"MALCOLM X" (1992)

STATS187pages178scenes33,165words34%dialogue152characters

Words

  • dialogue11,11234%
  • action20,91763%
  • other1,1363.4%

Scenes

location
  • INT 93
  • EXT 41
  • INT/EXT 1
  • UNKNOWN 43
time
  • DAY 5
  • NIGHT 17
  • DUSK 1
  • UNKNOWN 155
2

INT. GROCERY STORE· DAY

Autobiography of Malcolm x

It is a bright sunny day on a crowded street on the black side of Boston. People and kids are busy with their own things.

SHORTY makes his way down the street.· He is a runty, very dark young man of 21 with a mission and a smile on his face. He wears the flamboyant style of the time: the whole zoot•suit, pegged-leg, wide-brim bit.

Shorty turns into a grocery store.

With exaggerated care Shorty selects two large potatoes (rejecting one as too small); then moves to an egg bin and picks out two eggs. He brings his selections to the counter and impatiently waits for the white grocer to put them in a bag.

3

INT. HARDWARE STORE· CLOSE SHOT• DRALOLINGOFRED DEVIL

• DAY

A hand reaches for the devil and we see it is the label on a can of lye. PUl.LBACK SHOWS the hand to be Shorty's.

Shorty moves past sundry hardware items, stops to select a rubber hose with a metal spray-head. He tests it for durability.

4

INT. DRUGSTORE· DAY 4

A large jar is plunked on the counter by a white hand. Shorty leans INTO the SHOT to make sure it's what he ordered: a jar of Vaseline. Satisfied, he hands it back to the white dniggist.

s txT. STREET· FOLLOW SHOT· DAY s

Shorty is now laden with packages, winding his way down the street. His smile is one of anticipation. He noda to a pal without stopping; eyes a couple of chicks danc- ing on the street, but is not dissuaded.

6

INT. BARBER SHOP· DAY

Shorty has his jacket and hat off, his sleeves rolled up. H~ is like a surgeon preparing for an operation. His equipment is spread out on a table: can of lye, large mason jar, wooden stirring spoon, knife, the eggs, His actions have the character of a ritual: each thing being done just so, in time-honored fashion.

He slices the potatoes and drops the thin slices into the mason jar. He adds water and makes a paste of the starch,

Behind Shorty is a spirited barbershop conversation. One man is getting a haircut; two others are watching (TOOMER, JASON) one of them from behind a newspaper. A middle-aged barber, CHOLLY, is doing most of the talking.

CHOLLY
After I hit the number that woman wasn't no good to me at all.

The men laugh.

ANGLE - SHORTY

pries open the can of lye, whiffs it. It's good and strong. He pours some in the mason jar, stirring with the wooden spoon. He cracks the eggs into the mi%ture and stirs. He waits as fumes rise and feels the outside' of the jar as it gets hot.

ANOTHER ANGLE

The barbershop seen FROM a door, slightly ajar. A wooly head, entirely in shadow, peers out.

CHOLLY (O.S.)
She says I'm cheap cu: I won't buy her a diamond ring. Had the indignation to call me a cheap black motherfucker.
TOOMER.
And when a black woman call you a cheap black motherfucker you've been called a cheap black motherfucker.

Cholly is annoyed. It's hi.I.story,

CHOLLY
Will you let me tell it?

(CONTIN!JtD)

CONT!~'7JtD: 6

ON SHORTY

He opens the bulky package he has been carrying,unfolds a large rubber apron and gets into it. Now he dons a pair of rubber gloves.

SHORTY
Where's Homeboy?

He is all ready; one of his hands is filled with a huge glob of Vaseline. His manner is indignant as if he were asking the whereabouts of an exasperating child.

CHOLLY
Red's in the head, man.
TOOMER
You mean hiding in the head.
CHOLLY
Hey, Red. Your man's here and waiting on you.

His hands full, Cholly opens the door with his feet and MA.LCOLH comes out, a big, gawky, bright-faced country boy, wearing down-home clothes and an expression of apprehension.

TOOMER
Gonna get that first conk laid on, hunh, Homeboy?
CHOLLY
Han, don't scare him more than he's scared already. Ain't too bad ...

Halcolm allows himself to be led to an empty chair, where Cholly drapes him with a double sheet, tucking it tightly around his neck and adding a protective collar of paper.

CHOLLY
••• Like anything else. First time a chick gets her cherry popped, she might put up a little fight. But pretty soon you can't give her enough. Right, Homeboy?

CLOSE - H.Al.COLH

Malcolm gulps, his eyes on the fuming mason jar.

(CO~"TINU!.D)

6 CONTINUED: ( 2)

Shorty starts massaging a great quantity of Vaseline into Malcolm's scalp covering his neck and ears as well. All the men have gathered around, involved in the ritual. For Malcolm it is closer to being a kind of execution.

Git his forehead and eyebrows.

SHORTY
I know what I'm doing.

Shorty applies the Vaseline to that area. Now he brings over the steaming jar and places it nearby.

SHORTY
Lissen. You make sure there ain't no stinging when I get through 'cause this shit can burn a hole in your head.

Hold tight, baby, and keep your eyes shut.

Malcolm nods his head, clenches his eyes and gri~s his teeth. Shorty applies the congolene with a comb, working it into Malcolm's hair.

CLOSE - MALCOI..M

MA.1.COI..M
I thought you said it was gonna sting ... this ain't nothin'.

For a moment nothing happens, then the heat hits him. He yells, tries to catch his breath: his head is on fire.

MALCOI..M
You motherfucker. You're killing me. I'm burning up. My damn head is on fire,

He nearly leaps out of the chair, but the barber restrains him.

Shorty, utterly unmoved by the outburst, continues working the congolene into his hair.

Malcolm breaks out of the chair wildly. But the three men drag him to a basin where Shorty has attached the shower spray. His cries filling the room, Malcolm is ducked under the spray. Shorty starts rinsing out his hair.

(CONT11''1.f£D)

6 CON7I!,lJED: (3) 6

SHORTY
Don't fight me, man. Let me git it out.

Malcolm is a little relieved, he tentatively opens his eyes, then he feels the congolene again and there is another outburst. Shorty forces his head under the spray, spurts the water all over his head, wetting Malcolm and the shop in the process.

SHORTY
Is it out? How's it feel?
MALCOLM
How the hell do I know? Feels like I ain't got no skin on my head.
C'HOLLY
If you can talk, it's out.

The men laugh as Shorty throws a large towel over Malcolm's head and begins drying him.

SHORTY
Lemme work the grease in.

Shorty is working Vaseline into Malcolm's hair with a comb. Malcolm is covered with sweat and water. His teeth are still clenched, his eyes still closed.

SHOTS OF MEN

watching. As the effect of the conk takes shape. It's clear that Malcolm's hair is as straight and smooth as any white movie star's.

C'HOLLY
Well, all right.
TOOMER
Yeah.
SHORTY
Well, all reet.

CLOSE SHOT -MALCOLM

He opens his eyes. He cannot believe it. He stares at himself in the mirror. He wonderingly strokes his hair. His face opens into the sunburst of a smile.

MALCOLM
Sunovabitch, it looks white.
(CO?f!INlJED)

6 COI\TI?-."UtD:( 4) 6

ANGLt ONMAI..COI..H

as he tests his profile in the mirror. He laughs joyously.

7 txT. STREET· NIGHT (REMEMBERED TIME) 7

FROM the POV of the motonnan, the trolley tracks ahead as the trolley moves rapidly in the night. Someone is lying on the tracks a distance ahead. CI.ANGINGof the trolley BELL is loud as it's RAINING cats and dogs.

8

EXT. TROLLEY TRACKS· NIGHT (RT."1EMBEREDTIME)

A terrified black man, badly beaten, lies on the tracks as the trolley approaches. SOUND COMING ON. He is unable to move.

9

INT, CLOTHING STORE· DAY

SHORTY
Well, Homeboy, you almost there. Turn around. I

Shorty is supel."VlSlngasMalcolm tries on a zoot suit. He slips into the jacket••.

Shoes off, Malcolm steps into the tight-fitting peg• legged pants ..•

dons awide-bri111111edhatwitha bright blue feather.

Finally, fully outfitted, he leans forward toward his

new image in the full-length mirror, twirling a long, dangling key chain.

SHORTY
Well, all right, then.
MALCOLM
Well, all reet, then.

The transformation is complete, The two laugh and slap hands.

10

EXT. ROXBURY STHEET • DAY

Malcolm and Shorty come strutting down the street: two conked zoot-suited sharpies. Hometown boy has departed.

10 CONTlN1JtD: 10

And the chicks en the street notice them, especially Malcolm, the taller cf the twc, the lighter-skinned, the more dominant. They walk imperiously past, fully aware cf their impact.

CLOSE SHOT· MALCOLM

FREEZE FR.AME. He becomes a STILL.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
When my mother was pregnant with me, she tcld me later, a party cf Klansmen en horseback surrounded cur house inOmaha.

ANGLE· KL.ANON HORSES IN FRONT OF HOUSE

MALCOLM (V,O.)
They brandished guns and shouted fer my father tc ccme cut. My mother went tc the deer where they could see her pregnant ccnditicn .••

ANGLE· PREGNANT LOUISE LITTLE ON PORCH

MALCOLM (V.O.)
... and tcld them my father was in Milwaukee, preaching.

ANGLE· KL.AN

BRtA.KSall the Wlh'DOWS in the house, then rides cff intc the glcricus D.W. Griffith !irth of a Nation mccnlit night.

CLOSE· LOUISE LITTLE

MALCOLM (V.O.)
The heeded Klansmen said the gocd, white Christians would not stand fer his troublemaking, and to get out of town.

ANGLE· TERRIFIED LITTLE CHILDREN

leek cut a broken window at their mother.

(COITTIN1.J'tD)

B.

10 CON!INUtD: ( 2) 10

J,,1;;;1..t•O1..DFR.A!'ltHOUSE:INOH.AHA

MALCOI..H(V.O.)
They broke every window with their rifle butts before riding off into the night, their torches flaming.

ANGLE· FRONT PORCH OF LITTLE HOUSE

An empty rocker on it.

MALCOI..H(V.O.)
Hy fatherwas not a frightened Negro asmost were then and as many still are today. He was six feet four and very black ...

CI.Ost· t.ARLLITTLE

He looks directly INTO the CA.'1ERA,wearinga Baptist minister's robe.

MALCOI..H(V.O.)
•..and had a glass eye. He believed, as did Marcus Garvey, that freedom, independence and self-respect could never be achieved by the Negro in America.••

CLOSE· t.ARLLITTLE

He wears a Garvey hat, ornate with gold braid.

MALCOI..H(V.O.)
••. that, therefore, black men should leave America and return to the land of their origin•
9

ANGLE· T.ARLLITTLE

In a wagon with little Malcolm.

CLOSE· t.ARLLITTLE

MALCOI..H(V. 0. )
My father dedicated his life to his beliefs because he had seen four of his six brothers die violently •••

10 CONTih'1JED: (3) 10

WIDER ANGLE

We see Earl in front of a podium in church. He is preaching.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
...three killed by white men and one lynched. There are nine children in our family.

ANGLE - NINE LITTLE CHILDREN

CLOSE - LOUISE LITTLE

She is a pretty, mature woman and white-looking.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
Hy mother was an attractive woman, an educated woman, a strong woman.

CLOSE - LOUISE Aft"D£ARL

A posed wedding picture, serious but sweet.

MALCOLM (V,O.)
She was very light, her mama was raped by a white man. One of the reasons shemarried my father was because he was so black, she disliked her complexion and wanted her children to have some color.

CLOSE SHOT - FLASH BUl..B

of camera flashes.

ll EXT. ROSELAND STATE B.Al.LROOM• NIGHT ll

Music of GLEh'NMILLER'S BAND is heard.

A poster and the marquee announce the well-)::nownband.

The music is good, but ecol and white.

ln CUTS a big Saturday night crowd flocks in, All the patrons are white. People are dressed for the occasion.

(CONTlmr£D)

11 CON'!INUtD: 11

Malcolm and Shorty watch the crowd come in. Malcolm is impressed.

SHORTY
N~w, baby, here's the ropes. What you got to do to get that bread is give them some tooth...
12

INT. BALLROOH • NIGHT

The crowd dances sedately to the music, but the sheer mass of people and their fancy clothes amazes Malcolm's country eyes.

SHORTY
... 'cause them big white teeth worth more than a college education. Ya dig? Homey, the main thing ya got to remember is that e·,erything in this man's world is a hustle.
13

INT. HEN'S ROOH • NIGHT

In time to the GLENN MILLER MUSIC, a pair of shoes is being given a high gloss. Malcolm, as shoeshine boy, is working them over till they gleam. At the same time, to the delight of his white customer, B\JRGtSS,he is dancing to the music. He gives the shoe a final tap as the MUS· ICAL N1.))1"EtRENDSandBurgesssteps down. He appreciates Malcolm's expertise, his ingratiating manner and especially his smile.

B\JRGtSS You can sure swing it.

MALCOLM
Yes, sir. Natural rhythm,

Malcolm grins again and Burgess tosses him a quarter.

:SUli.GtSS You're okay.

MALCOLM
lf you got to go, sir, it's thataway -·

Halcolm gestures the urinal nearby. Burgess nods "Not a bad idea."

14

INT. JOHN - NIGHT

Burgess has just turned from the urinal and Malcolm has a basin of warm water waiting. A towel dangles fromhis wrist. As he goes to wash, Malcolm nods over toward Shorty who, approvingly, nods back.

ANGLE· MALCOI..H

is now giving him a brisk brushing off, the full treat· ment. He turns, fishing in his change pocket.

MALCOLM
You all set, sir?

Burgess eyes him, amused. Malcolm smiles broadly.

MALCOI..H
I mean you name it, man: hash, %'1.Jbbers,hooch··

Malcolm pats his pocket (the stuff's inside); flashes open the lining of his jacket. A pint bottle is visible.

MALCOLM
(no pause)
•· or maybe you'd like to have yourself a change of luck, change of color?

You on the ball. What's your name?

SHORTY
That's my homeboy. Old Red from Detroit.
BURGESS
I might see you later.
MALCOLM
I'll be there.

He smiles, tosses Malcolm another coin. He exits. Shorty sticks out his palm.

SHORTY
Hey, baby, cra:y.

Malcolm slaps it.

MA.LCOlJ1 Solid. Hey, this gone be all right.

(CON'.:'INU!.D)

CONTINUED: 14

Malcolm scoops out a handful of silver from his pocket and grins. Nice take for an evening.

SHORTY
Well, all reetl You think this is something? Wait'll you catch the flip side.

As the music of LIONEL H.A.HPTONcomes BI.AR.INGthrough

FLIP TO:
15

INT. BALLROOM· NIGHT

Miller has been replaced by Hampton; the white crowd is a predominantly black crowd·· and the contrast is imme· diate. The music is wilder, the dancing more frantic, the clothes more flamboyant. Although the crowd is over· whelmingly black, there is a peppering of whites, especially white chicks. And Malcolm is a little bug· eyed as he nudges Shorty, watching mixed couples on the floor.

A boy in extreme :cot-suit flips him; a white gi~l in long, blonde ,hairwigs him. Malcolm is a little open-mouthed.

VOICE (V .0.) S,bowtime! showtimel

ANGLE· BALLROOM· NIGHT

People start moving off the floo~, making room for the showtime dancers. The music begins to get faster and more furious.

CLOSE• H.A.HPTON'SBAND· NIGHT

It is a fast Lindy. People start clapping to the beat as they form a U around the dancers, with the band at the open end.

16

INT. DANCE FLOOR

Two couples are on the floor, dancing wildly. They are quickly joined by a half dozen others. These are the best dancers and constitute the main event of a Saturday night black dance.

People crowd and push to get better vantage points and the competition is underway.

16 CO?;TIN7.JE:D: 16

ANGl.EON CROWD

It is dominantly black, but there are some whites in the audience, mostly women. One is SOPHIA, a spectacular blonde with a degree of refinement, something of a thrill-seeker. Many of the men try to catch her eye, but for the moment Sophia is just watching, looking for no one in particular, but nonetheless looking.

ANGl.E• COUPLE ON DANCE Fl.OOR

Getting ready to enter the fray, the girl takes off her shoes and bounces out on the floor barefoot with her partner. Their advent is greeted with cheers and AD LIBS. Clearly, the crowd has its favorites,

',,,'IDERSHOT

The music gets faster and the dancing takes on a more frantic and more remarkable quality.

FOLLO\,,~NGSHOT· MALCOLM

He is looking for his partner, the Girl he brought, and now he sees her. He makes his way through the watching audience.

CLOSE· LAUR.A

She is a fine chick, cool and beautiful. She smiles as she sees Malcolm approaching.

TWO SHOT

Laura and Malcolm stand together, delighted to be with one another, starting to move to the 1111Jsic,asthey watch the dancers.

MALCOLM
Come on, baby, let's show 'em how.

Laura smiles shyly; she's willing.

MALCOLM
You better get out of them shoes, girl.

Laura laughs, goes quickly to a bench and changes into a pair of sneakers.

17

INT. DANCE FLOOR

Because of the cpmpetition, Laura and Malcolm begin at high speed. In a moment, they are executing the most intricate steps of the ''Flapping Eagle''and the "'Kangaroo." Malcolm starts boosting her over and around his hips, then boosting her over h;s shoulders. Laura is the perfect partner. She loves it.

ANGLE WITH CROWD

So does the crowd, who loves new stars. There are AD LIB remarks: "Go, man, go." "Hey, Red." "Mmmmmm ummm."

ANGLE· SHORTY

A big, fat, hefty black woman takes Shorty out to the dance floor, and she takes the lead. As they do the Lind~, she is slinging Shorty around like a rag doll. This woman slides him through her legs and Shorty hashad enough; he runs off the dance floor, and hides.

T\.1OSHOT

Laura and Malcolm are, in the phrase, cooking on all burners now; and when they execute an especially intri• cate step, even Hamp waves over.

Malcolm is sweating and flushed and enormously elated. He sees that people are watching him, goading him on. He notices that Sophia, in particular, has not taken her eyes off him; she is clapping in time to his steps.

Seeing new stars in the making, the other dancers move to the side of the floor, marking time, yielding the dance floor to them. Laura and Malcolm go into a solo.

VilIOUS ANGLES

The crowd loves it. Malcolm and Sophia are very aware of each other. The finale is the classic drag, with Laura hanging limp around Malcolm's neck as he cnpers off the dance floor to the spontaneous applause of the audience.

CLOSE SHOT· SOPHIA (SLOW MOTION)

Clapping enthusiastically•· in open admiration.

CLOSE SHOT· SHORTY

Waiting to catch them as they come off.

(CO?{TINUED)

l.$.

17 CONTI?-1.JtD:

Shorty is whistling and shaking his hand appreciatively. He ~s also looking out for his dance partner.

Hey, man, gimme some skin.

MALCOU1
Shorty, this is Laura.

Laura is flushed and out of breath and joyous.

LAUR.A
'Lo. I've got to freshen up.
MALCOU1
Now you come back.

Laura laughs as she goes. She surely will be back.

That's a fine chick.

MALCOU1
Fine as May wine.

Except she live on the Hill IU\d got a grandma.

MALCOU1
Make it too easy and it ain't no fun.

Then his vision catches Sophia, who is approaching him. She makes a simple, direct gesture, "Want to dance?" Malcolm eyes Shorty and wordlessly glides into Sop~ia's anns.

ANGLE· DANCE FLOOR.

Immediately from the glances of the other men at the dance, he is the cynosure cf all eyes. He has new status. It's a heady feeling because she is the first white girl he has even been with socially who is not an obvious whore. He begins to show off a little, cuts a few fine steps.

TWO SHOT

They are dancing closer than before, Sophia begins to rock his black world.

(CO?,'TINlJED)

17 CO?,'Til'<"UtD:(2) 17

CLOSt · 11.ALCOLH

Trying to play it cool•· but he is beginning to pant. Not from the dancing, but from the situation: a gorgeous white chick asking for it.

SOPHIA
Why don't you take your little girl home, Red, and come on back?

He stops in his tracks. He can't believe it.

SOPHIA
Just walk. Don't run. lt'll be here when you get back.

He can only grin.

18 txr. LA1JRA'SHOUSt (ROXBURY) - NIGHT 18

The porch of a respectable house. Malcolm with Laura; he anxious to get away.

HALCOLM
1 better not come in.
LA1JRA
1 ain't stupid.
MALCOLM
1 mean, it's late, baby.
LAURA
1 know where you're going.
MALCOLM
I'm going to bed. 1 gotta work tomorrow, need my rest.

Laura walks to the door.

MALCOLM
Baby, I'll call you tomorrow.
LAURA
What for? I ain't white and I don't put out.

The front door opens; it's Laura's grandmother, MR.S. JOHNSON.

MALCOLM
'Night, Mrs. Johnson.

He runs down the porch steps.

19

INT. SOPHIA'S CAR - NIGHT

The lone light emits from the carRADIO, which plays THE NKSPOTS' "!f ! Didn't Care."

Sophia pulls her tight sweater over her head to expose two full, ripe, xbite breasts. Malcolm's eyes are popping out of his head. (NOTE: It's very unusual for women not to wear a bra back in that day, but you might say Sophia was way ahead of her time.)

SOPHIA
Malcolm, look at them. Have you ever seen white breasts like these?

CLOSE - MALCOLM

He shakes his head.

SOPHIA
Put your black hands on them.

He is paralyzed.

SOPHIA
Please do as I say.

Malcolm touches one softly, then the other.

SOPHIA
Go 'head. They won't bite. Feel them, they're hot .••harder, they won't break.

Malcolm is getting used to their feel, their squeezeability.

SOPHIA
Don't you love my breasts?

Malcolm mumbles something. He then kisses Sophia as if his black life depended on it and he commences to kill it.

SOPHIA
Hey, baby.

She stops him for a moment, but he buries his head in her long neck.

(CONTINUtD)

19 C0N!I1'1JtD:

SOPHIA
Am I the first white woman you've been with?

She already knows the answer.

MALCOL.H
Naw, you ain't. I had aplenty.
SOPHIA
... That isn't a whore?

Knowing she's right, Sophia becomes the aggressor.

ANGLE· TWO PAIRS OF LtGS

Malcolm and Sophia as they bone.

A beat•· both panting -- then Malcolm stops abruptly, He raises his hand to his face, then to Sophia's hand, which is still caressing him.

SOPHI.A
That's alright. Baby, take your time. Sophia's not going anywhere. I told you to walk, don't nin.
MALCOL.H
Shut up. I don't like bitches that talk.

CLOSt · SOPHI.A

She shrugs, then moves to embrace him.

SOPHI.A
Who wants to talk?

The couple starts at it again.

19A

INT. MOVIE THEATER - DAY

On the screen, Bogart and Cagney are blasting away the dirty, flat•footed coppers with machine guns. It'• one of those great Warner Bros. gangster B movies, maybe The Eoarine Twenties.

ANGLE - MALCOL.H AND SHORTY

Malcolm and Shorty sit, transfixed, in their seats.

(CO?.'TI?,'UtD)

19A COKTINUED: 19A

MALCOl.H Don't you know, you can't hump the Bogart.

SHORTY
tat lead, coppers.

20 txT.~OSTON COHHONS • DAY 20

A bright, sunny day, long shadows in the park. The Commons is almost empty, Two improbable :cot-suited blacks race past trees, and run over the grass. Malcolm and Shorty are playing cops and robbers while passersby stare.

SHORTY
Bang, bang. You're dead.

MALCOl.H Naw, you missed me, copper. Try this on for size.

Malcolm fires an imaginary Tommy machine gun at Shorty.

SHORTY
I forgot to tell ~ou I'm wearing a bulletproof vest,

MAl.COl.H The hell you are.

SHORTY
I'm tired of always playing the cops. I wanna be Bogart sometimes.
MALCOLH
You're too small to be Bogart,
SHORTY
I'm not too short to be Cagney.

Shorty shoots Malcolm from behind.

SHORTY
Pow. Take that.

Malcolm acts as if he's been hit,

MALCOLM
Ahhh! You got me, you dirty, rotten, stinking copper, only a low-down yellow rat bastard would shoot a man in the back.

20 CON7lKUtD: 20

H~lcolm starts to stagger, this is a long, dra\,'Tl•out Hollywood drawn-out death a la Cagney death in Public tocmv.

LOW ANGl.t •MALCOl.!1

Malcolm falls directly INTO the CAm:RA, face-first, and Shorty stands over him.

SHORTY
He used to be a big shot.

21 OMITTtD 21 th:ru thru

24 tXT. HARVARD LAW SCHOOL - DAY 24

The campus is deserted as they stand before one of the impressive buildings of the law school. Ivy, columns, majesty.

SHORTY
And on your right, ladies and gentlemen, is where they teach 'em how to keep niggers in their place.

Malcolm laughs, then looks up at the motto on the build- ing. Carved on the facade i~ a Latin maxim meaning "Equal Justice Under Law." The laughter fades from his face. BtLLS RING behind.

25 tXT. HARVARD LAW SCHOOL - DAY 25

They are dismissal !ELLS, R.ES01JNDINGnow,across the campus as the students (all white) pour out of the build- ing. They are self-concerned and don't even see the two black boys standing in their pathway. There is no malice involved, merely indifference, Malcolm and Shorty are brushed aside, forced onto the grass by the mass of exiting students.

CLOSE - MALCOLM

as he watches the crew-cuts go by.

26

EXT. TROLLEY TRACKS - NLGHT

In the same sweeping rhythm and from the same direction that.the students came, the moving trolley comes closer and closer to the black man lying on the tracks. Earl Little's mouth opens in terror.

27

INT. HE.ARINGROOM· DAY

A room, clinically empty: table, chair, and MR. HOLWAY. He is putting papers into his briefcase; the hearing is concluded.

LOUISE
What you mean took his own life?!
HOLWAY
I'm sorry, ma'am. You heard the verdict.
LOUISE
A man bash in the back of his head with a hammer, lay down on the tracks and kill himself!
HOLWAY
We merely act on the verdict. We don't make them.

He is nearly out the door.

LOUISE
Do you pay or don't you?
HOLWAY
Read the policy, ma'am. It clearly states.
28

EXT. COMMONS (AS BEFORE)· DAY

The students have left. Shorty and Malcolm are alone.

SHORTY
Fuck 'em all, big and small. I got a fishtail Caddy and you got a white broad. We living, daddy.
MALCOLM
Yeah.

Shorty wants to break the mood that has descended on Malcolm.

