change. |
|
|
|
INT. TZCKET COUNTER/TERMINAL |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON the flyer of COLE and RAILLY taped under the counter, |
|
hidden from the customers, but in clear view of the TICKET AGENT |
|
who has just finished serving a PORTLY GENTLEMAN. The GENTLEMAN |
|
walks away. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, stepping up to the counter, smiling, looking |
|
nothing like the Railly on the flyer. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Judy Simmons. I have reservations for |
|
Key West. |
|
|
|
INT. PAY PHONES/TERMINAL |
|
|
|
COLE is speaking into the phone very low, very private, very |
|
intense. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Listen, I don't know whether you're |
|
there or not. Maybe you just clean |
|
carpets. If you do, you're lucky -- |
|
you're gonna live a long, happy life. |
|
But if you other guys exist and you're |
|
picking this up -- forget about the |
|
Army of The Twelve Monkeys -- they |
|
didn't do it. It was a mistake' |
|
Someone else did it. The Army of The |
|
Twelve Monkeys are just dumb kids |
|
playing revolutionaries. It was |
|
someone else! |
|
|
|
COLE looks around nervously, catches a BUSINESSMAN at the next |
|
phone looking away quickly. COLE touches his loose moustache as |
|
he averts his face and speaks into the phone in an urgent whisper. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I've done my job. I did what you wanted. |
|
Good luck. I'm not coming back! |
|
|
|
COLE hangs up the phone, looks around, catches a few stares. |
|
Averting his face, he heads for the Men's Room. |
|
|
|
INT. TICKET COUNTER - DAY |
|
|
|
The TICKET AGENT is counting out a stack of bills. |
|
|
|
TICKET AGENT |
|
Don't see a lot of this... cash. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
It's...a long story. |
|
|
|
TICKET AGENT |
|
(smiles, hands over the tickets) |
|
They'll begin boarding in about twenty |
|
minutes. Have a nice flight, Mrs. Simmons. |
|
|
|
Turning to go, RAILLY fumbles the tickets while trying to put |
|
them in her purse and they flutter to the floor. As she kneels |
|
to retrieve them, WE SEE the long line of waiting TRAVELERS from |
|
the waist down. WE SEE a familiar Chicago Bulls Sports Bag |
|
resting on the floor beside sneakers and gaudy baggy pants. |
|
we've seen this outfit before...in COLE'S dream...on MR. PONYTAIL! |
|
|
|
INT. MEN'S ROOM/AIRPORT - DAY |
|
|
|
The P.A. DRONES as CCLE, head down, lingers at a sink, washing |
|
and rewashing his hands while another TRAVELER finishes drying |
|
his hands, gives COLE a quizzical look, then leaves. |
|
|
|
Quickly, COLE glances around, checks the seemingly empty Men's |
|
Room, then takes the tube of adhesive from his pocket, puts some |
|
goop under the loose edge of his moustache and presses it firmly |
|
against his face as he leans close to the mirror. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Got yourself a prob, Bob? |
|
|
|
COLE whirls, looks for the source of the VOICE. Nothing! Until |
|
he spots shoes peeking from dropped trousers indicating an |
|
occupied stall. It must be him! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Leave me alone! I made a report. I |
|
didn't have to do that. |
|
|
|
RASPY VOICE (o.s.) |
|
Point of fact -- you don't belong here. |
|
It's not permitted to let you stay. |
|
|
|
A toilet FLUSHES in the "occupied" stall. COLE'S answer is loud |
|
and defiant. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
This is the present. This is not the past. |
|
This is not the future. This is right now! |
|
|
|
A PLUMP BUSINESSMAN emerges from the "occupied" stall, gives COLE |
|
a wary look and a wide berth as he heads for a sink. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I'm staying here! You got that? You |
|
can't stop me! |
|
|
|
PLUMP MAN |
|
(high pitched voice) |
|
Anything you say, chief. It's none of |
|
my business. |
|
|
|
COLE looks dismayed. This guy couldn't be "THE VOICE"! And there |
|
are no feet showing under the other stalls. Did he imagine it? |
|
|
|
INT. TICKET COUNTER - DAY |
|
|
|
The Chicago Bulls bag! It's on the counter in front of the |
|
TICKET AGENT who's reviewing a stack of tickets in awe... |
|
|
|
TICKET AGENT |
|
Woooo-eeee. San Francisco, New |
|
Orleans, Rio de Janeiro, Rome, |
|
Kinshasa, Karachi, Bangkok, Peking! |
|
That's some trip you're taking, sir, |
|
All in one week! |
|
|
|
MR. PONYTAIL (o.s.) |
|
Business. |
|
|
|
TICKET AGENT |
|
(handing over the tickets) |
|
Have a good one, sir. |
|
|
|
INT. TERMINAL LOBBY |
|
|
|
COLE emerges from the Men's Room, shaken, paranoid. He glances |
|
around nervously. Then, keeping his head down, he starts walking |
|
toward the Gift Shop. Before he gets more than a few steps, |
|
