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THE 25th HOUR |
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by |
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David Benioff |
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4/30/01 |
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INDUSTRY ENTERTAINMENT |
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EXT . WES T SIDE HIGHWAY -- NIGHT |
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o A blac k dog sleeps on the shoulder of the highway, head |
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between his paws , curled up next to the barricad e that |
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separates the north and southbound lanes . |
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Traffic rumbles past him: yellow cabs , blu e polic e cruisers , |
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white limousines with tinted glass and Jersey plates . |
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We hea r the squeal of brakes. A black *65 Ford Mustang, min t |
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condition, pulls onto the shoulder, ten yard s past the dog , |
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and back s up . Th e dog raises its head. |
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Two me n step out of the car. The driver , MONT Y BROGAN, mid - |
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twenties , is pale-skinned in the flickering light . A small |
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silver crucifix hangs from a silver chain around his neck ; |
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his fingers are adorned with silver rings . |
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The passenger , KOSTYA NOVOTNY, a hulking ma n in his late |
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thirties , blow s his nose in his handkerchief. |
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It's a cold night . Monty wears a camel's hai r overcoat, |
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Kostya an old blue Soviet Navy coat . |
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MONTY |
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He's alive. |
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KOSTYA |
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(Ukrainian accent) |
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This dog, how do you call it? |
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MONTY |
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Pit bull . Must have lost somebody some |
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money . |
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The dog stares at them and they stare at the dog . |
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KOSTYA |
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What d o w e do , Monty, w e watch hi m rot ? |
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路路 ' .路路路路路- 路 ' ? -. : 路 路- 路' MONTY : . 路' 路路 '' ' ' ;:; '' ' |
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: 路 "路 "路 - |
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路 路 |
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I was thinking of shooting him . |
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KOSTYA |
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Shooting him? Ar e you sick in the head ? |
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The dog continues to stare at them impassively, his face lit |
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by the passing headlights. The pavement by hi s paws is |
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littered with broken glass, twisted scraps of metal , black |
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rubber from blow n tires. |
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o |
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(CONTINUED) |
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CONTINUED: |
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MONTY |
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They just left him here to die. They |
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threw him out the window and kept |
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driving. |
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A ship's horn sounds from the Hudson. |
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KOSTYA |
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Come, my friend, it is cold. Come, people |
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wait for us. |
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MONTY |
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They're used to waiting. |
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Monty squats near the dog and inspects him. From this angle |
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it is clear that the pit bull has been badly abused. One ear |
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has been chewed to mince; his hide is scored with cigarette |
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burns; flies crawl in his bloodied fur. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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I think maybe his hip -- |
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The dog pounces, jaws snapping,; lunging for Monty's face. |
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Monty stumbles backwards. The dog, too badly injured to |
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continue the attack, remains in his crouch, growling. |
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Monty sits on the pavement, shaking his head. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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Christ. |
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(beat) |
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He's got some bite left. |
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KOSTYA |
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I think he does not want to play with |
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you. Come, you want police to pull over? |
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You want police looking through your car? |
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MONTY |
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Look what they did to him. Used him for a |
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fucking ashtray. |
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Monty stands and dusts his palms on the seat of his pants. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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Let's get him in the trunk. |
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KOSTYA |
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What? |
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(CONTINUED) |
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3. |
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CONTINUED : (2 ) |
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MONTY |
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There's a vet emergency room on the East |
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Side. I like this guy. |
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KOSTYA |
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You like him? He tries to bite your face |
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off. Look at him, he is meat. You want |
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some dog, I buy you.nice puppy tomorrow. |
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Monty is not listening. He walks back to his car, opens the |
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trunk, pulls out a soiled green army blanket. |
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Kostya holds up his hands: stop. |
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KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
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Wait one minute, please. Please stop one |
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minute? I do not go near pit bull. Monty? |
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I do not go near pit bull. |
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Monty, carrying the army blanket, walks back toward the dog. |
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MONTY |
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This is a good dog. I can see it in his |
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eyes. He's a tough little bastard. |
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KOSTYA |
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Sometimes I think you are very stupid |
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man. |
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The dog has slumped back to the pavement. His breath, comes in. |
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shorts rasps and wheezes. But he never takes his eyes off the |
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two men. |
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MONTY |
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We wait much longer, he'll be dead. |
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KOSTYA |
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One minute ago you want to shoot him. |
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MONTY |
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That was a mercy thing. But he's not |
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ready to go yet. |
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KOSTYA |
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Yes? He told you this? |
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Monty slowly circles behind the dog, holding the blanket the |
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way a matador wields his cape. |
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MONTY |
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Distrac t him. |
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U |
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(CONTINUED ) |
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CONTINUED: (3) |
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Kostya stares at his friend in disbelief. He looks down. A |
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crumpled soda can lies by his feet. He kicks the can. |
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The dog's head pivots to follow the aluminum flash. |
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Monty hurls the blanket over the dog and spring forward, |
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wrapping his arms around the dog's midsection. The dog |
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growls, bites the wool, tries to break the blanket's neck. |
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Monty lurches toward the Mustang, struggling to retain his |
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bearhug while the pit bull slithers in his grasp. As they |
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stumble closer to the car the dog releases the blanket and |
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snaps at Monty's throat. |
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Monty hurls the dog into the trunk and slams the lid. He |
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returns to the driver's seat. |
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Kostya watches him in silence, stares at the sky for a few |
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seconds, finally gets back in the car. The dog thrashes in |
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the trunk. |
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INT. MUSTANG |
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Both men sit in silence as Monty revs the engine. Blood is |
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beginning to leak from a bite on the right side of Monty's |
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neck. |
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KOSTYA |
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What goes on in your little head? |
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Monty grins. He has no idea that he's bleeding. |
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MONTY |
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I got him, didn't I? Surprised you how |
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.-- quick I was, huh? |
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Monty checks for traffic and pulls back onto the highway. |
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KOSTYA |
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Yes, you are so quick. |
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He points at the wound on Monty's neck, which has begun to |
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flow faster. |
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KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
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Meanwhile, you are bleeding. |
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MONTY |
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That's the dog's blood. |
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KOSTYA |
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Oh? Because you have hole in your neck |
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and blood is coining out. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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5. |
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CONTINUED : ,,,..-. . |
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"(/"~^) Mont y lift s hi s han d to hi s nec k and feel s th e blood . |
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MONT Y |
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They'l l stitc h i t u p a t th e vet's . |
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KOSTY A |
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Rul e numbe r one : don' t gra b half-dea d pi t |
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bulls . W e hav e peopl e waitin g fo r us , |
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peopl e wit h money , and you g o playin g |
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cowboy -- no , dogboy -- i n middl e o f |
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highway . |
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Mont y laughs , hi s han d presse d t o th e sid e o f hi s neck , bloo d |
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leakin g betwee n hi s fingers . |
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KOSTY A (CONT'D) |
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Yes , h a ha . You'r e ba d luck . Yo u brin g |
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ba d luc k o n me . Alway s everythin g tha t |
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ca n g o wrong , goe s wrong . I t i s no t jus t |
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yo u an d m e whe n w e g o out , no , no , i t i s |
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you , me , an d Miste r Doyle o f Doyle' s law . |
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Mont y frowns . |
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MONT Y |
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fly Doyle' s law ? Yo u mea n Murphy' s law . |
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KOSTY A |
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Who' s Murphy ? |
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MONT Y |
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Who' s Doyle ? Murphy' s law : whateve r ca n |
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g o wrong , wil l g o wrong . |
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KOSTY A |
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Yes . Him . |
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EXT . EAST RIVE R ESPLANAD E -- DAWN \ |
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TITL E CARD : Four Years Later |
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Mont y sits o n a par k benc h overlookin g th e Eas t River . H e |
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stub s out hi s cigarette , pull s anothe r fro m hi s pack , light s |
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it . |
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Th e blac k pi t bull , no w health y and well-fed , squat s b y |
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Monty' s side . I t i s winter : th e dog's war m breat h rise s a s |
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whit e vapor . |
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.Two tough-lookin g YOUN G ME N wal k by , wearin g hoode d |
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sweatshirts belo w thei r dow n parkas , on e o f the m leadin g hi s |
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i} spike-collare d rottweiler . . / |
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(CONTINUED ) |
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路- 路 -路 - 路路""路- 路 路-"- 6. |
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CONTINUED: |
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o DOYLE (for the nameless pit bull has become Doyle) growls. |
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Monty tugs on his leash and Doyle grunts and quiets down. |
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YOUNG MAN 1 |
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What up, Monty. |
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Monty nods but doesn't say anything. He's studying the view. |
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He stares at the green river, the steel bridges , the red |
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tugboats, the stone lighthouse of Roosevelt Island. |
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Doyle barks and Monty turns. SIMON, a bone-thin ma n in his |
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early thirties, approaches them. He wears rubber boots that |
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rise to his knees and a dirty yellow down parka . |
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SIMON |
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Easy, Doyle, easy, buddy. What's up |
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there, Monty? |
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Monty turns back to the river. Doyle barks again. |
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SIMON (CONT'D) |
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You want to tell the dog to relax? Hey |
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there, Doyle. Good dog. |
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0),^ Doyle has extended the leash as far as Monty will allow. He |
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~7 sniffs suspiciously at Simon. |
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SIMON (CONT'D) |
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I don't think your dog likes me . |
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MONTY |
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Go away, Simon. |
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SIMON |
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I'm hungry here. Woke up an hour ago and |
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I was hungry. |
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.- 路路' " 路路 路 路路. , 路路路路 \ 路: '路MONTY/ ' " ' 路- V ; :路 路 /'.I. 路 .- 路 ' "' . .',.路 ' 路 |
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,路 ' 路 . - 路 路 . |
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Nothing I can do about that. Go up to On e |
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Hundred and Tenth. |
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SIMON |
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One Hundred and Tenth? Come on, I'm good. |
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He reaches into his pocket and brings out a wad of five |
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dollar bills held together by a rubber band. |
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MONTY |
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(angry) |
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~, Put that away. |
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^V- ^ Doyle snarls. Simon repockets the money. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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CONTINUED: (2) |
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SIMON |
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Okay, okay. I'm just saying, I'm not |
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looking for a mercy pop. |
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MONTY |
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I'm over, man. |
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Simon points at a line of scabs that run along his throat. |
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SIMON |
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Cut myself shaving this morning -- four |
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times. Can't keep my hands steady. Come |
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on, Monty, help me out. I can't go to |
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Harlem. Look at me--- they'll eat me alive |
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up there. |
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Monty finally stands and walks toward the man, closer and |
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closer until their faces are inches apart. |
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MONTY |
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You need to leave me alone, friend. I |
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told you, I'm out of business. |
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Doyle sniffs Simon's boots, then raises his head, snout |
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climbing the man's leg. Simon dances a half-step, trying to |
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keep away from the pit bull without provoking him. |
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路 |
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SIMON |
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You worried about me narking you out? You |
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know who I am. |
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MONTY |
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You're not listening to me. I got |
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touched. Game over. |
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Simon blinks, tries to JLaugh, looks behind him,,,looks down at |
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Doyle, rubs his nose with the back of his hand. |
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SIMON |
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Five years I've been coming to you. All |
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right, all right, I'm leaving. There's no |
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need to be nasty. |
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Monty and Doyle watch the man go; they begin walking in the |
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opposite direction. They pass the concrete chessboards, the |
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sandboxes, and pause for a moment by a basketball court. |
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Six TEENS play -- with little skill -- one last game before |
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school. Monty shakes his head disdainfully, watching one |
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player dribble at the top of the key. |
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MONTY |
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You got no left. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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CONTINUED: (3) |
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The player drives right and misses an open lay-up. Monty |
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spits and continues walking, Doyle leading the way. |
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EXT. CAMPBELL-SAWYER HIGH SCHOOL -- LATER |
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Monty looks up at the old private school, tucked away on a |
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leafy street on the Upper East Side. |
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Two TENTH GRADE GIRLS look at Monty as they pass by. People |
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are always looking at Monty. |
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Both girls take long final drags on their cigarettes before |
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crushing them out and entering the school. |
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INT. CAMPBELL-SAWYER HIGH SCHOOL |
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Monty walks down a corridor of the school building, Doyle |
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padding along beside him. STUDENTS, hurrying to their |
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classes, stare at the dog and then at Monty. |
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The bells ring and within moments the corridor is empty. |
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Monty stops before a row of framed photographs. He examines |
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one photograph and smiles. |
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INSERT PHOTOGRAPH |
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The Campbell-Sawyer basketball team. The players stand in a |
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semi-circle with their coaches. We move in closer on one face |
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in particular: Monty, when he was sixteen, free and easy. |
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We move closer still and the black-and-white face begins to |
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blur. |
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ADMINISTRATOR (O.S.) |
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,,.. .... Excus.e-.me-,- sir, can I help_ you? |
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. 路路 |
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Monty, lost in a reverie, looks up. The ADMINISTRATOR, a |
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tall, harried-looking woman in her mid-fifties, squints at |
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him through her glasses. |
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MONTY |
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What? |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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Can I help you with something? |
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MONTY |
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(smiling) |
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No, I don't think so. |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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There are no dogs allowed on school |
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grounds. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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CONTINUED: |
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f~\ MONTY -^ |
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U Okay. .. 'J\ |
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(pointing at the picture) |
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I used to go here. |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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I really have to ask you to remove the |
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dog. |
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MONTY |
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(still looking at picture) |
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Look at what a little punk I was. |
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The administrator bends forward and squints at the photo. |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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I guess you weren't, the center. |
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MONTY |
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, Ha ha. Starting point guard. Started on |
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varsity from my first game, freshman |
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year. I still hold the all-time assist |
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record. |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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Mm, no, Marvin Ray broke the record last ^V |
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year. mm^ |
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Monty stares at her. She shrugs. |
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ADMINISTRATOR (CONT'D) |
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I coach the girl's team. |
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Monty turns back to the photo. |
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MONTY |
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路- we* Weire undefeated that" year. |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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Really? |
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MONTY |
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Until I got kicked off the team. After |
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that, they fell apart. Do you know where |
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Jakob Elinsky is? |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
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Probably in his classroom. Room 301. |
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MONTY |
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Thanks. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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10 |
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CONTINUED: (2) |
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o He leads Doyle away, but stops after a few feet and turns |
|
back. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Marvin Ray? |
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|
|
.ADMINISTRATOR |
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|
|
Mm hm. |
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MONTY |
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|
You're sure? |
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|
|
ADMINISTRATOR |
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|
|
I was there when he broke the record. |
|
Monty nods and continues on his way. The administrator |
|
watches man and dog walk down the long corridor. |
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|
|
INT. CAMPBELL-SAWYER CLASSROOM |
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|
|
JAKOB ELINSKY stands at the blackboard, facing three rows of |
|
uninspired teenage faces. He wears a tweed jacket that seems |
|
a few sizes too large, with chalk stains on the sleeves. |
|
Jakob is the same age as Monty but he seems younger. There is |
|
something adolescent in his slouch, in the way he chews his |
|
lip. |
|
One of his students, MARY D'ANNUNZIO (17), stands at her |
|
desk, reading from a poetry textbook. Her eyes drown in pools |
|
of painted shadow, her hair is dyed black, tattooed roses |
|
garland her wrist. |
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MARY |
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|
-芦=路-------路路路: .路 (reading) - 路路 -- 路路路 |
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路 路路 - |
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路 |
