The Usual Suspects

 

Script From Star-Spangled Site

1 -BLACK

The lonely sound of a buoy bell in the distance. Water

slapping against a smooth, flat surface in rhythm. The

creaking of wood.

Off in the very far distance, one can make out the sound of

sirens.

SUDDENLY, a single match ignites and invades the darkness. It

quivers for a moment. A dimly lit hand brings the rest of the

pack to the match. A plume of yellow-white flame flares and

illuminates the battered face of DEAN KEATON, age forty. His

salty-gray hair is wet and matted. His face drips with water

or sweat. A large cut runs the length of his face from the

corner of his eye to his chin. It bleeds freely. An un-lit

cigarette hangs in the corner of his mouth.

In the half-light we can make out that he is on the deck of a

large boat. A yacht, perhaps, or a small freighter. He sits

with his back against the front bulkhead of the wheel house.

His legs are twisted at odd, almost impossible angles. He

looks down.

A thin trail of liquid runs past his feet and off into the

darkness. Keaton lights the cigarette on the burning pack of

matches before throwing them into the liquid.

The liquid IGNITES with a poof.

The flame runs up the stream, gaining in speed and intensity.

It begins to ripple and rumble as it runs down the deck

towards the stern.

2 EXT. BOAT - NIGHT - STERN 2'

A stack of oil drums rests on the stern. They are stacked on

a palette with ropes at each corner that attach it to a huge

crane on the dock. One of the barrels has been punctured at

it's base. Gasoline trickles freely from the hole.

The flame is racing now towards the barrels. Keaton smiles

weakly to himself.

The flame is within a few yards of the barrels when another

stream of liquid splashes onto the gas. The flame fizzles out

pitifully with a hiss.

Two feet straddle the flame. A stream of urine flows onto the

deck from between them.

2.

The sound of a fly zipping. Follow the feet as they move over

to where Keaton rests at the wheel house.

CRANE UP to the waist of the unknown man. He pulls a pack of

cigarettes out of one pocket and a strange antique lighter

from the other. It is gold, with a clasp that folds down over

the flint. The man flicks up the clasp with his thumb and

strikes it with his index finger. It is a fluid motion,

somewhat showy.

Keaton looks up at the man. A look of realization crosses his

face. It is followed by frustration, anger, and finally

resignation.

VOICE (O.S.)

How are you, Keaton?

KEATON

I'd have to say my spine was broken,

Keyser.

He spits the name out like it was poison.

The man puts the lighter back in his pocket and reaches under

his jacket. He produces a stainless .38 revolver.

VOICE (O.S.)

Ready?

KEATON

What time is it?

The hand with the gun turns over, turning the gold watch on

its wrist upward.

The sound of sirens is closer now. Headed this way.

VOICE (O.S.)

Twelve thirty.

Keaton grimaces bitterly and nods. He turns his head away and

takes another drag.

The hand with the gun waits long enough for Keaton to enjoy

his last drag before pulling the trigger.

GUNSHOT

The sound of Keaton's body slumping onto the deck.

 

3.

MOVE OUT ACROSS THE DECK. Below is the stream of gasoline

still flowing freely.

The sound of the gasoline igniting. The flame runs in front

of us towards the barrels, finally leaping up in a circle

around the drums, burning the wood of the pallet and licking

the spouting stream as it pours from the hole.

MOVE OUT ACROSS THE DOCK, away from the boat.

The pier to which the boat is moored is littered with DEAD

BODIES. Twenty or more men have been shot to pieces and lie

scattered everywhere in what can only be the aftermath of a

fierce fire-fight.

A BARGE COMES INTO VIEW.

On the deck of the barge is a tangle of cables and girders.

The mesh of steel and rubber leaves a dark and open cocoon

beneath its base.

MOVE INTO THE DARKNESS.

Sirens are close now. Almost here. The sound of fire raging

out of control.

SIRENS BLARING. TIRES SQUEALING. CAR DOORS OPENING. FEET

POUNDING THE PAVEMENT.

MOVE FURTHER, SLOWER, INTO THE DARKNESS

Voices yelling. New light flickering in the surrounding

darkness.

SUDDENLY, AN EXPLOSION.

Then silence. TOTAL BLACKNESS.

We hear the voice of ROGER VERBAL KINT, whom we will soon

meet.

VERBAL (V.O.)

New York. - six weeks ago. A truck loaded

with stripped gun parts got jacked

outside of Queens. The driver didn't see

anybody, but somebody fucked up. He heard

a voice. Sometimes, that's all you need.

 

4.

BOOM

3 INT. DARK APARTMENT - DAY - NEW YORK - SIX WEEKS PRIOR TO

PRESENT DAY

The black explodes with the opening of a door into a dark

room. Outside, the hall is filled with blinding white light.

Shadows in the shapes of men flood into the room. We can make

out men in hoods with flashlights. They are laden with

weapons.

VOICES

POLICE. SEARCH WARRANT. DON'T MOVE.

It is a blur of violent action and sound.'Beams of

flashlights cut the darkness in all directions.

FINALLY:

A dozen flashlights land on one man. He lies naked in bed,

Merging from a deep sleep. He squints at the flood of

blinding white light, more annoyed than frightened. He nearly

laughs at the sound of countless guns cocking. He is

McMANUS. Age twenty-eight.

VOICE (O.S.)

Mr. McManus?

McMANUS

Yeah.

VOICE (O.S.)

Police. We have a warrant for

your arrest.

McMANUS

Will they be serving coffee downtown?

Two dozen black gloved hands grab him and yank him out of

bed.

4 INT. AUTO BODY SHOP - DAY 4

An old paint mixer vibrates furiously.

TODD HOCKNEY, a dark, portly man in his thirties is working

on an old Fire-bird.

A YOUNG HISPANIC KID mixes paint a few feet away.

SUDDENLY, the garage door opens TO REVEAL:

4A .

A row of five men silhouetted by the bright sun.

Hockney squints.

 

 

5.

HOCKNEY

Can I help you?

Hockney's voice is gruff.

MAN

Todd Hockney'

Hockney reaches for something just inside the door of the

Fire-bird.

HOCKNEY

Who are you?

All six men INSTANTLY PRODUCE GUNS and aim them at Hockney.

MAN

Police.

Hockney withdraws a filthy towel and wipes grease and sweat

from his forehead.

HOCKNEY

We don't do gun repair.

S EXT. STREET - NEW YORK - DAY

FRED FENSTER, a tall, thin man in his thirties strolls

casually down the street. He is dressed conspicuously in a

loud suit and tie with shoes that have no hope of matching.

He smokes a cigarette and chews gum at the same time.

He happens to glance over his shoulder and notice a brown

Ford sedan with four men in it cruising along the curb. He

picks up his step a little. The Ford keeps up.

He looks ahead at the corner. He tries to look as comfortable

as he can, checking his watch as though remembering an

appointment he is late for. The Ford stays right on him.

SUDDENLY, he bolts. He gets no more than a few yards before

cars pour out of every conceivable nook and cranny. Brakes

are squealing, radios squawking, guns cocking. Fenster is

surrounded instantly. He stops short and flaps his hands on

his thighs in defeat.

6 INT. MONDINO'S RESTAURANT - DAY

An attractive man and woman walk quickly through the front of

a small New York cafe. They are charged with nervous, excited

energy.

 

5A.

The man is DEAN KEATON, a well dressed, sturdy looking man in

his forties with slightly graying hair. He looks much better

than he did in the opening scene. The woman with him is EDIE

FINNERAN, age thirty-three, poised and attractive - Easily

the calmer of the two.

 

6.

They come to a staircase at the back of the restaurant

leading down to a dark room. Edie takes Keaton's arm and

stops him.

EDIE

Let me look at you.

Keaton is uncomfortable in his suit, or perhaps the

situation. Still, he smiles with genuine warmth.

Edie straightens his tie and picks microscopic imperfections

from his lapel.

EDIE (CONT'D)

Now remember, this is another kind of

business. They don't earn your respect.

You owe it to them. Don't stare them down

but don't look away either. Confidence.

They are fools not to trust you. That's

the attitude.

KEATON

I'm having a stroke.

EDIE

You've come far. You're a good man. I

love you.

Keaton blinks then stammers, looking for a response.

PAUSE

EDIE (CONT'D)

Live with it.

She kisses him and runs down the steps with Keaton close

behind. Keaton playfully grabs her ass and she nearly

stumbles down the stairs.

7 INT. RESTAURANT - DOWNSTAIRS

They come to the bottom of the steps giggling and jabbing

each other. Once off the stairs they instantly transform as

though hit with cold air. They assume a cool, professional

exterior and walk two feet apart. One would look at them and

see only two business associates here to ply their trade.

They walk across the dimly lit dining room to a table in the

far corner where two men are already waiting. The first is

MR. FORTIER, age thirty-five, the other is MR. RENAULT, age

sixty. Both men are impeccably dressed with a distinguished

air. They stand and smile.

 

7.

 

FORTIER

Edie, nice to see you.

EDIE

Sorry we're late.

FORTIER

Nonsense. Sit, please.

RENAULT

(struggling with English)

You must be Mr. Keaton.

EDIE

I'm sorry. Dean Keaton

Renault's hand is already out.

RENAULT

Monsieur Renault. A pleasure.

KEATON

How do you do?

They shake hands. Keaton takes Fortier's hand next.

FORTIER

Monsieur Fortier. So nice to finally meet

you.

Everyone sits at the table. All faces are smiling.

LOW ANGLE: UNDER TABLE

Edie's hand reaches out and finds Keaton's leg. Her hand runs

high up his inner thigh and squeezes firmly.

Her face is absolutely calm, giving no hint of what her hand

is doing. Keaton smiles and clears his throat.

8 INT. MONDINO'S RESTAURANT 8'

Follow a waiter past the flight of steps.

PAN DOWN TO REVEAL:

Five sets of feet arriving at the bottom.

The feet in the middle wear shoes notably nicer than the

rest.

7A.

PAN UP TO REVEAL:

SPECIAL AGENT DAVID KUJAN (Pronounced Koo-yahn), U.S.

CUSTOMS. Thirtyish, dark-haired and determined.

9 SCENE DELETED

9'

8.

10 INT. RESTAURANT - DOWNSTAIRS 10

FORTIER

Edie brought us your proposal and I'll be

 

honest. We're very impressed. A bit

skeptical, I must admit, but impressed.

 

KEATON

Skeptical.

RENAULT

We find the concept brilliant, but New

York is difficult for new restaurants.

How can we be certain that our money will

be returned in the long run?

Keaton looks at Edie and smiles confidently.

KEATON

It's simple gentlemen, design

versatility. A restaurant that can change

with taste without losing the overall

aesthetic. Our atmosphere won't be

painted on the walls.

FORTIER

This was the part of the proposal that

intrigued us, but I'm not sure I follow.

 

KEATON

Let's say for example -

VOICE (O.S.)

This I had to see myself.

Keaton looks up. He sees David Kujan. Behind him are the very

serious looking guys in suits.

Keaton is not happy to see them.

KEATON

Dave. I'm in a meeting.

KUJAN

Time for another one.

KEATON

This is my attorney, Edie Finneran.

(Gesturing)

 

9.

KEATON (cont'd)

This is Mr. Renault and Mr. Fortier.

Everyone, this is David Kujan.

KUJAN

Special Agent Kujan. U.S. Customs.

(Gestures to men behind him)

These gentlemen are with the New York

police department. You look great,

Keaton. Better than I would have thought.

RENAULT

Is there a problem, Mr. Keaton?

KUJAN

The small matter of a stolen truck-load

of guns that wound up on a boat to

Ireland last night.

Renault and Fortier's confusion is giving way to suspicion.

FORTIER

Mr. Keaton?

KEATON

If you will excuse us for a moment,

gentlemen.

KUJAN

We need to ask you some questions

downtown. You'll be quite awhile.

Renault starts to get up.

RENAULT

We should leave you to discuss whatever

this is.

KEATON

Please. Sit.

Keaton stands up and throws a wad of money on the table to

cover the check. He looks at Edie. She moves to stand, but he

sits her back down with a hand on her shoulder.

KEATON

Enjoy the meal.

(To Edie)

I'LL call you.

Kujan takes him by the arm, but Keaton yanks away.

 

10.

He looks out over the dozens of other faces in the

restaurant. Everyone is looking at him with some level of

surprise. If Keaton is humiliated by the whole affair, he

hides it well.

11 INT. LOCK-UP HALLWAY - NIGHT 11'

A police officer steps into the frame and opens the steel

door.

FOLLOW A PAIR OF FEET as they shuffle across the cement

floor. The shoes are shabby and worn, as are the wrinkled

pants that hang too low and loose at the cuffs. The right

foot is turned slightly inward and falls with a hard limp. It

is clear that the knee does not extend fully.

The sound of a steel door opening. The bottom corner of a

steel cage comes into view. Another set of feet falls into

step with the first. Another steel door and another set of

feet. Another door, another and another. Five pairs of feet

walk single file down the hall.

The lame feet are in the front of the line. They come to

another steel door, this one solid and covered with dents and

rivets.

CRANE UP TO REVEAL:

ROGER KINT, VERBAL to his few friends. He has a deeply lined

face, making his thirty-odd years a good guess at best. From

his twisted left hand, we can see that he suffers from a

slight but not debilitating palsy. Behind him are Dean

Keaton, Fred Fenster, McManus and Todd Hockney. t

Verbal steps through the door, followed by the rest.

VERBAL (V.O.)

It didn't make sense that I be there. I

mean these guys were hard-core hijackers,

but there I was. At that point, I wasn't

scared, f knew I hadn't done anything

they could do me for. Besides, it was

fun. I got to make like I was notorious.

12 INT. LINE-UP ROOM 12

The five men are ushered into the room in front of a white

wall painted with horizontal blue stripes. Each has a number

at either end to denote the height of the man in front of it.

Between these lines are thinner blue lines to tell the

specific height in inches.

11.

Bright lights shine on all of them. They squint, eyes

adjusting.

Keaton leans forward a bit and looks at the men in line with

him. He shares a look of familiarity with Fenster and then

McManus. Hockney smiles at all of them.

McMANUS

(To Keaton)

Where you been, man?

VOICE (O.S.)

SHUT UP IN THERE. Alright, you all know

the drill. When your number is called,

step forward and repeat the phrase you've

been given. Understand?

The men all nod.

VOICE (O.S.)

Number one. Step forward.

Hockney takes a step forward. He looks directly into a mirror

on the other side of the room. It is three feet square and we

can make out faint light behind it. It is a two-way. He

speaks in a complete dead-pan.

HOCKNEY

Hand-me-the-keys, you-fucking-cock-

sucker.

VOICE (O.S.)

Number two. Step forward.

McManus steps up and makes a gun with his thumb and

forefinger. He mocks criminal intensity, pointing at the

mirror. He camps up his line.

McMANUS

Give me the keys, you motherfucking,

cocksucking pile of shit, or I'll rip off

your

VOICE (O.S.)

KNOCK IT OFF. Get back in line.

McManus steps back.

The rest of the men do their bit as Verbal speaks.

 

12.

VERBAL (V.O.)

It was bullshit. The whole rap was a

setup. Everything is the cops' fault. You

don't put guys like that in a room

together. Who knows what can happen?

13 INT. INTERROGATION ROOM - NIGHT

13

McManus sits in a chair in front of a white wall. He smiles

at someone off-screen.

OVERLAPPED:

 

MCMANUS

This has to be embarrassing for you

 

guys, huh? I mean you know and I know

this is a load of shit, but at least I

don't have a captain with his dick in

my ass making me play along. That has

got to suck,

VOICE (O.S.)

Are you done?

McManus

Do you work for a broad? That would

have to be the worst.

VOICE (0.8.)

Are you done?

McMANUS

Still, I guess dignity is a small

pries to pay for medical and a

pension. A small pension, mind you,

but a pension nonetheless.

VERBAL (V.O.)

They drilled us all night. Somebody was

pissed about that truck getting knocked

off and the cops had nothing. They were

hoping somebody would slip. Give them

something to go on. They knew we wouldn't

fight it because they knew how to lean on

us. They'd been doing it forever. Our

rights went right out the window. It was

a violation. I mean disgraceful.

 

12A.

VERBAL (V.O.)

They went after McManus first. He was a

good guy. Crazy though. A top notch entry

man .

VOICE (O.S.)

So where'd you dump the truck?

McMANUS

What truck?

VOICE (O.S.)

The truck with the guns, fucko.

McMANUS

You kill me, you really do. Where's my

phone call?

VOICE (O.S.)

Right here. Suck it out.

McMANUS

Clever guy.

VOICE (O.S.)

You want to know what your buddy Fenster

told us?

13.

 

McMANUS

Do I look stupid enough to fall for that?

Jesus Christ. Beat me if you gotta, but

no more of the candy-land tactics, man.

VOICE (O.S.)

WHERE'S THE FUCKING TRUCK?

14 INT. INTERROGATION ROOM 14

Now Fenster is in the seat. He sweats profusely.

FENSTER

I want to call my lawyer. I don;'t know

about any truck. I was in Connecticut all

night on Friday.

VOICE (O.S.)

That's not what McManus said.

OVERLAPPED:

FENSTER

Who?

VOICE (0.8.)

McManus. Be told us another story

altogether.