someone suddenly grabs his shoulder from behind. |
|
|
|
FAMILIAR VOICE (o.s.) |
|
You gotta be crazy, man! |
|
|
|
COLE whirls, finds himself facing a Puerto Rican youth in an L.A. |
|
Raiders jacket, a sideways baseball cap, and mirrored sun glasses |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Jo...Jose???? |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
Pulling out the tooth, man, that was |
|
nuts! Here, take this. |
|
|
|
JOSE tries to slip COLE a 9mm pistol. Astonished, COLE resists! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
What? What for? Are you crazy? |
|
|
|
Frustrated, JOSE conceals the gun but keeps a grip on COLE'S arm. |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
Me? Are you kiddin? You're the one! |
|
You were a hero, man. They gave you a |
|
pardon! And whadda you do? You come |
|
back and fuck with your teeth! Wow! |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
How did you find me? |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
The phone call, man. The phone call. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
The call I just made? Five minutes ago? |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
Hey, five minutes ago, thirty years ago! |
|
Yes, that phone call. I been in training |
|
for this a couple a months now -- ever |
|
since I got back from that... "weird" |
|
war we were in. You remember that? |
|
(pressing the pistol on Cole) |
|
Here, take it, man! You could still be |
|
a hero if you'd cooperate! |
|
|
|
INT. GIFT SHOP/TERMINAL - DAY |
|
|
|
RAILLY takes a travel book on Key West from a rack, considers it, |
|
includes it with several magazines she's holding. She doesn't |
|
notice MR. PONYTAZL enter the Gift Shop behind her! |
|
|
|
The P.A. System DRONES flight info as RAILLY checks her watch and |
|
frowns. It's getting late and where's Cole? She turns, heads |
|
for the cash register to make her purchases. |
|
|
|
MR. PONYTAIL, seen from behind, is at the cash register already. |
|
He sets a newspaper on the counter and searches for change. |
|
|
|
The paper features a banner headline..."ANIMALS SET FREE" and a |
|
sub head..."PROMINENT SCIENTIST FOUND LOCKED IN GORILLA CAGE" |
|
over a photo of DR. MASON being released from the cage and |
|
another photo of a GORILLA perched atop a parked car. |
|
|
|
Stepping in line behind MR. PONYTAIL, RAILLY checks her watch |
|
again. Then, MR. PONYTAIL, having paid, turns to go and RAILLY |
|
looks up and sees his face. though it is not visible to us. |
|
|
|
Startled, RAILLY frowns. Does she know this man? |
|
|
|
MR. PONYTAIL pauses for a moment, considering the babe in the |
|
shades, gaudy earrings, the tight skirt, and high heels. |
|
|
|
RAILLY doesn't recognize the man, but we do! He's DR. MASON'S |
|
ASSISTANT, DR. PETERS...the man who attended RAILLY's lecture! |
|
|
|
Smiling, DR. PETERS steps around RAILLY and exits the Gift Shop. |
|
|
|
Still puzzled, RAILLY puts her purchases on the counter and the |
|
CLERK starts ringing them up as a DELIVERY MAN comes in and drops |
|
a bundle of newspapers at her feet. |
|
|
|
RAILLY'S POV: the front page shows a photo of three frightened |
|
GIRAFFES in freeway gridlock under a headline proclaiming, |
|
"TERRORISTS |
|
CREATE CHAOS". Further down are two more photos...DR. MASON in |
|
the |
|
gorilla cage and a file photo of DR. MASON in his lab. |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON THE SHOT OF DR. MASON in his lab. There's someone else |
|
in the picture. It's a man wearing a lab coat and a PONYTAIL! |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, reacting, suddenly remembering! |
|
|
|
MEMORY FLASHBACK! INT. RECEPTION ROOM/BREITROSE HALL - NIGHT |
|
|
|
RAILLY looks up from the book she's signing and sees DR. PETERS. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
Isn't it obvious that "Chicken Little" |
|
represents the sane vision and that |
|
Homo Sapiens' motto, "Let's go shopping!" |
|
is the cry of the true lunatic? |
|
|
|
INT. GIFT SHOP - DAY |
|
|
|
RAILLY, stunned, stares in the direction PETERS/PONYTAIL went. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Oh, my God! |
|
|
|
P.A SYSTEM |
|
-- flight 764 for San Francisco is now |
|
ready for boarding at Gate 36. |
|
|
|
INT. LOBBY - DAY |
|
|
|
In the confusion of TRAVELERS streaming in different directions, |
|
COLE hurries toward the Gift Shop while JOSE struggles to keep up. |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
Coma on, Cole, don't be an asshole. |
|
(then, blurting it out) |
|
Look, I got orders, man! You know what |
|
I'm sposed to do if you don't go along? |
|
I'm sposed to shoot the lady! You got |
|
that? They said, "If Cole don't obey |
|
this time, Garcia, you gotta shoot his |
|
girlfriend!" |
|
|
|