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|
"Let us roll all our strength and all |
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Our sweetness up into one ball, |
|
And tear pur pleasures with rough strife, |
|
Through the iron gates of life." |
|
Jakob watches her. We don't know the Campbell-Sawyer dress |
|
code, but we can guess that she's violating it . We can also |
|
guess that Jakob is watching her a little too avidly. |
|
Her pierced navel is visible below her Donnas tee-shirt. |
|
|
|
MARY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
(reading) |
|
"Thus, though we cannot make our sun |
|
Stand still, yet we will make him run." |
|
Mary shrugs and sits down. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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11. |
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CONTINUED: |
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JAKOB |
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|
Good, good, excellent reading. Urn, okay, |
|
so. What do people think? What' s going on |
|
here? |
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Nobody says anything. Jakob nods . |
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JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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Okay. |
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LUKE , a sullen-looking student with a shaved head and a |
|
failed goatee, raises his hand. |
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|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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|
Luke? |
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LUKE |
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Can I go to the bathroom? |
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JAKOB |
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No . You went twenty minutes ago . |
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LUKE |
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I have a bladder infection. |
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JAKOB |
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|
The poem. The poem, folks. Hello? |
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|
|
MARY |
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|
|
It's not real deep or anything. The guy |
|
wants to get laid and he's telling her to |
|
give it up . |
|
A few of the students titter half-heartedly. |
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|
|
A knock on the door releases Jakob from his hell . He goes to |
|
answer it and then "stops/ startled. ~"~ |
|
It's the type ofdoo r popular in school buildings> with a |
|
wire-reinforced glass panel at head height , allowing you to |
|
look into the classroom without disturbing anyone. |
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Doyle, tongue dangling from his mouth , stares back at Jakob |
|
through the panel . |
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MARY (CONT'D) |
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I didn't know your mother was coming |
|
today, Luke . |
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LUKE |
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o |
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Eat me . |
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Jakob opens the door . |
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(CONTINUED) |
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12 |
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CONTINUED : (2) |
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Mont y stands there, holding up Doyle. Doyle scramble s out of |
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hi s arms and jumps on Jakob , nearly knocking th e teache r |
|
down , getting his dirty paw s all over Jakob's jacket . |
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MONT Y |
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Easy, Doyle. |
|
Doyle immediately calms down , squatting by Jakob' s feet and |
|
staring up at the teacher . |
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JAKOB |
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|
Hey -- uh , what' s going on? |
|
Jakob seems awkward around Monty , nervous . |
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MONT Y |
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(looking at Doyle) |
|
Look at him . He loves you. |
|
Jakob looks at Doyle, wh o wag s the stump of hi s tail . |
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|
MONT Y (CONT'D) |
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|
|
He really love s you . So what are you |
|
doing? |
|
Jakob turns to look at hi s class , who all stare at Mont y and |
|
the dog. For the first time today, they're quiet . |
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JAKOB |
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|
(to Monty ) |
|
Teaching m y class , I guess. |
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MONT Y |
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Cool . |
|
ffco class) " 路路路 |
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|
" ------,,...--.-.,路路:. |
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|
Hey, class . |
|
A few students shyly wave . |
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|
|
MONT Y (CONT'D) |
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|
|
(to Jakob) |
|
Sorry to interrupt . .Listen, change of |
|
plans . They'r e throwing me a goodbye |
|
part y downtown . Yo u and Frank get |
|
together somewher e and I'll com e pic k yo u |
|
up . |
|
Jakob is a little flustere d by this encounter , acutel y awar e |
|
that his class is watching . |
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|
JAKO B |
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Okay. |
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|
(CONTINUED ) |
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13 |
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CONTINUED: (3 ) |
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{ \ Monty lean s close r t o Jakob . |
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MONTY |
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|
|
(whispering) |
|
I think the one with the bell y button' s |
|
checking me out. |
|
Jakob turns and sees Mary staring at them. He quickly turns |
|
back to Monty , wh o is smiling at Mary. Jako b grab s the door |
|
knob. |
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JAKOB |
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|
Okay, so I'll see you later? |
|
Monty nods . |
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MONTY |
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|
Tel l Frank we'll meet up after midnight . |
|
He leads Doyle away and Jakob closes the door , the n turns to |
|
look at his silent class. The bell rings and all the students |
|
grab their bags . , |
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|
|
INT. TEACHERS ' LOUNG E -- LATER |
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|
|
Jakob, alon e in the room, sits on a sofa, his hea d in his \ |
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hands. He looks up when he hears a knock on the door. xl"y |
|
Mary D'Annunzio peek s in. |
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|
|
MARY |
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|
Yo u have a minute? |
|
Jakob sits up straighter and smiles. |
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JAKOB |
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|
Sure . Come in. |
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|
|
/ '路 '路路路 路 ' , - 路 / . - . 路 M A R Y . , 路 路,路路路路路路路 路 ;路;路. 路路:'路 . - 路 . A , - 路. 路 路 路 路 路 ; - ; 路 .-. . ' |
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: |
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|
I thought no students were allowed in the |
|
teachers ' lounge. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
I won' t tell on you. |
|
Mary walks into the room, looking around suspiciously. Jakob |
|
points at a chair . |
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|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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|
Tak e a seat. |
|
Mary sits . ( ) |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
- -路 - 路路 - . 路 - - 1 |
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4 |
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|
CONTINUED: |
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|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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|
|
So what's up? |
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|
|
MARY |
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|
|
Who was that guy who came to class? |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
Monty? An old friend of mine. He went |
|
here, too. |
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|
MARY |
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|
|
He doesn't look like you. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
Actually, I have many friends who don't |
|
look like me. |
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|
MARY |
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|
|
No, I mean, he doesn't look like someone |
|
you'd be friends with. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
We grew up together. |
|
(beat) |
|
So what can I do for you? |
|
|
|
MARY |
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|
|
I want to know why I got a B+ on my |
|
story. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Okay, first of all -- |
|
|
|
MARY |
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|
|
Nobody else in this class can write. You |
|
know it, too. Don't start -- |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
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|
|
Don't worry about everyone else. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Vince Miskella writes a story about his |
|
grandmother dying and you give him an A? |
|
What is that, a charity A? Everyone's |
|
always writing about their grandmother |
|
dying. You know why? Not because it's so |
|
traumatic. Because it's a guaranteed A. |
|
And you're all sentimental, like, "Oh, |
|
Vince, that was very powerful, very |
|
moving." No it wasn't. You didn't care, I |
|
didn't care, nobody cared. That's what |
|
grandmothers do, they die. |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
15. |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (2) |
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|
|
Mary has worked herself into a lather and Jakob watches her |
|
admiringly. |
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|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What did your mother say when you go t |
|
that? |
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|
Mary stares at him, not comprehending. |
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|
MARY |
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|
What? When I got what? |
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|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
(pointing at her wrist) |
|
The tattoo. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
She said, "Where'd you get the mone y for |
|
that. " |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Oh . And? |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
And what did I say or where did I get the |
|
money? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Well , what did you say, I guess . |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
I said he did it for free. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Oh . Did he? |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
No . Why do you care so much? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Just curious. __ |
|
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|
MARY |
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|
|
So you're not going to change the grade? |
|
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|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
No , I'm not changing the grade. I'd be |
|
happy to discuss -- |
|
Mary yanks her bookbag off the floor and straps it on her |
|
shoulder. |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
' 路 ~'T ' "' 16, |
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|
|
CONTINUED: (3) |
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|
MARY |
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|
Great. That was a big waste of time. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
Look, instead of worrying about the grade |
|
so much, let's talk about the actual--- |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
(muttering) |
|
Forget it. |
|
She stomps out of the lounge, her black combat boots clomping |
|
on the corridor's linoleum floor. |
|
Jakob shakes his head and looks up at the clock. 9:15. He |
|
reaches for the phone sitting on the coffee table. |
|
|
|
INT. SHREVE ZIMMER INVESTMENT BANK -- SAME TIME |
|
|
|
FRANK SLATTERY, also in his mid-twenties, stares at the row |
|
of clocks on the far wall. Below each clock is a sign: Tokyo, |
|
Hong Kong, Frankfurt, London. The clock marked New York reads |
|
|
|
9:15. |
|
|
|
The trading floor is one giant room: rows of TRADERS seated |
|
before their computers, jabbering into their telephone |
|
headsets. No women -- the place is loud and aggressive. |
|
Slattery is built like a former college wrestler: thick- |
|
necked, broken-nosed, muscular, his hair retreating from his |
|
forehead, his eyes undercast with dark crescents. |
|
One of his phones rings. He answers. |
|
|
|
----SEATTER Y - 路- - |
|
|
|
Frank Slattery. |
|
He listens for one second. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Can't talk right now. Employment number's |
|
coming out. |
|
|
|
INT. TEACHERS' LOUNGE - CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
All right. Just wanted to let you know |
|
that Monty -- |
|
|
|
INT. SHREVE ZIMMER - CONTINUOUS |
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|
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I'll call you later. |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
17 |
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|
|
CONTINUED: -,^-.- ..... , |
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|
.路 |
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|
He hangs up the phone and returns his gaze to the computer |
|
screens in front of him. Clearly he's waiting for something |
|
and clearly he's anxious. |
|
|
|
LICHTER (O.S.) |
|
|
|
Coming out with us later on? |
|
Slattery looks up at his boss, ARI LICHTER, early forties, a |
|
plump, genial man. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Nah, I'm meeting some friends tonight. |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Big date? |
|
The subject clearly makes Slattery uncomfortable. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
More of a going-away party. |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Listen, the other thing, you're still |
|
holding onto all those contracts? |
|
|
|
. SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Why, you're nervous? |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
I don't like it. The claims numbers have |
|
dropped three weeks straight. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
And everybody's thinking, if claims have |
|
dropped, employment must be up. |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Everybody's thinking that because it's |
|
pretty much always true. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Not this time. |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Frank-- |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I've got a theory. |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Oh good, you've got a theory. Look, |
|
you're in awfully deep. You've got sixty |
|
million of the bank's money in there-- |
|
|
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
18 |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (2) |
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|
|
e SLATTERY |
|
A hundred million. |
|
|
|
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|
|
The news startles Lichter. |
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|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
A hundred million? Jesus, Frank. |
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|
SLATTERY |
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|
|
They authorized me to a hundred million. |
|
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|
|
Other traders sitting nearby have begun watching this |
|
exchange, and Lichter is careful to keep his voice down. |
|
|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
A week ago. They raised your limit a week |
|
ago, and you're already maxing out. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I'm telling you, we're in for a low |
|
number. One-forty, maybe one-thirty-five. |
|
|
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|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Cut your stake in half, all right? You've |
|
been doing a great job, everyone knows |
|
that, but I'm still you r boss and I'm |
|
telling you: sell those contracts. |
|
Lichter grips Slattery's shoulder for a moment and then walks |
|
toward his office (a real office, with walls and a door) , |
|
exchanging hellos with other traders on the floor. |
|
PHELAN, fresh from college, walks down the row, handing fax |
|
sheets to all the traders. He hands a sheet to Slattery, wh o |
|
looks-at--it briefly before crumpling it . ........ |
|
|
|
. |
|
|
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|
|
PHELAN |
|
|
|
Sollie's looking for a high number. Tw o |
|
hundred and eighty thousand's their call . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Fuck Sollie. |
|
|
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|
|
PHELAN |
|
|
|
Fuck Salomon Brothers? |
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
They're hedging their bets . They want |
|
everyone on their side of the fence. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PHELAN |
|
|
|
What's the big deal with the employment |
|
number, anyway? |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
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|
|
19. |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (3) ...,., |
|
|
|
|
|
. |
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|
|
|
Slattery doesn't want to discuss this right now . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
More jobs means fewer people looking for |
|
work, right? Which means it's harder to |
|
find the right people for a job, which |
|
means you got to raise wages to get them, |
|
which mean s inflation goes up -- you |
|
following? |
|
|
|
PHELAN |
|
|
|
(not following) |
|
Yeah. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slatter y frowns. |
|
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
You're wearing a striped shirt with a |
|
striped tie . |
|
Phelan looks down at his tie . |
|
|
|
PHELAN |
|
|
|
Yeah? Is that bad ? |
|
SLATTERY "x |
|
,L#bi You look like a xuoAiiiig optical -LJ.JHJOJ.LJII. |
|
xxiv c a fuckin j u^t.J.^ax illusion . ** |
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|
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|
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|
|
Go away. |
|
Phelan walks away, nervously adjusting his tie . |
|
MARCUSE peeks over the partition in front of Slattery. With |
|
his slicked-back hair , red suspenders, and obnoxious smirk, |
|
Marcuse looks like a ma n who owns the Gordon Gekk o action |
|
figure. |
|
|
|
- MARGUSE- ...路-..- |
|
|
|
Better hop to , sonny boy. |
|
Slattery says nothing, just stabs angrily at hi s keyboard. |
|
|
|
MARCUSE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I don't see you pickin g up the phone . |
|
Didn't Lichter just tell you to sell? |
|
Sounds like your allowance got cut off . |
|
Slattery, nostrils flared, pretends to ignore the taunts . |
|
|
|
MARCUSE (CONT'D) |
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|
|
You're not going to disobey a direct |
|
order, are you? |
|
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(CONTINUED) |
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-- 20 |
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|
CONTINUED : (4) |
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|
Slattery rolls back in his wheeled office chair and stares at |
|
Marcuse. |
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|
SLATTERY |
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|
|
I don't come into your bedroom and tell |
|
yo u how to fuck your wife, do I? |
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|
|
Marcuse grins . He calls to another trader down the floor. |
|
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|
MARCUSE |
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|
|
Hey , Schultz, what are we looking at for |
|
the employment number?. |
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|
SCHULTZ |
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|
|
(yelling from his desk) |
|
Two-fifty, two-seventy, somewhere in |
|
there . |
|
Marcuse sits down again, disappearing behind the partition. |
|
Slattery glowers at his desk. He picks up his phon e and holds |
|
the receiver to his ear, never dialing a number. |
|
Lichter calls to Slattery from his office door. |
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|
|
LICHTER |
|
|
|
Slattery! We're good? |
|
Slattery nods and gives a thumbs up. As soon as Lichter |
|
returns to his office, Slattery hangs up the phone . |
|
Marcuse sticks his head above the partition again. |
|
|
|
MARCUSE |
|
|
|
Good thing you got rid of those |
|
contracts.-Looks like a huge numbe r o n -- ,芦--路-.路----芦芦禄. |
|
the way. |
|
The trading floor suddenly -- and eerily-^ goes quiet. |
|
Everyone's attention is fixed on the television monitors |
|
hanging from th e ceilings. The monitors ar e muted; closed |
|
captioning files along the bottoms of the screens. |
|
|
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|
|
Each monitor is tuned to the same station, a financial |
|
network broadcasting the employment number's release. A |
|
REPORTER wearing a bowtie reads the statistics. |
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|
|
Slattery bows hi s head. He holds his hands in his lap and |
|
closes his eyes . For a long while the room is very quiet. |
|
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|
|
Then a commotion of shouts and groans riles the floor. |
|
Everyone is hollering at the same time, and we can only make |
|
out a few phrases . |
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(CONTINUED) |
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21. |
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CONTINUED: (5) |
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|
TRADER 1 (O.S.) |
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|
Stop out of that! Stop out! |
|
|
|
TRADER 2 (O.S.) |
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|
|
We're going for a ride! |
|
Slattery looks up at the nearest monitor. A white number is |
|
emblazoned on a blue background: 138,112. Every monitor in |
|
the room flashes the same number. |
|
Slattery stares at his computer screen. There it is again, |
|
displayed prominently in the largest window: 138, 112. |
|
Slattery raises his eyebrows. He juggles the crumpled fax |
|
sheet a few times and then tosses it over the partition, |
|
where Marcuse is sitting. |
|
|
|
MARCUSE (O.S.) |
|
|
|
Fuck you, Slattery. |
|
Slattery grins and leans back in his chair, hands behind his |
|
head. |
|
|
|
EXT. MONTY'S BUILDING -- LATE AFTERNOON |
|
|
|
A four-story walk-up on a quiet street in Yorkville. |
|
NATURELLE ROSARIO sits on the stoop steps, reading a book. |
|
Naturelle, in her early twenties, has the lean body of a |
|
runner. It's cold outside but she doesn't seem to mind. When |
|
she sees Monty coming she closes the book and stands. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
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|
|
How long have you guys been walking? I |
|
woke up at seven and you were already |
|
gone. _ _ |
|
Monty, digging in his pocket for his keys, kisses her for an |
|
answer. Naturelle closes her eyes and tries to embrace him |
|
but Monty abruptly ends the kiss and climbs the stairs. |
|
Doyle wags the stump of his tail. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
How you doing, Mr. Doyle? |
|
She bends down to scratch him behind his mangled ear. |
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Why you waiting down here? |
|
|
|
, ' NATURELLE |
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|
|
I had my book. It was a beautiful day. |
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
路'"路路路 路路""路路 " ' : '2 |
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|
路路 " 2 |
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|
CONTINUED: |
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|
|
c Monty smiles. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
Of course it was a beautiful day. |
|
He holds the door open for her and Doyle. |
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S APARTMENT |
|
|
|
Monty closes the apartment door behind Naturelle and Doyle, |
|
then locks it. There are five locks and a heavy steel |
|
deadbolt. |
|
Despite the ominous security, it's a nice one-bedroom |
|
apartment, with hardwood floors and tall windows facing the |
|
brownstones across the street. |
|
Black-and-white photographs line the walls: shots of the |
|
Manhattan skyline, of Bensonhurst, of Doyle. The largest |
|
photo, hanging above the sofa, is of Brogan's Bar. |
|
Doyle curls up next to the radiator and quickly falls asleep. |
|
Monty sits on the sofa and flicks on the television with the |
|
remote. |
|
|
|
WEATHERMAN |
|
|
|
The first major storm of winter is |
|
heading our way -- |
|
Monty turns off the television. He stares at the dead screen. |
|
Naturelle comes out of the kitchen carrying a jar of honey |
|
and a spoon. |
|
She hands the jar to Monty, who opens it for her. She sits |
|
路 beside him and begins eating" the honey, watching him. He sees |
|
her watching. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
What? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
What are you thinking about? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
What am I thinking about? |
|
He leans forward and unclips a hand-tooled leather holster |
|
from the back of his belt. A "B" for Brogan is tooled into |
|
the leather, stylized like the old Brooklyn Dodgers' logo. |
|
A .40 caliber automatic, squat and black, rests in the |
|
holster. Monty drops the holster onto the coffee table and |
|
runs his fingers over the B. Naturelle stares at the gun. |
|
|
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
23 |
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|
|
CONTINUED: |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
I'm thinking I want to be like that girl |
|
from the X-Men, the one who can walk |
|
through walls. |
|
He's still tracing the holster's "B " with his fingertips. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
And if I can't do that, if I can't figure |
|
out how to walk through walls, I'm |
|
thinking one shot through the roof of the |
|
mouth, boom, problem solved. |
|
Naturelle hits him on the shoulder. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Don't joke about that. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You think I'm joking? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
So what are we doing tonight? Before you |
|
shoot yourself. |
|
Monty reclines, arms spread wide and resting on the sofa's |
|
back cushions. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Uncle Blue's throwing me a party at |
|
Velvet. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I thought it was over with him. |
|
|
|
...MONTY. -- - .-- |
|
|
|
Almost. |
|
He watches her eat another spoonful of raw honey. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
That's a nasty habit you have. |
|
She leans forward and kisses him on the lips. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Come take a bath with me. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Not right now. |
|
She caresses his jaw but Monty is distant, his mind J |
|
elsewhere. ^--^ |
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
24. |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: (2) |
|
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|
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|
|
o She sets the honey jar on the table and walks out of the |
|
living room. Monty listens to her in the bathroom, drawing |
|
the bathwater. |
|
He listens to the sound of running water. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S BATHROOM -- SIX MONTHS AGO |
|
|
|
Naturelle sits on Monty's lap in the narrow bathtub. He's |
|
massaging her shoulders. Music plays from a radio on the |
|
windowsill. |
|
She is laughing at something he just said. He leans closer |
|
and kisses the back of her neck, behind her ears. She |
|
stretches back, lifting one leg out of the bath. |
|
He runs his hand down her thigh and then stops, looking at |
|
the Puerto Rican flag tattooed on her ankle. She follows his |
|
gaze to the tattoo and then groans. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Not this again. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You were born in America, you lived in |
|
America your whole life, you've been to |
|
Puerto Rico twice, for vacation. What is |
|
that? I should get an Irish flag tattooed |
|
on my ass cause my grandparents are from |
|
there? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
You,don!t have room on your ass for an |
|
Irish flag. |
|
Monty dips his hands into the warm water, reaches below her, |
|
grabs her butt. Naturelle shrieks and Monty laughs. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Between you and me the kids will be just |
|
right. |
|
Loud pounding on the apartment door startles them. They stare |
|
at each other. Doyle barks from the other room. |
|
Naturelle gets out of the tub, pulls on a bathrobe, and goes |
|
to answer the door. Monty waits, listening. He knows who it |
|
is. He stares out the bathroom's open window. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25. |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
C) INT. MONTY'S LIVING ROOM -- STILL IN FLASHBACK |
|
|
|
Monty, wearing sweatpants and no shirt, walks into the living |
|
room. Four D.E.A. AGENTS, all wearing D.E.A. windbreakers and |
|
shoulder holsters, wait for him. |
|
Doyle, ears back, growls at the agents. Monty scratches |
|
Doyle's head and the dog relaxes a bit. |
|
Naturelle, panicked, stares at Monty. She's still holding the |
|
apartment door open. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Close the door, baby. |
|
She closes the door. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
Montgomery Brogan? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Yeah. |
|
Brzowski flips open a badge and hands a paper to Monty, who |
|
looks it over. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI ^^ |
|
|
|
I'm Agent Brzowksi with the Drug |
|
Enforcement Agency. We've got a warrant |
|
to search your apartment. |
|
Brzowksi walks over to the sofa and sits down. The other |
|
three agents stroll around the apartment. One looks out the |
|
window; one starts flipping through a magazine on the coffee |
|
table; one stares at a photograph on the wall. |
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
You take this picture? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Yeah. |
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
Nice picture. |
|
When one of the agents steps too close to Doyle, the dog |
|
growls and the agent jumps back. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Easy, Doyle. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI I) |
|
|
|
I don't see any tags on that dog. ^"^^ |
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
26, |
|
|
|
|
|
路 ---路 - |
|
|
|
|
|
路 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
o MONTY |
|
He's inside. He doesn't have to wear |
|
tags. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
He better stay calm or I'll have the |
|
pound come get him. I've seen too many |
|
men bit by these little bastards . |
|
Monty whistles and Doyle stands and walks over to him. Monty |
|
crouches, one hand stroking Doyle's thick neck. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Naturelle, uncomfortable wearing only the bathrobe, begins |
|
heading back to the bedroom. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Ms . Rosario? That's your name , right? I |
|
need you to stay right here, ma'am. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
