"DEATH BECOMES HER" (1992)

STATS154pages119scenes30,013words22%dialogue60characters

Words

  • dialogue6,57022%
  • action21,99773%
  • other1,4464.8%

Scenes

location
  • INT 82
  • EXT 25
  • UNKNOWN 12
time
  • UNKNOWN 119
1

OPEN

DEATH BECOMES HER

by

Martin Donovan & David Koepp

July 25, 1991

revisions:

9/23/91 (blue) 10/22/91 (pink) 11/14/91 (yellow) 12/5/91 (green) 12/12/91 (goldenrod) 12/16/91 (buff) 1/27/92 {salmon) 1/30/92 (cherry) 2/12/92 (tan) 2/27/92 (gray) 3/10/92 (ivory) 3/25/92 (lilac)

THIS MATERIAL IS THE PROPERTY OF UNIVERSAL STUDIOS AND IS INTENDED AND RESTRICTED SOLELY FOR USE BY UNIVERSAL PERSONNEL. DISTRIBUTION OR DISCLOSURE OF THIS MATERIAL TO UNAUTHORIZED PERSONS IS PROHIBITED. THE SALE, COPYING, OR REPRODUCTION OF THIS MATERIAL IN ANY FORM IS ALSO PROHIBITED.

FADE IN:

1

EXT NEW YORK SKYLINE NIGHT

A soft summer shower flashes and RUMBLES over New York City. A legend --

BROADWAY, 1979.

The title of a show, "Songbird!," blinks in red neon on a theatre marquis, and next to it the words "Preview Tonight!" Up above the title, the name "MADELINE AS,HTON"glitters in brilliant black letters.

A COUPLE burst out of the theatre and breathe the night air as if for the first time.

MAN
A musical versi on of "Sweet Bird of Youth?" Are they kidding?
WOMAN
Thank God you wanted to leave . - \%

They hurry down the street as q"'-~OND COUPLE comes out of the theatre. v:\\J

~ ~~ONO WOMAN

Could you believe, Madeline Ashton? Talk about waking the dead.

SECOND MAN
I gotta get a drink .

The Second Woman tosses her Playbill, which lands face up on the sidewalk in the rain. There's a picture of a woman on thecover, aglamorous actress and we --

CUT TO:
2

INT THEATRE NIGHT

the Actress's face, and the picture on the Playbill isn't exactly from yesterday. MADELINE ASHTON, fortyish, has just reached the point where age is beginning to encroach on her incredible looks. She's elegant, she's beautiful, but if you look closely behind her eyes in a quiet moment, you'll notice something else.

She's terrified.

Right now she's singin' and dancin' up a:st·orm;seemingly without benefit of training in singin' or dancin'.

22 Oct 91

A DOZEN GUYS IH 'l'U;{EDOEScarry her across the stage while she sings the fi..cstact curtain number, "Me." Walkouts continue * in the audience.

IN THE AUDIENCE,

two hands are intertwined. He, DR. ERNEST MENVILLE, is in his forties, a bit rumpled, but clear-eyed. She, HELEN SHARP, is about five years younger. Pretty but dowdy, Helen seems to have completely reinvented style by ignoring it. "Provincial" is too harsh, "homey" is a better word for Helen.

Ernest beams, thoroughly enjoying the play. He leans over to Helen and whispers .

ERNEST
She 's sensational!

Helen looks at him, concerned, strangely saddened by his enjoyment of the play.

CUT TO:
3

INT BACKSTAGE NIGHT

MADELINE is in her dressing room backstage, examining her face critically in the mirror, holding the skin back in an imaginary facelift.

MADELINE

(muttering to herself) Wrinkled, wrinkled little star hope they'll never see the scars.

ROSE, Madeline' sfactotum, comes into the room.

ROSE

Your guests are here, Miss Ashton. Miss Helen Sharp, with a gentleman.

MADELINE
(nervous, snappy)
How does she look?
ROSE
Who?
MADELINE
Helen, you idiot.

22 Oct 9 1

ROSE * Oh! Uh -- I don't know. Smart, I guess. Kind of classy.

MADELINE

Who asked you? What do you know about smart and classy? Smart and classy compared to who?

ROSE * Well, compared to

MADELINE * Watch it, Rose. You're too old to be out of a job.

ROSE

What did I say? OBHOO 4

MADELINE * Oh, please. If you get any slower you'll be declared dead.

The door opens. HELEN enters with ERNEST, who follows her rather shyly. Madeline abandons all her nervousness and turns toward Helen with the greatest theatrical smile.

MADELINE (cont. )
Hell, darling, I can't believe it!
HELEN
How are you, Mad?
MADELINE
It's been so long. And don't you dare say how long.

They kiss. Madeline's eyeline shifts towards Ernest, who nods and claps his hands politely in reference to the play.

HELEN
Mad, I want you to meet Dr. Ernest Menville ,my fiancee.

MADELINE * Ernest Menville, the plastic surgeon? I've read all about you, Doctor, how nice to finally meet you.

5 Dec 91

ERNEST
You were wonderful, Miss Ashton.
HELEN
Ernest is quite a fan . He never told me he had such a Madeline Ashton thing.
MADELINE
Oh, I'm sure he doesn't have a thing. Do you?

ERNEST

(blushing) Oh, no I, uh well, I, uh, I --

He trails off, just looking at Helen and laughing uncomfortably.

MADELINE

I'm so happy for you both. How did you meet? Where? Why?

ERNEST
Helen edited the first medical text I wrote, and we, uh, well, you know

(to Hele:°ELINE (\~\)g * An editor? What happened t~t!'r'ewriting?

HELEN ~~ (a little embarrassed) Well, still trying.

ERNEST

Oh , don't be modest. She's brilliant. And the world will soon find out.

MADELINE
Tell me, doctor.
(coquettishly, touching her face)
Do you think I'm starting to need you?

Ernest laughs uncomfortably again and shakes a finger at Madeline. Helen slides an arm possessively through his, pulling him closer.

JA

12 Dec 91

MADELINE (cont . )
So, have you two set a date?

HELEN ERNEST

Yes, we have. No, we haven't .

They look at each other. A smile grows across Madeline's face like a fungus .

CUT TO:
4

INT OPERATING ROOM DAY

AN ENORMOUS EYE i s visible throughasurgeon's lighted magnifying viewer. The eye is closed, and creased on the side by crow's feet . A scalpel moves u p alongside theeye and prepares to make an incision.

ERN EST, the surgeon wielding the scalpel, is in gown and mask. He addresses his ASSISTANTS in rapid- fire jargon. *

ERNEST * Move the retractors over, I'm going after the lateral fat pad . Better put a hemostat on it too; there're some decent sized vessels in there and if I clip one I don't need any extra bleeding.

He goes to make the incision, but stops, hearing a strange TAPPING sound . He looks up, confused .

The TAPPING comes again. He looks over to the door . MADELINE stands outside. She waves through the gla~s. She looks rav-ishing.

Ernest, surprised, grins broadly beneath the mask and waves back with one gloved, bloody hand.

CUT TO:

5 Dec 91

5

INT HELEN'S APARTMENT NIGHT

An austere place, done in pastels, dimly lit. HELEN sits on a sofa, tense, twisting a handkerchief in her hands. A cat winds around her legs. ERNEST, still in his overcoat, paces in front of her.

ERNEST

For heaven's sake, it was dinner, a business dinner. The woman wanted my professional opinion .

HELEN
Ernest, you don't know Madeline the way I do. She wants you. She wants you because you're mine. I've lost men to her before -- she turns on the flash and glitter and they're gone. That's why I wanted you to meet her before we got married. I had to know if you could pass the Madeline Ashton test. Please, please don't fail. I couldn't take it again, I'd -- I don't know what I'd do.
ERNEST
Do you know how silly you sound?

He goes to her and takes her hand.

\¾ ERNEST (co~ ~ I have absolutely no tRterest in Madeline Ashton. ~<:o'~

CUT TO:
6

INT MARRIAGE HALL DAY

ERNEST stands in a dark suit, hands folded in front of him. A PRIEST stands before him .

PRIEST

And do you, Ernest, take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife, to have and to hold, to love and to cherish, in sickness and in health, till death do you part?

5 Dec 91

ERNEST
I do.
PRIEST
Then by the power vested in me, I now pronounce you man and wife.

Ernest turns to a bride standing next to him. He smiles happily, reaches out, and lifts her veil. It's MADELINE. He kisses her and a small group of GUESTS cheer.

Ernest is about to pull out of the rather chaste wedding kiss when Madeline runs one hand into the back of his hair, grabbing a handful of it. She runs her other hand down his chest, heading south. She pulls his head forward and puts her lips to his ear.

She WHISPERS something sexy, and from the look on Ernest's face it's hot enough. to light a cigarette from.

ERNEST
Oh God --

They kiss again, hard, and the CHOIR bursts into the "Hallelujah."

IN THE BACK OF THE CHURCH,

almost hiding in the shadows, is HELEN, wee~~ devastated, clutching a handkerchief tightly in he..£~~ds. She stares at the front of the church, at Ernest an~cleline.

They finally break from their kiss and turn, sweeping down the aisle toward the doors to the CHEERING of Guests. Helen steps back, further into the shadows, out of sight. They sweep almost right past her, but don't see her, totally absorbed in one another, GIGGLING happily .

They burst out the doors and down the steps of the church.

Helen stares after them. She still clutches the handkerchief, even more tightly now, and a trickle of blood oozes out from her palms, staining the cloth red.

CUT TO:

5A

23 Sept 91

7A

INT HELEN'S APARTMENT DAY

An enormous woman's butt stares us smack in the face. A legend --

5YEARS LATER.

The apartment we're in is an absolute pigsty, the home of a lunatic, jammed with newspapers, food cartons, and dozens of cats, which crawl everywhere. Snow falls outside , visible through a window.

There is a relentless POUNDING at the front door.

VOICE (o.s.) come on, lady! We know you're in there!

The butt ignores the pounding and waddles across the kitchen. A hand opens a cabinet. Thirty or forty cans of vanilla cake f rosting are stacked neatly inside. The hand picks one and cranks off the top.

VOICE (.q.~r)4 . This is your las~ pP.ffi.i!ng!You can't just ignore an e -Victionnotice!

Finally, the owner of the butt turns around. It's HELEN, and she is an absolute mess. She's only five years older, but at least fifty pounds heavier, and shows no concern for her appearance. Her chin is streaked with frosting.

She turns away from the door and goes back to the TV. She picks up a remote control a nd pushes play.

On the TV, i t's an oldmovie, from the late sixties, a murder mystery. MADELINE, much younger, dressed in evening wear , has come home to her apartment to find an INTRUDER.

MADELINE
(in the film)
What are you doing here?!

The Intruder jumps her and strangles her with a stocking ~ Madeline SCREAMS and dies. Helen smiles.

VOICE (o.s . ) We ' re breaking the door down!

Helen ignores them, pushes rewind, then play, then watches the same scene a gain. Madeline SCREAMS and dies. Helen rewinds it again.

SB

14 Nov 91

Behind her, the door SMASHES open and light floods the apartment. COPS and the LANDLORD hurry in, then turn and reel at the stench.

On the TV, Helen has started Madeline's death scene again. The Cops come over and grab her by the arms, hauling her to her feet and dragging her to the door.

Helen doesn't resist them, just strains to look back, over her shoulder, at the TV, grinning as she watches Madeline die. Again.

CUT TO:
7B

INT PSYCHIATRIC WARD DAY

HELEN, cleaned up now but still vastly overweight, sits in a straight backed chair in a drab, institutional room in a psychiatric ward, twisting a handkerchief in her hands. * There are a half dozen other PATIENTS there, part of group therapy. The PSYCHOLOGIST, a tough woman. in her forties, looks at Helen. :-~~

PSYCHO~ST What about you, He;xM::·We haven't heard from you i~'c(while. Do you have anything ~ - wantto talk about with the group?

The Group all turn and look at Helen apprehensively. One even bites a fingernail in dread.

Helen looks up. Her face is blank. Finally:

HELEN
Madeline Ashton.

She barely has the words out of her mouth when the other Group Members throw up their hands and GROAN, some even SHOUTING at her in anger. The Psychologist leaps to her feet and points an accusing finger at Helen .

PSYCHOLOGIST

In my office!

CUT TO:

5C

12 Dec 91

7C

INT PSYCHOLOGIST'S OFFICE DAY

The PSYCHOLOGIST follows HELEN into her office and closes the door behind them .

PSYCHOLOGIST
I can't take this any more, Helen! Six months of therapy, you're not one pound lighter, and we're still talking about Madeline Ashton!?
HELEN
Do you think I enjoy talking about Madeline Ashton?
PSYCHOLOGIST
Do you think I enjoy it? ! I don't know how many-different ways I can tell you this! Madeline Ashton has .!:!_Othi~to do with you any more! You have to tell yourself she doesn't even exist! For you to have a life for any of us to have a life - -you have to forget about her! You have to erase her from your mind. You have to completely eliminate any trace of - -
HELEN
(looking up suddenly)
You're right .
PSYCHOLOGIST
(stops short)
What?
HELEN
You're absolutely right. I don't know why I didn't see it before . I have to eliminate Madeline.
PSYCHOLOGIST
That's it! Eliminate all the --

5D

~ I

14 Nov 91

7C CONTINUED 7C *

HELEN
And I should get in shape.
PSYCHOLOGIST
Right!
HELEN
Lose a few pounds.
PSYCHOLOGIST
Exactly!

HELEN

Get in shape lose a few pounds (hard, and we just know she's lost something in the translation) eliminate Madeline .

CUT TO:

~

8

EXT BEVERLY HILLS DAY '0

~

A MES SENGER on a moped PUTTS dov{l\~he street in an exclusive section of Beverly Hills, clutchYng an envelope in his hand. He passes exquisitely manicured estates, all of them protected by heavy, wrought iron security bars that line their front yards and driveways. He stops in front of one such estate and rings at the gate. Another legend

BEVERLY HILLS, 7 YEARS LATER.

CUT TO:

12 Dec 91

9

INT MANSION DAY

ROSE, twelve years older, carriesa breakfast tray smoothly up this mansion's central staircase to the second floor .The breakfast is simple -- yogurt, an apple,some tea, and two Ice-Blue eye patches. *

The messenger's envelope is alsoon the tray, and now we have a chance to read the name written on the front -- "Madeline Ashton-Menville."

CUT TO:
10

INT MADELINE'SBEDROOM DAY

MADELINE is asleep in bed, her face tied back by triangles of plastic that prevent her facial muscles from relaxing. She's not horizontal, but almost sitting up with her head rigid, resting on a hard cushion. By now, Madeline's pushing fifty from the wrong side, but she has kept herself in excellent condition. Her plastic surgeon was a genius.

ROSE comes silently into the room and deposits the breakfast tray next to the bed. She puts on some soft CHAMBER MUSIC.

Madeline wakes up as if on cue. She opens her eyes very wide and strokes her neck languidly with a gloved hand. Rose goes to the drapes . Madeline puts on the eye patches. *

MADELINE
All right .

Rose opens the drapes. The room is invaded by sunlight.

ROSE
(whispering, by rote)
Good morning, madam . You look absolutely marvelous.
MADELINE
Aren't you forgetting something?

; ROSE .......(J, Today is Thursday, madam. I thou~fif ,) I only -- {) ~

MADELINE
Never mind. I think from now on I want you to say it every morning .

27 Jan 92

ROSE
Very well.
(with feigned spontaneity)
Oh, madam! You look younger every day!
MADELINE
Thank you, Rose.

Rose goes to the door. Madeline picks up the envelope on the tray and opens it .

MADELINE (cont.)
What's this?

ROSE

Your tickets, for Helen Sharp's reception tonight . They just came.

Madeline pulls out two large, ornate tickets.

MADELINE * Table assignments. Clever little witch. (reading, with contempt) " ForeverYoung - -a new beauty book by Helen Sharp . "

ROSE

Oh, I like that title!

MADELINE * How about " ForeverYoung and Eternally Fat." You like that one too, Rose?

She turns and looks at the vast expanse of un- slept-in bed next to her. She looks at Rose.

MADELINE (cont.)
I find it hard to believe he g~t up early and made his half of the bed .
ROSE
No, madam.

She looks up and points to the ceiling. Madeline sighs.

Ml"\DELINE Again?

CUT TO :

14 Nov 91

11

INT THIRD FLOOR DAY

ROSE carries another tray upstairs, this one even simpler * a Bloody Mary and a bottle of aspirin. She opens a door to the third floor of the house, revealing it to be a spacious loft with an enormous skylight in the middle of the cathedral ceiling. It looks like someone's sanctuary -- there ' sa pool table, a television, an easy chair, and a wet bar.

On a table next to the comfy chair, a framed picture of MADELINE and ERNEST on their wedding day fights for space with empty glasses and booze bottles.

Someone ' s feet are on the chair, but coming from the wrong direction. Following the body down, we see ERNEST, lying on the floor where he passed out in last night's ~lathes .

Unlike Madeline, he looks older. He looks lined, He looks, frankly, a wreck. A beeper on his belt BEEPS away, but he sleeps on peacefully. Rose shuts off his beeper, checks the number, and wakes him by setting the cold Bloody -Maryglass on his forehead. He MOANS, opens his eyes and looks up at her. \x

("'~ ERNEST ~ Is this an angel I see b~ore me? ~ ROSE (giggles, flattered) Dr. Menville, how sweet.

ERNEST
Not you, Toots.

He closes his hand around the dr i nk,drags himself up into the easy chair, and takes a deep swallow. The drink has a strong, soothing effect, and his head seems to clear. There are a couple scalpels on the table next to him. He picks one up and plays with it idly.

ERNEST (cont.)
Is it up yet?
ROSE
Yes sir. It's in the bath.

Ernest sighs and holds out the scalpel, sighting on a dart board on the wall about fifteen feet away. His hand is a drinker's hand, and it shakes so badly he can barely hold it straight.

0 ZING! He tosses the scalpel. He Eisses wildly, TRUNKING the scalpel into the wall a few feet from the board. In fact, that whole wall is peppered with holes, and the dart board itself is like new.

ROSE (cont. )
Your beeper was beeping, sir.
(whispering)
Mr. Franklin again.

Ernest sighs.

CUT TO:
12

INT MANSION FOYER DAY

ERNEST comes down the stairs from the third floor, wearing a wrinkled jacket and tie. He looked better when he was still asleep. He looks both ways and starts down the hall.

MADELINE comes out of her room at th~ same time, now fully dressed. She looks up as the two~t"'them meet at the head of the stairs. \)

~INE

0 Oh. It's yoll\)

ERNEST
Fine, thank you, darling. Like a rock.
MADELINE
Well, you're dressed. Special occasion?
ERNEST
work.

ROSE appear the bottom of the stairs. Madeline speaks to her as she and Ernest descend.

MADELINE (cont:)
We're leaving for the dinner around eight 1Rose . I'll need the masseuse and.the whole team no later than four.

14 Nov 91

ROSE
But madam ,tonight ' smy night off .
MADELINE
I'm sure you 'll work it out. You ' re a wonder .
ERNEST
Dinner? What dinner?
MADELINE
You know perfectly well.
(acid on her tongue)
Helen Sharp's book party.

A brief look of genu i ne happiness crosses Ernest's face, but he immediately wipes it away.

ERNEST
Oh -- do we have to?

MADELINE~\,\ She sent tab l e:_~~ments . You ' re with the VIP's,\:)~uwith the SOB ' s.

ERNEST * Oh, He l en would never do anything

MADELINE
watch your step with her, understand? If there ' sone thing I won ' ttolerate, it's infidelity.
CUT TO:
13

I NT BEACH HOUSE DAY

A woman ' sfingernails run down a man ' smuscular,well- tanned back, l eaving long white streaks behind. MADELINE, supine, is making love with DAKOTA, a stud in his late twenties, in * a small beach cabana. Madeline' s style is theatrical, grandiose , vocal; Dakota ' smovements give the distinct impression he is working on a chain gang .

Madeline reaches a climax and Dakota rol ls off of her. She lies still, gasping for air, staring up at the ceiling. He pull s on a pair of shorts, goes to the window, and stretches,* the afternoon sun slanting across his sweaty body.

CONTI NUED

14 Nov 91

MADELINE
Thank God you were here . I know we were sup posed to see each other tonight ,but this Helen thing has me an absolute wreck. I bet she holds a grudge. I ' m sure she does. She always resented my success with men, ever since school .

Dakota is ignoring her completely, as he ' s ata mirror now, examining his hip, where he has found some excess fat.

DAKOTA
Where did this come from?

He starts to do hip exerc i ses .

MADELINE * Oh, I don't know. out of her own ~ insecurity, I suppos e. But is t n at !!Yfault? Is it my fault I ~ohlt' the way I do and she lookso..,o~eway she does? Is that a reason ~ ·\fl.ateme?

DAKOTA
(of the fat)
You work and you wor kand you work - -

I I JI MADELINE *

And people dump on you. Exactly.

t

She made fun of me, her and her friends, those miserable Par k - Avenue- private- school- clenched- tooth

Dakota checks his watch .