COLE stops in his tracks, blown away, too stunned to speak. |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
I got no choice, man. These are my |
|
orders. Just take it, okay? |
|
|
|
COLE accepts the gun this time, resigned now. They've got him. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
This part isn't about the virus, is it? |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
Hey, man... |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
It's about obeying, about doing what |
|
you're told. |
|
|
|
JOSE |
|
They gave you a pardon, man. Whatdaya |
|
want? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Who am I supposed to shoot? |
|
|
|
Just then, RAILLY rushes up to COLE, not even noticing JOSE. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
James! Thank God! I thought you'd |
|
disappeared. Listen, I think I know |
|
who it is! I saw him! It's Dr. Mason's |
|
assistant. An apocalypse nut! The next |
|
flight to San Francisco leaves from Gate 38. |
|
If he's there, it has to be him. |
|
|
|
JOSE, having heard this, steps back into the crowd as RAILLY |
|
grabs COLE and pulls him toward the Security Check Points. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I love you, Kathryn. Remember that. |
|
|
|
She doesn't hear him or see the look of doom in his eyes. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Maybe we can stop him. Maybe we can |
|
actually do something. |
|
|
|
INT. SECURITY CHECK POINT/TERMINAL - DAY |
|
|
|
A young boy of nine passes through the magnetic arch grinning. |
|
YOUNG COLE! Exactly as he appears in the dream! |
|
|
|
He joins his PARENTS, who are only visible from their chests |
|
down, and they continue along the concourse. WE LINGER and |
|
DISCOVER two DETECTIVES watching TRAVELERS as they pass through |
|
the magnetic arch and retrieve their bags from the X-ray machine, |
|
comparing their faces to photos of COLE and RAILLY. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON A SECURITY OFFICER, watching the x-ray monitor. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE MONITOR, showing the X-RAY IMAGE of a sports bag |
|
moving |
|
along the conveyer belt. The bag contains some strange objects. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE SECURITY OFFICER, reacting. |
|
|
|
SECURITY OFFICER |
|
Excuse me, sir. Would you mind letting me |
|
have a look at the contents of your bag? |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON DR. PETERS, coming through the magnetic arch, reacting. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
Me? Oh, yes, of course. My samples. |
|
I have the appropriate papers. |
|
|
|
INT. END OF LINE/SECURITY CHECK POINT |
|
|
|
RAILLY AND COLE arrive at the very long suddenly stalled line of |
|
TRAVELERS waiting to pass through security. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Oh, God, we don't have time for this. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE SECURITY CHECK POINT, where DR. PETERS unpacks his |
|
Bulls bag, pulls out six metal cylinders along with a change of |
|
clothes and a Walkman. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
Biological samples. I have the |
|
paperwork right here. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS produces a sheaf of official papers while the SECURITY |
|
OFFICER examines one of the tubes, turning it over in his hands. |
|
|
|
SECURITY OFFICER |
|
I'm going to have to ask you to open |
|
this, sir. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
Open it? |
|
(blinks stupidly, then) |
|
Of course. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS takes the metal cylinder and starts opening it. |
|
|
|
There's a SOUND of VOICES RAISED behind them. DR. PETERS pays no |
|
attention, but the SECURITY OFFICER turns toward the NOISE. |
|
|
|
SECURITY OFFICER'S POV: RAILLY, trying to explain something to a |
|
SECOND SECURITY OFFICER. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE TWO DETECTIVES, nearby, showing interest in the |
|
commotion. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON DR. PETERS, oblivious to the fuss, pulling a closed |
|
glass tube out of the metal cylinder. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
Here! You see? Biological! Check the |
|
papers -- it's all proper. I have a |
|
permit. |
|
|
|
SECURITY OFFICER |
|
It's empty! |
|
|
|
Indeed, it looks like a sealed clear glass tube with nothing in |
|
it. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
Well, yes, to be sure, it looks empty! |
|
But I assure you, it's not. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, at the end of the line, arguing with the SECOND |
|
SECURITY OFFICER. |
|
|
|
RAILLY |
|
Please listen to me -- this is very urgent! |
|
|
|
SECOND SECURITY OFFICER |
|
You'll have to get in line, ma'am. |
|
|
|
TRAVELER |