He winks at her. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Can't have you sneaking around. |
|
Naturelle leans against the wall, looking for a sign from |
|
Monty, who gives her none. |
|
The agents don't seem to be searching very hard. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Hm. |
|
He stares down at the sofa he's sitting on . |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT-?D) |
|
|
|
This sofa is not very comfortable. |
|
Monty stares at the agent for a second and then exhales. He |
|
turns and looks carefully at Naturelle. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
Maybe it's your posture. Posture's very |
|
important. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
No , it's this sofa. It's very |
|
uncomfortable. It's lumpy. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Get it over with. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
27 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: (2) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
yj AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
I just don't understand. It looks like |
|
such a nice sofa. How much did you pay |
|
for this sofa, Ms . Rosario? |
|
Brzowksi stands and looks down at the cushion. Monty is still |
|
staring at Naturelle, who meets his eye for a second and then |
|
quickly turns away. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Maybe it's the padding? |
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
Could be the padding. |
|
Brzowski picks up the center cushion, turns it in his hands, |
|
and unzips it. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
Probably the padding. |
|
He pulls out handfuls of white fiber filling and lets them |
|
drift to the floor. Monty and Naturelle watch. |
|
|
|
, AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
rsS*f Yeah, there's something lumpy in here, |
|
v-v Mr. Brogan. It's a good thing I found |
|
this, you know. It'll make your sofa much |
|
more comfortable to sit on. |
|
The other agents laugh. Brzowski pulls out a package the size |
|
of a bottle of wine from the cushion, a bundle of plastic |
|
wrap and masking tape. |
|
Brzowski raises his eyebrows in mock shock while the other |
|
agents poh and. cluck* -- --, --路 -~ -- --- |
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Mr. Brogan, I do believe you're fucked. |
|
|
|
END FLASHBACK |
|
|
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S LIVING ROOM |
|
|
|
Monty sits on the sofa, running his hand over the sofa |
|
cushion. Outside it's dark and Monty hasn't turned on the |
|
lights. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE (O.S.) |
|
|
|
Baby? |
|
V_/ Monty looks up. Naturelle stands in the bathroom's doorway, |
|
wearing a bathrobe. |
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
28 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For a moment they watch each other in silence. Then he |
|
stands, grabs the holster off the table, and clips it to the |
|
back of his belt. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NATURELLE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Where you going? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I got to meet my dad for dinner. I'll |
|
call you in a couple hours. |
|
He kisses her quickly and turns to go, but then stops and |
|
looks at her. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Could you wear the silver dress tonight? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
You want me to? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
He nods. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I want to remember you in that dress . |
|
He walks out of the apartment, leaving Naturelle alone in the |
|
dark living room. |
|
|
|
EXT. MONTY'S BUILDING |
|
|
|
Kostya sits on the top step of the stoop, sipping from a |
|
silver flask. A female JOGGER runs past and Kostya calls |
|
after her. |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
路路路路 Hello ,--teeauti-f-uA~ woman! |
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
She doesn't look in his direction. He takes another swig from |
|
his flask. |
|
A young MOTHER pushes a baby stroller past the stoop. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Hello, beautiful mother! Hello, little |
|
baby! |
|
The mother doesn't look at him, but the two-year old GIRL, |
|
fascinated, stares at him. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
(calling after mother) |
|
You look like Julia Roberts. They tell |
|
you this, yes? Come back! I make you a |
|
new baby. I make you a boy! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
29 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Monty opens the front door. He stares down at Kostya. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
What are you doing here? |
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|
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KOSTYA |
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|
|
So many beautiful women, this |
|
neighborhood. I like very much. |
|
Kostya stands and grips Monty's arm. |
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|
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KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
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|
|
You are okay? |
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MONTY |
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|
|
I'm having the time of my life. |
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|
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KOSTYA |
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|
|
Uncle Blue wants me talking with you. He |
|
wants you coming to Velvet tonight. |
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|
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MONTY |
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|
|
Yeah, three other people already told me . |
|
He's really dying to say goodbye, huh? |
|
Kostya releases Monty's arm and nods sadly. |
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KOSTYA |
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|
|
It seems. |
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MONTY |
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What does he want? |
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KOSTYA |
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I don't know. |
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路 --路-- MONTY : "-" " 路"""" |
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~ 路 |
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|
You came all the way up here to tell me |
|
this? You heard of telephones? |
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KOSTYA |
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|
|
Yes, I heard, but you don't return my |
|
calls. And Uncle wants to make sure. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
I'll be there. I'm bringing Naturelle and |
|
some friends. |
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KOSTYA |
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You bring her? Why? |
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MONTY "V |
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Why wouldn't I ? v^ |
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(CONTINUED) |
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30 |
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CONTINUED : (2) |
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Kostya shrugs. |
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KOSTYA |
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|
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We have this conversation one time, |
|
remember? You get angry. |
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MONTY |
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Oh , Jesus. She didn't dime me out, man . |
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KOSTYA |
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No? |
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MONTY |
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Why would she? |
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Kostya shrugs again. |
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KOSTYA |
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Maybe her aunt is illegal alien. |
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MONTY |
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What if she is? |
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KOSTYA |
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|
|
Maybe the Federals threaten her. |
|
Monty shakes his head and walks down the stairs. |
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MONTY |
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. You're insane. She wouldn't do that. |
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KOSTYA |
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|
No? Did you ask her? |
|
Monty--stares--up--at- Kostya for a few seconds before-walking -- |
|
away. |
|
Kostya stands at the top of the stoop. He feels something and |
|
raises his palms to the air. The snow has begun to fall. |
|
|
|
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|
|
He looks up into the sky. Something catches his eye -- in one |
|
of the fourth floor windows, Naturelle is staring down at |
|
him. |
|
Kostya watches her. She lets the curtain close. Kostya takes |
|
another slug from his flask. |
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|
|
INT. SUBWAY STATION |
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Monty waits for the 6 train. Two BOYS (12), wearing winter |
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parkas and knit caps, crouch near the edge of the platform, |
|
pointing down at the tracks and laughing. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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31 |
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CONTINUED: |
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MONTY |
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What's down there? |
|
The boys point and Monty looks. We follow his gaze. We can't |
|
see anything at first, but then, as if our eyes were |
|
adjusting to the dark, we begin to pick out movement. |
|
A gang of large RATS crawls through the tracks, nosing |
|
through balled-up paper bags, candy wrappers and orange |
|
peels. |
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|
|
BOY 1 |
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|
|
These ones, they eat rat poison like |
|
chocolate. |
|
The biggest rat of all sniffs around the base of an upright |
|
wax-paper coffee cup that sits just outside the third rail. |
|
Monty reaches into the pocket of his camel's hair coat and |
|
pulls out a handful of change. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Watch this. |
|
He selects a quarter and -- with a free throw motion as smooth |
|
as Hersey Hawkins's-- tosses it into the empty cup, a ten- |
|
foot shot. |
|
The big rat, startled, hustles into the alcove below the lip |
|
of the platform. The boys, impressed, whistle. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Here -- |
|
He offers his palmful of change. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Take a shot at it. |
|
The boys look at each other for a moment before each takes a |
|
coin. They stare up at Monty. He nods at them. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Let's see what you got. |
|
Boy 1 takes careful aim at the coffee cup. His shot is way |
|
off target, though -- it pings off the tile on the far side of |
|
the tunnel. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Your release is too high. Look -- |
|
He mimics the boy's shooting motion. |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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32 |
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|
CONTINUED : (2) |
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|
o |
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|
|
^^ MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
See? You're letting go way up here, so |
|
it's floating on you. It's like -- you |
|
play basketball? |
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|
|
BOY 1 |
|
|
|
No. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
Baseball? |
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|
BOY 1 |
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|
|
No . |
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MONTY |
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|
|
No? What do you play? |
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|
BOY 1 |
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|
|
Soccer. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
(disgusted) |
|
Soccer? All right, forget it. |
|
(turning to the other boy) |
|
Your turn, little man . |
|
Boy 2 toes the edge of the yellow danger line and practices |
|
his motion . When he finally releases the coin, it flashes |
|
through the air and drops neatly into the cup. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Thataboy! |
|
He raises his fist and the boy taps knuckles, grinning |
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|
BOY 1 |
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|
|
You see that! You see that! Charlie got |
|
mad skills! |
|
Charlie says nothing, just grins and hops around on one foot. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
Make a wish. |
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CHARLIE |
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|
|
I get a wish? |
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|
MONTY ' |
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|
|
Hell , yes . A shot like that deserves a |
|
wish. |
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|
Monty and Charlie stare at the coffee cup and concentrate. |
|
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|
33 |
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|
INT . 6 TRAI N |
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|
Mont y rest s wit h hi s eye s close d a s th e trai n shudder s |
|
throug h th e tunnels . |
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|
|
TRE Y (O.S.) |
|
|
|
Monty ? Mont y Brogan ? |
|
Mont y open s hi s eyes . TRE Y POWEL L (27) stand s abov e him , |
|
holdin g th e ba r an d smilin g dow n a t Monty . A blonde , blandl y |
|
handsom e man , Tre y look s lik e h e migh t hav e rowe d fo r Yale' s |
|
crew . H e wear s a well-cu t navy-blu e suit . Hi s wife , NANC Y |
|
(26) , stand s besid e him -- equall y blonde , equall y bland . |
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MONT Y |
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|
|
(not recognizin g them ) |
|
Hey.. . |
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|
TRE Y |
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|
|
Tre y Powell ! Fro m Campbell-Sawyer ! |
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MONT Y |
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|
|
(trying fo r enthusiasm ) |
|
Oh , Trey . Hey . Ho w yo u been ? |
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|
TRE Y \ |
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|
Excellent , excellent . Well , Goldman' s go t w*^jf |
|
m e locke d awa y twent y hour s a day , bu t |
|
othe r tha n that.. . I'm sorry , Nancy , thi s |
|
i s Mont y Brogan . Bes t basketbal l playe r |
|
eve r t o pla y fo r Campbell-Sawyer . |
|
Mont y stand s an d shake s he r hand . |
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|
MONT Y |
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|
|
Nic e t o mee t you . Here , tak e m y seat . |
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|
|
NANC Y |
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|
|
No , no , please -- |
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|
|
MONT Y |
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|
|
Thi s i s m y stop . I go t t o catc h th e B |
|
train . |
|
j |
|
Trey claps Monty on the shoulder. |
|
|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
Too bad, I wanted to catch up. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Yeah, well I'm sure I'll see you soon -- |
|
|
|
\J |
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
"- .,*..--- ~- 34 |
|
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|
|
CONTINUED: |
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|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
Tenth reunion. It's coining up! I'm the |
|
alumni rep for our class, actually. We'll |
|
see you there, I hope? June fifteenth? |
|
The train has pulled into the station and Monty moves toward |
|
the doors. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Yeah, I hope so, definitely. Good seeing |
|
you. |
|
Monty makes his escape and Trey watches him go. |
|
|
|
NANCY |
|
|
|
He went to Campbell-Sawyer? |
|
|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
Mm. Well, he was a scholarship kid. It |
|
didn't take, though. They threw him out |
|
junior year. |
|
Through the subway car windows, they watch Monty jogging up |
|
the stairs. |
|
|
|
NANCY |
|
|
|
For what? |
|
|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
Selling drugs. |
|
(beat) |
|
You can take the kid out of Bensonhurst, |
|
but you can't take the Bensonhurst out of |
|
the kid. |
|
|
|
EXT. BROGAN'S BAR -- NIGHT |
|
|
|
The snow is falling faster. We watch the flakes spin through |
|
a yellow cone of streetlight. |
|
We see the bar from the street.. The name "Brogan's Bar & |
|
Grill" is written in gold script on the storefront window. |
|
From the outside it looks like any other Bensonhurst bar, |
|
neon beer signs hanging in the window. |
|
|
|
INT. BROGAN'S BAR |
|
|
|
On the inside, though, it's clear that attention has been |
|
paid to every detail. Everything is right: the zinc bartop, |
|
the brass foot-rail, the antique mirrors behind the liquor. |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
35, |
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|
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|
|
CONTINUED : - 路路路--<路路 |
|
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|
|
A BARTENDER wipes down the bartop with a rag and a spray- |
|
bottle . Two CUSTOMERS sit on stools and watc h the basketball |
|
game on television. |
|
Mont y sits at a corner table with his father, JAME S BROGAN , |
|
fifty. Each ma n has a pint of Guinness. The olde r Broga n was |
|
clearly a fine-looking ma n in his day, but the year s hav e |
|
bee n hard on him. |
|
Monty points at the Tiffany-glass sconces on the wall . |
|
|
|
MONT Y |
|
|
|
Where'd you find those? |
|
|
|
MR . BROGAN |
|
|
|
Estate sale in Sheepshead Bay. Old lady |
|
dies and her kids sell everything five |
|
days later. The china -- she probably |
|
thought her great-grandkids would be |
|
eating off those plates. |
|
|
|
MONT Y |
|
|
|
Maybe they didn't need any more plates . |
|
|
|
MR . BROGAN |
|
|
|
(wistfully) |
|
It was beautiful china. |
|
Monty leans back in his chair and surveys the place . No t that |
|
he hasn't seen the bar a thousand times -- he' s havin g a hard |
|
time looking directly at his father. |
|
RUTH (60), a waitress with a face like a crumpled pape r bag, |
|
arrives with the food: pork chops for the elder Brogan , a |
|
steak for Monty. |
|
|
|
MONT Y |
|
|
|
Thanks, Ruth . |
|
|
|
RUTH |
|
|
|
Anytime, sweetie . |
|
She rests her hand on Monty's shoulder for a moment . |
|
|
|
RUTH (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I'll send you cookies every month . Peanut I |
|
butter, right? Your favorite. |
|
Monty smiles and nods . Ruth exchanges glances wit h Mr . Brogan |
|
before departing. Mr . Brogan breaks a bread roll an d butters |
|
it . He stares at the buttered bread and leaves it on his |
|
plate . \j |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
36, |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (2) |
|
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
So I talked to Sal -- |
|
|
|
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Ah , come on, Dad. |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
See if he can help with anything. |
|
|
|
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Sal? The guy's been out of the picture |
|
for twenty years. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
He might know some people in there . |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
The guy's three hundred years old. He |
|
sits around playing gin rummy all day. |
|
What's he going to do for me? |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
He still knows people. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Dad, would you please? I'll be all right. |
|
Just, please, don't get involved in this . |
|
(beat) |
|
Okay? |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
You're still going to be a young man when |
|
you get out. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
- Monty lets his fork drop and wipes his mouth with his napkin. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I know you don't think so. But listen to |
|
me . You keep your head down in there. |
|
Don't start any trouble. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Jesus. Enough. |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
Both men stare at the uneaten food on their plates . |
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
This should never have happened. |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
Monty raps the tabletop with his knuckles. |
|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
|
37 . |
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|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: (3) "-路- |
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Dad? I fucked up. Okay? What else can I |
|
tell you? I fucked up. |
|
|
|
INT. BROGAN'S BATHROOM -- LATER |
|
|
|
Monty stands in the cramped bathroom, staring into the |
|
mirror. Someone has scrawled "Fuck you" in magic marker on |
|
the wall above the mirror. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
INT. DEA DIVISION OFFICE, INTERROGATION ROOM ~ MORNING |
|
|
|
Monty stares into the mirror covering one wall of the room. |
|
|
|
INT. OBSERVATION ROOM -- CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
Two agents stare back at him through the one-way glass. |
|
|
|
INT. DEA DIVISION OFFICE, INTERROGATION ROOM -- CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
Monty.sits at the table and waits. Agent Brzowksi walks in, |
|
followed by Agent Cunningham. Brzowski leaves the door ajar |
|
for a moment. |
|
Monty looks through the door and sees Naturelle leaving |
|
another room, escorted by two agents. She makes eye contact |
|
with Monty. Brzowski shuts the door. He smiles at Monty. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
Good looking girl you got there. |
|
Monty glares at him. Brzowski pretends to sh,iver. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ooh, that's a scary look. Yikes. You see |
|
the look he gave me? |
|
Cunningham laughs. Both agents take seats at the table. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Naturelle Rosario. What a name. You see |
|
the body on that girl? |
|
Cunningham laughs again. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You fucking touch her -- |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
No, no, you've got it all wrong. She |
|
fucking touched you. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
38 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : |
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Monty is silent for a few seconds. When he does speak, his |
|
tone is very quiet and deliberate -- he is trying to restrain |
|
his temper. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You're lying to me . |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
Am I? That's sweet, you really trust her . |
|
All I know is, she's walking away. We |
|
just signed her release. Bye bye , |
|
Naturelle. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
She's probably having a big party |
|
tonight. |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
Sure, why not? Big celebration. She's got |
|
that whole big apartment to herself now. |
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
She's a smart girl. You on the other |
|
hand... |
|
|
|
AGENT BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
You're supposed to be smart. Got yourself |
|
a scholarship to a fancy private school, |
|
huh? Not bad for a kid from Bensonhurst. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
And then you get yourself thrown out for |
|
dealing. Pretty dumb, buddy. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"~ -- --'--AGENT" BRZOWSKI |
|
|
|
You know what happens to pretty boys like |
|
you in prison? |
|
|
|
AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
|
|
|
Oh , they are gonna love you. |
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AGENT BRZOWSKI |
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|
|
But it's not too late, Brogan . First |
|
felony offense, we can offer you a nice |
|
deal. You just gotta be smart . So why |
|
don't you tell us about your friend Uncle |
|
Blue. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
(to Cunningham) |
|
Can I ask you a question? |
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(CONTINUED) |
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39. |
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CONTINUED: (2) .. , , ._..,._... |
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|
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AGENT CUNNINGHAM |
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|
|
Sure. |
|
Cunningham and Brzowski lean forward, eager to hear Monty |
|
name the names. |
|
|
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MONTY |
|
|
|
When you've got your dick up his ass, is |
|
he still talking all the time? |
|
Cunningham and Brzowski sit back. |
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|
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Cause it seems to me he never shuts up, |
|
and I'm just wondering, is that annoying, |
|
you're fucking the guy up the ass and he |
|
never shuts up? |
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|
|
CUT TO: |
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|
|
INT. BROGAN'S BATHROOM |
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|
|
Monty still stares at the mirror. He wets his thumb and tries |
|
to rub out the magic marker "Fuck you". Someone knocks on the |
|
door. Monty rubs harder. It's not coming out. |
|
VZ7 Another knock. |
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|
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MONTY |
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|
|
Yeah, all right. |
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|
|
INT. BROGAN'S BAR |
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|
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Monty returns to the table, sits, drinks some Guinness. , |
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|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
Let me aBk you "a question. |
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|
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MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Okay. |
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MONTY |
|
|
|
What do you think of Naturelle? |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
She's a good girl. Your mother would have |
|
liked her. |
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|
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MONTY |
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|
|
Do you trust her? |
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Q |
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(CONTINUED) |
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..... . 40 |
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CONTINUED: |
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MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Do I trust her? Why do J have to trust |
|
her? |
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MONTY |
|
|
|
Do you think I can trust her? |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Where you going with this? |
|
|
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MONTY |
|
|
|
I've been hearing weird things. |
|
(beat) |
|
Some people are saying she dimed me out |
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|
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MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
(incredulous) |
|
Why would she do that? |
|
|
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MONTY |
|
|
|
I don't know. Maybe the Feds got to her |
|
somehow. Blackmailed her. |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
The girl loves you/ Monty. I can't |
|
believe she would betray you. |
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Everything's gotten so strange, Dad. I |
|
wake up some mornings and it takes me a |
|
minute to remember who I am, you know? |
|
Where I'm going. |
|
Mr. Brogan looks down at his plate and nods. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Most of the people I'm with, I look at |
|
them and I think, these are my friends? |
|
(beat) |
|
The only ones I trust these days are you |
|
and the guys I grew up with -- Frank, |
|
Jake. |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
I miss those boys. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
And Naturelle... Jesus. I can't get it |
|
out of my head. |
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vL MR. BROGAN |
|
It doesn't really matter now, does it? |
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(CONTINUED) |
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41 |
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|
CONTINUED : (2) |
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路( Monty stares at his father, blue eyes unblinking. |
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MONTY |
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|
It matters to me . |
|
Monty checks his watch. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
I should get going. |
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MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Okay. I'll see you in the morning. |
|
Mr . Brogan removes his wallet from the inside pocket of his |
|
jacket. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
The morning? What for? I'm taking a bus |
|
up there. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Forget the bus. I'll drive you. It'll |
|
take half as long. |
|
Monty frowns, backing his chair away from the table. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
No thanks. I'd rather say goodbye here. |
|
Mr . Brogan pulls a small photograph from his wallet and hands |
|
it to his son. |
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|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Take this. They'll let you keep it. |
|
Monty holds the picture carefully. ._., ._ |
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|
|
_ =! |
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|
|
INSERT PHOTO |
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|
|
James Brogan, twenty years younger, his arm around his |
|
beautiful wife. The six-year-old Montgomery Brogan stands in |
|
front of them, wearing yellow pajamas and a red plastic |
|
fireman's helmet, staring at the floor. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
When you were a little kid you used to |
|
sleep in that fireman's helmet. Your |
|
mother -- |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
(still looking at photo) ..-?路-. |
|
Don't, Dad. Not now. L'路') |
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|
(CONTINUED ) |
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CONTINUED: (3) |
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|
|
> Monty carefully inserts the photo into his own wallet , kisses |
|
his father's forehead, and walks away. |
|
|
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|
|
James Brogan stares at the empty chair where Monty had sat. |
|
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|
|
INT. ELEUTHERIA GREEK RESTAURANT -- NIGHT |
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|
|
UNCLE BLUE, SENKA VALGHOBEK, and VICTOR GEDNY sit on the |
|
private balcony that overlooks the restaurant's mai n room. |
|
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|
|
The place is furnished in classic Outer Borough Greek |
|
fashion: whitewashed walls , clay-tiled floors, poster s of the |
|
Parthenon at dawn and Santorini at sunset. |
|
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|
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|
|
Uncle Blue owns the place . He's a fierce-looking ma n with a |
|
