"A BEAUTIFUL MIND" (2001)

STATS126pages187scenes22,169words37%dialogue36characters

Words

  • dialogue8,20537%
  • action12,77058%
  • other1,1945.4%

Scenes

location
  • INT 100
  • EXT 82
  • UNKNOWN 5
time
  • DAY 27
  • NIGHT 22
  • CONT 5
  • UNKNOWN 133
1

OPEN

A BEAUTIFUL MIND

By Akiva Goldsman

Based on the biography by Sylvia Nassar

REV. 8/11/2000

FADE IN ON:

2

EXT.-NORTH AMERICA-1947-DAY

The way the world looks to God.The odd puzzle geometry of sea and land pieGed together as if by unseen design. CLOSER...

VANNEUMANN (OVER)
Mathematicians won the war ...
3

EXT.-NEW JERSEY-1947-DAY

Alternating squares of lawn and lot, criss-crossing highways, a game board of cement and grass. CLOSER STILL ...

VAN NEUMANN (OVER)
Mathematicians broke the Japanese codes and built the A-bomb ...
4

EXT.-PRINCETON UNIVERSITY-DAY

Rows of heads. PUSH IN on a single FACE looking skyward, as if he can see us. Uncommonly handsome. Piercing blue eyes. JOHN NASH.

VAN NEUMANN (OVER)
Mathematicians like you ...

TRACK over the all male students to the head of the common. JOHN VAN NEUMANN, is delivering the matriculation speech.

VAN NEUMANN
But peace's flame burns all too briefly. Atomic weapons are within Stalin's reach.You are the vanguard of democracy and freedom. Today, we bequeath America's future into your able hands. Welcome to Princeton.

The crowd erupts in APPLAUSE.

5

EXT.-PRINCETON-PRESIDENT'S RECEPTION

Sunlight dapples the flickering autumn leaves. Students in formal dressmill. FIND twoSTUDENTSstanding at a bar, sipping martinis.

ZWEIFEL istall and wiry, like a scarecrowmade of skin. SHAPELYis older, maybe 26, and handsome. Both watch someone in the crowd.

SHAPELY
Milnor's gonnaget the brass ring if it kills him.

/,----..._,_ 2 '\ /:

ZWEIFEL
He's used to pretty metal.
(taps his teeth)
Silver spoon.

REVERSE on the subject ofthei'rmusings. A student with shaggyhair and fiercely intelligent eyes is pumping hands. MARTINMILNOR.

ZWEIFEL
It's not enough he won the Carnegie scholarship.
SHAPELY
Has to have it all for himself.

C~-~ERADRIFTS to a third figurestanding near them at the ba=. John Nash can't help but overhear their conversation. Zweifel notices.

ZWEIFEL
First time the Carnegie prize has been split. Now Milnor's all bent.

Nash nods, looks again at the young man working the crowd.

SHAPELY
He's set his sights on the new military think tank at RAND.
ZWEIFEL
They only recruit the best brain from each class.
SHAPELY
Milnor's used to beingpicked first.
(extends his hand)
Shapely. Symbol Cryptography.
ZWEIFEL
Shapes broke a Jap code. Helped rid the world of Fascism. Least that's what he tells the girls.
(extends his hand)
Zweifel. Atomic physics. And you are...

Just then a third FELLOW runs up. Breathless, clever face that resembles his name. FOX.

FOX
Am l late?

\ Zweifel and Shapely exchange a look. He's always late.

Ir~, 1,.-----

SHAPELY & ZWEIFEL Yes.

FOX
{toNash) Hi. I'm Fox.

That's when Milnor emerges from the crowd to join his friends.

MILNOR
Ah the burden of genius. So many supplicants, so little time.

Milnor's eyes light on Nash. The beat of recognition is so slight it's almost imperceptible. Then he smiles.

MILNOR
I'll take a white wine.
NASH
Excuse me.
MILNOR
A thousand pardons. Isimply assumed you were the waiter.
FOX
Play nice, Milnor.
SHAPELY
Nice i~ not Milnor's strong suit.
MILNOR
An honest mistake. What with those war ration shoes...

Nash's outfit does look off therack compared to Milnor's couture.

NASH
It's not your first mistake. I read your brief on Nazi ciphers.

With that, Nash offers a slight nod, turns and walks off.

FOX
Who was that masked man?
MILNOR
Gentlemen meet John Nash. The mysterious West Virginiagenius. The other winner of the distinguished

( \ Carnegie scholarship.

,~ \· I Off Milnor. He's still watching Nash go.

6

EXT.-PRINCETON-FRESHMAN DORM-SUNSET

The sun is low in the sky. Nash heads into the tall dormitory.

7

INT.-FRESHMAN DORM ROOM-SUNSET

Nash ENTERS. Smallbut well furnished. His clothes are stillpacked in trunks. Nash pulls off his tie, goes to the window.

Couples and LAUGHING groups move across the sun-drenched field. Nash rests his forehead against the glass. Alone.

The door swings open behind him. Unruly hair and a tuxedo that looks slept in whirl into the room. Meet CHARLESHERMAN.

CHARLES
The prodigal roommate arrives.

Charles begins stripping ashe speaks. Nash stares in wonderas off come his jacket and bow-tie.

NASH
Roommate?
CHARLES
Did you know that a hangover is not having enough water in your body to run your krebs cycle?

Charles pulls o:f his pants, and hopping, both shoes.

CHARLES
Which is exactly what happens when you die of thirst.

Now finally his shirt, which he throws on the couch.

CHARLES
So dying of thirst would feel like the hangover thatfinally kills you.

He grabs a towel and heads for the door.

CHARLES
Nash, right? Happy to meet you.

NASH-CLOSE. Speechless.

CUT TO:

\----, A TOUCHFOOTBALL GAME-CLOSE.A HAND moves intoFRAME, outlining the players wi~h wax boxes and vectors. WIDER...

8

INT.-NASH'S DORM ROOM-NIGHT

Nash has moved his desk in front of the picture window, sits now marking the players positions on the pane.

CHARLES
Officially almost human again.

Charles has ENTEREDfrom the hall, hair wet, towelaround his neck.

CHARLES
Officer, I saw the driver who hit me. His name was Johnny Walker.

Nash continues working as Charlesopens the closet, pulls out bags which he apparentlystowed before Nash's arrival.Begins unpacking.

CHARLES
I got in last night. Right in time for English Department cocktails. The cock was mine.The tail belonged to a lovely young thing with a passion for D.H. Lawrence.

Nash nods, still doesn't look up from his work.

CHARLES
Not easily distracted, are you?
NASH
I'm here to work.
CHARLES
I see.

Charles spo~s a bowl of wrapped amaretto cookies on Nash's desk. Nash covers the bowl before Charles can grab one, never once looking up from his pad.

That's when Charles actually climbs up on Nash's desk, sitting right in front of him.

NASH
Hey-.
CHARLES
Is my roommate a dick?

I \,

Charles reaches into his pocket and pulls out something. A silver flask. Waves it in Nash's face.

CHARLES
Ifwe can't break the ice, how about we drown it?
9

EXT.-DORM ROOFTOP-SUNSET

Charles and Nash stand under the crimson sky on the roof of the dorm, passing the flask.

CHARLES
So how'sit go? You the poor boy who didn't go toHarvard or Yale ...
NASH
(brushes his shoulder)
That'sme. Big chip.
CHARLES
Or thenerdy kid the other kids only liked forhis brains?

Nash just shrugs.

NASH
My first grade teacher wrote, John has a beautiful mind. Iwas five.
CHARLES
Lots of smartpeople around here.
NASH
But that's all Iam. Smart. I'mnot warm. I don't do people well.

A couple of guys race,LAUGHING,past, tossing a moonrise football.

NASH
Half these guys already published. I can't waste time with books or classes. I have to come up with a truly original idea. It's the only way I' 11distinguish myself. It's the only way I'll ...
CHARLES
Matter.

Nash glances over to Charles, startled, then just nods.

(~-_____' 1 Nash reaches into his pocket, pulls out two wrapped amaretto cookies. Hands one to Charles.

CHARLES
The cookies help.

Finally, Nash smiles back.

10

INT.-CLASSROOM-DAY

A MAN towers before theclass. Wire-rimmed glasses. The oldesteyes in the world. PROFESSOR LEW HORNER.

HORNER
The Russians stated goal is worldwide communism ...

Horner moves to the blackboard. Covered with arcane symbols, the hieroglyphics of high level math.

HORNER
It is on us to stop them. What we are looking for here is math with practical application. Morse's dot and dash. Einstein's torn atom. Numbers that can change the world.

C A group of students stare up athim. Zweifel,Milnor, Shapely, Fox and several others. Only one chair is empty.

HORNER
Results, gentleman. Publishable. Applicable. Results...

TAPS the board.

HORNER
This is an actual Russian Air Force code. Can you break it? Mr. Shapely you're disqualified.

Shapley nods slightly, leans back, lights a cigarette. Horner scrawls a final set of symbols on the board.

HORNER
All right complete thesequence! Go!
MILNOR
Seven.
HORNER
(scrawlsmore symbols)
Good. Again. Hurry, their MIG 15's are heading our way.

~WEIFEL Seventeen.

HORNER
(scrawlsmore)
Again. They' re closing in on the Capitol.
MILNOR
Six-
HORNER
(scrawls more)
Again. You can hear the roar of their Tupolevs-
MILNOR
Seven-
HORNER
(scrawls more)

0 The warheads are armed-

MILNOR
Seven, seven, one.

Horner sets down the chalk. Wipes the chalk dust from his hands with a series of CLAPS.

HORNER
Washington owes you a debt of gratitude Mr. Milnor. Good work.

Horner looks around the room.

HORNER
From now on, this is how you will think of numbers. Not as theory.Not as abstraction. As weapons.

Horner sits back on the desk.

HORNER
My name is Lew Horner and I will be your teacher. Welcome toMathematics in Thought and Action.

,,---.... ( --~ He glances at the empty chair. Then at his roster.

HORNER
Where the hell is ...Nash?

Milnor looks out the window. FOLLOW Milnor's gaze into...

11

EXT.-PRINCETON COURTYARD-DAY

MILNOR (OVER)
He's looking for his original idea.

Nash is on his bicycle riding around the courtyard in figure eights, eyes half-closed, students scattering as he goes.

12

EXT.-PRINCETON GAMES QUAD-DAY

Stone gaming tables built into the wide cement courtyard. The last brown leaves whip like dervishes across the expanse.

Van Neumann stands with Milnor, Zweifel, Shapely and a few others over a GO board set with marbles.

VANNEUMANN
We study games to study strategic behavior in conflict...

Fox pushes into the group.

VAN NEUMANN
Thank you for stopping by Mr. Fox. Put simply, the study of games is the study ofwar ...

(OVER) a WHISTLING rises, crystal clear. BEETHOVEN'S MOONLIGHT SONATA. All turn to revealNash, walking backwards past them.

VAN NEUMANN
Good day,Mr Nash. Care to join?

Nash looks up, apparently startled by their presence.

NASH
Classes dull the mind and destroy authentic creativity.No offense.
VAN NEUMANN
None taken.
MILNOR
John's going to stun us all with his original idea.
ZWEIFEL
(mouthing)
Psy-cho.
MILNOR
Which is another way of saying he doesn't have the nerve to compete.

Milnor RAPS the game table with his knuckles.

MILNOR
Scared?

A beat. Ther.Nash smiles.

13

EXT.-PRINCETON GAMES QUAD-MINUTES LATER

Nash faces Milnor acrossthe GO board. The play is incrediblyfast. As they speak, they never take their eyes off the game board.

MILNOR
Let me ask you something, John.
NASH
Be my guest, Martin.
MILNOR
Fox and Zweif correctly predicted stress fractures on Yeager's X-1.
NASH
Adequate work without innovation.
FOX
I'm flattered. Are you flattered?
ZWEIFEL
Flattered.
MILNOR
I've got two weapons briefs under security review by the DOD.
NASH
Derivative drivel.

The pace of play has increased to an amazing speed, less and less marbles on the board.

MILNOR
But Nash achievements: zero.
NASH
Is there an actual question coming?
MILNOR
What if you never come up with your original idea? How will it feelwhen I'm chosen for RAND and you're not?

Nash doesn't answer, concentrates on his play.

MILNOR
What if you lose?

And with that Milnor makes a deft move and takes the game. Nash sits there. Stunned.

NASH
You shouldn't have won. The game is flawed.
MILNOR
Ah, the hubris of the defeated.

Nash is furious, sweeos the board with his hand, rises and walks away. Milnor smiles, shakes his head.

MIL..~OR Gentlemen, the great John Nash.

14

EXT.-PRINCETON DORMQUAD-SUNSET

Nash stands staring down at aGO board at his feet. His face lined with deep frustration.

NASH-POV. Different sections of the board suddenly go dark, patterns of squares rising and falling, forming different shapes with ever increasing speed.

PULL BACK AND UP TO...

15

EXT.-PRINCET"ONDORMQUAD-ACCELERATED TIME

HIGH ANGLEof Nash standing alone in the courtyard,head bowed. The sun sinksbehind the horizon; the moon moves acrossthe starry sky; and the sun rises again.

NASH-CLOSE. Eyes red in the early morning light. Still staring at the board. Finally, he blinks, as if for the first time.

_,,........_, f \ I··----- ' . EXT.-PRINCETON GAMESQUAD-MORNING

Fox watches on as Shapely and Zweifel play GO. Nash walks up and grabs the board in mid-game, marbles CLATTERINGto the courtyard.

ZWEIFEL
What the hell-.

Nash pulls something from hisback pocket. It's a knife. Theothers jump up. Nash has a maniacal gleam in his eyes.

SHAPELY
John, take it easy-

Nash lifts ~he board and in two deft strokes, slices away both sides, leaving a triangle. He drops the cut board on the table.

Nash turns and walks away. The others stare after him.

ZWEIFEL
He's totally lost it.
FOX
What a whacko, huh, Shapes?

But Shapely's not listening, he's staring at the new game board.

SHAPELY
Will you look at this....
16

EXT.-PRINCETON GA.~ESQUAD-AFTERNOON

TRACK down a row of two-player tables. All sitting over cut-down, triangular boards. FIND Van Neumann and Milnor walking the quad.

VAN NEUMANN
Your work on hydrogen fusion is impressive.
MILNOR
I know the boys atRANDare doing H- bomb research, sir. I'm hopeful-

But Van Neumannhas become distracted by two students playingGO on the triangular board. He moves to them. Milnor follows.

VAN NEUMANN
What have we here?
STUDENT
It's derived from GO. But variant outcomesare made impossible by the shape of the board. Quite simply, it'sperfect, sir.
VAN NEUMANN
Where did it come from?
STUDENT
I don't know. But it's called Nash.
17

INT.-LIBRARY-LATE NIGHT

TRACK PAST the Librarian, PAST oak tables and green reaaing lamps, FIND Nash drawing on the large circular window over the campus.

CHARLES (OVER)
You've been here two days.

Nash turns to find Charles behind him. John looks exhausted.

NASH
Milnor just published anotherbrief. And I've come up with nothing ...

\"~) Charles walks to the glass, appraises Nash's work.

CHARLES
Hell, no. You invented window art.

Nash gestures to the first pattern.

NASH
This group represents a game of touch football...
(off the second pattern)
This was a cluster of pigeons fighting for bread crumbs....
(off the third)
And this is a woman chasing a man who stole her purse....
CHARLES
You watched a mugging?
NASH
In competitive behavior, someone always loses...
CHARLES
My niece knows that. She's nine.

,,,.......... I ' 14 .---~

NASH
If I could devise a stratagem where nobody loses, the ef feet on arms negotiations ...

Nash's jacket hits him in the chest. Nash looks up, startled.

CHARLES
When was the last time you ate?

Nash stares at him blankly.

CHARLES
You know, food?

Charles grabs Nash's wax pencil from his hand, shoves it in his pocket, begins walking away.

NASH
You have no respect for theperil of the free world, do you know that?
CHARLES
Pizza. I have respect forpizza. And maybe beer...

A beat. Then Nash follows.

18

EXT.-OLD HOME BAR-PRINCETON-NIGHT

Warm amber light shines through the window of the bar as students push inside, out of ~he deepening cold.

NT.-OLD HOME BAR-NIGHT

(OVER) LES BROWNon the jukebox. Students party with co-eds from neighboring schools. Shapely charms a few girls at the bar.

Nash is at the pool table. Makes a bank shot. Chalks up again.

ZWEIFEL (OVER)
Who's winning, you or you?

Zweifel stands with Milnor, who is holding twobeers. Hands one to Nash. John takes the bottle, puzzled.

MILNOR
That new game board is impressive. Lousy name. But impressive.

That's when Fox arrives. Gestures the Waitress for a beer.

FOX
Hey. Oh, hey Nash. Wilson tanked.
ZWEIFEL
What?
FOX
Bell Labs new transistor blew his schematics out of the water.
MILNOR
Those calculations took him a year.
FOX
Packed up in the middle of the night. Just gone.

Milnor looks at his beer, raises it in silent salute. Drinks.

ZWEIFEL
Hey, Nash, somebody's trying ~o get your attention.

Shapely, arrrnow securely arounda luscious brunette, is gesturing Nash over. The blond GIGGLES, averts her eyes.

Nash puts down his cue warily, heads towards the bar.

MILNOR
This is gonna be good.
19

INT.-OLD HOMEBAR-MOMENTS LATER

Nash is atthe bar with BECKY, the blond co-ed.The two stand there in awkward silence. The moment stretches on. Finally...

-BECKY-- Maybe you want to buy me a drink.

Nash appraises her clinically. When he speaks now, his words have a deliberace quality that belies their speed.