SHORTY
All reet, baby.

·'22.

MALCOLM
(half-heartedly)
All right, then.
SHORTY
Hub of the Universe•·

He repeats Malcolm's hand gesture. Malcolm laughs forcedly. There is no joy in it. The two walk off, become tiny figures lost IN THE FRAME. A RADIO begins PLAYING one of the syrupy white BAU.ADS of the period.

29

IN'!.SOPHIA'S APARTMENT - MORNING

Malcolm lies in bed, naked under the sheet. A half-empty whiskey bottle and an ashtray full of butts are en the night table: last night's partying.

SOPHIA
You like 'em scrambled soft or hard, sweetie?
MALCOLM
C'mere.

WIDEN TO SHOW Sophia at the stove fixing eggs. She wears an apron and nothing else. It's a nicely furnished, middle-class apartment.

SOPHIA
Sweetie, they're almost ready.
MALCOLM
You hear me, girl?

She shrugs, shuts off the burner, smiles and ambles toward him.

SOPHIA
You the man.
MALCOLM
You better believe it.

She starts to sit down on the bed n~xt to him.

MALCOLM
Sit over there.

He points to a nearby chair. Sophia makes an amiable hand-shrug and compliantly ~oes.

(CONTI'NUtD)

SOPHIA
You evil this morning.

MALCOlJ1 What's your story, baby?

He doesn't want to hear it; he wants to talk. He goes right on:

MALCOlJ1 You one of them white bitches can't get enough black dick. ls that what you are?

Sophia smiles. She aims to please. Malcolm smacks the bed next to him. She gets up and comes over.

MALCOlJ1 Take it off.

She takes off the apron.

MALCOlJ1 Now kiss my feet. Kiss 'em!

CLOSEUP· SOPHIA

As Sophia bends to do so.

MALCOlJ1 Feed me.

ANGLE

Sophia now has the scrambled eggs on a plate at Malcolm's side. She spoons some into his mouth. He chews and swallows slowly, then grabs her head and brings it to his. A long, brutal kiss. Then he pulls her head away by the hair. She looks at him: anything he wants.

MALCOLM
Yeah, girl; that's your story. When you gonna holler 'rape,' sister?
SOPHIA
Me?
MALCOLM
You will, baby•· if the time come.

(COh'TINU'ED)

29 CONTI KlltD: ( 2) 29

SOPHIA
Lemme feed you, sweetie, while they hot.

Malcolm lays back on the pillow and she holds out the eggs to him.

MALCOL.H
Sure wish you ma.maand papa could see you now. And that ofay you gonna marry.

30 tXT. BEACH - DAY 30

Bright sunlight. Malcolm and Laura are on a deserted Cape beach. They are dressed but both have their shoes and socks off, and he has his trousers rolled up. They walk, like birds, avoiding getting their feet wet as the waves come in.

LAUF..A.
Malcolm, you can be anything you want. You got class and you're smart.
MALCOL.H
All them books you read and you still don't know nuthin'.
LAUF..A.
I do know I love you.

Laura stops him and moves to him. Her kiss is a tender one, exploratory. Then Malcolm responds, embracing her fully. Her arms go around him as they both drop onto the sand.

CLOSt -HALCOL.H AND LAUR.A

LAUR.A
Oh, Malcolm, I love you. Please, there's no one around.

Malcolm turns his head from her, he gets up.

MALCOLM
Let's go.
LAUF..A.
Why? Is it because of your white gal? Folks say you're running around town with her.

(CONTINlJtD)

25,

30 co~;r1huED: 30

MALCOl.!1 Save it, baby. Save it for Hr, Right. 'Cause your grandma's smarter than you think.

LAURA
Is your mother alive?
MA.LCOI.J1
Yeah, she's alive.

& &

33

INT. DRUGSTORE - EVENING

Laura is eating a banana split. Malcolm is smoking and drinking coffee.

MA.LCOI.J1
You know how dumb I was? Iused to think that 'Not ForSale' was a brand name.

Laura looks over. She doesn't understand.

34

INT. LITTLE KITCHEN - DAY

Louise's hand reaches for a small sack of flour stamped "Not For Sale." She brings it down on the table with a hard, controlled whap.

MISS DUNNE (D.S.)
I did knock.

Louise doesn't look up.

LOUISE
Did you hear me say come in?

WIDEN to show Louise with a white social worker, HISS DUNNE, complete with pad, pencil and good will. Huddled out of sight, but nontheless visible, are five small black children.

MlSS DUNNE There's no point in fighting about it. I'm sorry. Hay I sit down?

Louise is very aware of the children and struggling for self-possession.

34 CONTI1'1.lED: 34

LOUISE
As you nice enough to ask, we'll get you one.

One of the children brings over a ~hair. Miss Dunne sets out her papers.

HISS DUNNE
It's the same question, Mrs. Little. Since the death of your husband
LOUISE
Murder.
HISS DUNNE
there is a serious question as to whether
LOUISE
They are my children. t:li,M.And they ain't no question . .li.l;ua.
HISS DUNNE
I think somet~~es, Mrs. Little, candor is the only kindness.

PAN the children's faces.

HISS DUNNE
All of your children are delinquent, Mrs. Little, and one, at least, Malcolm is a thief.
LOUISE
Get out.

HISS DU?.'NE (still sitting) Your control over your children, therefore --

LOUISE
Did you hear me?!
HISS DUNNE
You'll regret this, Mrs. Little.
LOUISE
If you don't move out through that door, you're going to be past all regretting.

The terror-stricken children huddle together.

27,

34 cot;TlNUED: (2) 34

FREEZE FRA.~E. It becomes a STILL.

MALCOLJ1(V.0.)
We were parcelled out, all five of us. I went to this reform school and lived at this woman's house. She was in charge.

SH.Al.LCLEAN ROOH

with a cot, a chair and a bureau.

MRS. SwtRl.IN (motherly; friendly) This is your room, Halcolm. 1 know you'll keep it clean.

DlNlNG ROOH TABLE

five white boys around it.

MRS. SwtRl.IN This is Malcolm, our new guest. We'll treat him like a brother,

CI..ASSROOH

MALCOLJ1(V.O.)
I was special. The only colored kid in class. I became a sort of mascot. Like a pink poodle.

SCHOOL YARD· KIDS

Playing in the school yard.

MALCOLJ1(V.O.)
I didn't know then that I was a nigger.

MALCOLM

playing basketball.

MALCOLM

speaking before his class.

34 CONTIKUtD: ( 3) 34

t'.A.I..CCL.11

doi:ighome1o10rk.

HORSE

having its teeth examined.

MRS. SWEJU.IN HALCOL.11(V.O.)

He's bright. Good grades. They talked about me Fine athlete. President like I wasn't there. of his class. Like I was some kind

of pedigreed dog or a horse. Like I was invisible.

35

INT. OSTROWSKI'S CL..ASSROOH•DAY

OSTROWSKI is talking to Halcolm, it's after school, the classroom is empty.

OSTROWSKI
The important thing is to be realistic. We all like you. You know that. But you're a nigger and a lawyer is no realistic goal for a nigger ...
HAJ..COLM
But why, Hr. Ostrowski? I get the best grades in the class. I got voted the class president. I want to be a lawyer.
36

INT. DRUGSTORE· P.H.

Laura and Malcolm, Neither is talking. She is simply watching him as he sips his coffee and puffs on a cigarette.

36A

INT, OSTROWSKI'S CLASSROOM• DAY

OSTROWSKI
•.. Think about something you can be. You're good with your hands. People would give you work. 1 would myself. Why don't you become a carpenter? That's a good profession for a nigra. Wasn't your pa a carpenter?

3GB lN1. DRUGSTORE: - CLOStUP - LAI.TR.A-P.H. 3GB

LAUR.A
It's not the end of the world.
37

EXT. ROAD· NIGHT

As Malcolm, driving, roars away in Shorty's Cadillac; Sophia at his side in the front seat. Shorty and two white chicks are in the back, all drinking out of a bottle, all high as kites.

MALCOLM
Fucking right, baby. It's only just the beginning.

38 SIGN 38

Bright sunlight. It reads "K.ALAHAZOOSTATE HOSPITAL 'FOR '!HtINSANt."

39 Ih'T.HOSPITAL - ROOH • DAY 39

Malcolm is with Louis~, who sits in a chair at~ window. She addresses him but without the slightest recognition of who he is.

LOUISE
I said it just as plain; 1 said. Don't let them feed that boy no pig. Because he got enough of the devil in him already. I told her she ain't got no reason talk to me that way because my hair blow in the wind.
MALCOLM
Mama, don't.
LOUISE
You want my skin. All right, I'll give it to you. I'll scrape it off. See how you like it ••.

She goes right on talking, although we do not hear her words. We GO IN ON her eyes TO an txnEME CLOSEUP.

The sound of a SPEEDING TR.A.INis heard.

28

EXT. YANKEE CLIPPER· DAY

The crack train of the New York, New Haven &Hartford speeds through the New England countryside.

41

INT. GALLEY OR TRAIN - NIGHT

THREE ELDERLY Bl.ACKWAITERS and Malcolm, wearing a sand· wichman's uniform, are crowded around a portable radio in the galley where food is prepared. The four stand around TULLY, a bland-faced personification of fine Pullman service. They are all listening to the Joe Louis-Max Schmeling heavyweight championship fight,

TULLY
Nigger, shut up so we can hear.
MALCOLM
C'mon, Joe.

WAITER fl Turn it up, Tully.

TULLY
It is up. fool, be quiet.

WAITER {!2 Tully, move the antenna ...

Tully fixes with the knobs.

WAITER 43
This guy Max is rough.
TULLY
Joe is just keeping his cool, He's feeling him out.

The Waiters are acting as if they're at ringside.

'R.ADIOANNOUNCER (V,O,) Louis moves in, he fires a left, another left, a looping right, Schmeling goes do}:ID,

• The Waiters are going crazy.

'R.ADIOANNOUNCER (V.O,) The referee leads Louis to the neutral corner.

TULLY
He let out that mule. Got that Nazi with a mule.

'R.ADIOANNOUNCER (V.O,) Seven, eight, nine, .t.c.D,We have a new heavyweight champion, J.£1:. Louis -- Joe Louis-

41 CONT!h1JED:

The Waiters are all jumping up and down when the galley door opens. MR. COOPER, the white man in charge of the kitchen, pops his head in.

COOPER
What in hell's going on?

In a moment's notice Tully and the others have resumed their customary, servient roles.

TlJLLY Nothing, Mr. Cooper.

COOPER
Got a lot of hungry customers out there.

TlJLLY Yes, sir, Mr. Cooper, soup done finished.

COOPER
Stop the talk, get moving. You, too.
MALCOI..H
On my way, Mr. Charlie.

Cooper eyes him narrowly.

COOPER
The name is Mr. Cooper and don't you forget it. Mr. Cooper.

RADIO ANNOt.TNCER(V.O.) Ladies and gentlemen, one minute , and fifteen seconds of the eighth round .•.

thru thru

45

INT. PASSENGER TRAIN• DAY

as Malcolm hefts his sandwich basket and a large con• tainer of coffee down the aisle, hawking as he goes.

MALCOI..H
Get your good haaaam and cheeeeeese sandwiches. I got coffee, I got cake and I got ice cream too. Right here.

45 CON!lh'UED:

ANGLE· FAVORING WHITE CUSTOMER, Bl.ADES

Hey, boy. Gimme a cheese on white and coffee.

Malcolm's mood is exuberant: the fight is still in his ears. He makes the delivery with a flourish and a smile.

MALCOLM
Yes, sir. Best in the house.
BLADES
You mighty pleased with yourself, boy
MALCOLM
Yes, sir. I aims to please.

'Bl.ADES I like you, boy.

INSERT· FANTASY PROJECTION

Malcolm picks up a slab of cream pie and pushes it in Blades' face,

BACK TO PASSENGER CAR

Normality again: Malcolm finishes serving him with complete servility. He pulls out a bill,

BLADES
Keep the change.

A.nd takes a satisfying bite out of his thin sandwich.

46

EXT. UILROAD TRACKS IN HILLF.M• P.H.

As the Clipper surfaces in Harlem, pulls up to the 125th Street station.

47

EXT. 125TH STJU:TTSTATION· P.H.

Malcolm, out of uniform and dressed in his :cot suit, comes down from the Park Avenue station in Harlem. He is hit with the sights and sounds. Everything delights him: the noise, the lights, the women, the pimps, the signs, the windows, the crowds, the laughter, the MUSIC.

48' OMITTED 48 thru thru

50A ANGLE· CROWD 50A

A CROWD of people run by Malcolm yelling and screaming.

CROWD
The Brown Bomber, The Brown Bomber, Joe Louis, the heavyweight champion of the world. Joe got the belt back. Lawd have mercy. Great day in the morning.

He runs after them.

50B

EXT. L25'L"HANDLENOX AVENUE SOB

All traffic has stopped, there is a huge spontaneous celebration going on. Black folks are everywhere, it seems as if all of Harlem is out on the streets. The citizens of Harlem are hugging, kissing, drinking, danc• ing, folks are hanging from street lamps, yelling out their windows, holding up hand!lladeJoe Louis banners, everyone has great reason to be joyous. The heavyweight champion of the world is a black man•· Joe Louis, the Brown Bomber, he has regained his championship.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

Malcolm quickly looks at his watch, he's running late for his train, as he fights his way through the crowd like a salmon going upstream, the CAM'E:RACRANES 'IJ1'toseehim eventually get lost in a sea of black humanit:y"cutting loose."

FADE OUT,

51 OMITTED .5l thru thru

35

57 EXT. SEVEN1'HAVENUE - NIGHT .57

Malcolm, newly conked and shart:>asa tack (:oot suit, trouser crease like a knife's edge, orange knob-toed shoes) walks toward his goal: Small's F~radise.

.. (CONTINVED)

57 CONTI?.'"UED: 57

The street is crowded with people, kids and HUSTLERS.

YOUNG HOOKER
Slow down, daddy, what's your hurry? Le;nmeshow you somepin brand new.

Malcolm smiles "no thanks"; keeps 111oving.

HUSTLER
Hey, man, hundred dollar ring -- diamond; and a ninety dollar watch. Take the both of them for a quarter; twenty-five bucks.

Malcolm waves; he's not having any. Goes on.

58

EXT. SMALL'S PARADISE• NIGHT

l>eforeentering, Malcolm sharps hin..;elfabit, picking off some lint, cocking his hat. And enters.

59

INT. SMALL'S PARAI)ISE- NIGHT

The restaurant is crowded, both at the bar and at the tables beyond. The immediate impression is of subdued well-being, of decorum, of easy affluence. This is the world Malcolm wants into. He digs it, drinking in its details.

ANGLE· BAR

A big man, FOX, accidentally bumps into Malcolm almost knocking him over.

MALCOLM
The word is excuse me.
FOX
Look, country boy, you shouldn't have been in my way.

Everyone becomes quiet in the bar.

FOX
So what are you goMa do? Go run home to your home.

Malcolm grabs a bottle off the bar counter and, with lightning speed, brings it crashing down on Fox's he•~· As he lays on the floor with head bleeding, Malcolm kicks him in the stomach two times. It's done, the fight is over and Feople pull him off of Fox,

59 CONTI1'1JED: 59

MALCOLM
Don't ever again in life step on my Florsheims a'gain,and never talk 'bout my mother.

ANGLE WITH MALCOLM AUD BARTENDER

MALCOLM
Gimme a whiskey.

The BARTENDER pours him a double.

MALCOLM
I ordered a single, Jack.

BARTEh"DER The double'& on that gentleman. Jack!

He points.

FROM MALCOL...~'SPOV· ARCHIE AT T.A.l!LE

The elderly man nods. He is big, he is ve:ry black. The same color as Malcolm's father.

CLOSE - H.ALCOLH

He raises his glass, toasts ARCHIE and downs it. Then leaning into the bar, asks:

MALCOLM
Who is he, man?
BARTENDER
That's West Indian Archie,
MALCOLM
Whut's he do?

The Bartender would not normally answer this, but Malcolm is the man of the moment, 10 the Bartender speaks:

BARTENDER
This and that.

Malcolm nods, then looks over again at Archie·· in appreciation. Archie wiggles a finger for him to come over.

(CONTINlJ'ED)

59 CONTINUED: ( 2) 59

AT ARCHIE'S TABLE

Halcolm is standing.

ARCHIE
Sit down. We ain't fixing to eat you. You look brand new in town. Pretty handy with a bottle.

Halcolm sits. There are no introductions. He just nods at SAH?-ITandCADII.l..AC.

ARCHIE
'Whatthey call you?

11Al.COU1 Red, and I ain't no punk.

ARCHIE
You better not be. 'Cause ifa cat toe you down in this town, you better stand up or make tracks.
SAMMY
Han live by his rep.
ARCHIE
That's a fact. lofuatyoudo, boy?

11Al.COU1 I'm working trains. Selling.

ARCHIE
Bet you like that shit.
MALCOU1
Keeps me out of the Anny.
ARCHIE
'Whenthey want your ass, won't nothing keep you out.

11Al.COU1 Not this boy. I ain't fighting their war. I got my own. Right chere. Heard tell you're a good man to know.

ARCHIE
Heard where?

11Al.COU1 'WhereI come from. Boston.

37

59 C0NTI1'7JtD: ( 3) 59

Samrr:yand Cacillac are watching a little skeptically. Archie is flattered.

ARCHIE
Sombitch and I ain't never been to Beantown.

MA.l.COLM Man's rep travels.

ARCHIE
How 'bout that?

Then seeing Sammy and Cadillac's dubious visages, Archie adds:

ARCHIE
You ain't bullshitting me, is you, boy?
MAJ..COLM
My papa taught me one thing: don't never bullshit a West Indian bullshit artist.

Archie laughs, Even Sammy smiles. Cadillac st.ll holds his judgment.

ARCHIE
Is your papa West Indian?
MAJ..COLM
No, my m&!!la.She's from Grenada,
ARCHIE
I like you, country.
SAMMY
Only where'd you get them godda.m vines.
CADILLAC
And them shoes. Oh, my.
ARCHIE
Yeah, got to do something about you.
SAMMY
You putting a hurtin' on my vision.

Sammy covers his eyes. Malcolm plays off the insults.

59 CONT! t-'UtD:(4)

MAI.COIJ1
Where ean I get a hold of you.
ARCHIE
YOU ean't• I'll get a h9ld of you.
MALCOIJ1
Lelllmewrite it down for you.

Haleolm reaehes for a peneil.

ARCHIE
Don't never write nothing down. File it up here, like I do.
(touching his head)
'Cause if they ean't find no paper they ain't got no proof. Ya dig?
MALCOIJ1
Yes, sir.

Arehie looks at him sharply.

ARCHIE
Boy, ]=ok me in the faee.

Haleolm does so.

ARCHIE
Did you just now eon me?

A pause.

H.ALCOIJ1
Yes, sir.

ARCHIE

MALCOLM
'Cause Iwant in. And it don't take a lot to know you there, daddy.

Archie and Sammy laugh at his direetness. Cadillae smiles.

Arehie pushes baek his ehair, about to get up.

ARCHIE
I got me a little run to make.

Malcolm has suddenly been exeluded and he wants des· perately baek in.

(CONTIN'tJED)

59 CONT 11'7.JED:( 5 ) 59

MAl.COU1 Can I run with you, Hr. Archie?

Archie eyes him, weighing him seriously.

ARCHIE
I like your heart and I like your style. You might Just do, Red. Lessen you got to git back to that train Job.
MALCOU1
I done told the man what he could do with his train.
ARCHIE
When?
MALCOU1
Just now. ,

The three established hustlers smile at the newcomer in their midst.

ARCHIE
Come on, baby. We going shopping.,,
60

EXT. SEVENTH AVENUE - DUSK

The education of Malcolm X as a big-time hustler is underway. There is a father-son thing here, on both sides: Malcolm taking pride in Archie's knowledge and experience; Archie in Malcolm's quickness and intelligence.

61

EXT. BAR ON AVENUE - LATER

Archie and Malcolm are headed into a bar. Archie lets Malcolm try the door. But it's locked and does not yield.

MALCOU1
It ain't open.
ARCHIE
Oh, it's open, If you the right fold. They don't want Just anybody floating in. Ya dig?
MALCOU1
No.

(CO?t!INUED)

-'40.

61 CONTl1'1JtD: 61

Archie smiles, raps en the small window cf the bar door with a coin: three taps, a pause and a fourth. Clearly a pre-arranged signal. The door CLlCKtR BUZZES and the two walk in.

62 !NT. RlP'S BAR· SA.11I.TlMt 62

It's packed and the men greet Archie as the door closes behind him. It's a loud bar (unlike Small's) and the MUSIC POURS OUT, the greetings are loud and hearty.

SKtJLLY How about that seven, seven, seven?

ARCHIE
Yeah, like to bust my back. \.lhere'sRip at?
SKUU.Y
He minding the store.

ANGLE· RIP'S BAR

Halcclm and Archie stand before a drawn curtain on one side cf the bar. Archie pulls the curtain to one side.

FROM MALCOI..~'SPOV - RIP A1''DCLOTHINGRACKS

They are looking at racks of clothing; you name it, Rip has it: furs, women's dresses, men's overcoats, shoes, suede jackets, men's suits. RIP, a sweet-faced fence with'a nice leathered face, smiles over at Archie.

ltlP Hey, baby, close the flap. You letting in a draft.

Archie does so.

ARCHIE
Gimme some skin,

He and Rip slap hands.

ARCHIE
How you doing? No heat?
RIP
He? Never happens.

(CONTINUtD)

CDN!!J.'UtD: 62

ARCHIE: Rip, this is my main man, Red. Fit him up.

Now Rip looks Malcolm over, as the outfitter in a fine men's shop might.

RIP
You's a 28 regular. Lemme show you something.

He selects a dark garment.

RIP
Petrocelli -- mohair. Feel of it.

Archie, a father buying his son some clothes, feels the fabric.

ARCHIE
Nice, you like that, Red?

Malcolm is delighted with the selection; it's the kind of suit Archie iswearing.

RIP
Slip this on, baby. Just for size.

Malcolm starts to remove his own coat.

RIP
How you like the cuff? Just touching or little short?
ARCHIE
How they wearing 'em this year?
RIP
Little short.

Malcolm has the new jacket on now.

RIP
Hmm, ummm. You can aho' wear vines. Glass over yonder, baby.

He gestures amirror.

63

INT. ARCHIE'S ROOM - NIGHT

Malcolm is looking at himself in a mirror in Archie's room. He has on the full outfit now, together with anew white on white shirt and a Sulka tie. Looks great.

(CONTIW£D)

A'RCHIE
Just the middle button, baby. Just the middle one.

Malcolm buttons the jacket and turns around, demonstrat• ing for Archie's inspection.

ilCHIE You looking good, Red. Real clean. Clean as the board of health. But you missing something.

MALCOLM
What?

ilCHIE Frisk me, baby. Give me a real pat-down.

Malcolm doesn't understand, but he senses something and becomes excited. Archie has walked over to him.

ilCHIE Go ahead. Do me.

Malcolm frisl:s him carefully: pats his sides, his pockets, under his arms, his legs. Archie is clean to the touch.

42

ILCHIE

(triumphantly) And I'm still carrying.

He smacks the small of his back. Then, reaching under his coat, he takes a revolver out from the middle of his back. And hands it to Malcolm.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

Holding the deadly instrument, fascinated by it, hefting it, feeling its power .

43

ILCHIE

It's yours, baby. Put it on.

Malcolm slips it carefully into the small of his back, behind his trouser belt. His first gun: the feeling shines in his eyes, Bogart has become a black man •

44

ILCHIE

How's it feel?

MALCOLM
Solid, daddy,
(CONTIN'IJED)

63 CON!H,1JtD: ( 2) 63

ARCHIE
Okay, baby. Now you outfitted. You ready to tackle the street?
MALCOL.H
Let 'em come. l'm ready.

64 lNT./EXT. VAltIOUS LOCATIONS - SERIES OF CLOSE SHOTS 64

A five dollar bill. CA.MER.AGOESlN for the last three digits.

The stock market board at the end of a day's trading. CO IN for the last three numbers.

Preacher in a pulpit, reading from the Bible.

l'R!.ACHER Let us turn to the Gospel according to St. John. Chapter 3, verse 23.

VOICE (O.S.) Three, two, three.

Malcolm scribbles the number onto a piece of paper.

CLOSE - CASH REGISTER

RINGING up an amount: $2.98

VOICE (O.S.) Two, nine, eight,

Malcolm's hand writes out the number.

CLOSE· TRAIN TERMINAL SIGN

It reads "New York to Chicago," FAN DOWN to show "Train arrives l:05."

VOICE (O.S.) One, :ere, five.

Archie with Malcolm as the latter writes down "l, O, S."

AltCHIE I told you less paper, less trouble.

MALCOL.H
I'm working on it.

64 co:-TIKUED: 64

ARCHIE
I keep all my numbers in my head. I've never written any down.

He taps his head.

CLOSE· FACE OF ELDE'ltLYWOMAN

ELDE'ltLYWOMAN I saw it in my dream. Five, five, five. And last week my sister had a dream and she hit.

CLOSE· FACE OF ELDE'ltLYBA'ltBER

BA'ltBER I got it from Ching Chow. It got to be two, five, one.

thru thru

68A

INT. MOVIE THEATI'.E·CLOSE· MALCOL.H •NIGHT

We are TIGHT ON Malcolm's intense face, he is pulling on a joint. We hear Bogart BLASTING his way out of a police blockade.

A PHONE RINGS.

69

INT. SOPHIA'S APARTH:ENT(BOSTON) NIGHT

In her well•to•do apartment, Sophia passes her husband, reading the stock reports in the evening paper, as ahe goes to answer the phone.

SOPHIA
Hello.

MALCOl.H(V. 0. ) It's me.

Sophia is excited by his call. She watches her husband carefully as she speaks.

SOPHIA
Aunt Martha, how are you?
70

INT. BRADDOCK BAR· PHONE BOOTH· NIGHT

Malcolm is on the phone with the door open. B.g. sounds of ):roSICandLAUGHTER are heard.

HALCOLH
That chump with you?

INTERCUT BET\o/'tENSophiaand the phone booth:

SOPHIA
Yes, he's here.
(to husband)
Aunt Martha says hello.

Husband bobs his head in acknowledgement.

Malcolm smiles.