DAKOTA
Look, uh, you gotta

14 Nov 91

MADELINE
Put it behind me, you're absolutely right. You see things so clearly. God, I feel so free here!

She SIGHS and rolls around in the sheets, but then stops and stares up at the ceiling in horror, at a giant mirror strategically placed over the bed.

MADELINE (cont.)
Oh, God! Look at that! There ' s an obscene little line running all the way from my eyelid to my cheekbone! How many times have I told you -- NO PILLOWS!

She leaps out of bed with the sheet wrapped aro~nd her and scurries into the bathroom. ~

Dakota rolls his eyes .

CUT TO:

12A

22 Oct 91

14

EXT PARKING LOT DAY

ERNEST parks his car in a parking lot ,:-nwh=.t.looks like a large estate. He takes his bag from the passenger seat -- and a belt from a bottle under the driver•s -- and gets out.

MR. FRANKLIN, a nervous man in a gray suit, is waiting for * him at the edge of the parking lot and strides forward quickly when he sees Ernest, his face brightening.

MR. FRANKLIN * Dr. Menville, thank God! I'm so sorry to call you at the last minute! You know how I hate the last minute!

He leads Ernest across the lush, well-kept grounds.

MR. FRANKLIN (cont.)

He's been completely prepped. our top staff have all been summoned and are waiting for you.

ERNEST

Good. He's going to be just fine. Calm down. DB HO O 4 MR. FRANKLIN calm? I am calm! Eve_ryone is calm

here!

They round a corner, passing a sign. The first word is patially obscured by a column, but the rest is clear:

-EST LAw"'NHORTUARY. *

CUT TO:
15

INT MORTUARY CORRIDOR DAY

ERNEST strides briskly down a corridor in the mortuary, flanked by MR. FRANKLIN and a growing retinue of ASSISTANTS. Ernest is taking gown and gloves from the Assistants as he walks, preparing for surgery.

12 Dec 91

ERNEST
Who is it? Someone?

MR .FRANKLIN

Fernando Rivas. The actor. You know, the handsome one? Our reputation's really on the line this time. His family insists on an open casket, but

ERNEST
It's bad?
MR. FRANKLIN
(nods)
He drowned in his hot tub. Very bloated . Very swollen.
(a professional whisper)
He was making love to his new fiancee. Eighteen years old. From Cuba. He 's got this expression of happiness on his face that's completely inappropriate.

They've reached a set of double doors with the word "EMBALMING" stencilled across them.

ERNEST
All right. We'll try to give him a little character. A little depth .
MR. FRANKLIN
Depth? Oh no, people have to recognize him!

They sweep through the double doors and into the~ embalming room . Poor FERNANDO RIVAS is visible for a se&,~~, laid out on a slab, grinning like an idiot. ~Yo

CUT :;,1t$:~

lJA

14 Nov 91

16

EXT CHAGALL'S DAY

Chagall 's is a sleek, expensive salon in the middle of downtown Beverly Hills. Its front windows are smoked, mak ing it impossible for us to see inside.

An expensive car with a "MAD" vanity plate pulls up in * front and MADELINE steps out. A VALET whisks the car into a garage as the DOORMAN nods discreetly to Madeline and admits her to the salon. TWO TOURISTS walking down the sidewalk try to sneak a look inside, but the Doorman closes the door quickly behind Madeline, blocking their view.

CUT TO:
17

INT CHAGALL ' S DAY

Inside Chagall 's ,CUSTOMERS receive haircuts, facials, and the like. MADELINE comes up to the reception desk, where a SVELTE WOMAN in a trim business suit greets her.

RECEPTI ONIST
Good afternoon, Mis&shton. ·. ·.•'+

Ml\DELINE How are y~m•:\Three o'clock, with Anna. ( \' I• RECEPTIONIST Yes, I know . You can go down.

She pushes a button bel ow her desk and a small gate BUZZES. Madeline pushes it open and steps behind the reception desk, to a tiled mirror wall. A SECURITY GUARD pushes a button in the wall and an elevator door opens. Madeline and the Guard step inside.

CUT TO:
18

INT LOWER LEVEL DAY

The elevator doors open on the lower level of Chagall's. This is an exclusive, elegant place, all black leather and white carpet. Everything is soft, soothing. Not one hair dryer screams, not one gossipy voice whines -- just here and there are the low, reassuring MURMURS of BEAUTY THERAPISTS.

The SECURITY GUARD leads MADELINE back, into the depths of the lower level. They wa l kdown a long, twisting hallway that has private rooms off each side.

23 Sept 91

Madeline glances inside one of the rooms. A MIDDLE AGED MAN * reclines in a black leather examination chair, an IV stand on either side of him, a plastic bag hanging from each. One of the bags contains a deep red liquid, the other a thick, deep blue one.

The blue is being pumped into the Man's left arm, the red is being drawn out of his right. We catch only a glimpse before the door is shut in our face.

CUT TO:
19

INT TREATMENT ROOM DAY

MADELINE is having a heated discussion with ANNA, her beauty therapist, who is in her early twenties. A video camera in one corner of the ceiling monitors their conversation.

MADELINE
Do you have any idea how much money I've spent in here over the years? A fortune, J()'G"rAassureyou.

,.~ (for the third time) I'm sorry, a plasma separation is a very traumatic process for the body . Our policy clearly prohibits more than one in a six month period.

MADELINE
So? I t's been nearly that long.
ANNA
Miss Ashton, you had one three weeks ago. What about a nice collagen buff instead?
MADELINE
A collagen buff? You might as well tell me to wash with soap and water! Tonight is important to me!
ANNA
I could do your makeup myself if --

23 Sept 91

MADELINE
Makeup is pointless! It doesn't do anything any more. You're not listening to me! You don't even care. You sit there with your twenty-two year old skin and your tits like rocks and you laugh at me and you --

She realizes how she sounds and catches herself.

MADELINE (cont. )
(calmly)
I could pay you extra. You know what I mean. On a -- personal basis, if that's what you're looking for. Money is no object. It means nothing to me.

Anna GASPS, looking over Madeline's should~. Madeline turns . ~ C)()U.

JEAN PAUL CHAGALL, ageless, contin~ ~ al,the ultimate

expression of sophistication, stands in the doorway to the room. He's elegant as hell, dressed in a black silk suit with gold flower lapel pin we may not even notice.

MADELINE (cont.)
Monsieur Chagall!
CHAGALL
Leave us alone, Anna.

The Therapist hurries out. Chagall closes the door behind her and looks at Madeline, saying nothing for a moment.

MADELINE
I suppose I should apologize. I --
CHAGALL
(cutting her off)
I am very sensitive to your torment.
MADELINE
Excuse me?
CHAGALL
Unfortunately, we are mere mortals here. We are restricted by the laws of nature.

23 Sept 91

He looks at her, his right eye fluttering. He could be winking, or it could be a tick, but it's definitely odd.

MADELINE
(slightly disconcerted)
Well, what more could one expect?
CHAGALL
That depends. I couldn't help but overhear your joke about money being no object.
MADELINE
That wasn 1 tajoke.
CHAGALL
I see.
(pause)
Have you heard of Lisle von Rhumans?
MADELINE QA
No . \J~ ~C) CHAGALL Of course you haven't. Very few have. Only a select group. She may be able to help you.

He pulls a business card from his shirt pocket and holds it out to Madeline.

CHAGALL (cont. )
This is her address. She accepts callers day or night.

Madeline reaches out to take the card, but he pulls it back with a word of warning.

CHAGALL (cont. )
A very select group. You understand .
MADELINE
(not really)
Sure.

She takes the card. Chagall smiles.

14 Nov 91

■ CHAGALL

I'm glad this happened, Miss Asht on. We'll be seeing more of you.

His eye starts that wink ing thing again, then he turns and leaves . Madeline shakes her head, tears the card i n half, and drops it in her purse.

MADELINE
Weirdo.
CUT TO:
20

EXT STREET DAY

ERNEST drives into the parking l ot of Dominick's, a friendly - * looking bar on the outskirts o f Beverly Hills.

CUT TO:

~

21

INT DOMINICK'S DAY~ \J

The bar is a warm, intimate p~~e, all pol i shed woodsand heavy brass railings.

At one end of the bar itself, a DRUNK, long hair, bearded, s l umps overa drink, semi-comatose. He looks like a permanent fixture.

E RNEST comes in and slides onto one of the bar stools. He runs his hands affectionately over the bartop. TONI, the bartender, a friendly woman in her mid- forties, sees him.

TONI
Hey, Dr. M!
ERNEST
How are you, Ton i?
TONI
can't comp l ain.Yourself?
ERNEST
Could . Won't .

Toni laughs genuinely. Ernest smiles for the first time today and they launch into what seems like a very familiar exchange:

5 Dec 91

2 1 CONTINUED 21

TONI
What can I get you?
ERNEST
Fill a glass with scotch.
TONI
With a little ice to wake it up?
ERNEST
But not wide awake!

Toni smiles and grabs a tumbler. She scoops up two cubes with the glass in one hand and upends a scotch pottle with the other. As she works, Ernest's eyes mist over with emotion. He watches Toni's balletic movements, clearly in lov e with the CRACK of the scotch cap, the SWISH of the liquid, the POP of the ice. She slides the drink down the bar to him with a flourish, and it nestles into his palm.

roNI * One drowsy scotch . Some peanuts?

ERNEST * (thinks) Pretzels, I think.

TONI * Just opened the bag. ~~

Out of nowhere , she produces a dish of pret~ ls. Ernest * smiles. He toasts the Drunk at the end ~ the bar, who doesn't respond. Ernest drinks anyway ~ e closes his eyes as he swallows, deeply soothed. Sudde~ the peace of the bar is shattered by an unmistakeable voice MADELINE's voice.

MADELINE (o.s.)
What are you doing here?!

Ernest flinches reflexively at the sound. He turns and looks up to the TV above the bar. One of Madeline's old movies is playing, the one Helen watched earlier. Young Madeline has returned home in evening clothes and is about to be killed by the Intruder. Toni goes to turn it off.

ERNEST
Wait a second.

5 Dec 91

Toni looks up and recognizes Madeline on the screen.

TONI
Oh, hey! Look! "Dark Windows!"

Ernest watches, a look of longing on his face, as the Intruder strangles Madeline, she SCREAMS, and dies.

ERNEST
(sighs happily)
You can turn it off now.
TONI
(she does)
So how is that wife of yours? She's one in a million, isn't she?
ERNEST
She doesn't love me any more.
TONI
But ·let's face it, there's plenty more where she came from.
ERNEST
I should leave her.
TONI
You have every right.

ERNEST '<' But I took a vow. "Till,..,.~athdo us part." And when you sinWas low as I have, your word is all you have left.

TONI
And I admire you for that.

Ernest looks up at her gratefully. He slides a hundred dollar bill across the bar to her. She slides it back to him.

TONI (cont . )
Sympathy's on the house.

Toni, who has been wiping the bar with a towel, wipes down near the Drunk. She lifts his head, wipes under it, and sets it back down gently -- on a little pile of cocktail napkins. * Ernest smiles.

5 Dec 91

ERNEST
You know something? I envy him. He's really got it all, No wife, no obligations, nobody to answer to, no wife, no possessions .
(finishes his drink)
And no wife.
TONI
Come on, Dr. M, There's gotta be a bright side.

ERNEST * You think so? I'm old, Toni, before my time. I gave other people youth, but I wasted my own life with lousy choices. All I really want is to be able to start the whole darn thing again, but that just doesn't happen. You tell me where's the bright side in that?

Toni looks at him, thinking, truly saddened.

TONI
You still love her, don't you?

Ernest looks up at her . He doesn't answer, just finishes his drink. He signals for another, and she fills his glass. He drinks that one too. She looks at him, st\~1 waiting for an answer.

ERNEST
Yeah.
(looking at Lucky bastard.
CUT TO:
22

INT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

MADELINE comes down the stairs, stunningly dressed and with an attitude. ROSE descends behind her, trying to adjust something on the back of Madeline's dress.

MADELINE
What are you doing?! Stop touching me!
ROSE
The label was showing!

20A

5 _Dec91

MADELINE
Don't just stand there, fix itl
ROSE
Iwould have left you years ago if Iwasn't such a masochist .
MADELINE
But you are, Rose. You are a masochist:- This is a dream job for you.

Rose SIGHS and starts to fix the label again .

MADELINE (cont.)
I refuse to feel sorry for you, . Rose. When you have something for me to feel sorry about, please let me know. When you're eight years old and your father walks out and leaves you and your mother in the Oakwood Trailer Park in Piscataway, New Jersey --

Rose, who has obviously heard this story before, mouths the last few words along with Madeline before Madeline cuts herself off as an upstairs door opens and ERNEST comes out of their bedroom. Madeline looks up at him. He lopki pretty dishevelled, with little pieces of bloody toilet \paperstuck to his face. Madeline shakes her head as he '£Omes down.

~ MADELINE (cont s:} * Ernest! All dressed up b,_~nce again you intend to be& 1'elife of the party. I'm so ~ ud. What is this obsession you have with embarrassing me? I buy you things, why don't you wear them?! (dramatically) I'm not going!

ERNEST
(quickly)
Okay.
26

MADELINE

No, you're not going.

ERNEST
Fine.

5 Dec 91

He turns and starts back up the stairs.

MADELINE * Oh no, you're coming . You're coming. If poor Helen insists on humiliating herself, the least we can do is be there to watch . (mocking) "Forever Young." Right, and eternally fat.

CUT TO:
22A

INT LIMO NIGHT

ERNEST and MADELINE ride in the back of a limo as it pulls up in front of a crowded, expensive restaurant. They're both looking out their windows, lost in their own thoughts, but there's a strange sound in the car. It's Ernest, who breathes loud. No special reason, he's just a loud breather, * and in a quiet moment like it really gets to Madeline. She tries to bite her tongue, but can't .

MADELINE

Could you please stop breathing?

Before he can respond, a VALET PARKER pulls their doors open and Madeline sweeps out, leaving her comment for Ernest to interpret.

Ernest gets out and Joins Madeline as restaurant. She notices the crowds.

MADELINE
Jesus. What'd she do,
23

INT RESTAURANT NIGHT

The restaurant has been rented out for a private party and is packed with FASHIONABLE GUESTS. Copies of a hardcover beauty book called "Forever Young," by Helen Sharp, are prominently displayed here and there. MADELINE makes a grand entrance, ERNEST in tow.

MADELINE

She must have spent her entire trust fund on this.

5 Dec 91

There is an OLD WOMAN near the door, eighty or so. Madeline goes to her warmly.

MADELINE (cont.)
Helen, darling, how are you?!
ERNEST
{pulls her away) Knock it off .

ACROSS THE ROOM,

a dishy STARLET turns to JAY NORMAN, next to her, a young looking twenty-five, horn-rimmed glasses, anonymous suit.

STARLET
Jay -- is that someone?
NORMAN
Sure, that's Madeline Ashton. She was a big star in the sixties .
STARLET
Really? What was she in?
NORMAN
What are you, kidding? "Uptown Lover," "Dark Windows," "Nobody's Bride"

STARLET ~~" Oh, her? I thought she was dead. What's she done lately? ~~ ~ NORMAN ~~ Complain. Sue people. ~ ve Boat . "

STARLET ~ Ick . Who's her agent?

NORMAN
(with asigh)
I am.

OVER AT THE BAR,

ERNEST leans, a scotch glass growing from his hand. He notices a good-looking MIDDLE-AGED MAN next to him, smiles, and gives a little wave. The Middle-Aged Man notices but pointedly ignores Ernest, chatting with two WOMEN.

• ~- ~ . ,..

14 Nov 91

,;',(~ 23 CONTINUED 23

I • • As the Women turn to walk off, the Middle- Aged Man pauses and speaks quietly to Ernest. ...

MIDDLE- AGED MAN
Sorry, Dr. Menville. If they know I know you, they know why, you know?
ERNEST
I know. How are you, Mel?
MIDDLE- AGED MAN
(taps the underside of his taut chin)
Pretty good after seven years, huh? And the implants?
(thumps his pees)
I can still bounce quarters off 'em.

11 You were a gen i us.

(catching himself) Are a genius. ~Tu.

ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE ROOM,

\)~~

Madeline comes up behind Jay Norman, looping an arm through

his.

NORMAN * Madeline! I was just coming to talk to you!

MADELINE

fl (to the Starlet)

Can I borrow him for a second?

Not waiting for a response, she spins Norman away, behind a

potted pal m, and speaks to him urgently . •

MADELINE (cont.) *
Why haven't you --

• J NORMAN *

I did call you back! Twice!

- Your°machine wasn't on.

MADELINE * (knows he ' slying) oh. I'll have to speak to Rose about that. Did you hear anything about Roger's film?

■ ■•

■ i-

I-

-■ ■

■... 14 Nov 91

• J ..~ 23 CONTINUED 23 ·"""

■ NORMAN ■ * ■ I wouldn't get my hopes up. What

■ did you decide about Hollywood Squares? ■

r MADELINE

- I'm having second thoughts . Can you ■.I ■ get me center square? •I •■ ■ ■

NORMAN
- ■ (shakes his head)

• •I ■■ Connie Stevens has it, she's part of a

package. But Charlie Weaver's old

■- corner square is free. We could get that .

We could make that a reality for you.

■ ■

MADELINE

■ I ( Which corner?

■ ■ NORMAN '& *

Lower left. It's a fa!tu:asticsquare. n ~

■ MA1)~t,:tNE ...-.. ■■- *

■ Why can't I have·'dpper?

1",

29

..,__

■ r-■ NORMAN

■ (thinks )

Let me talk to Mike.

■ OVER AT THE BAR,

the Middle-Aged Man is gone and Ernest is speaking to MRS. I L ADAMS, mid-forties .

MRS. ADAMS
■■ I never got a chance to tell you before, you know, what with all the I■

■ preparations, but you did a really

■• ■ spectacul ar job with Aunt Esther. ■

■ •■•

ERNEST
Oh, uh -- thank you.

■-

MRS. ADAMS

■ -

Her color , her tone -- you even brought out her cheekbones .

ERNEST
(embarrassed)

■ Well, that's my job.

■ CONTINUED

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

■ ■

- ■ ■ ■• .. - ■ ■ -"""" ■ ■ ■ 14 Nov 91 ..__,/ ' 23 CONTINUED ■ ■ ■

MRS. ADAMS
It was almost a shame to bury her. ■

- ■ ERNEST

I

■ ■ That's -- sweet of you to say .

■ ..

MRS. ADAMS

■ ■ can I ask what your secret is?

ERNEST

■ ■ - (confidentially) I Spray paint. ).

I She looks at him strangely, as if she misunderstood. Ernest ■ ■ nods enthusiastically.

ERNEST (cont.) *
See, dead skin just won't hol~ regular makeup -- the pores are too dcy, you

~ have to use a pa~ette ~ l te and really

grind the stuff in ~~eM. But one day ■ I thought to mysel~"X'1Whatabout mannequin paint?" It's go~~s own chemical

30

8- ADHESIVE, IT COMES IN AN INCREDIBLE

variety of flesh tones, and -- and --

•■ He ~ rails off, as Mrs. Adams is staring at him as if he were a monster. Her orange juice arrives, she takes it, and walks ■ off, aghast. ■ I Madeline comes up as she leaves.

MADELINE

■ ■

■- (looking around, ■ irritated)

■ ■

■ What is this, a joke? She ' snot even here.

ERNEST
Look over there!

He points toward the front door, where someone is making a helluvan entrance. They see just the top of a head moving through the crowd, then a hand that rises up and turns one lazy circle in the air, acknowledging all with the gesture. The BAND, a discreet string quartet, immediately strikes up their version of "Forever Young."

12 Dec 91

Madeline and Ernest watch the figure until it stops in the middle of the crowd. Ina moment the crowd parts, letting them see the backside ofa very OVERWEIGHT WOMAN. Madeline * smiles wickedly

-- and then the OverweightWoman steps out of the way, * revealing HELEN SHARP.

She looks incredible. She's dropped those fiftypounds like nothing, whipped herself into phenomenal shape,completely abandoned "sweet" in favor of "sexy,"and seems not one day older than she was twelve years ago . Maybe even younger . But the most striking thing about Helen is a shining new sense of confidence. She wears a swooping, sexy gown that is held together off one shoulder witha gold flower pin we may or may not notice.

Madeline's jaw drops. So does Ernest's.

ERNEST
My God.
MADELINE
We're leaving .
ERNEST
Don't be ridiculous,Madeline, let's talk to her.
MADELINE
I'll talk to her.

Madeline takes a deep breath and crosses the room to Helen, who, to Madeline's great distress, is speaking with a gushy Jay Norman.

NORMAN
-- want you toknow we're absolutely at your disposal . Call me any time, day or night. You have all my numbers, don't you? Did I give you all my numb~rs?
HELEN
(not really paying attention)
I think so.

Norman looks up, sees Madeline coming, and quickly turns and walks away. Madeline watches him go, hiding her irritation.