NASH
Look, I don't know exactly what things I am requiredto say in order for you tohave intercourse with me. But could we assume I've said them? I mean essentially we're talking about fluid exchange, right? So, could we go right to the sex?
BECKY
That was sweet.

SheSLAPS him across the face.

BECKY
Have a nice night, asshole.

She walks off. John turns to face the bar.

vo=cE (OVER) Want apiece of friendly advice?

WIDER. Charles has sidledup beside him.

NASH
Is 'no'an actual option?
CHARLES
You may be a genius, but when it comes to the calculus of human emotions, you don't have a clue.So buy them drinks. Smile. Nod a lot. And maybe keep your mouth shut.
NASH
What's unfriendly advice soundlike?

Charles CLAPS him on the shoulder and grins.

CHARLES
I especially like the fluidexchange part.

With that, Charles ruffles his hair and heads for the door. Nash turns back to the bar. Alone.

20

EXT.-PRINCETON-FINE HALL-DAY

The commons are pristine fields of snow. The stony facade of Fine Hall glistens, icicles hanging like sparkling whiskers.

VAN NEUMANN {OVER) Perhaps your academic progress has suffered from too much isolation ...

21

INT.-FINE HALL-MATHDEPARTMENT HALLWAY-WALKING

Nash and Van Neumann are walking the long hall, squares of winter sun and shadow gliding across their faces.

---.•· ·1,,

I_-------

VAN NEUMANN
Human connection gives us perspective. Friends...
NASH
I don't make friends.
VAN NEUMANN
Why not?
NASH
Apparently I'm an asshole.

Van Neumann would laugh if John wasn't dead serious.

VAN NEUMANN
The faculty is completing mid year reviews. We're making preliminary placement recommendations.
NASH
RAND would be my first choice,_sir.

Van Neumann stares at him incredulously. Finally, shakes his head.

VAN NEUMANN
The game is clever, John. But your fellows have attended classes, written briefs, published papers-
NASH
I'm still searching for-
VANNEUMANN
Your original idea. I know.
(softening)
We had such highhopes for you.

They have come to the door of the math faculty lounge. Professors sit over small tables being served teaby tuxedo-clad waiters.

NASH
What are they doing?

A professor has risen and crossed. Now he does something peculiar. Takes his pen from hispocket, lays it in front of a seated man.

VAN NEUMANN
The pens is one of the oldest tributes at Princeton.

_,/.

,,,.,...---.......•.,. I---: More and more faculty are rising, lyingtheir pens down in front of the smiling man.

VA.."!NE:JMANN Reserved for a member of the department who makes the achievement of a lifetime.

Van Neumann takes his own pen from his pocket. Then he pauses, notices the hunger in John's eyes.

VAN NEUMANN
What do you see, John?
NASH
Recognition.
VAN NEUMANN
Try seeing appreciation.
NASH
What's the difference?
VAN NEUMANN
(tapshis head)
The difference isn't here.
(taps his chest)
It's here.

John just stares at him blankly.

VAN NEUMANN
John, I asked to see you because your record doesn't warrant any placement at all.
NASH
Sir, I can still-.
VAN-NEUMANN
No, son. You can't. I'm sorry.

John stares at him.Van Neumann smiles sadly. Then he walks inside, leaving John alone, looking in.

22

INT.-NASH'S DORMROOM-LATEAFTERNOON

Nash stands, forehead against thepicture window, staringout. The glass is covered with elaborate wax patterns.

NASH
I can see it, come on, come on ...

,-----~-~..., Nash CRACKShis head, hard, on theglass, spiderwebbing thewindow.

CHARLES {OVER) Jesus.

WIDER. Charles is sitting up on his bed, looking sleepy, sheet around hi·sshoulders. He puts hisfeet on the floor. Smiles grimly.

CHARLES
What did that window ever do toyou?

John turns to him now, the despair onhis facepalpable.

NASH
I can't fail.Do you understand?

John turns back to look back outthe window. When his VOICE comes again there is a defeat that is chilling.

NASH
This is all I am.

John SLAMShis head ~nto theglass again, hard.

CHARLES
John, stop-

John spins, pleading eyes fullof rage and anguish.

NASH
I can't fail. There's no reason for me then. Do you understand? Doyou?!

Charles stares at him a long beat. Finally ...

CHARLES
...Yes.

This seems to give Nash some small comfort. A long beat. Then he walks to the desk, begins to pull it backwards from the window.

NASH
No more staring out. Face the wall. Read their books, attend their classes ...

Charles stares at him a beat. He nods slowly.

CHARLES
You're bleeding.

Charles rises, hands him a towel. As John begins to tamp his forehead, Charles puts his hands or:.theedge of the desk.

CHARLES
You know, friend Nash) if you want to win your owh way ...

Charles pulls the desk back from the window, but doesn't let go. Instead he bends, as if for traction.

CHARLES
You can't play by their rules ....

Charles begins shoving the desk towards the window ...

NASH
What are you-

The desk HITS and SMASHESthrough the glass.

23

EXT.-DORM ROOM-LATEAFTERNOON

The desk blows through the window, tumbling two stories to the ground in an EXPLOSION of wood and floating sheets of paper.

24

EXT.-DORM ROOM-CONTINUOUS

Nash stands with Charles looking down, out of the broken picture window at the still settling debris.

CHARLES
Heavy-.

Nash nods, can't help a shocked grin.

NASH
No witch's slipper. Good thing.
CHARLES
Your answer isn't, face the wall. It's not in theirbooks and in their classes. It's out there,right where you've been looking. When they tell you to look away,you've just got to look closer. Do you understand?

Nash stares at him a beat.

NASH
You're kind of strange, aren't you?

i\ ~.•.,••✓• ·.~.

·····--·------

,~, 21 i----- ' CHARLES

Coming from you, do you have any idea how much that scares me?

25

INT.-OLD HOMEBAR-NIGHT

(OVER) Sinatra on the juke. Our boys are playing pool. John sits alone, staring at the floor.

MILNOR
The Soviets just barred the UN from entering North Korea.
SHAPELY
Germany'snext. They'll build a wall right down the middle. Watch.
ZWEIFEL
Russians were cold once. Thousands died. They will not be cold again.
MILNOR
Incoming.

Milnor is gesturing to the door.About six women have entered the bar. Well, five and one. The BLONDin the lead is simply, perfect.

PAN ACROSS the guys' stunned faces.

26

INT.-OLD HOMEBAR-LATER

The group sits talking, casting furtive glances at the Blond and her girlfriends a couple of tables away.

MILNOR
I'mgoing tobuy her adrink.
NASH
That's creative.
ZWEIFEL
Will shewant a largewedding?
SHAPELY
One beauty, toomany suitors.
FOX
Swords,gentlemen? Pistols at dawn?
MILNOR
We apply Adam Smith's benevolent hand.

(------..__,. \,---, FOX

In competition, individual ambition serves the common good.

SHAPELY
Every man for himself.
ZWEIFEL
Those who strikeout end up with her friends.

John nods. Then his gaze fixes on the girls.

ZWEIFEL
She's looking over. I think she's looking at Nash.
MILNOR
He may have the advantage now. But wait until he opens his mouth.

But John doesn't respond to the taunt. Instead he continues to stare intently at the girls.

MILNOR
Nash? Hey, Earth to Nash.

But Nash doesn't take his eyes off the girls' table.

NASH
Adam Smith was wrong.
MILNOR
What are you talking about?

NASH-POV. The girls' table grows dark, only the blond girl highlighted, moving into the foreground.

NASH (OVER)
If everyone competes for the blond ...

NASH-POV. Images of all the boys surround the blond, then blow apart like fragments of glass, leaving the blond standing alone.

NASH (OVER}
...we block each other and no one gets her.

NASH-POV. The other girls rise into the foreground, images of our boys pairing off with them.

NASH (OVER)
...So then we go for her friends...

NASH-POV. All the other girls suddenly go dark, leaving our group standing alone.

NASH (OVER)
...But they give us the cold shoulder, because noone likes to be second choice. Again, no winners.

NASH-POV. The blond girl goes dark.

NASH (OVER)
...But what ifnone of us go for the blond...

NASH-POV. Now images of theboys pair up with the remaining girls.

NASH
...We don't getin each other's way, we don't insult the other girls.

NASH-POV. The world goes dark except for the couples which twirl like a mobile of arabesques in a victorious swirl.

NASH (OVER)
That's the only way we win. That's the only way we all get laid.

All are staring at him.

NASH
Adam Smithsaid the best outcome for the groupcomes from everyone trying to do what's best for himself.
MILNOR
Yes, Nash, it'sthe basis for all of modern economic theory.
NASH
He waswrong. The best outcome comes from everyone trying to do what's best for himself and the group.
MILNOR
Nash, if this is some plan for you to get the blond alone...

But Nash isn't listening. He's already pulling on his coat.

NASH
Don' tyou see? Adam Smithwas wrong. The father of economics was wrong.

And with that he's grabbed his coat, heading out the door, his puzzled ~riends watching on.

FOX
Could he be weirder?

HOLD on Milnor. Face darkening with concern.

27

EXT.-NASH'S DORMROOM WINDOW-NIGHT

Nash sits bent over his pad, working.Within the window frame Nash continues to work, time passing normally. PULL BACK AND OUT...

28

EXT.-NASH'S DORM-ACCELERATED TIME

Outside, snow covers the building, thenmelts, and tendrils of ivy snake up the concrete facade and bloom, all while Nash works on.

29

INT.-VAN NE~JMANN'SOFFICE-DAY

Van Neumann sits across the desk from Nash, holding Nash's handwritten paper in his hand.

VAN NEUMANN
You came up with this on a dating excursion?

Nash simply nods.

VAN NEUMANN
You realize thisrefutes one hundred and fifty years of economic theory?
NASH
I do, sir.
VAN NEUMANN
That's rather presumptuous, don't you think?
NASH
Yes, sir.

Van Neumann stares at the young man. Drops the paper on his desk.

,,,----.,_ 25 / \ I----- \ ' VAN NEUMANN

Well, Mr. Nash, this document may be the single most important work on competitive bargaining I have seen.

NASH
Thank you, sir.
VAN NEUMANN
It has immediate applications to current peace and armsnegotiations. You'll get any placement you want. Most of the top programs will let you bring two support people.
NASH
I'll take Fox and Zweifel sir.

Van Neumann raises an eyebrow. Leans back in his chair.

NASH
I did it, didn't I sir?
VAN NEUMANN
Yes, John. You did.
30

EXT.-THE PENTAGON-WASHINGTON DC-DAY-1951

Sun breaks on the monolithic stone building.

VAN NEUMANN (OVER)
Where will you go?
31

INT.-THE PENTAGON-WAR ROOM

Lit map-boards of the cold war globe. The hulking behemoths of early IBM computers.A young CAPTAIN stands on a grillworklanding.

CAPTAIN
General, the team f remRANDis here.

REVERSE. Two uniformedTECHNICIANS, a senior ANALYST anda GENERAL stand before a wall papered with sheets of numbers.

GENERAL
Show them in.

The Captain hits a button. A red wall light goes green. Three MEN in raincoats ENTER, faces obscured by the shadows of their hats.

\ \,....,.....·

CAPTAIN
General Wilson, this is RAND team leader ...

The lead man removes his hat to reveal...

CAPTAIN
...Dr. John Nash.

Close cropped hair. Four years since we have last seen him.

GENERAL
Glad you could come, Doctor.

Nash nods. Hands hisovercoat and gloves to one of hisAides. He is wearing a slimblack suit and tie. The General nods tothe Analys~.

ANALYST
We have been intercepting radio transmissions from Moscow.
GENERAL
The computer can'tdetect a pattern. But I'm sure i~'s code.
NASH
Why is that, General?
GENERAL
Ever just know something, Dr. Nash?

Nash actually smiles.

NASH
Constantly.

Nash moves to the wall papered with code.

GENERAL
We have developed several ciphers-

But Nash raises his hand, silencing the officer. He stands still, just staring at the numbers. Then Nash begins to WHISTLE.

PUSH IN ON Nash's eyes. In the black ocean of his pupils, the reflected rows of code begin to move, forming shifting patterns.

PULL BACK ON Nash, still staring at the wall. Hours have passed, folks sitting, jackets hanging on chair backs, coffee cups empty.

NASH-POV. Series of numbers darken as others rise, a cascade of rapidly changing patterns, endless permutations until...

NASH
There.

Nash opens his hand to a pencil from one of his rising Aides. He walks to the wall, begins circling various numbers. All scare.

NASH
I need a map. NorthAmerica I think.

The General and the Analyst exchange a look. The General nods and the Captain illum~nates a map Board of North America.

NASH
These are longitudes and latitudes.

Nash is already marking the map board.

NASH
They appear to be routing orders. Ways across the border into the US.

Nash glances upwards. From a glass booch overlookir.gthe room, a MAN is watching him. Fine da~k suit. Thin tie.

NASH
Who's Big Brother?

GENERAL

Excuse me?

But when Nash looksup again, the booth is empty. TheMan has gone.

NASH
What are the Russ~ans moving, General?

But the General just claps him on the shoulder.

GENERAL
You've done your country a great service, son.

The General turns, Nash watching asthe men begin tearing down the sheets of code from the wall.

32

EXT.-MIT CAMPUS-CAMBRIDGE-AFTERNOON

A black sedan slows at a gate manned by uniformed soldiers. One soldier nods, waving the car through into...

r=·-~; EXT.-MIT-RAND COMPOUND-AFTER.NOON

33

-··

High fences. A section of buildings that essentially comprise a small military base in the center of MIT's campus.

Nash eme~ges from the car, past scholars and military personnel. Vanishes into a large, single story building. RM.~ headquarters.

34

INT.-MIT RAND HEADQUARTERS-WALKING

Bustling. And hot. Nash is walking down a long, sun-lit corridor. A fellow falls into step with him. It's Fox.

FOX
Home run at the Pentagon.
NASH
Have they actually taken the word classified out of the dictionary?
FOX
Please. This is the military. The only place information travels faster is high school.
NASH
Fox, how about you call me chief or boss or something?
FOX
How about you blow me?
NASH
That's what I figured.

Nash strips off his jacket. Another figure falls into step with them, a file folder in his hand. Zweifel.

ZWEIFEL
Air conditioning broke again.
NASH
Exactly how are we supposed to keep the world safe for democracy if we're stewing to death?
35

INT.-MIT RAND HEADQUARTERS-NASH'S OFFICE-CONTINUOUS

Large. Sunlit. Walls covered with mathematical symbols, technical schematics. Nash peels off his shirt, leaving only hist.

NASH
Two trips to The Pentagon in four years.
FOX
That's twomore than we've had.
ZWEIFEL
(handsNash a file)
Itgets better. We just got our new assignment.
NASH
Moscow has theH-bomb ...

Zweifel and Fox exchange a look.They know what's coming.

NASH
Stalin's practically loading V2's wi~h biological payloads by hand ...
(slaps the file on the desk)
And we're doing stress tests for a new dam.

Nash begins rifling his mail. A letter to Charles Herman at U r Texas. Stamped: Return To Sender-Address Unknown. ,,__........

ZWEIFEL
You made the cover of Forbes.Again.
FOX
Please note the use of you not we.

FORBES-CLOSE. Nash lifts themagazine from his mail pile. The cover reads, America's geniuses. Four portraits. John looks pissed.

NASH
It was supposed to be just me.
ZWEIFEL
John, exactly what's the difference between genius and most genius?
NASH
Everything.
FOX
{rolling his eyes) He's your son.

ZWEIFEL

j. Anyway, you've got ten minutes-

NASH
I've always got ten minutes.
FOX
Before your first class.

NASH-CLOSE. Actually pales.

NASH
Can't I get a note from a doctor?
ZWEIFEL
You are a Doctor. And no. You know the drill. We get facilities ...
FOX
MIT gets America's great minds of today teaching America'sgreat minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards.

Fox thrusts a briefcase into Nash's arms.

ZWEIFEL
Have a nice day at school.

\) NASH ..............

(heading for the door) Screw you both. Really.

And with that, he's gone.

ZWEIFEL
Oh to be a fly on the wall.
CUT TO:

A HARDHAT is JACK-HAMMERING one of the cementwalkways. DEAFENING. PULL BACK THROUGH A WINDOW TO REVEAL...

36

INT.-MIT CLASSROOM-AFTERNOON

(OVER) The CONSTRUCTION RACKET. Maybe two dozen grad students sit restlessly at their desks, sweating, fanning themselves, windows opi:nto the meager breeze..

Nash ENTERS in hist-shirt. He depositshis briefcase on the desk, stares out at the class like a soldier eying the enemy.

NASH
What the hell is that racket?

\ Nash begins closing windows, shuttingout the CONSTRUCTION NOISE.

STUDENT
Can we leave one open Professor? It's really hot, sir...

Nash has returned to the board. Turns to face the boy who spoke.

NASH
Your comfort comes second to my ability to hear my own voice. Personally, I am certain this class willbe a deadly waste of both your, and worse, my time. But, here we are. Attend or not. Complete the assignments at your whim. We begin.

PAN across the stunned faces.A beat. Nash returns to the board.

NASH
This_non-linearequation should take you several months to solve....

Nash trails off. A GIRL, maybe20, has risen. Exquisite. Powerfully intelligent eyes.A dancer's body. This isALICIA LARDE.

NASH
Miss ...

Shecrosses the room, turns now and holds Nash's gaze a beat. Then she pushes open a window.

Folks just stare, stunned, as she pokes her head outside, begins TALKING. We hear only randomWORDS, then LAUGHTER.

THROUGH THE WINDOW.The ConstructionWorkers move off.

See the look she gives him, as stunning as it is impassable. A beat. Then Nash offers the barest nod. Turns back to theboard.

NASH
As Iwas saying, this equation..

PULL BACK over Nash as Alicia continues around the room, opening every window to thebreeze.