HALCOLH
Look, bitch, don't talk. Just listen. You haul white ass and git down here quick, Cheek into the Braddock Hotel. And bring some real bread. I'll be there when I get there.
71

INT, ARCHIE'S ROOM· NIGHT

There is MUSIC PLAYING. Wordlessly, Archie sprinkles a few grains of fine crystal onto a round shaving mirror. He slides it across a table to Malcolm and hands him a short straw. Sophia sits next to Malcolm; she and Archie are already high. Malcolm leans over the mirror, placing the straw in his nostril.

TIGHT CLOSE SHOT· HALCOLH'S FACE

IN THE MIRllOR(something satanic about him) -- aa he sniffs the cocaine well into his nose.

A beat as he leans back waiting for the drug to take hold, Malcolm looks into dressing mirror.

ARCHIE
It hit?
MALCOLM
Nn.n.nnnn.

Malcolm with gun in hand does his Bogart gangster imitations.

71 CONTI1'1JtD;

ARCHIE
Ain't nothing in the world to give you that real deep cool. Like girl. You there?
MALCOLH
I'm there, Daddy. Whewww. I'm cool enough to kill.

ilCHIE 'Bet you are.

CLOSE· MA.l..COLH

FREEZE FR.AME.

thru th:r-u

75 txT. Sl'1A.I..L'SPARADISE·NIGHT 75

A miserable night, RAINING and cold. Malcolm turns into the bar.

76

INT. BA:R- NIGHT

Shaking off the rain as Malcolm walks through. He is a familiar figure to the bar's denizens. He is met with AD LIB cries:

"Hey, 'Red,""Have a taste," from the men; a.ndfrom the women: "Come here, sugar," "Where you been?"

One man stands apart. He is Detective Holmes.

Malcolm a.c'knowledgesthe greetings, strolls down into the bar. It's illllllediatelyclearthata subtle change has come over him. He is no longer the neophyte, but a well· groomed, smooth, fully-possessed hustler.

ANGLE· BOOTH

Malcolm sits into the booth and motions for the waitress.

ANGLE· HONEY

A fine copper tan waitress comes to him.

(CONTINUtD)

76 CONTINUED:

HONEY
I thought you said we were going to the movies last night.
MALCOU1
I said a lot of things.
HONEY
And like a fool I believe it.
MALCOI.H
Do your job, get me a bourbon on the rocks and a pack of cigarettes.

Honey stares at him.

MALCOI.H
I said now.

She leaves. He leans his head back against the booth -- thinking. ,

Ft11A.LE(O.S.) Daniel come in yet, Honey?

Malcolm turns his head sharply at the sound of the voice. It's familiar. He looks toward the bar and sees the girl who asked the question.

MALC01..J1'SPOV- LAURA

It's Laura, but not the Laura we last saw.

She is still young, still vulnerable, but she is bolder, more self-assured, more vividly-dressed. She is unaware of Malcolm.

HONEY
Ain't that him now?

ANGLE FAVORING DANIEL

He is a young, cocky, nervous, ginger-bread colored boy who comes over to her quickly. He passes Detective Holmes at the corner of the bar. He quickly grabs Laura'• neck and kisses her hungrily.

DANIEL
Hey, gorgeous, how you been? Waiting long? Lemme see you. Wow. ·

(CO?-.'"I'INUED)

76 CONTINUED: ( 2) 76

It's obvious he's a junkie. And in need of a fix. Quick-

SHOT· MALCOI..H

Honey places his drink and cigarettes before him. He'~ watching, taking it all in immediately. Laura is clearly cra:y about Daniel,

ANGLE· LAUR.AAN!>DANIEL

LAUR.A
How are you, darling?
DANIEL
Fine, copacetic, great. Baby, did you work today?
LAURA
You know what time we wound up last night.
DANIEL
I need a five spot.
LAVR.A
Baby, I gave you ten this morning.
DANIEL
Gimme the goddam five dollars.

CLOSE· MALCOl.H

He looks, then belts down his drink.

CLOSER· LAVR.AAN!>DANIEL

Daniel motions to her pocketbook and she takes out a 10- dollar bill. He grabs it, and heads for the door.

WITH MALCOl.HAN'DHON'EY

She has been watching Malcolm.

HONEY
You know that chick?
MALCOI..H
Mind your own goddam business ••• She come in a lot?

76 CONTH,'1.JED:( 3)

HONEY
'Bout every other night, Red.

With him?

Honey nods.

She know?

HONEY
lf she got eyes she do.

ANGLE - I..AU!tA

Walking toward the door, looking for Daniel. She leaves the bar.

CLOSE -11.ALCOLHAl-,'!>HONEY

ls she hooking?

HONEY
Not yet. But the way things going, that boy gonna turn her out any day now.

Malcolm smacks the table in frustration.

HONEY
You love that girl?

CLOSE - GI.ASS

The glass en the table is trembling.

ANGLE· 11.ALCOLMAND HONEY

MALCOLM
Shut up, bitch.

He raises his arm tc hit her and it is held.

ARCHIE
Don't do that,

Archie is standing above him. Malcolm nods, and Archie lets his arm gc; standing next to him is Sophia.

(CO?{Tlt,'UED)

>O.

76 co1:r1NUtD: (4 J 76

MAl..COl.H Honey, he didn't mean it.

Archie wiggles his hand. Honey goes, but not before throwing daggers at Malcolm and Sophia, Archie sits do\.lTI,takesacigar. For a good beat there is a coolness between them. Then Malcolm reaches over and lights Archie's cigar. Sophia stares at her man, he then motions for her to sit down beside him,

AllCHIE Thanks. You got it. Who's beating on you, P.ed? You looking a little uptight.

The father-son thing is back, but Malcolm will never again be the student.

MAl..COL.M I ain't. But I might be tied up a couple of days.

By way of explanation he tosses an envelope in front of Archie. Archie opens it.

AllCHIE Well, well. Little old draft notice. You might be tied up a coupla years, Red.

MAl..COL.M Not this mother.

AllCHIE Yeah. I been hearing you rap 'boutyou ain't gonna fight they war. What you gonna do about it? Mr. Hot Shot.

MALCOL.M
Just you watch.
SOPHIA
Be careful, baby.

Archie looks over.

MALCOLM
D'ya see the roller down front?

SHOT· DETECTIVE

Nursing a drink at the bar.

ARCHIE (O.S.)
Big as life.

WITH MAI.COJ..HANDARCHIE

MALCOJ..H
Well, here 1 go.

He gets up and addresses the bar.

MALCOJ..H
Hey, y'all. Just got my greetings from Uncle Sam, the biggest sap of them all. Well, here l come .. ,

People are watching, amused, puzzled.

MALCOLM
Malcolm Little is the name; fighting is my game. l'm volunteering. For the Jap Army.
ARCHIE
You got a big ugly mouth.
MALCOLM
Yeah, and l'm putting my money where my ugly mouth is. l'm putting you back in the numbers right now,
(to Sophia)
Baby, what's today?

Sophia is not sure of this, or anything else.

SOPHI.A
August 2nd, 1 think. Yeah.

She laughs at her achievement. Malcolm goes to open Sophia's purse.

MALCOLM
Okay, put me down for a combination. Combinate me, daddy: 8,2,1. You got me? 8,1,2;1,8,2 •••

With each number he throws a bill at Archie.

MALCOLM
1,2,8;2,8,1. l git 'em all?

76 CONTih'UED: ( 6) 76

ARCHIE
(angrily taking the money)
I'll take your goddainbet.

Malcolm slides his tongue down Sophia's throat, then waves his notice on high; he starts for the door. The detective watches him narrowly. As Malcolm leaves, the detective heads for an open phone, drops a coin in and starts dialing.

77

:EXT.INDUCTION CENTER - CLOS£ SHOT - :RECRUITINGPOSTER

- DAY

It is torn off. Ptn.LBACKSHOWS Malcolm, zoot-suited and newly conked, has ripped the poster from a stand just outside the Army Induction Center.

78

INT. IH"ILUCTIONCENTER· DAY

SERGEANT ltOCK All right, I'm gonna say this once. Strip down to your socks and shorts. Clothes over there. Let's go.

A long, desultory line of inductees, mostly white, aome black; but all nervous. All the inductees a~e stripped down, as instructed. To the side of the line is S£RGE:AN'I ROCK, very GI, very tough.

SERGEANT ltOCK Now fonn two single lines: white to the right, coloreds to the left. Hop to it.

The two lines begin to form, the inductees eyeing each other; segregation begins ~n the U.S. Army at once.

MALCOLM (O.S,)
Shit, man, this gonna take all day .••

All the nervous eyes, and especially the Sergeant'•• turn back to where the commotion is coming from.

ANOTHER ANGLE

Malcolm, in shorts and socks, at the end of the line of blacks.

7S coi:rINUtD:

Where the hell do you go to git some action?

SERGEANT ROCK
Knock it off, fella. ·

Man, looka me. I don't need no physical. Gimme a gun. I'm gone kill me a hundred nips. A goddam thousand.

The Sergeant is standing in front of him, glaring.

SERGEANT ROCK
I told you to knock it off.

'Fore I'm done I'll make chicken Colonel.

Rock grabs him by the arm and yanks him out of line.

SERGt.Al,'TROCK Okay, Colonel, this way.

He pushes Malcolm ahead of him.

78A CLOSE SHOT· SIGN 78A

"PSYCHIATRIC SECTION" and below that: "NO SMOKING, NO TALKING."

NURSE BROWN
Sit down.

ANOTHER ANGLE

SHOWS Malcolm standing before an empty bench. Two doctors' cubbyholes are behind. NURSE BROWN, an attrac• tive, light-skinned black, in starched uniform, is at a desk between Malcolm and the offices. Malcolm pull• unlit cigarette from his underwear and motions for a light.

Someone leaves one of the booths, a sad-eyed black inductee. He hands a card to the Nurse as he leaves.

NURSE BROWN
Doctor will see you now in one.

She gestures to the left booth.

79

!NT. DOCTOR'S BOOTH· DAY

DOCTOR McCOY is pne of those thoughtful psychiatrists, sucking the earpiece of his glasses as he talks.

DOCTOR McCOY You want to fight, Little?

MALCOLM
You with it, daddy.

Doctor is looking at a 6x8 file card on Malcolm.

DOCTOR McCOY Can't wait to get into it?

MALCOLM
Solid, man.

DOCTOR McCOY \.Thy?

MALCOLM
You axe me a question like that? \.There'syourpatriotism, man? They done wasted us at Pearl.

DOCTOR McCOY Pearl Harbor was two years ago.

MALCOLM
l'll be goddamned, nobody told me, till today. Ain't that a bitch.

The Doctor taps his file card.

DOCTOR McCOY \.That'sthis about joining the Japanese Army?

MALCOLM
\.Thosaidthat?

DOCTOR McCOY You did. Several times.

MALCOLM
They got that on the wire? Damn, spies everywhere. Wait a second, daddy.

Malcolm looks around the cubbyhole, pretending caution, and lowers his voice.

79 CONT!!,1JED: 79

MALCOI...~ They might be in here, too. You ain't none, is you?

DOCTOR Mc:COY What's that supposed to mean?

He whispers.

MALCOLM
Cot to be careful. That Jap talk's camouflage.

DOCTOR Mc:COY What?

MALCOLM
Hold it.

Malc:olm getsup, goes to the door, falls prone on the floor and peeks under it. The Doc:tor might say some· thing, but Malcolm presses an urgent finger to his lips. Then he stands up and quickly opens the door•· to see if anyone is listening. There is no one there.

MALCOl.H'SPOV· NURSE BROWN

Busy at her desk, she frowns at him.

BACK TO SCENE

Malc:olm closes thedoor softly.

MALCOLM
Don't never trust a foreign nigger. That's chick's Haitian.

DOCTOR McCOY You better sit down and tell me what you're talking about.

80

INT. SMALL'S· NIGHT

It's crowded now and Archie and Malcolm are sitting at their table with Sammy and Sophia. All listening to his account of his interview.

MALCOLM
That's when l let him have it. Both barrels. 'Baby,' I says, 'we both from up north' ••

56,

81 u;r. DOCTOR. sBOOTH -DAY 61

H.ALCOI..!1 •· so I know you'll dig this. When I put on that brown they gonna ship me south. And they gonna give me a gun and teach me how to use it. And they gonna teach a lot of cats like me how to use them. And you know what we gonna do, man•·

82

INT. SMALL'S· NIGHT

Archie, Sammy and Sophia hanging on his words.

MALCOI..!1 We gonna organize. We gonna start shooting up them redneck crackers ...

83

INT. DOCTOR'S BOOTH· DAY

MALCOI..!1 ... All them goddam redneck crackers, we gonna blow they redneck motherfucking heads off.

The Doctor is simply staring at him.

ARCHIE (V.O.)
\o/huthesay?

MALCOI..!1(V. 0. ) Nothing. His mouth just flapped open. Damn Sam, how soon can you gimme that brown and that little old M·l?

SOPHIA (V.O.)
What he say then?

The Doctor takes his glasses out of his mouth, looks over at Malcolm.

DOCTOR McCOY I'll have to -- make out my report.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
.Andhere it is.

84 !NT. SMALL'S (AS BEFORE) 84

Malcolm holding up a draft card.

57,

84 CONTINUtD: 64

HALCOL.H
4F.

They all laugh.

SAMMY
Hey, honey, bring us a round.
ARCHIE
Here you go, Red.

He hands Malcolm a cigar•· and while Malcolm wets it, bites it and puts it in his mouth, Archie lights a match.

HALCOL.H
Hy only regret, like the feller said, is that I ain't got but the one life to give tomy goddam country.

He puffs, pulling on the cigar, lighting it.

AltCHIE I know ain't nothing you don't know. But don't never sit with you back to no door.

HALCOL.H
I never do, daddy•o. Now pay me.

AltCHIE What you talking about?

MALCOL.H
You owe me six big ones.

Archie looks at him, non-comprehending.

MALCOLM
l,2,8 hit didn't it?
ARCHIE
You didn't have no l,2,8.
MALCOLM
Was you that high? Old man, l threw the slats at you. I said to combinate me.
ARCHIE
You never had it.

84 CONTINUtD: ( 2) 84

MALCOl.H The bitch was there.

Archie doesn't even look at Sophia.

ARCHIE
Shit, what else she gonna say?

MALCOl.H Then skip it, man. But you slipping, baby. You done slipped.

Archie is controlling himself, Everyone in Small's is all ears, a falling out between Red and Archie•· their reps are at stake.

ANOTHtR ANGLE

Archie looks at Sammy. Sammy is neutral. Archie digs in his pockets, comes up with a roll. He peels off six $100 bills and throws them on the table in front of himself, as he gets up.

MALCOl.H Oh, sit down, man. What you tasting? I'm buying,

ARCHIE
I ain't drinking hot piss with you. Come on, Sam.

SAM!fi Be right there.

Archie goes.

SAM!fi Twenty-two years he didn't never forget no number.

MA.LCOl.H Got to be a first time, daddy•o,

SAMMY
He gonna check the collector he turn into. Hi• rep is on the line, boy, and so's yours. If you lying, one of you is dead.
MALCOLM
Ain't gonna be this mother.

Sammy goes.

84 CO?-:TH,"UED:( 3 ) 84

MAl.COU1 Come on, sweetlips, I got us some G·I·R·L, girl. Let's you and me fly.

He kisses Sophia possessively.

85

EXT. ONYX CLUB· NIGHT

The well-known 52nd Street night spot features Billie Holliday. A stand-up cutout of her is outside.

86

INT, ONYX CLUB· NIGHT

This is a plush nightclub, with a mixed black and white audience. Some of the hustlers from Small's are in evidence.

CLOSE· 'BILLIE

l.AI>YDAY starts into "You Don't Know What Love Is."

58

ANGLE· TA'BLE

Malcolm and Sophia, high as a kite and on the town.

CLOSE· ARCHIE

He makes his way toward Malcolm's table. There is murder in his eyes .

59

ANGLE· TA'BLE

Al'.CHIE You're a damn liar.

CLOSE· Al'.CHIE

You~ me, you bastard, and now I'm taking you•

60

ANGLE· TA'BLE

MALCOU1
It's me or you, ain't it, pops?

86 CONTlJ.7JtD: 86

ARCHIE

MALCOLH
l'll give you back the 6QO.
ARCHIE
l don't want your money.
MALCOLH
l'm wearing, Archie.
ARCHIE
There's two guns on you.

His eyes gesture. Malcolm looks:

MALCOLH'S POV - SA!1!1Y

At the nearby bar: his hand in his coat pocket.

CLOSE - ARCHIE

His hand is ~lso in his pocket.

MALCOLH
And every cat's watching, ain't they? It's a toe-down.
ARCHIE
That's what it is. Walk on out.
MALCOLM
Let Billie finish.
ARCHIE
Now.

Archie backs away from the table, his gun on Malcolm.

ANOTHER ANGLE

As S&llllllYmovesasteptoward Malcolm, Malcolm ri1es in his seat,

SOPHIA
You had the number.

{CONTINUED)

86 CONTI?-.1.JtD:( 2) 86

MALCOI..H
B~by, I got to let this old man win. Keep the faith, and tell Billie I'll see her later.

CLOSE· BILLIE

She knows what's going on.

ANOTHER ANGLE

Sammy and Archie are walking behind Malcolm, when he pushes a waitress into their path; with drinks flying everywhere, Malcolm darts away.

87

INT. 'ENTRANCE TO THE TOILET

He races into the men's room.

ANGLE

Archie and Sammy run after him.

88

INT. MEN'S ROOH · NIGHT

There is an open window. Archie is leaning out, looking both ways.

89

ARCHIE'S POV· OUTSIDE MEN'S ROOH WIN'DOW· NIGHT

A tiny alleyway. No one is visible.

ilCHIE The dirty, yellow, rat bastard.

90

INT. MEN'S ROCH· NIGHT

SAMMY
Don't push it. You way ahead. You back on top. That boy love ■ you, man.

ilCHIE lolhatyou say?

SAMMY
He gave it to you, Archie. He did.
91

EXT. STREET - NIGHT

Malcolm comes running out of an alleyway and onto the street. He stops to catch his breath, to regain his composure. He is shook up, frustrated, but mostly saddened. He then runs down the block OUT OF FRAME into Harlem night.

9lA INT, LITTLE HOUSE (LANSING, MlCHIGAN) - CLOSE• E:A:R.L 9lA • NIGHT (REHE:M'.BtREDTIHE)

Earl is sitting up in bed, he wakes his sleeping wife, Louise; next to her is a baby in a crib; another child sleeps between Earl and her.

ANGLE· HOUSE

Outside the house, five riders of the BLACK LEGION. The Blac';Legion are dressed in the style of the KKK, but in black sheets rather than white, even their horses sport black cone hats and sheets. We see gasoline cans being passed around.

91B

!~'.T,HOUSE• ANGLE • E:A:R.LANDLOUISE •NIGHT

?.APJ. Somebody out there. Wake the children.

Earl starts to put on his overalls and reaches for his gun, which sits on a nearby chair, when an explosion of flames greets the house.

EJJU.
Everybody out. Out! Out! Get the kids.

ANGLE· CHILDREN'S BEDROOM

FLAHES ROAR through the room and the Little kids are hysterical. Louise rushes in and pushes them past the fire, she has infant in hand covered in a blanket.

91C

EXT. HOUSE• NIGHT 9LC

The entire house is in flames. The Little family stands in front of it, just out of harm's way.

(CONTINlJED)

91C CONTlh1JtD: 91C

ANGLt - BLACK LEGION

They sit on their horses watching the results of their work.

CLOSE - BLACK LEGION LtADER

BLACK LEGION LtADER Boy, good thing we're good Christians. Nigger, it's time for you to leave this town.

CLOSE· £AlU.

£AlU. This here is 'pose to be a free country.

CLOSE - BLACK LEGION LtADER

BLACK LEGION LtADER Rev, we warned you 'bout that Garvey preaching, stirring up the good nigras here. Boy, next time you're a dead nigger.

CLOSE - £AlU.

EA'R.L
I ain't a boy, l'm a man, and a real man don't hide behind no bedsheets.

Earl takes his PISTOL out from behind his back and FIR.ES above their heads.

£AlU. Take these here bullets for de.m sheets.

ANGLE· BLACK LEGION

The bullets send the Black Legion flying into the glorious D,W, Griffith moonlit night.

ANGLE· HOUSE

The burning house collapses behind the Little family,

(CO?,"TlNlJED)

91C CON'l'INUtD: ( 2) 91C

ANGLt • EARL A?,"DLOUISE

LOUISE
Earl, Iknow you a better shot than that. You shoulda killed 'em all, shot 'em dead.

EJJU, Just wanted to scare 'em, they won't be bothering us no more.

CLOSE - YOUNG MALCOLM

Young Malcolm stares at his father while the house still burns behind him, no doubt drawing on the great courage displayed by his father.

EJJU, They won't be here no time soon. I •ma lll.ll.ll•

91D EX!. STIU:ET (LANSING)· NIGHT (RtMD-mtRED TI.ME:) 91D

It's raining eats and dogs and it's foggy. We he'lra big THUD, then a GRUNT, and Earl Little falls across the trolley tracks, the sound of MtN RUh'NINGaway is heard in the distance.

ANGLE· STRttTCAlt

Approaches.

ANGLE - E.AlU.

On tracks. He has been beaten to a bloody pulp.

CLOSER SHOT or STIU:ETCAR

Approaching.

CLOSE - EARL

He opens his one good eye.

CLOSE· STREETCA.ltMOTORMAN

He sees

(CO?."TINUED)

91D cor;rnn.JtD:

91D

MOTOR.MAN'SPOV

of somethin& ahead in the fog and rain.

CLOSE • HAh"D

reaches brake lever.

CLOSE· STREETCAR WHEELS

STOPPING, SPAR.KSfly.

CLOSE· MOTOR.MAN

winces and then makes the sign of the cross.

LONG ANGLE· PASSENGERS

Jumping out of the streetcar to attend to Earl.

PASSENGER (O.S.)
Somebody get a doctor.
MOTORMAN (O.S.)
No doctor, get him a priest.
MALCOLM (V.O.)
Hy father's skull, on one side was crushed in, and then laid across some tracks, for a streetcar to run him over. His body was cut almost in half. My father, Earl Little, lived two and a half hours in that condition. Negroes were stronger than they are now.

92 lNl'.CAR· NIGHT 92

Shorty is driving with Sophia in the front seat. Malcolm is in the back. They are in the country -- outside New York.

SHO'ltTY Han, I'm glad we got you out of there. With West Indian Archie on your ass, your name on the wire-· Boston the best goddamn place in the world for you -- things are too hot and it's not even summer.

(COh'TINUtD)

Halcolm has withdrawn within himself. He takes out a packet of cocaine and sniffs it.

SOPHIA
We'll take is easy. I got a place fixed up on Harvard Square. How's that sound?
SHORTY
Yeah. Cool it and lay dead for a while, homeboy. And don't worry none.

The drug takes hold. Halcolm is out of it.

SHORTY
I'll stake you, baby. I got my band. I'm blowing great sax. Hell, you ain't even heard us··

He and Sophia keep talking it up, trying to bolster Halcolm.

CLOSE· !1A1.,COI..H

Stoned, his nose running, Malcolm stares out of the window at the receding landscape. FREEZE FUME.

HALCOI..H(V.O,)
Like every hustler, I was trapped. Cats that hung together trying to find a little security, to find an answer -- found nothing. Cats that might have probed space or cured cancer -- (Hell, Archie might have been a mathematical genius) -- all victims of whitey's social order.

MUSIC of a DANCE COMBO is heard in b.g.

l1Al,COI..H(V.O.) Three things I was always scared of: a job, a bust and jail. l realized then I wasn't afraid of anything. I didn't care.

•-✓67.

94 INl. HARVARD SQUARE APARTMENT - DAY 94

Shorty, Sophia and Peg faee Malcolm -- stoned in a chair. Peg is 17, Sophia's kid sister and Shorty's date.

You got to eat somethin', Red.

SOPHIA
You want eggs, baby?

MALC01.!1 Yeah and get a slave, too, huh, baby?

I ain't doing bad.

MALC01.!1 Han, the name musicians ain't got shit. How you gonna have something? 1 need a stake, a bundle, a grand. Hy bitch can't afford it; my homey ain't got it. Hey, sis -- (this to Peg) -- how you like to turn out for ole Red?

Peg smiles, afraid of Malcolm.

Jesus, Red, she's akid.

MALC01.!1 Jesus ain't got nothin' to do with this. She got a pussy, don't she? Don't she?

Shorty eyes him in amazement. The degree of Malcolm's depravity surprises even him.

MALC01.!1 Surprise you, baby? Well, that'• the way it is. A bitch ii to buy and sell, Any bitch. What kind of scratch you got on you? Turn out. Let me have it. All of you•·

Glances exchanged among Shorty, Sophia and Peg. Shorty reaches into his pocket.

95

INT. HARVARD SQUARE APARTHENT - NIGHT

Halcclm with Sophia, Shorty and Peg around him.

MALCOL.M
We gone rob this town blind. Anybody want out, say so,

Nobody answers; they'll go with Malcolm.

MALCOL.M
Okay. I got the stake and I got a fence. I need a driver.
PEG
How about Rudy?
SHORTY
Yeah, Rudy.
MALCOL.M
l.'ho'sRudy?

J'l1l1l'CUTTO :

SAHE LOCATION - LATER

RUDY is with them, He is a good-looking, very light- skinned black, tough as they come.

RUDY
I'm half wop, half nigger and ain't afraid of no one.
MALCOL.M
What can you do?

They are in the process of appraising each other, seeing which one has the bigger penis,

RUDY
You name it, feller.
SHORTY
Rudy does catering. Rich Joints on Beacon Hill.
MALCOLM
That ain't bad.
SHORTY
Tell him about Baldy.

(CO?.'TINUtD)

95 CONTI?.1JED: 95

RUDY
Yeah. This rich ofay, like he's 60. I give him a bath on Friday.

Peg and Sophia are listening, a little horrified.

RUDY
Then I put him to bed and pour taleom powder on him like a baby. He gets his jollies off.
MALCOLM
So what about him?
RUDY
So? The man got silver, chi~a, rugs
MALCOLM
Might be all right.
RUDY
Might be, shit. Man, I know this town. I got my own fences. Who the hell are you? Who put ye~ in eha,:ge?

Malcolm smiles easily.

MALCOLM
You want to be the head man?
RUDY
That's right.
MALCOLM
Head nigger in charge?
RUDY
I'm the man.
MALCOLM
Okay, baby. Let's flip for it. Flip thil,

He takes out his gun, a ,32 revolver. He dumps the shells on the table, then reinserts one shell and twirl• the barrel.