14 Nov 91

■ HELEN (cont. )

Mad!

MADELINE
Hell!

They kiss and fall into an embrace. As they do, Helen looks over Madeline ' sshoulder and sees Ernest standing forlornly on the other side of the room. He raises one hand in greeting, but Madeline spins Helen away by the arm.

MADELINE (cont.)
I can't get over it, Hell darling. Twelve years. Twelve long year~, and look at you - -you have a waist!

HELEN .A · (laughs) ~~ You haven't changed. I'~~so glad you came. I didn't know if\)"~ would, but my P.R .woman said ~eline Ashton, she goes to the op,~n•ingof an envelope. "

forces a gay laugh, but nothing comes out.

HELEN (cont. )
Those people can be so cruel . I almost f i red her .
MADELINE
That was sweet of you, dear .

The Starlet comes up to Helen, awestruck, and shoves a copy * of her book in front of her, for Helen to sign.

STARLET * Would you mind -- ?

Helen ,barely noticing, signs the book while talking to * Madeline, who grinds her teeth.

HELEN * How has it been?

MADELINE
(acting her butt off)
Heaven. Absolute heaven . Ernest is like a dream.

12 Dec 91

HELEN
I'm so happy for you two.
MADELINE
You know, there were many times I thought to myself, "Idon't deserve this.11 I know it came at your expense, and that thought just makes me feel - -
(wonderful)
-- terrible .
HELEN
Oh, please. It was so long ago. And what is he? A man . You didn't steal him, he went to you . It wasn't you, it was him.

She takes Madeline by the shoulders and speaks with utmost sincerity .

HELEN (cont. )
I want you to know that I've never blamed you. Never.

CUT TO :

24

INT PARTY NIGHT

ERNEST comes out of the bathroom, drink in hand. HELEN comes up to him.

HELEN
There you are. I was starting to think you were avoiding me.
ERNEST
Not at all. Not at all. I -- not at all.
HELEN
Let's take a walk.
()IP

They head out two open doors to the ""':<)

garden bey~o

i

28A

12 Dec 91

24A ACROSS THE ROOM, 24A *

MADELINE hurries up to a table with several copies of Helen's* book arrayed on it. She grabs one of them and rips through it in angry disbelief.

MADELINE

A beauty book?!

TWO FASHIONABLE WOMEN, one of them Mrs .Adams, who spoke to Ernest earlier, are on either side of her, looking at a large* cardboard standee of Helen, gushing over it . *

MRS .ADAMS

(admiringly) Can you believe she's almost fifty years old?

WOMAN 2

You've got to be kidding me .

Madeline SNAPS the book shut angrily. She turns and sees Ernest and Helen, walking out toward the garden. She drifts across the room, following them from a discreet distance, keeping an eye on them.

CUT TO :

28B

■ ■ ■

■ ■ ■ I'

■ ■ ■ r.... 1, ■ ■ -.._' ■ .. ■ ■■ I 0 1.4Nov 91. - i r■ I I.......

25

EXT GARDEN NIGHT ■

I

ERNEST and HELEN walk in the garden area behind the restaurant. They c a n see the party, still in progress, I■' through huge glass windows. -

HELEN

■ .. ■1

Isn't it strange, Ernest? Seeing

: ■ each other, after so long? ■ ■ I I I •■ ■ Ernest hasn't really been listening, just looking at her I . with something close to adoration. - ■ ERNEST - ■ ■ ■

Wonderful.

, ■ (coming around) I I I mea n -- it's wonderful . ■ r

HELEN
I thought I was neve g~M over you . You s~o q_~~e s I was a mess. I v K1oc away, somewhere ~~te, for months. But then I said to myself, it's time to rejo i nsoci ety,with gusto . Shape up. Lose some weight . I started running . Three or four miles a day at first. Then ten. Then fifteen. Then twenty. ■ Then twenty-five. Then thirty. Then

■ •■ ■I thirty-two. Then thirty-three. Back

down to thirty, briefly, then up to forty . Forty-five. Forty-eight.

-

■ ERNEST

So, a lot .

■ HELEN Right, a lot is my point. And the - thing that kept me going was the

■ thought of --

' She turns and looks into the party, where she sees Madeline, L■ through the glass . She turns back to Ernest. t I HELEN (cont. ) - :.-you.

-

I ■ ■ ■ ■ ERNEST

jll .• ■ ■ Me?

..■

Ill~, ■

lj I ■ CONTINUED

- ■I

I ■ ■ ■ -

14 Nov 91

HELEN
Yes . Tell me everything about yourself. Ihear the Menville Clinic's doing very well.

ERNEST

oh, sure, it's like my own private oil well. We've even opened a franchise in Paris. I'm semi-retired, though. I'm fully committed to the good life.

HELEN
I'm sorry to hear that. h ERNEST \)I-'(' Why? What did I say? All::)._~meant was life has turned out ~ ~be a great party.
HELEN
You used to hate parties .
ERNEST
(false cheer)
Oh, that's when I was old. Now wel l,you should see me now.

He raises his glass in toast .

HELEN
I don ' tknow what to say. I didn ' tknow you were so unhappy.

He looks at her. He hasn't had a slap of honesty like this in a while and it melts him.

ERNEST * Never could fool you, could I?

HELEN * I'm so sorry for you, Ernest. I heard about the kind of - -work - - you're doing now.

ERNEST * (humiliated) I'd sell my soul to operate again. I've wasted myself, Helen.

14 Nov 91

HELEN
No, Ernest. She's wasted you. She married a brilliant surgeon and turned him into an undertaker.

She puts her hands on his shoulders.

HELEN (cont . )

I want you to know I never blamed you for leaving me. I always knew it was her. She's a woman. A woman, Ernest. From Newark, for God's sake.

ERNEST

Piscataway.

HELEN \)\.\, * Exactly . I'm never gain~).\~ - forgive her for whats~•~ done to you. Never.

He looks at her, overcome. In the distance, MADELINE is visible through the glass doors to the party. Watching them.

CUT TO:

NT ERNEST'S CLOSET NIGHT 26 *

ON a photo of Ernest and Helen, taken at least fifteen

.._.,_,..._rsago.They're standing ona pier somewhere on the shore. It's fall, they're dressed with scarves and sweaters, and the wind has blown color into their cheeks . They look happy. They look young.

ERNEST sits at his dressing table, at home, staring at the photo as he unbuttons his tuxedo shirt.

He smiles faintl y at the photo, then looks up at the mirror in front of him. He sees the ravages of the last twelve years and his smile disappears.

Off screen, he hears the faint sound of a bedroom door SLAMMING.

He gets up and leaves the room, still holding the photo.

CUT TO:

3 1

_]-

14 Nov 91

27

INT MANSION HALLWAY NIGHT

ERNEST hurries to the top of the stairs in time to see MADELINE hurrying out the front door of the house, carrying an overnight bag, making no pretense.

As she SLAMS the front door behind her, Ernest looks back down at the photo in his hand.

CUT TO:
28

EXT BEACH CABANA NIGHT

MADELINEhurries down a sidewalk to a small beach cabana and * rings at the door .

DAKOTA opens the door, shirtless. Madeline doesn't say a word, just slips into his arms and kisses him passionately. He kisses back, but there is reservation in it.

Madeline senses it and pulls back.

MADELINE
What is it?
DAKOTA
(low voice)
Nothing. I didn't know you were coming over.
MADELINE
Darling, we spoke.

DAKOTA ..,'i\: Yeah, but you came.th.is afternoon and I thought -- I~~, I didn ' t-- just give me a seco~ P will you?

MADELINE
Oh God, you're not alone .
DAKOTA
What are you talking about? Of course I am. I'm completely alone.

A YOUNG WOMAN ' SVOICE comes from offscreen, behind him.

VOICE Dakota?

DAKOTA
(not missing a beat)
Actually, "completely" isn ' tquite what I meant --

Madeline turns and walks away quickly.

DAI<OTA (cont . ) Madeline! Hey!

He follows her, grabs her by the arm, and turns her around.

5 Dec 91

28 CONTINUED 2 8

MADELINE

(livid) How dare you make me feel cheap!

DAKOTA
Madeline, I forgot, she's here to fix the -- the --
MADELINE
Who is she? Who is the lump of meat?
DAKOTA
That's what I'm trying to tell you . She's a friend of the -- uh, the
MADELINE
Oh Christ, at least lie quickly .
DAKOTA
I'm trying to! You gotta believe me, this is perfectly innocent!

Madeline looks over his shoulder. Far in the background, she catches a good glimpse of a NAKED WOMAN walking across the room. Young. Beautiful .

Madeline looks back at Dakota, her anger completely replaced by humiliation. THUNDER rumbles overhead; a st~m is imminent. '\.'

DAKOTA r;::,~ Hey, I'm sick of this shi<;),you know that? I've beeno...~n'you a favor here. <:/;>v

MADELINE
A favor?! I gave you·
DAKOTA
Yeah, you gave, I gave, big deal. You know, the other day somebody told me we look ridiculous together. How do you think that makes me feel? See, you never think of~ feel;ings. Why don't you go find someone your own age, Madeline?

27 Jan 92

These words are to Madeline as bullets shot from a gun. She stares at him as the THUNDER crashes, right on top of them now, and the rain starts to pour down, soaking her.

CUT TO :

29

EXT STREET NIGHT

MADELINE i sin her car,driving too fast, sobbing. The storm i s really raging as she toolsdown Sunset Boulevard, barely making the curves. She looks up and catches sight of her mascara and tear-streaked face in the rear v i ew mirror.

Horrified, she slams on the brakes. The car SQUEALS to a stop i n the middle of the road. Other cars HONK and swerve past her as she dumps her purse, searching for a kleenex to repair the damage.

She finds a kleenex. But she also finds the two torn halves of the business card Jean Paul Chagall gave her .

Fascinated, she pieces them back together.

CUT TO :

30

INT HELEN'S HOTEL ROOM NIGHT

HELEN is in front of the mirror in her hotel room. She's messing with a strange little contraption, something like an eyedropper, filling it from a bottle marked "Menthol."

HELEN * (singing) " Ihate her, I hate her, I hate her - -and where she goes I'll follow, I'll follow, I'll follow 11

The eyedropper filled, she holds it up to her eyes and squeezes, each in turn. It blows a little puff •of something into her eyes, and immediately tears flow down her cheeks. She looks up, into the mirror, affecting a countenance of great distress .

HELEN
(acting)
"Madeline! I have to speak to Madeline at once!"

12 Dec 91

HELEN (cont . )
(normal again)
Not bad.

She spritzes more stuff in her eyes.

HELEN (cont. )
(take two)
"Madeline! I have to speak to Madeline!11
CUT TO:
31

EXT VON RHUMANS MANSION NIGHT RAIN

MADELINE drives up to the base of a long, winding driveway up in the Hollywood hills. She stops at a gate, where two SECURITY GUARDS in blue suits stand, radios in their ears, sunglasses at night, seemingly impervious to the rain. One of them steps up to her car window . She rolls it down.

MADELINE

Hi, I know it's late, but I was, uh -- passing by and just wondered if it might be possible to see Ms. von Rhumans?

The Guard says nothing, just stares at her through his sunglasses. He turns his head, checking out the inside of her car, but giving no indication he intends to let her pass.

MADELINE (cont.)
I was, uh, given her card by --

She holds up the two pieces of the torn business card. The Guard, recognizing the card, immediately steps back and waves to the other, who presses a button and opens the gate.

Madeline drives through . As she starts to climb the driveway, she leans forward and squints through the windshield. A bolt of lightning flashes, illuminating the house at the top of the hi 11.

Make that "castle" at the top of the hill. Li&.6-,,©JJ, Rhumans' mansion is an enormous medieval thing, co:m'.F5,XE}t;:ewith turrets . (Ii

MADELINE (cont.)
Jesus .
CUT TO:

22 Oct 91

32

EXT HOUSE NIGHT

The impressive front door of the house is o::::,enedby an ATHLETIC GUY in his twenties. MADELINE stands on the step, wearing sunglasses and a silk scarf that half hides her face, which has been washed clean of makeup by the rain.

MADELINE
Good evening. I hope it's not --
GUY
Not at all, Miss Ashton. Lisle's expecting you.
MADELINE
She is?

Madeline looks at him, confused, but he smiles kindly enough and she enters.

CUT TO:

DB HOO 4

32A

INT FOYER NIGHT

MADELINE steps into the foyer and the ATHLETIC GUY closes the door behind her. She looks around at the strange, gothic interior of the place.

ATHLETIC GUY * Wait here, please.

He walks ahead, down some stairs and into a darkened room. While Madeline waits, she hears a low HUMMING sound from her left and turns to look. A light shines through a frosted window in a small door on the other side of the foyer, a * descending light, as in an elevator door. As Madeline watches, the door swings open and two large, bizarre dogs * trot out purposefully. They trot CLICK CLICK CLICK across the foyer and disappear down the stairs as well.

The Athletic Guy reappears at the top of the stairs.

ATHLETIC GUY (cont.)

Right this way.

He goes back down the stairs. Madeline swallows and follows him.

CUT TO:

14 Nov 91

33

INT LOUNGE NIGHT

The ATHLETIC GUY leads MADELINE across the floor of an enormous, gothi c ballroom with an incredible view of nost of Souther n California. *

On the other side of the room, another YOUNG MAN MURMURS softly, leaning forward toward a woman s e ated on a sofa in a dark part of the room, her back to us. There are three or four of these Beefy Guys throughout the house -- it's hard to be precise; they all look alike. The bizarr~ dogs are also with the woman, poised on either side of her; unmoving sentinels. \)\.,,;

The Athletic Guy leads Madeline_~. As they approach, the woman turns around. LISLE VON i):ofus is an att ractive woman, agel ess, firm body, beautiful, clear, tight skin. She is baroquely dressed, with huge chunks of jewelry, and speaks with an unplaceable European accent. She smiles .

LISLE
I hoped you'd come . Sit down .

She pats the sofa next to her and sends a fiery look to the Young Man sitting by her.

LISLE (cont . )
Make room for my friend, for Chrissakes.

He and the Athletic Guy leave the room.

LISLE (cont.)
But keep your ass handy!

She winks at Madel ine. Madeline moves a bit trepidatiously and sits next to her. Lisle observes her very c l osely. Madeline is uncomfortab l e.

MADELINE * Monsieur Chagall said

36A

12 Dec 91

LISLE
May I say I've always thought yours to be one of the most beautif ul faces ever to grace the silver screen .
MADELINE
(delighted)
Oh?
LISLE
(with particul ar reverence)
And your husband -- I can only say his reputation is unsurpassed.
MADELINE
(bored)
Oh.

LISLE * I just arrived in town. I follow the spring. I haven't seen autumn or winter in years . They aren't for us. We're people of the spring, you and I . Aren't we?

MADELINE
Listen, I'm not -- really sure why I'm here.
LISLE
You're scared as hell . Of your self. Of the body you thought you knew.
MADELINE
I beg your pardon?

Lisle reaches out and takes off Madeline's sunglasses .

LISLE
I'm the one who understands . I'm the one who knows your secret.

Madeline looks at her, surprised and intrigued .

MADELINE
Who are you?

14 Nov 91

LISLE
something of an expert.

She runs her finger down the skin of Madeline ' sface.

LISLE (cont . )

You had a young man. Worthless and empty, but he makes you feel in your prime; more alive than the day before. You need him as one needs a gadget to measure blood pressure or heartbeats. To tell you you're alive .

MADELINE ;-, To te1 1me I 'm a 1 ive \)~.\

L~~~ Now he goes . H~ leaves you. You can't feel your pulse, you see rings around your eyes. He's a symptom, dear. But he's not the problem .

... Madeline, who was transfi xed, seems to snap out of it .

... MADELINE

I'm being silly. I don ' tknow what you could possibly do to --

LISLE
(taking Madeline's hand)

■ You'd be surprised.

CUT TO:
33A

EXT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

As the rain pours down, Helen's car pulls up in front of the Menville mansion and parks at the curb. HELEN gets out. *

CUT TO:
34

INT MENVILLE MANSION NI GHT

ERNEST hurries down the main stairs, drink in hand. Someone ' sKNOCKING frantically at the front door, and he opens it. HELEN, on the front step, dashes something into her purse as he opens the door and looks up at him, her face * awash with tears.

14 Nov 91

ERNEST
Helen!
HELEN
Madeline! I need to speak to Madeline at oncel
ERNEST
She's not here.
HELEN
Thank God!

She throws her arms around Ernest in a tight~,~race. He's a little taken aback, but doesn ' tfi~htG~·

ERNES'l\ ·~\\

How'd you get in? \Ididn't hear the gate .

HELEN * I didn't want you to hear . Ernest, ask me to go. Ask me to leave this house immediately!

ERNEST
You just got here.
HELEN
I know. It's crazy. It took me a minute, a glimpse, and I was right back where I started.

Ernest looks truly confused.

HELEN (cont . )
Don't pretend you're not aware of it . You're a powerful sexual being, Ernest.
ERNEST
I am?
HELEN
You are.
ERNEST
(adjusting to the idea)
I am.

14 Nov 91

HELEN
You've always been. If I never told you before, it was because I was the sort of girl who couldn't say "sexual" without blushing. Well, I can now.

Helen pulls back far enough to look into his eyes.

HELEN (cont. )
Sexual, sensual, sexy, sex, sex, sex.

Ernest's drink slips from his hand and hits the floor with a THUD.

CUT TO:

\J\ '-:

35

INT VON RHUMANS MANSION :CO~GHT

LISLE is gently stroking MADELINE~ hand. *

LISLE
so warm -- so full of life -- and already it ebbs away from you. This is life's ultimate cruelty. It offers us a taste of youth and vitality and then makes us witnesses of our own decay.
MADELINE
Well, it is the natural law.

Lisle reaches out and CREAKS open an ornate wooden case that * sits on the table in front of them. An old, hand-tooled dagger and a bevelled glass vial are sheathed inside.

LISLE
Screw the natural law.
MADELINE
What's that?
LISLE
What you came for.

She reaches into the case and pulls out the single vial. It * has a silvery liquid inside, thick, strange, like mercury, that seems to shimmer in the light.

14 Nov 91

Madeline stares at the v i al, transfixed. *

LISLE (cont.)
A touch of magic in a world obsessed by science. A tonic. A potion.
MADELINE
What does it do?
LISLE
How old would you guess I am?
MADELINE
Oh(~_->!don ' t

, LISLE i}o on. And don't try to flatter me.

~ € ~ ?

LISLE
I'm seventy-one years old.

She smiles and sits back proudly.

LISLE (cont. )
That's what it does. Stops the aging process dead in its tracks and forces it into retreat. Drink that potion, and you will never grow even one day older aga i n.Don't drink it -- and continue to watch yourself rot.
CUT TO:
36

INT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

ERNEST and HELEN are on the sofa, necking passionately.

HELEN
We have to stop.
ERNEST
Yes, we do .

But they still kiss.

12 Dec 91

HELEN
Really,Ernest.

But they still kiss. When things start to get really heated, Helen pulls away and stands up,smoothing her hair, trying to regain her composure.

HELEN (cont. )
Please don't be angry with me, Ernest. I'm fighting itas hard asI can .But just look at you.

The position Ernest is sitting in makes his stomach rather pronounced. He sucks it in.

HELEN (cont. )
She's a lready destroyed your career,now she's breakingyour heart, stealing your pride, flaunting her lovers all over town.
ERNEST
(shocked)
Youknow about that?
HELEN
Everyone does, Ernest. At the party people spoke of nothing else.
ERNEST
Oh, God. Oh, Helen, I'm so ashamed. How can you love me? I've been so weak. I should have divorced her years ago .

He stands and points a shaky finger at her.

ERNEST (cont . ) *
(with unaccustomed strength)
I'll tell you what I'm going to do. I'm going to go down to the cou:J?il~use tomorrow and file for divorce ! -<,'!/_
(pause) 1a No -- Monday. I' 11 do it Monday. O·
HELEN
Ernest --

ERNEST

Tuesday at the latest.

12 Dec 91

HELEN
Divorce, Ernest? In California? That's exactly what she wants you to do. You have no talent for poverty . You can't let her get away with that.

Ernest sits, deflated, his plan snatched away from him .

ERNEST
Then there's nothing I can do.

Helen comes back to him. She sits close, kissing him between her words .

HELEN
Yes there is . Ernest, we have not only the right, but the duty to regain what is ours. And we will, even if it means breaking every rule, every commandment.
ERNEST
Yes.

She strokes his leg, kisses his ear, whispers into it.

HELEN

She has to go, Ernest.

ERNEST

(kissing back) You're right.

HELEN

She has to disappear.

ERNEST

(still kissing) Okay.

12 Dec 91

Helen sits up and pushes him away, leaving him in rnid- pucker.

HELEN * You're not listening to me. My therapist showed me once and for all that for us to have a life, Madeline has to

Ernest finally understands the implication of her words and his jaw drops.

ERNEST
(standing abruptly)
Die?! Did he actually say that?!
HELEN
She.
ERNEST
Whatever! Did she say die?!
HELEN
Not exactly, but I could between the lines.