|
We're all in a hurry, lady. What's so |
|
special about you? |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON DR. PETERS, producing the glass tubes from the other |
|
metal cylinders as the SECURITY OFFICER examines the papers. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
You see! Also invisible to the naked eye. |
|
|
|
A beat. OR. PETERS grins suddenly, opens one of the glass tubes, |
|
and waves it under the SECURITY OFFICER'S nose! |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS |
|
It doesn't even have an odor. |
|
|
|
The SECURITY OFFICER glances up, sees what DR. PETERS is doing, |
|
and smiles as he hands the papers back to the scientist. |
|
|
|
SECURITY OFFICER |
|
That's not necessary, sir. Here you |
|
go. Thanks for your cooperation. Have |
|
a good flight. |
|
|
|
Hastily, DR. PETERS snatches up all the tubes and cylinders and |
|
shoves them back into his gym bag. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON RAILLY, raging as the SECOND SECURITY OFFICER jabs her |
|
with his finger. |
|
|
|
SECOND SECURITY OFFICER |
|
Who are you calling a "moron"? |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
Get your hands off her! |
|
|
|
The SECOND SECURITY OFFICER stiffens for trouble. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE DETECTIVES, watching the fuss, ready to get |
|
involved. Suddenly, the FIRST DETECTIVE frowns. |
|
|
|
FIRST DETECTIVE9S POV: COLE'S moustache is slipping. COLE |
|
senses it, reaches up to touch it, catches the DETECTIVE'S look. |
|
For half a second their eyes meet, then COLE looks away. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON DR. PETERS, hurrying away. |
|
|
|
SECURITY OFFICER'S VOICE (o.s.} |
|
HOLD IT! JUST A MOMENT. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS freezes, turns, ashen. |
|
|
|
The SECURITY OFFICER is retrieving a pair of jockey shorts from |
|
the floor beside the search table. He waves them at DR. PETERS. |
|
|
|
DR. PETERS hurries back for his underpants. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON COLE, trying to keep his head turned away as he |
|
confronts the SECURITY OFFICER. |
|
|
|
COLE |
|
I said, get your hands off her. She's |
|
not a criminal. She's a doctor...a |
|
psychiatrist. |
|
|
|
RAILLY looks alarmed at that. |
|
|
|
ANGLE ON THE DETECTIVES, coming this way. The FIRST DETECTIVE |
|
has the photos in his hand. |
|
|
|
ANGLE OW DR. PETERS, bagging his jockey shorts, then starting |
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hastily down the windowed concourse toward the gates. |
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ANGLE ON RAZZLY, suddenly spotting DR. PETERS! |
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RAILLY |
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THERE HE IS! HE'S CARRYING A DEADLY |
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VIRUS! STOP HIM! |
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ANGLE ON COLE, following RAILLY'S look, seeing MR. PONYTAIL, THE |
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MAN FROM HIS DREAM! |
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ANGLE ON DR. PETERS, frightened, glancing back, walking faster. |
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RAILLY (o.s.) |
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PLEASE, SOMEBODY -- STOP HIM! |
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ANGLE ON DETECTIVES, reaching RAILLY and COLE. |
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FIRST DETECTIVE |
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(raising his badge) |
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Police Officers. Would you step over |
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here, please. |
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ANGLE ON COLE, spotting something behind the DETECTIVES! |
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COLE'S POV: SCARFACE, dressed like a "businessman"! He gives |
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COLE a cold look. |
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A beat. COLE lunges at the SECOND DETECTIVE, knocking him off |
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balance, then sprints toward the magnetic arch and through it. |
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The ALARM goes off!!!! |
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The FIRST SECURITY OFFICER tries to stop COLE, but COLE knocks |
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him aside like a rag doll. |
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ANGLE ON DR. PETERS, fifty yards up the concourse, glancing back. |
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ANGLE ON COLE, pulling his pistol. |