MALCOLM
I'll flip first.

He puts the revolver to his own head.

PEG
Don't.

Malcolm squeezes the trigger. lt CLICKS. Now he twirls the barrel again and hands the gun to Rudy.

MALCOLM
Your flip, baby.

Rudy is staring at him; so are they all. Malcolm puts the gun to his temple again.

SOPHIA
Red, for God's sake

He pulls the trigger a second time. Cl..lCK.Now he twirls it again.

SHORTY
Christ, Red, no•·
PEG
l can't stand it,

Malcolm puts the gun to Rudy's head.

MALCOLM
Your turn, Rudy. You want me to flip for you?
RUDY
Jesus Christ, no. Okay, okay. You got it, you got it! You're the boss.

A beat.

MALCOLM
Don't never try to cross someone who ain't afraid to die.

You the man!

Nodding accord from Rudy and Shorty. Sophia can hardly stand.

MALCOLM
All right. We'll start with Old Talcum Powder. You draw the house, where everything is. You and Peg go out and buy them tools like 1 told you. We hit tonight on account of in the daytime some of us got that high visibility. Ya dig?
(co?..-TlN'UtD)

7l.

95 CONTH,1JED: (3)

ANGLE

Rudy is at a table drawing a diagram; the girls have left. Shorty and Malcolm alone at a window.

SHORTY
What did you do, Homey, palm it?

H.Al..COLM Yeah.

He breaks open the gun·· the bullet is in the next slot to be fired.

H.Al..COLM Palmed it right in the goddam chamber.

SHORTY
Jesus Christ, Homey, you are nuts.

Malcolm starts laughing: a silent, hysterical laugh,

96 EXT/INT. Br.A.CONHILL HOUSE· NIGHT 96

The robbery, in QUICK CUTS:

A door lock is picked by Sophia.

Pencil flashlight passes an upstairs window.

Rudy in the ear.

Silver removed from a drawer by Shorty.

Peg walking down the street, as lookout.

Malcolm takes off his shoes.

The sleeping old man, old talcum powder, as Malcolm takes a watch, a wallet from within inches of his pillow. Then, more boldly, picks up the man's hand and removes a ring from one of his fingers. Shorty watching with bated breath, he's about to have a heart attack.

97

INT. MANSION· DAY

A Boston matron, MRS. CR.Aloli'OltD,isshowing the girls her collection of U.S. silver. In a fine New England home.

(CO?."TIN'UtD)

97 CONTH,7JED: 97

PEG
Beacon Hill survey.
SOPHIA
We're doing a survey for the Atheneum Soceity •· We wondered if you'd permit us to include your collection in the catalog of Great New England Antiques··?
MRS. CRAWFORD
Now these are my prizes. My Paul Revere silver coffee service.

SHOT· AR.RANGtMENTOF MUSEU!1-QUALITY PIECES

PEG
Lovely, just lovely.

Sophia is casing the room carefully as the matron continues.

MRS. CRAWFORD
And my husband's collectior. of scrimshaw should be included,
SOPHIA
May we see it?

MRS, CRAWFORD Won't you step this way?

98

INT. SPEEDING CAR· NIGHT

Everybody is high, Rudy is driving, Malcolm beside him in the front seat. Shorty sits between Peg and Sophia in the back a.mida earful of stolen bric-a-brac. We see candlesticks, lamps, vases, fire dogs, etc.

SOPHIA
If l asked her she'd have given ua the key.
SHORTY
Beats the shit out of blowing gi11,
MALCOLM
Slow down.
RUDY
What?

98 CONT!h'UtD:

MALCOI..H
Bulls.

A police car passes them going the other way asMalcolm waves to them.

MALCOI..H
Gimme a cap.
SOPHIA
Malcolm, that was close.
SHORTY
We better cool it a little, baby.

JtUI>Y They got a good look at you.

Malcolm is about to sniff,

MALCOI..H
We knocking over that jewelry store.

JtUI>Y When?

MALCOI..H
'Rightnow. Any objections?

And sniffs.

SHORTY
Take it easy, greasy,.
99

INT. HALTVAITDSQUARE APARTMENT • DAY

In the kitchen, Shorty is conking Malcolm's hair, about to apply the congolene.

SHORTY
You ready, baby.
MALCOLM
Let's go.

Shorty works in the congolene. PAN the ROOM during the process, to reveal considerable loot from previous hauls, not yet disposed of. And the tools of their trade: pick-locks, jimmies, etc.

(COh"TlNlJED)

MALCOLM
When's Rudy due?
SHORTY
'Bouthalf an hour. It grabbing you?
MALCOLM
Just about. The bitches ought to be finished casing that rug joint. Hey.
SHORTY
Over to the sink, baby.

They move to the sink. Shorty turns on the faucet, but no water comes. He tries the other faucet. Nothing.

MALCOLM , Come on. The damn shit's burning me.

SHORTY
No water.

MALCOLM

Malcolm jumps up, looks around. Crabs a pitcher, but it's empty. He runs into the bathroom, cursing as he moves.

100

INT. BATHROOM· DAY

He tries both faucets at the sink, then in the tub. There is no water.

MALCOLM
It's killing me. Godda.mnit, Get out of my way --

'Hepushes Shorty aside and sticks his head in the only place he can find water: the toilet bowl.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

His head in the bowl, as he splashes water on his head, trying to find relief. But it's not enough.

MALCOLM
Flush it. Flush the motherfucker!

100 CONT!J,7.JED: 100

And bathes his head in the tcilet bcwl, finally finding relief.

VO!CE (V. 0. ) Take ycur head cut cf the shit bcwl, nigger·· and grab that wall.

Malcclm turns sharply, water running dcwn his face; eyes tearing.

HIS POV • T\./0COPS\o.'lTHDRAl.'NGUNS

Smiling at his plight.

ANOTHER ANGLE· SHORTY

Shcrty leeks at Malcclm, his hands are raised, a third ccp has his gun sticking intc his back.

101

!NT. COURTROOM· DAY

The priscners face the bench: Peg, Scphia, Shcrty, Rudy and Malcclm.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
The average first cffender gets twc years fer burglary. We were all first cffenders. That'• what Scphia and Peg drew•·
JUDGE
Twc years in the Wcmen's Refcrmatcry at Framingham.
MALCOLM (V,O.)
But our crime wasn't burglary. It was balling white girls. They gave us the bcok.
JUDGE
Burglary, count one•· eight to 10 years; count two, eight to 10 years, ccunt three, eight to 10 years.•.

He ccntinues giving them 8 tc 10 years, behind Malcolm's comment:

MALCOLM (V,O,)
Fcurteen counts of eight to 10 years.

76,

lOl CONTINUED:

JUDGE
The sentences to run concurrently.
MALCOLM (V. 0. )
Shorty thought he hit us-with 114 years till l explained what concurrently meant. lt meant a minimum sentence of 10 years hard labor at the Charlestown State Prison. The date was February, 1946. l wasn't quite 21, l had not yet begun to shave.

CAMERA HAS CON£ lN for a TIGHT Cl.OS£SHOT of Malcolm's face: a hardened hustler, pimp, dope peddler and now jailbird at the ripe old age of 20. FREEZE FR.A.HE.

CUT TO :Bl.ACK.

FADE IN:

102

INT. CTLL COR..R.LDOR•DAY

It is the afternoon lockup: about 3:30 P.M.

The line of PRISONERS stands in front of their :ells, as two guards, WILKINS and :BARNtS, one white, one black, slowly walk past the P.M. check.

The procedure is routine, done without emotion, as it is done three times a day: the black guard calls out the prisoner's name, the PRlSONtR answers with his number, then steps into his cell, Whereupon the white guard slam~ the door shut and locks it,

GtlARDWILKINS Jackson.

PRlSONtR A 231549.

Door is slammed and gate locked,

Cl.OSt• MALCOLM

Each time a gate is locked his tension increases. His face is a mask hiding his fury, violence and the hunger of an advanced junkie who has not had a fix in over a week.

GtlAFJ>WILKINS Crichlow.

7i.

102 CONTI?-.1.JtD: 102

SECOND PRISONER
A 5991301.

Same procedure.

ANG~E SHOOTING PAST MALCOLM

FAVORING two other prisoners. The Guards are approaching Malcolm's cell. Past Malcolm are two experienced prison- ers who have been watching Malcolm during the scene. They whisper surreptitiously without moving their bodies, and barely moving their lips. One of the prisoners is PETE, a huge barrel of a man, a lifer --beaten by the system and a lifetime of incarceration. The other is BE:!1l3RY,a man of no great physicality, but who possesses immedi· ately the gift of leadership. It is clear that Pete and others look up to him with great respect.

PETE
Looks Satan.

BE:!1l3RY I see him.

Bembry's language is very unhip. He speaks carefully. He respects words and he respects himself, something which sets him apart from all the other prisoners.

PETE
He 'bout to bust.

BE:!1l3RY No, he's not gonna burst, But he's not gonna fix his face to please them, neither.

ANGLE

The check-in has reached the man next to Malcolm.

GUAJU>WILKINS Harrington.

THIRD PRISONER
B 775717.

GUAJU> BARNES Yeah. Lucky Seven.

Door slammed and locked.

102 CONTH,1JED: ( 2 )

CLOSE SHOT - 11.ALCOLM

The Guards are now in front of him.

GUARD WILKINS
Little.

Malcolm doesn't move.

GUARD BA:RNtS State your number.

Malcolm doesn't answer, doesn't blink.

GUARD WILKINS
Little.

ANGLE

Bembry in the f.g. of the scene.

BtH:BRY He's a new fish, Hr. Barnes. Give him a break.

It's a bold step by Bembry and the prisoners look over at him with admiration. Barnes accepts the irregularity and calls over to Bembry.

GUARD BA:RNtS Okay, I'll give him a break. Now state your number, Little.

CLOSE - 11.ALCOLM

1 forgot it,

Cl..OStSHOT- BtH:BRY

Shaking his head in anguish. He knows what's coming.

ANGLE

Barnes makes a small gesture and Wilkins aeizes Malcolm, grabbing his head and uniform at the same time. Stencilled on the chest of his faded dungarees is Malcolm's number. The Guard bends Malcolm's head to the number, shoving the material in Malcolm's face.

•·'79.

102 CONTINUED: ( 3) 102

GUARD WILKINS
Can you read, boy? Thass your number.

GUARD "BARNES Now say it.

MALCOI.!1 l'm Malcolm Little, not no goddam number.

GUARD WILKINS
Oh, yes you is, baby; thass all you is.

And slams Malcolm hard. He slumps to the floor.

GUARD :BARNES Two days in the hole. Take him.

Wilkins drags Malcolm off as :Barnesresumes the roll call.

GUARD :BARNES :Burnham.

PRISONER #4 A 551613, sir.

JUMP Cl.TTTO:

103

INT, SOLITARY CELL -DAY

Only the faintest light comes into the hideous room, which consists of amattress and a slop bucket. If Malcolm were to stretch out his arms, he could touch both walls. He lies half on the stone floor, half on the mattress.

A CI.ANGas the heavy DOOR is opened'.

GUARD com: Time's up. Get on your feet.

Malcolm stands.

GUARD com: Little, state your number.

A beat as Malcolm stares at the man, refusing to answer.

GUARD com: You just drew two more days.

And slams the door shut.

104

INT. SOLITARY - NIGHT

It is almost pitch biack. We can almost smell the stench of the room. Malcolm sits stony-faced, his back against a wall.

TRUSTtE:{O.S.) Water.

The long spigot of a watering can is pushed through an opening in the cell door. Malcolm, animal-like, leaps at it and bends the spout, almost wrenching it off in his fury.

10.5 OMITTED 105

106

INT. SOLITARY CELL -TWO SHOT• WHITE CHAPLAIN AND

MALCOl..11-DAY

CHAPLAIN GILL
Do you know what a friend you have in Jesus, son?

HAl.COL.M Preacher, take your tin Jesus and the Virgin Mary both, and shove 'em.

DOOR Sl..AM.

107

INT. SOLITARY· NIGHT

Malcolm is alone at the bars: the hope of freedom filling his mind.

Malcolm pulls at the bars, tries to shake them in impotent fury. He pounds the walls. Empty, sick, defeated, his nails scratching the walls, he slides to the floor of the cell.

lt is the low point of his life: nowhere to turn, nothing to hope for.

108 !NT. SOLITARY· LA.TtR 108

Guard Cone is shaking him into consciousness.

{cot-.-rINUtD)

Bl.

GUARD CONE
All right, Little, Get up.

Malcolm just about makes it. The Guard is in half-focus.

GUARD CONE
State your number.

He is beaten.

HAl..COLH A 859912,

A SHOWER is heard.

109

INT. SHO~ER ROCH - DAY

Malcolm stands with bowed head as the hot water cascades over his broken body. He lets it run and run, but it cannot really touch his problems. On a nearby bench are his clothes, his towel and the makings for a conk: lye, Vaseline, comb, etc.

He turns for a moment as he see~ he is being watched by someone. It'.sBembry standing nearby. Malcolm ·::urns away, trying to find solace in the water. He wants no part of the world or anyone, just to be left alone.

BEMBRY
I know how you feel. Like you want to lay down and die.

Malcolm shows no flicker of interest or understanding.

BEMBRY
I brought you something,

He puts down a small matchbox on the bench next to Malcolm's things. Malcolm eyes him like a snake•· but the punishment has reduced him to deep insecurity and his belligerence is more cautious than angry.

HAl..COLH Who the hell are you?

BEMBRY
Put it in a cup of water. It's nutmeg.

HAl..COLH Man, what do you want?

'BtmR.Y You need something. It's not a reefer, but it'll help some.

MALCOI..H
Han, get outa my face. I ain't nobody's punk.

'Buthe steps out of the shower, fills a tin cup with wate~ and empties the ·contents of the matchbox into it. And drinks it down quickly.

'BtmR.Y Sit down or it might knock you down.

Haleolm sits, towelling himself as the spice hits him. For the first time he smiles; this is the first relief he has tasted in prison. He looks at 'Bembrywonderingly, unable to figure him out.

MALCOI..H
If you ain't trying to punk me, what's your hype?

'BD-1'.BR.Y I can show you how to get out of prison. And it's no hype.

MALCOI..H
Talk, daddy, I'm listening. Hey, that ain't bad. You got some more?

'BtmR.Y That's the last stuff you'll ever get fromme.

MALCOLM
What did you give it to me for then?

BtmP.Y 'Cause you needed it. 'Cause you couldn't hear me without it.

This is a new breed of cat; Malcolm has never met anyone like him. He eyes him closely, as he slips into hi• clothes.

MALCOLM
What in the hell are you talking about?

109 CONTINUtD: (2) 109

He begins to conk his hair, but is paying attention to what Bembry is saying.

BEMBRY
I think you got more sense than any cat in this prison. ·How come you such a fool?

Malcolm looks over, piqued.

BEMBRY
Can't nobody bust out like Humphrey Bogart does it, in the movies. 'Cause even if you get out, you still in prison,

Malcolm is putting lye into his hair now.

MALCOLM
That's the damn truth.
BEMBRY
When you go busting your fists against a stone wall, you're not using your brains. 'Cause that's what the white man wants you to do. Looka you.

This last is spoken sharply with disgust. Malcolm turns, his hands massaging the conk into his hair.

MALCOLM
What's up your ass, man?
BEMBRY
hitting all that poison in your hair.
MALCOLM
Shit, man, everybody do. All the cats.
BEMBRY
Why? Why does everybody do it?
MALCOLM
'Cause I don't want to walk around with my head all nappy, looking like --
BEMBRY
Like what? Looking like me? Like a nigger?!

(COl'l'TiwtD)

109 CONT!t.1.ltD:( 3) 109

HALCOLJ1
Han, you got to be nuts

l!E:MBR.Y Why don't you want to look like what you are? What makes you ashamed of being black?

INSERT FI.ASH· CLOSE ON JER.Rl·ctJR.LEDMANAh'DWOMANWITH A wtAVE • 1991 (TIHE IS TODAY)

J!othare wearing blue/green contacts.

HALCOLJ1(V.O,)
I ain't said I'm ashamed.

l!ACKTO SCENE

He turns the water on to wash out the conk•· which has begun to burn. J!embeyrestrains him, holding his arm.

HALCOLJ1
Legge. I got to wat~ it out.

J!E:MBR.Y Let it burn. Haybe you'll hear me then.

But it is burning now.

HALCOLJ1
Goddam you, lemme go.

He wrenches away from J!embeyand puts his head in t.he water.

J!E:MBR.Y Sure, burn yourself, pain yourself, put all that pois~n into your hair, into your body trying to be white.

MALCOLM
Man, l don't want to hear all that,

l!EMBR.Y I thought you was smart. J!utyou just one of them cats bebopping down the avenue in your clown suit with all that mess on you. Like a monkey. Md the white man sees you and he laughs. He laughs because he knows you ain't white. )

80

(CO?,'TINUED

109 CONTINUED: ( 4) 109

Halcolm is drying his hair, finishing his conk, But some of what Bembry has said disturbs him.

MALCOLM
Ler:unebe. I had enough for one day. You some kind of a loony preacher?

Malcolm is completely humiliated, Bembry sees this and stops the barrage.

BEMBRY
It's not your fault, You were in the darkness. But I've come to bring you into the light. I told you I could get you out of prison. Out of the prison of yourself. · Maybe all you want is another fix, I thought you were smart.

And he is gone. Malcolm stands looking after him, a long thoughtful moment. He is pulling the comb through his hair.

110

INT. PRISON LICENSE SHOP· DAY

Prisoners are working en a beltline that stamps out and finishes license plates. Bembry is on the stamping machine, working as he talks to the other prisoners. Malcolm is painting the plates, a little removed from Bembry, but listening with interest. Barnes, with rifle, idles by a window.

BEMBRY
Don't tell me things are better in the north. I been all over this country. I studied this country. The south begins at the Canadian border.

The men react variously: some proud of Bembry'• out• spokenness, especially in front of a white man; some are indifferent, having heard it all before. FRANK ia one of these.

F1WiK You a bitch with your shit, but this awhite man'• country. What you fixing to do?

BEMBRY
Hake a new one. Ours.

(C0?.'1'INUO)

86,

110 CONTit.1JtD: 110

FRANK
Nigger is crazy,

There is more scoffing at this, but Bembry is unperturbed.

A WHISTLE SOUNDS, ending the work shift. The men quickly file out into the yard. Bembry stays. Malcolm is half decided.

GUJJU)BARNES You taking the yard?

I'm staying.

Barnes gestures toMalcolm.

MALCOLM
Me too.

He goes.

BEH'.Bli.Y ..'hatyou sniffing around for? I told you I gave you your last fi:a:.

MALCOLM
I ain't never seen a cat like you. Ain't you scared talking like that in front of an ofay?

BEH'.Bli.Y \.lhat'she gonna do to me he ain't already done?

MALCOLM
You the only cat don't come on with that 'Whatcha know, daddy' jive; andyou don't cuss none.

BEH'.Bli.Y I respect myself. A man cuss because he hasn't got the words to say what's on his mind.

MALCOLM
Tell you this: you ain't no fool.

BEH'.Bli.Y Don't con me. Don't try•••

MALCOLM
Okay, okay.

Don't con me .

MALCOLM
What do you do with your .time?

BE:MllRY I read. I study. 'Cause the first thing a black man got to do is respect himself. Respect his body and his mind. Stay 'way from whores; protect your women. Quit taking the white man's poison into your body: his cigarettes, his dope, his liquor, his white woman, his pork.

MALCOLM
That's what Mamma used to say.

BE:MllRY Your mama had sense because the pig is a filthy beast: part rat, part dog and the rest carrion.

Malcolm has b~en pondering all this and now grows animated as he thinks he has come to the essence of a hustle.

MALCOLM
Come on, daddy, pull my coat. What happen if you give all that up? You get sick or somethin'? I pulled a hustle once and got out of the draft.

BE:MllRY I'm telling you God's words, not no hustle. I'm talking the words of Allah, the black man's God. I'm telling you, boy, that God ii black.

MALCOLM
Oh, baby, I heard all that bullshit on 25th Street and Seventh Avenue.
BEMBRY
You heard nothing that the black man taught. You learned nothing. But everything the white man taught you, you learned.
(MOR.E).
BEMBRY (CONT'D)
He told you you were a black heathen and you believed him. He told you how he took you out of darkness and brought you to the light. And you believed him. He taught you to worship a blond, blue-eyed God with white skin -- and you believed him. He told you black was a curse, you believed him. Did you ever look up the word black in the dictionary?
MALCOLM
What for?
BEMBRY
Did you ever study anything wasn't part of some eon?
MALCOLM
What the hell for, man?
BEMBRY
Go on, fool; the marble shooters are waiting for you.
MALCOLM
Okay, okay. Show me, man.

CLOSE:SHOT· DICTIONARY

We can read the fine print of the definition:

DICTIONARY
:Blac;k,(blak),adj .. Destitute of light, devoid of color, enveloped in darkness. Hence, utterly dismal or gloomy, as "the future looked black."
MALCOLM (O.S.)
You understand them words?

BEMBRY (O,S.)

Read it.

PULL BACK to show Bembry and Malcolm in a small prison library. No one else is in the book-lined room.

MALCOLM
I can't make out that shit.

(COh'TINUE:D)

110 C01''TI1'1JtD:(4) 110

Soiled with dirt, foul; sullen, hostile, forbidding•· as a black day. Foully or outrageously wicked, as black cruel t:y.. Indicating disgrace, dishonor or culpability.

DICTIONARY
See also blackmail. blackball. blackguard.
MALCOLM
Hey, they's some shit, all right.

Bt!1BRY Now look up 'white.'

Bembry turns the pages of the dictionary to 'w.'

BtMBRY Read it:.

CLOSE.SHOT· DICTIONARY DtFINITION OF "WHITE"

MALCOLM (O.S.)
White (Whit), adjective. Of the color of pure snow; reflecting all the rays of the spectrum. The opposite of black, hence free from spot or blemish; innocent, pure, without evil intent, harmless. Honest, square-dealing, honorable.

Malcolm stumbles through the definition as well as he can. Bembry takes over the reading, giving it ironic emphasis.

MALCOLM
That's bullshit. That's a white man's book. Ain't all these white man's books.

SHOT· SHELVtS OF BOOKS

BtMBltY They sure ain't no black man'• books in here.

MALCOLM
Then what you telling me to study in them for?

(CONTINUE.D)

110 C01'TU,"UtD: (S) 110

BEMB'R.Y
You got to learn everything the white man says and use it against him. The truth is laying there if you smart and read behind their words. It's buried there. You got to dig it out.
MALCOLM
Man, how'm I gonna know the ones worth looking at?

Bembry smiles at Malcolm. He is a remarkable man who always takes careful measure of his listener. He never talks down to his audience; he talks to them. (A manner Malcolm later will adopt.) Bembry can talk funky or salty or, as we will see, in the cadence and eloquence of the Bible. 'R.ightnow he goes into street talk.

BDm'R.Y I'll pull your coat, daddy. 'Cause lots of these can't nobody read, be he black or white or a Ph.D. with their suspenders dragging the gre~nd with degrees.

Malcolm laughs. He likes .and admires the man. Then caught by a passage he does not understand:

MALCOLM
Man, I'm studying in the man's book. I don't dig half the words.

BDm'R.Y Look 'em up and find out what they mean.

MALCOLM
Where am I gonna start?

BDmltY Start at the beginning, Page one, the first one. Here

CLOSE SHOT - BE:HBJtY'SHAND

as Bembry's hand opens the book to page one.

CLOSE IN ON PICTUJtEOF AJJS>V~ WITH ITS DEFINITION

MALCOLM (O.S.)
Aardvark, noun. An earth pig; an ant-eating African ma=al. Man, that sounds like the dozens. ·
(CO?..'TINUtD)

110 CONTI?-1.JtD:( 6)

ANGLE· TWO-SHOT

BEMBRY
Read it and keep on reading.

Malcolm's finger runs down to the next definition:

DICTIONARY
Abacus, noun. Ari ancient and primitive Chinese counting device.
BEMBRY
If you take one step toward Allah, He will take two steps toward you.

& & 112. 112.

113

INT. MAI.COL.H'SCELL· NIGHT

He is reading on his bunk as Barnes walks by.

The lights in the cell go out. Malcolm looks Uy, annoyed at being interrupted. He shifts his position to the floor of the cell so that he can catch the dim light coming from the corridor and goes on with his reading.

CLOSE SHOT· BOOK

Malcolm is studying the dictionary, the last of the "a's": the words azimuth. Azores, A;te;, azure, etc. He reads a word, then holds his hand over the printed definition to test himself, half-mouthing its meaning. Malcolm is also copying the dictionary in a school book word for word.

114

INT. LIBRILY - DAY ..

There are several books on the desk before Malcolm. We see their titles: W.E.B. DuBois' The soul of »lack folks, Carter G. Woodson's Journal of Nerro Histpty. Durant's Stoo: of Philosophy, H.E. Wells' Outline pf History. Spinoza, Thoreau, etc.

GUARD BARNES (O.S.)
Closing. Knock it off.

Malcolm is surprised the time has gone so fast. He gathers up his books with care. He cherithes them, putting them back on the shelf carefully.

(CONTINUt!>)

92,

114 cor:rn,1.JED: ,114

GUARD BARNES
Hey, you studying to be the first colored President of the United States?
115

INT. LICENSE SHOP· DAY

The machines are idle; no one is in the room but Malcolm. He starts to reach inside his jacket when Barnes sticks his head in.

GUARD :BARNES You taking the yard or not?

MALCOLM
I'm staying.
GUARD BARNES
Then give me a butt,

Malcolm takes out a half-filled pack of cigarettes, about to offer one, then pauses. Malcolm hands him the pack of cigarettes.

MALCOLM
Take 'em. I don't smoke no more.

He takes the pack happily and goes. Malcolm reaches into his jacket again, takes out a book. We see its title: Mahatma Gandhi's MY St;:μggl@. He sits next to the license press to read.

116 txT. PRISON YARD· DAY 116

A baseball game is in progress. A black team is playing a white one. Most of the convicts are watching the game; partisanship at every pitch. A base hit gets a big reaction.

ANGLE· MALCOLM AND BEMBRY

They are out in right field, near the wall, They walk throughout the scene.

MALCOLM '
How we doing, man?
BEMBRY
You want to talk or watch the game?

(COh'TIWED)

116 CONTit.1..TtD: 116

MALCOl..'1 Let's do both, baby.

His ingratiating manner makes Bembry smile.