thick black beard, powerful hands, and no tolerance for |
|
incompetence. It's hard to determine his age -- anywhere from |
|
forty to sixty. |
|
Valghobek, his lieutenant, looks at first glance like an |
|
overweight suburban dad. But on closer inspection there is |
|
something absolutely mirthless in his smile, a meannes s |
|
around his eyes. He's in his late forties. |
|
Gedny, mid-thirties, Uncle Blue's lawyer, wears a shiny suit, |
|
a gold bracelet, and a deep , artificial-looking tan . |
|
Gedny busily eats his shrimp and feta while the other two |
|
watch him. Gedny gestures toward the windows. |
|
|
|
GEDNY |
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|
|
Starting to snow. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
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|
|
You met with Brogan this morning. 路路- |
|
Uncle Blue's accent, like his age, is difficult to pi n down. |
|
He could be Afghani or Iranian or Turkish. |
|
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|
GEDNY |
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|
|
I did, yeah. |
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|
Gedny reaches for his wine , takes a sip. |
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|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
And? |
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|
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|
|
GEDNY |
|
|
|
He' s no t lovin g lif e righ t now, |
|
obviously . I don' t know. He' s har d t o |
|
read . |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
43 . |
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|
|
CONTINUED : |
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|
|
( ) UNCL E BLU E |
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|
|
I kno w h e is . I don' t lik e that . |
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|
|
GEDN Y |
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|
|
Listen , on e hundre d percen t certain , th e |
|
ki d didn' t flip . The y woul d no t b e |
|
sendin g hi m t o Otisvill e i f h e flipped . |
|
Uncl e Blu e an d Valghobe k exchang e glances . It' s clea r the y |
|
don' t hav e muc h respec t fo r th e lawyer . |
|
|
|
UNCL E BLU E |
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|
|
We'r e talkin g abou t huma n behavior , Mr . |
|
Gedny . Nothin g i s on e hundre d percen t |
|
certain . |
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|
|
VALGHOBE K |
|
|
|
Don' t assum e they'r e idiots . |
|
|
|
GEDN Y |
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|
|
That' s jus t it . They'r e no t idiots . N o |
|
wa y i n hel l th e kid' s stil l walkin g |
|
aroun d ou t her e i f h e flippe d Federal . |
|
Secon d h e goe s he' s gone, right ? I f he' s |
|
thei r sta r witness , they' d hav e |
|
j-J搂i disappeare d him . |
|
Gedn y fork s anothe r shrim p an d eat s it . |
|
|
|
GEDN Y (CONT'D ) |
|
|
|
(mout h full ) |
|
He' s kep t hi s mout h shut . |
|
|
|
VALGHOBE K |
|
|
|
S o far . |
|
|
|
:' - ~ " GEDN Y ""~" |
|
|
|
He' s a smar t kid . H e know s what' s goo d |
|
fo r him . |
|
|
|
UNCL E BLU E |
|
|
|
He' s soft . H e won' t las t lon g i n there . |
|
|
|
GEDN Y |
|
|
|
He'l l hav e to . Fe d mandatory , tha t mean s |
|
on e da y of f pe r mont h o f goo d behavior . |
|
Eve n i f he' s a fuckin g choirboy , he' s i n |
|
ther e seve n years . |
|
|
|
UNCL E BLU E |
|
|
|
(to Valghobek ) |
|
He' s comin g tonight ? r,,'J |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
i 44 |
|
|
|
4 CONTINUED: (2) |
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|
Valghobek nods. |
|
|
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|
|
GEDNY |
|
|
|
Where to? Throwing him a goodbye party at |
|
VelVet? |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
You won't be there, Mr . Gedny. |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
GEDNY |
|
|
|
What do I have to do to rate one of those |
|
VelVet parties? Aside from getting locked |
|
up for seven years. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Win more trials. |
|
Gedny laughs but quickly notices that Uncle Blue and |
|
Valghobek are not amused. |
|
|
|
GEDNY |
|
|
|
Listen, they found six hundred and fifty |
|
g's in your boy's sofa cushion. They got |
|
every white junkie on the East Side |
|
saying Brogan's the sell. Game over. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uncle Blue and Valghobek say nothing. Gedny licks his lips |
|
|
|
GEDNY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
It's U.S . Code. There's nothing to argue. |
|
Who do I argue with, the fucking grid? |
|
It's seventy-eight to ninety-seven |
|
months, automatic. I kept him out of |
|
stepback* kep_t him in the world for a few |
|
extra months -- |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
The judge kept him out of stepback. Why? |
|
If he's not talking with the Federals, |
|
how come he's still on the street? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gedny shrugs. |
|
|
|
GEDNY |
|
|
|
It's pretty common for non-violent |
|
offenders. He's a white boy with no |
|
record and his father put up his bar as |
|
the bail bond. They're not worried about |
|
him jumping. |
|
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
45 |
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|
|
CONTINUED: (3) |
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|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
They know more than you think. If |
|
Brogan's telling the truth, he was |
|
touched. The DEA went straight to his |
|
sofa. They knew exactly where it was. |
|
|
|
GEDNY |
|
|
|
Someone dimed him out. You know who? |
|
Uncle Blue and Valghobek watch the lawyer, impassive and |
|
silent. |
|
|
|
GEDNY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
None of my business. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Correct. |
|
|
|
EXT. MULBERRY STREET -- NIGHT |
|
|
|
Monty walks down the snow-covered street, hands in the |
|
pockets of his camel's hair coat. He watches everything |
|
intently: the passersby, the cars swerving through the slush, |
|
the stores and restaurants. |
|
|
|
EXT. CLOTHING BOUTIQUE |
|
|
|
He stops in front of a fashionable shop. Beyond the plate |
|
glass window, bald mannequins wear the latest styles. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
EXT. CLOTHING BOUTIQUE -- FLASHBACK (TWO YEARS EARLIER) |
|
|
|
Monty and Naturelle, hand in hand, stare through the window |
|
at the elegantly attirejl manneguins_禄 ,,The shop appears to be |
|
closed for the night. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
This is my favorite store. |
|
|
|
' MONTY |
|
|
|
I know. Let's go in. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
It's closed. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Not for you it's not. |
|
He raps on the window. A SALES CLERK (25) walks over to the |
|
window, peers out and sees Monty. He goes to the door, |
|
unlocks it, holds it open for Naturelle and Monty. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
. (CONTINUED) |
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|
|
46 |
|
|
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|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
Naturelle stares at Monty, who smiles and beckons for her to |
|
enter. She raises her eyebrows and goes in. Monty nods to the |
|
clerk as he enters the store. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
How you doing? |
|
|
|
CLERK |
|
|
|
Pretty good, Monty, how you been? |
|
|
|
INT. CLOTHING BOUTIQUE |
|
|
|
Naturelle and Monty have the shop to themselves. She walks |
|
around, inspecting the blouses, the pants, the jackets and |
|
handbags. Monty watches hex. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Everything here is so expensive. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Don't worry about that. It's your |
|
birthday. |
|
The clerk emerges from the back room. |
|
/"'.'Jaillt |
|
[]^m CLERK |
|
vs" |
|
"~ We got some of the new stuff in from |
|
Italy this morning. You want to take a |
|
look? |
|
|
|
INT. BACK ROOM |
|
|
|
The new clothes are still wrapped in plastic. Naturelle pokes |
|
around, touching the fabrics, examining the cuts. The clerk |
|
touches her arm* - - - --- - |
|
|
|
CLERK |
|
|
|
Here, check out this dress. It's the best |
|
thing they've made in years. |
|
He tears the plastic wrap off a dress hanging in the corner |
|
of thp rnrmu--It really is a gorgeous dress,--sleek and silver,-- |
|
looking almost liquid under the fluorescent lights. |
|
Naturelle holds the hanger to her chest and looks at herself |
|
in a full-length mirror leaning against one wall. She turns |
|
to Monty and smiles. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
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|
|
47 |
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|
|
|
|
|
EXT. CLOTHING BOUTIQUE WINDOW -- NIGHT |
|
|
|
Monty, still remembering, stares through the window. His |
|
reflection stares back at him. |
|
|
|
INT. SLATTERY'S APARTMENT -- NIGHT |
|
|
|
Slattery opens the door and Jakob hurries in, his Yankees hat |
|
(which he wears for the rest of the night) and coat dusted |
|
with snow. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
It's really coming down, huh? |
|
Slattery lives in a Young Man with Money without Woman |
|
Apartment. The television set in the living room is so large |
|
that the weatherman startles Jakob. |
|
The living room itself is bigger than many Manhattan |
|
apartments, but it's empty except for the television, an old |
|
sofa, a coffee table, a Persian rug (still rolled) under the |
|
windows, and a shiny red electric guitar in the corner. |
|
Slattery returns to the sofa, bottle of beer in hand, while |
|
Jakob remains standing, brushing the snow from his coat. |
|
|
|
JAKOB ^ |
|
|
|
(indicating guitar) |
|
You taking lessons? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
You think I have time for guitar lessons? |
|
It's nice though, huh? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Yeah, it's nice. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I like that color red. Have you checked |
|
out the TV yet? Big, right? |
|
|
|
JAKOB = |
|
|
|
Very big. |
|
On television, the weatherman blabs on about the coming |
|
storm. |
|
|
|
WEATHERMAN |
|
|
|
...for the New York metropolitan area, |
|
and I'll tell you what, Carol, it could |
|
be a doozy. Expect anywhere from six to - |
|
ten inches of snow. \ |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
--.-........ - |
|
|
|
|
|
. 48 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Do you think real human beings use the |
|
word "doozy"? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Ten inches of snow! |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Maybe we'll have a snow day tomorrow. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
We should go skiing this weekend. I |
|
bought some racing skis. Six hundred |
|
bucks.for a pair of fucking skis . |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I don't know how to ski. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Well so what. Neither do I. But ten |
|
inches! |
|
(beat) ! |
|
You gonna stand all night? You'r e making ! |
|
me nervous. |
|
Jakob sits beside Slattery and stares unhappily at the huge |
|
television. When the screen goes blank befor e a commercial, \ |
|
he sees his own face reflected in the glass . j| |
|
|
|
JAKOB 路! |
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|
|
Frank? |
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|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Yeah? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Are you ready for this? |
|
Slattery changes channels. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
For what? |
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|
|
JAKOB |
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|
|
For tonight. |
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
What's there to be ready for? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What do we say to him? He's goin g to be |
|
living in a cell for seven years . |
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|
|
(MORE) |
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(CONTINUED) |
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49 . |
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|
CONTINUED : <2) |
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|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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|
|
It's like visiting a friend in the - |
|
hospital with cancer . What do we say? |
|
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|
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
We don't say anything. We get him drunk |
|
and go wherever he wants to go . |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I don't even know wh y he invited me . |
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|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
What are you talking about? |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
We hardly ever see each other these days . |
|
You and I are his friends from the past . |
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SLATTERY |
|
|
|
His friends from the present haven't done |
|
him much good. |
|
They're quiet for a time, staring at the huge television. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I can't believe he'l l be gone for seven |
|
years. Someone turns him in and boom, |
|
goodbye. |
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
It's the best thing that ever happened to |
|
him. |
|
The comment startles Jakob. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What does that mean ? |
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|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
It means if he didn't get arrested, he |
|
wouldn't be alive in seven years . They'd |
|
find him under the Manhattan Bridge with |
|
two bullets in hi s head. |
|
Jakob thinks about this for a second before picking up a |
|
framed photograph from the coffee table. |
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|
|
INSERT PICTURE |
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|
|
Slattery, Jakob and Monty at age sixteen, mugging for the |
|
camera. |
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|
JAKOB . |
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|
|
God, we were little punks, huh? { J |
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(CONTINUED) |
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|
路 路 - 路""路路 50, |
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路路 |
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|
"" 路- |
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|
CONTINUED : (3) |
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|
Slattery grunts. Jakob continues to stare at the photograph . |
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|
CU T TO: |
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|
|
INT. CAMPBELL-SAWYER CAFETERIA -- FLASHBACK |
|
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|
|
The three boys, age sixteen, sit at a table with their trays |
|
of food. They wear the school uniform: blazers with the |
|
Campbell-Sawyer crest, loosely knotted ties. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Young Slattery picks up a strand of limp spaghetti from his |
|
plate . |
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|
|
YOUNG SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Watch this. |
|
|
|
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|
|
He sticks one end up one nostril while his friends stare at |
|
him. |
|
Slattery snorts and then blows his nose. Monty and Jakob back |
|
away in disgust. Slattery sticks a finger into his other |
|
nostril and pulls down the end of the spaghetti strand. |
|
One end of the spaghetti strand now dangles from each |
|
nostril. He pulls on each end, a little this way, a little |
|
that way. |
|
|
|
YOUNG SLATTERY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
It's called brain flossing. |
|
|
|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
This is why you're still a virgin. |
|
|
|
YOUNG SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I'm not a virgin. |
|
Two classmates, TREY and MASON, come over to their table . |
|
Both are blonde, WASPy, and lazily elegant. |
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TREY |
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|
That's attractive, Slattery. |
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|
MASON |
|
|
|
Very classy. Here they are , the three |
|
Lords of the Outer Boroughs. |
|
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|
|
Slattery glares at them, the spaghetti still dangling from |
|
his nose . |
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|
|
YOUNG SLATTERY |
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|
|
Fuck you. |
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
51 |
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|
CONTINUED: > |
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|
TRE Y |
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|
|
Ooh, good comeback. Come on, we expect |
|
our scholarship boys to be a little |
|
quicker than that. |
|
|
|
YOUNG SLATTERY |
|
|
|
(clenching his fists) |
|
You want to see how quick I am? |
|
|
|
MASON |
|
|
|
All right, all right, take it easy. What |
|
are you boys up to this weekend? |
|
|
|
YOUNG JAKOB |
|
|
|
We've got that Paradise Lost paper due |
|
Monday. |
|
Trey rolls his eyes. |
|
|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
Monty, you coming to my party? |
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|
|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
I don't know, maybe. |
|
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|
|
It's gonna be a rager. |
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|
|
YOUNG SLATTERY |
|
|
|
A Park Avenue rager? You're gonna sit |
|
around drinking tea? |
|
Slattery drinks from his milk carton, letting his pinkie |
|
finger dangle in imitation of an aristocrat drinking tea |
|
|
|
TREY ,,. ... |
|
|
|
Smoking tea, more like. I'm buying half |
|
an ounce in the Meadow later on. |
|
Mason mimics smoking a J. |
|
|
|
MASON |
|
|
|
Two hundred bucks, going up in smoke. |
|
|
|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
|
|
|
Two hundred bucks for half an ounce? |
|
|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
Why, how much does it cost you? |
|
Monty shrugs |
|
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
-路路-路路 - 路 -- - -52. |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (2) |
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|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
I could get it for seventy. |
|
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|
|
Trey pull s out his calfskin wallet and selects a crisp |
|
hundred dollar bill . He hands it to Monty. |
|
|
|
TREY |
|
|
|
You get it, you can keep the change. |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
Trey and Mason amble away. Monty snaps the bill between hi s |
|
fingers. Jakob looks at Monty skeptically. |
|
|
|
YOUNG JAKOB |
|
|
|
Since when are you the big player? |
|
|
|
YOUN G MONTY |
|
|
|
(gesturing at Trey and Mason) |
|
They were born with money, right? Okay, |
|
fair enough. I was born with sway. |
|
|
|
YOUNG JAKOB |
|
|
|
What's sway? |
|
Monty leans toward the next table over, where four GEEKISH |
|
STUDENTS are poring over their textbooks. |
|
|
|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
Hey, Julian. How's that math homework |
|
treating you? |
|
JULIAN, a pale, pudgy boy with an odd resemblance to Alfred |
|
Hitchcock, grins at Monty and shrugs. He's clearly flattered |
|
by Monty's attention; his three friends stare at Monty. |
|
|
|
-- -- - --路 JULIAN " |
|
|
|
Piece of cake. Want to borrow it? |
|
|
|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
Just to make sure you didn't screw it up . |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
Julian laughs and hands Monty a sheet of graph paper covered |
|
with geometric proofs . |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
JULIAN |
|
|
|
Try no t to copy my name this time. |
|
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|
YOUNG MONTY |
|
|
|
Ha ha . |
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|
|
Monty smiles at Jakob and flutters the graph paper . |
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
53 . |
|
|
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|
|
CONTINUED : (3 ) 芦.->.. - -^ |
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|
|
(Ifl YOUNG MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
^~y Sway. |
|
|
|
K |
|
|
|
(beat) |
|
Hey, Frank, you eating that? Cause I'm |
|
still hungry. |
|
He grabs for the spaghetti strand dangling from Slattery's |
|
nose. Slattery defends himself with a butter knife. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
INT. SLATTERY'S APARTMENT |
|
|
|
Jakob returns the photograph to the coffee table. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Lords of the Outer Boroughs. Remember |
|
that? |
|
Slattery stands and stretches. He looks tired. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
You want to help me with this rug? It's |
|
been sitting here for a month. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Where do you want it? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Over here. |
|
They carry the rolled rug to the center of the room and tear |
|
off the plastic wrap. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What's he planning to do with Doyle? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Doyle? I don't know. Give him to |
|
Naturelle? |
|
Slattery balls up the plastic wrap and tosses it into the |
|
corner. They begin unrolling the rug. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
They should at least let him take his dog |
|
with him. Maybe it wouldn't be so lonely. |
|
Slattery cocks an eyebrow and stares at Jakob. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
You can't take your dog to prison with |
|
you. |
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
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|
|
CONTINUED : |
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|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I'm just saying it would be nice if you |
|
could. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
They look down at the unrolled rug. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
That looks pretty good^ |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Monty's tough. I think he'll be okay. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slattery starts shaking his head and Jakob hurriedly |
|
continues. |
|
|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
If it was me , I'd never last a day. But |
|
Monty's different. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
(dismissively) |
|
You don't get it. Here, let's move it |
|
closer to the sofa. |
|
They lift the rug and shift it a few feet. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
So explain it to me . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
You want the simple version? People wh o |
|
look like Monty don't do wel l in prison . |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
You're talking about... It can't be as |
|
bad as people say. I mean, it's a Federal |
|
prison. I'm sure they're pretty careful -- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slattery starts to laugh. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Man , you talk exactly like a guy who |
|
never left school. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob has no comeback for this . He simmers. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SLATTERY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Monty's got three choices, and none of |
|
them are good. One , he can run. Get on a |
|
train going to wherever and hope they |
|
never catch up to him. |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
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|
|
55. |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: (2) |
|
|
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|
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|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
He won't do that. His dad's bar -- |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I'm not saying what he will do, I'm |
|
saying what his choices are. Number two -- |
|
Slattery makes a gun with his thumb and index finger and |
|
points it at his temple. Jakob's eyes go wide. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Kill himself? Not a chance. No way. |
|
What's the third choice? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
The third choice? |
|
Slattery thinks about it for a minute. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
The third choice is he goes to prison. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
That's what's going to happen. He'll go |
|
and he'll make it through. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Maybe. But no matter what, it's bye-bye |
|
Monty. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What does that mean? |
|
Slattery raises his thumb. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
If he runs, he's gone. And he won't be |
|
coming home. |
|
He raises his index finger. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
If he pulls the trigger, he's gone. |
|
They'll keep the casket closed. |
|
He raises his middle finger. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY (COM" D) |
|
|
|
If they lock him away, he's gone. You'll |
|
never see him again. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Q |
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
56. |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: (3) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
o JAKOB |
|
I'll see him again. I'll visit him up |
|
there and I'll see him when he gets out. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I wouldn't bet on it. You think you're |
|
still gonna be friends? You think you'll |
|
kick back with a couple beers and |
|
reminisce? Forget it, Jake. It's over |
|
after tonight. |
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S KITCHEN -- NIGHT |
|
|
|
Naturelle, wearing the sleek, shimmering silver dress, enters |
|
the kitchen. She's looking for something. |
|
She finds her keys by the cutting board, and then stops for a |
|
moment, looking at the carving knife atop the clean cutting |
|
board. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S KITCHEN --ON E YEAR EARLIER |
|
|
|
Naturelle, wearing shorts and a t-shirt, slices onions while |
|
music plays on the stereo. We hear the apartment door open |
|
and close, and then Monty comes into the kitchen. |
|
Naturelle continues slicing onions. Monty walks over to her |
|
and embraces her from behind. He kisses her neck, her ears. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
You have a good day? |
|
|
|
"路 MONTY " " |
|
|
|
Mm hm. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Do anything special? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Nope. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Anyone call for me when I was out? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Nah. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Nobody? |
|
Monty begins to get worried. |
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
57 |
|
|
|
|
|
路CONTINUED: - ' |
|
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Urn. .. I don't -- |
|
Naturelle wheels around and Monty has to jump back to avoid |
|
getting gutted by the carving knife. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Like, for example, my mother didn't call? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Oh, shit. Shit, I'm sorry. I completely-- |
|
Naturelle stabs the air to emphasize her point. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
This is the third time this month, |
|
Montgomery. What's your problem, you're |
|
illiterate? You can't write down a |
|
message on a piece of paper? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I meant to.y I just -- |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
You meant to? You meant to? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Could you put the knife away? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I'll put the knife away. You want me to |
|
put the knife away? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
(smiling) |
|
Okay -- ^ |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
This is funny? |
|
Monty steps back and Naturelle advances on him with the |
|
knife. She's kidding, basically, but it's hard to tell. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
You think this is funny? I'll carve your |
|
heart out, you shit. |
|
Monty laughs. Doyle has walked into the kitchen and now |
|
stands behind Monty, staring up curiously at the two humans. |
|
MONTY x |
|
You're gonna carve my heart out? 路 i) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
路 (CONTINUED) |
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58 |
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CONTINUED: (2) |
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Naturelle waves the knife at him and Monty takes another step |
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backward, trips over Doyle, and lands hard on his back . He |
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begins to laugh hysterically. |
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NATURELLE |
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Keep laughing. |
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She kicks him in the ribs, not very hard, and Mont y howl s |
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with laughter. Doyle, a little confused, licks Monty' s face. |
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NATURELLE (CONT'D) |
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Yeah, keep laughing, you fuck. I'll carve |
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your heart out and feed it to Doyle. |
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She continues kicking while Monty laughs and Doyle, |
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mystified, begins to bark, and finally Naturelle starts |
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laughing too. |
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Monty grabs her wrist and pulls her down on top of him . She |
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drops the knife to the side and bites Monty, hard, oh the |
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lips. |
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CUT TO : |
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INT. MONTY'S KITCHEN -- PRESENT |
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Naturelle, in her silver dress, stares at the carving knife. |
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Doyle pads in behind her, panting. Naturelle turns and looks |
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down at his blunt, expectant face. |
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NATURELLE |
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You ready for this? |
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INT. VELVET NIGHTCLUB -- MANAGER'S OFFICE -- NIGHT |
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LUIS VOLANDES has decorated his office walls with signed |
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photographs of various low-rung celebrities. |
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Volahdes, a potbellied ma n in his late thirties, wit h a mane |
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of curly black hair , sits behind his desk, listening to |
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Kostya, who shadowboxes, ringed fists flashing. |
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VOLANDES |
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You move prett y wel l fo r a fa t man. S o |
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tel l m e abou t thi s part y tonight . |
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Kostya throw s a left-right-lef t combination . |
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KOSTYA |
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Uncl e Blu e want s th e VIP room. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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59 |
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CONTINUED : 路路 - - 路 ..,.-.,. |
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, 路...-路路. ..-..-- |
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. 路 .. |
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. |
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VOLANDES |
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Al l right, that's what he wants . It's his |