FENSTER t

Was it the one about the hooker with

dysentery I swear , she never

mentioned money until I came.

VOICE (O.S.)

Be fold us about the truck.

FENSTER s

To be honest, it was more like a +

mobile home. She made a lot of money, t

VOICE (O.S.) +

Who took the guns off your hands?

FENSTER

Hey, are we talking about the same

thing?

VOICE (O.S.)

I'm losing my patience.

 

 

13A.

VERBAL (V.O.)

Fenster always worked with McManus. He

was a real tight-ass, but when it came to

the job, he was right on. Smart guy. A

gopher. Got whatever you needed for next

to nothing.

FENSTER

You guys got nothing on me. Where's your

probable cause?

VOICE (O.S.)

You're a known hijacker. You're sweating

like a guilty motherfucker. That's my

p.c. Save us the time. Tell us where the

truck is.

Fenster knocks on the table.

 

FENSTER

HELLO? Can you hear me in the back? P.C.

He looks under his chair.

FENSTER (CONT'D)

Where is it? I'm lookin'. It's not

happening. What's going on with that? I

want

 

14.

15 INT. INTERROGATION ROOM

15

 

Hockney's turn in the chair. He laughs it all off.

HOCKNEY

- my lawyer. I'll have your badge,

cocksucker.

OVERLAPPED:

 

HOCKNEY (CONT'D)

I know you. You don't think I know

you're on the take. This whole fucking

precinct is dirty. You don't have a

fucking leg to stand on.

VERBAL (V.O.)

Hockney was just a bad bastard. Good with

explosives. Mean as a snake when it

mattered .

VOICE (O.S.)

You think so, tough guy? I can put you in

Queens the day of the hijacking.

HOCKNEY

I live in Queens. What the fuck is this?

You come into my store and lock me up in

front of my customers. What the hell is

wrong with this country? Are you guys

gonna charge me or what?

VOICE (O.S.)

You know what happens if you do another

turn in the joint?

HOCKNEY

I'll fuck your father in the shower.

Charge me, dick-head.

16 INT. INTERROGATION ROOM 16

Now Keaton sits in the chair, cool and indifferent.

VERBAL (V.O.)

Keaton was the real prize for them, for

obvious reasons.

VOICE (O.S.)

I'll charge you when I'm ready.

14A.

KEATON

with what?

VOICE (O.S.)

You know damn well, dead-man.

KEATON

Hey, that was your mistake, not mine. Did

you ever think to ask me? I've been

 

15.

KEATON (cont'd)

walking around with the same face, same

name - I'm a businessman, fellas.

VOICE (O.S.)

What's that? The restaurant business? Not

anymore From now on you're in the

getting-fucked-by-us business . I'm gonna

make you famous, cocksucker.

Keaton shows just a flicker of contempt. The threat has hit

home.

KEATON

Like I said. It was all your mistake.

Charge me with it and I'll beat it. Let's

get back to the truck.

A FIST flies into the frame and connects with Keaton's jaw.

His head snaps back, blood flowing freely from his mouth.

17 DELETED 17

18 INT. CELL BLOCK 18

Keaton is brought in to a holding where he joins Fenster,

Hockney, Verbal and McManus. He sits in a corner and keeps to

himself.

Fenster is in mid-tirade.

FENSTER

Somebody should do something. What is

this shit - getting hauled in every five

minutes? Okay, so I did a little time,

does that mean I get railed every time a

truck finds its way off the planet?

McManus is silently staring at Keaton, who sits on a bench,

looking away.

HOCKNEY

These guys got no probable cause.

 

 

 

 

 

 

16.

FENSTER

You're fuckin' A right, no P.C. Well

screw P.C. No right. No goddamn right.

You do some time, they never let you go.

Treat me like a criminal, I'll end up a

criminal.

HOCKNEY

You are a criminal.

FENSTER

Why you gotta go and do that? I'm trying

to make a point.

KEATON

Then make it. Christ, you're making me

tired all over.

McManus looks at Keaton.

 

McMANUS

I heard you were dead, Keaton.

KEATON

You heard right.

HOCKNEY

The word I got is you hung up your spurs,

man. What's that all about?

McMANUS

What's this?

HOCKNEY

Rumor has it, Keaton's gone straight -

cleaning house. I hear he's tapping Edie

Finneran.

McMANUS

Who?

HOCKNEY

She's a heavy-weight criminal lawyer from

uptown. Big-time connected. She could

erase Dillinger's record if she tried. I

hear she's Keaton's meal ticket.

(To Keaton)

Is it true?

 

McMANUS

What about it, Keaton? You a lawyer's

wife. What sort of retainer you giving

her?

17.

Keaton shoots McManus a fiery glare.

FENSTER

I'd say you've gotten on his main and

central nerve, McManus.

KEATON

Do your friend a favor, Fenster, keep him

quiet .

McMANUS

You're clean, Keaton? Say it ain't so.

Was it you that hit that truck?

FENSTER

Forget him. It's not important. I was

trying to make a point.

KEATON

(Ignoring McManus)

This whole thing was a shakedown.

McMANUS

What makes you say that?

KEATON

How many times have you been in a line-

up? It's always you and four dummies. The

P.D. pays homeless guys ten bucks a head

half the time. No way they'd line five

felons in the same row. No way. And what

the hell is a voice line-.up? A public

defender could get you off of that.

FENSTER

So why the hell was I hauled in and

cavity searched tonight?

KEATON

It was the Feds. A truck load of guns

gets snagged, Customs comes down on

N.Y.P.D. for some answers - they come up

with us. They're grabbing at straws. It's

politics - nothing you can do.

FENSTER

I had a guy's fingers in my asshole

tonight.

HOCKNEY

Is it Friday already?

 

18.

FENSTER

Fuck you. I'11 never shit right again. So

who did it? Own up.

KEATON

I don't want to know.

McMANUS

Nobody asked you, workin'-man.

HOCKNEY

Fuck who did it. What I want to know is,

who's the gimp?

ALL EYES suddenly turn on Verbal. He has been quietly

listening the whole time without uttering a word.

KEATON

He's alright.

HOCKNEY

How do I know that? How about it,

pretzel-man? What's your story?

KEATON

His name is Verbal Kint. I thought you

guys knew him.

McMANUS

Verbal?

VERBAL

Roger really. People say I talk too much.

HOCKNEY

Yeah, I was gonna tell you to shut up.

KEATON

We've met once or twice. Last time was

in...

VERBAL

County. I was in for fraud.

KEATON

You were waiting for a line-up then, too.

What happened with that?

VERBAL

I walked. Ninety days, suspended.

 

 

19.

HOCKNEY

So you did it?

 

VERBAL

To your mother's ass.

Verbal looks away from Hockney, awaiting a violent response.

Everyone slowly starts to laugh. Hockney looks as if he is

about to boil in his own skin.

KEATON

(To Hockney)

Let it go.

Verbal smiles at Keaton appreciatively.

McManus stands and walks to the toilet in the corner of

the cell. He starts taking a leak;

McMANUS

Look, we've all been put out by this, I

figure we owe it to ourselves to salvage

a little dignity. Now Fenster and I got

wind of a possible job -

KEATON

Why don't you just calm down'

HOCKNEY

What do you care what he says?

McMANUS

Yeah, I'm just talking here, and Hockney

seems to want to hear me out. I know

Fenster is with me -

(To Verbal)

How about you, guy?

McManus finishes pissing.

 

VERBAL

I'm interested, sure.

 

McMANUS

There, so you see, I'm going to exercise

my right to free assembly.

McManus taps the bars of his cell and the others LAUGH.

KEATON

I'm not kidding. Shut your mouth.

19A.

McMANUS

You're missing the point.

 

20.

KEATON

No, you're missing the point. Shut up. I

don't want to hear anything you have to

say. I don't want to know about your

job . Just don't let me hear you. I want

nothing to do with any of you -

(Beat)

I beg your pardon but all of you can go

to hell.

McMANUS

Dean Keaton, gone the high road. What is

the world coming to?

McManus and Keaton stare at one another for a long and tense

moment. Finally McManus turns to the others.

McMANUS (CONT'D)

Forget him then.

(Whispering)

Now I can't talk about this here in any

detail, but listen up...

Everyone but Keaton gravitates toward McManus's cell as he

begins to speak in low, hushed tones.

VERBAL (V.O.)

And that was how it began. The five of us

brought in on a trumped-up charge to be

leaned on by half-wits. What the cops

never figured out, and what I know now,

was that these men would never break,

never lie down, never bend over for

anybody. .. Anybody.

19 EXT. PIER - DAY - SAN PEDRO - PRESENT DAY 19

It is morning in the aftermath of the opening scene.

Harsh sunlight shines on a line of body bags on the dock.

Police swarm everywhere, photographers are taking pictures of

the scene while a team of men in rolled up sleeves and

plastic gloves pick at the remains.

Two men on a fire boat operate a water cannon, dousing the

smoldering remains of a burned-out ships hull.

Watching this from the edge of the pier is a man in a dark

suit. He is SPECIAL AGENT JACK BAER of the F.B.I. He is tall

and fit, in his late thirties. He gazes out over the water

thoughtfully.

21.

A UNIFORM COP trots up to him.

COP

Who are you?

 

Baer holds up his badge without looking at the man.

BAER

Agent Jack Baer, F.B.I. How many dead?

Before the cop can answer, Baer turns and walks along the

line of body bags.

COP

Fifteen so far. We're still pulling some

bodies out of the water.

Baer eyes the corpses on the dock, burned beyond recognition.

COP

Looking for anyone in particular?

Baer looks at the cop for the first time, unamused.

BAER

f don't want any of the bodies taken away

until I've had a chance to go over this,

understood?

COP

I have to clear the scene. I've got word

direct from the Chief

Baer lights a cigarette, only half listening.

BAER

(Unimpressed)

Yes, the chief. Spooky stuff. Any

survivors?

COP

Two. There's a guy in county hospital,

but he's in a coma. The D.A. has the

other guy - A cripple - from New York I

think. Listen, the Chief said -

BAER

Excuse me.

Baer walks away from the cop, ignoring him completely. He

wanders through the carnage on the pier.

 

22.

20 MT. OCEAN

20

A half mile out from the pier.

The sea is choppy, stirred by the wind. An object floats into

view a few feet away, bobbing in the water.

It is A DEAD BODY - a man, face down, wearing a CHECKERED

BATHROBE. He drifts quietly toward the open ocean.

21 INT. HEARING ROOM - DAY - LOS ANGELES PRESENT 2:

Verbal Kint sits in a chair in front of a microphone attached

to a tape recorder, his brow beaded with sweat.

On the wall behind him is the seal of the STATE OF CALIFORNIA

He is cleaner, better kept, in a well-cut suit and neatly

trimmed hair. He looks older than he did in New York - worn

down.

A flurry of voices banter off screen. Verbal's eyes follow

the voices back and forth.

VOICE #1 (O.S.)

My client offers his full cooperation in

these proceedings. In exchange, his

testimony is to be sealed and all matters

incriminating to himself are to be

rendered inadmissible.

VOICE #2 (O.S.)

The district attorney's office will

comply provided -

VOICE #1

No provisions, nothing. My clients

testimony for his immunity.

VOICE #2

May-I be frank, Counselor? I suspect your

political power as much as I respect it.

I don't know why Mr. Kint has so many

faceless allies in City Hall, and I don't

care. The embarrassment he helped cause

the city of New York will not happen

here.

VOICE #1

Immunity.

 

22A.

VOICE #2

Counselor, I will prosecute your client.

VOICE #1

Then prosecute. I will be very impressed

to see if the District Attorney manages

to bring in twenty-seven simultaneous

counts of murder against one man with

cerebral palsy. I would think a man with

your job would agree with these alleged

faceless people in City Hall you

mention.

VOICE #2 1

One would think the counsel is veiling a

threat.

VOICE #1 +

Counsel isn't veiling anything.

VOICE #2

I'11 take my chances then. I'11 feel

safer without a job if a man like Mr.

Kint is behind bars.

VOICE #1

Mr. Kint will plead guilty to weapons

possession.

VOICE #2

You're joking.

VOICE #1

Weapons. Misdemeanor one.

VOICE #2

Counselor, you're insulting me.

VOICE #1

Counselor, you're bluffing. Shall I push

for misdemeanor two?

Voices mumble off screen. Verbal fidgets in his chair.

VOICE #2 +

Misdemeanor one. Fine. This is

ludicrous.

A tiny smile and a genuine look of disbelief flash across

Verbal's face.

YELLOW 6/11/94

 

22B.

VOICE #2 (CONT'D)

(Clearing throat)

As for the rest of the charges grand

larceny, arson... murder - the district

attorney will accept the subject's

testimony in connection with the above

mentioned events and in exchange will

offer complete immunity. The

transcript... The transcript of said

testimony will be sealed and all matters

incriminating to Mr. Kint will be

rendered inadmissible.

Verbal lets out a long-held sigh of relief.

22 INT. POLICE STATION - HALLWAY - DAY

22

David Kujan is walking quickly beside SERGEANT RABIN, a dark

and weathered looking man in his late thirties. They move up

a staircase into the heart of police headquarters.

KUJAN

What do you mean I can't see him?

RAB IN

The D.A. came down here last night ready

to arraign before they even moved him to

county. Kint's lawyer comes in and five

minutes later, the D.A. comes out looking

like he'd been bitch-slapped by the

boogey man. They took his statement and

cut him a deal.

KUJAN

Did they charge him with anything?

 

RAB IN

Weapons. Misdemeanor two.

KUJAN

What'the fuck is that?

Rabin motions for Kujan to lower his voice. He points out

that they are walking through a bullpen filled with desks

where a number of other police are working within earshot.

RABIN

I give the D.A. credit for getting that

much to stick. This whole thing has

turned political. The Mayor was here -

the chief - the Governor called this

morning, for Christ's sake. This guy is

 

220.

RABIN (cont'd)

protected - From up on high by the prince

of fucking darkness.

 

KUJAN

When does he post bail?

RAB IN

Two hours, tops.

KUJAN

I want to see him.

Rabin comes to an office door with his name on it. He opens

it and lets Kujan in before following.

23-24.

23 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 23

RABIN +

Dave, please.

Rabin's office can only be described as a disaster area. The

desk is cluttered with weeks, perhaps months or even years of

paperwork that could never conceivably be sorted out.

Above his desk is a bulletin board. It is a breathtaking

catastrophe of papers, wanted posters, rap-sheets, memos and +

post-its. This is in the neighborhood of decades. Rabin is a

man with a system so cryptic, so far beyond the comprehension

of others, he himself is most likely baffled by it.

RABIN (CONT'D)

Even if I was to let you talk to him, he

won't talk to you. He's paranoid about

being recorded and he knows the

interrogation rooms are wired

KUJAN

This won't be an' interrogation, just a...

friendly chat to kill time.

RAB IN

(enunciating)

He won't go into the interrogation room.

KUJAN

Someplace else, then.

RAB IN

Where?

Kujan looks around Rabin's messy office.

RABIN (CONT'D)

No, no, no, no, no.

KUJAN

If it was a dope deal, where's the dope,

if it was a hit, who called it in?

RABIN

And I am sure you have a host of wild +

theories to answer these questions.

KUJAN

You know damn well what I think.

 

24A.

RABIN

That's crazy, Dave and it doesn't matter.

He has total immunity and his story

checks out. He doesn't know what you want

to know.

KUJAN

I don't think he does. Not exactly, but

there's a lot more to his story. I want

to know why twenty-seven men died on that

pier for what looks to be ninety-one

million dollars worth of dope that wasn't

there. Above all, I want to be sure that

Dean Keaton is dead.

RAB ZN

He's dead.

KUJAN

Two hours. Just until he makes bail.

RAB IN

They're all dead. No matter how tough you r.

say this Keaton was, no one on that boat

could've made it out alive.

 

25-29.

24 INT. HOSPITAL - DAY 24

A door marked INTENSIVE CARE.

The door BURSTS OPEN. SUDDENLY, the hallway is a flurry of

activity.

DOCTOR LISA PLUMBER, age fifty, walks quickly beside JACK

BAER .

Baer walks with all of the determination of a battalion of

Chinese infantry.

DOCTOR RIDGLY WALTERS, a young intern in his late twenties

rushes up to them.

PLUMBER

Ridgly, this is Special Agent Jack Baer

from the F.B.I. Agent Baer, this is

Doctor Ridgly Waiters.

RIDGLY

Nice to meet you.

BAER

Is he talking?

RIDGLY

He regained consciousness less than an

hour ago. He spoke - not English - then

he lapsed.

BAER

Hungarian?

 

 

30.

RIDGLY

I don't

BAER

It was Hungarian. Most of them were

Hungarians. Any fluent Hungarians on your

staff?

RIDGLY

We have a Turkish audiologist.

Ridgly opens a door and Baer barrels through.

25 INT. HOSPITAL ROOM 25

( .. DENOTES LINES SPOKEN IN HUNGARIAN) +

Baer comes to an abrupt halt at the foot of a bed surrounded

by a massive tangle of medical equipment. In the center of it

all is the as yet unnamed ARKOSH KOVASH, mid-thirties. His

body is nearly mummified in bandages and plaster from waist

to chin.