BEMBRY
How you coming?
MALCOLM
Han, that history is a bitch. Them British and the good old U.S.A.: grab India, China, Africa, the Philippines; kill the injuns. And what do they call it, .. 'Manifest Destiny, the Monroe Doctrine, Making the World Safe for Democracy. '
BEMBRY
Oh, yes, the white man is never violent. All his wars crusades. They cryviolence only when the black man fights for his rights.

ANGLE - BALL I

is hit over the fence for'a home run. There is a big cheer from the black prisoners. Pete, the hitter, trots proudly around the bases.

MALCOLM
Ole Pete ain't much in the head, but he can lay in there with the wood.

BEMBR'); Lemme tell you about history: black history. You listening?

TWO SHOT

Malcolm still watching the game.

MALCOLM
You pitch, baby; I'll ketch.
BEMBRY
The first men on earth were black. They Tllled and there was not one white face anywhere. But they teach us that we lived in caves and swung from trees. Black men were never like that.

94,

CONTINUED: 116

Malcolm is listening to Bembry's intent statement.

BE:11BRY We were a race of kings when the white men went around on ~ll fours.

There is a CRACK of the BAT and Malcolm turns, to watch another base hit, by a black convict, stir the crowd.

MALCOLM
This a helluva game. Somethin's going on.

He sees a black convict, CHUCK, nearby and calls over:

MALCOLM
Hey, whatsa score?
CHUCK
Ten to one; we murdering them. Din't you hear?
MALCOLM
\olhat?
CHUCK
The Brooklyn Dodgers brought up

'

Jackie Robinson and we pounding the hell out of them, celebrating.

MALCOLM
How about that?
BEMBRY
Sure. They throw us a bone and that's supposed to make us forget 400 years.
MALCOLM
A black man playing big league ball is something.
BEMBRY
I told you to go behind the words and dig out the truth. They let us sing and dance and smile•· and now they let one black man in the majors. That don't cancel out the greatest crime in the history. \olhenthe white devillocked us in chains•· 100,000,000 of us•· broke our families, tortured us, cut us off from our language, our religion, our past •••

(CONTim.rtD)

117 CONTINUtD: 117

CLOSt SHOT· MALCOLM

listening.

BtM'BRY Have you ever known a good white man in all your life? Think back on all the white folks in your life. Did you ever meet one who wasn't evil?

A prison WHISTLE is Ht.A.AD.

& &

120

INT. PRISON· NICHE:IN WALL· P.M.

Malcolm and Bembry standing close together. The feeling is of someone taking communion: with Bembry the minister and Malcolm the col!llllunicant.Their voicesare little more than whispers.

You are now Malcolm X.

MALCOLM
What does the X stand for?
BE.MBP.Y
X stands for our true names which we'll never know. We refuse our slave names.
MALCOLM
I accept.
BEMBRY
The body is a holy repository.
MALCOLM
I will not touch the white man's poison: his drugs, his liquor, his carrion, his women.
BEMBRY
A Muslim must be strikingly upright. Outstanding. So those in the darkness can see the power of light.

(CO?r!INUED)

120 COt,TIN1JtD: 120

Malcolm lifts his head.

MALCOI.J1
l will do it.

BtH:BRY He dedicates his body inpurity to Allah. He practices moral restraint. He defends our women.

MALCOI.J1
l will do that.

BtH:BRY But the key to Islam is submission. That is why twice daily we turn to Mecca, to the Holy of Holies, to pray. We bend our knees in submission.

Bembry kneels in a praying position. Malcolm stands.

MALCOI.J1
l can't.

BtH:B'RY For evil to bend its knee, admit its guilt, implore His forgiveness, is the hardest thing on earth•·

MALCOt.H I want to, Bembry, but I can't.

BtMB'RY -- The hardest and the greatest.

MALCOt.H l don't know what to say to Allah.

BtMBRY Have you ever bent your knees, Halcolm?

Halcolm laugh-snorts:

MALCOt.H Yeah. When I was picking a lock to rob somebody's house.

BtMB'RY Tell Him that.

MALCOt.H I don't know how.

120 C0NT!h"\.ltD:( 2) 120

:BEMBRY You can grovel and crawl for sin, but not to save your soul. Pick the lock, Malcolm, pick it.

MALCOLH
1 want to. God knows 1 want to.
121

INT. MALCOLH'S CELL - NIGHT

Malcolm holds a letter in his hand. He reads it careful· ly. He has read it several times before.

MALCOLH (V.O.)
I received a letter that day from the Honorable Elijah Huhammad. The Messenger of Allah wrote me, a nobody, a junkie, a pimp and a convict.
ELIJAH (V.O.)
1 have come to give you something which can never be taken from you: I bring yo~ a sense of your own worth, the worth of one human being. The knowledge of self.

The room becomes transformed. lt is suddenly suffused with light. And standing in the cell with Malcolm is ELIJAH HUH.A.H?1.A.D.Hehas materialized,but he can be seen through. He is Malcolm's hallucination.

MALCOLH (V.O.)
It was like a blinding light and 1 became aware that he was in the room with me. He wore a dark suit and on his face I saw a pain 10 old and deep and black 1 could scarcely look at him. I knew I was not dreaming. He was there.
ELIJAH
I tell you that the most dangerous creation of any society is the man with nothing to lose. You do not need ten such men to change the world. One will do.
MALCOLH (V,O.)
And suddenly as he came,he was gone.

121 CON'!lh1.JED: 121

The hallucination disappears.

MALCOI.H(V.O.)
.And then I could do it.

Malcolm goes down on his knees. There are tears in his eyes as he begins praying:

CLOSE· MALCOI.H

MAI..COI.H
Allah Akbar: all praises to Him who is all-seeing, all· understanding.

He continues to pray.

MALCOI.H(V.O.)
We are told that Saul, on the road to Damascus, heard the words of Christ. He was 10 smitten by the truth, he fell from his horse. I do not liken myself to Paul, but I understand. It happened to me.

122 IN'!.BtM:BRY'SLIVING ROOM - NIGHT 122

A poorly furnished, small, but immaculate room. There are two couches, a table set for eating, and, on the walls, a portrait of Elijah and a Muslim banner. It is dinner time in aMuslim home.

Two boys, SIDNEY, aged 20, and PETER, aged 17, both per- fect specimens of the Fruit of Islam, stand behind their chairs, waiting. Their mother, Lorraine, a woman of Bembry'& age, is seated, but, she, too, awaits Bembry.

SHOT· 'BtM:BRY

'BEMBRY In the name of Allah, the beneficent and the merciful to whom all praise is due.

At the window 'Bembry saying the evening prayers.

'BtM:BRY(V.O.) 'Dear'Brother Malcolm: I am back in the bosom of Islam, praise Allah ••• '

lOl.

122 CONTI 1-<utD: 122

He eomes to the table, nods and sits. The boys respect· fully sit after him. Food is passed. It is simple fare: natural foods, milk, greens. The portions are small. They eat in silenee, but there is warmth and love at thi.s table.

BtH:BRY(V. 0. ) We don't have much, but what we have is yours. Lorraine and my two sons join with me in saying that when you eome out, whieh will not be too long, come straight to us.•

123 lh'!. PRISON BARBER SHOP - DAY 123

Malcolm is reading Bembry's letter as he waits his turn. There is a white eonvict in the chair, just being finished by a white barber -- SI!1!10NS.A black barber Slim sits by. Both are eonviets. (NOTE: Malcolm now wears glasses, all that reading in his badly lit eell has ruined his eyes.

BtH:BRY(V. 0. ) You write thanking me. Don't thank me. Praise Allah. He did it all.

Sll1!10NS· Next.

Malcolm starts for the chair. Simmons moves away to light a cigarette as Slim takes over.

MA.LCOI.H(V,O,)
Dear Bembry. Please thank the Honorable Elijah Muhammad for the money and tell him I have not wirtten him beeause I have not yet proven myself.
124

INT. SMALL'S P.A:R.A.DISE-NIGHT

Archie and Cadillac are reading a letter they have received. They look at each other incredulously.

MA.LCOI.H(V.O.)
But I have written everyone else.

102,

125

!NT. ANOTHER PR!SON • DAY

Shorty is waving a letter he has received to his cellmate.

SHORTY
Look like Homey got himself a brand new hype.
126

INT. ELIJAH'S OFFICE· DAY

An immaculate room, well-furnished. ELIJAH sits in a chair as Bembry stands reading Malcolm's letter.

BE!1BRY 'I wrote the mayor, the governor and the rresident, but for some reason I haven't heard from them'...

Bembry laughs; Elijah smiles.

MALCOLM (V. 0.)
Tell the Messenger of Allah that I have dedicated my life to telling the white devil the truth to his face. I greet you with the ancient words: 'As Salaam Alikum.'
ELIJAH
Wa-Alaikum Salaam.
MALCOLM (V.O.)
P.S. I finally worked my way through the 'Z's' ...
127

INT. PRISON CHAPEL· NIGHT

TITLE: 6 YEARS LATER

A group of Prisoners, mostly white, but with a goodly smattering of black convicts, are listening to a lecture by CHAPLAIN GILL.

CHAPLAIN GILL
Are there any questions?

ANOTHER ANGLE

Malcolm seated next to a black convict, raises his hand. It's the only hand up. The Chaplain searches for another questioner, but there aren't any.

(CONTIN'IJl:D)

127 CONTINUtD: 127

Pete, sitting next to Malcolm, whispers.

PtTt Watch out, baby, this cat is he~vy on religion.

CHAPLAIN GILL
1 see this has become a struggle between good and evil. Satan has a question.

There is laughter from the convicts.

Yes it is, Chaplain Gill. ~ut 1 wouldn't want to say which one of us is what.

Laughter, especially from the black convicts.

CHAPLAIN GILL
Why don't you just ask your question.

You've been talking about the disciples. What color were they?

CHAPLAIN GILL
I don't think we know for certain.

There are reactions from the convicts. Malcolm is sharply challenging a white man about color.

They were Hebrew, weren't they?

CHAPLAIN GILL
That's right.

As Jesus was. Jesus was also a Hebrew.

Just what is your question?

( What color were the original

Hebrews?

(CO?l"TINUED)

CHAPLAIN GILL
I told you we don't know for certain.

MA.l.COl.!1 Then we don't know that Cod was white.

There is a strong reaction to this.

CH.Al'LAINGILL Now just a moment, just a moment

MALCOl.!1 But we do know that the people of that region of Asia Minor, from the Tigris-Euphrates valley to the Mediterranean, are dark-skinned people. I've studied drawings and photographs and seen newsreels. I have never seen a native of that area who was not black.

CHAPLAIN GILL
Just what are you saying?

MA.I.COl.!1 I'm not saying anything, preacher. I'm proving to you that Cod is black.

INSERT· FLASH· BLOND, BLUE-EYED JESUS ON CROSS

(Note: Try to get footage from The Last Tem2tatiop of Christ (William Dafoe)

MA.I.COl.!1(V.O.) Cod is black,

128

EXT. STREET CORNER (125TH AND SEVENTH AVENUE)· NIGHT

Malcolm is talking to a crowd from a ladder.

MALCOl.!1 And that the white man is the devil. Yes, God is black and you are made in His image and don't know it. That '1 how brainwashed you are.

The crowd is listening, caught up in Malcolm's intensity.

(CO!ITIN1JED)

105,

128 CONTit-1JED: 128

MALCOLM
My brothers and sisters, they tell you you will sprout wings when you die and fly to heaven. The Honorable Elijah Muhammad tells you that's pie in the sky.

ANGLE ON SIDNEY

Amid the listeners, watching their response.

MALCOLM (V•0 . )
Have you ever seen a black man who wasn't down on his knees begging the Lord to give him in heaven what the white devil enjoys right here on earth?

CLOSE SHOT· SEVER.ALLISTENERS

They turn from Malcolm, moving a few·steps away, and now are the audience on an adjacent SPLJ.KER..He is a young firebrand:

SPLJ.KER.
The Harlem Council fights for rat control, for rent control and for community control of our schools.

PAN CONTINUES to take in another ANOTHER. SPEAKER.,a few feet away. We see the street corner in Harlem's Hyde Park, with half a dozen speakers haranguing the crowd with half'a dozen panaceas. That Malcolm is just one among many:

SECOND SPLJ.KER.
If the man behind the counter ain't black, don't go in. Boycott the man. Be black. Think black. Buy black,

ANGLE· MALCOLM

MALCOLM
Come to our Temple and hear the truth. Because, brother and sister, you are dead. Yes, you are, mentally dead, spiritually dead, morally dead. And we are here to resurrect the black man from the dead.

l:?9 INT. Bt!-fBRY'SLIVINGROOH •P.H. 129

In contrast to the peaceful family scene, the room is a beehive of activity. Sidney is turning out leaflets on a mimeograph machine; Lorraine is busy making up a mailing list, using 3x5 file cards; Pete is talking animatedly to TWO TEENAGERS in a corner; Bembry is busy recruiting on the telephone.

MALCOI..H
How many you turning out?
SIDNEY
.500.
MALCOI..H
Hake it 1000. We got a lot of meetings tonight.
SIDNEY
Brother Malcolm, I want you to meet Brother Earl. He just joined the Nation.

Earl moves toward Malcolm and extends his hand. Malcolm shakes it firmly.

MALCOI..H
We can always use another good brother.

tAR.L I'm a willing servant for Allah.

130

EXT. CHURCH· DAY

Sunday service has let out and Malcolm, Earl, Sidney and Peter are "finishing." They're trying to convert the black Christians. Malcolm speaks, while the others hand out leaflets.

MALCOI..H
You think you are Christians, and yet you aee your so-called white Christian brother hanging black Christians on trees. You aay that the white man love• you and yet he has done every evil act against you. He has .everythingwhile he is living and tells you to be a good slave and when you die you will have more than he has in Beulah's land. We so-called Negroes are in pitiful shape.
(HORE)

130 CO?.'TINUtD: 130

MALCOJ.M(CONT'D)
Get off your knees praying to a picture of a white, pale, blonde and blue-eyed Jesus. Come out of the sky. Build heaven on earth. Islam is the black man's true religion.

131 t.XT,OPEN AIR "MAIDS" MARKET· DAY 131

A place where black women come to offer themselves for day work. Several are seen. A white woman comes up to one to interview her (bargain with her). Malcolm's voice is heard before he is seen, speaking to the women from a ladder.

MALCOLM (O.S.)
My beautiful sister, for you are beautiful. Beautiful because you are black. Because black is beautiful, You work in the white folks' kitchen so I don't have to tell you that they're devils.

CLOSE· MA.LCOJ.M

MALCOLM
And you are putting yourselves on the auction block, letting them examine you like a horse, like a ~lave. The Honorable Elijah Muhammad teaches that you are black and should be proud...

FACE OF ONE BLACK WOMAN

beginning to shake her head in accord.

132

INT. TEML'LE#7 •NIGHT

The same woman, now at a Muslim meeting. The faces of other listeners (from the church and from the maids' market) are scattered in Malcolm's audience,

The headquarters itself shows the progress Malcolm has made. It is better furnished, larger, and the chairs are ( filled. Bembry, Sidney, Peter and Lorraine are in the back of the room, pleased with the growth. Malcolm stands at a podium,

lOE.

132 CONTINUE:D: 132

MALCOLM
We're not American, we're Africans who happen to be in America. We were kidnapped and brought here against our will from Africa. We didn't land on Plymouth Rock, brothers and sister. Plymouth Rock landed on us.

Reactions: laughter, interest. Ad lib "That's the truth."

MALCOLM
Put an end to your begging. No more 'Please, Mr. White man, Lawdy boss, brush me another crumb off your table, kindly, sir.' We are a nation, a great nation and don't need a thing from them.

Malcolm scanning the faces of his audience as they react. He sees someone he knows and blurts out boyishly (and winningly):

MALCOLM
Shorty!

The crowd turns to Shorty, sitting embarrassedly in the audience.

MALCOLM
Come on up here, man, and give us some skin. Here's a man, brothers and sisters, who shot up with me, who robbed with me, and did time in the white devil's jailhouse. Stand up, Shorty, and be counted --

But Shorty is trying to hide from the spotlight. Malcolm comes down from the platform and walks to him,

MALCOLM
Folks, the brother is shy and needs special attention. So would you excuse us, while Brothers Sidney and Earl take up the collection.

He embraces Shorty as the crowd laughs appreciatively and Brothers Sidney and Earl have a chuckle themselves,

·'109.

133

INT. RIP"S BAR - NIGHT

Shorty and Malcolm in a booth. Shorty has a drink in front of him.

SHORTY
I &ot to hand it to you, Homey. That's the best preacher hype I ever did hear.

11.ALCOI.H It isn't hype, Shorty. And I meant what I said: join us.

SHORTY
Come on, baby. I don't pay that shit no mind.

11.ALCOI.H The Honorable Elijah Muhammad says you should pay it all your mind. If you got a mind.

SHORTY
Baby, I love you. Take it easy, greasy. How about a snort?

11.ALCOI.H I been clean for twelve years, Shorty.

SHORTY
You is something, Homeboy. Hy trouble is -- I ain't had enough stuff yet, I ain't et all the ribs I want and I sure ain't had enough white tail yet.

11.ALCOI.H How's the rest of the gang? You seen anyone?

SHORTY
Well, SUll!ly'sdead. Yeah, fell over in the bed with a chick twenty years younger than him. Had twenty-five grand in his pocket.

INSERT FLASH - SAMMY

I He's dead on top of teenage whore who is screaming, trying to push that dead weight off her.

11.ALCOI.H How about Old Cadillac?

133 CON!Ii...utD: 133

INSERT FL.ASH· CtDILL.AC

is an old junkie, past reclaiming, sitting staring in a mer,talward, twitching, nose running.

SHORTY (V.O.)
Hooked on horse. Been in and out of Lexington five times.
MALCOLM (V.O.)
You seen Sophia?

INSERT FL.ASH· SOPHIA

is a bored housewife, she's in the kitchen cooking while her husband hides behind the Wall Street Journal.

BACK TO BAR

SHORTY
I ain't seen Archie, but the vine tells it he's living somewhere's in the Bronx. If you can call it living.
134

INT. DINGY ROOH •DAY

A KNOCK on the door rouses Archie, by now an old and dying man. All the vigor is gone, all the life has ebbed out.

ARCHIE
Git the hell away, you bitch, I'll pay you tomorrow.

Door opens, Malcolm enters.

MALCOLM
Hello, Archie.

Archie sits up from his bed and stares. He tries to bring back some of his old Juice, tries to stand up.

ARCHIE
Hy man, Red. Come on in, man.
(then giving up)
Hey, I can't make it.

Malcolm has to help him lie back.

lll.

134 COKTI't.7.JtD: 134

MA.1.COU1
Take it easy, baby.
ARCHIE
That really you, Red?

The contrast is shocking: Malcolm tall and straight: Archie ruined.

MA.1.COU1
You saved my life, Archie. Running me out of Harlem. When I think how close we came to gunning each other down, I have to thank Allah.
ARCHIE
I wasn't gonna shoot you, baby, It was just my rep, that's all. And don't shit me now, but did you have that number? Tell me.
MA.1.COU1
I don't know. It doesn't matter. The :hing is we got to get you bac~ on your feet.
ARCHIE
Yeah. I got a couple of new angles ain't been figured yet. All I need's a stake and a chance
MA.1.COU1
Can you use a few bucks? I ain't got much, but
A.R.CHIE
No, man, I'm doing okay. Thanks.
MA.LCOU1
Take it easy. Lay down and don't think about it.
ARCHIE
Yeah.

You could of been something, Archie, but the devil got to you.

The old man is asleep.

MA.LCOU1
You knew all the angles except how to live.
135

EXT. STREET IN HARLEM - NIGHT

Malcolm walks thoughtfully doWT1the street; Archie is still on his mind, as he passes prostitute after prosti- tute. Once beautiful black women now selling their bodies.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
(speaking before an audience)
Women who could be mothers, teachers, scientists; men who might have been astronauts, composers, engineers

136 !NT. TtMPLt U7 • NIGHT 136

Malcolm is addressing a huge audience. His tone is more intense, more personal than before, because of his recent encounters. In the audience, sitting with Bembry, is BETTY, a lovely dark-skinned woman. Her interest in Malcolm (tnie, also, for most of the other unmarried sisters) is more than religious.

MALCOLM
-- and what has the white devil made of them: dead souls. Oh, my he has no conscience. He should fall on his knees and say, 'Hy kind commits history's greatest crime against your kind every day of your life.' But does he? No. He scorns you, splits your head with his nightstick and calls you nigger. lf you've had it, then stand up and come forward. lf not us, then who? !f not now, then when?

ANGLE· AUDIENCE

Many stand, some walk toward the podium speaking his name: "I'm with you, Brother Malcolm," "Praise Allah," "He, Brother Malcolm,"

CLOSE· BETTY AND BEMBRY

There is applause; some of the audience get to their feet •· Malcolm acknowledges their approval, trying to quiet ' them, but caught up in the heady excitement of leadership.

136 CONTI!."UED: 136

CLOSE· BETTY AND BEMBRY

Beth aremoved by Malcolm's performances.

BETTY
(whispering)
He ought to try to make it a little easier, Brother Bembry.
BEHSRY
\o,lhydon'tyou try telling him that, Sister Betty?
137

INT. A LARGE ANTEROOM IN TT11RLEF7 • NIGHT

The Muslim movement has grown enormously. The activity in this anteroom, leading to other rooms off it, shews that. Betty and Bembry stand before a directory announcing activities in the Temple: MONDAY· Fruit cf Islam Meeting; TUESDAY· Unity Night; WEDNESDAY - Student Enrollment; THURSDAY· Muslim Girls Training; FRIDAY· General Civilization Class; SATURDAY· Swahili, etc.

A stir cf people and activity as Malcolm enters the ante· room. He excuses himself from a group of Muslims, making his way toward Bembry.

MALCOLM
(little out of breath)
Brother Bembry, can we fix it so our loudspeaker is heard on the street?
BEHSRY
I'm sure we can. This is a new sister, Sister Betty.

Malcolm nods at her; she nods in return.

BEHSRY
The sister lectures our Muslim girls in hygiene and diet.

Malcolm mutters "very good," but his mind ii clearly on a million other details,

BEHSR.Y
The sister stresses care of

I

the body and :regulareating habits.

(CONTINU'ED)

137 CON!I?-'UtD: 137

Malcolm is still distracted.

BtTTY The sister wonders if the brother knows what Harriet Tubman did between taking souls to the promised land?

Malcolm is stopped. He looks at Betty.

MALCOLM
What?

BtTTY She ate.

Halc:olmlaughs.

BtTTY

98

ANDTHE SISTER SUGGESTS HE PUT

his actions where his mouth is.

Halc:olm's laughter is heard, in response.

138 IN!. HUSLIH CAFtTtRIA • TWO SHOT• BtTTY AND MALCOLM· 138 NIGHT

MALCOLM
Sure I'll speak to your class. But I'm a hard man on women. You want to know why?

BtTTY If you want to tell me.

CUT TO:

'EXT. ELIJAH'S GAltDtN• DAY

Malcolm sits next to the Honorable Elijah Huhammad. The student and the teacher.

MALCOLM
If you want to tell me.
ELIJAH
Women are deceitful. They are untrustworthy flesh. I've seen too many men ruined or tied down or messed up by women.
CUT BACK TO:

_,115.

138 CON'l"I~-UtD: l3E

BtTTY AND MAJ..COI..~

Betty says nothing, she merely pushes the salad plate a little toward him. The food has thus far gone untouched. Malcolm continues.

CLOSE· MAJ..COl.11

MAJ..COl.11 Women talk too much. To tell a woman not to talk is like telling Jesse James not to carry a gun or a hen not to cackle. And Sa.mson, the strongest man that ever lived, was destroyed by the woman who slept in his arms.

BETTY
Shall I tell my girls tht~we oppose marriage?

CtJTTO:

CLOSt · ELIJAH

ELIJAH
No. We are not Catholic priests. We do not practice celibacy. If a woman is the right height for a man, the right complexion, if her age is half the man's plus seven, if she understands that man'• essential nature is strong a.nd woman's weak, if she loves children, can cook, sew and stay out of trouble --
CUT TO:

CLOSE - BETTY

BETTY
I think you've made your points, Brother Malcolm.

What points?

BETTY
That you haven't time for either marriage or eating --

138 CONT!N'\.JtD:(2) 138

Malcolm chuckles a bit.

BETTY
•• and that women aren't the only ones who talk a lot.

Now he bursts out laughing.

CLOSE· BROTHERS SIDNEY AND E:AR.L

They're alarmed at Malcolm's behavior.

TWO SHOT· BETTY AND H.Al.COLH

BETTY
If you'll start eating, there is a question I have. Go ahead. Start.

He takes a forkful of the salad.

BETTY
Considering today's standards of animal raising and curing meats, I don't fully understand the restriction on pork.

Let me explain. No. I'll do better than that. I'll show it to you. Scientifically. But it's demonstration purely in the interest of science, you understand?

BETTY (O.S.)
Yes, I understand, Brother Malcolm. Purely scientific.
139

INT. MUSEUM OF NATU'R.ALHISTORY· L>AY

Before a comparative evolutionary display showing the skeletons of various animals, Malcolm is holding forth. Betty is dressed in a vivid, becoming, red dress.

MALCOLM
Notice especially the claw, the jaw and the skull formation. This is the rat. This is the mole. Here you have the aardvark and the boar.••

(CO?.'1'INU!.D)

139 CONTit11JED:

CLOSE ON SKELETONS

MAl.COl.11(O.S.) ... All members of the pig-rodent family.

BETTY
l see your point.

MAl.COl.11 So it is not amatter of the breeding conditions or preparation of the meat. The meat itself is foul.

ANGLE· MAl.COl.11Al,1)BETTY

as they saunter out, passing the huge skeletons of pre· historic animals now.

BETTY
Could we sit down someplace?

MAl.COl.11 l'm,sor:ry. I've had you on your feet for hours.

BETTY
You've been on your feet for days. And didn't even finish your salad.
140

!NT. SODA FOUNTAIN - DAY

WAITER
You're the strawberry soda and you're the hot fudge sundae.

He plunks down the order before Betty and Malcolm. Malcolm takes a long, long satisfying pull on his straw. Then he sighs:

MAl.COl.11 That's something lhaven't done in fifteen years.

BETTY
What?

MAl.COl.11 Sat down with a pretty girl and had an ice cream soda.

118,

140 CONTINUtD; 140

'Bt!TY How do you like it?

H.ALCOI..11
Delicious.