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place. If someone had asked, I'd have |
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said do this party some other night . |
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Tonight's gonna be insane. This DJ we've |
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got playing, he's like Jesus these days . |
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Every high school kid in the five |
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boroughs is gonna be at my door . |
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Kostya frowns at the smaller man . |
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KOSTYA |
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Monty goes to prison tomorrow. You wan t |
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we have party tomorrow night? |
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VOLANDES |
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(holding up his hands) |
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Hey, I like Monty. He's a good kid. Okay, |
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any special requests for this party? |
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Volandes taps the side of his nose. Kostya shakes his head |
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KOSTYA |
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None of that. For his last night , we get |
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him a girl. |
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VOLANDES |
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What does he like? |
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Kostya smiles. |
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KOSTYA |
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Monty? He likes everything. Get him a |
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pretty girl. And don't be cheap. |
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The office door opens. Uncle Blue and Valghobek walk in. |
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Volandes quickly stands. |
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VOLANDES |
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Hey. I didn't -- we weren't expecting you. |
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UNCLE BLUE |
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(to Kostya) |
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What time is Monty coining tonight? |
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KOSTYA |
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One , two, who knows? Monty will be late |
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for his own funeral. |
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UNCLE BLUE |
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(grim) |
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No , he won't. Bring him here at three. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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- ' - -路路路路"- - 路 路" - -- 路路路--- 60 |
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CONTINUED: (2) |
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KOSTYA |
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Sure. |
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UNCLE BLUE |
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You hear me? Three o'clock. |
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VOLANDES |
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You want m e to, uh -- |
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UNCLE BLUE |
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From midnight on, I want you somewhere |
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else. Nobody comes down here, you got |
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that? |
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|
INT. BUG BAR -- NIGHT |
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Slatter.y. and Jakob sit on bar stools. Slattery sips from a |
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glass of whiskey; Jakob nurses a bottle of beer. |
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The Bug Bar gets its name from the exotic insects in glass |
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jars behind the bar. A television above the bar shows the |
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entertainment news. |
|
A VETERAN in an army jacket practices trick shots on the pool |
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table, JODY, the young, zaftig bartender, runs a rag over the |
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bartop. |
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JODY |
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How you doing, Frank? You want another |
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one? |
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SLATTERY |
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Thanks. |
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- She pours-his-bourbon-. *,,禄路-=芦,.-.,,.-.路路--^. -- __ |
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JODY |
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How about you, honey? |
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JAKOB |
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No , I'm fine. |
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Jody walks away. Slattery and Jakob examine her tush. |
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JAKOB (CONT'D) ; |
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One of the guys at school, this biology i |
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teacher, Terry -- did you ever meet Terry? j |
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SLATTERY | |
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(still watching tush) |
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No. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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. 61 |
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CONTINUED: |
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JAKOB {- |
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Anyway, h e reall y like s thi s girl . In a |
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sor t of-- |
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SLATTERY |
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A girl ? What d o you mean , a student ? |
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JAKOB |
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A student, yeah. A junior. What's weird |
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is, I mean this girl is sixteen. Maybe |
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seventeen, I don't know. She's not really |
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pretty -- not in the usual way, but she's -- |
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I don't know, she's got something. |
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SLATTERY |
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Uh-huh. |
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JAKOB |
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I told him -- I told Terry he ought to |
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just forget about it, put her out of his |
|
mind, but he's -- he's kind of obsessing. |
|
It's a little scary, the way he talks |
|
about it. He's like, ^Five years from |
|
now, she'll be almost out of college. And |
|
I'll be thirty-one. Nothing wrong with |
|
that.' r~\ |
|
Slattery sips from his whiskey. He still hasn't looked at |
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Jakob. |
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SLATTERY |
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You haven't fucked her yet, have you? |
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Jakob's eyes go wide. |
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_ |
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|
See, wait a second. If you were listening |
|
to me you'd know I was talking about |
|
Terry. The biology teacher? Terry? |
|
Slattery turns and appraises Jakob. |
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SLATTERY |
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|
You haven't fucked her, right? |
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Jakob starts to protest and Slattery raises his eyebrows. |
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JAKOB |
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No. |
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SLATTERY |
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Good. That would be a mistake. fv \ |
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(CONTINUED ) |
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62 . |
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CONTINUED : (2) |
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Jakob angrily picks at the label of his beer bottle. |
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JAKOB |
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I'm not a pervert or anything. |
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Slattery drains his whiskey. He tries to catch Jody's eye , |
|
but she's staring at someone who just walked into the bar . |
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|
Slattery and Jakob see Monty in the mirror. For a momen t |
|
neither of them moves . |
|
Then both of them force cheerful expressions onto their |
|
faces. They rise and each embraces Monty in turn. |
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MONTY |
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|
You been here long? |
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JAKOB |
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|
Oh, we got here early. |
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MONTY |
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|
Uncle Blue's throwing me a party at |
|
VelVet. We ought to head over there. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
Whose Uncle is he? |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
Huh? Nah, it's a nickname. His real |
|
name's like Ankaybusim or something, but |
|
no one can pronounce it . |
|
Monty surveys the sawdust-covered floor, the country rtiusic- |
|
piay-ing--j-u-keboxy--the-glass jars of bugs_,_.. _. |
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|
_ . |
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|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
What is this place? |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
Frank wants to be a redneck. He comes |
|
here and whistles Dixie while he's |
|
peeing. |
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|
Jody lines up three shot-glasses of whiskey. |
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JODY |
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|
It's nasty outside. You fellas gotta warm |
|
up before you head out . |
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SLATTERY |
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|
Thanks, Jody. |
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Jody smiles at Monty. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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63 |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (3) --~~ ~ . |
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JODY |
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|
Y'all ought to come by on Sunday for th e |
|
Super Bowl . We're setting up a big |
|
screen. I have a second cousin playing |
|
for the Packers . |
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|
Slattery rubs the calluses on his palm and Jakob stares at |
|
the floor. Jody laughs at their morose reaction. |
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|
JODY (CONT'D) |
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|
You don't have to come! I was just |
|
saying. |
|
Monty raises his glass and Slattery and Jakob grab their |
|
glasses and raise them too . |
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|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
Fuck Sunday. |
|
He drinks. Slattery and Jakob hesitate and then follow suit . |
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|
|
EXT . VELVET -- NIGHT |
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|
|
Monty steps out of a taxi, followed by Slattery and Jakob . A |
|
roiling MOB occupies half the block, crowding in front of the |
|
entrance to the dance club . |
|
Most are teenagers. They clot together in groups of fours and |
|
fives, smoking cigarettes and stomping their feet to keep |
|
warm. Almost none are dressed for the snow. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
The whole city came out to say goodbye . |
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|
|
SLATTERY |
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|
|
芦Jto-u'^ve禄jgot a lot of yojxng _f an.s. I- think- -- |
|
we're the oldest ones here. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
Wait a second. |
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|
Monty slips through the maz e of boys and girls . The kids look |
|
at him as he walks by . |
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|
Monty makes his way to the velvet ropes . KHARI GREENE , a |
|
pillar of a ma n wearing the exact same camel's hair coat as |
|
Monty, stands by the door, checking names off a clipboard. |
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|
Two pale scars run in parallel lines down Khari's left cheek. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
Nice coat , you bastard. ( ; |
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(CONTINUED) |
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64 . |
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CONTINUED: |
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|
Khar i look s u p from hi s clipboar d and smiles . H e offer s hi s |
|
hand and the y shake . |
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|
KHARI |
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|
|
It's the man . The man has arrived. |
|
Wearing my coat. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
I gotta tell you, buddy, it looks better |
|
on me . |
|
Khari skeptically fingers the sleeve of Monty's coat . |
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|
|
KHAR I |
|
|
|
Yeah, well, I hope you got some seven- |
|
year mothballs for that coat. |
|
Monty hesitates and then laughs. Khari puts his arm around |
|
Monty's shoulders. |
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|
|
KHARI (CONT'D) |
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|
|
You doing all right? |
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Just trying not to think, you know? |
|
(gesturing at the crowd) |
|
What's with all the kids? |
|
|
|
KHARI |
|
|
|
The legendary DJ Dusk is spinning wax |
|
tonight. My homeboy from Hollis. Boy's |
|
seventeen years old. Seventeen! But damn , |
|
he gets the girlies moving. Don't worry |
|
about -the -crowds 路? They- -got-.thgL-.YIP setjup |
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|
|
- |
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|
|
for y'all. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
I've got my people waiting. You want me |
|
to bring them through here? |
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|
KHARI |
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|
|
Take ^em to the avenue entrance. I'll get |
|
the door opened. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
Thanks, man . |
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|
KHARI |
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|
You got it . When you going in? |
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MONTY |
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|
Bus leaves at nine a.m. |
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65 . |
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v |
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CONTINUED : (2) "~ "' * ,-,,,路.,,,,,,, =路 |
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,,- |
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KHAR I |
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|
Otisvill e right? |
|
Monty nods . |
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|
KHAR I (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Uncl e go t an y peopl e i n there ? |
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|
MONT Y |
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|
|
N o one wort h knowing . |
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KHAR I |
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|
|
Th e Federals , the y ru n a nic e place . Lo t |
|
nice r tha n Sta^e . |
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|
MONT Y |
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|
I'm a luck y kid. |
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|
KHAR I |
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|
|
Luc k o f th e Irish , right ? |
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MONT Y |
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|
|
Luc k o f th e Irish . |
|
Khar i grip s Monty ' s shoulder . |
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|
KHAR I ^ |
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|
|
Liste n up . Don't los e you r tempe r unti l |
|
it' s tim e t o los e you r temper . Yo u hear ? |
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|
MONT Y |
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|
|
Al l right . I'll se e yo u aroun d th e way . |
|
The y shak e hand s an d Mont y signal s fo r Slatter y an d Jako b t o |
|
follo w him . Mont y slide s throug h th e crowd ; Slatter y bull s |
|
through * lik-& a--f-ullback blockin g for--his speedier--teammate . |
|
Jako b walk s wit h a hig h degre e o f self-consciousness , |
|
nervousl y dodgin g aroun d th e variou s obstacles . H e passe s on e |
|
stone d gir l wh o stand s wit h he r hea d back , catchin g |
|
snowflake s i n he r mouth . |
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|
|
MAR Y |
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|
|
Hey ! Elinsky ! Mr . Elinsky ! Hey ! |
|
Jako b freezes . He r han d catche s hi s sleev e an d h e i s force d |
|
t o tur n around , force d t o star e int o th e unnaturall y brigh t |
|
eye s o f Mar y D'Annunzio . |
|
Sh e wear s dar k deni m jeans , a fak e raccoo n fu r coat , an d n o |
|
hat . He r we t blac k hai r snake s acros s he r forehea d an d neck . ^ |
|
Blac k trail s o f ey e shado w stai n he r cheeks . () |
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(CONTINUED) |
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路路 |
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|
|
路 路 -- 66 |
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|
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|
|
CONTINUED : (3 ) |
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|
MARY (CONT'D ) |
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|
Ha! It' s Elinsky! |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
Oh . |
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|
MARY |
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|
|
What are you doing here? God, I didn't |
|
know you ever left the school! I thought |
|
you had a bed down in the boiler room or |
|
something. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Mary D'Annunzio. |
|
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|
MARY |
|
|
|
Mary W B+ " D'Annunzio, that's me. |
|
She sees the look on his face and quickly continues. |
|
|
|
MARY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I'm kidding. It's not a big deal. |
|
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|
JAKOB |
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|
I've got to go. I'm here with friends. |
|
|
|
MARY |
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|
|
The guy who came to class today, right? |
|
He knows people, huh? What do you think, |
|
could he get us in? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Uh, I don't -- |
|
|
|
MARY~ |
|
|
|
They're not letting anyone in right now. |
|
They say it's too crowded already. |
|
(increasingly hyper) |
|
I have to get in there. I have to! You're |
|
a fan of Dusk? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Sure. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
He's the absolute truth, right? He is so |
|
truth. I can't believe you're into Dusk! |
|
No offense, I mean, but I thought you |
|
were more into flutes or -- |
|
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JAKOB |
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I think Dusk is very good. But I like his |
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earlier stuff better. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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67 |
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CONTINUED: (4) |
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MARY |
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His earlier stuff? |
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MONTY (O.S.) |
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Jake, what are you doing? |
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Monty has circled back and now motions for Jakob to hurry. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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I've got someone holding the door for us . |
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MARY |
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Hey! You're the guy with the dog. |
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Monty recognizes her from the classroom. |
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MONTY |
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It's past your bedtime, isn't it? |
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Mary clutches Jakob's arm and rests her head on his chest. |
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MARY |
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I'm with Jake. We're lovers. |
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Jakob closes his eyes. Monty grins. |
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路 MONT Y |
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Is tha t right? I didn' t realiz e you tw o |
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wer e lovers . Well , com e on , plent y o f |
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roo m inside . |
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MAR Y |
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Wait.. . I've got thre e friend s wit h me . |
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MONT Y |
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Girls ? .._. ,, _._: |
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. _...._,,. . _ |
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MAR Y |
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No . |
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MONT Y |
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Ar e yo u retarded? |
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He turn s and lead s the m around th e corner . |
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i |
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MARY |
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Better one than none, I guess. |
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Jakob disengages himself from Mary. She beams at him. They |
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follow Monty to the side door and disappear inside. |
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o |
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68 |
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INT. VELVET -- MOMENTS LATER |
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Monty walks up the back staircase (marked Club Employees |
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Only). Mary follows him. Jakob's in the rear. He still looks |
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stunned. |
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MARY |
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(to Monty) |
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So how do you know Jake? |
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MONTY |
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We went to school together. |
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MARY |
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You went to Campbell-Sawyer? You don't |
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seem the type. |
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MONTY |
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They didn't think so, either. |
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MARY |
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I hate that place. Elinsk -- Jake's okay, |
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but mostly -- |
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JAKOB |
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Look, Monty, she's seventeen. We can't |
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take her in here. |
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MONTY |
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Why not? We're already in. |
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MARY |
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I've got ID. |
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路"- |
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' " ' MOlfTY |
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"" |
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What did you say your name was? Mary |
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^P^AgOjtinO?^;'..:;../:.,ni;.,:,s.r.. .;.:路路,路.,:,.;>'.,.; 路:,:-路,;. .. :..;-,' ., |
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. .路 |
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D'Annunzio. |
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MONTY |
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What do you think of Mr . Elinsky? |
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MARY |
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He's all right. He acts like a little old |
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man sometimes. |
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JAKOB |
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Now listen -- |
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(CONTINUED) |
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路 |
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69. |
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CONTINUED : -'" ' ' - \ |
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; |
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MONT Y j\ |
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That's true, he does. I think tonight "; |
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should be a big night for Mr. Elinsky. I |
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think we should make sure Mr. Elinsky has |
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fun for once. |
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Monty pushes open the door at the stop of the staircase. The |
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noise rushes in, overwhelmingly loud, the bass vibrating in |
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our bones. |
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Mary opens her mouth and speaks, but we might not be able to |
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hear it over the music. |
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MARY |
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Truth. |
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INT. VELVET VIP ROOM -- MOMENTS LATER |
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Monty leads Jakob and Mary into the VIP room. Naturelle is |
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already there, speaking with Slattery. |
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The walls of the VIP room are covered with crushed red |
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velvet. The couches are upholstered in red velvet, the small |
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bar in the corner is draped with red velvet, the carpet is |
|
red faux velvet. |
|
----^ DJ Dusk's music pours from speakers bolted into the corners. |
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s |
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His beats are impossible to sit still for, incorporating |
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elements of bossa nova, techno, hip hop, and jazz. |
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Slattery has a hard time keeping his eyes off Naturelle. His |
|
gaze tends to slide her way, and his desire for her is |
|
apparent to everyone. |
|
Naturelle smiles when she sees Monty and goes to him. She |
|
looks beautiful in-the silver dr.ess_...-_Sh .hugs him. Monty |
|
e |
|
stands awkwardly in her embrace. |
|
When she realizes he's not returning the hug, she quickly |
|
releases him. He's watching her carefully. She sees Jakob and |
|
smiles at him. |
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NATURELLE |
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Hey, Jake. |
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She hugs Jakob. Mary has not stopped dancing since first |
|
hearing Dusk's mix. |
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NATURELLE (CONT'D) |
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(looking at Mary) |
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Is this your friend? 路- . |
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[^J 路 路 KJ |
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(CONTINUED) |
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.-路-路 路 路 " '70-; |
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路路路 |
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CONTINUED : |
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o JAKOB |
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No . . . |
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MARY |
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I'm his lover, Mary. |
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Naturelle arches one eyebrow. |
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NATURELLE |
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Okay. I'm Naturelle. |
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MARY |
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I've seen pictures of this room. The |
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Smashing Pumpkins were in here. |
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She turns and examines Monty more closely. |
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MARY (CONT'D) |
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Who are you? Are. you somebody famous? |
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MONTY |
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Do us a favor, D'Annunzio. Don't talk too |
|
much . |
|
Mary grins, tears off her fake fur coat, and hides it |
|
underneath a sofa. She wears a white tank-top with Tweety |
|
Bird emblazoned on the front. Tweety Bird looks scared. |
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DAPHNE, a young waitress in a green dress , comes over with a |
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tray of champagne flutes. Naturelle kisses Daphne on the |
|
cheek and the two women exchange greetings. Everyone takes a |
|
glass. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
路-"" ' (raising his glass~) |
|
Champagne for my real friends, real pain |
|
for my sham friends. |
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Everyone takes a sip except for Mary, who guzzles hers in one |
|
giant gulp, then belches and wipes her mouth with the back of |
|
her hand. Jakob stares at her, horrified. |
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MARY |
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Anyone want to go dance? |
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Naturelle glances at Monty. |
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MONTY |
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Do what you want to do . |