43A

23 Sept 91

E=~~st zits again, both relieved and disappointed.

ERNEST

So she didn't say it.

Helen takes his face in her hands again.

HELEN
(softly)
You said it, darling.
CUT TO:
37

INT VON RHUMANS MANSION NIGHT

MADELINE is studying the potion, holding it up to the light, its refracted beams playing across her face. LISLE hovers over her shoulder.

MADELINE
How much is it?

LISLE

Ah, the sordid topic of coin. I'm afraid it's not so simple. The cost, you see, is different for 1.l,erypne. 0 0 MADE1ti~~ -

{swallows) Well? For me? How much?

Lisle looks at her, studying her. She takes a pen and writes* a figure on a piece of paper. It seems to have a lot of zeroes. She finishes and holds the paper in front of Madeline.

Madeline stifles a GASP. Her face• suddenly clears,as one who has just realized they're being conned.

MADELINE (cont.)
Well, thank you so much, I really should be going.
LISLE
(strong)
Sit down.

23 Sept 91

Madeline, surprised, sits. Lisle takes the potion and uncorks it.

LISLE (cont.)
Hold out your hand.

Madeline looks at Lisle for a second, decides "what the hell," and holds out her hand. Moving like lightning, Lisle grabs her hand with one hand and reaches into the wooden case with the other, whipping out the dagger. She slits a tiny opening in the pad of Madeline's index finger.

MADELINE
ouch!

She tries to pull her hand away, but Lisle holds tight. She dips the dagger into the potion, picking up just a drop, and lets it fall into Madeline's cut. She loosens her hold and Madeline snatches her hand aw\{()Q 4. , .

D ~ DELINE (cont. ) What are you, crazy?! You

She stops in the middle of her sentence, letting out an involuntary GASP. Before her very eyes, her hand begins to change, to smooth out. Networks of lines disappear, the skin seems to replenish itself. In a few seconds, it's the hand of a much younger woman.

44A

She holds it up next to her other, unchanged hand. The difference is incredible.

MADELINE (cont.)
Check okay?
LISLE
Fine.

Madeline dives into her purse and comes up with her checkbook. She can't move fast enough as she fumbles with the pen, never wanting to take her eyes off her new hand.

LISLE (cont.)
But you must make me a promise. The secret we share must never become public. You may continue your career for ten years -- ten years of perfect, unchanged beauty -- but at the end of that time, before people become suspicious, you must disappear from public view forever. You can retire, you can stage your own phony death, or you can, as one of my clients said, simply -- ~ ~
( aSwedish accent~ "vant to be alone.'<:::,

Madeline looks at her, astonished, ~she figures out the reference. "-Q

C:) MADELINE You mean she's -- !

Lisle raises a hand, silencing her. Madeline is wide-eyed.

MADELINE (cont.)
Wow! Okay, no problem, I agree, whatever.

She writes out her check, frantically, and TEARS it from her book, shoving it across the table to Lisle. Lisle smiles and solemnly slides the vial with the potion in it across the table to Madeline.

Madeline takes it. She gives it a little sniff. She holds it up reverently, raising it in toast.

MADELINE' (c~:mt.)
Well -- bottoms up.

She upends it and swallows it in one gulp.

LISLE
Now, a warning.
MADELINE
Now a warning?!
LISLE
Take care of yourself. You and your body are going to be together a long time. Be good to it.

She reaches out and pins something onto Madeline's lapel. It's a tiny flower pin, made of gold, with little bursts of colored petals.

LISLE (cont. )
Siempre viva! ~ ~ CUT TO:
38

INT MANSION HALLWAY ;ILTGHT

'

MADELINE is led out of thema:tμl~n by the same ATHLETIC GUY 0 who admitted her. She follows't>ehind him,headed for the · door. Halfway there, she stops, feeling strange. She turns to a mirror on the wall next to her.

As she watches, she undergoes an amazing transformation. The crow's feet at the corners of her eyes smooth out with a little HISSING sound. smile lines at the sig_esof her mouth disappear with a POP. Her skin smoothes, tightens, she takes off fifteen years just as we look at her.

And that's not all. Her butt seems to lift and define itself; her breasts do the same, regaining old form and tone. An enormous grin spreads across her face and she flushes with color. She turns to the Athletic Guy, the only one around, with a look of absolute incredulity on h.er face.

MADELINE
I just -- did you I'm a girl!

The Athletic Guy raises a finger to his lips, smiling knowingly, devilishly.

ATHLETIC GUY
Shhhhh.
CUT TO:

■ 14 Nov 91

39

INT MENVILLE MANS NIGHT

ERNEST is pacing in front of HELEN, who sits on the couch. He has a scotch glass that he continually refills. *

HELEN
Let's go over the plan one more time.
ERNEST
Okay.

As they talk, we see flashes of their plan in action, but we see it as Ernest sees it -- perfect, smooth, and elegant, every step flowing perfectly. '

HELEN~"\'.~ * Tonight, while ~,~ ·~sleep

\)~

CUT TO:
40

INT DINING ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST, wearing gloves and looking uncommonly suave, carefully takes three crystal glasses from the dining room china cabinet.

HELEN (v.o.) *
-- you take one of each kind of glass -- highball, wine and water -- from the dining room cabinet.
CUT TO:
40A

INT LIVING ROOM NIGHT

HELEN hands ERNEST a small vial filled with white powder .

HELEN
Then you take this Narconol --
CUT TO:

16 Dec 91

41

INT DINING ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST, in a white lab coat,dumps a little white powder from r the vial into each glass, kicking up a small cloud.

HELEN (v. o . )
and dust each glass lightly with it . Tomorrow I'll call Madeline, say I want to come say goodbye, that I have a present for her --
CUT TO:
42

INT FOYER NIGHT

MADELINE is on the phone, dressed casually, in workout gear .

MADELINE
Fine, why not come for dinner?
CUT TO:

43

INT DINING ROOM NIGHT

MADELINE is at the table, a glass of water in hand.

HELEN (v. o . )
-- and at dinner, no matter what she has to drink, the Narconol will be in the glass --

Madeline slumps over, her head hitting the table with a CLUNK. ERNEST and HELEN, also at the table, PING their wine glasses in toast.

HELEN (V. o • ) *
I've used a phony name to r egister--

• .::.

CUT TO:

r INT LIVING ROOM NIGHT 43A *

HELEN hands ERNEST a tiny cellular phone.

HELEN

-- this cellular phone, which you will use to call the police --

CUT TO:

16 Dec 91

44

EXT MULHOLLAND DRIVE NIGHT

ERNEST, the picture of Civic Responsibility, is talking on the cellular phone, standing next to Madeline's car, which * is parked in a turnout on Mulholland.

ERNEST
There's some drunk woman up here on Mulholland, swerving dangerously c l ose to the edge!

CUT TO :

45

INT POLICE DISPATCH NIGHT

A SUPERVISOR leans over the POLICE OFFICER answering Ernest's call.

SUPERVISOR * Quick! Dispatch a unit up there befor eshe kills somebody!

CUT TO:
46

INT MADELINE'S CAR NIGHT

ERNEST and HELEN dump alcohol all over Madeline's car, chucking the empties in back.

HELEN (v.o.) *
You wedge her foot down on the accelerator --

Ernest wedges an empty bottle between the steering wheel and * Madeline's leg.

HELEN (v. o . ) *
-- drop the car in gear --

Ernest drops the car into gear. At the bac~ d, which is up* on a jack, the rear wheels spin fast, the ~~ 7J SCREAMING.

In front , Ernest jams one last whisky bottle i : t e{fa.g.,eline's hand . 1f

HELEN (v. o . ) *
and we'll send her on her way.

Helen delicately, elegantly KICKS the jack out from under the* rear bumper. The car drops, the tires SQUEAL, and the car takes off.

CUT TO:

I

14 Nov 91

Ernest tears away from her and goes to the fireplace.

ERNEST
What are we saying? We can't go through with it.
HELEN
She's killing you, Ernest. It's self-defense.

Ernest looks to his right, where several ornate shotguns are kept in a glass case. They gleam a little in the light.

ERNEST
(convincing himself)
Self-defense.

Tomorrow,

Tomorrow.

And he rushes back into her arms.

CUT TO:
50

EXT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

MADELINE pulls up in front of the Menville place. Were she not obsessed with looking at her own image in the car's rear view mirror, she would be able to see HELEN as she gets into her car and drives away from the house.

CUT TO:
51

INT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

MADELINE enters the mansion and throws her keys and bag on the front table. She pauses to admire herself in the foyer mirror, then heads upstairs, sweeping past ERNEST, who is in the living room, pacing. He looks up, but she barely notices* his existence.

He watches as she disappears upstairs. *

CUT TO:

14 Nov 91

52

INT MADELINE ' SROOM NIGHT

MADELINE is in her room, climbing out of her still soggy clothes. Her phone RINGS and she picks it up.

MADELINE
Hello? Well, you've got one hell of a lot of nerve, calling me after -- oh, knock it off. I just have one thing to say to you . I had a little too much to drink tonight and I overreact ed. It was a ridiculous display of emotion, particularly, I'm sure you'll agree, over someone like you. That's all .
(starts to hang up)
What? Oh, please. You don ' tmean that. Who do you think you ' re talking to?
(dirty )
Well, aren't you presumptuous? What makes you think I ' ll forgiveyou? I don't know. I have to warn you, you may be too old for me very soon. You'll fall in love, make a scene -- what? Say that again, you'd do what?

She hears a sound and turns . ERNEST is stan~ng at the door to the room, staring at her, livid, the gl~' of scotch spilling from one hand. He's heard ev~word.

ERNEST ~ Unspeakable.

Madeline casually kicks the door shut in his face.

MADELINE
(into phone)
Fine. I'll be there in twenty minutes . Just try not to humi liate yourself.

TEN MINUTES LATER,

MADELINE steps out of her closet, her hair pulled back in a

seductive fashion and her body poured into a sexy dress . She goes to the mirror and looks at herself in wonder.

12 Dec 91

MADELINE
My God, it fits .

She gigglesand opens the door to the room. Ernest is still standing in the hallway, hate in his eyes.

ERNEST
Unspeakable.
MADELINE
(walking pasthim)
Yes, Ernest. Unspeakable . Have another drink and go to bed .

She breezes past him and into the hall.

CUT TO :

53

INT HALLWAY NIGHT

ERNEST turns and hurries in front of MADELINE, cutting her off at the top of the stairs.

ERNEST
You'd like that, wouldn't you? For me to drink myself to an early grave. Well, it's not going to happen. It'smy money, and I'm going to keep it.
MADELINE
What are you talking about?
ERNEST
You haven't worked in years -- not a real job . Anything you had left you owed me long ago. Your face owed me .

He squints at her face, studying her, and fora moment, his rage vanishes.

b ERNEST (cont. ) .._Q.L,J * By the way, did you change your "7:@ makeup? fl,);,.

-

16 Dec 91

She looks at nim, decides he's not worth the explanation, and turns away.

MADELINE
Don't wait up.

She walks away, heading for the stairs .

ERNEST

(mutters) Cheap .

Madeline stops dead in her tracks . She turns around.

MADELINE * What d i dyou say?

ERNEST

I called you cheap, Madeline. A cheap little tramp who's every day less like a lady and more like a -- like a -- like a broad .

There is a line in every marriage that can't be crossed, and Ernest just crossed theirs. Madeline is enraged.

MADELINE * Who do you think you're talking to? Who do you think you are? You're nothing but a rich failure.

ERNEST
(that stung)
Watch what you say. I don't have to take it any more.

MADELINE * You'll take whatever I give, you always have. You are pathetic, Ernest . You're a tragic, boozy clown . You're not re~lly even a man any more, are you? How loAg's it been? Long enough so you're ~ afraid to try any more, that's how long .

52A

I I

16 Dec 91

Ernest is fuming, his face gone completely red. He turns away from her and grips the railing, his fingers turning white with tension.

MADELINE (cont.) *
We l l , that's notgood enough for me. I need a man, a real man, I not some drunken undertaker who's just as dead below the waist as his " clients " are.You

Ernest turns and grabs Madeline around the throat, pressing his thumbs against her windpipe. His face is grim, set, his body rigid.

He is a kil l er.

Madeline chokes, gasps, flails with her arms .

ERNEST
Cruel . .. vicious ... loathsome...

They stagger about. Her arms knock over a vase, her fingers gouge his cheek. Still his hold on her neck remains tight .

He backs her over to the top of the stairs.

She speaks, a death gasp.

MADELINE
Ernest please --

Ernest's eyes soften . His face washes over with awareness and reprehension at what he is doing. He releases his hold on Madeline and backs away, staring at his hands and at her in horror.

ERNEST
Oh God -- oh Madeline, d~ ing, I'm so sorry! v0 Jl . - lta

She teeters on her feet, precariously balance~ a ~the top of the stair s,her arms flailing but f i nding nothing to cling to.

22 Oct 91

MADELINE
Help me!

Ernest's eyes widen as he studies her delicate position. He looks behind her, down the steep winding staircase. He looks down at her feet, barely balanced on her high heels.

MADELINE (cont. )

Hurry, you miserable failure --

Ernest cuts her off, reaching out just ever so slightly and JABBING his finger into the middle of her chest.

The tiny impact is enough to tip her over, backwards, over the top of the staircase. For one brief moment, she is suspended there, like Wile E. coyote .

MADELINE (cont. )
Oh.

And then she's gone. She tumbles down the stairs, a long, hard, painful fall in which she doesn't miss a single step. There are unmistakeable CRUNCHING sounds and finally she lands in a grotesquely tangled heap of arms and legs at the bottom of the stairs.

Ernest stands at the top, hands clutched at his mouth like a mischievous child.

For a few seconds, nobody moves.

Finally, Ernest summons his courage and starts down the stairs. Timidly. One at a time. Trying not to look at Madeline's still form.

He reaches the bottom. Madeline's face locks up at him. Unfortunately, her body is lying face down. Her head is turned almost completely around, her neck certainly broken.

ERNEST
Oh my. DB\-\00 4

0 He bends down closer to her and moves his fingers along her neck near her jugular. He holds them there for a moment, searching for a pulse.

He finds none.

ERNEST (cont.)
Oh my.

He stands and backs a few unshaky steps away from her. He finds himself next to the liquor cart and burr iedly pours a glass of scotch.

An entire, eight ounce glass of scotch.

He drinks from it greedily.

"i)r..

Bolstered by the liquor, he turns ~d walks back over to Madeline again. He checks her puJ'-s-easecond time, then jerks his hand away and wipes it'-onhis pants.

,...-

She's plenty dead. Q:)

~

He turns and walks across the room, trying to compose himself. Struck by an idea, he runs to the telephone table. 0 He pulls a scrap of paper from his pocket, checks the number, and dials frantically.

While he's waiting for someone to answer, he looks apprehe~sively across the room toward Madeline's corpse. It's not going anywhere. He turns around, not able to look at it.

ERNEST
(into phone)
Suite 1110, please.
(pause, then breathless)
Helen! It's me, Ernest Menville! I did itl I didn't think I'd be able to but I pushed her down the stairs and she's absolutely stone cold and she was saying the most monstrous things and she's dead andI did it and I didn't think I could but there was just this feeling inside me and I couldn't contain it and we're free but I'm afraid I'm going to burn in hell and her neck is broken and there's no pulse and I pushed·her·down the stairs and she's dead!!
CUT TO:

10 March 92

54

INT HELEN'S HOTEL ROOM NIGHT

HELEN is in her hotel room, dressed in jeans and a "Just Do It" tee-shirt, running on a treadmill, the phone to her ear. * For a moment, she says nothing. Finally:

HELEN
Which part of the plan were you unclear on?
CUT TO:
55

INT MENVILLE LIVING ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST is still on the phone.

ERNEST
No, Helen --
HELEN (o.s.)
Because we went over it three times.
ERNEST
No, you don't understand. This is better! It was an accident! At least it'll look like one!
HELEN (o.s.)
Have you called th~ p~ice?

E~~T No! I calle$\fOU first thing. / CUT TO :

56

INT HELEN'S HOTEL ROOM NIGHT

(Throughout the following, we get a chance to see more of Helen's hotel suite. One corner of it, a small sitting room, looks like the apartment of an assassin. There are blow-ups of Madeline all over the walls, not just publicity shots, but shots that look like they were taken without Madeline's knowledge -- coming out of the market, getting into her car, jogging. There is a calendar on the wall with dates marked off and one -- two days from now -- with a large red circle around it. Most disturbing, on a mirror over the desk, the word "ELIMINATE" is written in lipstick.)

14 Nov 91

HELEN herself is still on the phone, trying to be patient with Ernest.

HELEN
(hard)
Ernest, you
(regaining)
-- poor, sweet thing. If the police check the phone records, don't you think it'll look unusual that you called me before you called them?
CUT TO:
57

INT MENVILLE LIVING ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST is still on the phone.

ERNEST
Oh God, you're right!
(''0 HELEN (o. s~--)
Of course I'm right:(¢'<'

ERNE~ I'd better call them right now.

HELEN (o. s. )
NO! We have to decide what you're going to say first.
ERNEST
Well?
HELEN ( o. s. )
I'm thinking .

Ernest drums his fingers on the desk nervously, waiting for Helen to come up with something. He's sitting with his back to Madeline's corpse, but it is visible behind him. As he waits, something funny happens with Madeline's body.

It moves.

Just a twitch, really, it might not even have happened.

56A

l4 Nov 9l

HELEN (cont. )
Okay, I've got it. Where's her body?

Ernest turns around and looks at Madeline, who is still again.

ERNEST
At the foot of the stairs.

He turns back. Madeline twitches again.

HELEN (o • s • )
Foot of the stairs, good. Don't move her .

Behind Ernest, Madeline sits~· \

HELEN (contQ\,\
As soon as we hang up,y\¥ou'll call the police. ~'<.;,'
ERNEST
Okay.

While Helen and Ernest talk, Madeline, behind him, begins to disentangle herself from her own wreckage. She pulls a twisted leg over her head and brings it back down into place. She pries a limp wrist off the floor and lets it fall at her side.

HELEN (o. s . )
You'll tell them you were on the phone with me when you heard a terrible scream. You turned around and saw Madeline fall down the stairs.
ERNEST
Right! Perfect!

Behind him, Madeline stands up, disoriented. She turns around, so she is facing Ernest.

Or so her face is facing Ernest, anyway. Her head is still twisted completely around, so while she's looking at Ernest, her body is headed in the other direction. She blinks, not really seeming to get it.

14 Nov 91

HELEN (o.s . )
Stick to that story! If they ever check the phone records, it'll just confirm what you told them .
ERNEST
Got it!

Madeline, facing Ernest, backs across the room toward him. He doesn't hear her.

HELEN (o ,s.)
One thing, though -- what about the time of death? Do you think they could ever use it to prove the phone call came after?

Madeline comes all the way up behind Ernest and s~ands there, staring down at him. '

ERNEST \)\ \ (into phone) '0 No, no, time of death ~<;ponly be determined within a few-'hours. It's not an exact

MADELINE
Ernest.

I He waves her off, not looking up.

ERNEST
(into phone)
.,.not an exact --
MADELINE
Ernest!

He waves her off again.

, ERNEST I

-- not --

He stops, realizing the implication of Madeline's voice. He turns around. His face goes completely pale.

MADELINE
You pushed me down the stairs.

10 March 92

ERNEST
HOLY JESUS CHRIST!
CUT TO:
57A

INT HELEN ' SHOTELROOM NIGHT

HELEN holds t he phone with both hands,but the line has gone

compl etely dead.

HELEN

Ernest! Ernest?!

CUT TO :

57B

INT MENVILLE LIVING ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST is backing away from MADELINE in abject horror .

She follows him, backing after him ,looking very creepy.

67

N.~\

~D,t',ILINE You push\)~'aown the stairs!

Ernest keeps away from her, circling her, knocking lamps and picture frames over in an attempt to keep her at a distance.

12 Dec 91

578 CONTINUED 57B *

ERNEST
Stay away fromme!
MADELINE
You bet I will. Animal! Psycho!
ERNEST
Don't come nearme!
MADELINE
Wife-pusher!
ERNEST
Don't come near me! Don't come near me or follow me! Don't come near me or follow me or talk tome!

MADELINE

r don't need to, I don't want to, I don't intend to! I just need to make a telephone call. You're in the shithouse now, pal.

She goes to the phone and reaches for it,but her arm goes the other way.

ERNEST
Madeline, lo6k at yourself!

She looks down, confused, and finds herself looking at her own backside.

MADELINE
Ernest! My ass! I can see my ass!
ERNEST
There's -- there's something wrong with your neck!
MADELINE
Yes! I would say so! I would fucking well say so!

She wanders around the room, backwards, in a daze ,·.

I/ MADELINE (cont . ) "~tt" Ernest, what's wrong with me?!

14 Nov 91

57B CONTINUED 57B *

The phone starts to RING. They ignore it.