She laughs. He blushes.

H.ALCOI..11
Let's talk about you for a change.

'BETTY There's nothing to talk about.

H.ALCOI..11
Oh, yes, there is. I know a lot about you. 'Brother'Bembrybriefed me.

'BETTY Oh? Purely scientific interest I'm sure.

H.ALCOI..11
(a beat)
You're from Detroit, near where I come from. You majored in education at Tuskegee. You're studying nursing and having trouble with your family.

ETTY I can handle it.·

H.ALCOI..11
They want you to quit the Muslims or they won't pay your tuition, isn't that it?

'BETTY You have enough worries of your own.

H.ALCOU1
No, good Sisters are rare. We need every one. Tell me something: how tall are you?

'BETTY Why do you ask?

H.ALCOU1
Just an idle question.

(CONTIN'lJED)

119,

140 CO~!l1'7.JED:( 2 ) 140

BETTY
lf it's just idle, I won't answer it.

She takes a bite of her sundae.

BETTY
But Brother Bembry says I'm tall enough for a tall man.

MALCOI.!1 How old are you, Betty?

BETTY
There's a few things you don't know about women, Brother Malcolm. They're possessive and vain.

MALCOI.!1 Are you?

BETTY
And dogged when I set my mind to something.

MALCOI.!1 What have you set your mind to?

BETTY
Being a good Muslim, a good nurse and a good wife.

Malcolm takes a good look at the lovely woman in front of him, then a long sip from his ice cream soda.

SIDNEY (O.S.)
Brother Malcolm.

Betty sees him first.

BETTY
It's Sidney.

ANGLE· SIDNEY

As he runs to them at the table:

SIDNEY
Brother Johnson was attacked by the cops.
MAN (V.O.)
There was a scuffle. The Brother was watching.
141

EXT. SIDE STREET (HARLEM) - P.H.

Malcolm listening as several witnesses simultaneously describe the attack. A small angry crowd has gathered. The most animated one is BENJAMIN, a very dark, young black teenager, we will soon meet him later.

BENJAMIN
The cop says, 'Move on.'

The Brother didn't scatter fast enough for the ofay.

CLOSE -MALCOLM

BENJAMIN
Crack. He bled like a stuck hog.

Watcha gonna do?

VOICE FROM CROW'D
(deprecatingly)
He'll rap a little.· He's a Muslim . .And make a speech.
ANOTHER VOICE FROM CROW'D(V.O.)
Muslims talk a good game, but they never do nothing, unless somebody bothers Muslims.

Malcolm's face goes taut. He nods sharply at Sidney, as Benjamin watches them both.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
I demand to see Brother Johnson.
142

INT. POLICE STATION· LATE P.H.

Malcolm facing a DESK SERGEANT, TWO UNIFORMED COPS and a PLAINCLOTHES 11.ANoff toone side.

SERGEANT
Who the hell are you?
MALCOLM
I'm from Muslim Temple Seven.

COP #1 Never heard of you.

MALCOLM
Where is he?

.._,121 .

142 CONTU,UtD: 142

The police respond with a squeeze play intended to intim· idate Malcolm: ·

StRGtANT Nobody here by that name..

PLAINCLOTHES
What's your name, feller?

He feels the power play and stiffens in resistance.

HAl..COI..M I'm Minister Malcolm X. Two witnesses saw him brought in. He was not brought out,

PLAINCLOTHES
You heard the Sergeant. Outside.

Malcolm stands his ground coolly.

HAl..COI..M Take a look out that window. I intend to see Brother Johnson.

The Cops eye each other. Plainclothes walks to the window.

143

EXT. STREET OUTSIDE - LATE P.H.

Across from the station is a phalanx of some fifty men of the Fruit of Islam. All are dressed in dark suits with white shirts. They stand in military formation: eyes forward, every face burning. People from the neighborhood have formed a crowd behind and around them. We make out Benjamin amongst the crowd.

PLAINCLOTHES
Who the hell are they?

HAl..COI..M Brothers of Brother Johnson.

PLAINSCLOTHES
Eddie, let's see that blotter.

TWO SHOT -FAVOR HAl..COI..M

( As the Cops examine the police blotter.

(CO?,"TINUED)

143 CO!\TH,1JED: 143

SERGEANT
Yeah, We got a Muslim, The relief must of put it down.

PI..A!NCl..OTHES But you can't see him, You ain't his lawyer.

No lawyer, no see.

HALCOLH
Until I'm satisfied Brother Johnson is receiving proper medical attention, no one will move.

Cops eye each other. Plainclothes nods slightly, he has to give in, Malcolm is not playing.

144

INT. LOCKUP· SAME TIME:

The back of Malcolm's head, as he examines Brother Johnson. As he comes up OUT OF FRAME, we lee that Johnson has been badly beaten.

HALCOLH
(shaking)
Only a pig eould do a thing like ' that.

PI..AINCl..OTHtS Watch your tongue, boy.

HALCOLH
Don't you call me boy, you pig. Letting a man bleed like that.

Sergeant puts a restraining hand on Plainclothes.

HALCOLH
That man belongs in a hospital. Get an ambulance. Now!
145

EXT. STREET• LATER (D.A:R.KER)

As Johnson's body, on a stretcher, ii hurried into an ambulance. The crowd has grown in proportions. There areAD LIBS: "Goddam pigs," "Damn police brutality," "Least they got him out of the meat house."

Malcolm with the Sergeant and a LIEUTENANT, as the ambulance pulls away.

145 CONTI?-.1.:ED: 145

LIEUTENANT
All right, break it up. You got what you wanted.

11.Al..COLH I'm not satisfied.

Malcolm starts walking down the center of the street, after the ambulance.

11.Al..COLH To the hospital.

The Fruit of Islam fall in behind him, marching slowly. It takes on the start of a march as the neighborhood peopl~ fall in behind them. People (especially kids) race with them on the street and on the sidewalk.

ANGLE· BENJAMIN

Benjamin fights his way through the crowd trying to walk beside Malcolm, the Brothers in the Fruit stop him and Benjamin drops back.

' 146

146 UT. LENOX AVtN'Ut - NIGHT

Now the march has taken over the broad avenue. Cops are forced to redirect traffic, holding up cross-town ears as the group walks solemnly by. The people walking behind have swelled it to a huge demonstration. Their faces reflect their anger and their satisfaction that, for once, something is being done about what has happened.

147

EXT. HOSPITAL (HAU.EM)· LONG SHOT· NIGHT

shows the Muslim men in perfect order, calm, with their arms folded across their chests, waiting. Their eyes are on Malcolm as he walks toward the hospital entrance.

SERIES OF SHOTS

-- of the growing crowd.

of the nervous cops, including some big brass.

of kids watching from a rooftop.

of Benjamin trying to emulate the Fruit of Islam.

148 tXT. HOSPITAL (HAlU.tH5~ NIGHT 14B

Malcolm is standing in front of the Fruit of Islam men, as HIGH-RANKING POLICt OFFICtR CRttN comes over.

CAPTAIN CRttN All right, that's enough. Iwant these people moved out of here.

MAI.COLJ1
They're all disciplined men. They're doing nothing except waiting.

SHOT· CRO\o/D

The unruly crowd behind the Fruit of Islam. They are restive, milling, ugly.

CAPTAIN CRttN \,Thataboutthem?

MAI.COLJ1
That's your headache, Captain. And if he dies, I pity you.
149

EXT. HOSPITAL (HARLE.H)• NIGHT

DOCTO'R
He'll live. He's getting the best care we can give.
MAI.COLJ1
Thank you, Doctor.
DOCTOR
I had to put a plate in his head.
M.U.COLJ1
(to Captain)
You bastards.

CAPTAIN CRttN All right, okay. Now disperse this mob.

MED. SHOT· MAI.COLJ1,FRUITOF ISLAM AND CROWD

It's clear the decision is in one man's hands, Malcolm's.

(CONTIN1JtD)

14 9 CON7Ih-UtD: 149

CLOSt SHOT· MALCOL.H

He makes a gesture with his hand, the Fruit of Islam disperse.

ANGLE· PEOPLE

moving away, going home. Only one person remains from the Fruit of Islam and the crowd, it's 'Benjamin.

CLOSE· CAPTAIN GREEN

CAPTAIN GREEN
That's too much power for one man to have.
149A

INT. HUSLIM CAFETERIA

Everyone is in a somber mood over the evening events.

ANGLE· TABLE

Malcolm sits with 'BrothersEarl and Sidney.

SIDNEY
'Brother Minister, we need to strike back.

'BROTHERUR!.. Put fear into those devils.

HALCOlJ'f I want to also, but until we are instructed by the Messenger to do so, we will Just wait and pray.

'BROTHERUR!.. I'm tired of praying.

HALCOLM
That's enough, 'BrotherEarl.

ANGLE· ENTRANCE

'Benjamincomes into the cafeteria and everyone looks at him. He sees Malcolm sitting and moves towards his table.

l49A CONT!t-.1JtD: 149A

A.NGl.t· TABl.t

Brothers Sidney and Earl get up to intercept him but Malcolm waves him through. Benjamin stands.

MALCOLM
Sit down, son,

Malcolm pours some eream into his cup of blaek coffee, then also some white sugar.

MALCOLM
There is only one thing I like integrated. My coffee.

Benjamin laughs.

MALCOLM
What ean I do for you?
BENJAMIN
Mr. X, I was out there tonight. I saw what you did. I want to be a Muslim. I ain't never aeen a Negro stand up to the police like that .
109

A.NGL.E·SIDNEY .ALIDE:.ALTL

They £xehange dubious looks.

MALCOLM
Do you know what it means to be a true Muslim?

Benjamin hesitates,

MALCOLM
Do you?

:BENJAMIN Not exactly, but I want to be one, like you.

MALCOLM
I admire your enthusiasm but you should never join any organization without first cheeking it QUt thoroughly,

Benjamin is crushed and he starts to get up.

149A CON!I'NUtD: ( 2) 149A

MALCOI.H
We need more young wnr=iors like yourself, stick around and we shnll see if your heart is true.
BENJAMIN
Mr. X, I won't make you out a liar.

150 IN!. TEM'PLt Ul (DETROIT) - CLOSE ON NEWSPAPER HEADLINE 150 (DAILY NEl:/S)

MALCOLM X W'INS$70,000 .JUDGEMENT FOR BEATEN NEGRO

An AIDE of Elijah puts down the newspaper and shakes Malcolm's hand.

AIDE
The Honorable Elijah Muhammad would like to see you now.
151

IN!, ELIJAH'S OFFICE - DAY

Elijah is sweeping the floor with a plain, hand broom. Malcolm enters the room, is surprised and waits at the door. The two are alone together.

ELIJAH
If I surprise you, let me explain. Menial work teaches us humility.
MALCOI.H
Let me do it then.
ELIJAH
No, each of us must relearn that work is the only worthwhile thing. Allah has given you a great gift. Use it wisely, never forgetting that we are nothing, while He ii all.

1A1.COIJ'S Allah a;.kbar.

The sweeping done, they stand together near a table at a window.

(CONTI?.'UtD)

151 CONTlKUtD: 151

ELIJAH
Tonight l shall introduce you as my First Minister. It will be a difficult task. Your assignment is to build temples all over the country. More work than you have ever done in your life and you will be in the public eye.

ANGLE· AlDtS AND OTHJ::RS

come into the room now. They are listening.

ELIJAH
Yes, thewhite devil will watch your every step. Even your own Brothers will become jealous, envious and hostile, go slowly. So I offer you a parable -- regarding your work.

Elijah picks up a glass and sets it before Malcolm.

ELIJAH
Here is a glass, dirty and its water foul, If you offer it to the people and they have no choice, they must drink out of it. But if you present them with this glass

He is holding a clean glass, with clear water in it,

ELIJAH
-· and let them make their decision, they will choose the•pure vessel. Islam is the only religion which addresses the needs and problems of our people, especially in the ghettos -- drugs, crime, unemployment, prostitution, 1 alcohol, gambling, fornication and adultery.

Malcolm kneels at his feet.

ELIJAH
You are my most faithful, hard- working minister. I believe you will follow me until you die,

129,

151 CONT!t."\.JED:(2) 151

HJJ.COLM(V.O.)
This sweet, gentle man at whose feet I ~neeled, gave me the truth from his own mouth. And I adored him, in the sense of the Latin root of the word. Adorare, to worship and to fear. He was the first man lever feared -- not fear such as one has of a gun·· •· but the fear one has of the power of the sun, l pledged myself to him, if it cost me my life.
152

INT. HOSPITAL WA.JU)· DAY

Betty is administering to a patient, as a PHONE is heard RINGING. It's answered. Another nurse motions Betty to the phone. She finishes with her patient and goes quickly.

BETTY
Hello
HJJ.COLM(V.O.)
Sis~er Betty?
BETTY
Yes.

INTERC'UT:

153

EXT. GAS STATION· PAY PHONE· DAY

I'm in Detroit.

BETTY
l know.
MALCOLM
At a gas station.
(beat)
Will you marry me?
BETTY
Yes.

'

Did you hear what I said?

BETTY
Yes l did. Did you hear my answer?

(COh"IINUED)

MALCOLM
l think so. Can you catch a plane?
BETTY
Yes. Did you eat?
MALCOLM
I love you.

1.54 INT. BE.H:BRY'SLIVING ROOM• NIGHT 1.54

A subtle change has come over the apartment: it is more comfortable; there is even evidence of some small luxury: A TV set, a new settee, etc. Preparation for the wedding party is in progress. It is a Muslim party, sedate and reserved, but with an underlying joy. Lorraine is put- ting the finishing touches on a wedding cake. Bembry, Sidney, Earl, and various brothers and sisters are present. Malcolm and Betty are not in the room.

BEMBRY
Looks gorgeous.

Just about ready.

BEMBRY
(to Sidney)
You set?
SIDNEY
Yes, sir.
BEMBRY
Well, get the happy couple and we can all dig in.

Sidney is about to go when Lorraine stops him.

LOR.R.A.INE
Give them a few more minutes. There won't be many times like this.
155

INT. BT:MBRY'SHOUSE• ANOTHER ROOM· NIGHT 1.5.5

Betty and Malcolm in a dim•lit room, very close.

MALCOLM
It won't be easy.

155 CONTlNUE.D: 155

BETTY
Just hold me.
MALCOL.'1
lt can get rough.
BETTY
Shh.
MALCOLH
I'll be away a lot.
BETTY
You're with me even when you're away.

He embraces her. Then Betty laughs.

BETTY
l never told you, butwhen I first saw you on the podium, cleaning your glasses, l felt sorry for you. Nobody as young asyou should be that serious. But l don't think that anymore.
MALCOLH
What do you think now?
BETTY
The simplest thing in the world: I want to have a lot of babies with you. Dear heart, I love you.

Full embrace.

BEMBRY (O.S.)
We're waiting on you, folks. You trying to starve us?

MtD. SHOT - FESTIVE TABLE

Malcolm has just cut the cake and handed a piece to Betty. Amid laughter and great warmth, Sidney and Earl unfurl the front page of the Messenger, the Muslim news- paper. Headline reads: "M.ALCOLH X WEDS BETTY SAUNDERS"; there is a photo. It is a moment of great joy -- but it lasts just a moment: I

JUMP CUT TO:
156

INT. MUSLIM AUDITORIUM - DAY

Malcolm is speaking to a good-sized audience:

MALCOI.!1 I bring you greetings from the Honorable Eiljah Muhammed. Mr. Chairman, brothers and sisters, friends and enemies. I can't believe everyone here is a friend and I don't want to leave anyone out.

CRO~'D- RE.ACTIONS

MALCOI.!1 So maybe 1 better add N,B.C., C.B.S., A.B.C., the F.B.I., and let's not forget our friends at the C.I.A.

CLOSE - BENJAMIN

He is neatly dressed in white shirt and tie, clean shaven, a fine young Muslim.

BENJAMIN
Take your time.

MALCDI.!1 You all read the newspapers, watch the T.V. shows, they call us 'hate mongers.' That's supposed to be us, the Nation of Islam led by the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. They say we hate whites; we're anti· white. No. I'm for anybodywho's fQr freedom. I'm for anybodywho's for justice. I'm not for anybody who tells me to sit around and wait for mine. I'm not for anybody who tells me to turn the other cheek when some cracker is whooping upside my head. I'm not for anybody who tells black people to be non-violent while nobody is telling white people to be non-violent.

1S7 INT. ANOTHER MUSLIM TEM".E'LE(CHICAGO)· NIGHT 157

There is a larger crowd in evidence.

(COlt"TINUED)

157 COK'!INUED: 157

MAl.COlJ1 Something new has happened. And it'll be Molotov cocktails next time there's violence against us. And hand grenades after that and something else after that. It'll be ballots, friends, or it'll be bullets.

The crowd responds, but Malcolm continues overriding:

MAI.COU1
It'll be liberty or it'll be death. With this difference it'll be reciprocal. You know what reciprocal means? That's one of whitey's words that I stole. I don't usually deal with those big words 'cause I don't usually deal with big people. Because you can get a whole lot of small people and whip the hell out of a whole lot of big people. 'Cause we have nothing to lose and everything to gain. And, brothers and sistert. F.B.I. and C.I.A., we are waking up. It takes two to tango. When I go, you go.

Strong response by the audience.

158

INT. BETTY'S BEDROOM· NIGHT

A modest room. She is rocking a cradle with her foot as she writes:

BETTY (V.O.)
Attallah is fine. Our first born is an angel and abeauty. And misses you as I do. But the news that you've dedicated four new temples is almost as good as having you with us.

l58A INT. HOTEL ROOM• NIGHT 158A

Malcolm sits in front of a television screen and watches the evening news:

158A CONTl?.'UtD: 158A

StR!tS or OLD NEWSREEL FOOTAGE (BL.ACKAND WHITE)

(Newsclips from Birmingham, Selma, Mississippi and elsewhere):

Police using dogs against people.

The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Marching.

Cattle prods used against men, women and children.

The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King singing "We Shall Overcome."

Pregnant woman knocked down by high-pressure water hoses.

Th~ Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King leading a crowd in p1ayer.

The smouldering ruins of Birmingham's 16th St. Baptist church.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
They say l advocate force and violence. All lever said is that where the government is unwilling or unable to uphold the law and defend the lives and property of Negroes, it's time for Negroes to defend themselves. Don't go looking for white folks with rifles and form battalions •· though you'd be within your rights if you did-· But it is time to let The Man know. Anytime they bomb a church and murder in cold blood, not some grown-ups, but four little girls, who are praying to the same God the white man taught them to pray to, 1 say lu2! •••
159

!NT. BEMBRY'S - DAY

Betty, quite pregnant with her second child, Quibillah, is with Lorraine. Attallah, about a year and a half old, is playing with Sidney. I

(CO?.'T!N!JtD)

159 cor;TINUED: 159

MAJ.COJ..H(V. 0. )
(no pause)
•.. lf you never see me again. If l die in the morning, I'll die saying one thing: either.the ballot or the bullet. Whitey, make up your mind.
LORRAINE
Then you like the new apartment. ls it big enough?

:BETTY (with humor) Well, so far it is, There's one thing l haven't told Haleolm. There are twins in my family.

Both women laugh.

159A

INT. TV STUDIO· CLOSE SHOT· MAJ.COJ..H'SFACE

With a studio mike around his neek, he's on a panel show.

MAJ.COJ..H
The Honorable Elijah Muha.mmad teaehes us freedom is not something somebody ean give you. It's something you take. Nobody can give you equality or justiee or anything worth having. If you're a man, take it, If you can't take it, you don't deserve it.

ANGLE - MAJ.COJ..H

is opposing several whites and at least one Negro, DR. PAYSON. A HODER.ATOR (a la Suskind) is trying to main· tain deeorum, but Malcolm doesn't lend himself to simple "law and order." He says what's on his mind when he wants to.

DR, PAYSON :BrotherMalcolm is a demagogue. He has no place to go, 10 he exaggerates. He's a disservice to the good Negroes in this country. Now he's breaking bread with the communists.

MAJ.COJ..H
What communists?

,136.

159A CONTIJ.7JtD: 159A

Please.

The brother accused me.

DR. PAYSON
You've given several speeches
118

INT. ELIJAH'S OFFICE· DAY

The Honorable Elijah Huhammad and Bembry watch Malcolm on television.

CLOSE:· TV SCREEN

(interrupting) That's not breaking bread. I spoke in London, does that make me pro· British? I spoke in an A,M,E. church. Does that make me a Methodist?

BACK TO ST1.1DIO

I speak to the public and I speak from any platform I can find. I'm speaking here and I sure ain't breaking bread with you, excuse my broken English.

WHITE PANELIST
Certainly Brother Malcolm must admit there has been progress.

First I'm not your brother. I'll talk about 'progress' in aminute, but let me finish with mx brother•·

He gestures to the Negro panelist. The black members of the TV audience are lapping it up. Betty and Earl ait in the TV studio audience.

H.Al.COU1

I Stop me if I'm wrong. I 'polarize

the community.' I 'erroneously appraise the racial picture.'

159A CONTl?-.7.ltD:(2) 159A I

DR, PAYSON You put it very well.

MALCOLM
You left one phrase out ..Another educated Kneegrew said to me and I quote: 'Brother Malcolm over simplifies the dynamic interstices of the Negro subculture.' Would you agree?
DR. PAYSON
Entirely.
MALCOLM
Well, I have this to say. Do you know what a Negro with a B.A., an M.A. and a Ph.D. is called·· by the white man? I'll tell you. He's called a nigger.

There is some blanching and guffawing from the audience. The Moderator is totally embarrassed. Betty roars.

MALCOLM
I'm not finished. To understand this man --

He points a sharp finger at the Negro panelist.

MALCOLM
-- you must know that historically there are two kinds of slaves. House Negroes and field Negroes., The house Negro lived in the big house; he dressed pretty good; he ate pretty good and he loved the master. Yeah, he loved him more than the master loved himself. If the master's house caught fire, he'd be the first to put the blaze out, If the master got sick, he'd say: 'What's a matter, boss; we sick?' We sick! If someone said to him, 'Let'• :runaway and escape. Let's separate.' He'd say, 'Man, are you cra:y7 What'• better than what I got here?' That was the house Negro, In those days he was called the house

(

nigger. Well, that's what we call them today because we still got a lot of house niggers running around.

159A CON!IKUED: ( 3) 159A

There is applause from the blacks in the audience. Moderator tries to regain control.

IN1'.ELIJAH'S OFFICE• CLOSE· HONOR.ABLEELIJAH l1UHAHl'1AD•DAY

He is enjoying this display by his prize student, the CAMER.A PANS to a CLOSE SHOT of Bembry and the same cannot be said.

BAC'KTO STUDIO

I think, perhaps, Doctor Payson has something to•·

MALCOLM
Don't you want to hear about the field nigger?
DR. PAYSON
Let him finish.

, MALCOLM Thank you. Now the Negro in the field caught hell all day long. He was beaten by the master; be lived in a shack, wore castoff clothes and hated his master. lf the house caught fire, he'd pray for a wind.· lf the master got sick, he'd pray that he'd die. And if you said to him, 'Let'• go, let's separate'; he'd yell, 'Yeah, man, any place is better than this.' You've got a lot of field Negroes in America today. I'm one.

BENJAMIN
Tell it.
MALCOLM
•· there's another one. The majority of black Americans today are field Negroes. They don't talk about mu: progress, about mu: government, .llJ.I.I:Navy,Rll.X astronauts. Hell, they won't even let you near the plant.
159B

INT. ELIJAH'S OFFICE· DAY

Bembry turns off the TV set and he commences to plant the seeds of ''betrayal.''

CLOSE· BEM:BRY

BEM:BRY Your holy apostle, dear Messenger, I am your true servant and the brothers asked me to tell you Malcolm is getting too much press. The brothers think he thinks la is the Nation of Islam, that he has aspirations to lead the Nation. It was you who made Malcolm the man he is. You lifted him out of the darkness.

CLOSE· ELIJAH

ELIJAH.
Go and tell the brothers what Brother Minister is doing, has done has been of great benef~t to the Nation.

CLOSER· BEM:BRY

BEM:BRY Great benefit for himself.

l59C BRIEF HONTAGE - THE RISE or MALCOLM X l59C

120

EXT. STREET (H.ALU.EH)DAY

Malcolm is walking the streets of Harlem like he i ■ campaigning for office. He has Brothers Sidney, Earl and Benjamin at his side, a crowd follows hilll. Malcolm sees a wino.

MALCOLM
Brother man, put that bottle down, take that poison away from your lips. That's what the devil want ■ you to do, stay high, out of your natural mind. I know, I've been

{

there.

The wino looks atMalcolm and continues to drink.his wine.

(CONTINU'£1))

l59C CONTI!,7.JED: l59C

Malcolm emerges from a doorway to be met by an army of 'TV reporters armed with microphones. He walks; they follow.

Malcolm walking in Harlem, urging people to lift themselves up, come to the meetings, etc.

Malcolm sits with Benjamin.

MALCOLM
lt's time you've received your X. But first you must copy this letter, exactly as 1 give it to you; down to the dotted 'i's,' crossed 't's,' everything. And you must go on a fast, just water and juices, that's it.

CLOSE· BENJAMIN

He takes the letter from Malcolm and looks at it.

BENJAMIN
l'll have it tomorrow.
MALCOLM
Brother Benjamin, do not rush, it has to be exact.

Benjamin hands Malcolm his letter, Malcolm shakes his head· and hands it back, it's not exact.

121

EXT. STREET (H.A.RLEH)•DAY

Malcolm is talking to a group of people who are having a rent strike.

MALCOLM
When you live in a poor neighborhood, you're living in an area where you have poor schools.
CUTAWAY TO:

(CONTlN'IJED)

159C CONTIKUED; (2) l'59C

HALCOLJ1 AND BENJAMIN

Malcolm hands him back his letter again. The fast is getting to Benjamin.

MALCOLM
When you have poor schools you have poor teachers. When you have poor teachers, you get a poor education.
CUTAWAY TO:

DESPAIR OF HARI.EH- SL1Jl1S,TENEMENTS,GARBAGE, MTS

MALCOLM (V.O.)
Poor education, you only work on poor paying jobs and that enables you to live again in a poor neighborhood.
CUTAWAY TO:

BLACK FACES

MALCOLM (V.O.)
So it's a very vicious cycle. We've got to break it, a very vicious cycle that has to be broken.
122

INT. MUSLIM CAFETERIA

Benjamin meekly walks toward Malcolm and gives him his letter, which he takes. The fast is wearing him out.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

Malcolm is inspecting it.