37

EXT.-MIT RAND-HEADQUARTERS-DAY

Nash is climbing the front stepstowards themain doors.

VOICE {OVER) ProfessorNash ...

Standing on the path is a single figure. Slim black suit. ,___.., ,.

MAN
Big Brother at your service.

Nash inspects the Department of Defense photo ID and badge, embossed with a government seal. Meet WILLIAM PARCHER.

NASH
So, what can I do for the DOD?
38

EXT.-MIT-RAND COMPOUND-WALKING

Parcher is leading Nash away from the main RAND building, deeper into the fenced off military compound.

PARCHER
Impressive work at the Pentagon.

John just nods.

PARCHER
Oppenheimer used to say genius sees the answer before the question.
NASH
You knew Oppenheimer?
PARCHER
His project was under my command.
NASH
Which project?
(eyes widening)
That project?

Nash stops, terribly impressed. William just shakes his head.

PARCHER
It's not that simple, you know.
NASH
You ended the war.
PARCHER
We burned up two hundred thousand people in a heartbeat.
NASH
Great deeds come at great cost.

William's smile, coming now, is very old.

PARCHER
Conviction is a luxury of the those on the sidelines.

William resumes walking. John falls into step.

PARCHER
No close friends. No family. Why is that, John?
NASH
Get to know me.

Parcher's LAUGHcatches Nash by surprise.

PARCHER
There are endeavors where your lack of personal connection would be considered an advantage.
NASH
What are those?
PARCHER
But what distinguishes you, John, is that you are, quite simply, thebest natural code breaker I've ever seen.

They have come to a row of warehouses at the rear of the compound. All abandoned, paint chipping, windows boarded up.

PARCHER
Ever been here?
NASH
We were told during orientation these warehouses were abandoned ...
PARCHER
That's cover. Military speak for a lie.

They have arrived at a warehouse at the end of the row. New windows, a fresh coat of paint. A soldier standing guard salutes.

PARCHER
Your life exists on the surface ofa mighty ocean. What lies underneath, forces colliding, ready to breakthe surface at any moment and shatter the calm, that's my world.

,.. •..

NASH
Good speech.
PARCHER
It should be.
(sad smile)
I've made it enough times.

William walks to the door, pulls it open.

39

INT.-MIT RAND COMPO"L:JND-PARCHER'SWAREHOUSE

Sprawling. White suited Technicians scurry back and forth amidst hi-tech computing machines and giant illuminated globes.

NASH
This isn't possible. Half this technology is a good ten years off.
PARCHER
We have labs like this all over the nation. We use them to exploit best minds.

William leads the ogling Nash throughthe maze of equipment towards a large glass office.

PARCHER
Minds likeyours.
40

INT.-MIT RAND-PARCHER'S OFFICE

Nash sits across the desk. Photos of William with Roosevelt; with Ei~stein; in a Colonel's uniform withan allied liberation force at the gates of a concentration camp.

PARCHER
(noticinghis gaze)
Dachau. Man is capable of as much atrocity ashe has imagination.

William looks off a beat. Eyes that have seen too much. Then ...

PARCHER
By telling you what I am about to tell you I am increasing your security clearance to Top Secret.

William slides a form with a government watermark across the desk.

/'~-.

PARCHER

(,:~c

Whether or not you agree to assist in this operation, disclosure of secure information .can result in imprisonment.Get it?

NASH
What operation?
PARCHER
Please sign.

John signs the form, slides it back. William nods. Then he lifts a small remote control, points it at a blank TV screen in thewall.

NASH
(off the remote)
Those are a good idea.

ON SCREEN-A placard reading Eyes Only is replaced by black and whites of a giant factory, US soldiers scattered in every frame.

?ARCHER (OVER) This factory is in Berlin. We seized it at the end of the war.

~ ON SCREEN-Closer shots of large, complex production equipment. '·~--···"

PARCHER
Nazi engineers were attempting to build a portable atomic bomb.
NASH
What?

William looks up at John a beat, then back to the screenwhich now shows a device no larger than a television.

PARCHER
The Soviets reached this facility before we did. Thetechnology evaded our capture. We lost thedamn thing.
NASH
You're telling me the Russians have a handy atomic bomb?
PARCHER
Yes.

William just stares at him, letting this sink in.

NASH
The routing orders at the Pentagon. They were for this...
PARCHER
A splinter group of the Soviet Army calling itself New Freedom intends to detonate the bomb on U.S. soil.
NASH
Where? When?
PARCHER
All we know is that their target is not military. They hope to incur maximal civilian casualtiesin order to initiate a nuclear conflict.
NASH
Why?
PARCHER
Because they can win.

Simple as that.

NASH
...What's the payload?
PARCHER
Two kilotons. The ground burst will kill 30,000. Another 100,000 will die from radiation spill.
NASH
God help us.
PARCHER
Take a number. Intel suggests New Freedom's sleeper agents here-
NASH
In the U.S.?
PARCHER
Mccarthy is anidiot. Unfortunately, that doesn't make him wrong.
PARCHER
New Freedom is communicating to its agents through codes embedded in periodicals and newspapers. That's where you come in. We need your unique abilities.

Nash stares at him.

NASH
Tell me what you want me to do.
41

INT.-PARCHER'S WAREHODSE-MOMENTS LATER

Nash and William stand over a monitor manned by a Technician.

PARCHER
Commit this list of periodicals to memory.

John looks at the list. Nods.

PARCHER
Scan each new issue. Look for any possible hidden codes.
DISSOLVE TO:
42

INT.-PARCHER'S WAREHOUSE-MOMENTS LATER

William stands with John at anotherwork-station. A Technician has lowered what appears to be large x-ray machine over his arm.

TECHNICIAN
This may be uncomfortable.

The machine makes contact with John's arm and HISSES.

NASH
What the-?

The Technician lifts themachine, shinesa black light over John's wrist. In a fresh welt abovehis wrist we see a series of numbers.

PARCHER
He implanted a radium diode under your skin. It's safe. These numbers will change over time. They're access codes toyour drop spot. Here is its location...
DISSOLVE TO:
43

EXT.-PARCHER'S WAREHOUSE-SUNSET

John emerges from the door, blinking into the dying light.

PARCHER (OVER)
You can tell ,noone of your work. Just proceedwith normal life. Avoid new people. And assume at all times you are being watched.
NASH (OVER)
So what am I now? A spy?

PULL BACK A..."'IDUP overJohnstandinginthe courtyard. Alone.

44

INT.-MIT RAND HEADQUARTERS-NASH'S OFFICE

A LIFE MAGAZINE-CLOSE. A PEN ENTERS FRAME circles certain occurrences of certain words, then crosses them out. WIDER.

Nash sits behind his desk, pen in hand. (OVER) a KNOCK.

NASH
Come.

Nash looks up to see a figure standing in his doorway. Alicia, a soldier-escort behind her.

ALICIA
Boy, you must reallybe important.

Nash stares a beat. Then he shakeshis head.

NASH
It's all right,Mike.

The .Soldier tipshis hat toAlicia and is gone.

NASH
How didyou get inhere?

Alicia throws her hair and GIGGLES, the very picture of a sex kitten. Then shebrings the intelligenceback intoher eyes.

ALICIA
Testosterone is a girl's best friend.

Nash GRUNTS, returns to work as Alicia steps into the room.

ALICIA
What areyou working on?
NASH
Classified.
ALICIA
Come on. Tell.
NASH
Ask me again, I get to shoot you.

Nash looks up, despite the kidding inhis eyes, he looks tired.

ALICIA
Everybody waitedhalf an hour.

Nash simply stares ather.

ALICIA
Class.You missed class today.
NASH
Oh.

Ee resumes working. Alicia slidesa single page atop his magazine.

ALICIA
The equation you left on the board. I solved it.

Nash barely glances at her paper as he hands it back.

NASH
No. You didn't.
ALICIA
You didn't even look.
NASH
There's an error in the second to last sub-valuation.

Alicia stares at him. Then looks back at her equation. Frowns.

NASH
(without looking up)
Your second proof is elegantthough.

Alicia beams. Nash continues to work. She doesn't move.

NASH
You're still here.
ALICIA
I'm still here.
NASH
Why?
ALICIA
Iwas wondering, Professor Nash, if I could ask you to dinner.

Nash looks up at her. Stunned.

ALICIA
You do eat, don'tyou?
NASH
On occasion.

He sizes her up. A long beat, then...

NASH
Leave your address with my office. I'11 pick you up Friday at eight. . . .We'lleat.

\~ 1 Nash goes back to work.

ALICIA
I'm dismissed now?
NASH
You're dismissed now.

Alicia smiles a wry smile,starts for the door. Nash callsafter ...

NASH
One more thing.

Alicia turns back to him, sunlight through the window strikingher face so per~ectly it steals your breath.

NASH
What's your name?
45

EXT.-BOSTON-GOVERNOR'S MANSION-NIGHT

Hundreds of tiny white lights illuminate the giant stone mansion, glittering in the darkness like a Christmas ornament. Limos pull through the circular drive, disgorging passengers.

NASH {OVER) Governor, may I present ...

i .. '•

--···-·-------------------

46

INT.-GOVERNOR'S MANSION-NIGHT

A resplendent black tieparty. Nash stands just insidethe doorway.

NASH
Miss Alicia Larde.

WIDER. Standing beside Nash in a stunning black dress before the Politician is Alicia. She smiles, warmly bemused.

47

INT.-GOVERNOR'S MANSION-MOMENTS LATER

Alicia and Nash inspect a Rothko on the wall. Alicia is rivetted.

ALICIA
I think God must be a painter. Why else would we have so many colors?

Nash nods. But he's not listening, looking instead at two non- descript MEN a~ the bar. They notice his gaze, look away.

NASH
(distracted)
So, you're a painter?
ALICIA
That's not actually what I said.

She raises her hand. Faint paint-stains color her skin.

ALICIA
But, yes.

The two Men at the bar are watching Nash again. This time, when they catch his eyes, they move off.

ALICIA
I'm also a burlesque dancer...

Nash nods, following the Men with his eyes.

ALICIA
I started stripping forthe infantry in France, then moved up to fly boys. They call me Cha-Cha physics.
NASH
Um-hmm.

He's still staring across the room. That's when she kicks him, hard, in the shin. He starts. That got his attention.

ALICIA
Here. Me. Practice human contact.

He stares at her a beat. Then he nods. She smiles again, warm.

ALICIA
Champagne would be lovely. I'll be outside.
48

EXT.-GOVERNOR'S MANSION-LATER

Alicia stands on a terrace talking to a handsome young man.

YOUNGMAN
And what brings you to Boston?
ALICIA
Theoretical physics.

The fellow LAUGHS. Waits for her to join in. A beat, then ...

YOUNG MAN
You're kidding, right?
ALICIA
Have you met my husband? He's just out of prison.

WIDER. Standing behind the man is Nash, two beading flutes of champagne in his hands.

YOUNG MAN
What? Oh. Excuse me.

The fellow heads off. John hands her a glass, comes to stand next to her. They stare out across Beacon Hill at the glittering city.

ALICIA
Nothing like a little gab about relativity to throw the pick-up process into high gear.

Nash nods, glances inside the door. The same two Men.

ALICIA
Why don't you just talk to them?
NASH
Who?
ALICIA
The two men who keepstaring at you?

Nash looks startled. Alicia begins backing towards the door.

ALICIA
I used to stare before I met you too. You're famous, remember?
NASH
Alicia, wait-

Alicia opens the balcony door, face to face now with the Men.

ALICIA
Hi, there.

The Men stare at her, startled. Then emerge onto the balcony.

MAN 1
Sorry to ogle, Dr. Nash. Win Mcgee, First Bank of Boston.
MAN 2
Yes. Apologies. Just wcndering, any thoughts on technology stocks?

HOLD on Nash. Not convinced.

49

INT.-GOVERNOR'S MANSION-GARDENSNIGHT-WALKING

Nash and Alicia walk the gardens. They cross into a dark fie1d surrounded by elms, sky overhead a glittering canopy of stars.

ALICIA
Oh.
(spellbound)
When I was a girl, Iused to try and count them.
NASH
Pick a shape.
ALICIA
What?
NASH
An animal, anything.
ALICIA
Okay. An...umbrella.

NASH-POV. As he holds the night in his gaze. The sky grows dark except for a series of stars. They do in fact form an umbrella. ; •... -.

NASH
Look.

Nash steps behind her,taking her hand in his andguiding her eyes, pointing out thepattern in the stars,Alicia LAUGHSwith surprise.

ALICIA
Do it again. Do an octopus.
50

EXT.-GOVERNOR'S MANSION-NIGHT-WIDE ANGLE-SECONDSLATER

Nash star.ds with Alicia under a sky that is totally black save several glittering constellations.An urr.brella.An octopus.A rose. A donkey. A ballerina.

Two tiny figures in a universe all their own.

51

EXT.-C~Y.BRIDGE-BROWNSTONE-SUNSET

A car pulls curbside. Fox emerges.

52

INT.-BROWNSTONE-SUNSET

Fox KNOCKSon an apartment door. Nothing.

FOX

0 Nash? Nash?

The door is ajar. Fox pushes into...

53

INT.-BROWNSTONE-NASH'S APARTMENT-DAY

Small and sparse. No sign of Nash. {OVER) Sounds from ...

54

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-SUN PORCH

Windows face bright rooftops beyond. Nash stands over a sea of magazines, spread out on the floor around him.

FOX
And I was sure you were house trained.

Nash looks up, startled.

NASH
Do you always just walk into people's apartments?
FOX
I'm not goingto be the weird one in this interaction.
NASH
I'm working.
FOX
And which of our projects involves papering your apartment with Life?
NASH
It's classified, Fox.
FOX
I'm serious. You missed the irrigation conference today. Zweif and I did the bestwe could. But the brass were there to see you.
NASH
I'm close to something here.
FOX
To what?
(a beat)
You skip work. You miss briefings. Me and Zweif, we' re worried about you.

Nash is now taping magazine pages to thewall. Fox lifts a file of articles off a cabinet. All on Hiroshima.

FOX
We're not doing anything on the Hiroshima bomb ...

Nash retrieves the file without speaking,deposits it out of Fox's reach on his desk.

FOX
That was polite.
NASH
Did you know the initial blast was so bright it left only shadows?

Nash looks at Fox for the first time. His eyes aren't just tired. They're haunted.

NASH
The flash seared them on park benches, on schoolyards, on sidewalks. They're still there.

Fox starts to speak. But Nash just raises his hand.

-----------·----------

_,,.,·~~--. t,··-·--···· NASH

I'll be back at work tomorrow.

Fox stares as Nashgoes to his desk and resumesworking. Apparently Nash doesn't have anything else to say. Finally Fox leaves.

HOLD on Nash as (OVER) thedoor SHUTS.

DISSOLVE TO:
55

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-SUN PORCH-NIGHT

Nash is standing over his sea of torn pages. All ar:-oundhim shifting patterns rise and fall with ever increasing speed.

Suddenly, the rapid cascade of patterns freezes, all the dark shapes falling away, leaving a singlepattern hovering inmid air.

Nash gathers up severalpages and the map, puts them in a grayRAND envelope. He takes a stick of sealing wax, lights the wick ...

56

EXT.-CA~BRIDGE STREET-NIGHT

(OVER) CRICKETS. Nash is walking, alone, past large houses set apart on larger lots, his sealed, grey RAND envelope in his hand.

He stops before a giant wrought iron gate, behind which sits a resplendent white colonial mansion, lights burning in every room.

On the gate, a small keypad is illuminatedby the purple glow of a tiny bulb. Nash stares at the keypad, reaches forward.

NASH'S WRIST-CLOSE. In the purple light, a new set of numbers appear beneath the surface of his skin.

He rubs his wrist in wonder. Then enters the numbers into the keypad. The lock CLICKS open. Nash pushes the gate wide.

57

EXT.-CAMBRIDGEESTATE-NIGHT

Beyond thegate is a free standingmailbox. Freshly painted wrought iron, dug into the firmament, secured with a heavy padlock.

Nash slides the gray envelope into the mail slot. (OVER) A sudden RUSTLING from behind him.

Nash spins. The bushes across the road move. Just the wind?

58

EXT.-CAMBRIDGESTREET-NIGHT

Nash has slipped back out through the gate, is pulling it LOCKED behind him. (OVER) More RUSTLING, this time to his left.

NASH
Hello?

Nothing. Nash turns, starts moving,·firsta jog, then a run towards his car parked at the end of the street.

59

INT.-NASH'S CAR-CAMBRIDGE STREET-NIGHT

Nash climbs in, SLAMS and locks the doors. Leans his head against the steering wheel. Catching his breath. Freaked.

60

EXT.-WALDEN POND-DAY-HIGH ANGLE

High above the forest rimmed iris of blue that was the heart of Thoreau's imagination. CAMERA TILTS DOWN ...

NASH (OVER)
On your mark ...Get set ...

DOWN past Cardinals swooping from tree to tree towards the edge of the pond where two small figures bob.

NASH (OVER)
Go!
61

EXT.-WALDEN POND-WATER'S SURFACE-MOVING

CAMERA rushes over thewater's surface towards two figures swimming the breast stroke, corninghead on in a dead heat across the pond.

Nash is in the lead, Alicia maybe three strokes behind him. Both are swimming fast. But the race is John's.

He pulls himself up onto the shore. A few seconds later Alicia hoists herself onto land beside him.

Both are beautiful, fit and trim. Their breathlessness is asmuch a function of their glistening proximity as their exercise.

ALICIA
You're supposed to let me win.

Nash just smiles at her.

ALICIA
I love this spot. Sometimes, I come here to paint.

Another smile from Nash. The silences stretches on.

ALICIA
You don't talk much, you know that?

i \

NASH
I've been told I talk too much.
ALICIA
No. I mean about, you know, what's really going on?
NASH
It's classified....