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Jakob and Slattery hear the coldness in Monty's voice and are |
|
surprised by it . |
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(CONTINUED) |
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71 |
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|
|
CONTINUED: (2) ~ """ , ^TM <----. |
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Mary grabs Naturelle's hand and leads her out the door. |
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SLATTERY |
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|
(to Daphne) |
|
You have any whiskey? |
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DAPHNE |
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|
What kind do you want? I'll call down for |
|
some. |
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SLATTERY |
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|
Nah, don't bother, I'll get it. |
|
He nods at Monty and Jakob. |
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|
|
SLATTERY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Back in a minute. |
|
Daphne sets a champagne bottle in an ice bucket on the table, |
|
then retreats to the small bar in the corner of the room. |
|
Monty sits on the red velvet sofa and Jakob lies down next to |
|
him, covering his eyes with his arm. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
I can't believe you brought my student in |
|
here. |
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MONTY |
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|
She's cute, buddy. She talks too much but |
|
she's cute. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
You're going to get me fired. Do you |
|
realize that? She'll tell her friends, |
|
--'路路路=-=路 --- and they'll -t-e-1-1-the-i-r friends -- |
|
|
|
" -- |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
So what, so you ran into her at a dance |
|
club. You haven't done anything wrong, |
|
have you? Not yet. |
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|
JAKOB |
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|
Not yet? What does that mean? |
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MONTY |
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|
You want this girl, don't you? |
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JAKOB |
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Shit, Monty, she's seventeen! She's my |
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o |
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student. I can't touch her. |
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{CONTINUED) |
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I |
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|
CONTINUED : (3) |
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MONT Y |
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I would . She' s go t tha t look . I lik e |
|
littl e girl s wit h tattoos . |
|
Jako b groan s an d rub s hi s han d ove r hi s face . |
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|
MONT Y (CONT'D) |
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|
It' s goo d seein g you , man . I gues s we'v e |
|
kin d o f gon e ou r separat e ways . |
|
Jako b sit s up . |
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JAKO B |
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|
Yeah . |
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MONT Y |
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|
It' s to o bad . You'r e smarte r tha n th e |
|
peopl e I kno w thes e days . |
|
Mont y pour s mor e champagn e for Jako b an d himself , the n raise s |
|
hi s glass . |
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|
MONT Y (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Mak e m e a toast . |
|
Jako b i s startle d b y th e request . |
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|
JAKO B |
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|
Yo u wan t m e t o mak e a toast ? |
|
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|
MONT Y |
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|
|
Yeah . Com e on , I won' t b e seein g yo u fo r |
|
a while . Sa y somethin g nice . |
|
Jako b stare s a t th e tin y bubble s risin g infills glass . |
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|
JAKO B |
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|
Urn. . . |
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MONT Y |
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|
Al l right . Here' s t o Doyle . |
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JAKO B |
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|
|
T o Doyle . |
|
The y touc h glasse s an d drink . |
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MONT Y |
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|
He' s you r do g now . |
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JAKO B |
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|
What ? |
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73. |
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|
CONTINUED: (4) |
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MONTY |
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|
He needs a home. And he loves you. |
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JAKOB |
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|
Yeah, but... I don't know. You've seen |
|
the size of my apartment. |
|
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|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Poor Doyle, he'll live in a small |
|
apartment. Hey, he's a tough dog. He'll |
|
survive. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What about Nat? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
She's moving in with her mom. Woman hates |
|
him. And Doyle hates Frank. And my Dad's |
|
allergic. |
|
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|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
The thing is -- |
|
Monty takes another sip and then holds the champagne flute up |
|
to the light. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Cristal. They went all out for me , huh? |
|
I'm lucky to work for such caring people. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
One more glass of this and I'm officially |
|
drunk. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Listen, this is important to me.. Doyle is |
|
important to me . You understand that? |
|
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|
JAKOB |
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|
|
Yeah, of course. |
|
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|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Doyle's the toughest guy I know. He was |
|
lying there off the highway when I found |
|
him, waiting to die. He knew he was going |
|
to die. And he didn't make a sound. The |
|
best thing I ever did, my whole life, was |
|
rescue that black little son-of-a-bitch. |
|
Every day he's had since then is because |
|
of me . Every time he runs through the |
|
park, that's me . Every bone he chews -- |
|
because of me . I saved him. |
|
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|
(MORE) |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
~ ~ 74 . |
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路 |
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' |
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|
CONTINUED : (5) |
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|
MONTY (CONT'D) ,| |
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|
|
And it's different from what you'd |
|
expect, right? I saved him but I'm the |
|
one that's grateful. Because I see him |
|
running around, I hear him barking, and |
|
there he is, the best thing I ever did, |
|
in the flesh. |
|
(beat) |
|
I'm not going to let the pound have him. |
|
Doyle's the ugliest fucking dog in the |
|
five boroughs. Who's gonna adopt him? And |
|
I'm telling you now, I will not let a vet |
|
stick a needle in him and end him. I |
|
saved his life, right? I'm responsible |
|
for him. I didn't go through all that |
|
just so some vet can put hi m to sleep. If |
|
it comes to that, I'll do it myself. I'll |
|
put a bullet in his ear tonight. So I'm |
|
asking you, Jake -- for me , as a favor for |
|
me , and it's a big favor but I'm asking |
|
you -- will you take him? Will you take |
|
him home with you? |
|
Jakob is quiet, rubbing his palms over the red velvet sofa |
|
cushions. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
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|
|
You know what? It would be an honor. |
|
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
I was hoping you'd say that. I really |
|
was. |
|
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|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
After that speech, Jesus Christ, how |
|
could I refuse? |
|
Slattery returns with a glass of whiskey. He sits next to his |
|
friends and sighs. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
There's some talent here tonight. |
|
|
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|
|
Monty raps Slattery's knee. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
What do you think, Jake's girl's looking |
|
pretty good, huh? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Who, the little one? Who is she? |
|
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|
JAKOB |
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|
She's my student. MY STUDENT. |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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75 |
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|
|
|
CONTINUED': (6) |
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|
The lights go off. The room is completely dark. |
|
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|
|
When the lights come on again, a few seconds later, Monty is |
|
crouching in front of the sofa, his .40 caliber automatic in |
|
his hand . |
|
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|
|
Kostya stands just inside the doorway of the room, hands on |
|
the light switch. |
|
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|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
The party begins without me ? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I should have shot you, you fat Russian |
|
fuck. |
|
Kostya ambles over to the sofa, wagging his finger. |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
Ukrainian. Fat Ukrainian fuck. |
|
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|
|
He bea r hugs Monty and kisses both his cheeks . |
|
|
|
KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Montgomery, my friend! You have been here |
|
long? An d you open champagne without me ? |
|
Frank, hello Frank! |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Hey, Konstantine. How are you? |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
Kostya, please, Kostya. I am good, yes . I |
|
will be better when our friend comes back |
|
to us . |
|
(to Jakob) -- - |
|
Hello! It is Jason, yes? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Jakob. |
|
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|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
(to Monty) |
|
The champagne is good? |
|
(elbowing Slattery and winking) |
|
I have nice girl for you, Monty . Very |
|
nice. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
I'm really not in the mood for that . |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
Ll 路路路路- - -路 " 路 - 路 76, |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (7) |
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KOSTYA |
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|
Ah , when you see her, you will be in |
|
mood. I pick her out special for you. |
|
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MONTY |
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|
The last girl you picked out special had |
|
three teeth. |
|
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|
KOSTYA |
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|
|
(laughing loudly) |
|
Funny you should say that. |
|
Everyone waits for the rest. When it becomes obvious that |
|
Kostya will not provide the rest -- |
|
|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
Why is it funny I should say that? |
|
|
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KOSTYA |
|
|
|
It was funny, what you said. |
|
Monty looks at Slattery for a second. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Wait, when you say, "Funny you should say |
|
that," it's like saying, "That reminds me |
|
of this other funny story." |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
No , no , I am saying what you say was |
|
funny. "Funny you should say that. " You |
|
see? It was funny, the thing you said. |
|
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|
Nobody speaks for a moment. |
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|
|
KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Come, you want to meet her? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I don't think so. Naturelle's dancing |
|
downstairs. |
|
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KOSTYA |
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|
|
So we go quick, we go right now. You must |
|
see this girl. |
|
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MONTY |
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|
|
You have someone nice for my friends? |
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SLATTERY |
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芦 * . 路_ |
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_拢T _ __ |
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|
Not for me . Thanks. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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77 |
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|
CONTINUED: (8) ~ "" |
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JAKOB |
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Yeah, I'm -- |
|
Monty puts his hand on Slattery's arm. |
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|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
Come down there with me . I need to talk |
|
to you. |
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SLATTERY |
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|
That's not my style, Monty. I really -- |
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MONTY |
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|
No, that's cool. I just want to ask you |
|
something. |
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JAKOB |
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|
|
Do you want me to stay here? |
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MONTY |
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|
You've got to stay here. Who's gonna look |
|
after Mary D'Agostino when she gets back? |
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|
|
JAKOB |
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|
|
Should I tell Nat you're downstairs -x |
|
having sex with a prostitute? \, ,. J |
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KOSTY A |
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|
(horrified ) |
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No , don' t tel l he r that ! |
|
Mont y grin s an d punche s Jakob' s arm . |
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MONT Y |
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|
|
Tell her whatever you want. But don't |
|
take off. We'll go back to my place after |
|
the party and get Doyle. |
|
Monty, Slattery and Kostya leave the room. Jakob sits alone, |
|
rubbing his arm. |
|
|
|
INT. CATWALK -- MOMENTS LATER |
|
|
|
The three men stand on a glass-enclosed catwalk overlooking |
|
the dance floor. The place is so crowded and dark that the ] |
|
dancers look like one strange beast, thrashing and swaying to j |
|
the beat. ] |
|
DJ DUSK, the teen prodigy from Queens, mans his turntables I |
|
from a riser above the dance floor. He stands in the eye of a |
|
spotlight, deftly flipping needles onto spinning records. / \i |
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(CONTINUED) |
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|
ii |
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|
路-"" |
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|
路 路路 路 -芦--禄-- - . --,,-..- - _ |
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|
. . ,, 78 |
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|
CONTINUED: |
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|
The music is loud, even behind the glass, but not loud enough |
|
to overwhelm conversation. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
(to Kostya) |
|
Where we going, the White Room? |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
Yes, White Room. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I'll meet you down there. I need to talk |
|
with Frank about something. |
|
Kostya leans closer to Monty and speaks quietly. |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
After the girl, Uncle Blue wants word |
|
with you. Okay? |
|
Monty nods. Kostya grins and slaps Monty's shoulder. |
|
|
|
KOSTYA (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
She is waiting! |
|
Kostya walks down the staircase that leads from the catwalk |
|
to the dance floor and disappears into the crowd. For a while |
|
neither Monty nor Slattery speaks. 路 |
|
Then Slattery looks at Monty and notices his eyes are closed. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
You all right? |
|
Monty opens his eyes". ~ "'" |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
They knock out your teeth the first |
|
night. You know why? So you can give them |
|
head all night long and they don't have |
|
to worry about biting. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Come on. None of that's gonna happen. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
How the fuck do you know it's not gonna |
|
happen? |
|
Two broad-shouldered HOODLUMS in expensive suits saunter down |
|
the catwalk. They stop to embrace Monty. |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
79 |
|
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|
|
CONTINUED : (2) _, |
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|
HOODLUM 1 '^ |
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|
|
My ace deuce. _> |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Hey, fellas. |
|
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|
HOODLUM 2 |
|
|
|
Bid's tomorrow, huh? |
|
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MONTY |
|
|
|
Yeah. |
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|
HOODLUM 2 |
|
|
|
Nothing but a catnap. Be good, brother. |
|
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|
|
The hoods nod at Slattery and walk away. Monty presses his |
|
forehead against the window. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Believe me , Frank, I've studied this. |
|
I've looked at the options. Seven years, |
|
man . Seven years . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Thirty-four is still young. You and me , |
|
we'll start something up . A bar , maybe . /x |
|
Two Irish kids from Brooklyn, how could fcr--] |
|
we not have a bar? Green beer for St . |
|
Paddy's Day, free hot dogs for Monday |
|
Night Football. Think about it . Old |
|
fashioned jukebox sitting in the corner -- |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I hate green bee r on St . Paddy's Day. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Yeah : Well, m e t o o . " """""""*-""""--"路 - |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
But it's a nice thought, man . I don't see |
|
it happening, bu t it's a nice thought. |
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Have I ever broken a promise to you? Have |
|
I ever once in my life broken a promise |
|
to you? Have I ever said I would be |
|
somewhere and not shown up? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
No . |
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C |
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
路 路路路路- 路路'路- - -- - " 80 |
|
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|
-"- - |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (3) |
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|
|
o SLATTERY |
|
When you get out, I will be there. You |
|
hear me? I will be there. |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
Monty finally turns and looks at Slattery. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
But you won't be there tomorrow. |
|
(beat) |
|
Cute little white boy like me , how long |
|
am I gonna last? |
|
(beat) |
|
I need a favor from you. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Anything. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Not here . Stick around, okay? We'll go |
|
uptown in a couple hours. |
|
Monty points to the dancers below. We can see Mar y dancing |
|
wildly on a platform. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Our friend Jake has picked himself a |
|
winner. |
|
|
|
INT. VELVET VIP ROOM -- LATER |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The room is beginning to crowd with Monty's friends and |
|
acquaintances. Jakob sits alone on the sofa, sipping |
|
champagne. He clearly recognizes no one . |
|
The men speak loudly, holding their- champagne flutes in |
|
ringed fists. Lean women stand in clusters, heads bowed |
|
together. We hear snippets of banter in four different |
|
languages. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob dips his head against the sofa's velvet armrest. He's |
|
clearly exhausted. He begins slipping into sleep. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mary walks into the room. The men standing nearby turn to |
|
look at her, then whisper to each other and laugh. Mary sees |
|
Jakob curled up on the sofa and dances over to him. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
She pulls off his Yankees cap and puts it on her own head, |
|
where it sits, crookedly. She climbs on top of him, her knees |
|
straddling his chest, and bends close to whisper in his ear. |
|
|
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|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Jakey... Jakey... |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
81 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED,: |
|
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|
|
O She runs her fingernail down his side. Jakob, half-sleeping, |
|
smiles and caresses her hand. Then his eyes pop open. He |
|
jerks upright and Mary slides off him. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Whoa, what are you doing? What are you |
|
doing? |
|
Mary, now standing and slightly swaying, laughs. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Don't panic. Nobody here gives a shit. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I give a shit. Do you know what happens |
|
if somebody sees me -- us -- like that? |
|
Mary sits on the far side of the sofa, knees primly clasped |
|
together, exaggerating the role of good girl. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Beg your pardon, Mr. Elinsky. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Are you drunk? |
|
MARY 路 '路'mm |
|
Uh huh. And I had some E before. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Jesus. |
|
: He tries to rub the sleep out of his eyes. |
|
|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
We call it X in this country. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Naturelle's cool as shit. She knows |
|
everyone who works here. I love that |
|
name, right? Naturelle? One hundred |
|
percent Naturelle! All Naturelle flavors! |
|
Jakob cannot help stealing a peek at Mary's chest. Tweety |
|
Bird stares back, alarmed. |
|
|
|
MARY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
So what's up with her boyfriend? Monty? |
|
It's like he owns this place. |
|
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
' 路 |
|
|
|
|
|
'' |
|
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|
|
"" ' |
|
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|
|
路 82 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (2) |
|
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|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Listen, Mary, do you think it would be |
|
possible to avoid talking about this at |
|
school? This whole night? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
You think it would be possible to give me |
|
an A for the term? |
|
Jakob's mouth falls open. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Tell me you're joking. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
I'm joking. That's what I love about you, |
|
Elinsky. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob says nothing for a moment, but he can't resist. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What? |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Huh? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mary is watching three women dancing in the middle of the |
|
room, their purses flung down on the floor between them. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What's what you love about me ? |
|
Mary turns to look at him again, but it's clear she's not |
|
really following the conversation. |
|
|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Never mind. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Hello? Elinsky? Do you think I'm weird? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
No. I don't think you're weird. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
You're coming to see Hamlet next week, |
|
right? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Of course. You're Ophelia? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Fuck Ophelia. Laertes. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
83 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (3) |
|
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|
|
(路 |
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB 路 |
|
|
|
Laertes? |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
You want to see my death scene? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
She springs up from the sofa and takes three steps back, then |
|
begins staggering toward Jakob, hands folded over her gut, |
|
covering her invisible sword wound. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MARY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Exchange forgiveness with me , noble |
|
Hamlet: Min e and my father's death come |
|
not upon thee , nor thine on me ! |
|
She collapses onto the red sofa and lies there, quivering for |
|
a moment before going still. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A group of men smoking cigars in the corner claps loudly. |
|
Jakob stares down at the prone Mary. He cannot hel p noticing |
|
the stretch of pale skin between the dark denim of her |
|
waistband and the white cotton of her tank top. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mary sits up and brushes some stray hairs under the Yankees |
|
cap. ' |
|
|
|
MARY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
It's bettex with the fake blood . j |
|
|
|
\ |
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
No , it was very good. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Ms . Taylor says I'm the best dier she's |
|
ever haoL^ Did you see Romeo and Juliet |
|
last year? I was Mercutio. That was the |
|
greatest death of all time. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I was there . |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
You know wha t I really want to be ? A |
|
stuntwoman. Except I'm afraid of heights . |
|
You think they'd hire a stuntwoman who |
|
was afraid of heights? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Ar e you allowed to stay out this late? On |
|
a school night? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (4) |
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|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
You think my mother gives a shit? Anyway/ |
|
did you see all the snow outside? It's a |
|
snow day for sure. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I need to go to sleep. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mary lies back on the sofa and kicks her feet in the air. She |
|
begins a bicycling motion, her hands behind her head. |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
Can't sleep yet. He's turning it on . |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob looks at her slender pale ankles. He covers his eyes . |
|
Mary rolls off the sofa. |
|
|
|
MARY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Is there a bathroom in here? |
|
Jakob points . |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Over there, I think. |
|
Mary winks at him and makes her way across the room. En route |
|
she grabs a champagne flute off Daphne's platter and chugs |
|
it. She replaces the glass and slips into the bathroom. |
|
Jakob watches her go. He watches the bathroom door close |
|
behind her. He stands, a bit unsteadily. He's been drinking |
|
all night . He weaves his way to the bathroom door . |
|
He waits . Eventually Mary opens the door. She looks up at |
|
Jakob, he r "eyes as wide as Tweety Bird's . |
|
|
|
MARY |
|
|
|
You need to pee? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
No . |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
He presses forward, backing her up , and closes the door |
|
behind him. |
|
|
|
INT. VI P BATHROOM -- CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The bathroom is blue-walled and lit by a single blue bulb . |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MARY ; |
|
|
|
Hi? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
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|
|
85 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : |
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
He r teeth glow in the blu e light. Jakob grabs he r by the |
|
shoulder s and kisses her hard on the mouth . His hand s begi n |
|
t o mov e down from her shoulders -- |
|
--an d then, abruptly, Jakob pulls back . H e stares a t Mary , |
|
wh o stares at the floor. She looks stunned, the Yankees cap |
|
sitting crookedly on her head. |
|
Jakob stumbles backward. He tries to say something bu t can't |
|
get the words out . |
|
He turns and rams through the bathroom door . |
|
|
|
INT . VELVE T VI P ROOM -- CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
He shoves past cigar smokers and dancing women . He runs from |
|
the VI P room. |
|
The partiers watch him go and then turn to look at the |
|
bathroom, a drop of blue in the overwhelming redness of the |
|
VIP room. |
|
Mar y stands in the blue light, still looking at the floor . |
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|
|
INT. WHITE ROOM -- LATER |
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|
|
The Whit e Room got its name for obvious reasons . Everythin g |
|
is white : the shag carpet, the walls , the overstuffed |
|
furniture. |
|
Monty sits on a large whit e bea n bag in a corner of the room. |
|
He holds a champagne bottle in one hand, and takes occasional |
|
sips . |
|
MARGUERITE, a beautiful prostitute in her early twenties , |
|
kneels in front of. Monfcy,.__he_r...bands, .on ...his_Jfchighs... _... |
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|
|
; _ |
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|
|
Monty passes her the bottle and she takes a long draught , |
|
never taking her eyes of f him. She hands back th e bottl e and |
|
unzips his fly, taking he r time wit h everything. |
|
Monty leans back and closes his eyes . We watch hi m like this |
|
for a few seconds, and then we |
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|
CU T TO : |
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|
|
EXT . CARL SCHURZ PARK PLAYGROUND -- AFTERNOON |
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|
|
Springtime. Monty sits on a park bench. This is several years |
|
ago , and he looks younger, less exhausted. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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86, |
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|
CONTINUED : |
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|
He is watching two high school girls on the swings. One |
|
blonde -- LINDSAY JAMISON -- and one brunette -- a younger |
|
Naturelle . |
|
Both girls wear the uniform of their private school: white |
|
blouses embroidered with the school's initials and green |
|
plaid skirts over black tights. |
|
Both girls are smoking. But while Lindsay keeps the cigarette |
|
clenched in one hand as she swings higher, Naturelle |
|
continues taking reckless drags., the crook of her elbow |
|
holding the chain lightly as she soars skyward. |
|
Monty stands and approaches the swings. The girls pretend not |
|
to notice him. |
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|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