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ANGLE ON THE SECOND SECURITY OFFICER. |
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FIRST SECURITY OFFICER |
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HE'S GOT A GUN! |
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ANGLE ON THE FIRST DETECTIVE, raising his pistol at COLE. |
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FIRST DETECTIVE |
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STOP OR I'LL SHOOT! |
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ANGLE ON COLE, gun in hand, sprinting along the concourse toward |
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DR. PETERS as frightened TRAVELERS SCREAM and dive for cover. |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, standing at a concourse window, watching a |
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plane land, flanked by his parents whose faces we don't see. |
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IT'S SUDDENLY AS IF THE DREAM IS HAPPENING IN REAL LIFE!!! THE |
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SAME MOKENTS INTERSPERSED WITH "NEW" MOMENTS FROM THE POV OF |
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YOUNG COLE who, hearing the commotion, turns just as DR. PETERS |
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hurries by. DR. PETERS bumps into YOUNG COLE and reacts by |
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pulling his Bulls bag close to his body and calling... |
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DR. PETERS |
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WATCH IT! |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, wide eyed, watching... |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: a BLONDE MAN. dashing up the concourse, his |
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moustache slipping over his lip, a pistol in his hand. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: the FIRST DETECTIVE aims, looking for a clear |
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shot in the crowded passageway. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: a BRUNETTE in flashy clothes, gaudy earrings, |
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high heels, and sun glasses SCREAMS... |
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BRUNETTE (RAILLY) |
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N0OOOOO0O!!!!!! |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: the FIRST DETECTIVE, firing! CRACK! |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: the BLONDE MAN, shuddering, staggering, |
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falling. |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, stunned, as his PARENTS try to shield him. |
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MOTHER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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My God! They shot that man! |
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Mesmerized, YOUNG COLE watches the BRUNETTE rush to the BLONDE |
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MAN, kneel beside him, minister to his bloody wound. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: the BLONDE MAN, fatalistically reaching up |
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and tenderly touching the BRUNETTE'S cheek, touching her tears. |
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(WE'VE SEEN THIS EXACT IMAGE IN COLE'S DREAM, A POWERFUL MOMENT, |
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UNFOLDING UNNATURALLY SLOWLY, OPENING LIKE A FLOWER.) |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, not able to hear their words, but he can see |
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emotion as the BLONDE MAN tries to tell the sobbing BRUNETTE |
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something. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: PARAMEDICS, breaking the spell, pushing the |
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BRUNETTE aside as they crouch beside the BLONDE MAN. |
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FATHER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Come along, son, this is no place for us. |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, as his FATHER'S ARM drapes over his shoulder, |
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steering him. YOUNG COLE turns to look back as he's led away. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: the PARAMEDICS, exchanging glances, shrugging |
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helplessly. It's too late. The BLONDE MAN is dead. |