AL!CIA I'm not talking about work, John.

John stares off a beat. Then he looks back at her.

NASH
Numbers add up.Human interaction is unpredictable.
ALICIA
You're not good with people. Don't you think I know that?
NASH
What I'm not goodat is polishing my interactions to make them sociable. I have a tendency to expedite

\,,,~_) information flow by being direct.

Often I don't get a good result.

ALICIA
Try me.

John stares at her a beat. Then ...

NASH
All right. I find you attractive. Your aggressive moves towards me indicate you feel the same. Still ritual requireswe continue a number of platonic activitiesbefore we can have intercourse . I am proceeding with these activities, although, to some extent, all Ireally want is to have sex as soon as possible.

Alicia stares at him a beat.

NASH
Are you going to slap me now?

She leans in and kisses him on the mouth.

,.,.~--..... /~__ \ ALICIA ' I

How was that result?

62

EXT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-LIVING ROOM-NIGHT

Dark. Th~ door swings open, flooding the room with yellow hall light. Alicia stands wearing John's shirt over her bathing suit.

NASH
Wait here a second.

John moves through the living room, grabbing from every surface magazines and newspapers covered with scrawls. He hurries into ...

63

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-SUN PORCH-NIGHT

John throws his work into a filing cabinet, begins gathering up pa~ers here too. He glances out the wi~dow.

A black sedan sits parked across the street. Insidetwo me~ sit. A beat. Joh~ draws the shade.

A F.A.~Dgrabshis shoulder. John spins. Alicia stands behind him. She's taken off her shirt, now wearing only her bathing suit.

ALICIA
Cleaning up your dirty magazines?
NASH
I told you to wait.

And she begins pulling off the top of her bathing suit, stripping it down to her waist.

ALICIA
I couldn't.

And he goes to her.

64

INT.-NASH'S.APARTMENT

Nash and Alicia make love on the desk under the slatted light spilling in from the street. PAN DOWN...

On the floor are several of John's newspapers, marked up with his code-breaking scrawl. Fallen to the floor. Forgotten.

65

EXT.-BEACON HILL-DAY

Nash stands atop the hill, looking out at the city beyond.

Suddenly downtown Boston erupts with a low nuclear cloud. Kex: comes the white light, then the blast wave, leveling build:ngs, whipping toward Nash in a colossal wave of ruin.

66

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-BEDROOM-NIGHT

Nash bolts up in his bed,' sweating and breathless from the nightmare. He looks down at·Alicia, asleep peacefully beside h~m.

67

EXT.-MIT COMMONS-DAY

Nash sits under a tree, markir.gupanother magazine. A :ittle ai~~ (MA.~CEE,9) walks up to him.

MARCEE
What ya doin?

Nash looks up at her.

NASH
I am attempting toisolate patterned recurrences across periodicals across time. And you?

JV'i.ARCEE Chasin' pigeons. You talkfunny, Mr. Nash.

NASH
(frowning)
Do I know you?
MARCEE
My uncle says you're very smart but not very nice so Ishouldn't pay you no mind if you're mean to me.
NASH
And who might that uncle be?

VOICE (OVER) The prodigal roommate returns.

Nash looks up and standing over him is Charles. Nash grins.

68

EXT.-MIT CAMPUS-WALKING

Nash and Charles stroll together. Marcee runs a few yards ahead, chasing pigeons, eyes wide with a child's fascination.

-·---------------·----·------------------------

CHARLES
My sister got herself killed in a car crash.Husband was too drunk to know he was too drunk to drive. I tookMarcee in.
NASH
She's so small.
CHARLES
She's young. That's how they come.

Marcee runs at the pigeons. To her dismay, theydon't react.

CHARLES
I'm doing the great authorsworkshop at Harvard. D.H. Lawrence.
NASH
Very fitting. Very fancy.
CHARLES
Well, I have been reading aboutyou. How are you, John?
NASH
At first it was all bureaucratic. Nothing I did mattered. Then something came up ....I can't talk about it.
CHARLES
Top Secret, Black Bag, Black Ops?
NASH
Something like that. And ....
CHARLES
Yes.
NASH
I've met a girl.
CHARLES
You buried the lead.
NASH
She's beautiful and brilliant ...

The two walk in silence. Then ...

NASH
Should I marry her?
CHARLES
Hell, you buried the whole story.
NASH
I mean, it all seems to add up. But how do you know for sure?
CHARLES
Nothing's ever for sure. That's the only sure thing I know.

That's when Marcee runs up, her expression grave.

MARCEE
I can't make the pigeons fly.
NASH
Put your arms up and roar like a monster.
MARCEE
Are you being mean and I shouldn't pay you no mind?

A beat. Then Nash smiles.

69

EXT.-MIT COMMONS-DAY

Two men and a little girl, arms high, ROARINGlike monsters, race through the pigeons, the birds soaring away, taking fligh~.

70

EXT.-APARTMENT ROOF

Nash and Alicia drink beers, watch the last of the sunset.

NASH
Charles used to say, if you want divine inspiration, give God an unobstructedview.
ALICIA
And what quandary requires the help of theAll Mighty herself?
NASH
I am trying to determine if our relationshipwarrants commitment.

Alicia LAUGHS, looks away.

{

ALICIA
Give me a moment to redefine my girlish notions of romance.
(smiles)
Okay. So, how goes the task?
NASH
I require a·proof. Some kind of verifiable empirical data.
ALICIA
You say the sweetest things.

He just stares at her blankly. She smiles.

ALICIA
How big is the universe?
NASH
Infinite.
ALICIA
How do you know?
NASH
I know because all the data indicates that it's infinite.
ALICIA
But have you seen it?
NASH
No.
ALICIA
Then how do you know for sure?
NASH
I just believe it.
ALICIA
It's the same with love, I imagine.

Nash stares out at the sunset.

ALICIA
The part you don't know. Is if I want to marry you.

HOLD on Nash. That really hadn't occurred to him. He blanches.

1<:::c

71

NASH
Alicia...
ALICIA
Oh no. Don't even think it. You're looking at a really big ring...
72

EXT.-WALDENPOND-SPRING

Shapely, Fox and a few of Alicia's friends hurl rice. Joh~ and Alicia pose as folks snap pictures.

John notices a figure standingat the edge of the trees. Willia~.

A =lash catches John's attention.When he turns back to the woods, William is gone.

73

EXT.-CA.~BRIDGESTREET-NIGH~

NASH'S WRIST-CLOSE. In the glow of the purple light, a new set of nurrbersshine through the skin. WIDER.

Nash punches inthe codes, pushes open the gate, a new sealed grey RAND envelope in his hand. He drops the envelope into the slot.

(OVER) aSCREECHINGof tires. CAR HEADLIGHTSturn onto the street. Nash stands frozen, the car bearing down on him.

Suddenlythe car SCREECHESto a halt.A figure is SHOUTINGfrom the driver's seat.

PARCHER
In! Fast!
74

INT.-CAR-CAMBRIDGE STREET-NIGHT

William GUNS the engine before Nash's door is even closed.

NASH
What the hell-
PARCHER
Are they following?
NASH
Who?
(looking over his shoulder)
Shit!

OUT THE BACKWINDSCREEN.Another setof headlights SCREECHESaround thecorner, in close pursuit.

PARCHER
The drop has been compromised.

{OVER) asharp CRACK. The back window shatters.

PARCHER
(shouting)
Down.

John ducks. William cuts around the corner, SLAMMING John, hard, into the car door.

PARCHER
Take this.

William, still steering with one hand, tosses something onto the seat. A revolver. Nash just stares at him blankly.

PARCHER
Return fire.
NASH
I don't know how-
PARCHER
Out the window! Shoot, goddamnit.
75

EXT.-BOSTON STREETS-NIGHT

The pursuit car is gaining. A shadowy figure 2.eansout of the passenger side window, gun in hand. He FIRES.

76

INT.-PARCHER'S CAR-BOSTON STREETS-MOVING

(OVER) Another CRACK. A bullet lodges in the windshield between Nash and William, spider-webbing the glass.

PARCHER
Shoot the fucking gun.

Nash just stares at the weapon. William grabs the revolver, tries steering with one hand and SHOOTINGout the window with the other.

77

EXT.-BOSTON STREETS-SHORE OF THE CHARLES-NIGHT

William's car turns onto the riverfront, the chase car in close pursuit. William and the shadowy gunman exchange FIRE as the two cars race along the moonlit edge of the Charles.

--------------------~-----------

78

INT.-PARCHER'S CAR-MOVING

PARCHE.R
Hang on. I'm going to try and get a better shot.

'NASH (frantic) Can't we just get away?

William spins the wheel, hitting the brakes, wheels SCREECHING ...

79

EXT.-BOSTON STREETS-SHORE OF THE CHARLES-NIGHT

William's car spins broadside. The pursuit car is bearing down or. them. William aims out the window and FIRES, SHOT after SHOT.

The pursuit car keepscoming. William let's off a finalVOLLEY, the pursuit car now virtually on top of them.

At the lastinstant, the villains' windshield SH.~TTERS,thepursuit car skidding off the road and flying, hard, into the water.

80

INT.-PARCHER'S CAR-MOVING

~ CLOSE on John's eyes. Wide with disbelief. '·-......-/

81

EXT.-SHORE OF THE CHARLES-NIGHT

William and Nash emerge from their car,watching as the last signs of che sedan are swallowed by the black water.

NASH
You just-
PARCHER
(adrenalized)
Don't think about it. It never happened. Do you understand me?

Nash nods dumbly.

PARCHER
We have a leak. They know our operative is at RAND. They just don't know who.

John manages to nod again.

PARCHER
Keep working. We'll contact you.

(OVER) a distant SIREN.William hands him the gun.

PARCHER
Keep it.You may need it.

John looksdown at thegun inhis hand. A beat. Then he tosses it away onto the seat ofWilliam's car.

82

EXT.-SHORE OF THE CHARLES-NIGHT

John watches as William's car pulls away. Then he turns andstares into the dark waters. Terrified and alone.

83

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-LATE

Nash ENTERS. The apartment has changed. A woman's touch.Alicia is sitting on the couch, wrapped in a blanket.

ALICIA
Baby, Iwas worried.

She r~ses, the blanket falling away to reveal a belly threemonths pregnant. She rushes to her husband, wrapping her armsaround him. But he stands there, still, like a ghost.

ALICIA
Fox said you left the office hours ago. When you didn't call ...
(pulling back)
John ...?

He just shakes his head.Kisses her on the cheek distantly. Thenhe goes into the study and closes the door.

Alicia tries the knob. Locked.

ALICIA
Baby, what is it?

No answer. She bows her forehead against the door.

ALICIA
John, please answer me. John?

But from beyond the shut portal, only silence.

84

INT.-NASH'S SUN PORCH-NIGHT

Alicia's paintings rest on easels. Nash sits at his desk. A beat. Then he buries his head in his hands and begins to cry.

·;· ..'~

85

INT.-MIT-CLASSROOM-DAY

John standsat the window, staring out at the parking row. A black sedanpulls up. Two suspicious men intrench coats and hats emerge.

NASH-CLOSE. Really nervous.

Then two women emerge from the car, followedby their kids. Not hit men, just two families. WIDER

John turns to face a classroom fullof students, all staring at him with confusion. His eyes are hollow as he moves to his desk.

NASH
(off booklets on his desk)
Here is the final exam I will be giving in ten weeks. Class participation is neither expected nor desired.Have anice day.

Nash walks out, leaving thegroup of stunned students behind.

86

INT.-MIT HALLWAY-AFTERNOON

Nash is walking down a corridor. (OVER) FOOTSTEPS behindhim. He turns over his shoulder.No one. Resumes walking.

Again FOOTSTEPS. He picks up his pace. So do the FOOTSTEPS.

Nash breaks into arun, down the corridor, ducking just inside an alcove, back pressed against the wall, BREATHLESS.

The FOOTSTEPS grow LOUDER, closing until...Alicia and Zweifel turn the corner, stop and stare at Nash.

ALICIA
What are you doing? Didn't you hear me calling you?

John rubs his eyes, shakes his head. He didn't.

ALICIA
I wanted to surprise you for lunch. Zweif said you'd be here. John ...?
NASH
I'm just tired is all. Thanks, Zweif.

Nash leads Alicia off. He doesn't notice the look she throws over her shoulder at Zweifel who just stands there, watching them go.

/~~ EXT.-MIT-PARCHER'S WAREHOUSE-AFTER.NOON

Nash approaches the warehouse which houses William's lab.The same armed soldier stands at the door.

NASH
I need to see William.
GUARD
He's not on site today, sir.
NASH
When will he be back?
GUARD
I'm sorry, Professor.

A beat. Nash heads off.

87

INT.-MIT RAND HEADQUARTERS-HALLWAY-DUSK

The setting sun draws long shadowsout the windows. Nash pul:s his office door c:osed. He turns, practically colliding with Willia~.

NASH
(jumpingback)
Christ.
PARCHER
You were looking for me.

Nash takes a second to gather himself.

NASH
I can't keepdoing this. I'm getting paranoid. Any time a car backfires-
PARCHER
I understand. Better than you can possibly imagine.

William looks away. His eyes are terribly sad.

PARCHER
Great deeds come atgreat cost. Your words, John.

William puts his hands on Nash's shoulders.

PARCHER
We' re closing in on the bomb, in large part due to your work. Isn't your fear a small price to pay?
NASH
You have to guarantee you can protect me. Protect my family.

William's tone is steely when he speaks.

PARCHER
I told you attachments were dangerous. You chose to marry the girl. I did nothing to prevent it. Don't make me regret that.
NASH
What do you mean, prevent it?

William's answer is only silence.

PARCHER
The best way to insure everyone's safety is to continue your work.

·~..,_..,,,,

NASH
That's bullshit. I'll just quit-
PARCHER
No. You won't.
NASH
Why the hell not-
PARCHER
Because I keep the New Freedom from becoming aware thatyou work for us.

Finally, John realizes William's eyes are dead.

PARCHER
If you quit working for me, I quit working for you.

In the dying light, William turns, heads for the front door.

NASH
(shouting)
Parcher! PARCHER!

Fox emerges from his door, stares at Nash, obviously concerned.

FOX
You okay? Who are you shouting at?

But Nash doesn't answer, just stares after William as the door kisses closed behind him.

88

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-SUN PORCH-LATENIGHT

Nash sits, his back to us, in the dark, staring into space.

ALICIA (OVER)
John..

She flicks on the light,standing now in the doorway, a threemonth old infant swaddled in he~ arms.

NASH
(spinning)
Turn it off.

We see his face now, unshaven, cheeks hollow, eyes wide.

NASH
(shouting)
Turn off the light.

He is up fast, SLAMMING his hand on the wall, extinguishing the light. His fast moves have scared the baby who has begin to WAIL.

Nash moves to the window, knocking over Alicia's easel and half finished painting. He hurls the canvas out the door.

NASH
I want this stuff out of here.

John raises the drawn blind a bit and peeks out.

OUT THE WINDOW.A black sedan. An identical carpulls up beside it. A shadow inside the first car points towards John's apartment.

A beat. John lets the shade fall again. He turns now to face his wife and WAILING child.

NASH
They're out there.
ALICIA
Who's out there?

John just stares at her. When his VOICE comes, it's soft.

NASH
Go to your sister's.

ALI::A John, what's going, on? Please, you've got to ~alk to ·me-

NASH
(exploding)
Go. Now. GET OUT!

John rises and SLAMS the door. He sits back at his desk, peers again out the window, then hugs himself, rocking slightly.

89

INT.-NASH'S APARTMENT-HALLWAY-CONTINUOUS

Alicia rocks her baby in her arms, her ruined canvas at her feet. She pauses over the phone. A beat. Then she lifts the receiver.

90

EXT.-HARVARD UNIVERSITY-DAY

Nash climbs the steps of the Mathematics building. His suit looks slept in, his hair a wild garden. He keeps looking behind him.

Nash pauses by a signthat reads: GUEST LECTURER-~OHNNASH. A beat. ~ He checks over his shoulder again, then heads inside. \,..............J·'

91

INT.-HARVARD UNIVERSITY-~.ATHEMATICSBUILDING-DAY

Jchn is walking skittishlythrough the lobby when a small,familiar fig.ireruns up to greet him. Marcee.

MARCEE
Mean Uncle John, Mean Uncle John.

She raises her handshigh over her head, bares her teethand looses a savage GROWL.

MARCEE
See, I remembered.
NASH
You sure did.

He lifts her up in his arms and hugs her, tight, eyes closing against the smell of her small girl's hair. Sets her down.

CHARLES
Someone really needed a hug.
(claspsJohn's hand)
Saw you on the slate. Couldn't miss hearing the inimitable John Nash.

/,.,.,~........~, 63 /-----' Nash's smile is weak.

CHARLES
What is it? What's wrong?
NASH
I'm into something.... I need help.
CHARLES
(darkening)
What? Tell me ...

Joh:1looks like he's about to speak. Then ...

VOICE (OVER) Professor Nash ...

A GRJ..DUA~ES~UDENTstands at the open door to the lecture hall. Beckoning John. Apparently his lecture is about to begin.

NASH
We'll talk after. Okay?

Before Charles can stop him, Nash heads inside.

\~,! INT.-HARVARD-LECTUREHALL

John stands on stage, a blackboard scrawled with numbers behind hirr..Heis speaking, staring out into the audience.

NASH
...And so we see that conventional number theory breaks down in the face of relativistic exploration...

Nash'svoice trails off. A couple of MENhave ENTEREDat the top of a stairway, wearing overcoats and hats.

NASH
Sometimes, our expectations are betrayed by the numbers...

Nash's voice trails off again. Another MAN has emerged at the top of the other stairway, also in overcoat and top hat.

NASH
Excuse me.

Nash is staring at the young Graduate Student in the front row.