Hey! |
|
The girls keep swinging. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Could I bum a smoke? |
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|
NATURELLE |
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|
|
What? |
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MONTY |
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|
|
A smoke. |
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|
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NATURELLE |
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|
This is my last one . |
|
Lindsay brakes with her feet and stares at Monty . |
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|
|
LINDSAY |
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|
|
I've met you before, haven't I? |
|
Monty nods slowly. It's obvious he doesn't recognize her , but |
|
he doesn't want to be rude. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
Yeah, you look familiar. |
|
Naturelle has stopped swinging now. Lindsay jumps off he r |
|
swing. |
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LINDSAY |
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|
|
I know wh o you are . Come on , Nat , we've |
|
got practice. |
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MONTY |
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You know wh o I am? Who am I? |
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(CONTINUED) |
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87 |
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|
CONTINUED: (2) |
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Lindsay picks up her bookbag and strides quickly away, |
|
looking back once or twice to see if Naturelle is following. |
|
Naturelle is not following. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
So you're Natalie? |
|
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NATURELLE |
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|
|
Naturelle. |
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MONTY |
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|
|
Really? Naturelle. I like that. |
|
Naturelle. So what's your friend's |
|
problem? |
|
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|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
You're the one that got thrown out of |
|
Campbell-Sawyer, right? |
|
|
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MONTY |
|
|
|
Yeah, well, lots of people got thrown out |
|
of Campbell-Sawyer. How come you didn't |
|
follow Blondie to practice? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I want to finish my cigarette. |
|
He smiles and sits on the swing next to her. He tries |
|
swinging a little. |
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|
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MONTY |
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|
|
I never really got the hang of these |
|
things. |
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|
|
- 路-- " " NATURELLE - -- -- |
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|
|
It's all in the legs. |
|
She starts swinging again and he watches her, her long black |
|
hair falling beneath her, her legs straight and then bent, |
|
straight and then bent. |
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|
|
CUT TO: |
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|
INT. WHITE ROOM |
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|
|
Monty's eyes are still closed. Now he opens them. His hands |
|
are in Marguerite's hair, but now they drop by his side. |
|
Finally he taps Marguerite on the shoulders. She backs away |
|
from him, looking up at his face for a moment before blinking |
|
and licking her lips. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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88 . |
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CONTINUED: |
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MONTY |
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|
It's my fault. You're very beautiful. |
|
He hands her the bottle again and she takes a long sip. |
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MARGUERITE |
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|
|
(Colombian accent) |
|
You are very handsome. Are you an actor ? |
|
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|
Monty zips his fly. |
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|
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MONTY |
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|
Yeah. I'm a star. |
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|
|
INT. CLUB ROOM -- LATER |
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|
|
The club room is decorated to look like the library of an |
|
English country manor : dark wood paneling, bookshelves |
|
stacked with leather-bound books, flickering sconce lights. |
|
Slattery sits on a stool at the bar, rolling a glass of |
|
whiskey between his palms. His eyes are red, from crying or |
|
exhaustion or both. |
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|
|
Naturelle walks into the room and spots Slattery. She goes |
|
over to him and squeezes the back of his neck before sitting |
|
on the neighboring stool. He sits up straight and smiles. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Why are you all alone? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I couldn't sit in that goddamn red room |
|
anymore. I don't know anyone in there . |
|
These are Monty's friends?-- |
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|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I guess so . They're around a lot, anywayv |
|
Slattery drains his whiskey. He signals for another and the |
|
bartender pours it . He's clearly getting drunk, though |
|
Slattery is a man who can handle his liquor. He checks his |
|
watch. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I'm supposed to be at work in a couple |
|
hours. Christ, I can't even imagine |
|
working today. You just gave me the flu, |
|
okay? I'm calling in sick. |
|
|
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|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I wish Monty could call in sick. Have you |
|
seen him around? |
|
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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89 |
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|
CONTINUED: |
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|
SLATTERY |
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|
|
He's probably saying goodbye to everyone. |
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|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Can you do me a favor? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
What's that? |
|
Slattery catches himself looking at Naturelle's cleavage and |
|
looks away. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Keep an eye on Monty tonight, would you? |
|
Try to stick with him. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
What's wrong? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
He's just acting really strange. You |
|
don't think he's acting strange? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
He's going to prison in a few hours, Nat. |
|
How do you want him to act? |
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|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I want him to act like he's scared. |
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|
|
SLATTERY |
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|
|
He is scared. |
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NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I don't want him to hurt himself. Will |
|
you watch him for me? ..-TO芦.,,,,,..芦--. |
|
Slattery nods. For a while they are quiet. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE (CONT'D) |
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|
|
I don't think he wants me here. |
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
That's not true. He's just -- |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
You see the way he looks at me these |
|
days. It's like he doesn't trust me . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Why wouldn't he trust you? |
|
Naturelle is quiet for a moment. |
|
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
- - -- -90 |
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|
|
CONTINUED: (2) |
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|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
I'm going uptown. When you see him, tell |
|
him I'm waiting for him back home, okay? |
|
She stands and smooths out the wrinkles in her silver dress . |
|
Again, Slattery has to turn away from the sight of her . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
This is all so stupid. It's so stupid. |
|
He's got so much going on, he's so smart, |
|
and what does he do? He throws it al l |
|
away. An d here I am, his friend -- I mean , |
|
right? I'm his oldest friend? |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
He loves you, Frank. You know that. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
His oldest friend, and what do I do to |
|
stop it? Nothing, never a word. When he |
|
started selling pot to kids in Campbell - |
|
Sawyer, did I say anything? When |
|
everyone's talking about buying from |
|
Monty, the whole school, and I knew they |
|
were going to nail him, knew it, did I |
|
say a word? The last ten years I watc h |
|
him get deeper and deeper, and these |
|
friends of his, these fucks you wouldn't |
|
want petting your dog, did I say, |
|
"Careful now, Monty, better get out of |
|
this. " No . Nothing, not a word. His bes t |
|
friend. Goddamn, Naturelle, I'm his bes t |
|
friend and I just sat there and watched |
|
him ruin his life. And you did, too . Both |
|
of-us.,., all -of us , we just sat there and |
|
let him . |
|
Naturelle runs a fingernail down her forearm an d inspects the |
|
faint white trail . |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Keep an eye on him, okay? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slattery watches her walk away. A moment later Jakob hurries |
|
in, sweating and frantic. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I've been looking all over for you. Can |
|
we get out of here? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
We've got to wait for Monty. What's the |
|
matter? |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
|
91 . |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (3) |
|
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|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I kissed her. |
|
|
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|
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|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Who? |
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Mary D'Annunzio. I kissed her . |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
Slattery grins . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Yeah? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
I kissed my student. My seventeen year |
|
old high school student. |
|
(beat) |
|
They'll fire me . |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Jake. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Yeah? |
|
Slattery hands him the glass of whiskey. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Have a drink. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
INT. BASEMENT HALLWAY -- LATER |
|
|
|
Monty and Kostya walk slowly down the corridor that leads to |
|
the manager's office. |
|
|
|
- -路路 KOSTYA |
|
|
|
So? You like her? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
She's very nice. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
Does she have three teeth? Eh ? No , I |
|
think she has many teeth. I think you |
|
like her. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I said so, didn't I? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
o |
|
Very nice . |
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
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|
|
路 '" 92 , |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
0路^ They stop outside the office and knock on the steel-plated |
|
door. MUSTAFAYEV, a balding man smoking a cigarette, opens |
|
the door and closes it behind him. He nods. |
|
Monty and Kostya pull out their guns and hand them to him. |
|
Checking the safeties, he shoves the guns under his belt and, |
|
cigarette clenched between his teeth, carefully pats both men |
|
down. |
|
When Mustafayev finishes searching them he raps on the door |
|
and it opens again. He gestures, and Monty and Kostya enter. |
|
|
|
INT. VELVET MANAGER'S OFFICE -- CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
Mustafayev follows them inside, hands their guns to one of |
|
the ZAKHAROV twins, and goes back outside, closing the door. |
|
The twins are Russian redheads who speak very little English. |
|
Their faces are blunted and pitiless. |
|
Uncle Blue sits behind Volandes' desk, reading the paper. |
|
Valghobek sits on a corner of the desk. |
|
The twin with the guns places them carefully in front of |
|
" Uncle Blue, then returns to stand by his brother, both of |
|
them standing behind Monty and Kostya. |
|
DJ Dusk's music can barely be heard down here, the thump of |
|
bass and drum sounding like distant bombshells. |
|
Uncle Blue folds his paper neatly and sets it aside. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Montgomery. How is the party? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
It's all right. Thanks for setting it up. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
The first time I went to prison I was |
|
fourteen years old, a skinny little boy. |
|
Very afraid. By the time I came out I had |
|
my beard. I was a grown man. I went back |
|
to my hometown, I found my mother, I |
|
kissed her. And she screamed. |
|
(smiling) |
|
She did not recognize me . I have been in |
|
three different prisons, Montgomery, in |
|
three different countries. You know what |
|
I learned? |
|
Monty shakes his head and waits. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
93. |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
o UNCLE BLUE (COM" D) |
|
I learned that prison is not a good place |
|
to be . |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
(laughing) |
|
I knew that before I went. |
|
|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
Nobody's talking to you. Keep your mouth |
|
shut. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Seven years is a long time. Some men |
|
would do anything to avoid seven years in |
|
prison. |
|
Monty waits. |
|
|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
Your father's a hardworking man . Where's |
|
his bar? In Bay Ridge? 86th Street and |
|
6th Avenue, am I right? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Yes . |
|
|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
At least he has a short commute. He can |
|
practically walk to work. Where does he |
|
live, 17th Avenue? And what was the cross- |
|
street? 81st? 8002 17th Avenue. Is that |
|
right? The first floor. That must be |
|
noisy, living on the first floor. But he |
|
doesn't walk to work, does he? He drives. |
|
-A 1987 Honda. Should-I tell you how many |
|
miles he has on the car? |
|
Monty stares at the floor. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Your father, I like your father. A hard- |
|
working man. He has had bad luck, some |
|
very bad luck. Everyone in the |
|
neighborhood loved your mother. You |
|
remember her, Senka? |
|
|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
Sure. She was a beautiful woman. A real |
|
sweetheart. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Q |
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
路 路 " 路 路 路 |
|
|
|
|
|
"路路- 路 |
|
|
|
|
|
-路'路 94. |
|
|
|
|
|
路 |
|
|
|
|
|
路 路 |
|
|
|
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|
' |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: (2) |
|
|
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|
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|
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
I want to help your father. I could use a |
|
man like that, a hard-working man, a man |
|
I could trust. I could take care of your |
|
father. Do you understand what I mean, |
|
Montgomery? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You don't need to do this. I never said a |
|
word to anyone. You don't need to bring |
|
him into it. |
|
i |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
I asked you a question, Montgomery. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I understand exactly what you mean. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
I have a good job for your father. We'll |
|
help him with the money he owes. |
|
Uncle Blue turns Monty's gun in his hands. He checks the |
|
slide's action. He ejects the magazine, peers at the top |
|
cartridge, slaps the magazine back into the pistol's butt, |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Good weapon. Accurate? |
|
Monty nods. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Polymer frame, very good, easy to clean. |
|
And reliable? No jams? |
|
Monty shakes his head. He turns around for a moment. The |
|
Zakharov twins are staring at him. Monty turns back. Uncle |
|
Blue smiles. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Have you ever fired it? At someone, I |
|
mean. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
No. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
No. Good. It is a toy for you. Not toy, |
|
prop. A prop for you. Like an actor. Am I |
|
wrong? With the gun you feel more... |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
95. |
|
|
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|
CONTINUED: (3) " "~"~ |
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|
|
Monty turns again. The Zakharov twins have their automatics |
|
out. Monty, getting desperate, turns back to Uncle Blue. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I never said a word to anyone. They came |
|
after me to get to you. I know it, you |
|
know it. They don't care about me . But I |
|
never said a word. |
|
Uncle Blue makes a gesture and the Zakharovs, frighteningly |
|
fast, spring forward, slamming Kostya to the floor and |
|
holding their pistols to his skull. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
I believe you, Montgomery. When you get |
|
there, figure out who is who. Find a man |
|
nobody is protecting, a man without |
|
people. And beat him until his eyes |
|
bleed. |
|
Monty stares at Kostya, who whimpers on the ground, blood |
|
dripping from his nose. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Let them think you are a little bit |
|
crazy, but respectful, too, respectful of |
|
the right men. |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
Monty -- |
|
One of the Zakharovs kicks Kostya in the ribs. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
You're a good-looking boy, it won't be |
|
easy for--you. But remember, I was=- - ---- |
|
fourteen when I first went. And I |
|
survived. |
|
(beat) |
|
We do what we have to do to survive. |
|
|
|
KOSTYA |
|
|
|
Monty... please, Monty... |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
So now we have this other problem. |
|
|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
How many people knew you kept the stuff |
|
inside your sofa cushion? Eh? Your |
|
girlfriend, Kostya, who else? ^i |
|
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
96 |
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|
|
CONTINUED : (4 ) |
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MONTY |
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|
|
I-- |
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|
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|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Kostya dimed you outr little brother. He |
|
made a call and stole seven years from |
|
your life. |
|
|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
They put the clamps on him, and instead |
|
of being a man about it, taking the time |
|
himself, he sold you out. |
|
Uncle Blue hands Valghobek Monty's pistol. Valghobek walks |
|
over to Monty and offers it to him. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I don't want it. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
It's yours. You know how to use it? |
|
Valghobek holds the pistol by the barrel, a small smile on |
|
his face, until Monty grabs it from him. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I know how to use it. |
|
|
|
UNCLE BLUE |
|
|
|
Good. This man does not deserve to live. |
|
He betrayed you, he betrayed me. He stole |
|
from you. He stole seven years from you. |
|
End him. |
|
"One of the ZakTiaTo^^'Ewins!rag'rins at Monty and taps" "theback of |
|
Kostya's skull with his pistol's muzzle. |
|
|
|
ZAKHAROV |
|
|
|
Right here. Boom! |
|
The Zakharovs back away and Monty crouches down beside his |
|
former friend. Kostya struggles to turn his head, to make eye |
|
contact with Monty. ! |
|
KOSTY A j |
|
Monty-- | |
|
i |
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|
|
MONTY | |
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|
|
Don't talk. ! |
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|
KOSTYA | |
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|
|
No, no, wait, Monty, wait, please listen. |
|
I had no choice. I-- |
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|
|
I |
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|
(CONTINUED ) f |
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|
|
97. |
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|
|
CONTINUED: (5) |
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|
Monty flicks off the safety and presses the muzzle against |
|
Kostya's skull. |
|
Everyone in the room is quiet, watching. |
|
The only sound is DJ Dusk's mix, an accelerating industrial |
|
heartbeat. |
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|
|
VALGHOBEK |
|
|
|
Do it. |
|
Kostya weeps, softly, his big body shuddering. |
|
Uncle Blue, face impassive behind his heavy beard, watches |
|
carefully. |
|
|
|
ZAKHAROV |
|
|
|
He is cockroach. Kill him. |
|
Monty's face is very close to Kostya's. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
(quietly) |
|
You were my friend. |
|
f=*5 KOSTYA |
|
^ Monty -- |
|
Monty closes his eyes. |
|
When he opens his eyes, he flicks the safety back on. He |
|
stands. |
|
He tosses the gun to Uncle Blue, who catches it and frowns. |
|
|
|
_ MONTY, |
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|
|
It doesn't matter to me . Not a goddamn |
|
thing matters to me , except this: if you |
|
hurt my father, I'll kill you both. |
|
The Zakharov twins grab Monty and hold him. Monty doesn't |
|
struggle; he and Uncle Blue stare at each other. |
|
Uncle Blue drums the desktop with his fingers. Everyone |
|
waits. A glass of water on the table trembles from the |
|
distant bass. |
|
Finally Uncle Blue nods at Valghobek, who opens the office |
|
door. The twins release Monty. Everyone (except for Kostya, |
|
who is face down on the floor) watches him. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
o |
|
V' Monty walks out of the room, never looking back. |
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|
98 |
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|
|
EXT. 14TH STREET -- LATER |
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|
|
Monty trudges down the sidewalk, followed by Slattery and |
|
Jakob. The snow continues to fall, and lies thickly drifted |
|
on the crookedly-parked cars, on the parking meters, on the |
|
spears of the church gate they pass. |
|
They reach the Union Square subway station and walk down the |
|
stairs, disappearing from our view. |
|
|
|
CLOSE ON FOOTPRINTS IN THE SNOW |
|
|
|
We slowly follow their path backward. In the yellow shine of |
|
the streetlights the footprints fill with snow, until finally |
|
(the camera still moving backward) they disappear. |
|
|
|
INT. UNION SQUARE SUBWAY STATION |
|
|
|
Monty, Frank, and Jakob sit with their backs against the |
|
""'corrugated shutters of a closed newspaper stand. |
|
An OLD MAN, wearing a garbage bag with a hole cut out for his |
|
head, leans against a blue I-beam that helps support the |
|
ceiling. He holds a small radio to his ear; we can hear |
|
fragments of Puerto Rican Jibaro music. |
|
Jakob chews on his fingernails. He cranes his neck to look |
|
down the subway tunnel -- still no train in sight. He looks at |
|
Monty. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
What time is it? |
|
But Monty is jnot present, he is elsewhere, lost in whatever |
|
feveFie occuples""his mind. Slattery's eyes are clo~sed;-he- |
|
seems to be sleeping. |
|
|
|
JAKOB {CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Monty? |
|
Monty looks up, dazed. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
What? |
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|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Do you know what time it is? |
|
Another long pause. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
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|
|
It's getting late. |
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
99 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: . - - -*.芦.-., ,..-, |
|
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|
|
-. |
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|
|
The lights of the train come around the bend in the tunnel. |
|
|
|
INT. 4 TRAIN -- LATER |
|
|
|
The three men sit side by side as the train shudders through |
|
the darkness. Slattery seems to be sleeping again. Jakob |
|
stares at his reflected face in the far window. |
|
Monty pulls out his wallet and finds the photograph that his |
|
father gave him earlier in the night. |
|
|
|
INSERT PHOTO |
|
|
|
Monty in his fireman's helmet, standing before his parents. |
|
|
|
EXT. MONTY'S BUILDING -- NIGHT |
|
|
|
Monty, Slattery and Jakob wade through the snow to the stoop |
|
steps. |
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S BUILDING |
|
|
|
They climb the narrow staircase, their footfalls echoing off |
|
the tiled walls. |
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S APARTMENT ,-~^ |
|
|
|
They enter the apartment. Doyle is excited to see them; he - |
|
pants and spins in little circles, sniffing at their boots. |
|
Jakob and Slattery fall onto the sofa and lie there like |
|
corpses. |
|
Monty opens the bedroom door, steps inside, and closes it |
|
behind him. |
|
|
|
INT- MONTY'S BEDROOM |
|
|
|
Naturelle sleeps on her side, facing the window. Monty kneels |
|
beside her and takes her hand. Her eyes open. She smiles for |
|
a second and then quickly sits up. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
What time is it? |
|
Both of them turn to look at the digital clock on the |
|
nightstand. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I've got an hour left. Listen -- |
|
Naturelle waits as Monty stares down at the bed. ^J |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
IOO, |
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|
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|
|
CONTINUED: , |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I was wrong. About you, about -- |
|
She runs her hand through his hair. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
It doesn't matter right now. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
It matters to me. |
|
(beat) |
|
I don't want you to hate me. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
How could I ever hate you? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Jesus, Nat, I blew it. I really blew it. |
|
He stands. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Stay with me, baby. We have another hour. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
There's one last thing I gotta do. |
|
Naturelle doesn't like the sound of this remark. She leans |
|
forward and takes his wrist. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Hey. Don't go anywhere. Stay here with |
|
me. |
|
|
|
- -路路路路路路路 |
|
|
|
|
|
- - 路--MONTY- 路路 ' ~ -路 路路 - |
|
|
|
Just one last thing. |
|
He kisses her again, a last fierce kiss, and heads for the |
|
door. |
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S LIVING ROOM |
|
|
|
Monty grabs the leash off the back of the apartment door and |
|
clips it to Doyle's collar. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Let me take one more walk with Doyle. |
|
Slattery and Jakob nod. Both are exhausted. |
|
|
|
EXT. EAST END AVENUE ~ LATER |
|
|
|
The snow has finally stopped falling. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
101 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The parked cars lining the avenue look like scoops of vanilla |
|
ice cream, glistening below the streetlights. The awnings of |
|
the buildings, fringed with icicles, creak beneath the weight |
|
of the snow. |
|
Doyle, off his leash, charges down the middle of the avenue, |
|
carving a trail through the foot-deep powder, a drop of ink |
|
rolling down a blank page. |
|
Monty follows behind, twirling circles with the leash. |
|
Slattery and Jakob bring up the rear, slogging through the |
|
snow like weary soldiers. |
|
The only vehicle on the road is a snow plow half a mile |
|
south, its yellow lights flashing. |
|
|
|
EXT. CARL SCHURZ PARK |
|
|
|
They cross into the park, past the fenced-in gingko trees, |
|
climbing the stairs that lead to the esplanade. |
|
Doyle spies a squirrel and chases after it, but the squirrel |
|
is quicker, makes it to a red maple and scrambles up the |
|
trunk to safety. |
|
Doyle squats at the foot of the tree, staring sadly up ^\ |
|
through the branches. 11W7 |
|
|
|
EXT. EAST RIVER ESPLANADE |
|
|
|
Across the river is Queens, and Queens before sunrise is |
|
beautiful: red antennae lights winking to warn pilots; the |
|
Pepsi sign glowing in neon script over the bottling plant; |
|
white clouds rising from the smokestacks like genies. |
|
Behind Queens the sky is beginning to brighten. - -- |
|
Jakob brushes snow off the iron balustrade, leans against it |
|
and stares into the river. A string of yellow lights quivers |
|
beneath the waters, reflections from the Queensboro Bridge. |
|
A red tugboat chugs south. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
It would be good to work a tugboat. Be |
|
out on the river all day. |
|
He turns to face Jakob. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
So what do you think? You ready for Mr. |
|
Doyle? |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
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|
|
|
|
; |
|
|
|
|
|
路 路'路 路 路 ' -- 路路 |
|
|
|
|
|
- 102, |
|
|
|
|
|
路路 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob looks at Doyle, who is rolling on his back in the snow, |
|
kicking his feet in the air like a puppy. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
He likes the snow. |
|
Monty whistles for Doyle and the dog jumps to his feet and |
|
runs over, wagging the stump of his tail, his muzzle dusted |
|
with snow. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I need a favor, Frank. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Anything. |
|
Monty refastens the leash onto the dog's collar and ties the |
|
cord around a baluster, knotting it twice, checking to make |
|
sure it's secure. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I'm not going in there like this. The |
|
minute they get a look at me, I'm gone. |
|
Monty straightens up and looks directly into Slattery's eyes. |
|
|
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Make me ugly. |
|
Slattery looks dumbfounded. He turns to glance at Jakob, who |
|
is equally confused. |
|
Monty clears the snow off the nearest bench, unbuttons his |
|
camel's hair coat, and lays it down. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
You just said you'd do anything. So this |
|
is what I need. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I can't do that. What are you thinking, I |
|
give you a black eye and people won't |
|
fuck with you? It won't change anything. |
|
Monty steps closer. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You think I deserve it, don't you? |
|
Slattery holds his hands up and backs away. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I can't hit you. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
103, |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (2) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I think you can. I think you want to, a |
|
little bit. I think you've wanted to for |
|
years. |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
I'm not doing it. |
|
Monty steps closer again. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You want to. Come on, Frank, you're |
|
afraid? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Listen -- |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
What are you afraid of, Frank? That I'll |
|