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YOUNG COLE sees the BRUNETTE, her face streaked with tears, |
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suddenly turn and look around, scanning the crowd, searching for |
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something. POLICE OFFICERS approach her, say something to her. |
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Even as she responds, her eyes continue to scan the concourse. |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, being hurried toward the lobby by his PARENTS |
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(whose faces remain out of view). He can't help sneaking another |
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look back. |
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YOUNG COLE'S POV: POLICE, handcuffing a distracted, unresisting |
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RAILLY. Even now, she continues to look around almost |
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frantically. |
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Suddenly, her gaze falls on YOUNG COLE and she reacts...she's |
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found what she's looking for! |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, reacting to the intensity of her look. |
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ANGLE ON RAILLY, her eyes speaking to the boy across the crowded |
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concourse. |
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ANGLE ON YOUNG COLE, overwhelmed by the look. |
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FATHER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Hurry up, son. |
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With a last lingering look toward the mysterious BRUNETTE, YOUNG |
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COLE turns away, tears welling in his eyes. WE MOVE IN...CLOSE... |
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CLOSE...CLOSER...on his eyes. WE WANT TO KNOW WHAT THE TEAR |
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MEANS, |
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BUT THERE IS NO WAY TO TELL. WE DON'T KNOW WHAT HE IS THINKING, |
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BUT WE KNOW VERY WELL WHAT HE WILL REMEMBER! |
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MOTHER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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Pretend it was just a bad dream, Jimmy. |
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|
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INT. 747 CABIN - DAY |
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DR. PETERS closes the door to the overhead luggage rack |
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containing his Chicago Bulls bag and takes his seat. Next to |
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him, a FELLOW TRAVELER, unseen, says... |
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FELLOW TRAVELER'S VOICE (o.s.) |
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It's obscene, all the violence, all the |
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lunacy. Shootings even at airports now. |
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You might say...we're the next endangered |
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species...human beings! |
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CLOSE ON DR. PETERS, smiling affably, turning to his neighbor. |
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DR. PETERS |
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I think you're right. sir. I think |
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you've hit the nail on the head. |
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DR. PETERS' POV: the FELLOW TRAVELER, a silver haired gentleman |
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in a business suit, offering his hand congenially. DR. PETERS |
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doesn't know who this man is, but we do. It's the ASTROPHYSICIST! |
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ASTROPHYSICIST |
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Jones is my name. I'm in insurance. |
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EXT. PARKING LOT/AIRPORT |
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As YOUNG COLE'S PARENTS (seen only as sleeves and torsos) usher |
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YOUNG COLE into their station wagon, the boy hesitates, looks |
|
back, watches a 747 climb into the sky. |
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FADE OUT: |
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