ERNEST
(trying to compose)
It's a -- a dislocated neck, that's what it isl It could happeni Inever heard of it happening, but it could happen!

Madeline walks up to a chair. She turns around, as one ordinarily would to sit, but now the front of her body is facing the chair. She tries to sit, but her knees don't want to bend that way. She turns around, so her face is facing the back of the chair along with the backside of her body.

Now, she sits, her face looking at the back of the chair.

MADELINE
WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON?!

ERNEST \' Dislocated neck! You have~x dislocated neck! :('

MADELINE'\)'Q) Fix it!

ERNEST
How?
MADELINE
Just do it!

Ernest swallows. He takes a deep breath, goes to her, and gingerly lays one hand on either side of her head. He pulls them away and backs off.

ERNEST
I can't, I -- can't!
MADELINE
Oh, for Christ's sake.

She grabs hold of her own head, and with one powerful twist of her hands and a disgusting CRUNCH, cranks it back around to the front. She blinks.

MADELINE (cont.)
I think I need a doctor.
CUT TO:

14 Nov 91

58 EXT

Ernest's car SQUEALS to a halt outside the UCLA emergency room, BANGING into the rear end of an ambulance. A VALET * takes one step forward but ERNEST leaps out of the car and SHOUTS at her .

ERNEST * SHE ' SAT DEATH ' SDOOR!

CUT TO:
59

INT EXAMINATION ROOM NIGHT

MADELINE sits on the table in a small examination room, a thermometer in her mouth. ERNEST paces in front of her, * frantic, taking an occasional shot from a flask he carries .

DR. SELWYN HARRIS, sixtyish, tired, sweeps through the doors. Harris has been in the emergency room for twenty years and seen every conceivable human ailment, none of which shock him any more. Ernest SHOUTS at him.

ERNEST '\)\)<. * SHE'S AT DEATH'S DOOR!:(\

HARRIS~~ Well, why don ' twe just let me be the judge of that, all right? (to Madeline) What seems to be the trouble?

MADELINE

(with a look at Ernest) -- fell down the stairs.

HARRIS
Ooops! Anything broken?
MADELINE
No, I don ' tthink so. It would hurt, wouldn't it?
HARRIS
I should think so, yes.

12 Dec 91

MADELINE

Well, maybemy wrist. And my neck's a little - -out of whack .

HARRIS
All right, let's havea look, shall we?

He pulls down the blanket and reaches for Madeline's hand.

HARRIS (cont.)
Your left wrist?
MADELINE
Yes.

He takes the hand and holds it carefully, turning it a bit, poking here and there.

HARRIS
Does it hurtwhen Ido this?
MADELINE
No.
HARRIS
It doesn't?
MADELINE
No.
HARRIS
What about this?
MADELINE
No.
HARRIS
This?
MADELINE
Uh -- no.

HARRis0 This doesn't hurt? ~~

MADELINE •(l{).1f: Well, no.

14 Nov 91

HARRIS
(annoyed)
You're telling me it doesn't hurt when I do this?
MADELINE
Yes, that's what I ' m telling you, okay? It doesn ' thurt.
HARRIS
(cryptically)
Uh huh.

He sets her hand down and clears his throat.

HARRIS (cont.)
You said something about your neck?
MADELINE
It feels funny when I turn it. ~

Harris leans over her, pulling her col~ar~ack to have a look. His eyes widen and he steps ~~\ °quickly, wiping his hand on his pants.

HARRIS
(voice slightly higher)
Okay, I see. Right. Gotcha .
ERNEST
Did you check for shock? Check for shock!
HARRIS
(his joviality eroding into serious unease)
could be, could be shock.

He unbuttons her blouse a few buttons for his stethoscope and puts it to her chest. He listens a moment, then moves it to a new area. A look of confusion crosses his face. He stands up, chucks the stethoscope in the trash can, and goes to a cabinet on the other side of the room.

Madeline and Ernest look at each other, confused.

Harris comes back with another stethoscope, much larger. He puts it to Madeline's chest, moving it around, unnerved.

MADELINE
What is it?

Harris steps back and looks at her.

HARRIS
Interesting.

He takes the thermometer out of her mouth and-consults it. He looks at her, he looks at the thermometer, he looks at her.

HARRIS (cont.)
Okey dokey.
(false cheer)
Well, I think that about covers it .

Ernest takes another belt fro~is flask. Harris notices.

~ ~HARRIS (c;ont.)

0 I wonder i~ might have a sip of

that. -Q:_,

~ ERNEST Of course.

He hands the doctor the flask. Harris takes one very long gulp and hands it back.

HARRIS
Thank you very much.
ERNEST
Not at all.

Harris steps over to a mirror above the sink. He runs ah~ through his hair, but he's shaking so badly the net effecte,::_/ to muss it up. ·He takes a small tin box of pills from his breast pocket ~nd puts one under his tongue.

He turns to Ernest and Madeline, trying like hell to be professional, but he's developed a stutter.

HARRIS
Your wrist, as far as I cant-tell, is fractured in three places. You've also sh-shattered two vertebrae in your neck, _although it's impossible to s-s-say for sure without x-rays. still, there is bone protrusion through the skin, which can't really be called a g-g-g-g-good sign. Your body temperature is below eighty degrees, . and your h-h-h-heart has stopped beating.

Silence.

More silence.

ERNES~ What the hell do~ that mean?!

~IS I believe -- Q;,~

He holds a finger out, abou~to pronounce his diagnosis, but can't bring himself to do it.

0 HARRIS (cont.)

-- I'd like a second opinion.

He sweeps out of the room just as dramatically as he swept in.

Ernest and Madeline look at each other. Silence for a second.

MADELINE
Could be worse.
ERNEST
This is ridiculous! I've got to see for myself.

He goes to Madeline.

MADELINE
What are you doing?! Stop it! Get away from me!

Ernest quickly searches her neck for her pulse, looks at her protruding vertebrae, and feels her forehead for her temperature. He backs off, staring at her with eyes· wi·de:.

0 ERNEST

My God! He's right!

MADELINE
Don't be ridiculous, he can't be right! What would it mean if he was right?!
ERNEST
This is incredible! You're in violation of every natural law I know!

On the words "natural law, 11 Madeline GASPS,looking down at the lapel pin Lisle gave her in shock. She covers her mouth in horror and stands, shaking.

ERNEST (cont. )
You're standing th,$.re

~~INE Oh, shit! ~ .... 4i}mEST You're talk~ to me --

MADELINE
(beginning to swoon)
Oh, shit !
ERNEST
BUT YOU'RE DEAD!

Madeline tries to scream, but only a tiny GASP comes out.

ERNEST.(cont. )
I've got to get help!

He turns and runs out of the room.

Madeline promptly faints, falling back onto the table.

CUT TO:
60

INT HOSPITAL CORRIDOR NIGHT

ERNEST hurries out of the room and into the corridor, looking for somebody, anybody, but the emergency area is a chaotic place, full of GUNSHOT VICTIMS, STABBING VICTIMS, and bizarre domestic accidents of all kinds.

14Nov 91

The ADMITTING NURSE is havin g an argument with a RUDE WOMAN

who keeps shoving a poodle at her.

NURSE

Look, this just isn't that kind of hospital --

Ernest tries to get the attention of several other NURSES --

ERNEST
Excuse me, I need --

-- but they're all in some crisis of their own. A seemingly unattached NURSE hurries past. *

ERNEST (cont. )
Look, my wife is really

The Nurse ignores him, continuing on. Ernest, determined, * follows her around a corner and into a room.

CUT TO:

\J~

61

INT HOSPITAL ROOM NIGHT 15O~

ERNEST follows the,, NURSEinto the roo~

ERNEST
Would you please just

He stops as he sees what the Nurse was hurrying to. An EMERGENCY TEAM hovers over a man's body, giving him CPR.

DOCTOR
Hit him again!

Ernest looks closer. The patient is dressed in hospital greens. He looks familiar. He's DR. HARRIS. BEEEEEEEEP! The EKG line goes flat.

CUT TO:

62 OMITTED 62 *

63

INT EXAMINATION ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST hurries back into Madeline's examination room, but Madeline is gone. A SECOND DOCTOR, younger, corporate- looking, is there filling out a form on her clipboard. *

14 Nov 91

ERNEST
Where is she?!

The Doctor looks at him p r ofessionally and caps her pen. She* puts an arm around Ernest's shoulders.

DOCTOR
I'm terribly sorry, sir. I know how difficult this must be.
ERNEST
No, you don't understand -- she wasn't -- she didn 't -- it's hard to explain.
DOCTOR
(comfortingly)
I know i tis. How can anyone explain it?

ERNEST \)\)< (growing alarmed) o..\\ Where did you put her?!<::)~'

DOCTOR
Don't worry about that right now. Give yourself some t ime to grieve.

Ernest grabs her by the lapels and shakes her violently. *

ERNEST
WHERE THE HELL DID YOU PUT MY WIFE?!
DOCTOR
She's dead, sir. They took her to the morgue.

Ernest lets go and stares at the Doctor in shock.

ERNEST
The morgue?! She'll be furious!

He turns and races out of the room. The Doctor watches him go, sympathetic.

DOCTOR
Poor bastard.
CUT TO:

14 Nov 91

64

INT HOSPITAL CORRIDOR NIGHT

ERNEST steps off the elevator and hurries down another corridor, frantic, rubbing his head in confusion, trying like hell to comprehend what's going on.

ERNEST
(muttering)
can't be -- just can't be --

As he walks, he sees THREE NUNS walking toward him, dressed in full habits, SOBBING uncontrollably. They're an eerie sight, sort of floating past him in all their religious grief and grandeur.

Ernest stops, staring at them, thinking, then continues on.

CWT TO:
65

INT MORGUE NIGHT T"\.W

' "\.))

The hospital's morgue is a stark whit~led place with silver doors in the walls leading to~tt~ you-know- whats . A MORGUE WORKER in a white lab coat hovers over a DEAD PRIEST who is on one of the slabs, ready to start undressing him.

The Worker hears a strange SOUND, muted, like a human voice, but very far away. He looks up for a second, listening

-- then shrugs and goes back to the Priest, unbuttoning his collar. *

After a few seconds, he hears it again, a little louder, definitely someone's voice. He shakes his head, knowing he ' s the victim of a joke.

WORKER
Those guys .

■ ERNEST comes in, frantic, but trying to compose himself.

WORKER (cont.)
can I help you?

Ernest stops, staring at the dead Priest with a l ook of amazement on his face.

WORKER (cont . )
Hello?

12 Dec 91

ERNEST
(snapping out of it)
Sorry . I need to -- seemy wife . She was just brought in.
WORKER
Oh, yeah . You got some forms to fill out . And you have to sign for her clothes.

He shoves a plastic bag across the table to Ernest.

ERNEST
I will, I just --
(the widower)
-- I need to see her alone for a minute. You know. To say goodbye .
WORKER
Well, okay . I understand .

The Worker re-buttons the Priest's collar, slides his slab into the wall, and BANGS the silver door shut, but it doesn't latch. He taps the door of the s lab two rowsdown.

WORKER (cont. )
She's in here. Just a couple minutes, okay?
ERNEST
Thank you. Thank you.

The Worker goes out into the hallway. Ernest takes a deep breath, approaches Madeline's slab, and delicately slides her out .

She's in a body bag. Ernest winces and unzips the bag as delicately as he can, revealing MADELINE's face. She's graying now, death really beginning to take its toll on her appearance. She's wide awake and teary, like a child who's hurt herself.

MADELINE
Ernest!

T

16 Dec 91

ERNEST
Yes. It's me, darling.
MADELINE
Ernest, I fainted and when I woke up it was dark and I was yelling and yelling but nobody could hear me and I didn't know where I was and I was scared and -- and

She stops, looking around. She recognizes her surroundings and now her tears break .

MADELINE (cont.)
Ernest, I'm in the morgue! Why am I in the morgue?!
ERNEST
Shhhhh. It's okay . Listen to me. I understand what's going on! It's incredible, it's physically impossible, but I understand it now!
MADELINE
They think I'm dead, Ernest!
ERNEST
You are -- but you're not! In the whole of recorded medical history, that has never, ever happened to a single human being!
MADELINE
So why did it have to happen to me?!

ERNEST /J * ■ Don't you know what you are,·~~~ine? !

Behind Ernest, the door to the drawer with the P/jiJst,,init

swings open slowly. Ernest doesn't notice it. V

16 Dec 91

ERNEST (cont . )

You're a sign! You're an omen! You're a burning bush!

MADELINE

I am?

Now the slab the Priest is on starts to slide out oi:the * drawer, toward Ernest, who still doesn't notice, his rapture building.

ERNEST (cont . ) *
Of course you are! We're being told we belong together ! And I'm being called! I'm being challenged !I have to fix you! I have to reassemble that which I have torn asunder! It's all so clear to me now ! It's as if I've been struck dumb by many -- uh, tablets, heavy stone tablets. Don't you understand, Madeline?! God has intervened!

The Priest's slab, all the way out now, hits Ernest in the * butt. Ernest whirls and sees the dead Priest just as a massi ve bolt of lightning flashesand thunder CRACKS.

Ernest throws his hands up to the heavens.

ERNEST (cont. ) *
MIRACLE!

CUT TO :

10 March 92

66

INT HALLWAY NI GHT

The MORGUE WORKER has cornered two ORDERLIES, who are folding body bags, and is talking to them in the corridor.

WORKER
I'm just sayin', I don't think it's funny. What if the families were around?
ORDERLY 1
What are you talking about?

The door to the morgue BANGS open. (\~ ~ T and MADELINE come out of the morgue and walk past t~~'ntas casually as possible. Madeline looks at the Morgue ~~er and smiles.

MADELINE
False alarm.

The Worker laughs, assuming this is some kind of joke, and turns back to the Orderlies. After a second, he turns sharply, raising a finger, realizing something is wrong with this picture, but having no idea what and

CUT TO:

67A OMITTED 67A *

14 Nov 91

69

EXT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

HELEN, dressed in black now, is at the gate of the Menville * mansion, peering through the bars at the darkened house, trying to see something, anything, but al l is dead. Suddenly the gate itself HUMS and starts to move, opening .

Helen steps back, confused. From down the street, headlights* flash across her. She turns and darts over to her car, parked at the curb a short distance away. She hides behind it as Ernest's car ZOOMS past, flying through the opened gate and racing up the driveway, SQUEALING to a halt near the side entrance to the house.

Helen creeps back to the gate as it closes. i~ pulls out a small pair of binoculars and peers through them.

\X

Through the binoculars, she sees ERNES~ J\imp out of his car, * run around to the passenger door , pu)c!"<butMADELINE's lifeless body, and drag it into thec-h'9use.

'-) HELEN

Oh - -my -- God .

She folds the binoculars and sticks them in her pocket. She * stands, looks both ways to see if anyone's watching, and then, like a gymnast --

- -scampers~ and over the gate .

She drops to the ground on the other side and sprints across * the lawn, fast and low, headed for the front door. She's almost there when she hears Ernest's car start again. She drops to the driveway, flat.

Ernest backs the car up, fast, does a Y- turn in reverse, and * stops just a few inches from Helen. He drops it into forward, punches the gas, and SQUEALS the hell out the driveway again.

Helen leaps up and runs down the driveway, squeezing through * the gate just before it closes a ndrunning for her car.

She jumps in as Ernest's tail lights disappear down the block. She gives chase.

CUT TO:

27 Jan 92

71

INT HELEN'S CAR NIGHT

HELEN is following ERNEST on an almost abandoned road somewhere. She has a tape in the cassette player, and she's * singing along, like a mantra .

HELEN
11 * "I will follow him --

Up ahead, Ernest slows and turns in an unlit driveway, more of a service road.

HELEN (cont.)
What is this?

She looks up at a huge sign on the hill above her. Only the last word is clear:

"MORTUARY ."

72

EXT MORTUARY NIGHT

HELEN kills her lights and coasts to a stop just down the driveway from the mortuary itself. She peers over her steering wheel . ERNEST is out of his car and standing at the back door to the mortuary, shaking hands with a MAN in a white coat. They seem to know each other rather well .

TWO MORE GUYS come out of the mortuary, carrying jugs of some kind of liquid, strange-looking too l s,hoses, a n d the like. Ernest directs them, putting everything in the trunk.

HELEN
What in God's name -- ? 0. ✓ I

Ernest shakes hands with the men again, gets in his'car, and starts it.

78

/

Helen ducks down in the seat as Ernest drives past her, out the way he came.

73

EXT STREET NIGHT

HELEN is following ERNEST again, this time on Sunset Boulevard in Beverly Hills . He stops at a stop light . Helen - stops behind him. He turns on his right turn signal .

10 March 92

Helen looks up, ahead of them and to the right, and sees a sign for the Beverly Hills Hotel.

HELEN
Oh, shit!

She cranks her wheel and punches the gas, tearing out ahead of Ernest, through the intersection agai~st the light, and into the driveway of the hotel, SMACKI~G 'Umto a luggage cart. A VALET dives out of the way as Hele~j,Omps out.

v, VAL~i' Uh -- 'evening, ~s Sharp . /

Helen doesn' tanswer, just races into the hotel. She's barely inside when Ernest's car pulls up behind hers.

73A

INT HELEN'S HOTEL ROOM NIGHT

HELEN is in her hotel room, frantically shoving the evidence of her Madeline obsession into the sitting room. She pulls the door shut on it a l l,hiding it from sight,just as there's a KNOCK on the main door.

74

INT HOTEL CORRIDOR NIGHT

ERNEST waits patiently outside suite 1110. He's about to knock again when HELEN opens the door

HELEN
Ern_est,thank God!

and yanks him into the room.

75

INT HELEN'S HOTEL ROOM NIGHT

HELEN quickly closes the door behind ERNEST.

HELEN

Tell me right now -- what's going on?!

ERNEST

Well, it's very difficult for me to say, Helen. (takes a deep breath) Madeline and I have had a reconcil- iation .

10 March 92

Helen just looks at him .

HELEN
Ernest, that's sick.
ERNEST
Please, I have to be brief. She's waiting for me. I'm going to do some work on her. ~

She looks at him in disbelief. ,)'0~

HEt'$i,, Oh, my God, you'r~ completely insane.

ERNEST
What?
HELEN
Ernest, I followed you . I had to. I saw her, Ernest. Madeline is dead.
ERNEST
Well, yes, but not in the usual sense . Please, don't try to be logical about it, it's a waste of time. It's a miracle, that's all I can tell you.
HELEN
Stop this, Ernest! You're suffering through some kind of psychotic episode!
ERNEST
(checks his watch)
I should get back.
HELEN
Snap out of it!
ERNEST
She'll be suspicious.

Helen picks up a glass of water and throws it in his face. For a moment he just looks at her, confused, wet.

ERNEST (cont . )
May I have a towel, please?

10 March 92

HELEN * God, Ernest, I thought you had a plan! You're going to get us both in one hell of a lot of trouble!

ERNEST * Helen, you're not looking at the big picture here.

HELEN * Okay, you've already wai~ too long to call the poli ce-- ~ we're going to have to get rid o i0 thebody ourselves and just report h~ ' missing,that's all. v ERNEST I think she's fine back at the house.

HELEN
The house ? Don't be ridiculous . She'll start to smell.
ERNEST
Well ,why do you think I picked up the formaldehyde?
HELEN
(looks at him)
Oh, you poor son of a bitch.

ERNEST * Helen, if you would just listen for a --

HELEN
(pacing, thinking)
Body disposal, let's see. We're in California ,we've got the ocean, the desert -- the desert!
ERNEST
Helen!

He grabs her and sits her down on the edge of the bed. As if by reflex, she picks up a handkerchief and squeezes it in her hand. Ernest, still in his overcoat, paces in front of her.

23 Sept 91

ERNEST (cont. )
I love you. I always have and I always will. But I have a duty to Madeline. I never meant to break your heart -- but good bye, Helen .

He kisses her softly on the cheek, turns, and leaves, the door CLICKING shut behind him. Helen just sits there for a moment. She looks down, at the handkerchief in her hands. * She's squeezed it so hard a few drops of blood from her palms have stained it. She stares at it in disbelief.

HELEN
(incredulous)
She did it again!
CUT TO:
75A

EXT MENVILLE MANSION MORNING

Morning. sun shining. BIRDS singing. CRICKETS cricketing. An old Datsun parks in front of the Menville mansion, three PEOPLE inside. ROSE gets out and goes to the main gate. She punches in a code and the gate swings open.

CUT TO:
76

INT MENVILLE MANSION A F\~TG

The sun shines on ERNEST, who ~ NORES softly, asleep in a sitting position on the living room couch. From the kitchen, we hear the sound of a DOOR OPENING.

IN THE KITCHEN,

ROSE and two MAIDS have come i n through the kitchen entrance, ready to start their day. They've stopped in their tracks, staring at the kitchen, which is a disaster. The contents of the refrigerator, shelf racks and all, have been pulled out and are stacked on the counters. Flies BUZZ around rotting meat, ice cream puddles everywhere, it's a mess.

ROSE
What in God's name -- ?