NASH
Is there another way out of here?

(~~ , 1 Folks look puzzled. The Student, confused, points to a sidedoor.

NASH
I'm sorry.

Nash turns and rushes off stage, out the side door. The audience stares in befuddled wonder.

92

EXT.-HARVARD MATHEMATICS BUILDING-DAY

Nash emerges from a side door, moving fast towards the street. A

figure blocks his way. It sthe lone Man from one of thestairways.

MAN
Professor Nash.

Nash stops cold in his tracks. Spins. The other two Men are standing right behind him. Nowhere to run.

~.AN Let's avoid a scene, shall we?

NASH
What do you want?
MAN
My name is Dr. Rosen. I'rn a psychiatrist.
NASH
Right.
ROSEN
I'd like you to come with me, John. Just for a chat.
NASH
And if I say no?
ROSEN
I have a court order signed by a judge. I hope we canproceed without any unpleasantness.

John offers a charming smile.

NASH
Well I suppose I don't have much choice.

He begins towards the Man, then hauls off and DECKS him, hard, across the face. Bolts towards the street. -.,.

The two Men are on him in a second, grabbing him, restraininghim.

NASH
Get away fromme. Don't you think I know who you are?

Rosen approaches, pulling a hypo from a case inhis coat.

NASH
(shouting)
Help! Somebody, please.

Folks are watching. At the top of the steps, Charles and Marcee have emerged. John spots them.

NASH
Charles. Help. They're Russian spies.

That's when Rosen sinks the needle into his arm.

ROSEN
(gentle)
There now. All better.

e Nash's struggling begins to slow as the medication takes effect.

ROSEN
(to the crowd)
Everyth~ng's all right here.

The two Men stuff John into the back of the car asRosen climbsin next to the driver.

93

INT.-SEDAN-MOVING

Nash stares out the window at Charles coming fast down the steps, Marcee behind him.

Nash raises his hand towards his friend, findingonly window glass between them as the car pulls away, leavingthe university behind.

CUT TO:

NASH-POV. DARKNESS. Then lightthrough the blinks of slowlyopening eyes reveal Rosen's peering face.

ROSEN
John ...

/---..__ INT. -OFFICE

Nash lays on a couch, Rosen sitting over him. Leather chairs, an oak desk, degrees on the walls. Picture perfect.

ROSEN
John, can you hear me?

Nash blinks. Takes in Rosen. Tries to sit up. No luck. He looks down. His hands are bound.

ROSEN
Go easy. The Thorazine takes a little while to wear off.
(off John's hands)
I'm sorry about the rest=aints. But ...
(rubshis chin)
You have a hell of a right hook.
NASH
Where am I?
ROSEN
Mclean Psychiatric Hospital.

NASH

You can cut the shrink act, okay?

ROSEN
Who do you think I am, John?
NASH
I know who you are. You work for a group called the New Freedom.
ROSEN
I see.
NASH
I don't know anything else, okay? I'rnjust a codebreaker. That's all.
(abeat)
What are you going to do with me? Are you going to kill me?
ROSEN
No. I'm going to try and help you.

John nods, then heshoves Rosen onto the floor. Jumpsup, tries for the door. But hegoes down, hard. His ankleshave restraints around them too.

John looks up f::::-om thefloor.What he sees chills his bones. Sitting on a windowseat in the cornerare two figures. Charles and Marcee, staring at him expressionlessly.

NASH
Charles?

But his old friend says nothing, just sits there impassively.

NASH
Say something. Why won't you answer me? ...What are you doing?

Rosen has stood, gone to the desk and pressed a buzzer. 7he door swings open and two burly orderlies ENTER.

NASH
Oh, Charles, not you. You can't be one of them. Not you.

But Charles and Marcee show no expression, just sit, watching on.

NASH
(small)
Marcee?

C The Orderlies pull John standing. Rage rises in him like a tide.

NASH
Answer me, Charles. Say something.

Rosen has moved in front of Nash. Stares at him a beat.

ROSEN
Who are you talking to? Tell me who you see.
NASH
(flaring)
You know damn well. It's Charles.
ROSEN
Where?
NASH
(virtuallyhysterical)
He's right there. With Marcee. He's sitting right there.

Rosen stares at him a beat.

//~,, 68 1-·--- ', __)

ROSEN
There's no one there, John.

· Rosen nods and the Orderlies begin dragging him out.

NASH
What are you talking about? They're right there. They're right there.

John is growing hysterical.

NASH
What are you doing? Say something, Damn it Charles please just say something.

The Orderlies drag Nash into the hallway, Charles and Marcee staring after him like the dead, unmoving, perfectly still.

94

EXT.-MCLEAN HOSPITAL-DAY

Lovely steepled brick buildings situated on resplendent browning lawns. Folks wonder like ghosts. A sprawling palace of the mad.

95

INT.-MCLEAN HOSPITAL-DAY

John Nash sits on a cot ina cell, rocking, mumbling. PULL BACK...

96

INT.-MCLEAN HOSPITAL-HALLWAY

Alicia stands watching John through the window of his cell. She turns now, eyes red, to face Rosen.

ALICIA
What's wrong with him?
ROSEN
John has a disease called schizophrenia.

Alicia can't even ask what he means, only shakes her head.

ROSEN
He's lost his ability to tell the difference between what is real and what is imagined.
ALICIA
The men? The ones he thinks are following him?

,,

ROSEN
Schizophrenics are often paranoid. They see conspiracies everywhere.
ALICIA
But John's work ...Ithink he deals with conspiracies.
ROSEN
Seeing conspiracies, finding hidden codes, these are the hallmarks of schizophrenia. But in John's world, these behaviors are acceoted, even encouraged.As such, his illness may have gone untreated far longer than is typical.
ALICIA
What do you mean? How long?

Rosen takes a minute before he speaks. Then ...

ROSEN
Possibly since graduate school. At leastthat's when hishallucinations seem to have begun.
ALICIA
What are you talking about? What hallucinations?
ROSEN
Two, so far, that I am sure of. An imaginary roommate named Charles Herman. Also a girlnamed Marcee.

Alicia looks at Rosen like he's thecrazy one.

ALICIA
Marcee is Charles' niece. Charles isn't imaginary. He and John have been best friends sincePrinceton.
ROSEN
Have you ever met Charles?

Rosen holds her gaze, watches her glimpse thendiscard thepanic.

ROSEN
Has he ever come todinner?

··r

_,..,--~__ 70

ALICIA
He's always in town for so little time. Lecturing.
ROSEN
Was he at your wedding?
ALICIA
He had to teach.
ROSEN
Haveyou ever seen a picture of him? Haveyou ever spoken with him on the phone?
ALICIA
...This is ridiculous.

But her words carry more conviction thanher eyes.

ROSEN
I contacted Princeton.According to housing records John lived in a single. Therewas no Charles Herman in attendancewhen John was there.
97

EXT.-MCLE~.NHOSPITAL-GARDENS-NIGHT-WALKING

Rosen and Alicia walk the tree lined paths. Over the horizon hangs a low harvest moon, plump andyellow.

ROSEN
Charles and Marcee are fantasies. But to John they appear as real as you or I.
ALICIA
Doctor, there's probably just a records error at Princeton.
ROSEN
I was with John when he saw them. There was no one there.

She hugs her coat tighter.

ROSEN
Ibelieve John's world is laced with delusions. Like dreams walking through his waking life.

{.

ALICIA
This is absurd.
ROSEN
Which is more likely, that your husband, a mathematician with no ~ili~ary training, is a government spy fleeing renegade Russians ...
ALICIA
You're making him sound crazy-
ROSEN
...Or that he has lost his grip on reality?

Alicia starts to speak.Then purses her lips, not sure what tosay.

ROSEN
The only way I can help John is to show him the differencebetween what is real and what is in his mind.
ALICIA
What John does is classified.
ROSEN
He mentioned a supervisor at RAND. William Parcher. Maybe he can clarify things for us. But I can't get to him without clearances.

Alicia stops, eyes narrowing.

ALICIA
You want me to help you get the details of my husband's work?

Rosen's sudden smile seems forced.

ROSEN
John thinks I'm a russian spy. Is that what you think?

Alicia is silent. Holds Rosen's eyes.

ROSEN
You called me, Alicia. You knew something was wrong.

',___,..- ..'

/·-•.\ i"___, ) ALICIA

He wasn't sleeping. I wantedsomeone to talk with him. Zweifelrecommend-

ROSEN
So your Mr. Zweifel, is he part of this conspiracy as well?

Alicia stares at him a beat. Unsure. Then ...

ALICIA
This was all a mistake. He's just over-tired. I'll take him home now.
ROSEN
Alicia, no one wants someone they love to be sick.
ALICIA
What I want is my husbandreleased.

She's growing agitated. Rosen's smile is full of compassion.

ROSEN
John's been given something to sleep. Come back in the morning.

0 Nine AM-.

ALICIA
I'm not leaving him here.
ROSEN
He attacked me. I've committed him Alicia. It's not up to you anymore.

She stares at hirr.,fightingback the fear.

ROSEN
After you've had a good night's rest, if we still can't agree on what's best for John I'11 release him into your custody.

Alicia stares at him. Nowhere to go. Finally...

ALICIA
Nine. And I wanthim ready to leave.

And with that she walks off. HOLD on Rosen as he watches her go.

98

INT.-MCLEAN HOSPITAL-NASH'S CELL-NIGHT

John stands at the window, staring through the mesh as Alicia's tiny form separates from Rosen's, walks o:f under theyellow moon.

99

EXT.-NASH APARTMENT-NIGHT

Dark. A light burns in the bedroom window.

100

INT.-NASH BEDROOM-NIGHT

Alicia sits in bed, rockingher swaddled infant in her arms.Spread on the comforter before her are several strewn envelopes. Eacr. addressed to Charles Herman. Each stamped Return To Sender.

Alicia reaches for the phone, begins to dial a number,wearily, as if for the hundredth time.

CAMERA.DRIFTS across the bed to an open address book and FINDS Charles Herman's name and number. (OVER) The RING signal is replaced by a recorded VOICE.

OPERATOR (OVER)
The number you have dialed isa non- working number. Please try again.

r-". \"--~_,:HOL:)an Alicia's face. Eyes hollow, like a ghost's.

101

INT.-MC~EAN-ROSEN'S OFFICE-MORNING

A CLOCK-CLOSE. Reads 9:00.PULL BACKTO REVEALRosen sit~ing behind his desk, looking at the door. No Alicia.

102

EXT.-MIT RAND COMPOUND-MORNING-LONG SHOT

Alicia stands at the Guard Booth. Fox runs up, late,to greet her, taking her hands in his as the Guard raises the barricade.

103

EXT.-RAND-MAIN HEADQUARTERS-MORNING

Alicia stands with Fox and Zweifel. Both men seem uncomfortable.

ZWEIFEL
What did the Doctor say?

Alicia just shakes her head.

FOX
Oh, man.

---------------------·· ·-----

--~ 74

ALICIA
I need to know what John's been working on.
ZWEIFEL
Alicia, you know we can't talk-

What she does now is extraordinary. She SLAPS himacross the face.

ZWEIFEL
(stunned)
!t's classified-

And she SLAPS him again. Harder.

ZWEIFEL
Alicia-.

And a third swing. But this one he catches by the wrist. Looks at Fox. Back to Alicia.

FOX
You better come inside.
104

INT.-MIT RAND-NASH'S OFFICE

Fox pushes open the door. The walls, ceiling and windows are covered with scrawled magazine and newspaper clippings. The work is, without question, bizarre, perhaps even mad.

ALICIA
Oh my God.
105

INT.-MIT RAND-NASH'S OFFICE-MINUTES LATER

Alicia sits with Fox and Zweifel. She is trying to hang on, her eyes fierce, determined.

ALICIA
Why didn't you say something? I mean, all this...

She gestures to the magazine papered ceiling.

ZWEIFEL
Alicia, John's always been, well, you know, weird.
FOX
I mean he used to ride his bicycle in figureeights for days straight.
ZWEIFEL
But he's a genius and in our business, geniusesget way with it.
FOX
Especially here.
ZWEIFEL
He said he was doing code breaking. That it was eyes only. Top secret. Part of the military effort.
ALICIA
Was he?

Fox opens his hands before him.

FOX
It's possible. Directives come down all ~he time that some of us aren't cleared for. It was possible.
ZWEIFEL
But not likely. Lately he seemed more and more agitated. Then, when you called...
ALICIA
So thisis all he's been doing every day? Cutting upmagazines.

Fox and Zweifel exchange a look.

FOX
Not exactly all.
106

EXT.-MIT RAND COMPOUND-WALKING-DAY

Nash, Alicia and Fox arewalking the row of abandoned warehouses.

FOX
He keeps comingdown here.
ZWEIFEL
We figured he was thinking.
FOX
He used to do that a lot at school. Just thinking.

,---......, (··---~ ZWEIFEL

He'd go inside. You'd hear him sort of ...talkingto himself.

PULL BACK TO REVEAL...

The three of them face the warehouse that housed William's secret lab. No fresh coat of paint. No new windows.No guard at the gate.

Alicia climbs the steps, pushes open the door.

107

INT.-WAREHOUSE-DAY

No secret lab. No personnel. Just sunlight pa~ntir.gthe colurr~sof dust through the windows. No one hasbeen here in a very long time. PULL BACK as Alicia stands alone in the giant, empty space.

ALICIA
(turning)
Ineed John's supervisor. I need to talk toWilliam Parcher.

FCY.-CLOSE. His frown is inscrutable.

108

EXT.-MCLEAN-GARDENS-MORNING-WALKING

~-~/ Crisp. Sunny. John and Rosen walk, John's handsbound before him. A burly ORDERLY paces them, a few feetbehind. Patientsmill.

ROSEN
You seem calmer this morning, John.
NASH
Well it seems obvious by now that you're not going to kill me. You can imagine that's a load off my mind.

Rosen can't help but smile.

ROSEN
You still think I'm a Russian spy?
NASH
You still want to pretend you' re not?
ROSEN
You are a rational man. Let me appeal to your rationality. Why do you think I didn't see Charles and Marcee in my office?

/.,.----.,, (.______. ', NASH

I think you did seP.them. I think this isall somekind of attempt to brainwash me.

, ROSEN And why would Iwant to do that?

NASH
To break me. To find out what I know.

Rosen nods. He doesn't seem surprised.

ROSEN
So Charles and Marcee, they arepare of this conspiracy too?
NASH
You must have recruited him. Maybe you threatened Marcee.
ROSEN
And your wife. She phoned me. Isshe part of this as well?

0 John stumbles a beat. Then recovers.

NASH
My behavior must have seemederratic to her. She's confused.
ROSEN
Is she, John? Or is itpossible that you're confused?

Rosen motions across the courtyard. A white haired man stands ina corner, gesturing angrily, TALKING to thin air.

ROSEN (OVER)
For years people have referred to madness as being without reason.But that isn't true. That fellow is as reasonable as you or I.

The white haired man begins to plead and SHOUT.

ROSEN (OVER)
We simply cannot see his reason. We cannot see the invisible adversary who makes him so angry. But he can, as clear as he sees you or I .
109

,

'

Rosen stops,puts his hand on John's arm.

ROSEN
Look back onthe times with Charles andMarcee.
NASH
Iwon't play this game with you.
ROSEN
Is it possible that, like him, you were really alone?
NASH
I won't indulge this.
ROSEN
John, insulin shock has been known to reduce schizophrenic delusior.s.

John stops, anger flashing in his eyes.

NASH
The other shoe falls. What do you want to give me? Sodium pentothal?
ROSEN
Just insula-

John knocks Rosen's hand away with his bound wrists. Despite his spiking temper, John seems almost relieved.

NASH
Spacebo, Comrade Rosen. I told you, I don't know anything . I ' mjusta code breaker.
(voice rising)
But if this means an end to this goddamned charade, then come on. Drug me.

The Orderly has moved in. John spins to face the man.

NASH
Come on!

But Rosen stops the Orderly with a gesture. Turns to face Nash.

ROSEN
John, treatment only works if you want to get well. I won't give you

(

the medication until you askfor it.

1<..----~> ', i' This turn seems to throw John. His expression darkens.

NASH
This is insane.

Rosen's expression is sad.

ROSEN
Yes, John. I'm afraid it is.
110

EXT.-CAMBRIDGESTREET-DAY

Alicia is walking up a familiar street. She stops, looks up. REVERSE Ji...~GLE...

111

EXT.-CAMERIDGE STREET-MANSION-DAY

The same house we've seen before. And terribly different. Broken windows. Dilapidated side boards. Long ago deserted.

Alicia walks to the front gate. The remains of an aging lock pad hangs by wires. Broken. She pushes the gate, CREAKING, open.

112

EXT.-CAMBRIDGE MANSION-DAY

('""; An old mailbox sits ahead.A rusting pad lock hangs at its base. ........,_........·· Alicia looks up at the empty house. Thenshe lifts a large rock and begins HAMMERING away at the lock, face set with determination.

113

INT.-MCLEAN~NASH'S CELL-DAY

Nash sits alone in his cell. Spread out before h~m are documents from Princeton. His housing form.A class list.

HOLD on John as he stares at the documentation. A beat. Is that a crack in his resolve?

Then he wipes the materials onto the floor, angry. Draws his knees up to his chin and sits, face fixed once again with determination.

114

INT.-MCLEAN-COMMON ROOM-EVENING

Alicia sits alone, uncomfortable. Other patients occupy other tables. Many wear the vacant staresof the damned. Alicia's eyes go to an opening door.

John ENTERS, escorted by two Orderlies. He sits at the long table across from her. The Orderlies retire to a table not far off.

Alicia reaches across and takes his hands, holds them in hers. The pain on her face ispalpable.