hit back? You're afraid I'll hit back? |
|
That would be embarrassing, huh, big |
|
tough guy like you getting his ass |
|
kicked? |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Come on, this is crazy. |
|
on, t |
|
i.JSh Come |
|
Monty points at Jakob. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Who the fuck is talking to you? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
Forget it. Come on, forget all this. |
|
Let's get some breakfast. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
This works out pretty well for you, |
|
doesn't it? You're gonna take good care |
|
of Naturelle while I'm gone? |
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
What? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You think I don't see you staring at her |
|
all the time? You've wanted to fuck her |
|
for years. |
|
He shoves Slattery hard. Slattery's eyes narrow for a moment, |
|
but he shakes his head. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-路-- 104 |
|
|
|
|
|
CONTINUED : (3) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SLATTERY |
|
|
|
All right. Al l right. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
He turns stiffly and walks away. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
' JAKOB |
|
|
|
Come on. Come on , Monty, what are you |
|
doing? Tell him you're kidding. |
|
Monty pivots and punches Jakob hard on the cheek, the crack |
|
of gloved knuckle on bone echoing on the empty esplanade. |
|
Jakob falls back against the balustrade, clutching his face. |
|
|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Monty I |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Monty steps closer and punches Jakob again, this time in the |
|
gut, and Jakob sinks to his knees, gasping. He covers his |
|
face with his hands, to protect himself. |
|
Slattery tackles Monty, pinning him to the ground. |
|
For a moment everything is still. Doyle, leashed to the |
|
baluster, whines, unsure if his master is playing or |
|
fighting. |
|
Jakob, stunned by the violence, watches. Slattery stares at |
|
Monty and Monty stares back . All :of them in the snow, their |
|
breath coiling and rising into the sky. |
|
Finally Slattery looks away, looks past the East River , past |
|
Queens. He clenches his eyes shut. When he opens them, we see |
|
the first tears forming. |
|
Slattery grabs Monty's throat with his left hand and punches |
|
him in the face with his right, again and again and again. |
|
Doyle howls. He tries to jump on Slattery bu t the leash keeps |
|
yanking him back. He strains forward, fangs bared , bu t his |
|
master is three feet too far. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob touches his cheek and examines his fingers: no blood. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Doyle, barking madly, keeps jumping for Slattery, keeps being |
|
yanked back by the leash. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jakob grabs hold of the balustrade and pulls himsel f to his |
|
feet. |
|
|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Frank... Frank! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
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|
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105, |
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CONTINUED : (4) |
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The bloo d puddles by Monty's head, melting through the snow |
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and steaming in the air. Slattery, lost in hi s anger , his |
|
frustration, continues swinging. |
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|
Jakob stumbles over to Slattery and pushes him. |
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JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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Stop! |
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Slattery looks up , his face wet with tears , a webbin g of |
|
saliva between his lips . |
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JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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|
Okay. Enough. |
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|
Jakob grabs the bi g man under the armpits and help s hi m rise . |
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Slattery looks down at Monty, who is not moving . |
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|
|
SLATTERY |
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|
|
Oh Jesus . |
|
Jakob crouches and turns Monty onto his stomach . Monty |
|
coughs, a thick ribbon of blood falling from hi s mouth . |
|
Jakob scoops up a handful of snow and begins gentl y pressing |
|
it to Monty's brutalized face. |
|
Doyle continues to bark, the collar digging into his throat |
|
as he struggles to reach his master. |
|
Slattery watches , speechless, his bloodied hand s by his side. |
|
Finally Monty shakes his head clear of the snow and begins |
|
crawling forward. |
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Hold still for a minute. Hold still . |
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When Monty tries to stand his legs collapse beneat h him. |
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Jakob wraps his arms around him before he falls an d lowers |
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him to the snow. |
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JAKOB (CONT'D) |
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Don't try to move yet. |
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Monty pushes himsel f off the ground again and thi s time |
|
manages to keep hi s balance, though he sways lik e a drunk. |
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MONTY |
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(slurring) |
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It's okay . |
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106, |
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CONTINUED : <5) |
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Blood leaks from his nose, from his mouth, from a deep gash |
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bisecting one eyebrow. The entire left side of his face is |
|
bright red, already swelling. |
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Slattery looks at him and moans , sits down heavily in the |
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snow, his chin tucked against his chest, his right hand, |
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slick with blood, covering his face. |
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SLATTERY |
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Oh Jesus. |
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JAKOB |
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Hospital.. We need to take you to the |
|
hospital. |
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MONTY |
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No . |
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He staggers toward them. Doyle is mewling now, stomping his |
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paws, confused. Monty bends down unsteadily and scratches |
|
behind the dog's ear. |
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|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
(to Doyle) |
|
Be a good boy. |
|
He walks over to Slattery, wh o sits in the snow, sobbing. |
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Monty leans over and kisses his forehead. |
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MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
I'm sorry. |
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Slattery rocks back and forth, hands over his face, his |
|
forehead marked with blood. |
|
Monty turns to Jakob and touches his shoulder. |
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|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
I'm sorry, Jake. |
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Jakob is stunned by what's happened in the last few minutes . |
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He has no idea what to say. |
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JAKOB |
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Okay. |
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MONTY |
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|
Take care of my dog. |
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He grabs his coat from the park bench and walks away from |
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them. |
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107 |
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|
EXT. MONTY' S BUILDING -- DAWN ( |
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|
|
Naturelle, in her down parka, sits on the stoop steps. She |
|
sees him when he's a block away, and we see him from that |
|
distance, limping through the snow. |
|
Naturelle stands and breathes in deeply. She starts walking |
|
toward him but stops after a few steps. She can see his face |
|
now. |
|
His eyes are so badly swollen that he doesn't notice her |
|
until he's almost upon her. When he does see her he smiles, |
|
and Naturelle has to look away for a moment. |
|
He tries to say something but chokes, leans over, hands on |
|
his knees, and spits up blood. |
|
Naturelle takes him by the hand and leads him up the steps. |
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|
|
INT. MONTY'S LIVING ROOM |
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|
|
He sits on the sofa while Naturelle dabs at his face with a |
|
wet washcloth. A bowl of soapy water sits beside her on the |
|
coffee table. |
|
When she wrings the washcloth above the bowl, drops of blood ,"***S |
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|
|
/ > |
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|
|
fall into the water and bloom. W-- / |
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MONTY |
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|
|
I don't want you to visit. |
|
His voice is rough and slurred, his split lip impeding his |
|
diction. |
|
She opens a bottle of rubbing alcohol, wets a cotton ball, |
|
presses the cottpn lightly against the gash in his forehead. -- |
|
He shudders, his fingers gripping the edges of the sofa |
|
cushions. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
I don't want you to see me up there. |
|
Naturelle struggles mightily to keep herself together. She |
|
continues cleaning his wounds. |
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|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Why'd you stay with me? |
|
(beat) |
|
You should have left a long time ago. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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108. |
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CONTINUED: |
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NATURELLE |
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|
|
(shaking her head) |
|
You idiot. |
|
A knock on the door. Naturelle goes to answer it. We hear |
|
voices that sound very distant. Monty peers through his |
|
swollen eyelids at the man walking toward him. |
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|
|
CUT TO: |
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|
MONTY'S POV |
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|
|
The blurred figure of a man stands before him. The room is |
|
sunlight and shadows, all edges washed away; |
|
The man's face is a pale oval that bends and splits when he |
|
speaks. |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
Who did this to you? |
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|
CUT TO: |
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|
Monty sitting on the sofa, staring up at his father. |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Who did this to you, Monty? |
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MONTY |
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|
|
What time is it? |
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MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
I'm bringing you to the hospital. We can |
|
tell-- |
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MONTY |
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|
|
No. I need to go. |
|
He pushes himself upright. Naturelle comes in from the |
|
kitchen and hands him a glass of water. He takes it and |
|
drinks. |
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|
|
NATURELLE |
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|
|
You have to go to the hospital, baby. |
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
No. |
|
Monty goes to his bedroom. |
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|
|
INT. MONTY'S BEDROOM -- CONTINUOUS |
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|
|
\v_y He pulls an already packed suitcase from beneath the bed. He |
|
~" grabs the string of silver rosary beads from the bedside |
|
table. |
|
He stares at the unmade bed for a few seconds before leaving. |
|
|
|
INT. MONTY'S LIVING ROOM -- CONTINUOUS |
|
|
|
He sets his suitcase by the front door. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I'll say goodbye here. |
|
He approaches his father but Mr. Brogan shakes his head. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
How you planning on getting to the Port |
|
Authority? |
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|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Subway. |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN |
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|
|
You won't make it. Trains are barely |
|
running right now. I'll drive you to |
|
Otisville. |
|
(beat) |
|
Jesus, look what they did to you. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I'll take a taxi. |
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|
|
NATURELLE |
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|
|
You won't be able to get one. Let him |
|
take you to the hospital. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
You don't trust my driving? I got chains |
|
on the tires and everything. |
|
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
I don't want it like this. Let me walk |
|
away, Dad. It's easier that way. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
What's easy about it? Easier? My God, you |
|
don't understand, do you? You don't have |
|
any idea. |
|
He touches Monty's shoulder. |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
110, |
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|
CONTINUED : |
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|
|
MR. BROGAN (CONT'D) |
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|
|
Let me drive you there. I need to see |
|
where it is anyway, for visits. Okay, |
|
buddy? Help me out . |
|
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|
|
Monty blinks and then nods . |
|
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|
MONTY |
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|
|
No hospitals. |
|
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|
|
Mr . Brogan kisses Naturelle on the cheek and she embraces the |
|
older man . When she lets go he walks to the front door, pick s |
|
up the suitcase, and leaves the apartment. |
|
Monty stands still, looking at Naturelle. |
|
|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
Wait a second. |
|
She goes to the kitchen and Monty rocks back and forth on his |
|
bootheels. When she returns she holds a plastic ba g filled |
|
with ice cubes. |
|
She makes him hold the bag against the side of his face. They |
|
don't move for a moment, her hand on top of his hand, the ba g |
|
of ice pressed to his jaw. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I want you to be happy. |
|
|
|
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|
|
She nods but says nothing, biting her lip, tears beginning to |
|
roll down her face. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Will you d漏 that for me ? |
|
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|
|
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|
|
She nods again. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Okay? |
|
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|
|
She grabs him and holds him very hard, clutching him, sobbing |
|
into his neck. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I'm sorry for everything. |
|
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|
|
NATURELLE |
|
|
|
No . . . |
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MONTY |
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|
Fo r everything . |
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|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
CONTINUED: (2) |
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|
|
He kisses her again and releases her, walks out the apartment |
|
door and closes it behind him. |
|
|
|
INT. HALLWAY |
|
|
|
Monty unknots the plastic bag and dumps the ice down the |
|
stairwell. The cubes glitter and disappear before clattering |
|
on the linoleum three floors below. |
|
|
|
EXT. MONTY'S BUILDING |
|
|
|
Mr. Brogan's car is double-parked. The roof of the old Honda |
|
is crowned with snow but the windshield and rear window have |
|
been swept clean. |
|
|
|
INT. MR. BROGAN'S HONDA |
|
|
|
Mr. Brogan opens the passenger door and Monty eases carefully |
|
into the seat, then leans over to unlock the driver's door. |
|
After Mr. Brogan starts the engine, they wait for a moment |
|
for the windows to defrost. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
FDR is closed. I figured we'd go up |
|
First, take the Triborough, catch 87 up |
|
to Route 17, and then 211 takes us right |
|
into Otisville. Easy drive, except for |
|
the snow. |
|
Monty says nothing, and Mr. Brogan studies his savaged face. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Jesus, look what they did to you. I'll |
|
tell you what, Monty, you're gonna be |
|
okay. It looks bad now, I know it, but |
|
when all the swelling goes down it's |
|
- 路 - gonna be okayr ~ ~" 路路-路-路 路路路路路路-路 |
|
|
|
- -- . -路--路路 |
|
|
|
(beat) |
|
They sure gave you a licking, though. How |
|
many were there? |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I don't know, Dad. A bunch of them. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
Well, give it a month and you'll be |
|
better looking than ever. |
|
A fire truck rolls slowly past, chains on its massive tires. |
|
Monty and his father sit in silence, letting the engine warm. |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
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|
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|
|
112. |
|
|
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|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
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|
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|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
You were right, Dad. It wasn't Naturelle. |
|
Mr. Brogan shifts into drive. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
Of course it wasn't Naturelle. |
|
|
|
EXT. EAST RIVER ESPLANADE -- DAWN |
|
|
|
Slattery sits on a park bench overlooking the river. It's the |
|
same bench Monty sat on the day before. Slattery is alone on |
|
the snow-covered esplanade. |
|
His knuckles are covered with dried blood. His forehead is |
|
marked with blood. |
|
He watches the sun rise over Queens. |
|
|
|
EXT. EAST END AVENUE -- DAWN |
|
|
|
Jakob and Doyle walk south along the western edge of Carl |
|
Schurz Park. A SKIER, an attractive young woman in her mid- |
|
twenties, schusses toward them on cross-country skis. |
|
She smiles at Jakob as she passes. |
|
|
|
SKIER |
|
|
|
Cool dog. |
|
|
|
JAKOB |
|
|
|
Thanks. |
|
He turns and watches her glide down the hill toward 86th |
|
Street. He looks down: at Doyle. Doyle looks-iap- at ~hifff. TM - |
|
|
|
JAKOB (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Cool dog. |
|
Jakob shakes his head and smiles, and they continue walking |
|
south. |
|
|
|
INT. MR. BROGAN'S HONDA -- MORNING |
|
|
|
They drive up First Avenue. Monty looks out the window and |
|
watches the city roll by. It's his last look for a long time, |
|
and he wants to remember everything. |
|
A WOMAN wearing a man's overcoat sprinkles salt in front of a |
|
shuttered butcher shop. Two YOUNG BOYS drag their sleds |
|
behind them, huffing and puffing with exaggerated fatigue. |
|
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|
|
(CONTINUED) |
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|
|
113. |
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|
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|
|
CONTINUED: |
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A NEWSPAPER VENDOR sits on a blue milk crate, sipping coffee |
|
from a paper cup, while his CURLY-HAIRED SON snaps icicles |
|
from the kiosk's eaves. |
|
A POLICE OFFICER, hands on his hips, stares under the opened |
|
hood of his cruiser, while his PARTNER leans against the |
|
driver's-side door and laughs into his walkie-talkie. |
|
At a red light, Monty looks up at the city bus idling noisily |
|
alongside them. A LITTLE BOY in the backseat waves. Monty |
|
waves back. |
|
The boy points at his window: letters have been finger-drawn |
|
on the frosted glass. T-O-M. |
|
Monty smiles as well as he can and draws his own name on his |
|
own frosted window: M-O-N- |
|
Before he can cross the T the bus pulls away. |
|
They drive north. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
I always thought I'd make you proud of |
|
me . |
|
M r . Brogan turns to look at Monty and then turns back to the |
|
road. |
|
|
|
MONTY (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
I pictured it, you know? I pictured you |
|
sitting at the bar with all your friends, |
|
poker night, and you'd say, "Did I tell |
|
you what my boy's been up to?" And your |
|
friends would be like, "Goddamnit, |
|
_ Brogan,,_all you ever talk about-is your ,,... _, __,, _ |
|
boy." |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
Give me the word and I'll take a left |
|
turn. |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Left turn to where? |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN . |
|
|
|
Wherever you want. Take the GW Bridge and |
|
go west. |
|
Monty stares at his father. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
o |
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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|
|
CONTINUED: (2) |
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (CONT'D) |
|
|
|
Get you stitched up somewhere and keep |
|
going. Find a nice little town -- |
|
|
|
MONTY |
|
|
|
Dad. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN |
|
|
|
I'm saying if you want. If that's what |
|
you want, I'll do it. |
|
Monty closes his eyes. We hear the tire chains rattling on |
|
the snow. We hear the old engine wheezing. |
|
CLOSE on Monty's ravaged face, on his eyelids. |
|
Mr. Brogan keeps talking and New York City melts away. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (COM" D) |
|
|
|
We'll drive and keep driving. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
EXT. INTERSTATE HIGHWAY -- DAY |
|
|
|
As Mr. Brogan speaks, we watch the car driving west. The |
|
voice-over tracks with the images on the screen. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
|
|
|
Head out to the middle of nowhere. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
EXT. DESERT HIGHWAY -- DAY |
|
|
|
The car speeds along a desert highway now, past the pitchfork |
|
cacti and towering mesas. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
|
|
EXT. MAIN STREET -- DAY |
|
|
|
The car drives slowly down the main street of a one stoplight |
|
town. |
|
|
|
MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
|
|
|
Find a nice little town. |
|
|
|
CUT TO: |
|
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
|
|
(CONTINUED) |
|
|
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115 |
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CONTINUED: |
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Mr. Brogan parks in front of a small bar with an old- |
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fashioned BAR sign in front. Mr. Brogan and Monty (his face |
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unmarred) step out of the car. |
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CUT TO: |
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INT. TOWN BAR -- DAY |
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Mr. Brogan and Monty are sitting at a corner table. Mr . |
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Brogan raises his glass of whiskey to Monty and both men |
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drink. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
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Find a bar, and I'll buy us drinks. I |
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haven't had a drink in nineteen years, |
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but I'll have one with you. And then I'll |
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leave. |
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CUT TO: |
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Monty stands at the window of the bar, watching Mr. Brogan |
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drive away. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) (CONT'D) |
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I'll tell you don't ever write me, don't |
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ever come visit. I'll tell you I believe |
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in God's Kingdom and I believe I'll be |
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with you again, and your mother. But not |
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in this lifetime. |
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Monty approaches the BARTENDER, a powerfully-built older man |
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(60). Monty speaks and the bartender listens carefully, but |
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we don't hear the dialogue. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) (CONT'D) |
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You get a job somewhere, a job that pays |
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cash, a boss who doesn't ask questions, |
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and you make a new life, and you never |
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come back. |
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CUT TO: |
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INT. TOWN BAR -- NIGHT |
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Monty works behind the bar on a crowded night. The bar |
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PATRONS, a blue-collar rural crowd, are rowdy drinkers, but |
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Monty works efficiently, quickly filling their orders. |
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CUT TO: |
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116, |
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INT. HEAD SHOP -- NIGHT |
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Monty, in the backroom of a seedy head shop, sits for a |
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photograph in front of a black drop. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
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You find the right people and you get |
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yourself papers, a driver's license. |
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EXT. TOWN BAR -- DAY |
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Monty sits on the steps in back of the bar, looking out past |
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the gravel lot toward the distant mountains. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
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And then you wait. People get caught when |
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they come home. But you're never coming |
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home. |
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EXT. BUS STATION -- DAY |
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Monty, a few years older, waits as a Greyhound bus pulls into |
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the station. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
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And maybe -- and this is dangerous-- but |
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maybe after a couple years you send word |
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to Naturelle. |
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Naturelle steps off the Greyhound bus. She sees Monty. They |
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stare at each other, twenty feet apart. |
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Finally he goes to her, threading through the other |
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travellers, the other waiting families. He takes her in his |
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arms. |
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INT. APARTMENT -- NIGHT |
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In the cramped apartment above the bar where Monty works, |
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Monty and Naturelle sit together, on a sofa, watching a small |
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television. Naturelle is pregnant. |
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The ball is about to drop in Times Square. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
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You forget about New York. You can't come |
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back. You can't call, you can't write. |
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INT. SMALL HOUSE -- NIGHT |
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Monty, much older now, stands in front of his family, his |
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grown CHILDREN and the little GRANDCHILDREN. Naturelle, |
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equally aged, sits with one of the little girls on her lap. |
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(CONTINUED) |
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117 |
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CONTINUED: |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) |
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And maybe one day, years from now, long |
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after I'm dead and gone, you gather your |
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whole family together and you tell them |
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the truth. Who you are and where you came |
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from. |
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As Monty speaks his children exchange glances. They can't |
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really believe what they're hearing, but they know their |
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father is telling the truth. |
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MR. BROGAN (V.O.) (CONT'D) |
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You tell them the whole thing. And then |
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you ask them if they know how lucky they |
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are to be there. |
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Monty looks at his family. He is awed by their existence, by |
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the life he has created. He looks at Naturelle, still |
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beautiful in old age, and she smiles back at him. |
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OLD MONTY |
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It all came so close to never happening. |
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INT. MR. BROGAN'S HONDA -- MORNING |
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The sun shines through the windshield. Monty sleeps, his |
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battered head resting against the window below his frost- |
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spelt name: M-O-N-T-Y. |
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OLD MONTY (V.O.) |
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This life came so close to never |
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happening. |