The First Maid sighs heavily, grabs a towel, and starts to clean up.

23 Sept 91

MAID
Waste, waste, waste.

Rose sighs too, tosses a stray chunk of bacon into the sink, looks up at the clock, and starts to prepare Madeline's breakfast tray.

ROSE
Well, I'm sure they had their reasons.

She goes to the refrigerator, a big Sub-Zero model, and opens it. MADELINE is inside, crumpled slightly to fit, dressed in a terrycloth robe and slippers. Her body is completely blue, with red and white patches here and there. Rose stares in disbelief. Madeline looks up at her.

MADELINE
Close the door.
ROSE
Yes, ma'am.

She closes the door. She just stares at it for a moment, trying to figure this out. She turns and looks at the Maids, who didn't notice, still busy cleaning up.

Rose runs a hand through her hair. She finishes with Madeline's breakfast tray, putting a single rose in a vase. She looks up at the clock again. She picks, up the tray and raises one hand as if to knock on the r ~ r,igeratordoor.

"~ r\O

But she loses her nerve. She sets the tray next to the door and backs away from it, into the living room.

IN THE LIVING ROOM ,

Rose sees Ernest asleep on the sofa. She hurries over to him and shakes him.

ROSE
Dr. Menville! Dr. Menville!

Ernest wakes up and yawns casually, as on a normal day.

ERNEST
'Morning, Rose. Is it up yet?
ROSE
Well, sir it's in the 'fridge.

---

23 Sept 91

Ernest leaps to his feet ,~ememberinq the events of last night.

ERNEST
Right! I know! Don't worry! Nothing to worry about!

From the kitchen, the Maids SCREAM and run into the living room, hysterical .

MAID
She's -- sir, she's -- !

Ernest forces a loud, phony, exaggerated laugh.

ERNEST
It's just a beauty thing. She read it in a magazine. Can you believe she actually did it?!
(laughs again, then hard)
Wait here .

Ernest races into the kitchen. Rose and the others fall into frantic gossip.

IN THE KITCHEN,

Ernest finds Madeline, stuck in the refrigerator. He starts tugging at her, but she's stiff as a board, her joints don't respond, and one arm is completely encased in frost, like an old package of peas. QB\-\ QQ ij ,

ERNEST
They saw you! I told them it was a beauty thing! Put some avocado on your face or something!
MADELINE
They'll think I'm crazy!
ERNEST
We can only hope .

He finally gets her out of the refrigerator and she lands on the floor with a CLUNK, like a block of ice.

MADELINE
Why am I so stiff?

23 Sept 91

ERNEST
Rigor mortis! Try to walk it off! Hurry~!

Madeline stands, CREAKING and CRACKING like an old rocker.

IN THE LIVING ROOM,

Ernest, smiling gaily again, hurries back into the living room. He takes three envelopes from his jacket and starts distributing them to the help.

ERNEST
Listen to me carefully, all of you. Mrs. Menville and I are going to Europe. We've sold the house to a buyer who will be here in a few days. I've given you each one year's salary, but I'm afraid --

They GASP, looking at something behind Ernest. Madeline is making her way out of the kitchen stiffly, her arms and legs responding like two by fours, her face green with an impromptu avocado mask. She immediately starts up the stairs.

ERNEST (cont.)
(cheery)
Good morning, darling!
MADELINE
Good morning, everyone! It's me! Perfectly fine, as you c~n see! Just a swedis~ t~I\(}iji l(g!

She waves, but with her broken wrist. Her hand flops back unnaturally. It seems stuck, so she reaches back and pulls it forward, trying to act natural as she continues up the steps, which is a bit of a chore.

Ernest opens the front door for Rose and the others.

ERNEST
I'm sorry, but I'm afraid you'll all have to leave this morning.

They don't answer, as they're fascinated, staring at Madeline as she makes her clunky, precarious way up the stairs.

23 Sept 91

ERNEST (cont. )
Uh -- ~, actually.
ROSE
But sir! We were happy here!
ERNEST
(herding them out the door)
So were we. Thank you all so much for everything. Have lovely lives!

When the last of them are gone, he closes the door behind them and locks it.

CUT TO:
76A

INT MADELINE'S BEDROOM DAY

MADELINE is in her bedroom, staring into a mirror morosely. ERNEST races in.

ERNEST
That was too close. We can't risk people seeing you again. Think of the publicity!
MADELINE
(horrified)
Publicity?!
(considering it)
Well, publicity -- I

Don't even th~~ij~o Q_t'il~.

MADELINE
Why am I so sweaty?
ERNEST
It's not sweat, darling, you're defrosting. I have to make you presentable,~!

She looks at the mirror again, totally defeated.

MADELINE
It's hopeless. Completely hopeless. And I looked so good!

14 Nov 91

76A CONTINUED 76A *

ERNEST
You will again. Remember the kind of work I used to do? Well, I ' m go i ng to be even better . You're going to be my masterpiece .
CUT TO:

76B OMITTED 76B *

77 OMITTED 77 *

78

INT MENVILLE THIRD FLOOR DAY

Used surgical equipment and empty jugs of formaldehyde lie * piled in a corner of the third floor of the house. It's quiet, except for a strange sound. It ' sfamiliar,but a little hard to place at first. ~

CHUCKA CHUCKA CHUCKA SHHHHHHHH. 'J~

CHUCKA CHUCKA CHUCKA SHHHHHHHHX) ~

~

Spray paint.

■ Moving over, past the used equipment and a phone that is RINGING but ignored, we see a wastebasket half filled with empty spray paint cans. Past that, we come upon one of the legs of the pool table, which has been covered with a sheet, turning it into a makeshift hospital bed. We move up it, somewhat nervously.

■ MADELINE is lying on the table, face down. We start at her feet - - which look absolutely fabulous, by the way, pink and healthy - -and move up, toward her behind.

ERNEST hovers over her like an artist, in gloves and a barbecue apron that reads "Kiss the Chef." He's applied masking tape along the line where her but t gives way to her legs, and is leaning over it with a can of spray paint. He sprays abit of the paint onto his own fingers and rolls it around, s tudying the color.

Deciding against it , he tosses the can and leans back, I ' selecting another from a rack with about two dozen different colors behind him. He seems truly happy, HUMMING to himself as he works . The phone, which had stopped ringing, starts again .

10 March 92

MADELINE (o.s . )
Who keeps calling?

Ernest, annoyed at the distraction, goes to the phone and tears it out of the wall. He returns to his work.

ERNEST
Hold still. This is the tricky part.

Holding his shaking right hand with the other to steady it, he sprays a smooth line along the masking tape.

MADELIN-~~ .s. ) What are you doing~~n there?! ,'

Ernest RIPS the masking tape~'El with a flourish.

/ ERNEST Tan line, darling .

CUT TO:
78A

INT HELEN'S HOTEL ROOM DUSK

HELEN is in her hotel room. She's a fanatic, running faster than a human being can run on her treadmill. There is a * KNOCK at the door and a BELLHOP comes in. *

BELLHOP * Miss Sharp? You asked for the maps of Death Valley?

Helen doesn't even slow down as she answers -- and she's not even out of breath.

HELEN * Just leave them on the table, thank you. Wait a minute -- when does the sun go down tonight?

BELLHOP * Uh -- about an hour, I think?

HELEN

(smiles) Perfect.

CUT TO:

10 March 92

78B

INT HARDWARE STORE NIGHT

HELEN, now dressed in black, stands at the counter of a hardware store while the CLERK rings up her merchandise.

CLERK
Two shovels, one pick, fifty feet of rope, one large plastic tarp, two pairs of gloves, two pairs of rubber boots, and a ten pound bag of lime.

He looks up at her over the top of his glwses.

CLE~1 (~ ~~ ) That gonna do i t\)f~you, or can I get you a headstone to go with this?

Helen laughs at his joke, much too hard.

CUT TO:
79

INT MENVILLE THIRD FLOOR NIGHT

MADELINE sits with her back to us. ERNEST hovers in front of her, holding an artist's palette and several small brushes. He's in a creative frenzy, daubing paints from the palette onto her face, blending them with his fingers, CURSING when something isn't quite right, REJOICING when it is.

He does something wrong over one eye and reaches for a small jug of turpentine. He finds it empty.

ERNEST
(heading for the door)
Damn! Hold still .
MADELINE
Where are you going?

14 Nov 91

ERNEST * I need more turpentine.

MADELINE

Aren't we done yet?

ERNEST

(offended) The shadows under your eyes are unbalanced. Do you want people to stare?

Madeline SIGHS and waits as Ernest lea?es the room.

CUT TO:

\X

80

INT STAIRCASE NIGHT<:::)

The door at the top of the 9'~~case to the third floor SLAPS open and ERNEST fills the dcroTway, looking like a mad scientist. He SLAMS the door behind him and THUNDERS down the stairs.

CUT TO:
81

INT LIVING ROOM NIGHT

ERNEST comes down the main staircase, HUMMING to himself, * happier than we've ever seen him. He reaches the bottom, turns to head for the garage -- and stops dead in his tracks . He GASPS.

HELEN is standing right in front of him, burdened with * shovels, picks, and everything else she bought in the ) hardware store, looking like a designer grave digger.

HELEN *

I (all business)

Where is she?

ERNEST * (whispering) God! Helen! What are you doing here?!

HELEN
What is that on your face? Is that blood?

1 CONTINUED

--

14 Nov 91

Ernest wipes frantically at his face .

ERNEST
No, it's paint!
HELEN
Paint? What are you doing that you have paint on your face?
ERNEST
(thinks)
Painting!

HELEN ·\ Ernest, are you doing something funny with Madeline? \x

ERNES~ \j (thinks) ~ Define "funny. 11<::::;,

Helen puts do er gear and strides forward determinedly, * past Ernest and to the foot of the stairs, looking up. He follows her.

HELEN * Come on, Ernest. Cough her up.

ERNEST
(whispering} Helen, I really think we should talk outside.
HELEN
(turning back to him)
Why are you whispering?
ERNEST
She's resting. She's in a foul mood.
HELEN
(loud} Oh, please!
ERNEST
(horrified)
She'll hear you!

14 Nov 91

UP ON THE SECOND FLOOR,

it seems Madeline can, in fact, hear them. She stands on the landing, out of their view, and ours too. All we see of her is her hand -- fully restored -- resting on the bannister at the top of the stairs . Helen's voice is clear up here.

HELEN (o.s.) *
She's not resting, she's dead, Ernest! Just like we wanted . Just like we plotted. Together, remember?

On that, Madeline's hand curls into a claw, the fingernails digging into the bannister.

HELEN (cont.)
You may have done it alone, but I can't walk away from~4t now, not with you putting us\)loth in jeopardy like thi.._,.~We're going to bury her in Dea~"valley and be done with her once abo for all!
ERNEST (o.s.) *
Helen, please, just listen
HELEN (o.s . ) *
Stop waffling! She deserved it, Ernest! She was a homewrecker! She was a maneater! And she was a bad actress!

Madeline's fingernails SCRAPE down the bannister, leaving five long, deep scratches in their wake.

BACK DOWN IN THE LIVING ROOM,

ERNEST
Believe me, Helen, she's not ready to be buried. She's upstairs - -
HELEN
Okay. Fine. Then why don't you go ask her to come down? Why don't you tell her to come down here, walk right up to me, and kiss me on the --

A VOICE comes from the top of the stairs.

14 Nov 91

MADELINE (o.s . )
Kiss you on the what?

They turn and look up. MADELINE s t ands at the head of the stairs, now in full view, hands on hips, dressed to ki l lin a pair of skin t i ght pants anda loose blouse. Sh elooks absolutely ravishing, better than she did the night she first took the potion. Ernest has even given her a healthy suntan.

HELEN
Mad!
MADELINE
Hell!
ERNEST
Darling! •'\J\); . I NE * What are you l ottingdown there? or should Is y What else? "

Helen stares at her, absolutely shocked out of her skin. Her mouth moves, but she's unable to form wor ds.

Madeline starts down the stairs , and as we watch her, there should only be one word in our minds -- "hips. "

HELEN
(under her breath, to Ernest)
My God! It's alive!

ERNEST

(to Madeline, t errified) Are you angry, honey?

HELEN * It's alive and it' s -- it's -- beautiful!

ERNEST

Are you very angry, dear ?

Madeline ignores him completely, reaching the bottom of the s t airsand sweeping right between t hem, headed for the firep l ace. She seems strangely cal m. Too calm.

12 Dec 91

ERNEST (cont.)
(watching her walkaway)
Oh boy .

He grabs her by the arm and starts leading her away, out onto the terrace, which is through two sliding glass doors.

ERNEST (cont . )
Ithink you'd better go, right now. I seea very bad situation developing here .
HELEN
(whispering)
How can this be?! This isn't possible! I saw her,Ernest, she was dead!
ERNEST
Helen, please,you don't know her theway Ido!
HELEN
And now she's got a suntan!

Ernest hears a CREAKING sound behind him and turns back to Madeline, at the fireplace. The shotgun case, next to the fireplace, is hanging open. So is one of the drawers in its base, which is filled with shotgun shells.

Ernest's eyeswiden as Madelihe SNAPS shut the barrel of an enormous shotgun and points it straight at Helen. He tries to shout, but nothing comes out . *

MADELINE * I just want you to know one thing, Hell.

Helen turns around.

MADELINE (cont. )

You brought this on yourself.

KA-BOOM!!

Madeline pulls the trigger on both barrels . Helen catches the shots in the midsection, is thrown through the air, and comes to rest in an enormous fountain out on the terrace.

14 Nov 91

Madeline breaks open the smoking barrels and the shell casings PING across the floor.

MADELINE
I should have done that years ago.
ERNEST
WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?!

MADELINE

What have I done?! Defended myself, that's what! You plotter! You co- conspirator! (proudly, noticing Helen's body) Check it out. Right in the fountain .

Ernest runs to Helen's still form, which is floating upside down in the fountain. Thef'\~ter is completely red. Ernest feels for a pulse with ia.K.i.nghands.

~{c, ERNEST (flysterical) She's dead!

Madeline joins him at the fountain and grabs his arm excitedly.

MADELINE * She is?! Oh, these are the moments that make life worth living!

Throughout the following, Ernest runs around the house, turning off lights, pulling drapes, closing blinds.

ERNEST
My God ,Madeline! That was horrible! That was brutal! And it was stupid! The police, Madeline, the police!
MADELINE
What are they going to do, give me the gas chamber? Big deal.
ERNEST
Life in prison, then! Do you know what that means for a person in your condition?

14 Nov 91

MADELINE

You're so negative. Can't you for once just let me enjoy a moment?

ERNEST
What about that gunshot?! What if the neighbors ask questions?!
MADELINE
What neighbors? In twelve years in Los Angeles, have you ever seen a neighbor?

ERNEST * (frantic) I have to think! One of us has to be rational!

MADE;iNE-~ * I'm completely A~onal. We're going to bury ..her,Er~st. In Death Valley. You and me.

ERNEST * I'll do no such thing!

MADELINE * Oh no? That's pretty strong talk for a murderer on the run. Let's face it, Ernest, that's exactly what you are. What if the police were to receive an anonymous phone call about you and found me upstairs, dead? If anybody can play dead, Ernest, it's me. What would you tell them? I'm sure you'd be very popular in prison.

ERNEST

I'll get the shovels.

He runs to the tools Helen brought and struggles to lift them up. He staggers back out onto the terrace with them.

MADELINE * And she even paid for the hardware. Don't you just love it?

Ernest drops all the burial supplies next to the fountain and starts to unfurl the roll of plastic. He looks up at Madeline, who is staring at Helen, happy as can be.

14 Nov 91

ERNEST
Help me! I'm not going to be your accomplice all by myself!

She starts to help him. Both of them turn and bend over the plastic, their backs to Helen.

MADELINE * Well, today certainly shaped up in a hurry, didn't it?

Behind them, Helen slowly stands~ in the fountain. She's dripping wet, and with a big, blackened, see- all-the-way- through hole in the middle of her stomach. She towers over Madeline and Ernest, who are spreading the tarp out in front of the fountain, their backs to~~

MAJ)~LINE (cont.)

(to Ern,s..Kt Did you ever h'oticehow some days can start out so shitty and then all of a sudden something wonderful ha,Ppensand your whole outlook just --

She turns to the fountain, to where Helen's body is. Or was. ■ Instead of looking at the fountain, she's looking right through the hole in Helen's stomach. She looks slowly up, at Helen, who glowers down at her, hands on her hips.

Madeline freezes, her jaw dropping open.

MADELINE (cont.) *
changes.
HELEN
(furious)
That was totally uncalled for!

Ernest whips around, sees He l en,and SCREAMS. His knees go out on him and he BANGS to the floor in a sitting position. Madeline backs quickly away from Helen and trips over him, falling to the floor as well.

Helen starts to climb out of the fou n tain. Ernest and Madeline scramble away from her, across the floor, trying to get up.

1 6Dec 91

HELEN (cont . ) *
Ernest ! Look at me! Just look at mel I'm soaking wet!

ERNEST

And there's a little problem with your -- your -- tights.

HELEN'

(looksdown) Don't sugarcoat it, Ernest! I've got~ hole in~ stomach!

ERNEST
It's another miracle!

Madeline, finally regaining herself, stands up .

MADELINE
It is not !
(to Helen)
You fraud ! Forty- eight milesa day, my ass!

She walks over to Helen and flips back her collar, revealing a shining siernpre viva pin just like herown.

MADELINE (cont.)
This is your beauty book, this is your secret! You took the potion!

She RIPS the pin off Helen's collar .

HELEN

How do you know about it?! (eyes widening) You took the potion too!

ERNEST
Took what?

HELEN * - That's why you look the way do ! And you are dead!

12 Dec 91

81 CONTINUED Bl

MADELINE
(French accent)
" Avery select group . "Hah !Some selection, if they let you in !
HELEN
What do you mean "if they let me in?! " I took it in New York years ago, way before you!
ERNEST
What are you two talking about?!

MADELINE & HELEN The potion !

ERNEST
What potion?

HELEN * I paid everything I had, ana now look at me! I'm soaking wet!

MADELINE * (pointing to Helen'sstomach) Don't forget that.

HELEN * And I've got~ hole in~ stomach!

ERNEST
You both took a potion?
HELEN
Can you just try to keep up?
ERNEST
A Satanic potion?!

MADELINE * (to Helen) Well, I hope that little hole in your stomach teaches you a lesson .

ERNEST

I don't think this is a miracle at all!

12 Dec 91

MADELINE

(still to Helen) You see what happens to people who obsess about their weight?

Madeline giggles to herself and turns, walking away from Helen.

MADELINE (cont.)

And as a friend, let me just say I'd stay out of a bathing suit if I were yo~. People might call you a - -

CLANG !! Something big and heavy hits Madeline on the head from behind and she sails off her feet. Helen stands behind her, soaking wet, with a hole in her stomach, and holding one of her shovels .

Madeline stands up, her neck broken again, her head dangling over her back .

MADELINE (cont . )
I just fixed this!

She grabs her head by her hair and lifts it back into place, although her vertebrae have become hopelessly tangled again. Ernest claps his hands to his mouth in shock .

Helen goes to the fountain, grabs the other shovel, and

tosses it to Madeline, a challenge.

Madeline catches it with one hand .

HELEN

En garde, bitch .

The women start to circle each other, wielding the shovels like broadswords.

HELEN (cont. )
Watch yourself, Madeline . not screwing with the same

MADELINE * Did anyone?

96A

12 Dec 91

Ernest steps between them, the peacemaker.

ERNEST

Now, hold on, girls. Why don't we all just go into the kitchen, sit down, and have a really good

CLANG!!

Ernest ducks at the last second, as the women swing the shovels at each other, CLANGING them together just where his head was.

ERNEST (cont . ) *
Gee!
MADELINE
(to Helen)
I thought you'd learned not to compete with me! I always win!

CLANG!

HELEN
You may have won, but you never played fair!

CLANG!

Ernest backs away from them, slowly, up the stairs .The women's shadows fall on the stairs around him as they pitch an unholy battle, SHOUTING, CLANGING the shovels off of each other, fighting like Vikings or something .

MADELINE (o.s.)
You're a sore loser! Who cares if I played fair, I won, period!

CLANG!

HELEN (o . s . )
Just because you could raise your legs higher and wider than anyone!

CLANG!

j MADELINE (o.s . ) You mean better than anyone!

30 Jan 92

Ernest reaches the top of the stairs and stops, staring down at them in horror as their shadows dance at his feet.

ERNEST
(quietly)
I'll be upstairs.

CUT TO :

102A

INT MENVILLE THIRD FLOOR NIGHT 102A*

While the CRASHING and CLANGING of the battle rages on downstairs, ERNEST,looking like a man at the end of his rope, silently trudges up to his third floor sanctuary. *

CUT TO:
102B

INT MENVILLE LIVING ROOM NIGHT

Downstairs, the battle rages on. MADELINE swings at HELEN, misses, and her shovel CRACKS off in the middle of the handle. Realizing she has a spear now, she chucks ~tat Helen, but it sails through the hole in Hel~n's mid~ection and sticks in the sofa. Madeline does a -:0uble- ~e .