/"-·-·~~. 80 (_..:

ALICIA
John, I'm so sorry.
NASH
{nodding) At first, I thought you were one of them. But I've been thinking about it. They used you,Alicia. Of course I must have looked mad to you.
ALICIA
I was so worried.
NASH
It's going to be all right. But we have to speak quietly. They may be listening. There may bemicrophones.

Alicia bites her lip, tries not to react.

NASH
I'm going to tell you everything, now. I'm breaking protocol. But you've got to know. You've got to help me get out of here.

John rubs his wrist.

NASH
Damn implant.
(a beat)
I've been doing top secret work for the government. There's a threat of catastrophic proportions. I think the Reds must think I'm too high profile to simply do away with. So they're trying to keepme here. So I can't do my work.

Alicia is s~aring at him, fighting back the tears.

NASH
Go to RAND. You've got to get in touch with William Parcher. He can-
ALICIA
(too loud)
Stop! Just stop!

Folks in the room stare.Nash sits back, stunned. Alicia gathers herself. Takes a breath.

ALICIA
John, I'vebeen to RAND. There is no William Parcher.
NASH
Of course there is. I've been working for him. I've been-
ALICIA
What, John?Breaking codes? Dropping them in a secret mailbox for the government to pick up.
NASH
How could you ...?
ALICIA
Fox followed you one night. He thought it was harmless. Loyal Fox.

Alicia has reached into her bag. Lifts something onto the table.

ALICIA
None of its been real, John.

~--~ And with that, she deposits on the table a stack of gray RAND envelopes.All still sealed with John's seal.

ALICIA
They've never been opened.

John tears one open. Inside, his pages of code. His marked maps. Never picked up.Never seen by anyone.

ALICIA
There is no William. There is no conspiracy. It's all in your mind. You're sick, John. Don't you understand, you're sick.

Alicia begins to cry, the tears coming now, streaming down her cheeks. Finally she bows to John's hand on the table, pressing her cheek to the back of his palm, body racked with trembling SOBS.

HOLD on John as he looks from his weeping wife to his work. He lifts a torn magazine page, marked and scrawled.

HOLD on John. On his face, for the first time, fear.

115

INT.-MCLEAN-ROSEN'S OFFICE-NIGHT

? Rosen sits over his desk. The door opens and a NURSE ENTERS. i_

----------··----····---

,,----..... I '

NURSE
Doctor. It's Nash. Code red.

Rosen is up fast.

116

INT.-MCLEAN-NASH'S CELL-NIGHT

Rosen UNLOCKS Nash's cell and ENTERS to findNash, his back to the door, standing in a pool of blood.

ROSEN
John?

Nash tu!:"ns,holding his wrist in his hand. Blood is sp.:.lling through his fingers.

As Rosen gently takes John's handhe notices a brad from under the mattress frame, torn free and bloody on the floor.

NASH
There's nothing there.

The flesh on top of John's wrist has been gouged away, almost to the bone. The Nurse hands Rosen a wad of gauze. Rosen begins to dress the wound. John is crying. ~'-..../

NASH
There's no implant. There's nothing there.
117

INT.-MCLEA.~-TREATMENTROOM-DAY

Small. A single gurney sits in the middle of the floor. A NURSE stands by a silver medical table.

The dooropens. Nash shuffles in wearing hospitalclothes and paper slippers. He sits on the gurney. Draws up his legs and arms.

NT.-MCLEAN-OBSERVATION ROOM-DAY

Rosen and ATicia watch through a plexi window.

ROSEN
This, right now, is the final nightmare of schizophrenia. The horror of not knowing what is true, what is real and what isn't.

Leather restraints are pulled tight around his wrists and ankles, • his forehead.

·.:..

-------- -·

ROSEN
Imagine i:fyousuddenly learned that the people, the places, the mooents most important toyou were not gone, not dead, no,worse, had never been . •

The Nurse places a plastic bit in his mouth. Lifts the hypo.

ROSEN
What kind of hell would that be?

Alicia touches the divide as the Nurse swabs John's arm, looks to Rosen for the nod. She puts needle to flesh..Alic~a turns away.

118

INT.-TREATMENT ROOM

See Nash as his body arches into the agony of insulin shock, eyes roll~ng up, SCREAMING through the bit as we PULL BACK AND UP...

119

EXT.-MCLEAN-HIGH ANGLE

(OVER) Nash's GROWLED SCREA.~.We continue up; higher and higher, Mclean disappearing in ~he first falling storm of snow until the world is awash of white...

D:SSOLVE :'O:

WHITE CHERRYBLOSSOMS-CLOSE. PULL BACK TO REVEAL...

120

EXT.-LAWN-PRINCETON-SPRING

Rows and rows of cherry trees, blowing in the breeze. Alicia and Fox walk away from us along the bank of a brook.

ALICIA
Two a week. For six months. The treatments were ...difficult.

REVERSE ANGLE. Alicia seems older. It's her eyes.

FOX
But he's better?
ALICIA
He's in remission.

Fox's eyes ask thequestion.

, ~...

ALICIA
(reciting)
Schizophrenia has no cure. But with medication and a low stress environment the patient can hope to approximate a normal life.

Fox just nods. They continueon. A lovely white colonial isvisible in the distance.

ALICIA
The doctor thought a change of scenery. Somewhere peaceful. After RANDterminated his contract-
FOX
Zweifel and I tried to-

Alicia stills him with a casualwave of her hand. She hasabout her th.:odd self-possession thatcomes with close proximity tomadness.

ALICIA
You can't very well have a madman keeping government secrets,can you?

\'""'::'·She looks off, gaze going well past the visible horizon . ..__,...,

ALICIA
You'd be surprised how many people don't want crazy in their lives.

Fox wants to speak, he just doesn't know what to say.

ALICIA
John always spoke so fondly of Princeton. I thought, maybe being here, near familiar surroundings...
FOX
Alicia, how are you?
ALICIA
The delusions have passed.· I see pictures of the Jews f remEurope. They have this look in their eyes. Hard and stunned at the same time. Like they're trying to find an entire world that's been stolen out from under them. That's John too, I think. Lost.

There is definitely about her an odd feeling, both strong c:.••- fragile, like giant plates of shifting ice.

FOX
No, Alicia. How are you?

For a moment she seems not to be able to even unde::::-standtte question. Then ...

ALICIA
You know Heisenberg's uncertainty principle?
FOX
(puzzled)
The properties of the object are in::luencedbythe observer.
ALICIA
(nodding)
Often what I feel isobligation, or guilt over wanting to leave, or rage,against John, against God.But then I look at him and I force myself to see the man I married.And he becomes that man. He' s transformedinto someone I love.And then I'm transformed into someone who loves him. It's not all the time. But it's enough.

Fox walks on, amazed at this woman.

FOX
John is a lucky man.
ALICIA
And sounlucky.
121

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-PRINCETON-DAY

Nash sits on the porch swing, staringat a pad of equations, pen i~ hand. Fox climbs the porch steps.

FOX
Hey, Chief.

Nash looks up. He seems pale, drawn, as if part of him has go~e missing, been replaced by shadow.

NASH
Finally. A little respect.

1•.,

•.··:·

/,..-.......,_ i\···--- Nash gestures to an empty porch swing.

NASH
Have you said hello to Harvey?
FOX
John, I-
NASH
Relax. What good's being nuts ifyou can't have a little fun?
FOX
Jesus, John.

Alicia appears and hands John two red pills and a glass of water. She kisses him on the head and leaves them again.

NASH
Well, I must say it's nice to k~ow you were real.

He swallows the pills, takes a long drink.

FOX

,...._, Zweifel wanted to come but ... \.___.,/

NASH
Squeamish? {offFox's shrug) I suppose I would be too. But alas, I'm stuck with me.
FOX
Ah, I know that feeling.

Nash actually smiles.

FOX
Have you been to campus? Milnor's running the math department.
NASH
God, don't tell him whathappened to me. He'll have finally won.

Fox gives a sad smile.

FOX
I've missed you, John.

' Nash seems sincerely puzzled. \.~~--,·.. ~

NASH
Why?

Fox findshis answerblocked by a lump inhis throat, looks away.

NASH
I 'vebeen working on solving the Riemann Hypothesis ...

Nash slides his pad over to Fox.

NASH
If I dazzle them, they'11 have to reinstate me. But the medication makes me blurry.

Fox's smile tries to hide the fact that Nash's calculations don't seem to make much sense.He slides back the pad.

FOX
There are other things beside work.

John stares at him.

NASH
What are they?
(tapshis temple)
This is who I was.
122

INT.-NASH HOUSE-KITCHEN-NIGHT

Alicia is doing the dishes. John stands staring at the kitchen table. He lifts a napkin, toys with it curiously, like an alien come to Earth for the first time.

ALICIA
(turningoff the tap)
Is everything all right, John?
NASH
What do people do?

By Alicia's expression, this question is not coming for the first time. But she rallies herself again for the answer.

ALICIA
This. Just this.
(smiles)
No conspiracies. No earthshattering discoveries. Just this.

i \

NASH
Everything is so meaningless.
ALICIA
It's life, John. Activities available. Just add meaning.

John nods, but by his expression, he surely doesn't understand.

NASH
What do I do now?
ALICIA
You could take out the garbage.
NASH
(smiles)
World famous mathematician turned schizophrenic takes out trash. Now that's something.
ALICIA
There you go. Onward and upward.

He lifts the trash bag, walks out the kitchen door. Alicia begins ~ putting the dishes away. (OVER) We hear Nash TALKING. ·,,__....,... ALICIA-CLOSE. Terrified. She spins as John re-enters.

ALICIA
Who were you talking to?
NASH
The garbage man.
ALICIA
Garbage men don't come at night.
NASH
I guess here they do.

Alicia stares at him. Unsure. Then a figure passes the window. A garbage man after all, throwingthe bag into a truck HISSING past.

ALICIA
John, I'm-

He takesher in his arms. She folds into hischest. Normal life has become a mine field.

', ' '..-,-;"·. {

NASH
It's all right. Eve.rything'sgoing to be all right.

But by his expression, he seems anyt~ing but sure.

123

INT.-SUN.PORCH-DAY

Nash sits over his pad. He stares out the picture window. Then tries to write. Stares at the line of equations. Gibberish.

Nash presses his pencil into the paper, crushingthrough the lead, finally SNAPPING the hilt.

124

INT.-NASH BEDROOM-NIGHT

John lays on his back, Alicia curled beside him. Spring moonlight pours in through the open window.

Alicia kisses his neck tentatively, then hisface. John lies still as a statue. He tiltshis head away, strokesher head platonically.

NASH
I'm sorry. The medication...

Alicia surrenders, sliding back down and layingon his chest. HOLD on her =ace, sad eyes open in the moonlight.

125

INT.-NASH LIVING ROOM-AFTERNOON

John stands with his SCREAMING baby inhis arms. He seems entirely unsure how to handle this unwieldy little human.

Alicia comes in from the kitchen. She SLAMSJohn's medication and water glass on the table.

Then she scoops up her child in one hand, retrieves the fallen pacifier from the floor with the other.

She feedsth~ir son the binky, the child'sCRIES instantly stilled.

Alicia exits with the baby. John stands inthe middle of the room, sad, helpless. No good at real life. He stares down at his pills.

126

INT.-NASH KITCHEN-SUNSET

Alicia stands staring into themirror. She begins fixing her hair, finding several streaks of premature grey.

Her fingers dr~ftdown to her cheek, trace the linesthere. HOLDon her as she stares at her expression, one suddenly so very old .

127

·······-·-·--·-·····--·---···············---·-········-···········--······-·-···------

A beat. Then she pulls the mirror off the wall, throwing it, SHATTERINGto the floor.

Alicia leans back, slid~ng down now against the wall, k~ees coming up to her chin as she begins to CRY.

128

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-NIGHT

John is pouring the shards ofthe mirror off an impromptu cardboard dustpan into the trash can. He turns, heads back into...

129

INT.-KITCHEN-NIGHT

Alicia is setting his medication and water on the table. She looks worse than she ever has. Eyes dark and hollow. What a toll, this.

NASH
Alicia-.
ALICIA
You're not the only one who gets to go crazy around here, you know.
(brave)
I'm fine.

\~~! She lying and they both know it.

ALICIA
I'm going to bed.
(offhis pills)
Eat up.

John smiles. Then he nods. She kisses his head, goes out thedoor.

130

INT.-NASH HOUSE-SUN PORCH-NIGHT

Glass enclosed. Moonlight beams in through the large windows, illuminating the dark forest beyond the lawn.

John sits at his desk, staring at the pills and water before him. A beat. Therihe opens a drawer.

INSIDE THE DRAWER. Maybe five days worth of his pills. Not taken. John drops the two new tablets inside. Closes the drawer.

Nash looks at his desk. Piles of unopened mail. Several math journals. He notices a New·York Times. He opens the paper.

NASH-POV. Columns of articles. Suddenly the text goes black, characters rising into the air in a perfectly revealed pattern.

\...- (OVER) A RAP as something hits the window. Hard . ..

..··-····--·····--·-----·-----··--·-

-----------··-·-··--····

John peers out into the night. Someone, asilhouette, darts across the lawn. John is up, fast, ~oving into the hallway.

131

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-NIGHT-CONTINUOUS

Nash shoves open the screen door, stares out into the night.

NASH
Who's there? Hello?

(OVER) CRICKETS. A figure bolts across the green, littlemore than a shadow, racing towards the tree line and then gone.

NASH
Hey!

Nash takes off in a spr~nt after the fleeing specter.

EX~.-NASH HOUSE-NIGHT

The figure disappears into the dark tree line, Nash racing fast across the lawn ~n close pursuit, bursting now, into...

132

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-FOREST-NIGHT

Nash continues running through the trees, slowing now, finally comir.g to a stop deep in the dark forest. He looks around. Moonlight. Night bird CRIES. But no signof the mysterious figure.

(OVER) A RUSTLING. Nash spins to his left, a shadow darting from tree to tree, there, then gone into the darkness.

NASH
Hello?

(OVER) ANOTHER RUSTLING. Nashspins to his rightto glimpse another darting shadow, vanishing into the night.

NASH
Who's there?

That's when John is grabbed from behind. His arms are pulled backwards in restraint as a figure steps out of the darkness.

Hat and trenchcoat make him little more than anelegant shadow. As he approaches, his face becomes visible in the moonlight...

NASH
Parcher.
PARCHER
It's good to see you, John.

i----; William nods and the MAN behind Nash releaseshim. As the stranger _, steps into the moonlight we see he is a U.S. soldier.

PARCHER
What's wrong? Cat got your tongue?
NASH
(finally)
You're not real.

William wraps his arm around Nash.

PARCHER
Dor.'tbe ridiculous. Of courseI am. Let's take a walk.

He begins leading Nash deeper into the forest.

133

INT.-NASH HOUSE-NIGHT

Alicia lies in bed, her sleep fitful, moving under the covers. A small MOAN escapes her lips, victim to dark dreams.

134

EXT.-FOREST-NIGHT

William and his guardhave led John to an old tool shedon the edge of the property.

PARCHER
The bomb is armed and stationary.

William has walked to the front door.

PARCHER
Knowing your situation requires you keep a low profile, Mohammed. We brought the mountain to you.

William pulls open the door, the night flooded with sudden white light. William bowsand gestures with his arm,ushering him inside.

135

INT.-TOOL SHED-NIGHT

Bright. Men in 'labcoatsmove back and forth in front of high-tech decoding equipment. William leads Nash to a giant, lit map board.

PARCHER
We have narrowed thelocation of the bomb to the Eastern seaboard. But we're stumped. Their codes have grown increasingly complex....

,,,--....__,_ 93 (.----'.\ John stares at him.

PARCHER
What?
NASH
You're hallucinations. Products of my imagination. Dr. Rosen said ...
PARCHER
Rosen? That quack? Schizophrenic break from reality,right? Inability to tell what is real from what is imagined? Psychologicalbullshit. Do I look imagined to you?
NASH
RAND has no record of you ...
PARCHER
Do you think we list our personnel?

John just stares at him.

PARCHER
I'm sorry you had to go through this. Your stay at Mclean must have been...disorienting. Yourwife meant well, I'm sure. Your actions must have looked quitebizarre to her. We had no idea she'd go ahead and have you institutionalized. But once she did.... You were calling attention to yourself. I thought it best you stay put until the scrutiny passed.
NASH
But Charles and Marcee....
PARCHER
After your lecture, our operatives approached Charles. We needed someone to keep an eye on you. Someone you wouldtrust. He's turned out to be quite good, actually. If only he didn't insist on carting that child around everywhere.

William nods and two figuresemerge from the shadows. Charles, and behind him, Marcee.

F
::~. ·--

/,,.,.,,.,...-....,, I-------.:

MARCEE
Uncle John, Uncle John.

She races to him and leaps into his arms. He holds her so tight.

MARCEE
You'regonna squeeze me 'till I pop.

John reluctantly sets her down, his expression darkening.

NASH
At the hospital.Why couldn't Rosen see you?
PARCHER
Ican explain everything. But I need you to trustme.

HOLD on John abeat as he stares at William.

PARCHER
I've gone to great trouble to get you back. No~, make me owe you. I can restore your status at RAND. I can tell theworld what you did ...

~ ·,,_______..Williamwalksrightup to him, stares intohis eyes.

PARCHER
Ineed you now, soldier.We all do.

John looks at Charles. At little Marcee. Finally...

NASH
I was so scared you weren't real.
PARCHER
We can't afford a repeat of last year. Your wife can't know.
NASH
I have to tell her. She thinks I'm-
PARCHER
We'd be putting her at risk. It's for her own protection. Hers and that brand new boy of yours.

William extends his grasp. Nash stares a beat. He takes his hand.

PARCHER

; Welcome back. ~·r·~ (. 1..~,..