CLOSE· BENJAMIN

His face is filled with apprehension.

' ANGLE· MALCOLM AND BENJAMIN

MALCOLM
You are now Benjamin _zx.

l59C CONTIN1JtD: (3) l59C

lltNJAMIN All praises are due to Allah. Thank you, llrotherMinister.

11A.LC01..1'1 Come, sit with us.

ANGLt • TABLt

llenjamin 2X sits with Malcolm and llrotherstarl and Sidney.

11A.LC01..1'1 We are now sitting with llrother llenjamin2X.

Allah Akbar.

SIDNtY You will be good.

lltNJAMIN llrother Ministet, can I hav~ something to eat?

tveryone laughs.

11A.LC01..l'I Let's get this man some food.

160 tXT. HARVARD SQUARE· DAY 160

A crowd of students outside the Law School. The setting is the same as the last time we saw Malcolm and Shorty here, except now the students part for him. Malcolm walks slowly toward the entrance, looking up at the Latin inscription of the building when he is stopped by aWHITt COED.

COED
Hr. X, I've read some of your speeches and I honestly believe a lot of what you say bas truth to it. I have a good heart. I's a good person despite my whiteness. What can the good white people like myself, who are not prejudiced, or racist, what can we do to help the cause?

160 CON!INUED: 160

CLOSE· H.Al,COl.11

He stares at her.

HALCOl.11 Absolutely nothing!

CLOSE· COED

She is absolutely crushed and runs away in tears.

161

IN!. HARVARD LAW SCHOOL· DAY

Speaking to a packed student audience in the famous auditorium:

H.Al,COl.11 ,,, My high school was the black ghetto of Roxbury. My college was the streets of Harlem and I took my Master's in prison. Ifyou look out that window --

SHO! • H.ALCOLH'SOLD GANG HANGOUT

H.ALCOl.11(V,O.) -- you can see my burglary hangout. I lived like an animal. Had it not been for the Honorable Elijah Muhammad l would surely be in an insane asylum or dead.

ANGLE - AUDIENCE

carefully listening.

MALCOLM (O,S,)
The language we have been speaking to this man in the past can never reach him, And you can never get your points across unless you communicate. If a man speaks French, you can't talk Latin to him. You have to know what language he speaks and talk to him

I in that language.

(MORE)

(CONTI!M:D)

161 CONTINUtD: 161

MALCOl.11(D.S.)(CONT'D) (pause) '!he white man speaks the language of brutality and violence and some of us are going ar·oundspeaking this·· ehieken peeking, we shall overcome singing, Unele Tom language and think he's going to hear. I tell you•·

INStRTS • SHOTS

A) Fruit of Islam, standing up to police.

B) Blaek Panthers bearing arms.

C) Students in confrontation.

D) Blaek folks rioting in ghettos aeross the country chanting "We want Malcolm X, we want Malcolm X."

MALCOLH (V.O.)
If his language is a shotgun, get a shotgun. If he only und~rstands the language of a rifle, get a rifle. If he talks to you with a rope, then get a rope. But don't waste time talking the wrong language.

BACK TO AUDI'!ORIUl1

'!heaudience roars.

MALCOl.11 '!heHonorable Elijah Muhammad teaches us that we're sick of 'advances'; we're sick of token Negroes; we're through with showpieces. Yeah, acme restaurant hires a Negro, Some university enrolls a freshman without bayonet ■,

124

ANDWHITE PEOPLE THINK WE OUGHT TO

be shouting halleluyah, Let ae tell you something: for 400 years he has had a foot-long dagger in the blaek man's back, and now because he starts to wiggle the knife out maybe an inch, the black man is supposed to be grateful. Why, if he jerked the knife out altogether, it's still gonna leave a scar ••• (CON'IIN'UtD)

161 cor:rnmtD: (2)

Crowd response.

MALCOLM
This is a question of human rights, not civil rights, Respect as human beings is what black Americans want. That's the true problem: letme tell you the answer. I've been to Africa. I've studied Africa. Independence came in those areas where they got mad. (Theydidn't sit around singing and they weren't sad.) They weren't interested in logic or consequences; they just got angry, kicked some ass and took over. Yes, they organized a Mau Mau and that's what we need.

SHOT OF REPORTERS IN AUDIENCE

Beginning to scribble furiously.

MALCOLM (0..S• )
I see the gentlemen of the press are with us and the pencils are beginning to wiggle. Then let me say with great forethought and careful consideration: in Mississippi we need a Mau Mau; in Alabama we need a Mau Mau. Wherever the law is flouted by white racists, we need a Mau Mau and that includes Roxbury and Harlem --

Great cry from the crowd. Malcolm stills them:

CLOSE - MALCOLM

MALCOLM
'I can aee tomorrow'• headline. Yes. 'Malcolm X Calls for Mau Mau.' I'll tell you something; if I ■ aid, 'Mary had a litte lamb,' they'd write 'Malcolm X Attacks Poor Mary -- and her Little White Lamb.'

' Loud laughter from the audience. But this response ii overwhelmed by the response of ANOTHER, LARGER AUDIENCE.

162 lN!. HONS!tR RALLY -NlGH! 162

Malcolm is talking before an all-black audience. lt is the largest rally yet; the hall is packed to the rafters.

MALCOLM (O,S.)
You saw the headlines, brothers and sisters, but you also see the results.

People in the audience wave The Pailv News headline: "MALCOLM X CALLS FOR HARLEM MAU MAU." Their joy is enormous.

MALCOLM
We have built temples in Boston, in Detroit, in Atlanta, Philadelphia, Washington -- 100 temples in fifty states. From a handful we have grown to scores of thousands. Oh, yes, they know about us.

VARlOUS SHOTS OF RALLY

Hawkers selling the Messenger: faces of Fruit of Islam near the podium; Lorraine, Sidney, Earl, Benjamin, and Bembry. For the first time a new note is 1een in Bembry's face: reserve bordering on resentment. When others around him cheer Malcolm, Bembry is cool. Sidney notices this from his father, but makes no comment.

MALCOLM (O.S.)
My beautiful brothers and sisters, I'm not going to spend tonight telling you, as I have 10 often, of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad's greatness. I'm going to tell you his greatest greatness. He i1 the first leader to identify our enemy. And why is this 10 great? Because when you know your enemy, you can no longer be divided. He has given us our true identity and pride and this ia the greatest binding force in the world. He ii the second Hoses sent by the Great God Allah. We know who we are and w),atwe want. No sane black man wants integration. No sane black man believes the white man will give him anything but a crumb.

147,

162 CONTit-'UED: 162

11ALCOl..l1(CONT'D) The Honorable Elijah Huhammad teaches us that the only solution for the black man is complete and total separation. Ours, .ourown, no one else's but ours.

A wave, as responses greet this.

CLOSE - BEMBRY

He does not like this.

163 Il;T. ANTEROOM OF RALLY - NIGHT 163

The rally is over. A small room packed with people congratulating Malcolm, trying to touch him.

He is the hero of the hour. Sidney, Peter, Earl and Benjamin are with him, enjoying the accolades and trying to help Malcolm make his way out. Bembry stands apart, removed and silent.

MALCOl..!1 Thank you, brother; sister, how are you?

SIDNEY
Please make way, please

ANGLE - W'ELL-KNOWNPERSONALITY (DICK GREGORY)

is at the door. He and Malcolm know each other well, Malcolm extends a palm, but GREGORY doesn't slap it,

GREGORY
Can 1 ask you something?
MALCOLM
Sure, man.

GREGOltY Are you a dupe or a dope?

MALCOLM
What?
GREGORY
(scornfully)
'His greatest greatness.'

-· 148.

163 C0N!H,1JtD: 163

H.,U.COLM Say what you're saying.

lf you don't know, man, ;hen I feel sorriest for you.

164

INT. MALCOLM'S HOME:· NIGHT

Betty, large with child, is in a chair -- a newspaper in her lap. Malcolm is in the other room, putting his last daughter to sleep. We hear him saying:

MALCOLM (O.S.)
Okay, last hug.

ANGLE:

As he enters, a smile on his face, but the concern of the evening clearly imprinted. He sits heavily. Betty watches him carefully.

MALCOLM
Long day. Long night. Long year. Long ten years.
(smiles)
lolhyare you looking at me like that?
BETTY
Because you're in trouble.
MALCOLM
How do you know?
BETTY
(smiles)
Dear heart, because I know you.

A pause.

MALCOLM
I don't want to bring my troubles home. You know that.
BETTY
I'm not made of glass. l won't

( break. I'm a black woman. You

helped make me that.

(CONTINlJtD)

164 CONTU,1JED:

MALCOI..11
I just want to sit here and be still.

BtTTY We've never had a fight.· Not a real one. But we're going to have one right now if you don't talk about it.

MALCOI..11
How did you know?

BtTTY Because the talk is all around.

MALCOI..11
There's always talk, always been talk. Don't they say how rich I'm getting off the Nation.
BETTY
We'll get to that, too, but this isn't just talk anymore.

She picks up the newspaper and reads from it:

BETTY
'Los Angeles, U.P.I.: Elijah Huhammad, 67-year-old leader of the Black Muslim movement, today faced paternity suits from two former secretaries who charged he fathered their four children .•• '
MALCOI..11
There are always slanders, always lies. You're reading the devil'• newspapers. Can't you see they're trying to bring us down, bring down the Messenger.
BETTY
'Both women, in their 201, . charged they had had intimacies with Elijah Muhammad since 1957••• •
MA1.COU1
I was going to talk to Bembry

( about it tonight.

BETTY
To Bembry? Is Bembry your friend?

164 CONTI?-.1JtD:( 2) 164

126

MALCOI..H

Woman, have you lost your mind? What's the matter with you?

She gets up, goes to him gently.

:BETTY No, what's the matter with you? Wake up! Are you so dedicated that you have blinded yourself? Are you so committed you cannot faee the truth? Bembry is the editor of the newspaper you established. Ask him why your name hasn't been in the Messenger in a year? Ask him why you rate front page in every paper in the country, but not a single paragraph in your own?

MALCOU1
(rationalizing)
I'm not interested in personal publicity. Our people know what I'm doing.

:BETTY But do you know what Bembry is doing? You're so blind, everyone ean see this but you!!!

MALCOU1
Bembry saved my live. The Honorable Elijah Huhammad has saved my life.
BETTY
A long time ago. You've repaid them many times over. Ask them why they have new ears and a house full of new furniture? And what do we have, Malcolm? A broken down jalopy and the clothes on our backs. We don't even own our own home. What about our children? What about me? You don't even have life insurance.
HALCOU1
You know the Nation will provide for you and the children if anything happens to me.

164 CONTINUED: ( 3) 164

BETTY
Will they? Are you sure? Are you sure or are you blind?

She touches him very gently.

BETTY
Dear heart, you can face death 24 hours a day; but the possibility of betrayal never enters your mind.

164A DETECTIVE MONTAGE 164A

Malcolm goes to the apartments of the secretaries to question them. These attractive young women are pregnant and/or with children, most complain that they are getting no child support from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, he has cut them off, even threatened them.

MALCOLM (V.O.)
From their own mouths-,I heard their stories of who had fathered their children. And from their own mouths l heard E:?.:.jahhadtold them l was the best, the greatest minister he ever had, but that someday I would leave him, turn against him. The Honorable Elijah Muhammad, while praising me to my face, he was tearing me apart behind my back.
165

INT. BEMBRY'S HOUSE - CLOSE SHOT - MALCOLM - NIGHT

He has said everything on his mind and waits for Bembry's answer.

PAN TO Bembry.

BEMBRY
What are you talking about•· 'blackout'? Some of the brothers are a little jealous. Maybe they think you been a little•· over- publicized. That's all. Forget it. It's nothing.

Malcolm is listening closely. Bembry puts an arm around him, man-to-man. "

165 CONTU,1JED:

BEMBRY
Now about our coming up in the world a little. You're not naive. You're a man of the world. The movement's grown; we've grown with it. You know folks. They want their leaders to be prosperous. One hand washes the other.
MALCOI.J1
(quoting Bembry back to himself)
'I'm telling you God's words, not to hustle.'

BtMllRY You want a new car? You want a new house? ls that it? It's the money, right?

Malcolm has to control his rage:

MALCOI.J1
We tell the world we're moral leaders because we follow the personal example of the Honorable Elijah Huhammad.

BtMllRY Elijah Huhammad is a human being. So am I. Do you know your Bible?

MALCOI.J1
I've read the Bible.

BtMllRY All right. David slept with Bathsheba; but that was less than his slaying Goliath. Lot committed incest, but he saved the people from Sodom and Gomorrah. Noah wa1 a drunk, but God gave him the Ark. A man's deeds outweigh his personal weaknesses.

Malcolm pours out his acorn.

MALCOI.J1
And one hand washes the other. You're a hustler and he's an adulterer.

165 CONTI?.1J'ED:( 2) 165

llD1'BR.Y lle careful, Malcolm. I warn you.

MALCOLM
I have to hear it from his own mouth.
166

INT. 'ELIJAH'SOFFIC'E • DAY

A tableau. Elijah Huhammad at his desk; Malcolm stands. We do not hear the earlier part of their exchange. Peri• odically Elijah has coughing spasms.

ELIJAH
Son, I'm not surprised. You always have had such a good understanding of prophecy and spiritual things. Yes, 1 am David who took another's wife. I am Lot who laid with his own daughters. It is only the fulfillment of prophecy, Hy aeed must be planted amongst fertile soil.

CLOS'E• MALCOLM

His world is coming apart.

167

SHOT - MALCOLM

Malcolm's face is dimly lit. He is kneeling as he prays and the C.AHI:R.AMOVESIN SLOWLY INTO an EXTREME CLOSEUP•

130

MALCOLM (V,O.) Every second of my twelve year, with Hr. Huhammad, 1 had been ready to lay down my life for him. The thing to me worse than death was betrayal. 1 could conceive death. 1 couldn't conceive betrayal•· not of the loyalty which I had given to the Nation of Islam and to Mr. Muha.mmad. During the previous twelve years, if Mr. Huhammad had committed any crime punishable by death, I would have

(

said and tried to prove that I did it•· to save him•· and 1 would have gone to the electric chair, as Mr. Muhammad.

FR.'EtZEFR.AMI:ONMalcolm's eye.

131

-· 154.

168 lNT. MALCOLM'S HOME - NlGHT 168

Malcolm is working at his desk when Betty enters. He locks up and smiles wanly, she wants to say something but dces not.

CLOSE· MALCOL.11

Feeling he's being watched. Malcolm puts his papers down and looks at her.

CLOSE - BETTY

BETTY
What did Elijah say? Was l right?

ANGLE - BETTY AKD MALCOL.11

MALCOL.11
lt's like someone has told me the earth is flat, up is down, down is up, I'm lost.
BETTY
Dear heart, l'm sorry.
MALCOL.11
There is a lot of work to do.
BETTY
How can you work?
MALCOL.11
It's hard to make a rooster stop crowing once the sun has risen. The sun is up.

We hear RIFLE SHOTS.

DRUM CADENCE (it will be throughout entire scene).

168A

INT. MANHATTAN CENTER • L)AY

Malcolm, a last minute replacement for the ailing Honor• able Elijah Muhammad, speaks before a huge crowd.

MALCOLM
And what do I say of this 10- called 'national mourning'? I say•• , the white man's acts are condemned, ·not only by our beliefs but by his own.

155,

168A CONTI!."UtD; 168A

SHOT· Al1tRlCANfl.A.GSAT HALF·11AST

MALCOI..H(V. 0. )
Both his Bible and the Holy Koran say: 'As you sow, so sh~ll you reap.' Both say: 'Sow the wind, reap thewhirlwind.'

ANOTHtR SHOT· .AHtRICAN FLAGS AT HALF-MAST

MALCOI..H(V.O.)
In the soil of America the white man planted seeds of hate. He allowed the weeds that sprang up to choke the life out of thousands of black men.

SHOT· KtNNtDY FUNtR.AL CORTtGE

MALCOI..H(V.O.)
Now they have strangled one of the gardeners. This is the justice of Allah. Wa·Salaam Alaikum.

SHOT· AUDIENCE

AUDIENCE
Alaikum Wa•Salaam.

SHOT· LONE, RIDERLESS HORSE

169

INT. MANHATTAN CENTER· MALCOI..HWITH REPORTERS· DAY

JU:PORTER Minister X! Don't you have even a little bit of remorse ...saddened by President Kennedy's assassination?

CLOSE· MALCOLM

MALCOLM
Assassination might be too good a

I word, and might I add an Arabic

word at that. This was a prime example of the devil's chickens coming home to roost. (MOJU:)

156,

16 9 CON!I?IUED: 169

MALCOLM (CONT'D)
Being an old farm boy myself, chickens coming home to roost never did make me sad. It always made me glad,

169A IN!. ELIJAH'S OFFICE· NIGHT l69A

On his desk is the black headline: "MALCOLM X CALLS ASSASSINATION 'CHICKENS COMING HOME TO ROOST,'" Elijah's health is getting worse, his coughing is frequent.

ELIJAH
Did you see the papers today?
MALCOLM
Yes, sir, I did.
ELIJAH
That was a very bad statement. The country loved this man, and you have made it hard in general for Muslims.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

He knows what is coming.

CLOSE· ELIJAH

ELIJAH
We must dissociate ourselves from your terrible blunder, l'll have to silence you for the next ninety days. You are not allowed to make any statements to the press nor are you to speak at any temples.

CLOSER· MALCOLM

He looks at Elijah, his leader, his friend, his father and speaks with total sincerity.

MALCOLM
1 agree with you, sir. 1 submit 100 percent.

ANGLE· ROOM

Malcolm turns around and leaves the room.

134

· 15 7

169A CONTIt.'UED: 169A

ANGLE• DOOR

As the door is being closed, we see Bembry kneeling before Elijah and kissing his hand. The door closes, the SCREEN IS Bl.ACK.

FADE IN:

170

INT. MALCOLM'S CAR· NIGHT

He is driving the ear slowly. Betty is with him. The mood is bitter.

BETTY
What will you do now?
MALCOLM
I don't know. I have to get away from those reporters, ke~p my mouth shut.
(small smile)
I'm going to get the car fixed. At least that's eonerete.

Bt':7Y What you said was true, And you've said harsher things.

MALCOLM
It was an excuse to lower the boom. I know that. The Assistant Minister told me I was silenced before I told him. Now I'm forbidden in the Temple.
(a laugh-snort)
Did you hear Bembry's statement?
BETTY
No.
MALCOLM
He said I might be reinstated if I submitted.
BETTY
Ii you submitted? You have already.
MALCOLM
I wasn't a hustler for nothing. l know a set-up when l see one. One

(

brother said if people knew what I'd done, they go out and kill me, This wheel 'h_asa lot of play in it.

170 CONTIJ.1JtD: 170

BETTY
Hy poor Malcolm.

11.ALCOI..H Hy head feel like it's b~eeding inside.

171

EXT. GAR.AGE· LLTTLE LATER

lt's darker. Their car is on a rack. An ATTENDANT comes out from under.

ATTENDANT
Lucky you didn't take her out for a spin.

11.ALCOI..H That bad?

ATTENDANT
Somebody been tampering with your drive shaft,
MALCOI..H
lolhat?
ATTENDANT
At 50 you might have lost control completely,

11.ALCOI..H lt has begun.

Betty has a terrible thought:

BETTY.
Oh, dear Lord --
MALCOLM
lolhat?
BETTY
I left the children with --

She can't say the words•-

MALCOLM
With who?
BETTY
Sidney.
172

INT. HALCOLM'S HOUSE· NIGHT

The room is empty, Betty and Malcolm come bursting in.

BETTY
Attallah, Ouibilah, girls !

A pause.

Sidney enters with both girls on his back and the little one, Ilyasah, riding his leg. Betty begins to weep in relief. She takes the children.

The PHONE RINGS. Malcolm answers it. From his expres• sion we know it is a threat call. He hangs up.

SIDNEY
Another one?

H.Al..COl.11 How long has this been going on?

SIDNEY
All day. Malcolm, I have to level with you. They gave me an assignment. But I couldn't do it. I love you, Betty and the kids.

' H.Al..COl.11 What was the assignment?

SIDNEY
To wire your car so it would explode when you turned the ignition. The brothers say you are spreading untruths about the Messenger. The brothers say your tongue should be cut out.

H.Al..COl.11 Sidney, you don't believe that?

SIDNEY
No! Whatever you decide to do, I'm with you.

H.Al..COl.11 No, you mustn't. You'll be marked for death.

SIDNEY
Let me die then.

H.Al..COl.11 I won't allow myself to come between you and your father. Go home. I order you.

Sidney reluctantly leaves.

Ariddon't come back.

173

!NT. HOTEL THERESA· DAY

Malcolm, backed by Brothers Earl and Benjamin 2X, faces a roomful of supporters and reporters.

ln the past l thought the thoughts, spoke the words of the Honorable Elijah Huhammad, that day is over. From now on l speak my own words and think my own thoughts. Because 1964 threatens to be a very explosive year on the racial front and because l myself intend to be very active in every phase of the American Negro struggle for human rights, not civil rights, l have called this press conference to clarify my own r~sition in the struggle. The orders have been issued for my death. l&111certain my executioner walks these streets. He may be even in this room, but that will not stop me. I've been forced out of the Nation by internal differences, the decision to break with the Honorable Elijah Huhammad was not mine to make, it was made for me. l therefore announce today the formation of the 0.A.A.U., Organization of Afro-

139

AMERICANUNITY. DESIGNATED TO

eliminate the political oppression, the economic e:r:ploitationand the social degradation 1uffered daily by 22 million black .Americans. I'm back at the old stand, gentlemen, A little more alone than I was before, but I am back,

A host of questions fired all at once:

ltEPORTERS l. Will it be a Muslim organization? 2. Do you have a mosque ofyour own? 3. How many of Elijah's followers will join you?

(COh'TlNUtD)

173 CON'!It.\.JED: 173

MaJcolm calms them:

HALCOl..H There is one further preparation I need, It is a return to the source cf cur great religion. I will make a pilgrimage tc Mecca.

174

EXT. LDLEWILD AIRPORT· DAY

Malcolm, at the window, as his plane takes off. He is watching Betty and the children on the visitors' ramp. He sees her become a tiny figure, waving a vivid bandana.

17 5 EXT. VISITORS' JtAl1P•DAY 175

The plane is out of sight. Betty gathers up her children. As they leave, she is subtly surrounded by a protecting band of supporters, led by Earl and Benjamin 2X.

175A MECCA· PILGRIMAGE 175A

HALCOl..H

Greeted as he descends from the plane in Egypt.

HALCOl..H(V.O.) Hy darling Betty. Everywhere l go I am welcomed as the representative of our people.

GROUPS or BURNOOSED SUPPORTERS ON STREETS OF JEDDA, SAUDI A:R.A:BIA

HALCOl..H(V.O.) Our fight is known and respected worldwide. Incidentally, there's a little white man who follows me wherever I go ...

SHOT OF CIA AGENT

He watches as Malcolm walks between the two pyr&111ids.

HALCOl..H(V.O.) •..I wonder who he's working for? If I was a betting man I'd say C.I.A. What's your guess?

SHOT OF HALCOl..H

On a camel as he rides toward the Sphinx.

162,

176

INT. AUDUBON BALLROOH • NIGHT 17 6

Betty is reading Malcolm's letter to a large audience.

BETTY
'I arrived in Jedda, Saudi Arabia. I have never witnessed such sincere hospitality and true brot,herhood as practiced here in the ancient home of Abraham, Mohammad, and the great prophets of the Scriptures ••• •
177

INT./EXT. MECCA· DAY/NIGHT

A) Malcolm, wearing the garb of a pilgrim, walks with a vast throng of others, similarly clad, around the Great Temple. He wears two white towels, one over his loins, the other over his neck and shoulder, leaving the right arm and shoulder bare. He wears simple sandals. The other pilgrims are of various colors: from white, to yellow, to darkest black.

B) Malcolm and other pilgrims kneeling together on a praying rug.

C) Malcolm and several white pilgrims eating Muslim· style; breaking a chicken and shaking it.

D) Malcolm and others walking around the Great Kaaba, a black stone set in the middle of the Great Mosque. He falls to his knees. We see what he dE:sribes:

MALCOLM (V. 0. )
Today, with thousands of others, I proclaimed God's greatness in the Holy City of Mecca. Wearing the Ihram garb I made my seven circuits around the Kaaba; I drank from the well of Zem Zem; 1 prayed to Allah from Mount Ararat, where the Ark landed. It was the only time in my life that 1 stood before the Creator of all and felt like a complete human being.
178

I~'T.ELIJAH'S OFFICE· NIGHT

Elijah and a group of Black Muslim leaders. Bembry among them, it looks like he is the number two man now that Malcolm has been jettisoned. The Messenger lies in bed, he is having a coughing fit, this is the worst condition he's been in. A doctor orders everyone out of the room.

·'163.

CON!Ih7JED: 178

11ALCOU1 (V. 0. ) You may be shocked by these words, but I have eaten from the same plate, drunk from the same glass and prayed to the same God with fellow Muslims whose eyes were blue, whose hair was blond and whose skin was the whitest of whites. And we are brothers, truly; people of all colors and races believing in one God and one humanity. Once before, in prison, the truth came and blinded me. It has happened again...

179

INT. HA1..COU1'SHOHE• NLGHT

Betty is with Brothers Earl, Benjamin 2X, and the children. There are now four incluning another baby Gamilah.

HALCOU1 (V. 0.)
... ln the past Imade sweeping indictments of all white people. I no longer s~~scribe to racial indictments. I wish nothing but freedom, equality and justice for all.

SHOT

Malcolm is bent over in prayer, lone figure in a huge mosque.

HALCOLH {V.O.) My first concern, of. course,is with the group to which I belong, forwe, more than any other, are deprived of our inalienable rights.

SHOT

Malcolm on a plane headed home,

MAl.COLH(V,O.) I believe the true practice of Islam can remove the cancer of racism from the hearts and souls of white Americans.

180

EXT. IDLEWILD AIRPORT - TIGHT TWO-SHOT OR L1ALCOL~AND

BETTY - DAY

In embrace. She breaks from him and whispers:

BETTY
Go ahead. I can wait now.
181

INT. IDLEWILD AIRPORT• DAY

A large press conference: mikes of every network, every newspaper and wire service present. Malcolm looks magnificent, tanned and healthy, wearing African garb and his splendid beard; he sits down at a table.

MALCOIJ1
I met the religious and political leaders of the Middle East and Africa. President Nasser of Egypt; President Nyerere of Tanzania; Dr. Nkrumah; President Sekou Toure; Jome Kenyatta•· and I met the people and this I learned:

SHOT· REPORTERS

Taking down his words.

MALCOIJ1 (O.S.)
We are not merely 22 million black Americans fighting white racism. We are a billion and a half, two billion people, united; for the black people of the world are victimized by the white people of the world. It is not the individual white man who is our enemy; our enemy is the American political system which feeds and nourishes white racism.

SHOT

The CIA agent (from Egypt) 1een in b.g.

MALCOIJ1
1 will tell you the other thing I learned. Wherever I went 1 was followed. In Egypt they tried to poison me, but 1 have a strong constitution.
(MORE)

181 CONTIN'\.JtD:

H.ALCOU1 (CONT'D)
1 do not say this with bravado or without fear and my wife and l will have a new child this summer.••

SHOT

Betty, calmly listening.

H.Al.COU1 ... But there are ingredients here that make it impossible for me to die of an old age. When l go, you will know who got me.

A long pause; no one moves.

H.Al.COU1 So every day that l wake up is another borrowed day, but you can be sure l will use the day to the fullness thereof.

He stops, Reporters burst in immediately with questions:

REPORTERS
l. What about rising racism? 2. Do you still advocate guns?
(one overriding question)
3. Do we understand you now do not think all whites are evil?

Yes, sir. Mecca opened my eyes. The true Islam taught me that it takes all the religious, political, psychological and racial ingredients to make the human family complete. Today my friends are black, brown, red, yellow and white.

REPORTER
What about guns? Should blacks be armed?

Nothing 1 saw or learned abroad changes the basic facts about America. (MORE)

(CONTIN'\.JED)

l66.

181 CONTI1,1.JED:( 2 ) 181

HALCOU1 (CONT'D)
It is still a racist nation with racist courts, racist schools, racist police, racist jails, a racist Hollywood, a racis_tT.V., and a racist press. And I shall bring these charges before the U.N. because this country has spit upon the Charter of Human Rights. These United States of America will be brought before the world court.
ANOTHER REPORTER
What about guns, Malcolm?
MALCOU1
Let me ask you a question. Has whitey changed since I went away? Have you put up your guns? The day you stop being violent against my people will be the day I tell folks to put away their guns.
THIRD REPORTER
Then you're :till an extremist?
MALCOLM
Yes, I'm still an extremist because black Americans are in extreme conditions. Show me a black man who isn't an extremist and I'll shew you someone who either needs psychiatric care, is an Uncle Tom •• or he's dead.

ANGLE· MUSLIM MALE

'B'ENJAM!NTHOHAS Git your hand out of my pocket!

'Everyoneturns around to the back to see what the commo• tion is about. The man who yelled out leaves quickly, we will see him later on, very soon.

182

INT. MALCOLM'S 'BEDROOM· NLGHT

Malcolm and 'Betty are in bed with a tiny night light on. They are closer than they've ever been. He is reading to her from their favorite poetry: The Rubaiyat ofOmar Kbavvarn-

(CONTIN'U'ED)

167,

182 CONT!t,"JED: 182

MALCOI.H
'Ah, fill the cup, what boots it to repeat How Time is slipping underneath our feet? Unborn Tomorrows and dead Yesterdays; \olhyfret about them if Today be sweet?'

Betty is half-asleep in the crook of his arm. She mumbles in pleasure.

BETTY
Dear heart, you could read the phone book to me.
MALCOI.H
Mmm. Have you thought about a name?
BETTY
Hmmm nnn.
MALCOI.H
Five girls'll be marvelous,

Betty raises an eyebrow.

BETTY
How do you know it'll be a girl?
MALCOI.H
Well --
BETTY
And who says it's just one?
MALCOI.H
No!

ETTY That's what the doctor thinks.

MALCOI.H
Well, six is better than five.

She kisses him.

ETTY Get some sleep.

He switches off the light.

182 CO?;Tn,utD: (2) 182

MALCOJ..H
You're the one who needs it. You got to sleep for three.

lltTTY I'm not sleepy.

MALCOJ..H
Sister lletty,not including my mother you're the only women I've met I would trust 75 percent.

lltTTY We have to work on that other 25 percent. Dear heart, I love and trust you and I'll always support you, Muslims or no Muslims.

MALCOLM
We had the best organi:ation that black people ever had and niggers ruined it.
183

EXT. HOUST - NIGHT

It is a cold winter night. A molotov cocktail. is lit and hurled through the front picture GLASS WINDOW.

184

INT. HOUSE - NIGHT

One of the children screams.

185

INT. MALCOLM'S LLTDROOM- NIGHT

Malcolm grabs his pistol and ~uickly throws a coat over lletty. She is half-asleep, frightened, trembling and disoriented.

MALCOLM
Walk out the back, dear. Hurry.

llettygoes. Malcolm runs back for the children.

ANGLE

He reassuringly leads the four children, in their pajamas, through the smoke-filled house.

MALCOLM
There's nothing to be afraid cf. It might be a little cold. Hang en. We'll be fine.

~,169,

INSERT - fLASHBACK

cur BACK TO:

EARL LITTLE

getting his family out of the burning house in Lansing, Hichaigan. It should be the same exact scene we saw be- fore earier in the film.

EARL
Everybody out . .(&t! ,(&t! Get the kids,
C1JTBACK TO:
186

EXT. HOUSE -NIGHT (PRESENT)

Neighbors' lights have gone on. Tl.~reare shouts:

NEIGHBORS
l. What is it? 2. Fire! 3. Bring those children in here.
H.ALCOL.H
Call the fire department.

l86A INT. HOTEL.THERESA -NIGHT l86A

Brothers Earl, Benjamin 2X and some of the other brothers are in Malcolm's office.

ANGLE - BROTHER EARL

on phone. He dials, then listens.

BROTHER. E.AlU. Get your coats. Now. And arm yourself, the minister is in trouble.

The brothers run out of the office brandishing rifle ■ and pistols.

187

EXT. HOUSE - NIGHT (LATER)

A hose is playing on the fire. Police cars have arrived. There are TWO REPORTERS with the cops. H~lcolm faces them furiously.

(CO?,"T!NiJED)

187 co1;,11,"1JtD:

MALCOLM
l repeatedly asked for police protection. I got none. The alarm was turned in half an hour ago. The firemen just g~t here. And then they rang the doorbell to get in!
REPORTER
Are the Muslims behind this?
MALCOLM
White racists did this. Maybe they're using the Black Muslims and maybe they're doing their own dirty work. What difference does it make?
SECOND REPORTER
Do you know what Muslim headquarters is saying?
MALCOLM
(with total contempt)
I can imagine. I did it myself. For the publicity.
153

EXT. TEMPLE 11 (DETROIT) - DAY

Bembry is being interviewed by a reporter.

BEMBRY
We feel this is a publicity stunt on the part of Malcolm X. We hope this isn't a case of 'if he can't keep the house, we won't get it either.'
187A

EXT. MALCOLM'S STREET - NIGHT

A CAllcomes ROAltINGdown the street with rifles sticking out the windows, and pulls right up in front of Malcolm'• house.

ANGLE -HOUSE

Brothers Earl and Benjamin 2X run out of the car up to f Malcolm.

(COh"l'INUED)

187A CDNTl?-.-UED: 1B7A

BROTHER EARL
We called your house, operator said you had requested that your phone be turned off.

I\ENJAMIN2:X Give us the command, Malcolm.

MALCOLM
I don't care about myself, my wife and four children were sleeping in their beds, they have nothing to do with this.

I\ROTHER£AP..L Let's get out of this cold.

Brothers Earl and I\enjamintake off their coats and put it over Malcolm and lead him to a police car.

187B

INT. I\ASE:MTNT• DAY

Five black men sit around a table. They do not speak. They are Thomas Hayer, Ben Thomas, Leon Davis, William X, and Wilbur Ki~ley. All are Muslims, ell are the assassins.

CLOSE· 12 GAUGE SAWED-OFF SHOTGUN ON TABLE

CLOSE· 9Hl1GERMAN LUGER ON TABLE

CLOSER· .45AUTOMATIC

ANGLE· THOMAS HAYElt

He puts a roll of e:r:posed35mm film intoa aock.

ANGLE• TABLE

ASSASSINS
Allah Akbar.

l87C INT. NY HILTON• ANGLE· LOI\I\YESTABLISHINGSHOT l87C

Malcolm is checking in when he is approached by• young white COED.

l87C CONTINUED: l87C

CLOSE· COED

COED
Mr. X, I have a good heart. I'm a good person despite my whiteness. What can the good white people like myself who are not prejudiced do to help the cause of the Negro?

CLOSE• MALCOLM

He looks at her.

MALCOLM
Teach your white friends to seek the truth. Teach them not to hate someone because their skin is not white like theirs. Teach them not to believe in white supremacy .•. That's all I can say.

CLOSE· COED

COED
I will, Mr. X. I will.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

MALCOLM
Let's all pray without ceasing. May Allah bless you.
187D

INT. HOTEL ROOH • NIGHT

Malcolm lies on his bed, and for the first time we see the strain in his face, it has begun to take its toll, he's a hunted man. A doomed man.

ANGLE· MALCOLM

Malcolm dials the phone.

MALCOLM
Brother Earl.

17 3.

187D CO?,TIJ.1.JED: 187D

157

INT. HOTEL THTRESA -·NIGHT

BROTHER tAltL Malcolm, where are you?

INTERCUT BETW'EENBrother Earl and MAJ..COLM.

MALCOLM
I'm gonna spend the night at the Hilton, try to get some work done.
BROTHER EARL
Let some of us come down there.
MALCOLM
No, that won't be necessary. I'll be all right.

BROTHER tAltL I wish you'd listen to us. What about the meeting tomorrow? We need to frisk people.

MALCOLM
I don't want folks to be searched, it will be over soon.

There is silence on the other end.

MALCOLM
Don't be sad. I have lived with danger all my life. I never expected to die of old age, I know the power structure won't let me. I know I have done the very best I could to. helpour people.

CLOSE - BROTHER E.AlU.

A tear rolls down his face.

MALCOLM
Inever wanted an organization that depended on the life of one man. The organization 1111st be able to survive on its own.

I (CO?-.'TINUED)

174,

1B7D CONTINUED: ( 2) 18 7D

BROTHER EARL
Believing in Allah is one thing but I also believe in being armed. We will protect you. Wa•Salamm Alaikum.
MALCOLM
I don't want black people killing each other. Alaikum Wa•Salaam. Good night.

1B7E INT. AUDUBON BALI.ROOM· NIGHT l87E

The Harlem Y is having a party and it's packed with ttenagers doing the Monkey, Watusi, Mashed Potato, etc. to the sounds of MOTOWN.

ANGLE· STAIRCASE

The three assassins come up the stairs, Ben Thomas, William X and Wilbur Kinley, and start to mingle amongst the gyrating bodies.

187F

INT. HILTON LOBBY• NIGHT L87F

Thomas Hayer and I.eonDavis, two of the rema1n1ng assassins, walk into the lobby and go straight to the check-in counter.

CLOSE· HAYER

HAYER
Do you have a Malcolm X registered here?
187G

INT. HOTEL ROOM· NIGHT

Malcolm's resting on the bed.

CLOSE

The PHONE RINGS.

I CLOSE· MALCOLM

He picks it up.

187G CONTlt..'UED: 187G

HAYER V.O.) Wa•Salaam Alaikum. Wake up, brother.

CLICK.

Malcolm stares at the receiver, then hangs up the phone.

187H

INT. A'JD1J'BONBALLROOM· NIGHT

The three assassins are casing the ballroom. They check the different entrances, the exits, the bathrooms, staircases while the jam-packed crowd continues to dance the night away.

188

INT. FRIEKD'S HOUSE· NIGHT

Betty is putting her four daughters to sleep when the PHONE RINGS. She picks it up.

BETTY
Hello?

CLOSE· 11.ALCOLM

It's me, good to hear your voice.

INTERCUT BETWEEN Malcolm and Betty.

BETTY
Dear heart, where are you?

In a hotel. The kids asleep?

BETTY
I just put them to bed. Can we come to the meeting tomorrow?
MALCOLM
I don't think ao.
BETTY
We want to be with you.

MALCOLM

I

It's dangerous.

176,

lBB COKTH,1JED:

BETTY
lt's been dangerous.
MALCOI..M
Sister Betty, I've never told anyone this before, the more I keep thinking about the things that have been happening lately, I'm not at all sure it's solely the Muslims. I know what they can and cannot do, and they can't do aome of the stuff that's recently going on.
BETTY
Are you sure?
MALCOI..M
I think l'm going to quit saying it's the Muslims, it's not them alone. They're getting help,
BETTY
The children and I miss you.

CLOSE· MALCOl.M

MALCOl.M Sister Betty, I trust you 110 i,er cent.

BETTY
You are with us even when you are away.

CLOSE• MALCOl.M

Malcolm doesn't say anything, he's silent as he thinks about how much he loves his wife and kids.

MALCOLM
You can come tomorrow, bring the girls. Everything is gonna be all right.
189

EXT. HIGHWAY· DAY

SUPERlH'POSt: StJNllAYFEBRUARY21, 1965

A blue 1962 Cadillac i,assesa sign that says Patterson, New Jersey.

(COh"TIN'lJED)

177,

ANGLE • CAR

The assassins are on their way to the Audubon ballroom, Wilbur Kinley is behind the wheel, no one is talking.

Betty is driving to the Audubon Ballroom, her four daughters are in the back seat making a racket.

190A

EXT. STLTEET• DAY L90A

Malcolm drives to the Audubon Ballroom.

191

!NT. AUDUBON BAJ..LROOH•DAY

Brothers Earl and Benjamin 2X along with some others are putting the folding chairs in place for the coming meeting. The audience has not started to come in yet.

192

EXT. GEORGE WASHINGTON BRIDGE· DAY

The assassins are driving over the George Washington Bridge.

ANGLE· CAR

KlN'LEY Brothers, the time is fast approaching, it's the hour of the 'knifa.

193

EXT. STLTEET·CLOSE· BETTY· DAY

Betty is trying to quiat down her daughters as she drives.

194

EXT. STREET - CLOSE - MALCOLM• DAY

Malcolm is in deep.thought as he drives.

194A

!NT. AUDUBON BALLROOM - DAY

,

Betty and her four kids walk into the ballroom and move down the canter aisle.

(CO?-."TINU'ED)

178,

One of the girls drops her black doll and a young man picks it up. The young man is Thomas Hayer, he gives it back to her.

BETTY
Say thank you.

GAM!LAH Thank you.

THOH.A.S
You are welcome.

ANGLE

The rest of the assassins come in and go to their posi- tions along with the rest of the crowd, the place is starting to fill up.

195

INT. BACKSTAGE· DAY

BROTHER BENJAMIN ZX
No s~;n of the minister yet.

BROTHER EAlU.. He'll be here like clockwork.

196

EXT. STREET· DAY

Malcolm drives past the Audubon Ballroom, people are going in but no cops are present.

ANGLE· CAR

Malcolm drives by.

ANGLE· STREET

Malcolm parks his car, it's four blocks away. He turns OFF the IGNITION and sits there.

CLOSE· MALCOLM

It's as if he's frozen in his car. I

l 79.

ANGI..E- STREET

Malcolm finally gets out of the car, leeks the deer and walks a couple of steps, then steps.

CL.Ost -MALCOI..H

Malcolm has stepped in his tracks, like some unseen force has overcome him which prevents him from moving. Malcolm is paralyzed.

CLOSER -MALCOI..H'SFACE

His eyes are closed, and the street NOISE BEGINS TO BUIL.D tc a DEAFENING ROA.R. Then all of a sudden it steps .

171

ANGI..E-01..DWOMAN

01..DWOMAN Sen, you all right?

Malcolm opens his eyes, she has brought him out of it. He looks at her but doesn't answer.

01..DWOMAN ~re you okay?

Malcolm looks at this Old Woman, who slightly resembles his own mother.

HALCOI..H
Ma'am, I'm fine.
OLD WOMAN
Good. We need you. I recognize you, don't pay them folks no never mind, you keep on doing what you doing.
MALCOI..H
May Allah bless you.
OLD WOMAN
I'll pray for you, too, son. Jesus will protect you.

, She walks away, carrying her two shopping bags full of groceries.

197 lNT. BACKSTAGE· DAY 197

Malcolm walks in. Present are Brothers 'Earl, Benjamin

172

:?X,AND A SECRETARY, SLST'ERROBLN.

MALCOLM
ls the charter ready?

B'ENJAMlN2X No.

MALCOLM
Why not? You've had ample time, you and the sister.

SlST'ERROBlN I apologize, Minister, we'll have it next week.

He is pissed.

MALCOLM
Folks are sitting out there today, not next week, expecting to hear our charter.
BENJAMIN 2X
Next week, Minister.
MALCOLM
Has the Reverend called? Is he gonna show?

BROnt'EREAlU. He called last night and said he wouldn't be able to attend.

MALCOLM
So now we have no opening speaker? Why wasn't I informed last night?

BROnt'EREARL I called Betty, she didn't call you?

MALCOLM
Since when do you start telling her ~Y business? Since when? She has nothing to do with this. You tell me, not her, not anybody else.
BROTHER EARL
I assumed •••
MALCOLM
What did I tell you about assuming.

(CONTIN'\J'ED)

Haleolm starts paeing the room, nobody has ever seen him like this before.

MA.l..COLH Ber.Jamin,you better go out there and explain the charter isn't ready.

Benje.min 2X gets up to leave,

MA.l..COLH Sister, please go with the brother.

They both exit.

CLOSE - MA.l..COLHA'NDEAlU.

BROTHER EAlU. Brother Hinister, what is wrong?

MA.l..COLH I don't feel right about this meeting, something is not right.

BROTHER EAlU. Let's cancel it.

MA.l..COLH Is my family here?

BROTHER tAR.L Down front.

198

INT. ANTEROOM· DAY .198

A lone cop in uniform stands in the shadows with a walkie-talkie.

198A

INT. BACKSTAGE• DAY

Malcolm is about to go out onstage when he sees Sister ltobin.

MALCOLM
You'll have to forgive me for raising my voice to you.
SISTER ROBIN
Brother Minister, I understand.

'

MAJ..COLH
(to himself)
I wonder if anybody understands.
199

INT. AUDUBON BALLROOM· DAY

The place is filled. Betty and the girls sit in a boxed· off section near the platform. Malcolm's bodyguards stand on and around the stand: Benjamin 2X is finishing up his speech when Malcolm walks onto the stage and sits down.

HAl.COU1 Hake it plain,

BENJAMIN 2X
And now, without further remarks, l present to you one who is willing to put himself on the line for you --

CLOSE· BETTY >.1,'DKIDS

CLOSE· THOMAS HAYER

CLOSE· \,'l,LBU'RKINl..EY

CLOSE· LEON DAVIS

CLOSE· BEN THOMAS

CLOSE· \,'l,LLIAHX

CLOSE· HA1..COU1X

CLOSE· BENJAHlN ZX

BENJAMIN 2X
-- a man who would give his life for you. l want you to hear, to listen, to understand one who is a trojan for the black man.

ANGLE - STAGE

A roar greets Malcolm's intro. He shakes hands with Benjamin ZX, then steps towards the podium,

CLOSE· MALCOU1

He starts to rearrange his 3xS index cards in his hands,

MALCOU1
Brothers and sisters, Wa-Salaam Alaikum,

199 CONTINUtD: 199

AUDitNCt Alaikum Wa-Salaam.

S',,,'IFTJtRKYPANOFCAMtR..A

There is a commotion in the rear of the audience.

BENJAM!N THOMAS Git your hand out of my pocket.

The bodyguards move towards the rear.

CLOSE· HALCOLM

HALCOLM
Hold it, brothers. Don't get excited. Let's cool it•·

ANGLE· 1,/lLLIAMX

He stands up from the fourth row with 12 gauge sawed-off SHOTGUN BLASTING.

CLOSE· HALCOLM'

Throws up his hands, grabs his chest and is knocked backward.

SHOTS· PURE PANDEMONIUM

People hit the floor, knock over chairs, stampede for the exits.

ANGLE· BACK OF AUDITORIUM

Wilbur Kinley ignites a smoke bomb.

ANGLE· FIRST I.UN

Thomas Hayer and Leon Davis stand up, run towards the stage, and EMPTY their 4Ss and LUGER into the fallen body of Malcolm.

ANGLE· BETTY

She is on the floor covering her children.

(CONTimrtD)

199 CONTINUED; ( 2) 199

ANGLE - AISLE

Hayer and Davis charge up the aisle towards the rear exit, shooting at the crowd.

ANGLE· BODYGUAJU>

He stands in Hayer's way, Hayer FIRES, he turns, the bullet misses and the bodyguard gets off a SHOT which hits Hayer in the leg.

ANGLE - HAYER

He stumbles momentarily, then limps on.

ANGLE - STAIRCASE

Hayer is running down the staircase when he is tripped, and goes flying through the air to the bottom of the landing. The crowd starts to beat the shit out of him, kicking him in the head, etc., they're about to tear him apart limb :o limb when a patrolman enters with gun drawn. He SHOOTS GUN into air and the crowd bac~s off and he takes custody of Hayer.

ANGLE - STAGE

One of Malcolm's bodyguards, Brother Gene, is over him, giving him mouth to mouth resuscitation. Brother Gene stops, Betty moves in and hugs her dying husband.

BETTY
Somebody call an ambulance, Somebody call an ambulance.

ANGLE - ENTRANCE

Thirty cops walk in like it'• a spring Sunday stroll in Central Park.

CLOSE -MALCOLM

His eyes are glazed over.

I BETTY (O.S.)

They killed him. They killed him.

200

SHOT - BROTHERS EARL AND BENJAMIN 2X SITTING ON STAGE

SHOT - MALCOI..11

is rushed en a stretcher ta hospital next door.

SHOT -HOSPITAL SPOKESPERSON

HOSPITAL SPOKESPERSON
The person you know as Malcolm is no more.

STUNNED FACES OF BLACK PEOPLE (OUTSIDE AUDt.raONBALLROOM)

STUNNED FACES OF BLACK PEOPLE (ANI>IN HARLEM)

Ossie Davis speaking behind the above:

OSSIE DAVIS (V,O,)
Here at this final hour, in this quiet place, Harlem has come to bid farewell to one of its brightest hopes extinguished now and 10ne from us forever.

DOLLY SHOT

of the long line of people outside the funeral parlor, waiting to see Malcolm's body, where it lies before burial.

OSSIE DAVIS (V,O,)
For Harle.mis where he worked, and where he struggled and fought. His home cf homes, where hia heart was and where his people are. And it ii therefore most fittin& that we meet once again in Harlem to share these last moments with him.

FUNERAL ITSELF

OSSIE DAVIS (V.0.)
Fer Harlem haa ever been gracioua to those who loved her. have fou1ht fer her and defended her honor even to death. It is not in the me.mor,- of man that this beleaguered, unfortunate but nonetheless proud community has found a braver. mere gallant young champion than thil Afro-American who lies before ua unconquered still,
(CONTINIJED)

200 CONTINUtD: 200

INSCRIPTION ON COFFIN

''El JajjHalick El Shabba::. Hay 15, 1925 • Februaey 21, 1965"

OSSIE DAVIS (V.O.)
Many will ask what Harlem finds to honor in this stormy, controversial and bold young captain and we will smile and we will answer and say unto them··

SHOTS· FACES OFHAR.LEH (PRESENT DAY, '90s)

Ordinaey people in ordinaey pursuits of life, black people still struggling to stay afloat in a racist white America that does not have their best interests at hand·· 8 years of Reagan and now at least 4 years of Bush.

OSSIE DAVIS (V.O.)
Did you ever talk to Brother Malcolm? Did you have him smile at you? Did you ever listen to him? Did he ever really do a mean thing? Was he ever associated with violence or any public disturbance?

SHOT· STREET SIGN· HALCOLH X BOULEVARD (HAR.LEH)

SHOT· YOUNG AFRO-CENTRIC TEENAGERS WITH MALCOLH I T-SHIRTS, HATS, JACKETS, JEWELRY, ETC.

OSSIE DAVIS (V.O,)
For if you did, you would know him and if you knew him, you would know why we must honor him,

SHOT• NEWSREEL FOOTAGE OF .lUl.MALCOLH I

OSSIE DAVIS (V.O.)
Malcolm was our manhood. our living black manhood, That was his meaning to his people and

I

in honoring him we honor the best in ourselves.

{CONTINUED)

200 CONTliNUE:D: (2) 200

F'RE:E:ZtFR.AHE:•ACLOSEUP of the real Malcolm X smiling right at us.

CUT TO:
177

INT. CL.ASSROOM- SHOT· BULLETIN BOARD

A picture collage of Malcolm X. It reads: P.S. 153 Harlem honors Malcolm on his birthdate May 19, 1925.

OSSIE DAVIS (V.O.)
And we will know him then for what he was and is. A prineg. a black $hining Ptinee who didn't hesitate to die because he loved us so.

ANGLE· CLASSROOM

It's a fourth grade class.

CLOSE: • S'!"tJI>t?t'T

1ST STUDENT I'm Malcolm X.

CLOSE • STUDE?t'T

2Nl)STUDENT I'm Malcolm :X.

CLOSE:· STUDENT

3RD STUDENT I'm Malcolm :x.

CLOSE· STUDENT

4TH TtMALE STUDENT I'm Malcolm x.

201

INT. CLASSROOM (SOWETO, SOUTH ANICA) •DAY

CLOSE· STUDENT

1ST STUDENT I'm Malcolm :X.

CLOSE - STt.JDENT

2ND STt.JDENT I'm Malcolm X.

CLOSE - STU:OENT

3R!>STt.JDENT I'm Malcolm X.

CLOSE - STt.JDENT

4TH FEMALE STt.JDENT 1'111MalcolmX,

CAMER.APANS SI.OWLYTO head of class where the teacher stands, it's NELSON MANDELA.

CLOSE - MANDELA

MANDELA
As Brother Malcolm said, 'We delcare our right on this earth to be a man, to be a human being, to be respected as a human being, in this society, on this earth, in this day, which we intend to bring into existence by any means necessary.'
179

EXT. SCHOOL (SOWETO)· DAY

The students are chanting, "We-want Malcolm, :X,we want Malcolm X, we want Malcolm X."

MALCOLM :X (V,O.) ••• in this society, on this earth, in this day, which we intend to bring into existence bx 1nv moans Dcccssan~

FADt TO !LACK,

THE END