MADELINE
Wait aminute! This is pointless ! Nothing even hurts ! We can't even cause each other pain!
HELEN
Pain?!

She BOPS Madeline on top of the head with her shovel and Madeline's head disappears down between her shoulders.

HELEN (cont. )
You want to talk about pain?! Bobby O'Brien ! Scott Hunter! Ernest Menville! That's pain ! I loved every one of them, and they loved me! They - -

She stops, as Madeline, who has been struggling to re-seat her head on her shoulders while Helen was speaking, isn't really listening.

-

14 Nov 91

S-fr:f ~ lt>-1l-1u . HELEN (cont.)

vJ ,W ~ I will not speak to you until you

~ f, put your head on straight.

Madeline finally succeeds.

HELEN (cont . )

(picking up where she left off) They were all I had, and you took them away -- not because you loved them, not because you cared, but just to hurt me! You hurt~ on purpose!

MADELINE \)~ That's not true! '(\

HELE1')~ Liar!

MADELINE
You were the one that attacked me!
HELEN
Me?!
MADELINE
Did you think I was blind? Did you think I was deaf?! Do you think I never heard what you and your snotty little friends said about me behind my back? You thought I was cheap, didn't you?
HELEN
YAffl!f(l.CLrEra"rle-!-
MADELINE
Then how come you never once invited me to a party at your parents' place?!

HELEN * We didn't think you'd feel comfortable! It just wasn't -- could you stop that?

Madeline's head has drooped again, forward this time, her chin banging into her sternum. Annoyed, Madeline yanks it back up.

14 Nov 91

HELEN (cont. )

(continuing) It just wasn' t usual for us to have --

MADELINE (cont.)

-- trash in the house! Say it !

HELEN

You're avoiding the issue! You stole my boyfriends to hurt me on purpose!

MADELINE

I did not!

HELEN
Admit it! ,....
(:)"( M.11.DELINE0-.,. You admit it! Look m~~n the eye and tell me -- you §l)~ughtI was cheap!
HELEN
(looks her in the eye)
Okay. I thought you were cheap .
MADELINE
Well, I hurt you on purpose.

t There is a long pause while they both digest this information, deciding what to do with it. Madeline c hews her lip, absolutely agoniz ing over the next words that are to come out of her mouth.

MADELINE (cont . )
And - -I'm -- sorry .

Helen l ooks at her, tru l ysurprised, but doesn't reciprocate. Madeline just stares at her, waiting .

HELEN
(with equal difficulty)
I'm - -sorry too.

And just like that, the air goes out of their feud . They drop their shovels and drop onto the couch in relief, on

opposite ends. /,MAk r ( ✓ , IA l:-w~

14 Nov 91

There is a long pause while they take stock of their situations. Helen looks down at the hole in her stomach. She sees she has i nadvertantly leaned back against the shovel* handle, which is now protruding through her midsection. Madeline finds a decorative African neck piece and wedges it * down over her own head, so that it supports her neck.

Helen pulls the shovel handle out morosely and starts to cry. *

MADELINE

Hey, don't do that.

Helen continues to cry, a little harder now. She's not the driven Helen she used to be, she's more like ·the mousy Helen she was years ago. Madeline slides 'aown the sofa, closer to her, and puts an arm around her. \J

Madeline takes a glass of wa~iO't.om the table next to her * and hands it to Helen. ·

MADELINE (cont.)

Hell, honey. What's wrong?

Helen takes the water and l ooks at her in disbelief.

HELEN * What's wrong? Look at me!

She stands up .

HELEN (cont.)
For twelve years, I put every ounce of energy I had into hating you. All I wanted was you dead, all I wanted was revenge . Well, now I've got it . But it just fee l s -- hollow .

She drinks the water, which almost immediately drips out the * hole in her stomach . She watches it , starting to sob now.

MADELINE * (of the water) Oh, come on. It'll wipe up .

HELEN
I don't care about that! I have a hole in my stornach!What am I supposed to do!?
CUT TO:

30 Jan 92

102C

INT MENVILLE THIRD FLOOR NIGHT 102C*

Ascalpel THUNKS into the wall a few feet to the right of * Ernest's still unmolested dart board. Ernest sits morosely in a chair opposite, staring at the dart board vacantly. He gets up and goes to retrieve the scalpels, but he stops in the middle of the motion, as i fstruck by a thought. His eyes widen and a faint smile crosses his lips as the shadows * of the two women fall on the wall on either side of him.

MADELINE (o.s.)
Ernest?

Ernest turns. MADELINE and HELEN are standing in the doorway, arms around one another. They're completely different now -- pals, girlfriends.

MADELINE
Helen and I want to apologize fo rour little quarrel. It's out of our systems now . Completely gone. Honest .
HELEN
And thank God! It was awful, hating her, envying her at the same time --
MADELINE
You envied me? I envied .z9~!
ERNEST
Excuse me --
HELEN
You did not! Did you? ! What specifically -- about me did you envy?
MADELINE
Well, your gradepoint, for one.
HELEN
No kidding?!

ERNEST * Excuse me! (the ylook at him) I just want to tell you both that I've come to a very important, long overdue decision. I'm leaving.

As if to reinforce that, he takes the dart board down and * tucks it under his arm.

14 Nov 91

MADELINE
Leaving? What do you mean, leaving?
HELEN
We need you!
MADELINE
I promised Helen you'd fix her!
HELEN
And Maddie needs work too~
(to Madeline) \)~ You can go first if~ want , sweetie.

MADEL~E Thanks, hon! (to Ernest) Please? For old times' sake?

They look at him plaintively. He speaks quietly, with unaccustomed determination.

ERNEST
On one condition. When I'm done - - I go. You won't ask me where. You won't look for me. You won't even think of me. Ever again .
MADELINE
I have no problem with that.
(to Helen)
Do you?
HELEN
(shrugs)
Not any more.
CUT TO:

103 OMITTED 103 *

103A

EXT MENVILLE MANSION DAY

Another beautiful Beverly Hills morning. An automated garbage truck picks up a garbage can from in fron r ofthe Menville mansion and dumps the contents -- hundreds of spray paint cans and other of Ernest's working supplies .

CUT TO:

-

■ ..

16 Dec 91

103B

INT MADELINE'S BEDROOM DAY 103B*

MADELINE and HELEN, fully restored and in their underwear, ■ are admiring themselves in a fu l l - length mirror.

MADELINE
Amazing, isn't he? Not a blemish . Not a pore .

HELEN * Say what you like about Ernest, the man is a genius .

Madeline notices something on Helen's arm and reaches over to flick it away. Whatever it was doesn't seem to f l ick,so Madeline scratches at it with her nail. A chunk of paint comes up, and before Madeline realizes it, she's pulled offa huge strip of Helen's flesh-tone paint, revealing a large * patch of gray skin underneath .

MADELINE * Ooops .

HELEN

(noticing) Oh my God .

MADELINE * I am so sorry. I shouldn't have messed with it. It must have sti l l been wet.

HELEN

(panicky) Can Ernest fix it?

MADELINE

I'm sure he can. I'll catch him before he leaves.

the door. Pr; HELEN ~ & liqa

Wait a minute . What if this liapI?J:ns again? What if it fade s ?What i"'f it rains? Do you think Ernest will come back for touch-ups?!

30 Jan 92

MADELINE
Well, even if h~ did, he's not going to live forever .

A thought hits them at the same time. They look at each other.

CUT TO:
104

INT ERNEST'S CLOSET DAY

ERNEST is in his closet. There's an open suitcase on the * island, which he is rapidly filling. He empties one drawer * and finds a picture of himself with Helen, the one he looked at before. He throws it and a framed picture of Madeline into a wastebasket.

He turns and sees MADELINE and HELEN standing in the doorway.

They have a neatly prepared glass of scotch on a tray that they hold in front of them, so invitingly that there !!!Ustbe something wrong with it.

MADELINE
Hello, Ernest.
ERNEST
Is my cab here?
HELEN
Not yet . We thought you n}i'~htlike some breakfast.

He doesn't answer, just GRUNTS, shoving more stuff into his * suitcase. Helen takes the drink from the tray and sets it on the dresser next to him.

ERNEST
You know, I was just thinking, I was questioning myself, Iwas wondering . Why didn't Ipack this thing and leave five, six, ten years ago? Why did I stay and suffer every indignity, every humiliation?

He latches the suitcase, picks up the drink, and raises it to his lips. Helen and Madeline lean forward, but he stops short, with a thought.

30 Jan 92

ERNEST (cont.)
It was because I'd made a promise. That meant everything to me.

He BANGS the drink down and heads for the door.

HELEN
Ernest! Your drink!

She picks it up and they follow him .

IN THE HALLWAY,

Ernest races ahead, the women behind him, Helen with the drink. He stops and turns around sharply, pointing at them.

ERNEST (cont . )
Do you know what you call those guys who stick to their word, no matter what? I do.

Not missing a beat, Helen slips the drink into his extended hand. He barely notices, continuing his thought .

ERNEST (cont. )
Idiots.

He turns and walks again, this time with the 'dJink. They * follow. He walks and talks, gesturing wildly with the drink, spilling most of it.

ERNEST (cont. )
Well, from now on, I'm going to be the idiot I want to be, an idiot with a modicum of pride. Because I finally realized I lived up to my promise. "Till death do us part," I said.

From out in front of the house, a car HONKS . Ernest brightens.

ERNEST (cont. )
Well, darlings -- you're dead . And I'm parting.

105A

16 Dec 91

Al most as an afterthought ,he raises the glass to his lips. The women lean forward in anticipation, but Ernest s t ops, looking at the drink as if with new eyes .

ERNEST (cont. )
And you know what else? I drink too much .

He turns and dumps the drink into a nearby p l ant.

Madel ine and Helen l ook ate ach other,desperate. Ernest nods to them and turns to go down the stairs .

Madeline looks to her right. There are two antique vases on a tabl enext to her. She picks one up and BASHES Ernest over the head with it . ■ Ernest doesn't go down, just turns and faces her , woozy, - confused . ■

ERNEST (cont.)
What?

Hel en picksup the other base and BASHES that one over his head too.

Ernes tpitches fo r ward andfallsto the carpet.

As h e blacks out, the women lean over him, b l urry and o u t of focus .

HELEN
Sorry, sweetheart !
MADELINE
You'll thank u s l ater! Really !

Everything goes black. '..,r.l)

-~ l

CUT TO:

105B

14 Nov 91

105

INT POOL ROOM NIGHT

Everything remains black for a moment. There is only a strange, gentle LAPPING sound in the dark, like someone taking lazy laps in a swimming pool .

ERNEST opens his eyes. He squints, trying to orient himself. At first he sees only steam, but in a moment it clears and he sees --

-- LISLE VON RHUMANS, rising up out of an indoor pool, completely naked. She comes up some steps, out of the shallow end of the pool, but it seems like she's floating out of it. Her body is perfect, hard, tempting as hell, and she's staring straight at Ernest, who's sitting in a chair, groggy, dressed in a tuxedo. He touches t~~ confused. *

Ernest looks around. He's in some ~o t<of subterranean pool room. overhead is a huge stained g window, a replica of Michelangelo's "Creation" painted on it.

He looks back at Lisle . Every time she takes a step forward, a beam of light materiali zes above her, lighting her perfectly, as if someone were flicking a switch every time she took a step .

.. Ernest turns and looks to the door, where one of the Beefy Guys is, in fact, flicking a switch every time she takes a step. He's at a small circuit breaker box with many rows of tiny switches and one b ig greenand red one at the end.

Two other BEEFY GUYS swoop up next to Lisle and blot her dry with large powder puffs before draping a robe over her. She She gestures to Ernest's tuxedo. *

12 Dec 91

LISLE

I hope you don't mind. Di ck and Harry dressed you . You were improperly attired for the occasion .

ERNEST
Who are you?

LISLE * An admirer. How old do you think I am, Dr. Menville? (he shrugs) I'm more than six hundred years old .

ERNEST
You -- you - -you -- what do you want with me?
LISLE
To talk, for the moment . Like colleagues. You 'rea creator . A restorer. An artist . So am I. In fact, I've even finished a few of your early works for you.
ERNEST
You sound like you're trying to sell me something .

She smiles. She sits on a chair next to him. Her robe falls open a bit too much. Ernest swallows .

LISLE
No, Dr .Menville. Not you . To you, I would like to give a gift. The gift of life and youth . Forever.

She opens the wooden potion case, which is on a small table between them. Ernest looks at the silvery potion inside. He looks back up at Lisle.

LISLE (cont.)
I saw your wife and -- friend . ~ou did brilliant work . You' r eagerrlus ,. You're a God. ~0

She notices he's looking at her breasts but does nothi~ ~ ~o cover the m. She reaches out and puts her hand on his face .

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

LISLE (cont.)
My dream is to have a world full of Ernest Menvilles . But instead, look what I've had to settle for. {contemptuously) Movie people. The real triumphs always refused me -- Shakespeare, Lincoln, Max Factor -- all of them were too selfish. They would deprive this world of their magic. So I deprived them of this world.
ERNEST
You killed them!
LISLE
I can't stand rejection. It's a fault, I know.

Ernest looks around, suddenly realizing he's in danger. The Beefy Guys have m·oved ina little closer and are definitely looking menacing. ~j-, j

L~~ (cont.) Show me your ~s.

0 (he hesi~es)

Come on, I ~9,.~tbite. '-~

Ernest holds out his shaking hands. Lisle sighs sadly.

LISLE (cont.)
Tch, tch, tch.

She takes his right hand in hers. Moving qui ckly,she slides the dagger out of the potion case and slits his index finger.

ERNEST
Hey!

Lisle dips the dagger in the potion and drips it into Ernest's cut.

ERNEST (cont. )
What are you -- ?
LISLE
I'm loving you. Look.

Ernest looks down. Sure enough, his left hand is still aged and shaking, but·his•right hand is youthful, steady'··a·s ··a ·· rock. He looks at Lisle, his eyes swollen with tears.

0 ERNEST

My God!

LISLE
Thank you.

She stands up -and moves around behind his chair,whispering in his ear seductively.

LISLE (cont.)
But don ' tbe modest. That's what you do, isn't it? It's what y ou've always done. Stopped time in people's hands, in their faces. You're Don Quixote, tilting at nature's windmill.

She picks up the vial of the potion and holds it out to Ernest.

LISLE (cont. )~
Go on. This is your cha~~ to finally beat her. Drink'~ . -~

He takes the v ial. He holds it up. _The light from the pool--'

100

. ~ '( . .

0 seems to shimmer off ofit. Anothet-::lightshines onhis face. He looks down. It's the light' reflectingoff the dagger, on the table next to him.

He looks to Lisle. He looks to the potion. He looks at the Beefy Guys, only ten feet away, ready to do Lisle's bidding.

LISLE (cont.)
It's the completion of y our life's work.

Ernest is sweating now, absolutely ripped apart inside . He raises the potion toward his lips with his s haking left hand.

LISLE (cont.)
(a whisper)
Drink!

The potion is a few inches from his lips.

LISLE (cont. )
"Siempre viva! 11

The bottle touches his lower lip. He star~s to tilt the bottom of the vial up, the pot'i·on··s·l·±'d-e-sback toward his tongue --

14 Nov 91

LISLE (cont.)
" Live forever!"

and he stops right there, a thought crushing down on him.

He turns and looks at Lisle.

ERNEST
But . -then what?

Lisle just looks at him, confused, as if no one's ever asked that question before.

LISLE
What?

And with t h at Ernest grabs the daggerof}u,.thetable, turns, and ZINGS it across the room, scoring a ~rfect bullseye in the red button in the circuit break~~ox. Sparks CRACK and the pool room is plunged into darkA_e$g'.The Beefy Guys SHOUT in alarm, but Ernest moves fast, g),,}abbingthe potion,capping it, and tearing out the door.

BEEFY GUY 1
Get him! GET HIM!!

Lisle just stands there, calm as ever, as lightning flashes. *

LISLE
Relax. He won't get far . Not at his age.
CUT TO:
106

INT CORRIDOR NIGHT

ERNEST races down a windowless corridor, away from the pool room . He runs blindly, no idea where he is or where he's going. It's like a labyrinth here, under Lisle's mansion. Behind him, he can hear VOICES and FOOTSTEPS as the Beefy Guys give chase .

Ernest takes a left, then two rights, then a little jog to the left. He stops, to catch his breath. He doesn't hear the footsteps anymore, but he still hears the PEOPLE, only now it sounds like a he l l of a lot more of them.

He's terrified. Up ahead, he sees a narrow staircase. He sprints up it. At the top, he has no more options, there is only a single doorway. He opens it.

CUT TO:

12 Feb 92

107

INT BALLROOM NIGHT

NOISE and light wash over ERNEST. He's standing in the middle of Lisle von Rhumans' enormous gothic ballroom --

-- and she's having~ party.

A big party. There are probably five hundred people here, all gorgeous and wealthy-looking. There are huge, artifical siempre viva plants ringing the edges of the room, and every single guest has a replica of the flower that they wear on their lapel.

Ernest swallows and moves forward into the crowd, trying to blend in. The door he came out of opens again and the three BEEFY GUYS tumble out. They search the crowd, looking for Ernest, but all they see is an ocean of tuxedos.

IN THE MIDDLE OF THE CROWD,

Ernest is wandering around in an absolute daze. It's not just that the people at the party are attractive,-.-they're famous, too

-- and most of them died years ago.

GRETA GARBO is there, in her prime, not one day older than the day she retired, talking toMARILYN MONROE while ANDY WARHOL looks on.··Ernest sort of circles around them, wide- eyed, trying to smooth out the wrinkles in his face.

From the front of the room, a VOICE speaks over a public address system.

VOICE (o.s.) Welcome, everyone!

The crowd· bursts into applause. Ernest looks. JEAN PAUL CHAGALL is up on the second floor landing with a microphone.

CHAGALL (cont.)

Lisle will be do.wnin just two more minutes!

Everyone APPLAUDS again.

CHAGALL (cont.)
In the meantime, I do have just a few announcements while we wait.

CONTINUED. 110A

12 Feb 92

Ernest looks around, panicky, searching for a way out. He spots a large staircase at the other end of the room, leading to the exit. He starts to move toward it, trying like hell to walk at a normal pace so as not to attract attention.

CHAGALL (cont.)

First, I must remind all of you who staged your own deaths of our strict policy against popping up in public to grab a few headlines. I won't name names, you know who you are.

Everyone turns and looks at Ernest. He stops in his tracks, terrified --

-- then turns and looks behind him , at who the crowd is really looking at. It's ELVIS PRESLEY ,slimmed down, looking like he did before the Vegas show period, with a stunning BLONDE on his arm. Presley looks away, embarrassed.

ACROSS THE ROOM,

MADELINE and HELEN follow the gaze of the crowd toward Presley and see Ernest.

HELEN
r.,ook!It's Ernest!
MADELINE
(squinting at him)
He still looks like hell. I don't think she gave him the good stuff .

CHAGALL (o. s.)

(continuing from the front) For those of you who are on the installment plan, payment envelopes will be available before you leave --

Helen looks down and sees Ernest clutching the potion bottle in his hand.

HELEN
He didn't take it at all! He's still got it!

12 Feb 92

MADELINE
Oh, shit.

They watch as Ernest edges his way toward the stairs at the front of the room. They move with him, keeping pace from

103

\ ACROSS THE ROOM, ALSO TRYING NOT TO ATTRACT ATTENTION•

BACK WITH ERNEST,

he keeps moving, nodding and smiling nervously to people, fighting back panic.

CHAGALL (o.s . ) *
Please, keep your accounts current; enforced collection is beneath us all. Kruggerands are still the preferred method of payment, with precious gems or works of art by acknowledged masters also acceptable. If you pay in cash, please remember, contemporary currencies only.

Ernest is only a few yards from the stairs now. He keeps moving, his heart beating wildly, as Chagall drones on from the landing. ·

CHAGALL (cont. )

104

ONESAD NOTE FOR YOU AMERICANS DUE

to continued deterioration we can no longer accept dollars.

There are some GROANS in the crowd.

UP ON THE LANDING,

Ernest is heading up the stairs and into the foyer when someone taps Chagall on the shoulder and whispers in his ear.

CHAGALL (cont.) *
Ah! Everyone please come forward, /)$ Lisle will be down any second! /)j

There is agreat deal of hubbub as everyone crowds forwar'C/(J gathering under the landing. Ernest moves faster, across the4 foyer, the front door in his sights, his escape imminent.

CHAGALL (cont.)

Will the gentlemen please seal the room!

CONTINUED· 111A

12 Feb 92

There are loud CLUNKING and LATCHING sounds as several Beefy Guys go around locking the doors and windows. Ernest steps on it, but he's too late -- a Beefy Guy at the front SLAMS a security gate into place, locking the door. *

Ernest spins away, hiding his frustration, eyes darting wildly, searching for another way out. He barely has time to think when he hears a WHIRRING sound coming from the other * side of the foyer. He looks across and sees a small door on the side of the foyer with a tiny window in it, around eye height. Light shines through the window, descending, as an elevator arriving.