136

INT.-NASH BEDROOM-NIGHT

Alicia lies asleep. John stands over her, staring. Then he turns. William is standing in the door way. John heads towards him.

137

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-NIGHT

Nash crosses the dark lawn, into the forest.

138

INT.-NASH HOUSE-TOOLSHED-NIGHT-MOS

Nash stands amidst the high tech machinery, before a light board covered with maps and code, lecturing to a team of analysts.

139

INT.-NASH HOUSE-FRONT HALL-DAY

Nash is carrying the baby upstairs as Alicia heads outside.

ALICIA
There's a storm coming.
NASH
I'll draw his bath.

Her concern flashes for only asecond. But he registers it anyway.

NASH
I'm his father, Alicia.
(softening)
!t'll be okay.

Alicia's forced smile is full of hope for truth in his words. She heads outside.

140

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-DAY

Storm clouds are assembling on the horizon. Dark. The wind is fierce. Alicia gathers blanket andtoys. (OVER) A BANGINGfrom the woods just beyond the house.

Alicia looks up at the SOUND, puzzled.A beat. Then she leaves the detritus on the lawn, begins heading towards the BANGING.

141

EXT.-FOREST-DAY

Alicia walks through the trees. In just minutes the sky has grown darker. The wind has picked up, MOANING now.

(OVER) The BANGING has increased in both tempo and volume. She heads towards...

:.---' EXT. -TOOL SHED-DAY

The door t~.the old shed has been left ajar, BANGINGin thewind. It begins to rain, the sky pelting her with big, heavy drops. Alicia approaches the shack. She pulls the door open.

142

INT.-TOOL SHED-CONTINUOUS

ALICIA-CLOSE. Face broken with horror. PULL BACK TO REVEAL ...

The entire shed, walls, floorand ceiling are covered with scrawled newspaper and magazine clippings, the hallmarks of John'smadness.

143

EXT.-LAWN-HIGH ANGLE-STORM

See Alicia, tiny from this height, racing across the lawn towards the house. Lightening. (OVER) Thedull THUD of distant thunder.

144

INT.-NASH EOUSE-STORM

Alicia pushes inside. Looks in the living room. No sign of John. (OVER) From upstairs the sound of WATER RUNNING.

ALICIA
No.
145

INT.-NASH HOUSE-STAIRWAY-CONTINUOUS

Alicia is racing up the stairs. (OVER) Thesound of RUNNING WATER has grown LOUDER. Another lightening flash. A CRACKof thunder.

146

INT.-NASH BEDROOM-CONTINUOUS

Alicia bursts into the bedroom in time to see Nash struggling to close a window. The baby is nowhere in sight. (OVER) Thesound of RUNNING WATERis loud from the bathroom.

NASH
(backturned)
I've almost got it. Charles, hold the baby up. Make sure he doesn't slip into the bath...

FOLLOWAlicia as she rushes into the room, past John's startled expression, and freezes in the open bathroom door.

ALICIA
No!

/,,----.._, 97 (__\ I. /;

147

INT.~NASH BATHROOM-CONTINUOUS

The baby is in thetub. Alone. The water is almost up to his chin, seconds from drowning.Alicia moves with lightning speed, grabbing her child up and into her arms.

ALICIA
Precious baby, precious boy.

She clutches him for dear life. Spins to face John who's standing there, eyes wide with panic.

NASH
Charles was watching him. He was okay. Charles was watching him.
148

INT.-STAIRWAY-SECONDSLATER

Alicia is moving down the stairs, fast, baby in her arms. Nash is chasing after her.

ALICIA
How long, John? How long have you been lying to me?
NASH
You don't understand. It's for your protection.The work is top secret.
ALICIA
Don't youget it yet? There's no one here.
NASH
They've been injected with a cloakingserum. It's part of the war against the conspiracy. I see them because of a chemical that entered my bloodstream when my implant dissolved....

John's VOICE trails off. Alicia has spunaround, is staring at him.

ALICIA
Don't you even hear how you sound?
NASH
I'm not crazy. It's all real.

Alicia startsmoving again, John following her into...

149

INT.-LIVING ROOM-CONTINUOUS

Alicia lifts the phone.

ALICIA
I'm calling Rosen. You need help.

That's when William steps into the doorway.

PARCHER
You've got to stop her, John.
NASH
What?
ALICIA
(blooddraining} Who are you talking to?
PARCHER
We can't afford to let her slow us down again.
NASH
Alicia, please. Put the phone down.
ALICIA
John, you're scaring me.
PARCHER
You'll go back to the hospital. Countless people will die.

William takes a step into the room.

PARCHER
I can't let that happen.

Alicia has begun dialing the phone. Hands unsteady, trembling lips finding the-numbers.

PARCHER
Great deeds.

William unbuttons his jacket, revealing his holster.

PARCHER
Great cost.
ALICIA
(into the phone)
I need to speak to Dr. Rosen-

William reaches for his weapon. His eyes are sad.

PARCHER
I'm sorry, John.
NASH
No!

John SLAPS the receiver out of Alicia's hand, sending the phone SMASHINGagainst the wall.

Alicia steps back against the wall. John stands facing her. The baby WAILS inher arms. When her voice finallycomes, its WHISPER.

ALICIA
Get away from me.
NASH
Alicia-
ALICIA
(screaming)
GET AWAY!

C--, John takes a stepback from the force of her VOICE, and she's out, ,,_/ pushing past him into...

150

INT.-NASH HOUSE-HALLWAY-CONTINUOUS

She'sgrabbed her bag, heading for the door. Shespins to face John who just stands in the hallway, watching.

ALICIA
You want it to be real. Your secret life is more exciting. You think I don't know that? But this is all there is, John. Me. Your baby. This house. Just this.
NASH
Alicia-
ALICIA
Can you find one reason that this all doesn'tmake sense? Can you find one reason not to believe in them? To believe in us instead?

John starts to speak. But no words come.

ALICIA
I love you. But that's nowhere near enough any more.

And with that, shepushes out the front door into thepouring rain.

151

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-HIGH ANGLE-STORM-CONTINUOUS

John stands in the open doorway, watching his wife disappear down the walkway in the pouring rain towards their car.

152

INT.-NASH HOUSE-HALLWAY-CONTINUOUS

John stands staring outside.

William steps into the doorway behind him. Watching.

Another figure begins descending the steps. Charles.

A third tiny form tugs his hand. Marcee.

The fro~t door SIJL~Sclosed inthe wind. PULL BACK AN'"DUP tosee Nash there, alone in the house with his ghosts.

153

EXT.-NAS?.DRIVEWAY-STORM

It's po~ring. Alicia is putting the baby in the passenger seat. A hand touches her shoulder. She spins to face her husband.

NASH
She never gets old.

His lips are shaking, mixing with therain now, his falling tears.

NASH
Marcee can't be real.She never gets old.

The two juststand there staring at each other inthe pouring rain.

154

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-PRINCETON-LATEAFTERNOON

The storm has broken. Crimson light stains the old colonial.

155

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-PORCH-LATEAFTERNOON

Nash faces a familiar figure across the porch. Dr. Rosen.

ROSEN
Do you see them now?

\...,..,Nash manages a brave smile. i ",;:..

NASH
Yes.

REVERSE ANGLE. Marcee sits on the porch playing Jacks. Charles stands in the doorway, shaking his head disapprovingly.

ROSEN
Why did you ·stopyour meds, John?
NASH
I couldn't work. I couldn't help with the baby. I couldn't touchher.
(a beat)
Is that better than being crazy?
ROSEN
We' 11 try a higher run of insulin shocks. Then a new med-
NASH
There has to be another way.
ROSEN
The disease is degenerative. You're getting worse ...

Nash looks again at Marcee.

ROSEN
Without treatment, the fantasiesmay take over entirely.
NASH
Please. I can't go back there.
ROSEN
I'm sorry, John. You have to.
156

INT.-NASH BEDROOM-EVENING

PAN ACROSS open dresser drawers, a suitcase half packed on the floor, FIND Nash sitting on the bed, holding aclosed book between his palms, staring into space.

ALICIA (OVER)
Almost ready?

Alicia stands in the doorway, her expression brave.

ALICIA
Rosen's waiting outside.

Nash looksup to his wife, his smilesad enough to snap your heart.

NASH
I can't.
(simpletruth)
I won't survive it.
ALICIA
He said you might say.. . .Hehas commitmentpapers forme to sign.

Nash nods, so terribly tired.What he expected.

NASH
This is just a problem. I have to findthe solution. It's what Ido ...

She steps towards him but he stopsher with agesture. Only ashe looks up do we really see the tollthis istaking on him.

NASH
Maybe you won't sign them. Maybe you'll give me some time to try and figurethis out.

~ He rubs the book inhis hand. "-~-/

NASH
But whatever you do, I thinkRosen's righ~ about one thing. You shouldn't be here. I'm not so safe anymore.

Alicia stands in the doorway. Staring at her husband.

ALICIA
Would you have hurt me, John?

A figure races past behind her, like a ghost, startlingly fast, then gone. He looks up at his wife.

NASH
I don't know.

Nash has to look away. How elseto blink back the waterbrimming in his eyes? When he looks up, she is gone.

HOLD on Nash as he lets his head fall into his hands,palms taking the weight of his defeat. PUSH IN on this single figure. Alone.

llICIA (OVER) Rosen said to call if you try to

---··-r kill me or anything. ..

REVERSE. Alicia ENTERS. Offers a wry smile as John stands. (OVER) An ENGINE starts, FADES away.

ALICIA
I don't think he thinks this is a very good idea.

Nash's stares at her, confused. She takes the book fromhim, turns it over in her hands.

ALICIA
You're not the only genius in the family, you know?

She walks to him, their faces close, her voice coming quiet.

ALICIA
In sickness and in health ...

She takes a rose ernbroideredhandkerchief, wipes the tears now spilling from his eyes.

NASH
Alicia-
ALICIA
Don't. I'm scared and I need you to tell me everything's okayand you're awful with words so just don't.

What he does, he reaches out and takes her in his arms, holding fast, holding on to her for dear life.

DISSOLVE TO:
157

INT.-STUDY-NIGHT-DAWN

Nash and Alicia sit on the floor reading amidst a sea of books. Outside the window, orange and red streaks rake away the stars.

ALICIA
(glancingup)
It looks like a dream.

Nash MURMURS. Then he looks up at her, brow furrowing.

NASH
What?
ALICIA
The sky. It looks like-
NASH
Rosen said dreams are walking throughmy waking life....

John closes his book.

NASH
What's the difference? Between life and a dream?

Alicia takes a beat, considering. Then ...

ALICIA
Life feels more real-
NASH
How? Be specific-
ALICIA
...Emotion.
(a beat, nods)
I can't feel my dreams as deeply as I feel the people in my life.
NASH
But I don't do people well. I don't relate to them. My greatest connections have always been ...

Nash taps his head.

NASH
Need a mathematical solution, my mind creates one. Need a best friend, an important career,my mind creates those too ...
ALICIA
Are you saying that's why you're sick or because your sick?

But Nash isn't listening.

NASH
What if I buried myself in people? In places? In the every day? Sank myself into reality. Wouldn't real life elbow out the ghosts? Wouldn't the dreams fade? Wouldn't Iwake up?

~-...

ALICIA
John, this is all just theory. No one just wills away schizophrenia.
NASH
Why not?
ALICIA
It's not math. You can't think your way-
NASH
No. Not think ....Feel.
(tapshis head)
No more life of the mind ...
(pats his heart)
I have to live a life of the heart.

Alicia stares at him, equal parts confusion and concern.

158

EXT.-PRINCETON UNIVERSITY-MORNING

Fall. Through swirls of falling color, students move across the common. The clothes may be different, but it's the same Princeton Nash entered so many years ago as a Freshman. PUSH IN TO FIND...

159

EXT.-FINE F.ALL-DAY

Nash stands before the steps to thebuilding. Takes a step towards it, then a step back, repeats the tiny dance of indecision.

He stops, takes something out of his pocket. Alicia's rose embroidered handkerchief.

Holding it tightlike a talisman, he heads up thesteps and inside.

160

INT.-MATH DEPARTMENT-OFFICE

A fellow sits, head bent over a desk, his face not yet visible to· us. (OVER) A KNOCK.

MAN (OVER)
Come.

Nash ENTERS, stands in the doorway.

NASH
Hello, Martin.

The fellow looks up, familiar face going from confusion to shock. It's Milnor. '••-;;, I ·~ \,

-··------·---------------------------------------·--···----

MILNOR
Jesus Christ.
NASH
No. I don't have that one.My savior complex took a different form.

Milnor just stares, his expression almost impossible to decode.

MILNOR
John ...

Then he s~ands, comes around the desk, and does something almost unimaginable, he wraps his arms around Nash and holds him.

NASH-CLOSE. So stunned he has to blink back the tears. Milnor finally steps away, holds his shoulders at arms length.

MILNOR
I heard what happened. I wanted to write. I tried Mclean but you had lef~ and I just... God,how are you?
NASH
Nutty as a fruitcake. And you?
MILNOR
Look. Look here.

Milnor pulls John to his book shelves. There, beneath medals and prizes are pictures of Nash, Milnor, Fox, Zweifel and Shapely. Young, full of hope for the future.

MILNOR
God, de you remember us?
NASH
(off the medals)
You won after all.
MILNOR
They were wrong, John. No one wins. You heard about Shapely?

Nash shakes his head.

MILNOR
Lung cancer. Last year. All those damn cigarettes. Thought you knew.

Nash just shakes his head. He didn't.

MILNOR
Sit down. Please.

Nash does. Milnor returns behind his desk.

,MILNOR : I'm so glad to see you. What brings you back to ~rinceton?

CHARLES (OVER)
Tell hi~ you're a genius-

Nash sp~ns over his shoulder to see Charles in the open doorway.

CHARLES
Tell him you're mission-

John reaches around in his chair and SLAMS the door in Charles' face. Turns back to face Milnor, who stares a beat. Then smiles.

MILNOR
You were saying?
NASH
You're going to ignore what I just did?
MILNOR
What are old friends for?
NASH
Is that what we are? Friends?
MILNOR
Of course. We always have been.

A beat. Then John just shakes his head.

NASH
I think being a part of a community would do me good. I know it's a lot to ask. And now that I'm here it occurs to me you'llprobably say no. But I was wondering,could I kind of hang around?

Milnor stares at him across the desk, this arch rival, this old :riend. It is a moment before he speaks. Then ...

MILNOR
Will you be needing an office?

/,,,....-....,, (-----___:_

161

EXT.-PRINCETON GAMES QUAD-DAY

Two students at a games table play Nash on a triangular board. One keeps glancing over his shouldernervously.

WIDER. Standing behind him is Nash in his baggy suit. Rocking on his heals the way he does, he looks like amadman.

NASH
(stepping forward)
You might try protecting your-
STUDENT
Take a hike, huh weirdo.

NASH-CLOSE. Taken aback. A beat. HOLD on Nash standing alone.

162

INT.-FINE HALL-HALLWAY-AFTERNOON-WALKING

A young ADJUNCT ~s walking M~lnor fast down thelong hall.

ADJUNCT
So the old guy tries to get intothe library but he doesn't have ID ...

MILNOR

\,,___)

Why can't people readtheir memos ...

ADJUNCT
And he goes totally nuts ...

They arrive at the picture window at the end of the hall. Milnor looks down, expression darkening...

THROUGH THE WINDOW-COURTYARD-HIGH ANGLE

Amidst a crowd of gaping students, Nash is storming the courtyard in tight figure eights, CURSING at the empty air.

MILNOR
Shit!
163

EXT.-COURTYARD-AFTERNOON

Nash walks his figure eights. William keeps pace, matching Nash step for step, right in his face.

PARCHER
Is this what you are, Soldier? Some useless ghoul. The local madman?

·-·.:·.··•

/-~--. 'f-•·-----!.. \ NASH·

Get away from me!

PARCHER
You' regoing to end up old, in a cell. Worthless. Discarded.
NASH
Go to hell!
PARCHER
And while you rock and drool, the world will burn to ashes.

Two campus cops peel away from the inside of the crowd, heading towards Nash. Milnor gets there first, grabbing Nash.

MILNOR
{shakeshim) John? John.

Nash stops. Faces Milnor. William stands behind them.

MILNOR
I'm sorry...

~ \,.~/ Nash is looking around. At the gaping students. The still wary security guards. All staring at him.

~ILNOR I just heard what happened...

But John has stopped listening. His eyes are hollow with embarrassment, defeat.A beat. Then he walks offtowards the gate.

MILNOR
Nash ...

But John keeps walking. William smiles. Opens his arm.

PARCHER
Ladies andGentleman, the great John Nash.
164

INT.-NASH LIVING ROOM-EVENING

Nash sits on the couch, shirt untucked, tie half off, staring at the floor. His face, his posture, a portrait of surrender.

(OVER) The BANGING gets LOUDER. Finally, Nash rises. As if moving through molasses, heads towards the kitchen and the SOUND...

er·--,, INT. -NASH HOUSE-PANTRY-EVENING

Alicia sits on the floor next to the open back of the clothes dryer. Pieces of fan and belt are spread out before her.

NASH
Twas wrong. I don't think-
ALICIA
Can you check the motor?

Nash stares at her. Then he leans over, li:ts the part.

NASH
There's carbon build up on the rotator grooves ...

Nash squats, shaves a groove with a screwdriver.

NASH
Try it now ...

Alicia replaces the part. Tries the power. A HUMbut no action.

AL::::CIA It still won't work.

Nash looks at the assembly. Tries the switch. Feels the machine.

NASH
It just ran hot. Maybe try again tomorrow.

Alicia nods.

NASH
Rosen was right. I can't do-

She reaches forward, touches her finger to his lips to quiet him.

ALICIA
Maybe try again tomorrow.
165

INT.-NASH HOUSE-LIVING ROOM-LATER

Alicia ENTERS, toweling grease off her hands. No sign of John.

166

INT.-NASH HOUSE-TOOLSHED-NIGHT

John opens the door, turns on the light. No lab. Just walls and walls of clippings.

--~•..

PARCHER
Welcome back.

William stands in the corner, arms crossed.

PARCHER
Close the door.

John stares at him a beat. Then he obliges.

PARCHER
I want you to listen to me very carefully. None of this is real.

Nash can't help but stifle a LAUGH of su=prise. William smiles.

PARCHER
Ironic, I know. But true. Think about it? Do you really believe Rosen would just leave you in the house after you hit Alicia?
NASH
I didn't hit-.
PARCHER
That Princeton would let you hang around, ranting at their students like a T:'ladman?Thatyoucould think your way out of a disease?

William steps away from the wall, walks towards him.

PARCHER
Rosen drugged you,John. You're in a cell at Mclean. This is all a hypnotically induced hallucination to keep you from doing your work.

William has moved close.

PARCHER
It's 1954. Mind control through chemicals is the rage. We're doing it. They're doing it. To you. What you need to defeat them is belief. Not in me.But in your unique value. Belief in yourself. Surrender that and thousands die.

Nash stares athim a beat. Then he reaches upand grabs a clipping.

\__ _

NASH
You're the one who's not real.

He tears the clipping down. William looks him right in the eyes.

PARCHER
You see us. We see you. Who's to say?

Still holding his gaze, Nash tears another clipping from thewal:.

NASH
I am.

William leans in close. And smiles a smile to freeze yo~r heart.

PARCHER
You're still talking to me.
167

INT.-PRINCETON-FINE HALL-CONTINUOUS

Students file into a classroom. Nash stands at the door facing Charles and Marcee, Alicia'shandkerchief in his hand for courage.

CHARLES
You can't ignore me forever.
NASH
You were a good friend to me. The best. But I won't talk toyou again.

Nash bends on one knee before Marcee and touches her tiny cheek.

NASH
Or you either, baby girl.
(kissesher head)
Goodbye.

A PROFESSOR comes to thedoorway, stops to stare at this oddman on his knee, kissing thin air. Nash rises, turns to the Professqr.

NASH
I was wondering if I might audit your class?
PROFESSOR
I'm sorry, you have to be enrolled-

The young Professor's eyes narrow. He seems suddenly flustered.

PROFESSOR
Oh. Of course. Dr.Milnor mentioned. It's ...it'san honor sir.

John is about to step over the threshold of the door. He stops.

I

PROFESSOR
Is something wrong?
NASH
It's my first class.

And with that, he steps inside. Charles and Marcee follow.

168

INT.-NASH HOUSE-KIGHT

John wakes. Rises to get a drink of water. He pulls open the bathroom door but beyond there is only solid wall. He spins ...

169

INT.-MCLEAN-CELL-NIGHT

Small. Dark. Windows barred. John looks around wildly, heart sinking with shock and dread. William steps out of the shadows..

PARCHER

C We don't have much time.This is the

real world. Don't let them drug you again. Hang on, Nash-

(OVER) The doorUNLOCKS.Opens. A Nurse steps in, hypoin her hand, face hidden by shadow. She seeps forward into the light. Alicia.

170

INT.-NASH BEDROOM-NIGHT

Nash jolts awake with a start. Alicia is sitting up beside him.

ALICIA
John? Are you all right?

He stares at her a beat. Not so sure.

NASH
Give me time...
171

EXT.-PRINCETON LIBRARY-DAY

Morning breaks on the old stone building.

NT.-PRINCETON-LIBRARY-DAY

TRACKPAST a librarian, PAST oaktables and green reading lights.

(~~~~ \ A couple of STUDENTS stand before the large circular window, covered now with wax markings. ,The symbols seem disorganized.

STUDENT
Gibberish.

The second begins wiping off the window.

VOICE (OVER) Get away! Don't touch that!

They turn to find Nash, towering over them, face distraught.

NASH
Get away, do you hear me? Get away.
STUDENT
Freak.

They walk of:. Nash goes to the window, with his wax pencil begins trying to reconstruct the symbols.

A beat. Then he touches hishead to the glass, defeated, looksdown at the courtyard below. What he sees is startling. See itnow ...

C'7 EXT.-GAMES QUAD-DAY
'--···--- A slightly older Nash stands at a gaming table watching two kids finish a game of Nash. After they leave, he makes a move.

One of the kids returns to grab a forgotten book. Notices Nash's move. Nash starts to explain, looks over the boy's shoulder to ...

172

EXT.-COMMON-SPRING

A slightly older Nash sitsamidst a group of students under atree, listening to Milnor give a seminar.

Nash seems out of place. Marcee plays with his hairbut he ignores her, taking notes. Nash looks to see...

EXT-COURTYARD-DAY

A slightly older Nash walks in figure eights, silent as William SHOUTS in his face.

Students pass without a second glance, folks used to him by now. Nash looks towards...

·! '·,

/r,.,..,..--...,~', ',~--r EXT.-PRINCETON-MAINGATE

A slightly older Nash sits under a giant weeping willow, havir.ga picnic with Alicia. Nash LAUGHS, looks up towards...

173

EXT.-PRINCETON LIBRARY WINDOW-DAY

A figure looks down at campus through rows of symbols that cover the glassbefore him. It's Nash, ten years older then when we left him here.

174

INT.-LIBRARY-1970'S

Nash finishes writing on the pane. The syrrbolsare now orderly, their sequences in long, graceful lines.

He takes a step back, appraises his work. Allows a slight nod and walks off.

PA.~RIGHT.Two STUDENTS, one SKINNY, one FAIR, have been watching. Theymove to the window, stare at the equations.

SKINNY STUDENT
Oh, man. Look at this...

FAT STUDENT

(:)'

I think he solved Riemann ...

175

INT.-LIBRARY-MINUTES LATER

Nash works over his pad at one of the oak tables. Marcee sits on the table top in front of him, reading Green Eggs and Ham.

VOICE (OVER) ProfessorNash?

John looks up to face the Skinny Student.

STUDENT
You are John Nash, right?

Nash looks at him and smiles.

STUDENT
You solved the Riemann Hypothesis.
NASH
Actually there'san error in my last lineof code. But I'm getting there.

The Student PLONKShis textbook on the table. Opens it.

/.r-----~\ 116 '---•--". \

STUDENT
I've been studying your bargaining equilibria.

TEXT BOOK-CLOSE. Under the title FUNDAMENTALSIN MATHEMATICS is Nash's Bargaining Equilibria.

NASH
Hang around long enough and you become famous.
STUDENT
It's all I want. To be like you. Come up with something totally original, you know?

John looks at this boy, the ambition in his eyes. So bright, so familiar. The kid slides his notebook towards Nash.

STUDENT
Maybe you'd take a look...
NASH
When was the last time you ate?

C~j The boy stares at him blankly.

NASH
You know, food?

Nash closes the boy's notebook. Reaches intohis brown paper lunch bag and removes a sandwich.

NASH
The woman loves mayonnaise.

He slides half his sandwich across. Pats the chair next to him.

NASH
Why don' t you tell me how you're adjusting to school? I know how difficult it can be ...
176

EXT.-PRINCETON-GAMES QUAD-DAY

Nas~ sits at one of thegames tablesover a go board. Milnor walks up, older now, sits down across from him.

MILNOR
How many times did we sit here? A hundred?

·,

~...---...., 117 (____:_

NASH
A hundred lifetimes ago.
MILNOR
My secretary said you w~re looking for me.
NASH
I was thinking I might teach.
MILNOR
You're a terrible teacher, John.
NASH
Details, details.

Milnor stares at him.

MILNOR
What about, you know... Are they gone?
NASH
Oh no, they're not gone. Maybe they'll never be.

C~·' Nash looks. Sitting across the path are Charles, William and Marcee. The stare at him with little emotion.

NASH
But I've got-:.enused to ignoring them. And I think, as a result, they've kind of given up on me. Do you think that's the way it is with our dreams and our nightmares? That we have to keep feeding them for them to stay alive?
MILNOR
But they haunt you?
NASH
They're my past,Martin. Everybody's haunted by their past.

Milnor looks up. Shapely, Fox and Zweifelrace past. All young. He looks back at Nash and the cool autumn day is empty once more.

NASH
Do you understand?

.....,,~~ '.:,.-

MILNOR
Maybe. Almost.

A beat. Then John stands.

NASH
I've got togo. Alicia still worries if I'm late. You get a lot of attention when you're crazy.
MILNOR
I'll talk to the department. Maybe ~n the,Spring semester.

John nods, begins to head off.

MILNOR
Hey, Nash.

Nash spins. Milnor TAPS the game board in front of him.

MIL~OR You scared?

John stares at hi~. Then he grins.

As John goes and sits back down PULL BACKAND UP over these two old friends, playing with the hearts of the boys they once were.

177

EXT.-NASH HOUSE-TWILIGHT

Lights burn. Alicia's car pulls into the driveway.

178

INT.-NASH HOUSE-TWILIGHT

An unfinished painting sits on an easel. Walden Pond in winter, trees lifeless, but off the ice, a sparkle that might be hope.

The door opens and Alicia ENTERS. Looks around. The phone receiver hangs off t~ehook, swingingby the cord. Her expression darkens.

ALICIA
John?
179

INT.-CAR-PRINCETON-DRIVING-NIGHT

Alicia drives, expression intense. Looking. She spots a man in a doorway, RANTING. She slows.Just a stranger.

Alicia takes a beat, gathers herself. Drives on.

·...(.:

r~~..

180

EXT.-PRINCETON-NASH'S DORM-NIGHT

Nash stands on the same roof wherehe and Charles passed the flask, so very long ago.

'ALICIA Looking for divine inspiration?

John looks at her. A beat. Then into the distance again.

NASH
Milnor' s dead. His car crashed on 95.He was buying a goldfish.
ALICIA
Oh God, John,no. I'm so so=ry.
NASH
And I thought, what if I suddenly wake up in a cell and you're the enemy. What if the world shatters again and Ican't hold on?

She stares at him, eyes sparkling in the moonlight.

ALICIA
But you held on.
NASH
I held on.

He turns to face her, to look right into her eyes.

NASH
Because none of that felt as real, as the chance of losing you.

He looks up at the glittering panoply streaking the night sky.

ALICIA
Do you see the umbrella?
NASH
No. Just stars.
ALICIA
(pointing)
Here. Let me show you.

As she slides her arm around him, HOLD on this couple. Standing together against all the dark in theworld.

181

INT.-FINE HALL-DAY

NASH-CLOSE. Clean shaven, hair cut short. Dazzling.

NASH
I can do this. They' re only kids, right? What can they doto me. Write slanderous comments on bathroom walls. How bad could it be?
(a beat)
Horrible. It could be horrible.

From this angle John might be talking to himself. PULL BACK TO REVEALhe's not alone. Alicia is standing behind him.

NASH
(hands to his chest)
Oh no. Where's-

His face is suddenly child-like with panic. She reaches into her purse, takes out what he was looking for. Her handkerchief, which she folds and places in his pocket.

He smiles at her.

NASH
Thanks.

He turns andheads into the classroom. Alicia staresat him through the door as the kids settle.

182

INT.-CLASSROOM-DAY-CONTINUOUS

NASH
When I was a studenthere, they used to say you had to be certifiable to take this class.

John's smile is brilliant.

NASH
Now it seems you just have to be certifiable to teach it.

The kids BREAK out in LAUGHTER, the tension broken.

NASH
My name is JohnNash. And I am going to be your teacher. Welcome to mathematics in thought and action.

ALICIA-CLOSE. Eyes bright with pride.

\_----~ HOLDon the CLASSROOM DOORas Alicia slowlyDISSOLVES. The hallway CHANGES COLORonce, then AGAIN, time passing until we are ...

183

INT.-PRINCETON-FINE HALL-1990 1 S

THE DOORswings open.Nash emerges amidst a gaggle ofstudents. His suit is t·ailored,his face covered with a closebeard. The way the students cling to him, JABBERING, this man is one fine teacher.

MAN (OVER)
Professor Nash?

A MAN is standing bythe doorway. This is HOWARD KUHN.Nash's smile is polite, but vaguely puzzled. Turns to one of his students.

NASH
Do you see him?

The stude~t nods.

NASH
You'll forgive me. I'm always suspicious of new people.

Although Kuhn is puzzled, the students seem to take it in stride. (~~) They just like this guy.

STUDENT
See you next week, Professor.

Nash watches them go, smiling, paternal.

NASH
I have a son that age. Harvard.
(rolls his eyes)
So, now that you are real, who are you and what can I do'you for?

Kuhn takes a beat before speaking. Then ...

KUHN
Professor, my name isHoward Kuhn. I am here to tell you you are.being considered for the Nobel Prize.
184

INT.-FINE HALL-WALKING-MINUTES LATER

Nash and Kuhn walk. Students who pass greet Nash.

NASH
I'm sorry. I'm just a bit stunned .

......._.,.,·

KUHN
Over the last ten years your bargaining equilibria has become a foundation ofmodern economics.

They hav~ come to a familiar doorway. It's the faculty lounge.

High Tea is in progress. The formaldress is gone. The students are -multi-national,the waiters women. But the ritual is the same.

KUHN
Shall we have some tea?

Nash stares through the door a long beat. When he looks back at Kuhn, his eyes are sad.

NASH
I'm not formally a member of the department. I ...

There is a tragic tenderness to his expression, an acknowledgement of all that has been lost to time.

KUHN
I guest lectured here before the war. I'm sure it will be all right.

He puts his hand on the small of John's back. John looks at him warily and then, finally, steps over the threshold.

185

INT.-FINE HALL-MATH FACULTYLOUNGE-DAY

Nash and Kuhn sit across from each other. A young girl serves them tea from a silver service. Nash smiles at her.

NASH
Things have changed.

The sentence seems to resonate more deeply to him than he had intended as_it rolls offhis lips. He grows pensive a beat.Then ...

NASH
I thought the nominations for the Nobel Prize were secret. I thought you only knew if you won or lost.
KUHN
That is generally the case, yes.But these are special circumstances.The awards are substantial. Theyrequire private funding. As such, the image of the Nobel is quite important ...

,,,,----- 123 (.---\ Kuhn stops a beat. Takes a sip of tea.

NASH
So you came here to see if I was crazy. To see if I'd screw everything up if I actually won. Maybe dance at the podium or strip naked and squawk like a chicken.

It's Nash's tone that put's Kuhn at ease.

KUHN
Something like that, yes.

Nash stops, stares off. Then ...

NASH
Would I embarrass you? Yes, I suppose it's possible. You see,I am crazy. I am dependant on the newer medications. I still seethings that are not here. But I chooseto ignore ~hem. Like a diet of the mind. I do not indulge certain appetites. My appetite for patterns. And perhaps my appetite to imagine, even to dream. I have lost much. But ...

He opens his hands.

STUDENT
Professor Nash?

John looks up.A young faculty member is staring athim. He reaches into his pocket, layssomething down in front of him. It'shis pen.

WIDER

Another teacher stands behind him. He too layshis pen down before Nash. And now everyonein the room is rising, coming tohim, laying their pens down, one after another in a growing tribute to a lifetime of accomplishment.

KUHN
What ...?

The pens keepcoming. Nash opens his mouth to answer. Buthe can't, eyes suddenly flooding with tears for this journey taken so very far.

DISSOLVE TO:
186

INT.-ROYAL SWEDISHACADEMY-NOBEL CEREMONY

A giant hall. Full.Nash standsat the podium, blinking his eyes. Hundreds sit watching, as camera flashbulbs finally cease.

But Nash _juststands there. A long beat. And even longer.

KUHN-CLOSE. In the audience. Concerned.

ALICIA-CLOSE. In the front row. Starting to worry.

BACKTO NASH. Still standing there. See what he sees. Hundreds o: faces staring back at him..Finally, just when all seems lost...

NASH
Thank you. Thank you for your patience.

Buthe's not looking atthe speech before him. He's not looking at theAudience. He's looking only at Alicia.

NASH
I have always believed in numbers. In the equations and logics that lead to reason. I was wrong. It is only in the mysterious equations of

~ \\~..,._........·' love that anylogic or reason can be

found. Perhaps it is good to have a beautiful mind.But a better gift is to discover a beautiful heart.

And suddenly thereis no one else in the room but the two of them, Nash's magical vision revealing the patterns of the heart.

NASH
Thank you for your belief in me after so many years. You are the reason I am here today.

Nash reaches into his breast pocket and takes out something familiar. It's her rose embroidered handkerchief.

NASH
You are the reason I am.

And with that he tucks the handkerchief in his suit pocket.

NASH
Thank you.

12S

The room EXPLODES with APPLAUSE, suddenly full again. Zweifel stands, his APPLAUSEever more enth1.isiastic,asdoes Fox, and then those around them, all rising in ovation.

ALICIA-CLOSE. CLAPS as hard as the r~st, full of love and pride.

John just stands on stage. Taking it all in. Then, finally, he bows, folksAPPLAUDING even so loud that Nashcan't stifle a LAUGH.

187

INT.-ROYAL SWEDISHACADEMY-COCKTAIL RECEPTION

John stands with Alicia and amidst the dwindling well wishers.

ALICIA
Time to go?
NASH
Yes, please.

He helps her on with her wrap. That's when he sees them, standing by the door. Three familiar figures. Charles, Marcee and William.

Then William does something odd. He gives Nash a small salute.

ALICIA
What is it? What's wrong?

He turns to his wife. His smile is long in coming, but when it comes, it melts the worry on his face along with our hearts.

NASH
Nothing. Nothing at all.

He takes her hand, turning his back on them, man anq wife heading away together, outside, into the light and gone.

FINAL FADE TO BLACK.