 

BOLD IS OVERLAPPED:

 

KOVASH s

Are you the police? I need the

police. He'll find out I'm here and

he'll kill me. I need the police. I

will tell them anything they want to

know. Please, I am going to be

killed.

 

BAER

will he die?

PLUMBER

There's a chance.

Baer walks over to Rovash and kneels down on the bed beside

him.

He looks closely at his battered and scalded face. He listens

to him far a moment. Kovash goes on incessantly.

KOVASH

Find someone who understands me,

you idiot, I'm going to be killed,

You'll all be killed if he has to do

it. Help me, God. They're all stupid.

Get someone who understands me or

we're all going to die.

 

30A.

Baer pulls a cellular phone out of his jacket and dials.

BAER

Call hospital security and put a man on

the door until the police get here.

KOVASH

Why are you just standing there,

you idiot? I'm not speaking English

am I? Wouldn't it make sense to find

someone who could talk to me so you

could find the person that set me on

fire, perhaps? He is the Devil.

You've never seen anyone like Keyser

Soze in all your miserable life you

idiot. Keyser Soze. Do you at least

understand that? Keyser Soze. The

Devil himself. Or are you American

policemen io stupid that you haven't

even heard of him. Keyser Soze, you

ridiculous man. KEYSER SOZE .

 

31.

Ridgly runs out of the room. Kovash babbles louder and

louder, trying to get Baer's attention. Baer sticks a finger

in one ear to block him out and hear the phone.

PLUMBER

Is he dangerous?

BAER

Yes.

Someone picks up on the other end of the phone.

BAER (CONT'D)

Joel, it's Baer. I'm down at L.A. county.

The guy they pulled out of the harbor is

ARKOSH Kovash... Yes, I'm sure... No,

he's all fucked up... What? I can't hear

you.

(To Arkosh)

Shut up, Hugo, I'm on the phone.

(Into Phone)

Yes... No... Not until I put someone on

him. Listen, I need you to send me

someone who can speak Hungarian. He's

awake and talking like a Thai hooker...

How should I know? Get me someone who can

talk to him -

Baer is suddenly distracted by something Kovash has said. In

the middle of a long string of unintelligible dialect, he has

spouted two words that have gotten Baer's attention.

He turns and looks down at the tattered man in the bed.

Kovash realizes Baer is listening and says the two words

again.

KOVASH

Keyser - Soze.

BAER

What?

He waves his hand, gesturing for Kovash to say it again.

KOVASH

Keyser - Soze.

BAER

No shit?

(Into Phone)

Joel, call Dan Metzheiser over at Justice

and find Dave Kujan from Customs.

32.

2 INT. HALLWAY - POLICE STATION 26

Rabin walks out of a small room. Behind him, we catch a

glimpse of a workroom with a bench covered with wires.

Kujan comes out a moment later, gently fixing his tie.

Rabin opens the door to his office and Kujan enters. Rabin

follows, looking up and down the hall before closing the door

behind them.

As the door closes we can just make out the back of Verbal's

head. He is seated in Rabin's office, smoking a cigarette.

27 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 27

Kujan and Rabin sit down across from Verbal.

 

34.

KUJAN

(Exasperated)

Verbal, you know we're trying to help

you.

VERBAL

Sure. And I appreciate that. And I want

to help you, Agent Kujan. I like cops. I

would have liked to have been a Fed

myself but my C.P. was -

KUJAN

Verbal, I know you know something. I know

you're not telling us everything.

VERBAL

I told the D.A. everything I know.

28

28 INT. WORKSHOP

Rabin stands over LOUIS, a messy looking technician at his

workbench in a room full of electronic equipment. He adjusts

several dials on a receiver until the voices of Kujan and

Verbal come clearly through a tinny speaker on the wall.

Rabin reaches over for a nearby pot of coffee.

KUJAN (VOICE)

I know you liked Keaton I know you think

he was a good man.

VERBAL (VOICE)

I know he was good.

KUJAN (VOICE)

He was a corrupt cop, Verbal.

29 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 29

 

VERBAL

Sure. Fifteen years ago, but he was a

good thief Anyway, the cops wouldn't let

him go legit.

KUJAN

Keaton was a piece of shit.

 

VERBAL

You trying to get a rise out of me, Agent

Kujan?

34A.

KUJAN

I just want to hear your story.

 

35.

VERBAL

It's right here.

 

He taps a finger on the stack of paper that Kujan brought in.

Kujan picks it up and thumbs through it.

KUJAN

According to your statement you are a

short-con operator. Run of the mill

seams. Everything you do, you learned

from somebody else.

VERBAL

That's been suppressed. Anything in there

is inadmissible.

KUJAN

Oh, I know. Sweet deal you have. Total

immunity .

VERBAL

(laughing)

Well I do have the weapons charge. I'm

looking at six whole months hard time.

KUJAN

(smiling)

You know a dealer named Ruby Deemer,

Verbal?

VERBAL

You know a religious guy named John Paul?

KUJAN

You know Ruby is in Attica?

VERBAL

He didn't have my lawyer.

KUJAN

I know Ruby. He's very big on respect.

Likes me very much.

Verbal sees this getting to something. His smiles fades.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

Now I know your testimony was sealed.

Ruby is well connected. He still has

people running errands for him. What do

you think he'd say if he found out you

dropped his name to the D.A.?

 

36.

VERBAL

There's nothing in there about Ruby.

KUJAN

I'11 be sure to mention that to him.

Verbal is not smiling anymore. He stares at Kujan with utter

contempt, knowing he is being shafted.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

The first thing I learned on the job,

know what it was? How to spot a murderer.

Let's say you arrest three guys for the

same killing. Put them all in jail

overnight. The next morning, whoever is

sleeping is your man. If you're guilty,

you know you're caught, you get some rest

- let your guard down, you follow?

VERBAL

No.

KUJAN

I'11 get right to the point. I'm smarter

than you. I'11 find out what I want to

know and I'11 get it from you whether you

like it or not.

VERBAL

I'm not a rat.

Kujan puts his hand on the transcript of Verbal's confession.

Rabin walks in with a cup of coffee. Verbal takes it with his

good hand and sips it with a relish.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

Ahhh. Back when I was picking beans in

Guatemala we used to make fresh coffee.

Right off the trees I mean. That was

good. This is shit, but hey...

RAB IN

Can we get started again?

KUJAN

Now what happened after the line-up?

Verbal sneers at Kujan, unable to change the subject.

 

 

37.

30 EXT. POLICE STATION - NIGHT - NEW YORK - SIX WEEKS PRIOR 30

Keaton stops at the top of the front steps of the police

station and lights a cigarette. Edie comes out behind him,

fuming mad.

EDIE

...and the desk Sergeant is actually

trying to tell me he can't release you?

Can you believe that? You weren't even

charged. New York police - Jesus. I want

to take pictures of your face to bring to

the D.A. first thing in the morning.

KEATON

Just forget about it.

He looks across the street and sees Fenster and McManus

talking by a newsstand. McManus is thumbing through

magazines.

EDIE

Absolutely not.

Keaton looks to his right and sees Hockney trying to hail a

cab.

EDIE (CONT'D)

I'11 have this thing in front of a grand

jury by Monday.

KEATON

Edie, please. I don't want to hear this

right now. What did Renault and Fortier

say?

EDIE

They want more time to think about

investing.

KEATON

Goddamnit.

EDIE

They just said they wanted time.

KEATON

Time for what, Edie? Time to look into me

a little more, that's what. No matter how

well you cover my tracks now, they'll

find out who I am.

 

38.

EDIE

Give me some credit. I got you this far,

let's go to the grand jury. This is never

going to stop if we -

KEATON

No. It's never going to stop, period. It

won't take more than a week before every

investor in this city is walking away

from us. It's finished. I'm finished.

Just then, Verbal bumps into him on his way out the door. He

excuses himself and hobbles down the steps, oblivious to who

he has bumped into as he tries to navigate the stairs.

EDIE

Don't give up on me now, Dean.

KEATON

They'll never stop.

EDIE

I love you.

KEATON

(To himself)

They ruined me tonight.

EDIE

Dean, I love you. Do you hear me?

Verbal gets to the sidewalk and stops. He turns, realizing it

is Keaton on the steps.

EDIE (CONT'D)

Let's just go to my place. We'll worry

about this tomorrow.

Keaton and Verbal look at one another for a moment. Keaton

then looks over to the newsstand and sees Fenster looking at

him.

KEATON

Huh?

McManus notices Fenster and glances up from his magazine to

see what he is looking at. +

EDIE

Come home with me, please. Dean?

 

39.

Keaton looks at Hockney who has one foot in a cab. He is

looking at Fenster and McManus who are looking at Keaton.

This makes Hockney look up at Keaton as well.

SUDDENLY, Edie tunes in to what is going on. She notices the

others on the street. She reaches over and takes Keaton by

the arm, pulling gently. She glares at the others.

EDIE

Come home, Dean.

KEATON

(Distant)

Alright.

Verbal looks at everyone else from where he stands on the

street. Fenster, McManus and Hockney all look at him and then

at each other. It is a strange moment of unspoken

understanding.

All eyes finally turn to Keaton, high on the front steps of

the police station as he walks away with Edie.

31 INT. HALLWAY - DAY 31

Verbal stands in front of an apartment door. He hesitates for

a long moment before he knocks.

After a moment, the door opens and Keaton stands on the other

side of it. He is wearing a bathrobe and smoking a cigarette.

He looks at Verbal without any expression whatsoever.

KEATON

What are you doing here'! How did you find

me?

 

VERBAL

I just asked one of the detectives

downtown. He seemed pretty happy to tell

me.

Keaton curses under his breath and motions for Verbal to come

in.

32

32 INT. EDIE'S APARTMENT

 

Verbal walks in and sits down on the couch, watching Keaton

cautiously. He looks around the large apartment, beautifully

furnished and decorated.

 

40.

Edie walks into the room in a man's button-down shirt and

sweat pants.

EDIE

Dean, who was at the

She stops when she sees Verbal. Verbal stands and smiles

nervously.

VERBAL

How do you do?

KEATON

Verb - Roger, this is Edie Finneran.

Edie, this is Roger Kint, he was at

EDIE

(Cold)

I know who he is.

VERBAL

I hope I didn't disturb you.

EDIE

I hope so, too, Mr. Kint. Can I get you

something to drink?

VERBAL

A glass of water would be nice.

Edie shoots a look at Keaton on her way out of the room.

Keaton tries to hush his voice despite his anger.

KEATON

What the hell do you want?

VERBAL

I wanted to talk to you. The other guys -

KEATON

I did you a favor by standing up for you

last night, but don't think we're

friends. I'm sorry, but I have other

things -

VERBAL

They're gonna do a job. Three million

dollars, maybe more.

Keaton is speechless. Verbal sits on the couch again.

 

 

41.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

They sent me to offer you a cut. We could

use a fifth man - a driver - That's all

you'll do.

Edie walks in with a glass of ice water and hands it to

Verbal.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

Thank you.

Verbal drinks slowly. Edie stands over him, her face blank.

It is an awkward moment. She deliberately makes Verbal

uncomfortable.

LONG PAUSE - FINALLY:

 

EDIE

So what is it you do, Mr. Kint?

VERBAL

Umm ...

EDIE

A hijacker like Dean, here? Or something

more creative?

KEATON

That's enough, Edie.

EDIE

(Angry)

I don't know what you came here for, but

we won't have any part of it.

KEATON

Edie, please.

Keaton takes Edie by the arm and tries to guide her toward

the other room. She pulls away, anger turning to rage.

EDIE

I've spent the last year of my life

putting his back together again - I won't

have you come in here and - What makes

you think - GET OUT. GET OUT OF m HOME.

HOW DARE YOU COME HERE?

Keaton is pulling her now. She yanks her arm away and shoves

him.

 

42.

EDIE

Don't touch me. Just don't,

She turns and walks out of the room. Somewhere in the back of

the apartment, a door slams.

Keaton turns and glares at Verbal. Verbal cringes.

KEATON

Get out.

VERBAL

If you'll just let me -

SUDDENLY, KEATON LUNGES. He grabs Verbal by the lapels and

lifts him off the couch, moving him effortlessly across the

room and slamming him into the wall next to the front door.

He opens it.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

Don't hurt me.

KEATON

(Seething)

Hurt you, you sonofabitch? I could kill

you.

Keaton starts to shove Verbal out the door.

 

VERBAL

(Quickly)

They're going to hit the Taxi Service.

Keaton freezes. LONG PAUSE.

 

VERBAL

New York's Finest Taxi Service.

 

KEATON

They - That's bullshit. They don't

operate anymore.

VERBAL

McManus has a friend in the Fourteenth

Precinct. They're coming out for one job

- Thursday. They're picking up a guy

smuggling emeralds out of South America.

Fenster and McManus have a fence set to

take the stuff.

 

 

43.

KEATON

What fence? Who?

VERBAL

Some guy in California. His name is

Redfoot.

KEATON

Never heard of him.

Keaton moves to throw Verbal out. Verbal grabs Keaton and

holds tight.

VERBAL

You have to come.

KEATON

What's with you? What do you care whether

I come or not?

 

VERBAL

They - They don't know me. You do. They

won't take me unless you go. Look at me.

I need this.

KEATON

Tough break.

VERBAL

Don't tell me you don't need this. Is

this your place?

Keaton is unable to answer.

 

VERBAL (CONT'D)

They're never going to stop with us, you

know that. This way we hit the cops where

it hurts and get well in the mean time.

Keaton lets Verbal go and steps back, thinking.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

As clean as you could ever get, they'll

never let you go now.

 

44.

VERBAL (cont'd)

I'm not knocking you. You look like

you've got a good little seam going with

this lawyer -

WHAM. Keaton punches Verbal in the stomach and drops him to

one knee. Verbal coughs and tries to find his breath.

KEATON

You watch your mouth.

VERBAL

(Gasping)

Okay, okay. You say it's the real thing?

That's cool.

Keaton reaches for Verbal. Verbal flinches. Keaton gently

helps him up and guides him to the couch. They bath sit.

Keaton reaches for a pack of cigarettes and lights one for

each of them.

KEATON

I apologize.

Verbal takes one and has a few drags, catching his breath and

rubbing his stomach in pain.

FINALLY:

VERBAL

I was out of line.

KEATON

You okay?

VERBAL

I'11 be alright.

KEATON

Well, I'm sorry.

VERBAL

Forget it.

(Beat)

I'11 probably shit blood tonight.

Keaton laughs. Verbal thinks about it for a moment and laughs

with him.

Keaton's laughter trails off. He thinks for a moment.

 

45.

KEATON

How are they going to do it?

VERBAL

McManus wants to go in shooting. I said

no way.

KEATON

Fenster and Hockney?

VERBAL

They're pretty pissed off. They'll do

anything. Now I got a way to do it

without killing anyone:

but like I said,

they won't let me in without you.

KEATON

Three million?

VERBAL

Maybe more.

KEATON

No killing?

VERBAL

Not if we do it my way.

LONG PAUSE

 

KEATON

(Lost in thought)

I swore I'd live above myself.

Verbal smiles, knowing he has him.

33 EXT. KENNEDY AIRPORT - DAY 33

 

VERBAL (V.O.)

New York's finest Taxi Service was not

your normal taxi service. It was a ring

of corrupt cops in the N.Y.P.D. that ran

a high-profit racket, driving smugglers

and drug dealers all over the city. For a

few hundred dollars a mile, you got your

own black and white and a police escort.

They even had their own business cards.

OSCAR WHITEHEAD, a tall gray-haired man in his fifties comes

out of the international terminal in a white linen suit. He

holds a large suitcase in his right hand.

46.

VERBAL (V.O.)

After a while, somebody started asking

questions and the taxi service shut down.

Ever since then, Internal Affairs had

been waiting to catch them in the act.

Oscar stands on the curb long enough to light a cigarette.

After a moment, a POLICE CRUISER pulls up to him. He opens

the back door and gets in.

VERBAL (V.O.)

And that was how we started. McManus came

to us with the job; Fenster got the vans;

Hockney supplied the hardware; 'I came

through with how to do it so no one got

killed - but Keaton - Keaton put on the

finishing touch. A little Fuck you from

the five of us to the N.Y.P.D.

The car drives out of the airport. A VAN follows at a

distance.

34 INT. POLICE CAR 34

SERGEANT JIM STRAUSZ, a meaty, imposing looking man in his

forties drives the car. Beside him is a thin, greasy looking

PATROLMAN, STEVE RIZZI. They are two drivers for New York's

Finest Taxi Service.

RIZZI

How was the flight?

Oscar hands Rizzi a thick envelope.

OSCAR

Will that get me to the Pierre?

Rizzi counts the stack of hundred dollar bills in the

envelope .

RIZZI

That'll get you to Cape God.

The two men laugh. Strausz watches the road, expressionless.

35 EXT. HIGHWAY 35

The cruiser heads towards the heart of Manhattan.

 

 

47.

36 EXT. STREET - LATER

36

The police car makes its way down a wide, abandoned street. A

WHITE MINIVAN pulls out behind it and heads the same way.

37 INT. POLICE CAR

37

Strausz looks in the rear-view mirror. The white minivan is

flashing his high-beams.

STRAUSZ

What the

RIZZI

LOOK OUT.

Strausz looks in front of him. A green minivan swerves in

front of them from out of nowhere. Strausz slams on the

brakes and skids to a halt. The white minivan rams them from

behind.

Strausz and Rizzi are stunned for a moment as two more vans

screech up on either side of the cruiser, boxing it in with

only a few inches between them.

The cruiser is surrounded on all sides.

SUDDENLY, SHOTGUN BARRELS come through the open windows. They

come to rest, one on Strausz's left temple one on Rizzi's

right. RIZZI looks out of the corner of his eye.

He sees the driver of the van next to him holding the shotgun

with one hand. A stocking is over the driver's head.

Strausz looks straight ahead. The minivan in front of them is

missing a back window. Another man with a stocking on his

head aims a sub-machine gun at them from inside.

By the twisted right hand holding the front of the gun, we

know it is Verbal.

Strausz and Rizzi raise their hands without being asked.

38 EXT. STREET 38

The driver of the white van gets out with a gallon jug in one

hand and a sledge hammer in the other.

Moving like lightning, he jumps onto the roof of the police

car

 

48.

'He stands on the front of the roof and swings the hammer

down.

39 INT. POLICE CAR

39

 

SMASH

The hammer punches three huge holes in the windshield and

finally caves it in. Strausz and Rizzi are covered with

pebbles of broken glass. Whitehead clutches his bag in the

back seat. He trembles in terror.

The man standing on the roof doubles over and sticks a gun in

Strausz's face. His face hangs upside down and looks gruesome

- covered from the mouth up in a stocking. By the voice, we

know it is McManus.

McManus

GIVE ME THE SHIT.

STRAUSZ

Give it up.

Oscar hands the suitcase up front and Strausz passes it to

McManus.

40 INT. FRONT VAN

40

Through the front windshield of the front van we see Keaton

at the wheel. Verbal is behind him leaning out the back

window.

Beneath Keaton's stocking mask we see he is trembling and

sweating - sickened by what he is doing.

He glances up at the rear-view mirror and looks at the scene

outside. He looks down at the floor in shame, shaking his

head.

41 INT. POLICE CAR 41

McMANUS

The money.

Strausz looks at Rizzi.

McMAMJS (CONT'D)

THE MONEY. LET'S HAVE IT.

Rizzi hands the money through the remains of the windshield.

 

49.

McManus takes the money and stuffs it in his jacket. He steps

back and takes the cap off of the gallon jug. He quickly

pours some kind of liquid all over the roof of the car.

STRAUSZ

Do you know who I am?

A hand reaches into the driver's side window and rips

Strausz's badge off of his shirt.

Strausz dares to turn his head right at the shotgun pointing

at him through the window. On the other end is a masked and

smiling Todd Hockney.

HOCKNEY

We db now, Jerk-off.

McManus lights a pack of matches and drops them on the roof

of the car as he jumps off. THE LIQUID IGNITES, the roof of

the car is instantly in flames.

Strausz and Rizzi attempt to bail out, but the vans are too

close for them to open the doors.

The vans pull away.

Strausz and Rizzi escape from the car.

Oscar is trapped inside, SCREAMING.

Strausz and Rizzi stop, each expecting the other to go let

Oscar out.

42 EXT. STREET - LATER 42

The scene is swarming with fresh police cars. Strausz and

Rizzi are fielding questions from a dozen other cops.

Photographers are everywhere.

VERBAL (V.O.)

The papers got Keaton's call that day and

were on the scene before the cops were.

Strausz and Rizzi were indicted three

days later. Within a few weeks, fifty

more cops went down with them. It was

beautiful. Everybody got it right in the

ass, from the chief on down.

 

 

50.

43 INT. GARAGE - NIGHT

43

Hockney, Fenster, McManus and Verbal are all laughing in a

secluded garage. They are still in their black clothes from

the robbery. Hockney is throwing everyone a can of beer.

Keaton sits off by himself. He watches the others, unable to

join in the festivities.

The others sit around a cheap card table. It is covered with

emeralds. Dozens of them. Everyone is in awe.

McManus

There's more than I thought.

HOCKNEY

When does the fence come?

McMANUS

Redfoot? He never comes to see me. I have

to go see him.

VERBAL

In California?

McMANUS

Yeah. It'll take a few days. Me and

Fenster

HOCKNEY

Hold the fuckin' phone. You and Fenster?

No, no, no.

McMANUS

Guys, come on.

HOCKNEY

I'm sure you can understand my

hesitation.

FENSTER

Then who goes?

HOCKNEY

We all go. How about it, Keaton?

All eyes turn to Keaton. He comes out of his trance.

KEATON

We need to lay low for a while.

 

51.

McMANUS

Fine with me.

PAUSE

Everyone looks at each other, their moment of distrust

blowing over. All eyes drift back to the emeralds on the

table.

Hockney begins to snicker, then McManus, then Fenster. Verbal

joins in at last.

McManus grabs Verbal and hugs him, shaking him violently.

McMANUS (CONT'D)

My boy with the plan.

SUDDENLY, everyone yells and pours beer over Verbal's head.

He laughs as he is drenched in white foam, nearly choking as

the others chant his name.

Keaton watches from across the room, trying to smile in vain.

44 SCENE DELETED 44'

45 INT. WAITING ROOM - LAW OFFICE - DAY 45'

Keaton and Verbal sit side by side on a sofa. A sign on the

door behind them reads: MONTGOMERY and LaGUARDIA - ATTORNEYS

AT LAW.

VERBAL

We're going to miss the flight.

KEATON

We'll make it.

VERBAL

Don't do this. Send her a card -

something.

KEATON

We'll make it.

VOICE (O.S.)

Ms. Finneran will be with you in a

moment.

Keaton stands and paces across the waiting room. He comes to

a set of glass doors and looks through them.

 

51a.

Keaton realizes he is standing on a balcony overlooking a

library below.

He sees Edie working in the library with an old woman. The

two women talk for a moment.

SUDDENLY, Keaton turns with a start. Verbal is standing

behind him.

VERBAL

We're gonna miss the plane.

(beat)

She'll understand.

 

52.

Edie is smiling and laughing with the old woman.

Keaton's face is marked with guilt and anguish.

Keaton turns and walks out of the waiting room. Verbal takes

one last glance at Edie and turns back to Keaton.

46

46 INT. LIBRARY

 

Edie seems to sense something behind her. She turns and looks

through the glass doors and up into the waiting room.

NOTHING IS THERE. She goes back to chatting with the old

woman.

 

47 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE -DAY - LOS ANGELES - PRESENT 47

 

KUJAN

Heartwarming. Really, I feel weepy.

VERBAL

You wanted to know what happened after

the line-up, I'm telling you.

KUJAN

Oh come on, Verbal. Who do you think

you're talking to? You really expect me

to believe he retired? For a woman?

Bullshit. He was using her.

VERBAL

He loved her.

KUJAN

Sure. And I'm supposed to believe that

hitting the Taxi Service wasn't his idea

either.

VERBAL

That was all Fenster and McManus.

KUJAN

Come on. Keaton was a cop for four years.

Who else would know the Taxi Service

53.

KUJAN (cont'd)

better? That job had his name all over

it.

VERBAL

You keep trying to lay this whole ride on t

Keaton. It wasn't like that. Sure he

knew, but Edie had him all turned around. r

I'm telling you straight, I swear. +

KUJAN

Let me tell you something. I know Dean

Keaton. I've been investigating him for

three years. The guy I know is a cold- +

blooded bastard. L.A.P.D. indicted him on

three counts of murder before he was

kicked off the force, so don't sell me

the hooker with the heart of gold. +

VERBAL

You got him wrong.

KUJAN

Do I? Keaton was under indictment a total +

of seven times when he was on the force. +

In every case, witnesses either reversed +

their testimony to the grand jury or died +

before they could testify. When they t

finally did nail him for fraud, he spent +

five years in Sing Sing. He killed three

prisoners inside - one with a knife in

the tailbone while he strangled him to

death. Of course I can't prove this but I

can't prove the best part either.

Kujan pauses to drink some coffee.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

Dean Keaton was dead. Did you know that? r

He died in a fire two years ago during an

investigation into the murder of a

witness who was going to testify against

him. Two people saw Keaton enter a

warehouse he owned just before it went

up. They said he had gone in to check a +

leaking gas main. It blew up and took all

of Dean Keaton with it. Within three

months of the explosion, the two

witnesses were dead, one killed himself

in his car and the other fell down an

open elevator shaft.

53A.

 

48

48 SCENE DELETED

 

49 SCENE DELETED/DIALOGUE MOVED - BOTTOM SCENE 47 49

 

54.

50 INT. WORKSHOP 50

Rabin and Louis look at one another as they listen.

KUJAN (On Speaker)

Six weeks ago I get an anonymous call

telling me I can find Keaton eating at

Mondino's with his lawyer, and there he

is. Now because he never profited from

his alleged death and because someone

else was convicted for the murder we

tried to pin on Keaton, we had to let him

go.

51 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 51

KUJAN (CONT'D)

He was dead just long enough for a murder

rap to blow over, then he had lunch.

 

 

55.

VERBAL

I don't know about that.

KUJAN

I don't think you do. But you say you saw

Keaton die. I think you're covering his

ass and he's still out there somewhere. I

think he was behind that whole circus in

the harbor. My bet is he's using you

because you're stupid and you think he's

your friend. You tell me he's dead, so be

it. I want to make sure he's dead before

I go back to New York.

VERBAL

(Blurting)

He wasn't behind anything. It was the

lawyer.

KUJAN

What lawyer?

PAUSE

KUJAN (CONT'D)

What lawyer, Verbal?

Verbal stammers for a moment, looking around wildly.

VERBAL

Back when I was in that barber shop

quartet in Skokie, Illinois I used to

have

Kujan grabs Verbal's shirt and yanks him half out of his

seat.

KUJAN

You think I don't know you held out on

the D.A.? What did you leave out of that

testimony? I can be on the phone to Ruby

Deemer in ten minutes.

VERBAL

The D.A. gave me immunity.

KUJAN

NOT FROM ME, YOU PIECE OF SHIT. THERE IS

NO IMMUNITY FROM ME. You atone with me or

the world you live in becomes the hell

you fear in the back of your tiny mind.

Every criminal I have put in prison,

 

56.

KUJAN (cont'd)

every cop who owes me a favor, every

creeping scumbag that works the street

for a living, will know the name of

Verbal Kint. You'll be the lowest sort of

rat, the prince of snitches, the loudest

cooing stool pigeon that ever grabbed his

ankles for the man. Now you talk to me,

or that precious immunity they've seen so

fit to grant you won't be worth the paper

the contract put out on your life is

printed on.

Verbal looks at Kujan with utter contempt.

VERBAL

There was a lawyer. Kobayashi.

KUJAN

Is he the one that killed Keaton?

VERBAL

No. But I'm sure Keaton's dead.

KUJAN

Convince me. Tell me every last detail.

52 SCENE DELETED 52

53 INT. HOSPITAL - DAY 53

( DENOTES LINES SPOKEN IN HUNGARIAN) +

Kovash's room is now filled with people. Jack Baer stands

next to DANIEL METZHEISER, a balding man in his forties. Next

to him is Doctor Plumber. Across from her is Ridgly Waiters.

Sitting beside the bed is TRACY FITZGERALD, a casually

dressed woman in her late twenties. She holds a 15x20 inch

drawing pad on her lap.

Police fill the hall. People are talking loudly outside.

LIONEL BODI, a cop in his mid-twenties pushes his way in.

BAER

Are you the translator?

BODI

Patrolman Lionel Bodi, sir.

 

57.

PLUMBER

Agent Beer, this is getting out of hand.

BAER

I'11 see to it we're gone before he blows

his porch light, Doctor.

Baer gestures to Tracy.

BAER

(To Bodi)

This is Tracy Fitzgerald. She's a

composite sketch artist from county.

The young couple smile at one another nervously.

BODI

Hi.

TRACY

Hi.

METZHEISER

(Impatient)

I've got a noon meeting, Baer.

PLUMBER

Agent Baer, please.

BAER

Everyone calm down.

(To Bodi)

Ask this man about the shoot-out in the

harbor.

BODI

My name is Bodi. How are you'

Kovash smiles with relief when he hears his own language.

KOVASH

How am 17 You are as stupid as that

one, but at least I can talk to you.

 

BODI

You'll be alright. He is from the

F.B.I. He is here to help you. He wants

to know what happened in the harbor.

 

KOVASH

We were there to buy a man and take him

back to Hungary.

57A.

BODI

He says they were buying It doesn't

make sense. I'm sorry, I'm a little

rusty. They were there to buy something.

BAER

Dope, we know.

KOVASH +

You don't understand me either? God

help me, they are all idiots. s

(talking slowly) +

We were there to buy a man, you simple

boy. A witness. I don't know his name. A

witness who knew the Devil.

BODI

Not dope. Something else. Some what?.. He

doesn't knob what they were buying. But

not dope... people.

KOVASH

I'll tell you everything. I'11 even say

it slow enough for you to understand it.

Just tell this man I want protection.

Real protection.

 

 

58.

METZHEISER

Your witness is whacked, Baer.

BODI

He says he'll tell us everything he knows

if we protect him.

.BAER

Tell him fine.

BODI

He says that is fine.

 

KOVASH

No, no, no. I need a guarantee from the

ridiculous man. I am going to be killed.

I have seen the Devil and looked him in

the eye.

BODI

No good. He needs guarantees. He says...

his life is in danger... He has seen the

Devil... looked him in the eye.

METZHEISER

I'11 be on my way.

Baer grabs Metzheiser by the arm.

BAER

(To Bodi)

Tell him to tell this man what he was

telling me before. Who is the Devil? Who

did he see?

BODI

Who is this Devil you keep talking

about?

KOVASH

Keyser Soze He was in the harbor

shooting everyone in sight.

Metzheiser is suddenly interested.

BODI

He says he saw him in the harbor. He was

shooting... Killing... Killing many men.

METZHEISER

Did he say Keyser Soze? He saw Keyser

Soze

 

58A.

BODI

He says he saw him in the harbor. He was

shooting... Killing... Killing many men.

METZHEISER

Did he say Keyser Soze? He saw Keyser

Soze.

KOVASH

Keyser Soze. Keyser Sate. I've seen his

face. I see it when I close my eyes.

BODI

He says he knows his face. He sees it

when he closes his eyes.

 

59.

METZHEISER

Ask him what this Devil looks like.

BAER

(To Tracy)

Ready?

Tracy holds up her pad and pencil. She nods.

54 EXT. LOS ANGELES SKYLINE - DAY - FIVE WEEKS PRIOR

54

 

VERBAL (V.O.)

McManus' fence was this guy named

Redfoot. He had a good reputation around

L.A. Seemed like a good guy - Looked like

a cowhide full of thumbtacks.

55 EXT. FRIENDSHIP BELL - NIGHT 55'

All five guys stand in a group. It is utterly quiet.

An old but well kept Cadillac creeps into the lot from the

far end and idles up to them. The windows are tinted too much

to see in. The car passes within a few feet of them and

drives on.

A moment later, a chrome and leather monster of a Harley

Davidson pulls into the lot. The rider is dressed in an

almost comical array of leather, silver and suede.

He waves to the Caddy as it parks a few yards from Keaton and

the others. It sits quietly, almost menacing.

As he gets closer, we can see he is wearing one black boot

and one red. Keaton is still looking at them when the bike

pulls up to them and stops.

REDFOOT and McManus shake hands.

REDFOOT

How've you been?

McMANUS

Good. You?

REDFOOT

Alright. How's it going, Fenster?

FENSTER

Getting by.

 

 

60.

REDFOOT

You got it?

McManus holds up a briefcase.

Redfoot takes it and gets off the bike. He walks over to the

Caddy. The door of the Caddy opens. Redfoot hands the case to

Someone inside that we cannot see. The door closes.

KEATON

(Whispering)

Snazzy dresser this guy.

A moment later, the door of the Caddy opens again. Someone

hands Redfoot a different briefcase and he walks back over to

McManus.

He hands him the case.

McManus hands the case back to Hockney. Hockney opens it,

revealing the stacks of money inside.

REDFOOT

You must be Keaton.

McMANUS

Jesus, I'm sorry. Redfoot, this is Dean

Keaton, that's Todd Hockney, and that's

Verbal Kint.

REDFOOT

(To Verbal)

The man with the plan.

Verbal smiles.

REDFOOT (CONT'D)

Are you guys interested in more work?

McManus moves to answer, but Keaton cuts him off.

KEATON

We're on vacation.

REDFOOT

I've got a ton of work and no good

people.

McMANUS

What's the job?

 

61.

Keaton shoots McManus a foul look. McManus pretends not to

notice.

REDFOOT

A jeweler out of Texas named Saul. He

rents a suite at a hotel downtown and

does free appraisals. Buys whatever he

can. Word is he moves with a lot of cash.

I'11 take the merchandise, you keep the

green.

HOCKNEY

Security?

REDFOOT

Two bodyguards. Pretty good.

McMANUS

Give us time to check it out?

REDFOOT

I'd expect nothing less.

McMANUS

We'll call you.

REDFOOT

Take your time. Enjoy L.A.

KEATON

A friend of mine in New York tells me you

knew Spook Hollis.

REDFOOT

I hear you did time with old Spook. Yeah,

he was a good egg. I used to run a lot of

dope for him. Fuckin' shame he got

shivved.

KEATON

I shivved him.

Now McManus is shooting the angry look at Keaton.

KEATON (CONT'D)

Better you hear it from me now than

somebody else later.

REDFOOT

Business or personal?

 

62.

KEATON

A little of both.

REDFOOT

Ain't it a crime? Call if you're

interested.

Redfoot fires up his bike and takes off with the Caddy close

behind.

McMANUS

(To Keaton)

What's your fucking problem?

KEATON

One job, that was the deal.

McMANUS

Take it as it comes, brother.

KEATON

This is bullshit.

McManus laughs and walks away. Fenster and Hockney follow.

Verbal turns to Keaton.

VERBAL

What is it Keaton?

KEATON

(Distant)

Something - I don't know.

(Shaking himself)

I ever tell you about the restaurant I

wanted to open?

Keaton walks off. Verbal follows him in confusion.

VERBAL (V.O.)

L.A., was good for about two hours. We

were from New York. There's no place to

eat after one; you can't get a pizza that

doesn't taste like a fried fruit-bat, and

the broads don't want to know you if you

don't look like a broad. Within a few

days the last of us was ready to go back

to N.Y., but Keaton wouldn't have it, so

he really didn't have a choice. We went

to work.

 

63.

56

56 INT. PARKING GARAGE - NIGHT

McManus walks along a line of cars. He comes across a black

Mercedes and stops. He looks down at the license plate and

walks over to the next car, a green Honda. He pulls a slim-

jim out of his jacket and pops the lock an the Honda. He

reaches in and opens the hood. He walks around and sticks his

head in the engine.

57 INT. VAN 57

Verbal sits behind the wheel. Keaton is beside him. Hockney

and Fenster are in the back. They all watch McManus from

where they are parked a few dozen yards away.

58 INT. PARKING GARAGE 58

DING-DING

The elevator bell sounds at the far end of the garage. The

doors open. Two men in ill-fitting suits get out and look

around cautiously. The first is TUCCI, a big bellied, white

haired menace. The other is HIGHAM, lean and bad skinned.

They are bodyguards and give it away by their every careful

move.

They turn back to the elevator and motion to someone inside.

Out walks SAUL BERG, a slightly overweight man in his forties

with an open collar silk shirt and a thick gold chain on his

hairy chest. He carries a LARGE ALUMINUM BRIEFCASE.

He lets his guards do the worrying. He walks straight to his

car.

Saul passes McManus under the hood of the Honda. He takes out

his keys and pushes a button on his key chain. The Mercedes

beeps three times and tells Saul his alarm is off.

Tucci keeps an eye on McManus. Higham watches Saul.

McManus pretends to tinker with the car's engine. He has put

a pistol just inside the grill and keeps it within reach.

The van on the other side of the garage starts and pulls out

of the spot. It cruises over toward the Mercedes.

Tucci sees the van. He and Higham are suddenly busy trying to

keep track. They hear laughing behind them and turn around.

 

64.

FENSTER and HOCKNEY are walking towards them. They are

sporting mustaches and sunglasses in addition to matching

suits, each with loud plaid sport coats, decades out of

style. Saul glances at Tucci and Higham.

HIGHAM

Just get in the car Saul.

Under the hood of the Honda and out of sight, McManus pulls

on a black ski mask.

The van gets closer.

HOCKNEY

I get out of the car, and man if the

thing wasn't wrecked. And I see this

broad in the back seat with nothing on.

Saul gets in the car quickly but calmly as Fenster and

Hockney laugh and talk louder. They look drunk - The desired

effect.

HOCKNEY (CONT'D)

I'm laughing so hard I can't breathe -

Tucci and Higham try to take it all in stride. Saul's reverse

lights come on and he begins to back out of the spot.

HOCKNEY (CONT'D)

...And the fat guy comes out of the car

with his pants on backwards and says -

SUDDENLY, the van revs and screeches to a halt behind Saul's

Mercedes, blocking him in. Hockney and Fenster drop the drunk

act and snap to. They both pull out guns and start screaming.

HOCKNEY (CONT'D)

DON'T MOVE, YOU FUCKERS.

FENSTER

RIGHT THERE. FREEZE.

McManus comes up from under the hood.

Tucci and Higham throw their hands in the air. Hockney and

Fenster grab them and reach into their belts to get their

guns .

Keaton jumps out of the van and runs up to Saul's car, his

face covered in a ski mask. He yanks on the door handle but

it is locked. Saul sits in terror behind the wheel. Keaton

pulls out a pistol and smashes the window with it.

 

65.

KEATON

Give me the case.

 

Saul reaches over for the case. Keaton trains the gun on him.

SUDDENLY, Saul comes up with a pistol and points it at

Keaton. Keaton sidesteps and grabs his wrist. The gun goes

off into the fender of the Honda.

Hockney and Fenster both look over at the sound of the gun.

Tucci and Higham seize the opportunity. Tucci grabs Hockney,

Higham grabs Fenster. The four men grapple for the guns.

Fenster's gun falls to the floor. McManus picks it up. He

trains a pistol on each bodyguard and takes a breath. They

are some ten feet apart and moving erratically. Hockney and

Fenster constantly fall in the line of fire.

McManus walks around the four men, keeping a pistol trained

on each of the guards. Finally he comes to an angle where

they are all in front of him. One guard is a few feet away,

the other is ten feet past him.

McMANUS' P.O.V.

The closer of the two moves in and out of the sights of the

pistol in McManus' right hand, the one farther away does the

same with the left.

Verbal gets out of the van and moves towards them to help.

BOOM

Both of McManus' guns go off like one shot. Tucci and Higham

collapse, each with a bullet in his head

 

PAUSE

The only sound is Saul grappling with Keaton for the gun. His

arm is halfway out the window. His elbow rests in the door

frame.

Keaton cannot get the gun out of his hand. Finally, he pushes

down with all his weight. Saul's elbow breaks backwards on

the door frame. He screams in agony. The gun falls from his

hand.

 

66.

All five of the men look at each other for an impossibly long

moment. The confusion is only aggravated by Saul's screaming.

SLOWLY, Keaton raises his pistol and aims it at Saul. His

hand trembles, his eyes squint to near slits. His finger

tenses and slacks off over and over again on the trigger.

BOOM

VERBAL SHOOTS SAUL. Keaton looks at him in surprise. Verbal

trembles more than he does.

The garage is silent.

HOCKNEY

What the hell?

McManus

Bad day. Fuck it.

DING-DING

 

The elevator light comes on. All five men look.

KEATON

Move.

Keaton reaches into the car and grabs Saul's case. Everyone

else piles into the van. Keaton gets in as Verbal is driving

for the exit.

59 INT. VAN 59

The mood in the van is grim. Everyone is silent. Keaton pops

the clasps on the case and opens it.

KEATON

Son of a bitch.

Everyone looks in the case. It is filled with cash on one

side. The other side is filled with clear plastic bags of

WHITE POWDER.

60 EXT. PARKING LOT - NIGHT 60

Keaton and the others stand in silhouette in front of the

lights of an oncoming car in the distance. We can make out

McManus loading a gun. +

KEATON

What are you doing?

 

 

67.

 

McMANUS

What does it look like? I'm going to kill

him.

KEATON

We did it your way. Now I'11 deal with

him.

MCMANUS

You gonna kill him?

KEATON

I'm going to deal with him.

The car, Redfoot's escort Caddy, is now in front of them.

The horn lets out three short blasts.

Redfoot comes around from behind the Caddy on his motorcycle.

He gets off the bike, trying to hide a faint smile.

McManus throws Saul's case on the ground in front of him.

McMANUS

What the fuck is this, Redfoot?

REDFOOT

Get a grip. I didn't know.

KEATON

You didn't know.

 

68.

REDFOOT

The job got thrown to me by this lawyer.

KEATON

Who is he?

REDFOOT

Some Limey. He's a middle-man for

somebody. He doesn't say and I don't ask.

KEATON

We want to meet him.

REDFOOT

He wants to meet you. He called last

night and asked me to set it up. What do

I tell him'

KEATON

Tell him we'll meet.

McMANUS

If you're lying, Redfoot...

REDFOOT

McManus, you're a real bad-ass, but get

off my tip.

McManus lunges for Redfoot.

The Caddy doors instantly pop open and rifle barrels come

into view from within.

Fenster and Hockney draw guns and aim at the Caddy.

Keaton and Verbal grab McManus and hold him back.

Redfoot gets on his Harley, smiling defiantly.

REDFOOT (CONT'D)

Real shame about Saul getting whacked.

Lot's of cops looking for the guys that

did it. I'm sure They'll get around to

asking me.

He starts his bike.

69.

McMANUS

Fuck you.

Redfoot drives off..The Caddy waits until he is completely

out of sight before following.

61 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY - PRESENT 61

KUJAN

So this lawyer...

VERBAL

Kobayashi.

KUJAN

Came from Redfoot.

VERBAL

Right.

KUJAN

And why leave this out when you talked to

the D.A.?

A KNOCK AT THE DOOR

Rabin sticks his head in.

RAB IN

Someone to see you, Agent Kujan.

Kujan steps out into the hall, shutting the door behind him.

62 INT. OUTSIDE RABIN'S OFFICE 62

Kujan smiles instantly, recognizing the man standing with

Rabin.

 

KUJAN

Jack. What are you doing here?

BAER

I've been looking all over for you. You

still after the coke that walked out of

that blood bath in the harbor?

KUJAN

Yeah.

BAER

You can stop looking. There was no coke.

I've been in L.A. county with a guy they

70.

BAER (cont'd)

pulled out of a drainpipe in San Pedro

yesterday after the shoot-out. He came to +

this morning and started talking. He was

part of a Hungarian mob there to do a

deal with a bunch of goats from

Argentina. He says it was definitely not

a dope deal.

KUJAN

There was ninety-one million -

BAER

We know, but our man says no way on the

dope. This Hungarian tells me the whole

bunch was pulling stumps for Turkey the

next' day. They had no time to negotiate

that kind of product and no means to move

it.

KUJAN

What was the money for?

BAER

He didn't know. No one doing the deal

knew except a few key people. This guy

says they were real hush about it.

Whatever it was it was highly sensitive.

KUJAN

I don't get it.

BAER

They tell me you got the cripple from New

York in there. He mention Keyser Soze

KUJAN

Who ?

BAER

Bear with me here...

63

63 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - LATER

 

BOOM - The door bursts open.

KUJAN

Who is Keyser Soze

Verbal looks up in shock. He drops his cigarette and trembles

at the mere mention of the name.

 

71.

VERBAL

Ahhh fuck.

64 INT. HOLLYWOOD ATHLETIC CLUB - DAY - TWO WEEKS PRIOR 64'

Keaton stands while the rest sit and listen.

KEATON

So I need to know if anyone can think of

anybody. Somebody with power. Enough to

possibly track us from New York.

McMANUS

Look. We've been over it for an hour now.

I say we pack up and run. Let's go back

to New York. At least get out of L.A.

SUDDENLY, The sound of a man clearing his throat.

Everyone turns to the door behind them.

MR. KOBAYASHI a tall, slim, well groomed man stands in the

hall. He has a briefcase in his hand. He smiles politely.

 

KOBAYASHI

Mr. Keaton?

Keaton stands back and lets him in. Kobayashi looks them

over.

KOBAYASHI (CONT'D)

I am Mr. Kobayashi. I've been asked by my

employer to bring a proposal to you

gentlemen. That must be Mr. Hockney. I

recognize Mr. Fenster from his mug shot,

as well as Mr. McManus.

(To Verbal)

I can only assume that you are Mr. Kint.

I believe you were the one who disposed

of Saul. My employer sends his gratitude.

A most unexpected benefit.

Everyone looks at one another in shock that he would know

this.

KEATON

What can we do for you?

72.

KOBAYASHI

My employer requires your services. One

job. One day's work. Very dangerous. I

don't expect all of you to live, but

those who do will have ninety-one million

dollars to divide any way they see fit.

KEATON

Who's your boss?

KOBAYASHI

My employer wishes to remain anonymous.

KEATON

Don't jerk me off. We all know what this

is. You don't work with me if I work with

you without knowing who I'm working for.

Now let's cut the shit. Who's the man?

KOBAYASHI

I work for Keyser Sate.

A strange look crosses Keaton's face. Skepticism, mockery and

just a hint of fear. Hockney, McManus and Fenster all share

similar looks.

KEATON

What is this?

VERBAL

Who's Keyser Soze?

KOBAYASHI

I am sure you've heard a number of tall

tales, myths and legends about Mr. Soze

I can assure you gentlemen, most of them

are true.

 

VERBAL

Who's Keyser Soze?

KOBAYASHI

Judging by the sudden change in mood, I

am sure the rest of your associates can

tell you, Mr. Kint. I have come with an

offer directly from Mr. Soze. An order

actually.

KEATON

An order.

 

73.

KOBAYASHI

In nineteen-eighty one, Mr. Keaton, you

participated in the hijacking of a truck

in Buffalo, New York. The cargo was raw

steel. Steel that belonged to Mr. Soze

and was destined for Pakistan to be used

in a Nuclear reactor. A very profitable

violation of U.N. Regulations. You had no

way of knowing this, because the man

shipping the steel was working for Mr.

Sate without his knowledge. +

(Beat)

Mr. Fenster and Mr. McManus hijacked a

twin-prop cargo flight earlier this year

out of Newark airport. The plane was

carrying platinum and gold wiring. Also

set for Pakistan.

Kobayashi turns and points at Hockney.

KOBAYASHI (CONT'D)

Two months ago, Mr. Hockney stole a truck

carrying gun parts through Queens -

Everyone looks at Hockney. He smiles shyly. It occurs to them

all that he robbed the truck for which they were all arrested

in the first place.

KOBAYASHI (CONT'D)

- guns allegedly set to be destroyed by

the state of New York. They were to be

lost in a weigh station and routed to

Belfast. Again, Mr. Sate using pawns who

had no knowledge.

(turning to Verbal)

Which brings us to Mr. Kint.

Verbal crumbles under his stare.

KOBAYASHI (CONT'D)

Nine months ago, one of Mr. Soze less

than intelligent couriers was taken in a

complicated confidence seam by a cripple.

He was relieved of sixty-two thousand

dollars. Now

(To all of them)

- It has taken us some time to find you.

Our intention was to approach you after

your apprehension in New York.

 

74.

KEATON

You set up the line-up.

KOBAYASHI

Mr. Soze made a few calls, yes. You were

not to be released until I came to see

you. It seems Mr. Keaton's attorney, Ms.

Finneran, was a bit too effective in

expediting his release. Holding the rest

of you became a moot point.

KEATON

What about Redfoot?

KOBAYASHI

Mr. Redfoot knew nothing. Mr. Soze rarely t

works with the same people for very long,

and they never know who they're working

for. One cannot be betrayed if one has no

people.

FENSTER

So why tell us?

KOBAYASHI

Because you have stolen from Mr. Soze.

That you did not know you stole from him

is the only reason you are still alive,

but he feels you owe him. You will repay

your debt.

HOCKNEY

Who is this guy? How do we know you work

for Soze

 

KOBAYASHI

I don't think that is relevant, Mr.

Hockney. The five of you are responsible

for the murder of Saul Berg and his

bodyguards. Mr. Redfoot can attest to

your involvement, and we can see to it

that he will. He is not of your

superior breed.

MCMANUS

This is a load of shit.

KOBAYASHI

The offer is this, gentlemen. Mr. Soze's

primary interest, as I am sure you all

know, is narcotics. He's been - competing

shall we say, with a group of

 

75.

KOBAYASHI (cont'd)

Argentinians for several years. Competing

with Mr. Soze has taken its toll. These

Argentinians are negotiating the sale of

ninety-one million dollars in cocaine in

three days time. Needless to say, this

purchase will revitalize the diminishing

strength of their organization. Mr. Soze

wants you to stop the deal. If you

choose, you may wait until the buy.

Whatever money changes hands is yours.

The transaction will take place on a boat

in San Pedro. Mr. Soze wants you to get

to the boat and destroy the cocaine on

board. Then you are free of your

obligation to Mr. Soze.

KEATON

Give me one good reason why I shouldn't

kill you right now.

Kobayashi smiles and puts his briefcase on the table in front

of him.

KOBAYASHI

A gift from Mr. Soze gentlemen.

He turns and walks out of the room.

Keaton walks over to the case and opens it. He reaches in and

pulls out five thick manila envelopes, each marked in bold

black letters. KEATON , McMANUS , HOCKNEY , FENSTER and

KINT

Keaton pulls out the files, revealing a map underneath.

Keaton hands each man his file. He opens his first. He pulls

out a thick stack of papers and thumbs through them.

KEATON

Jesus Christ. Open them.

All of the men open their files. Inside are mug shots of each

man in his respective file as well as a printout of his

criminal record. But there is more.

HOCKNEY

They know everything.

McMANUS

This is my life in here. Everything I've

done since I was eighteen.

 

76.

FENSTER

Everybody I ever worked with, did time

with.

HOCKNEY

They fucking know everything.

Keaton pulls out a large black and white photograph of

himself and his lawyer EDIE FINNERAN. They are laughing arm

in arm by a fountain in New York. He hides the photo from the

others.

KEATON

This is not right.

FENSTER

I don't know. Who was that guy that used

to talk about Soze in New York?

McMANUS

Bricks Marlin.

FENSTER

Yeah. He said he did jobs for him.

Indirect stuff. Always five times more

money than the job was worth.

KEATON

Come on. The guy is a pipe dream. This

Kobayashi is using him for window

dressing .

FENSTER

I don't know. This is bad.

HOCKNEY

It's bullshit. This guy could be L.A.P.D.

I think it's a setup.

FENSTER

The way I hear it, Soze is some kind of

butcher. No pity.

KEATON

There' is no Keyser Soze

Verbal thumbs through his file. A long list of names,

numbers, addresses. It is a detailed portfolio of his entire

criminal and personal life. He looks up at Keaton.

 

77.

VERBAL

Who is Keyser Soze

65 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY - PRESENT 65

Kujan leans into Verbal's face. He hangs on his every word.

VERBAL

He is supposed to be Turkish. Some say r

his father was German. Nobody believed he

was real. Nobody ever saw him or knew

anybody that ever worked directly for

him, but to hear Kobayashi tell it,

anybody could have worked for Soze. You

never knew. That was his power. The

greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was

convincing the world he didn't exist. One

story the guys told me - the story I

believe - was from his days in Turkey.

There was a petty gang of Hungarians that

wanted their own mob. They realized that

to be in power you didn't need guns or

money or even numbers. You just needed +

the will to do what the other guy

wouldn't. After a while they come to

power, and then they come after Soze He

was small time then, just running dope,

they say...

66 SCENE DELETED 66

67 INT. SOZE'S HOME - DAY 67

Three of the Hungarians come bursting into Keyser Soze's +

home. They grab his five children and round them up in the

front room. One of the men grabs his wife and back-hands her

across the face.

78.

VERBAL (V.O.)

They come to his home in the afternoon

looking for his business. They find his

wife and kids in the house and decide to

wait for Sate.

68 INT. SOZE'S HOME - LATER 68'

The front door opens and in walks Keyser Sate. We are never t

allowed to see his face.

Sate's wife lies in the corner, beaten and bruised. Her dress

is tattered to shreds. She cannot look up at her husband.

The three Hungarians stand to greet him. Two hold guns in

their hands. The third holds a straight razor. He grabs

Soze youngest boy and holds the razor to his throat.

VERBAL (V.O.)

He comes home to his wife raped and his

children screaming. The Hungarians knew

Soze was tough. Not to be trifled with.

So they let him know they meant business.

The Hungarian smiles. Soze's wife SCREAMS IN HORROR.

The Hungarian holds up a BLOOD SOAKED RAZOR.

SUDDENLY, he grabs another child. A little girl no older than

six.

VERBAL (V.O.)

They tell Soze they want his territory -

all his business. Soze looks over the +

faces of his family... Then he showed

these men of will what will really was.

SUDDENLY, Soze pulls out a pistol and shoots the two men with

guns. He turns and aims at the third man holding his child.

The man threatens to cut the child's throat, slicing just

enough to draw blood.

SOZE FIRES.

The stunned Hungarian watches the child fall from his arms.

Sate turns the pistol on the next child, then the next and

the next. He kills his children one by one in front of the

Hungarian.

79.

 

VERBAL (V.O.)

He tells him he would rather' see his

family dead than live another day after

this.

SOZE walks over to his wife, crying and beaten on the floor

and holds up her head. She gives him the strangest look. One

of trust perhaps, saturated with fear and humiliation.

He puts the gun between her eyes and fires.

VERBAL (V.O.)

He lets the last Hungarian go, and he

goes running. He waits until his wife and

kids are in the ground and he goes after

the rest of the mob. He kills their kids,

he kills their wives, he kills their

parents and their parents' friends.

A dark and looming figure of a man walks in front of a wall

of fire - a black shadow blurred by waves of heat.

VERBAL (V.O.)

He burns down the houses they live in and

the stores they work in, he kills people

that owe them money. And like that he was

gone. Underground. No one has ever seen

him again. He becomes a myth, a spook

story that criminals tell their kids at

night. If you rat on your pop, Keyser

Sate will get you. And nobody really ever

believes.

69

69 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY

 

KUJAN

Do you believe in him, Verbal?

VERBAL

Keaton always said: I don't believe in

God, but I'm afraid of him. Well I

believe in God, and the only thing that

scares me is Keyser SOZE.

70

70 INT. WORKSHOP

 

Jack Baer and Rabin listen to Verbal on the speaker with one

ear.

RAB IN

You give this any weight, Agent Baer?

 

80.

 

BAER

I can introduce you to Dan Metzheiser

from Justice. He has a file on Sate in

D.C. It's been a hobby of his for a few

years. A lot of guys equate him to that

reporter on the Incredible Hulk.

RABIN

Had you heard of him before?

BAER

On the street? A few times. Outside

stuff. Somebody was working for a guy who

was working for a guy who got money

through Keyser Soze. That kind of shit.

Could be an old badge. A hex sign to keep

people from fucking with you back when a

name meant something.

RAB IN

But you're here.

BAER

Shit yeah. I got a guy trying to walk out

of the hospital on d fried drumstick to

get away from SOZE. I'11 run it up the

flagpole.

71 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 71

VERBAL

I came clean. I told it like it happened

on the boat. So what if I left out how I

got there? It's got so many holes in it,

the D.A. would've told me to blow amnesty

out my ass. So you got what you wanted

out of me. Big fucking deal.

KUJAN

And this is why you never told the D.A.

VERBAL

You tell me, Agent Kujan. If I told you

the Loch Ness Monster hired me to hit the

harbor, what would you say?

KUJAN

Turn state's evidence. Take the stand on

this and we'll hear it out.

81.

VERBAL

I've got immunity now. What can you

possibly offer me?

KUJAN

If there is a Keyser Soze he'll be

looking for you.

VERBAL

Where's your head, Agent Kujan? Where do

you think the pressure's coming from?

Keyser Soze - or whatever you want to

call him - knows where I am right now.

He's got the front burner under' your ass

to let me go so he can scoop me up ten

minutes later. Immunity was just to deal

with you assholes. I got a whole new

problem when I post bail.

KUJAN

So why play into his hands? We can

protect you.

VERBAL

Gee, thanks, Dave. Bang-up job so far.

Extortion, coercion. You'll pardon me if

I ask you to kiss my pucker. The same

fuckers that rounded us up and sank us

into this mess are telling me They'll

bail me out? Fuck you. You think you can

catch Keyser Soze? You think a guy like

that comes this close to getting fingered

and sticks his head out? If he comes up

for anything, it will be to get rid of

me.

(beat)

After that, my guess is you'll never hear

from him again.

72 INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE HOSPITAL ROOM - DAY 72

Doctor Plumber watches from out in the hall. +

Kovash spits out a constant river of Hungarian while Bodi

tries to keep up, relaying everything to Tracy Fitzgerald.

She sketches frantically while Daniel Metzheiser looks on.

The composite sketch of Keyser SOZE is taking form.

81A.

 

( Denotes liners spoken in Hungarian.)

BODI c

What sort of nose did he have?

KOVASH

It was smaller than that. Sharper.

BODI

(To Tracy) +

The nose is sharper. Smaller too. +

(To Arkosh in Hung.)

And what about the hair? You said

something earlier about it.

KOVASH

It is longer than that. And not so

dark.

BODI

Are you sure?

KOVASH

Don't be stupid.

BODI

(To Tracy)

He says the hair is longer and lighter.

82.

 

73

73 EXT. BEACH - DAY

 

Waves pound across a stone jetty. A MAN sits fishing while

his young son, BRANDO strolls toward the open sea. He pokes

at rocks and seaweed with a fishing pole. He glances down at

Something wedged between the rocks beneath his feet. He

pokes at it. He notes the checkered pattern of the fabric

entwined with the twisted mess. It is the bloated carcass of

THE MAN IN THE CHECKERED BATHROBE. BRANDO pokes it's eye

with the fishing pole. It pops.

74

74 SCENE DELETED/DIALOGUE MOVED

83.

 

75

75 INT RABIN'S OFFICE

 

VERBAL

That was how I ended up in a barber shop

quartet in Skokie, Illinois.

KUJAN

This is totally irrelevant.

VERBAL

Oh, but it's not. If I hadn't been

nailed in Illinois for running a three

card monte in between sets, I never would

have took off for New York. I never

would have met Keaton, see. That barber

shop quartet was the reason for

everything.

KUJAN

Can we just get back to Kobayashi?

VERBAL

The quartet is part of the bit about

Kobayashi. The quartet was in my file,

along with every other thing I had done

since high school, see? Aliases, middle-

men. They knew me better than I did.

They knew all of us.

Kujan looks at his watch.

KUJAN

You're stalling, Verbal.

VERBAL

Give a guy a break, huh?

KUJAN

What happened?

Verbal slumps a bit. He realizes his stalling tactic has

failed.

VERBAL

We woke up the next morning and Fenster

was gone. He couldn't handle the idea of

slumming for SOZE. He left a note wishing

us good luck and took a chunk of the

money we'd scraped together.

 

84.

KUJAN

Then what?

VERBAL

McManus was furious. He was talking about

tracking him down and ripping his heart

out and all sorts of shit. That night we

got the call.

KUJAN

What call?

VERBAL

Kobayashi told us where we could find

Fenster.

76 EXT. BEACH - NIGHT - TWO WEEKS PRIOR 76

Keaton looks out over the ocean and smokes a cigarette.

KEATON

What do you want to do with him?

McManus kneels in the sand. Hockney and Verbal stand behind

him, staring at something in front of them.

It is the body of Fred Fenster, literally peppered with

bullet holes. McManus stares at him, fighting any flicker of

emotion.

McMAMJS

I worked five years with Fenster. More

jobs, more money than I can count.

KEATON

I'm sorry, McManus.

McMANUS

I want to bury him.

KEATON

No time.

McManus springs to his feet and points a pistol at Keaton.

Keaton turns to face him and raises his head. McManus might

as well be pointing a feather-duster.

McMANUS

YOU WILL FIND TIME. You're not the only

one with debts, man.

 

85.

KEATON

No shovel.

McMANUS

WITH OUR HANDS.

77 MT. BEACH 77'

Everyone digs in the sand on the deserted beach with their

hands. They are up to their waists in the hole they have

scooped out. Fenster's body is a few feet away.

HOCKNEY

This is nuts.

McMANUS

Dig.

HOCKNEY

This is fucking dry sand, man. When he

rots, the surfers'll smell him from a

hundred yards out.

McMANUS

DIG, YOU FUCKER.

Hockney can see that McManus has truly gone over the edge for

now. Keaton gives him a look that says don't argue.

HOCKNEY

Keaton, we gotta go. They're gonna find

him.

KEATON

Dig.

VERBAL

What are we gonna do?

HOCKNEY

I can run. I got no problem with that.

KEATON

They don't seem to have a problem with it

either.

McMANUS

Nobody runs.

HOCKNEY

This ain't my boy we're burying. I don't

owe anybody.

 

86.

McMANUS

We got a deal here.

HOCKNEY

Since when?

McMANUS

Since tonight. +

HOCKNEY

Fuck that.

McMANIJS

It's payback.

KEATON

IT'S NOT PAYBACK. I don't answer to you. +

It's precaution. You want payback? You

want to run? I don't care. I'm going to

finish this thing. Not for Fenster, not

for anybody else, but

for me. This Kobayashi cocksucker isn't

going to stand over me.

(Beat)

All of you can go to hell.

 

Keaton turns and digs furiously with both hands. Hockney

takes a moment and slowly starts to do the same.

The four men dig for Fenster. The first to find some rest.

78 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY - PRESENT 78

Verbal smokes with his good hand shaking badly.

KUJAN

And after they killed Fenster nobody

would run?

 

VERBAL

I wanted to. I thought we could make it.

KUJAN

Why didn't you say anything?

VERBAL

I tried, believe me, but Keaton wouldn't

have it. It was too far-fetched for him.

Keaton was a grounded guy. An ex-cop. To

a cop, the explanation is never that

complicated. It's always simple. There's

87.

VERBAL (cont'd)

no mystery on the street, no arch-

criminal behind it all. If you got a dead

guy and you think his brother did it,

you're going to find out you're right.

Nobody argued with Keaton. They just set

their minds on whacking Kobayashi.

79 EXT. PARKING LOT - NIGHT - TWO WEEKS PRIOR 79

Redfoot's Harley rests on the roof of the Caddy in a mangled

heap. The body of the Caddy is riddled with bullet holes.

Redfoot's dead body has been shoved head-first through a hole

in the windshield up to his waist, recognizable only by the

trademark red boot.

 

80

80 INT. OFFICE BUILDING - DAY

 

Kobayashi walks through the front door of a plush office

tower followed by two bodyguards. He heads toward the

elevator, failing to notice Hockney a few feet away, reading

a newspaper.

We see a wire running from Hockney's ear to his collar.

HOCKNEY

He's coming up.

81

81 INT. HALLWAY - FORTIETH FLOOR

 

Keaton, McManus and Verbal stand by the six elevators on the

fortieth floor. They are all wearing khaki overalls and tool

belts with walkie-talkies. They look like servicemen.

 

All of the elevators have been propped open and stranded.

McManus moves into one of the elevators. As the doors close i

behind him, he scrambles for the ceiling hatch.

82

82 SCENE DELETED

 

88.

 

83f

83 SCENE DELETED

 

84

84 SCENE DELETED

 

85

85 SCENE DELETED

 

86

86 INT. HALLWAY

 

Keaton and Verbal listen for anything on the radio.

 

87

87 SCENE DELETED

 

88

88 SCENE DELETED

89.

 

89

89 INT. LOBBY

 

The elevator opens. Kobayashi and his bodyguards get on the

elevator.

90

90 INT. ELEVATOR

 

The elevator is empty except for the three men. McManus has

vanished. Kobayashi presses a button and they are on the way.

 

SUDDENLY, the ceiling hatch opens and McManus' arm comes out.

POP - POP. Two shots from a suppressed pistol and the guards

drop to the floor, DEAD.

Kobayashi looks up with surprising calm into McManus' barrel.

McManus

Press forty.

91

91 INT. HALLWAY - FORTIETH FLOOR

 

The elevator opens and Kobayashi is greeted by Keaton and

Verbal. McManus drops from the ceiling hatch and pushes him

out.

 

90.

Verbal and McManus grab the dead bodies and drag them out of

the elevator. They drag them to the next elevator which has

been forced open, revealing an empty shaft.

KEATON

The answer is no.

KOBAYASHI

Mr. Soze will be most -

KEATON

Listen to me, cocksucker. There is no

Keyser Sate. If you say his name again,

I'11 kill you right here.

KOBAYASHI

A strange threat. I can only assume

you're here to kill me anyway. Pity about

Mr. Redfoot.

McMANUS

Fair trade for Fenster.

The elevator opens and Hockney steps out.

KOBAYASHI

Ahh, Mr. Hockney. Do join us.

KEATON

We know you can get to us, and now you

know we can get to you. I'm offering you

the chance to call this off.

KOBAYASHI

Mr. So- My employer has made up his mind.

He does not change it.

KEATON

Neither do we.

McMANUS

You got Fenster, you may get more, but

you won't get us all. Not before one of

us gets to you.

KOBAYASHI

I believe you, Mr. McManus. I quite

sincerely do. You would not have been

chosen if you were not so capable, but I

cannot make this decision. Whatever you

can threaten me with is... ludicrous in

comparison to what will be done to me if

91.

 

McMANUS

Just so you know. I'm the guy. I'm the

one that's gonna get through to you.

KOBAYASHI

I am sorry, Mr. McManus.

(To Keaton)

f implore you to believe me, Mr. Keaton.

Mr. Soze is very real and very +

determined.

KEATON

We'll see.

McManus holds a pistol to Kobayashi's chin. The lawyer's cool

eyes never falter'.

KOBAYASHI

Before you do me in, you will let me

finish my business with Ms. Finneran

first, won't you?

SUDDENLY, Keaton grabs McManus' hand and pulls the gun away

before he can shoot.

KEATON

What did you say?

KOBAYASHI

Edie Finneran. She is upstairs in my

office for an extradition deposition. I

requested she be put on the case

personally. She flew out yesterday.

Everyone looks at Keaton.

KOBAYASHI (CONT'D)

No matter. Kill away, Mr. McManus.

KEATON

You're lying.

KOBAYASHI

Am I?

92

92 INT. HALLWAY - FIFTIETH FLOOR

 

Everyone follows Kobayashi quietly down a dimly lit, oak-

lined hallway. Verbal holds a small pistol discreetly in the

small of Kobayashi's back.

 

92.

They come to a glass office foyer. Kobayashi gestures and

everyone looks through the glass into the lobby beyond.

EDIE FINNERAN is talking casually with the receptionist.

93 INT. LOBBY 93

Edie glances toward the men in the hall.

Keaton turns quickly on his heels, facing the others. From

where Edie stands, it looks as though Kobayashi is talking to

a group of harmless maintenance men.

They see A LARGE MAN dressed very much like the two dead

bodies left in the hall downstairs. The man notices Kobayashi

and the others. He stands and stares menacingly.

KOBAYASHI

Ms. Finneran's escort in Los Angeles.

Never leaves her for a moment. I thought

you'd like to know she was in good hands.

Keaton's mind races for an alternative. He can find none.

Verbal lowers his gun without being told.

KOBAYASHI (CONT'D)

Get your rest, Gentlemen. The boat will

be ready for you on Friday. If I see you

or your friends before then, or fail to

check in every half hour with that

unpleasant looking man in there, Ms.

Finneran will find herself the victim of

a gruesome violation before she dies. As

will your father, Mr. Hockney. and your

Uncle Randall in Arizona, Mr. Kint. I

might only castrate Mr. McManus' nephew,

David. Do I make myself clear?

All of the men surround Kobayashi, aching to kill him.

KOBAYASHI

I'11 take care of the dead men

downstairs. We'll add them to the cost of

Mr. Fenster. Now if you'll excuse me.

Kobayashi walks into the office. Edie turns to greet him.

Keaton slowly turns and watches as they shake hands and talk.

Kobayashi says something they cannot hear and Edie laughs,

her back to the window.

93.

Kobayashi smiles over her shoulder at Keaton.

All the while, the bodyguard watches Keaton. He nods politely

before Keaton and the others leave. Verbal watches for a

moment more and follows.

94 EXT. HILLSIDE ROAD - DAY 94'

Keaton, Verbal, Hockney and McManus sit in a rented sedan

overlooking San Pedro harbor.

Another file from Kobayashi's briefcase is laid out on the

dashboard. This has a map and a good fifty pages of

information in it.

KEATON

It's a logistical nightmare. Close

quarters, no advance layout, ten men,

maybe twenty.

HOCKNEY

Can we stealth these guys?

KEATON

Doubtful. With all that coke, they'll be

ready - which brings me to sunny spot

number two. Even if one of us gets

through and jacks the boat, we get

nothing.

McMANUS

And if we wait for the money?

KEATON

Ten more men at least. In my opinion, it

can't be done. Anyone who walks into this

won't come out alive.

McMANUS

I'm for waiting for the money.

HOCKNEY

Me too.

VERBAL

Did you hear what he just said?

HOCKNEY

If I'm going in, I want a stake.

 

94.

McMANUS

So do I.

Verbal is shocked by what he is hearing. He looks at Keaton

as if to ask him for his decision.

Keaton's cold stare is all the answer Verbal needs. He slumps

in his seat, resigned to the others.

VERBAL

I just can't believe we're just gonna

walk into certain death.

PAUSE

They all suddenly realize the weight of their situation.

FINALLY:

McMANUS

News said it's raining in New York.

No one knows quite how to respond.

95 EXT, PIER - SAN PEDRO - NIGHT 95

A large boat, sleek and yacht-like, but without finesse. This

is a boat for business - heavy and fast. It is moored to the

pier.

A large crane hoists a pallet of fuel drums from the dock. It

swings slowly over the boat. A man on the dock yells in

Spanish to the crane operator.

96 EXT. BOATHOUSE 96

Behind an old and weathered boat in dry-dock, Keaton and

Verbal watch the boat from the shadows.

VERBAL

What-are they speaking?

KEATON

Russian, I think. I don't know.

VERBAL

Hungarian?

 

95.

KEATON

Knock it off.

DOLLY OVER TO REVEAL:

 

McManus climbing up the side of the boathouse.

CONTINUE PAST HIM TO REVEAL: r

 

A large boat. A very large boat.

97 EXT. BARGE 97

Hockney maneuvers through a mesh of twisted steel, arriving

at a vantage point near the stern of the large boat.

HOCKNEY'S P.O.V.

A black van pulls up and parks near the crane. Four men in

suits get out. One remains with the van and the other three

walk toward the boat.

On the boat, five men come up from below deck. They are tense

and cautious around the men in suits. Someone speaks in

Spanish and someone else in Russian. It takes a moment before

anyone speaks the same tongue. They settle on French for both

negotiators.

Hockney sits in the van. He handles a large shoulder bag +

stuffed with plastique. He tests a timer on top.

He picks up a walkie-talkie.

HOCKNEY

Are we ready, kids?

98 SCENE DELETED 98

99 SCENE DELETED/MOVED TO BOTTOM SCENE 97 99

100 EXT. BOATHOUSE.-- ROOF 100

McManus is positioning himself on the roof of the boathouse.

He stops and grabs his radio.

McMANUS

If I didn't have to stop and answer you,

I would be.

95A.

101 MT. BOATHOUSE 101'

KEATON

(into radio)

Everyone shut up. I'm ready. McManus, you

better be set up in ten seconds.

McMANUS

(On radio)

I'm there.

 

96.

KEATON

(To Verbal)

I want you to stay here. Understand?

VERBAL +

But I'm supposed to -

KEATON

If we don't make it out, I want you to

take the money and go.

VERBAL

(Confused)

Keaton, I can't just -

KEATON

I want you to find Edie. Both of you find

some place safe. Tell her what happened -

Everything. She knows people. She'll know

what to do. If we can't get Kobayashi my

way, she'll get him her way.

VERBAL

What if I

KEATON

Just do what I tell you.

Keaton turns and takes a few steps. He stops and looks back,

his face marked with guilt and agony.

KEATON (CONT'D)

Tell her I... Tell her I tried.

Keaton leaves before Verbal can respond. He walks down a ramp

toward the boat.

He is no more than a few yards out of the shadows before the

first man sees him.

102 EXT. DOCK 102'

One of the men in suits starts to yell to the others. Men

pull out guns and try to look as cool as they can.

Keaton walks right into the face of all of these men,

undaunted. His hands are in his pockets.

Above him, in the darkness, McManus pokes his head out and

 

97.

spies Keaton. He pulls his head back and sticks out the

barrel of the rifle.

Keaton comes to a stop about twenty feet from fifteen men all

together.

103 EXT. BOATHOUSE - ROOF 103'

McMANUS'S P.O.V.

McManus stares through the scope of his rifle at the scene.

The cross-hairs breeze past Keaton and find a target. A man

in a suit.

McMANUS

Pow.

He moves to another and then another, picking up speed and

mock-shooting the men. He is steady and quick. It is clear he

could take all fifteen in a few seconds.

McMANUS (CONT'D)

Pow-pow-pow-pow-pow-pow . Oswald was a

fag.

104 EXT. DOCK 104'

 

The men shout questions at Keaton in a number of languages.

105 EXT. BARGE 105'

HOCKNEY'S P.O.V.

A few men standing on the dock near the stern of the large

boat, move towards the commotion.

Hockney bails out and runs quickly and quietly through the

shadows, bringing the bomb with him.

106 EXT. BOATHOUSE'' 106'

Verbal remains in the darkness, looking frightened.

107 INT. BOATHOUSE - ROOF 107a

McManus still wanders with his scope.

McMANUS

Old McDonald had a farm, ee-aye, ee-aye,

oh. And on this farm he shot some guys.

Ba-da-bip, ba-da-bing, bang-boom.

98.

108 EXT. DOCK 108'

Finally two men walk right towards Keaton. The rest train

guns on him. They reach for his arms, pointing their guns

right at him.

At the far end of the dock, Hockney throws his bomb onto the

stern of the large boat.

IT EXPLODES

The men surrounding Keaton, are distracted.

Keaton pulls a pistol out of each pocket and shoots the two

men closest to him.

109 EXT. BOATHOUSE - ROOF 109'

McMANUS

ELVIS HAS LEFT THE BUILDING.

He fires as fast as he can.

110 EXT. PIER 110

The men from the boat and the men in suits try to peg Keaton,

but McManus' sniping has them running.

111 INT. CRANE 111

The crane operator opens the door to bails out, leaving the

crane in motion.,,

112 EXT. BOATHOUSE - ROOF 112'

McManus runs across the roof of the boathouse and jumps down

to the pier. He arrives at a thick mooring cable and climbs

across to the boat. i

MEANWHILE ON THE DOCK:

Keaton climbs up onto a small lifeboat hanging from the side

of the larger boat. From this he climbs aboard the large

boat.

 

99.

113 EXT. DOCK 113f

Hockney is firing in all directions.

SUDDENLY, he realizes no one is left on the dock.

PAUSE

FINALLY, he turns and runs back for the van parked on the

pier above. He finds a ramp leading from the dock to the

pier.

At the van, he finds the one man who has stayed behind to

protect it. I i

The man hears Hockney coming and raises his gun. Hockney runs i

straight at him, screaming frantically. i

HOCKNEY

(In Spanish)

DON'T SHOOT, DON'T SHOOT. LET'S GET THE +

FUCK OUT OF HERE. EVERYONE IS DEAD.

BOOM i

He shoots the man point blank in the face and runs over his

body as it falls.

He gets to the back door of the van and yanks it open.

The inside is stacked with large wooden crates.

114 INT. VAN 114

Hockney, suddenly oblivious to the sound of gunfire, opens

one of the crates and looks inside.

IT IS FILLED WITH MONEY. Cash and negotiable bonds of all

kinds.

He smiles.

BOOM

BLOOD sprays all over the money. Hockney looks at it,

puzzled.

Hockney raises a blood-soaked hand from his belly.

He turns and stares in horror.

 

99A.

BOOM - Another shot takes off the top of his head.

115 EXT. PIER 115

McManus runs like a wild man across the deck, heading for the

hatch .

He shoots in all directions as though he has eyes in the back

of his head. He sees Keaton climbing onto the deck of the

boat.

YELLOW 06/11/34

 

100.

116 EXT. WAREHOUSE 116

Verbal is wrestling with what to do. He finally makes a break

for the other side of the boathouse.

117 EXT. BOAT DECK 117'

The crane continues to swing.

A single bullet hits one of the barrels on the suspended

pellet.

Gasoline pours out through the bullet-hole.

118 SCENE DELETED ' 118f

119 EXT. BOAT 119

Keaton finds the hatch and goes below, shooting a man on his

way up the stairs. McManus jumps on board and runs down

behind him.

120 EXT'. PIER 120'

Verbal arrives at the top of the ramp leading from the dock

to the pier. +

He ducks down behind a guardrail beside the ramp.

He turns and sees Hockney's dead body next to the van.

He looks around frantically, frozen in terror.

It is quiet, except for the sounds of screaming, far off in

the bowels of the boat and the hum of the crane.

121 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY - PRESENT 121

KUJAN

Why didn't you run?

 

101.

 

VERBAL

I froze up. I thought about Fenster and

how he looked when we buried him, then I

thought about Keaton. It looked like he

might pull it off.

A KNOCK ON THE DOOR.

Rabin steps in and motions for Kujan to come outside.

 

122'

122 INT.HALLWAY

 

Rabin and Jack Baer are in the hall. Rabin hands Kujan a

thick manila folder. Kujan thumbs through it.

BAER

A boy came across a body on the beach

this morning. Thrown clear when the boat

burned. Shot once in the head. Two guys

from the F.B.I. just identified him. +

KUJAN

And ?

RABIN

His name was Arturo Marquez. A petty

smuggler out of Argentina. He was

arrested in New York last year for

trafficking. He escaped to California and

got picked up in Long Beach. They were

setting up his extradition when he

escaped again. Get this - Edie Finneran

was called in to advise the proceedings.

KUJAN

Kobayashi.

Bear nods.

RAB IN

I called New York County and they fared

me a copy of Marquez's testimony. He was

a rat.

Kujan pulls out page after page from the file.

KUJAN

A big fucking rat.

 

102.

RABIN +

Arturo was strongly opposed 'to going back

to prison. So much so that he informed on

close to fifty guys. Guess who he names

for a finale?

Kujan finds one sheet and notices a paragraph is highlighted.

KUJAN

Keyser Soze

BAER

There's more.

123 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - MOMENTS LATER 123

Kujan walks in and sits down in front of Verbal. He smiles.

KUJAN

I'11 tell you what I know. Stop me when

it sounds familiar.

Verbal is confused.

KUJAN

There was no dope on that boat.

124 INT. BOAT - NIGHT - ONE WEEK PRIOR 124

Keaton is weaving through tight, low-ceiling corridors,

looking in every cabin, working his way towards the bottom of

the boat.

ELSEWHERE IN THE BOAT, McManus is tearing though the

corridors, seemingly less interested in securing the cargo as

he is in killing everyone on board.

He screams like a lunatic, shooting everything in his path,

killing some men with his bare hands, shooting others,

stabbing others still with a knife he has brought along.

125

125 INT. CORRIDOR

 

JAIME, one of the men from the boat, is half-pushing, half-

helping a thin and sweaty looking MAN IN A CHECKERED BATHROBE

towards a cabin at the end of the hall.

The man in the robe is trembling. He seems stricken with

fear.

 

103.

MAN IN ROBE

He's here. I saw him on deck.

Jaime pushes him inside the cabin and shuts the door.

A stereo playing softly in the room mixes with the man's

panicked breathing.

The man in the robe screams through the closed door, his

voice echoing off of the metal bulkheads.

MAN IN ROBE

(CONT'D)

I'M TELLING YOU IT'S KEYSER SOZE.

Jaime stands outside the door of the cabin and turns to face

down the hall. Off in some other part of the boat, he can

hear McManus wailing like a banshee and the ever-less

frequent sound of gunshots.

126 INT. HOLD 126

Keaton has come to the four-foot-high door to the hold. The

door is open slightly. Keaton finds this strange. He pushes

the door open and steps inside. The hold is empty.

He hears a noise behind him. He wheels around to fire. He

sees McManus in the door. His face is covered with blood.

McMANUS

Did you hear what I heard?

KEATON

What happened to you?

McMANUS

Keyser Soze is on the boat.

KEATON

What?

McMANUS

I heard somebody screaming his nuts off.

He said Keyser Soze was on the boat.

KEATON

Are you alright?

McManus rubs some of the blood off with his sleeve.

 

104.

McMANUS

Huh? Oh, It's not mine.

KEATON

There's no coke.

McManus looks around the hold as though he'll see four and a

half tons of dope in some corner where Keaton might have

missed it.

The two men look at one another. There is a long, pregnant

silence.

McMANUS

Let's get the fuck out of here.

KEATON

Right behind you.

127 INT. CORRIDOR 127

Keaton and McManus step out of the hold, walking slowly and

cautiously back from where they came. They hear the sounds of

footsteps running on the deck above and the occasional

hollered sentence in Spanish.

KEATON

Where's Hockney?

McMANUS

I don't think he made it to the boat.

They come to a corner. They can go left or right.

KEATON

I can't remember which way.

McMANUS

Right -

BOOM - BOOM

Gunshots fill the hallway from behind them. They do not stop

to turn around. Keaton goes left, McManus goes right. They

run in opposite directions with the sound of gunfire right

behind them.

128 INT. HALLWAY - CABIN 128

Jaime squints and cocks his head.

 

105.

SOMEONE IS COMING. He raises a pistol and crouches by the

door.

129 INT. CABIN 129

The man in the bathrobe sits on the foot of the bed watching

the door. He hears the sounds of fighting somewhere not too

far away.

He crawls over the bed and squeezes between it and the

bulkhead. Only the top of his head is visible. He starts to

cry.

BOOM - BOOM - Two shots just outside in the hall.

SUDDENLY, the door bursts open. Jaime collapses in a heap on

the floor, a bullet hole in his eye.

A FIGURE LOOMS IN THE DOOR

The man in the bathrobe looks up at the figure. We cannot see

him.

MAN IN ROBE

I told them nothing.

BOOM

 

The man in the robe falls dead.

130 EXT. DECK - MOMENTS LATER 130

The boat is quiet now. Keaton walks out onto the deck.

He looks out over the pier and sees Verbal standing in the

middle of the carnage, frozen. Their eyes meet. Keaton waves

at him as if to shoe him away.

131 EXT. PIER - TOP OF RAMP 131

Verbal hesitates and finally moves towards the van with the

money. He looks back over his shoulder and sees Keaton.

Keaton sees him looking and waves again, hurrying him along.

Verbal turns away and focuses on the van.

 

132

132 EXT. DECK

 

Keaton hears a noise behind him. He swings around and points

his gun at McManus again. He puts the gun down.

106.

McManus smiles. He walks slowly across the deck towards

Keaton. Something is not right about him.

McMANUS

Strangest thing...

He slumps to the deck. Keaton rushes over to him. He kneels

down and sees a pipe sticking out of the back of McManus's

neck.

133 EXT. PIER 133'

Verbal approaches the van, stepping over Hockney's body. He

closes the back doors of the van. ,

He looks to his left at the huge loading crane. He glances

upward along the giant' arm as it swings steadily on.

Somewhere, off in the distance, the sound of SIRENS can be

heard.

134 EXT. DECK 134

Keaton kneels by McManus, trembling with rage. After a moment

he stands, looking down at McManus' dead body.

135 EXT. PIER 135

SUDDENLY, Verbal realizes something. He turns and goes to

call out a warning to Keaton. He is too late.

136 EXT. DECK 136

Keaton never sees the crane coming.

WHAM

The pellet of barrels hits him square in the back and sends

him flying into the wheel house of the boat.

Keaton is still for a moment. Finally, he tries to get up,

but finds he cannot move his legs.

137 EXT. PIER 137

Verbal runs down the ramp as fast as he can. He comes to a

rope ladder hanging down the side of the boat. +

SUDDENLY, he stops dead in his tracks, looking up at the

boat.

 

106A.

From where he stands, he can just make out the figure of a

TAU, THIN MAN walking along the edge of the deck. He moves

quietly and calmly in the shadows towards the crane, looking

out of place in his expensive suit.

 

107.

Something about this man terrifies him.

138 SCENE DELETED ' 138'

139 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY - PRESENT . 139

KUJAN

And that's when you say in your statement

that you saw...

Kujan picks up his copy of Verbal's statement to the D.A.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

A man in a suit with a slim build. Tall.

VERBAL

Wait a minute.

KUJAN

(Looking at watch)

I don't have a minute. Are you saying it

was Keyser Soze? You told the D.A. you

didn't know who it was.

Verbal is drowning in Kujan's interrogation. He looks dazed.

 

VERBAL

I - there had to be dope there.

 

108.

KUJAN

Don't shine me, Verbal. No more stalling.

You know what I'm getting at.

VERBAL

I don't.

KUJAN

YES YOU DO. YOU KNOW WHAT I'M GETTING AT.

THE TRUTH. TRY TO TELL ME YOU DIDN'T

KNOW. TRY TO TELL ME YOU SAW SOMEONE KILL

KEATON .

For the first time, Verbal stands and tries to move away from

Kujan, but Kujan stays in his face, backing him into a

corner. Verbal shields himself with his hands and shuts his

eyes.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

TRY TO REEF LYING TO ME NOW. I KNOW

EVERYTHING .

VERBAL

I don't know what you're talking about.

KUJAN

YOU KNOW. YOU'VE KNOWN THIS WHOLE FUCKING

TIME. GIVE IT TO ME.

Verbal looks into Kujan's eyes with genuine terror. Kujan's

face is red, his body trembles. His locomotive breathing is

the only sound in the room.

VERBAL

I don't understand what you're saying. I

saw Keaton get shot, I swear to you.

KUJAN

Then why didn't you help him?

VERBAL

I WAS AFRAID, OKAY? Somehow, I was sure

it was Keyser Soze at that point. I

couldn't bring myself to raise my gun to

him.

KUJAN

But Keaton...

VERBAL

It was Keyser Soze, Agent Kujan. I mean

the Devil himself. How do you shoot the

Devil in the back?

109.

Verbal holds up a shaking, twisted hand.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

What if you miss?

140 EXT. BARGE - NIGHT - ONE WEEK PRIOR 140'

Verbal is hiding in the tangle of girders and cables on the

barge.

VERBAL'S P.O.V.

 

Keaton's body is completely obscured.

The man in a suit strides across the deck over to Keaton,

stopping to relieve himself on a small fire on the deck.

He walks up and stands over Keaton. The two men exchange

words and the man in the suit pulls out a pistol. He points

it at Keaton.

RED AND BLUE LIGHTS FLASH BEHIND VERBAL

Verbal turns. He can just make out police cars coming in the

distance.

BANG

Verbal hears a shot from the deck of the boat. He turns in

time to see the man in the suit running across the deck

toward the gangway.

Verbal can barely see the man from where he is now. The man

in the suit is covered by shadows and the poor angle from the

barge. Verbal strains to see but he cannot.

The man in the suit stops long enough to pull out a lighter.

He turns and walks back across the deck and out of sight.

A moment later flames leap up from on the deck.

The mesh of steel and rubber leaves a dark and open cocoon at

its base.

MOVE INTO THE DARKNESS.

Sirens are close now. Almost here. The sound of fire raging

out of control.

SIRENS BLARING. TIRES SQUEALING. CAR DOORS OPENING. FEET

POUNDING THE PAVEMENT.

109A.

MOVE FURTHER, SLOWER, INTO THE DARKNESS.

Voices yelling. New light flickering in the surrounding

darkness.

110.

141 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE - DAY - PRESENT 141

KUJAN

Arturo Marquez. Ever hear of him?

VERBAL

Wha- No.

KUJAN

He was a stool pigeon for the Justice

Department. He swore out a statement to

Federal Marshals that he had seen and

could positively identify one Keyser Soze

and had intimate knowledge of his

business, including, but not exclusive

to, drug trafficking and murder.

VERBAL

I never heard of him.

KUJAN

His own people were selling him to a gang

of Hungarians. Most likely the same

Hungarians that Sate all but wiped out

back in Turkey. The money wasn't there

for dope. The Hungarians were going to

buy the one guy that could finger Soze

for them.

VERBAL

I said I never heard of him.

 

KUJAN

But Keaton had. Edie Finneran was his

extradition advisor. She knew who he was

and what he knew.

VERBAL

I don't

KUJAN

There were no drugs on that boat. It was

a hit. A suicide mission to whack out the

one man that could finger Keyser Soze so

Sate had a few thieves put to it. Men he

knew he could march into certain death.

VERBAL

But how - wait. You're saying SOZE sent t

us to kill someone?

 

111.

KUJAN

I'm saying Keaton did.

Verbal cannot grasp this. He squints, trying to understand.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

Verbal, he left you behind for a reason.

If you all knew Soze could find you

anywhere, why was he ready to send you

off with the money when he could have

used you to take the boat?

VERBAL

He wanted me to live.

KUJAN

Why did he want you to live? A one-time

dirty cop without a loyalty in the world

finds it in his heart to save a worthless

rat-cripple? No, sir. Why'

VERBAL

Edie.

KUJAN

I don't buy that reform story for a

minute. And even if I did, I certainly

don't believe he would send you to

protect her. So why?

VERBAL

Because he was my friend.

KUJAN

No, Verbal. You weren't friends. Keaton

didn't have friends. He saved you because

he wanted it that way. It was his will.

Verbal grinds to a mental halt, trying to grasp the

implication .

SUDDENLY:

VERBAL

No...

KUJAN

Keaton was Keyser Soze

VERBAL

NO.

 

112.

KUJAN

The kind of guy who could wrangle the

wills of men like Hockney and McManus.

The kind of man who could engineer a

police line-up from all his years of

contacts in N.Y.P.D.

Verbal stands on wobbly legs, shaking with anger.

VERBAL

NO, NO, NO, NO, NO.

KUJAN

THE KIND OF MAN THAT COULD HAVE KILLED

EDIE FINNERAN.

A strange look crosses Verbal's face. Shock perhaps, or

revelation.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

They found her yesterday in a hotel in

Pennsylvania. Shot twice in the head.

It starts to sink in with Verbal. His eyes swell.

VERBAL

Edie...

KUJAN

He used all of you to get him on that

boat. He couldn't get on alone and he had

to pull the trigger himself to make sure

he got his man. The one man that could

identify him.

VERBAL

This is all bullshit.

KUJAN

He left you to stay behind and tell us he

was dead. You saw him die, right? Or did

you? You had to hide when the first

police cars showed up. You heard the

shot, just before the fire but you didn't

see him die.

VERBAL

I knew him. He would never -

KUJAN

He programmed you to tell us just what he

wanted you to. Customs has been

 

113.

KUJAN (cont'd)

investigating him for years. He knew we

were close. You said it yourself. Where

is the political pressure coming from?

Why are you being protected? It's Keaton

making sure you tell us what you're

supposed to. Immunity is your reward.

 

VERBAL

BUT WHY ME? WHY NOT HOCKNEY OR FENSTER OR

McMANUS? I'm a cripple. I'm stupid. Why

me?

Verbal hears the weight of his words and falls back in his

chair, Kujan looks at him with some pity,; but he is too far

in to stop.

KUJAN

Because you're a cripple, Verbal. Because

you're stupid. Because you were weaker

than them. Because you couldn't see far

enough into him to know the truth.

Verbal is crying now. He shakes his head, eyes closed.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

If he's dead, Verbal - if what you say is

true, then it won't matter. It was his

idea to hit the Taxi Service in New York,

wasn't it? Tell me the truth.

VERBAL

(Sobbing)

It was all Keaton. We followed him from

the beginning.

Kujan smiles with triumphant satisfaction.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

I didn't know. I saw him die. I believe

he's dead. Christ

KUJAN

Why lie about everything else, then?

VERBAL

You know what it's like, Agent Kujan, to

know you'll never be good? Not good like

you. You got good all fucked around. I

mean a stand up guy. I grew up knowing I

was never going to be good at anything

'cause I was a cripple. Shit, I wasn't

 

114.

VERBAL (cont'd)

even a good thief. But I thought the one

thing I could be good at was a keeping my

mouth shut - keeping the code. I didn't

want to tell you for my dignity, that's

all, and you robbed me, Agent Kujan. You

robbed me.

Kujan pulls the microphone out from under his tie and puts it +

on the desk. Verbal actually manages to snort a laugh, but

only briefly, overcome by an apparent wave of nausea.

KUJAN

You're not safe on your own.

VERBAL

You think he's..?

KUJAN

Is he Keyser Soze I don't know, Verbal.

It seems to me that Keyser Sate is a

shield. Like you said, a spook story, but

I know Keaton - and someone out there is

pulling strings for you. Stay here and

let us protect you.

VERBAL

I'm not bait. No way. I post today.

KUJAN

You posted twenty minutes ago. Captain

Leo wants you out of here a.s.a.p.,

unless you turn state's.

VERBAL

I'11 take my chances, thank you. It's

tougher to buy the cheapest bag-man than

it is to buy a cop.

KUJAN

Where are you going to go, Verbal? You

gonna run? Turn states evidence. You

might never see trial. If somebody wants

to get you, you know They'll get you out

there.

VERBAL

Maybe so, but I'm no rat, Agent Kujan.

You tricked me, that's all. I won't keep

my mouth shut 'cause I'm scared. I'11

keep it shut 'cause I let Keaton down by

getting caught - Edie Finneran too. And

if they kill me, it's

 

115.

VERBAL (cont'd)

because They'll hear I dropped dime.

They'll probably hear it from you.

Verbal stands, mustering his shattered dignity and walks

towards the door. Rabin opens it for him from outside.

For once Kujan cannot bring himself to look at Verbal.

Verbal turns to the door, stopping to look Rabin in the eye.

VERBAL (CONT'D)

Fuckin' cops.

He steps out of the room and into the hall. Rabin follows

him.

142 INT. HOSPITAL - DAY 142

Daniel Metzheiser comes out of Arkosh Kovash's room with a

single sheet of 15x20 inch paper in his hand. He inspects the

sketch with great interest. He folds the edges of the paper

back to make it smaller.

143 INT. HOSPITAL RECEPTION ROOM 143

Metzheiser walks behind the reception desk without asking the

nurse for permission and helps himself to the fax machine.

144 INT. DEPOT - LATER 144

Verbal is downstairs in the depot of the police station

picking up his personal belongings.

A FAT, WHITE-HAIRED COP is checking off the items as he takes

them out of the tray in which they are kept.

COP

One watch: gold. One cigarette lighter:

gold. One wallet: brown. One pack of

cigarettes.

Verbal collects his personal items and shuffles on his lame

leg toward the exit.

145 INT. DISPATCHER'S OFFICE 145

Jack Baer stands by a fax machine. A green light comes on

next to a digital display.

The display reads: RECEIVING

116.

146 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 146

Kujan stares solemnly at the bulletin board, drinking from

Rabin's coffee cup. Rabin sits at the desk, sifting through

the mound of gapers as though considering organizing them

once and for all.

RAB IN

You still don't know shit.

KUJAN

I know what I wanted to know about

Keaton.

RAB IN

Which is shit.

KUJAN

No matter. He'll have to know how close

we came.

RAB IN

Keyser Sate or not, if Keaton's alive

he'll never come up again.

KUJAN

I'11 find him.

RAB IN

Waste of time.

KUJAN

(To himself)

A rumor is not a rumor that doesn't die.

RAB IN

What?

KUJAN

Nothing. Something I - forget it.

Kujan shakes his head. He gestures to the desk.

KUJAN (CONT'D)

Man, you're a fucking slob.

Rabin regards the mess of his office.

RAB IN

Yeah. It's got it's own system though. It

all makes sense when you look at it

right. You just have to step back from

 

117.

RABIN (cont'd)

it, you know? You should see my garage,

now that's a horror show...

Kujan is not listening. He has been staring at the bulletin

board, lost in thought, his unfocused eyes drifting across

the mess of papers, not looking at anything at all.

147 EXT. STREET 147

Verbal steps out into the sunlight, putting on a pair of

cheap sunglasses. He looks up and down the crowded street.

People on their way to and from lunch, no doubt.

Cars choke the street in front of the police department as

they wait for pedestrians to clear the way.

148 INT. DISPATCHER'S OFFICE - 148

A single sheet of paper comes out of the fax machine, face

down.

149 INT. RABIN'S OFFICE 149

Kujan still stares at the bulletin board.

SUDDENLY, Kujan's face changes. He leans in closer to the

bulletin board and squints his eyes. His face changes again.

First a look of puzzlement, then confusion - finally

realization.

The coffee cup tumbles from his hand. It hits the floor with

the SMASH of cheap porcelain. Coffee splatters everywhere.

Rabin snaps out of his droning and looks up in surprise.

KUJAN'S P.O.V.

Kujan is staring not at what is on the bulletin board, but at

the bulletin board itself.

His eyes follow the aluminum frame, mounted firmly to the

wall. One might note it's sturdy construction and it's

convenient size. Big enough to hold a lifetime of forgotten

and disregarded notes and facts. Years of police trivia that

has been hung and forgotten with the intention of finding a

use for it all someday. One might want such a bulletin board

for one's self. One would look to see who makes such a

bulletin board.

Kujan's eyes are locked on a metal plate bearing the

manufacturer's name.

118.

It reads: QUARTET - SKOKIE, ILLINOIS

Kujan's eyes flash all' over the bulletin board. He finds a

picture of Rabin in the far corner. He stands beside a scale

in fishing gear. He proudly holds a hand out to his freshly

caught marlin. His eyes skim quickly over and stop on an

eight and a half by eleven inch fax sheet of what must be a

THREE HUNDRED POUND BLACK MAN. Kujan glazes over his name, it

is irrelevant. His aliases stand out.

Slavin, BRICKS, Shank, REDFOOT, Thee, Rooster...

KUJAN'S EYES WIDEN with sudden realization. He runs for the

door.

His foot crushes the broken pieces of Rabin's coffee cup. The

cup that hovered over Verbal's head for two hours.

Kujan is in too much of a hurry to notice the two words

printed on the jagged piece that had been the bottom of the

cheap mug.

KOBAYASHI PORCELAIN.

150 EXT. HALLWAY 150

Kujan is sprinting wildly down the hall for the stairs.

151 EXT. STREET 151

Verbal looks behind him and sees ANOTHER COP standing just

inside the doorway, lighting a cigarette. The cop notices

Verbal and watches him in the way that cops look at people

they cannot place in the category of idiot citizen, or stupid

criminal.

Verbal smiles politely, meekly at the cop and walks down the

steps into the moving throng.

152 INT. DEPOT 152

Kujan runs up to the desk where Verbal had only moments

before picked up his belongings. Rabin is right behind him, a

look of absolute confusion on his face.

KUJAN

WHERE IS HE? DID YOU SEE HIM? t

COP

The Cripple? He went that way.

 

118A.

The cog gestures towards the door.

Kujan runs outside looking around frantically.

153 SCENE DELETED 153'

 

119.

 

154 EXT. SIDEWALK 154

Verbal limps his way carefully across the sidewalk, avoiding

people as best as he can.

He looks over his shoulder, getting farther away from the

police station. He can see Rabin and the cop on the steps,

looking around with strange, lost expressions on their faces.

He does not notice the car creeping along the curb beside

him.

155 INT. CAR 155

DRIVER'S P.O.V.

The driver's hands tap the wheel patiently. His eyes follow

Verbal as he fumbles through the crowd.

156 EXT. SIDEWALK 156

Kujan pushes and shoves, looking this way and that.

157 EXT. STREET 157

LOW ANGLE on the feet of dozens of people.

Verbal's feet emerge from the crowd on the far side. They

hobble along the curb.

SUDDENLY, the right foot seems to relax a little, the inward

angle straightens itself out in a few paces and the limp

ceases as though the leg has grown another inch.

CRANE UP VERBAL'S BODY

Verbal's hands are rummaging around in his pockets. The good

left hand comes up with a pack of cigarettes, the bad right

hand comes up with a lighter. The right hand flexes with all

120.

I-

of the grace and coordination of a sculptor's, flicking the

clasp on the antique lighter with the thumb, striking the

flint with the index finger. It is a fluid motion, somewhat

showy.

Verbal lights a cigarette and smiles to himself. He turns and

sees the car running alongside.

158 INT. DISPATCHER'S OFFICE 158

 

Jack Beer pulls the sheet out of the fax machine and turns it

over, revealing the composite sketch of Keyser SOZE.

Though crude and distorted, one cannot help but notice how

much it leaks like VERBAL KINT.

159 EXT. STREET 159

The car stops. The driver gets out.

IT IS KOBAYASHI, or the man we have come to know as such. He

smiles to Verbal. Verbal steps off of the curb, returning the

smile as he opens the passenger door and gets in.

The man called Kobayashi gets in the driver's seat and pulls

away .

A moment later, Agent David Kujan of U.S. Customs wanders

into the frame, looking around much in the way a child would

when lost at the circus. He takes no notice of the car

pulling out into traffic, blending in with the rest of the

cars filled with people on their way back to work.

BLACK




THE END

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