Ernest ducks into an alcove and peers around the corner as * the elevator door opens and LISLE steps out, flanked by two * of her BEEFY GUYS.

Ernest presses himself into the alcove, hiding as she sweeps across the foyer and takes her place on the landing. The entire crowd APPLAUDS, long and loud, as she acknowledges them, waving like the pope or something. ,

Ernest looks behind her, at the elevator, which is still on this floor, waiting. He swallows.

LISLE
(to the crowd)
Look at yourselves! Just -- look at yourselves!!

IN THE MIDDLE OF THE CROWD,

While the crowd lustily APPLAUDS and CHEERS Lisle again, Madeline and Helen, at the front, peer up into the foyer, looking for Ernest.

Suddenly, Madeline grabs Helen's arm and points behind Lisle. Ernest is there, tiptoeing behind her, sneaking across the foyer to the elevator.

LISLE (cont.)
(to the crowd, as the applause dies)
Let me tell you a joke DickClark told me this morning --

Madeline and Helen watch, frozen, as Ernest slips into the elevator.

12 Feb 92

107A INTHE ELEVATOR, 107A

Ernest pulls the door shut behind him and turns around. There's no wall panel, only three small levers on the floor. He steps on one of them. There is a low CHUNG!sound and the elevator starts to move. Up .

107AA IN THE CROWD, 107AA

LISLE * -- to which the man replies, "Don't ask me, I thought it was silicone!"

The crowd LAUGHS uproariously .

Madeline and Helen watch as the light in the door of the elevator ascends .

HELEN

He's going~?

MADELINE ..:.

Idiot. Come on .

107AAA IN THE ELEVATOR, 107AAA

Ernest barely has time to celebrate his escape when the elevator CLUNKS to a stop and the door swings open.

107B ON THE UPPER FLOOR, 107B

Ernest steps out and sizes up his surroundings. He's on the upper floor now, the sound of the party far below him.

Looking for somewhere to hide , he sees an open door ahead, at the end of the hall. It's weird inside whatever room that is; there's an ornate bed post visible and a strange, glowing light. Ernest takes one step toward it and --

-- LISLE'S DOGS step out of the room and into the hallw~ ~

Ernest freezes. The dogs stare at him, larger and more lio bizarre than ever. Ernest takes one step back. The dogs 0 take one step forward. ~

The elevator WHIRRS again. Ernest tugs on the door, but it's locked, the elevator gone back down .

The dogs GROWL.

12 Feb 92

Ernest wipes the sweat from his brow, desperate, and then he gets an idea.

He runs.

Down the hall the other way, as fast as he can, an ugly, ''\ gasping, spitting sprint. The dogs take off after him, quick, sleek, and scary .

Ernest turns a corner and finds himself in a dead end, an alcove with just a steep metal staircase that leads to a door in the ceiling. He flings himself on the staircase and starts up, but now the dogs are around the corner and leaping at him, SNAPPING and GROWLING.

Ernest flings open the metal door in the ceiling and sees stars above. He tries to pull himself through, but one of the dogs sinks its teeth into the back of his jacket, tugging him down a few steps. Desperate, Ernest shrugs out of the jacket, throws himself through the open doorway in -the ceiling, and CLANGS it shut on the dogs.

CUT TO:

l2 Dec 9l

108

EXT ROOF NIGHT

ERNEST turns and finds himself on the flat roof of Lisle's mansion. He staggers a little, blown by the wind, which is stiff as hell up here, on top of the world. In every direction, Ernest can see forever, the whole of Los Angeles is spread out far below.

A spring storm is on the wayi thunder RUMBLES and lightning flashes.

ERNEST
Well, that helped.

Ernest looks around, knowing he doesn't have much time. He runs to one end of the roof and looks down, over the edge.

It's a sheer drop, down the side of the house and straight down a limitless cliff.

ERNEST (cont.)

Oh boy.

He turns and looks around, growing panicky. He spots a garden trellis that comes all the way up to the top of the roof on the other side. He runs to it.

He l eans over that edgeand looks straight down, into pitch black. But at least the trellis goes all th eway, at least all the way that he can see before it's lost in the black.

A door opens behind him. Ernest whirls.

MADELINE and HELEN come out the door to the roof and head * toward him.

ERNEST (cont . )
Stay away!

He shakily starts to climb down the garden trellis.

MADELINE
(annoyed)
Ernest!

-

12 Dec 91

HELEN
You're e mbarrassing us!

The top board of the trellis CRACKS under Ernest's weight. He slips down several boards, SMASHING through each of them, before coming to rest on a tough one.

He heaves a sigh of relief.

But his reprieve is only temporary. Now the trellis breaks all the way, practically splitting down the middle. Ernest spins, still holding onto half of it, and SLAMS into the rain gutter, hard.

Th e trellis breaks away beneath him and falls into the black. Ernest doesn't fall, as his suspenders have hooked onto the rain gutter.

Ernest looks down, at his feet, dangling over t hei nky black.

Madeline, Helen, and the Beefy Guys rush forward to grab him, but the steel plate holding one end of the rain gutter RIPS out of the concrete.

The end of the gutter swings out, a way from the building, dangling Ernest out s i x or seven feetaway,held there by his suspenders, like a marionette .

ERNEST
Oh, my .

He looks at the side of the house. The other end of the rain gutter is held in by a steel plate with four bolts in it, one in each corner.

HELEN
Ernest! Give me your hand!

She goes to the edge of the roof and reaches out, but Ernest is much too far away.

Ernest looks back to the steel plate. One of the bolts CRUNCHES out of the wall . The gutter shudders7 # most spilling Ernest.

~0 MADELINE Ernest! Do you still have the @1 potion? ! Do you have it?!

12 Dec 91

Ernest's eyes light up. He fumbles in his pocket and pulls out the potion bottl e.

HELEN

Drink it! You can put yourself together again!

Ernest spins the cap off.

MADELINE
Drink it! You'll die otherwise!

Ernest looks at the potion. He looks at the steel plate. The second of the four bol tsSNAPS out of the concrete. The gutter shakes again, and this time bends, dangerously close to falling.

HELEN * It's your only chance! Drink it!

MADELINE * Drink it!

-- HELEN

DRINK IT!!

~he thira bolt ZINGS out of the concrete, almost hitting Ernest . Only one bolt left.

Ernest looks at Madeline and Helen, looking at him, desperate . A strange, peaceful look crosses his face.

ERNEST
I'm sorry, dears .

MADELINE & HELEN What?!

The fourth bolt GROANS, pulling out of the concrete about halfway.

ERNEST
Tell them tell all the monsters I created I'm so sorry.

He caps the bottle again, holds it out

and deliberately lets go of it. It falls, for a long

time, before there is the faroff sound of glass SHATTERING.

23 Sept 91

Ernest looks up at Madeline and Helen for the last time, and then the bolt rips free. The gutter falls. So does Ernest. The last thing he hears is the f aroff SCREAMS of Madeline and Helen as he tumbles into the black abyss, down, down, a seemingly endless fall.

Just before he hits, there is a sudden FLASH as lights go on beneath him, illuminating something right in front of him, something he's going to slam into.

A stained glass window. Michelangelo's 11creation.11Ernest covers his face as he SMASHES through the window --

CUT TO:
109

INT POOL ROOM NIGHT

-- and PLUNGES into Lisle's swimming pool in a shower of glass. He hits the water hard, his fall broken, but he still SMACKS the bottom of the swimming pool pretty hard.

But not too hard. He opens his eyes and sees something floating in the water next to him, something silvery and shiny. It's the potion bottle, unbroken, still corked. Ernest grabs it and swims to the top, bursting out and GASPING for air. He looks up at the window he crashed through. He looks over to the door.

JIM MORRISON is standing at the circuit breaker box. He * holds Lisle's dagger, which he has just pulled out of the circuit breaker box. A half-clad BLONDE GROUPIE stands next to him, ready for a swim.

MO~ f~tiOO 4 * You gonna be don~ soon or what?

ERNEST

Yes! (waving the potion bottle) And so are all of you!

CUT TO:
110

EXT LISLE'S MANSION NIGHT

ERNEST runs down the h i l lfromLi sle's mansion,SLOGGING as he goes. He hurries up to the valet parking area, where a '55 racing Porsche has been brought around.

5 Dec 91

Ernest shoves JAMES DEAN away from the driver's side, jumps in, and GUNS the engine, racing out of there.

DEAN
Hey!

111 UP AT THE HOUSE, 111

MADELINE, HELEN, and LISLE come out the front door, watching Ernest drive away. Mctdelineand Helen are in Lisle's wake, following her like disobedient children.

LISLE
He still has the potion. It will be better for both of you if yo~ get it back.
MADELINE
(rolls her eyes)
What are you going to do?

HELEN

Kill us?

LISLE
(simply)
Bury you .

Madeline and Helen look at each other, not at all pleased.

CUT T0: ...

112

EXT DOMINICK'S NIGHT \L~

The Porsche SCREECHES to a halt outside Do~ n-Yck's,Ernest's neighborhood bar.

~ ~ CUT TO :

113

INT DOMINICK'S NIGHT

It's late,and the place is empty -- except for the same comatose DRUNK at the end. The door SLAPS open and ERNEST bursts in, looking •wild,looking for Toni, his regular * bartender, but she's not behind the bar.

ERNEST * (panicky) Toni?!

s Dec 91

TONI {o. s.) Hey, Dr.M!

Ernest whirls around . It's TONI,who was wiping off a table * in the corner.

ERNEST
Toni!
TONI
(9oing behind the bar)
You kne>w, you don't look so good, Everything okay?
ERNEST
They're after me, Toni! They·, re after me and they won't rest until they catch me!
(leaning forward, ccmf identially)
They'rE~all around us, you know.
TONI
Who is:1

She pours a cup of cot:fee and puts it in front of him.

ERNEST
It sounds crazy, I know. Don't , ask me to explain. ~ " {holds out the pc,tion bottle) \)"' You would never believe~ horror that surrounds us in~~s city!

TONI ~ Is MadE~line involved?

ERNEST
Yes!
TONI
I beliE~ve every word.

He drinks the coffee, without thinking about it. He makes a face when he tastes it:.

5 Dec 91

ERNEST * Is this coffee?

TONI

(holding the pot) Should I make it a double?

ERNEST

Yeah.

She fills the cup, and he holds onto it like it's all he's got in the world.

CUT TO :

114

INT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

HELEN and MADELINE burst in the front door of the mansion.

HELEN
Ernest? ! ·
MADELINE
Ernest! Come down here right this minute!
HELEN
He wouldn't come here! This is a waste of time! No one would come back here, it's idiotic!

They look at each other for a second.

~ HELEN (cont • )\))<::; I'll take this floor, you X'-ookupstairs.

~ ~ CUT TO :

115

INT BAR NIGHT

ERNEST has one hand wrapped around his cup of coffee, the other hand wrapped around the potion bottle, which he holds out to Toni.

ERNEST
Listen carefully. If anything happens to me -- and I'm afraid it's going to -- just get this bottle to the Tinies. Tell them to analyze it. They'll know what to do.

120A

5 Dec 91

TONI
But --
ERNEST
Do you promise?!
TONI
Ipromise. But you have to promise me somElthing. For once in your life, you have to take care of yourself! Don't just sit here! If they're after you, you've got to go to the police, or run, or -- something!
ERNEST
It's no use. No matter where I go, they'll find me. I couldn't just disappear, I'd have to die . Die and be rebc>rn. You tell me ,Toni -- how could anyone possibly do that?

Down at the end of th1?bar, the Drunk suddenly sits bolt upright, raising his finger as if he has a terrific idea.

Ernest and Toni look at him.

ERNEST (cont.)
Yes?

Instead of speaking, the Drunk turns completely red, makes one sound --

DRUNK
ACK! Q,~

-- and falls forward, his face hitting ~ 'tar with a loud CLUNK, his toupee fal l ing off . ~

Ernest bolts out of h i s chair andgoe~ to him.

TONI

Is he all right?!

Ernest turns the Drunk over and puts his fingers on the side of his neck, feeling for a pulse.

ERNEST * My God l

5 Dec 91

TONI
What?
ERNEST
He's dead!

TONI

Dead?!

ERNEST

All dead! Extremely dead!

TONI
Are you sure?!
ERNEST
I've haidsome experience in these matters.

TONI

My God!

I'll call

He heads for the phone.

ERNEST (co
his next

Ernest pi the phone .

No

They are bo They look at the Drunk, then :DE~;,.......-jclalMJ:S-llPthe phone.

27 Feb 92

ERNEST (cont. )
Weli - I've always admired him. t

way.

CUT TO:
116

INT MENVILLE MANSION NIGHT

MADELINE and HELEN meet in the foyer.

MADELINE
Well?
HELEN
Nothing. You?
MADELW
Nothing. ~

'n~EN All rig·ht~l<et 1sbe logical. If you were ErnesY and you'd been through what he's been through, what's the first thing you would do?

They turn at the same time and look at the liquor cart. They look at each other -- and bolt for the door.

CUT TO:
116A

EXT BAR -- FRONT NIGHT 116A*

Police cars are parked in front of the bar, lights flashing. *

117

EXT BAR -- BACK NIGHT

TWO CORONERS wheel a gurney out of the bar, a sheet pulled up over a corpse. TONI follows the gurney, acting very upset, talking to a COP who has Ernest's wallet.

TONI
(too helpful)
It's Menville. M-E-N-V-I-L-L-E.
COP
I can't seem to find any picture ID here. Just credit cards and so forth.

27 Feb 92

TONI
Oh, I'm sure that's Dr. Menville. I've known him for ten years.
COP
Yeah, well, without ID I'll need a family member to look at the body.

At the end of the driveway, a car pulls up in front of the * bar, SQUEALING to a halt. MADELINE and HELEN jump out. *

COP (cont.}
Do you know his next of kin?
TONI
(mind racing)
Um, well -- Idon't ~~hinkMrs .Menville --

MAD~~E (o. s . ) {hurrying~b.wnthe driveway) Mrs. Memvill~l'lat?

~TONI (acting very well) Oh, Mrs. Menvillel I'm so sorry! It's poor Dr.Menville! He's -- he's dead! I saw him die! Very clearly!

HELEN
Ernest?
MADELINE
(pointing to the body)
That's Ernest Menville?!

Toni nods, sobbing.

HELEN
He's dead? Ernest is dead! Everybody's dead!
COP
(to Madeline)
I'm sorry, ma'am. These are his personal possessions . His walle· his keys, everything he had on

14 Nov 91

Madeline quickly go,=sthrough the items, looking for the potion bottle.

MADELINE
This is it? This is all?!
COP
Uh --· yes ma' am.
HELEN
There was nothing else? Maybe in a pocket?
MADELINE
Like a little bottle about this big?
COP
I don't think so. \)\~

MADELINE <o'('.. I want to see the bo~.

COP * Fine, we'll need you to identify it anyway.

TONI * (desperate) No! It's ugly! He fell into the blender! I was making a margarita!

They ignore her, marching over to the body .

AROUND A CORNER,

ERNEST, crouching in the alley dressed in the Drunk's clothes, hears what's going on and panics. He looks down at the potion bottle that he clutches in his hand. He's torn. * Making a decision, he leans out, around the corner, and HSSSTS. Toni turns. He cocks his arm to toss the bottle.

IN THE STREET,

Madeline has walked up next to the gurney. She reaches out and takes hold of the sheet with one hand. She starts to draw it back . In the background, we can see the potion * bottle arc gracefully through the air, over everyone's heads, unseen by everyone except Toni, who catches it gracefully .

25 March 92

TONI
Wait a minute!

Madeline turns. She's holding the sheet up with one hand , c learly exposing theDRUNK'S face, but she's looking back at Toni ,who is holding the potion bottle out in front of her .

TONI (cent.)
Is this what you mean?

Madeline and Helen exchange a look. Madeline lets go of the sheet, which settles over the Drunk's face again.

Helen steps up to Toni.

HELEN
Yes, e xactly .I'll take care of that.

Her hand closes around the potion bottle and she tugs it from Toni's unwilling hand. Madeline closes her eyes in relief and joins Helen.

COP
(still at the gurney)
Uh ma'am?

Madeline turns. For the first time, she realizes she is a grieving widow.

MADELINE
(theatrically)
Oh yes. Yes, that's my husband .
COP
Fine . You can claim the body tomorrow at the morgue.
MADELINE
The morgue?!
(thinks)
I'll send someone.

The Cop shrugs and goes to his car. Madeline and Helen come together, watching as the Coroners finish loading the body * into the b~ck of the ambulance.

125A

25. March 92

MADELINE

Well -- now it's just you and me, Hell .

HELEN
Yep. *

A terrible thought sweeps across Helen's face as the doors of the ambulance SLAM. She turns her head, sneaking a look at Madeline that is full of dread.

HELEN (cont. )

Forever.

The implications of eternity with Helen hit Madeline too, now, and she turns to Helen with the same look of dread on her face.

They stare at each other for a second, terrified, then try like hell to force smiles.

But they look a lot more lik.egrimaces.

CUT TO:
118

INT BAR NIGHT

TONI comes back in the front door of the bar and closes it behind her. She turns and sees ERNEST, still dressed in the Drunk's clothes, standing in the doorway from the alley .

TONI
You did it. You got away with it.
ERNEST
They got away with it. Without that bottle, no one would ever believe me.
TONI
They'll get what's coming to them, Dr. M. Everybody does. Everybody.

He GRUNTS, staring out the doorway blankly, at the rain that has started to fall.

ERNEST

When do yo think -they'11 realize that body sn't mine?

TONI

Not before ou're far, far away.

ERNEST

And t?

She looks at him, a look t at is a combination of affection and sadness, because he se ms already a million miles away from her, just staring ou the open doorway at the rain.

CUT TO :

119

EXT SWISS STREET DAY

This is a small, quaint s reet somewhere in a village high in the Swiss Alps. There ar no cars, and few signs of progress. Time doesn't s em to move much here. A legend:

D, 27 YEARS LATER.

It's a beautiful spring ay, late in the afternoon. MADELINE and HELEN are sitting on a cafe terrace that looks out over a park. They look exactly he same as they did twenty-seven years ago, exquisite. And they look bored to death.

HELEN
Do you want to go to London? ~-~ MADELINE Again? ~~ C)
HELEN X'
Do you want to go ~ aris?
MADELINE
I don't care.
HELEN
Do you want to go anywhere?

Madeline just looks at her.

MADELINE
What's the rush?

14 Nov 91

Madeline looks out, into the park. An OLD COUPLE are in the park with a picnic basket. They're spreading out a blanket, putting out food, moving slowly, awkwardly, like old people.

MADELINE (cont.)
Look at that couple .
(Helen doesn't answer)
Look at them!

HELEN * I am looking at them. \J\).{

MADELINE ~ * God, they're old. Pathw.%, aren't they? (Helen doesn't answe"r) Huh?l

HELEN
Yeah .. Pathetic.

She looks at Madeline, then at herself, then back at the * Cou~le. There is almost a look of longing in her eyes as L .. she watches them struggle with their tired limbs.

HELEN (cont.)
PathE?tic.

120 OUT IN THE PA1rn, 120

the Old Couple are sitting on the blanket now, leaning against each other. The food and wine are laid out in front of them, but it's each other they admire, in love. They're ERNEST and TONI, now in the i rlate seventies, well-dressed, well-groomed. They smile warmly, the picture of happiness.

ERNEST
Hungry?
TONI
Starving.

She holds out her hamd to him, and it's an old, wrinkled, liver-spotted hand. Ernest takes it with his left hand, which is every bit as old.

And then he covers i.t with his right hand. The hand of a twenty-five year old.

FADE OUT.

14 Nov 91

APPENDIX A
scene from "Dark Windows," Madeline's early film
1

EXT LONDON FLAT DAY

MICHAEL CAINE comes up the steps to his London flat and goes inside.

\

2

INT HALLWAY DAY

'-0\\

MICHAEL comes in, closes the door behind lzj._n(>and notices the window over the door to his apartment i~l'ightly ajar, and light is coming from inside. Cautious, he draws his gun and proceeds.

3

INT MICHAEL'S FLAT DAY

MICHAEL throws open the door and sweeps inside, revealing MADELINE, very 1965, who is standing next to the desk. She whirls and sees him, his gun pointed at her.

MADELINE
What are you doing here?!

Michael doesn't answer. Suddenly an INTRUDER steps out from the curtains behind Madeline, throws a scarf around her neck, and starts to choke her.

She flails, fights, and finally dies, collapsing to the ground at the Intruder's feet. The Intruder unwraps the scarf from her neck and rubs it softly between his fingers. He looks up to Michael.

INTRUDER
Nice scarf. Cashmere?
MICHAEL
(coldly)
My mother gave it to me for Christmas.

BANG! Without a flinch, Michael fires the gun, shooting the Intruder in the head. He drops to the carpet, dead, next t6 Madeline.

CUT TO: