"RED DRAGON"
Screenplay
By
Michael Mann
SECOND DRAFT
July 20, 1984
EXT. MARATHON, FLORIDA, BEACH - GRAHAM + CRAWFORD - DAY
The highlit aqua water burns out sections of the two men
imposed in front of it. The beach is white sand. JACK
CRAWFORD -- mid-forties, large -- came down from Washington.
His suitcoat over the driftwood log and his rolled-up white
sleeves says City, not Florida Keys. WILL GRAHAM -- late
thirties -- in a faded Hawaiian number and sun-bleached vio-
let shorts, belongs. Graham smokes. Crawford drinks from
a glass of iced tea. Then:
CRAWFORD
I should have caught you at the boat
yard when you got off work. You
don't want to talk about it here...
GRAHAM
I don't want to talk about it
anywhere.
(beat)
If you brought pictures, leave them
in the briefcase. Molly and Kevin
will be back soon.
CRAWFORD
How much do you know?
GRAHAM
What was in the 'Miami Herald' and
the 'Times.'
(beat)
Confessions?
CRAWFORD
Eighty-six so far. All cranks. He
smashes the mirrors and uses the
pieces.
(beat)
None of them knew that;
GRAHAM
What else did you keep out of the
papers?
CRAWFORD
Blond, right-handed, really strong,
wears a size eleven shoe. The prints
are all smooth gloves. He's on a
full moon cycle. Both times. His
blood is AB Positive.
GRAHAM
Somebody hurt him?
CRAWFORD
Typed him from semen. He's a secretor.
Crawford takes a sip of the iced tea and looks at Graham.
2.
Graham flips his cigarette into the surf.
CRAWFORD
Will... you saw this in the papers.
The second one was all over TV. Did
you ever think about givin' me a
call?
GRAHAM
No.
CRAWFORD
Why not?
GRAHAM
The Bureau already has the best lab.
Plus you have Bloom at the University
of Chicago...
CRAWFORD
And I got you down here fixing fuckin'
boat motors.
GRAHAM
You don't need me. I wouldn't
be useful to you anymore, Jack.
CRAWFORD
Last two like this we had, you
caught.
GRAHAM
That was three years ago. And by
doing the same things you and the
rest of them at the lab are doing.
CRAWFORD
That's not entirely true, Will.
It's the way you think.
GRAHAM
I think there has been a lot of
bullshit about the way I think.
(beat)
I came down here to get away from
all that.
CRAWFORD
You look all right now.
GRAHAM
I am all right.
Crawford pulls two pictures from his shirt pocket. He keeps
them face down. They draw at Will. Crawford knows this.
3.
CRAWFORD
If you can't look anymore, I
understand...
GRAHAM
As long as they're dead...
CRAWFORD
These are all dead, Will.
PICTURES
If we expected gory crime photos, these are not them. Two
snapshots: a woman followed by three children and a duck
carrying picnic items up a bank of a pond. A second family
behind a birthday cake at a table. They're all smiling.
CLOSE: GRAHAM
looks at the pictures for a full twenty seconds. Then he
puts them down and looks along the beach.
GRAHAM'S POV: MOLLY + KEVIN
KEVIN -- lanky and tall at eleven -- hunkers down at the
water's edge, 50 yards away examining something in the sand.
MOLLY -- suntanned, blonde and sensuous at thirty stands
watching the two men, her hand on her hip. Waves careen
around her ankles. Her body language openly states
hostility. It's towards Crawford.
GRAHAM (O.S.)
Let's talk after dinner. Stay and
eat.
CRAWFORD (O.S.)
I'LL come back later. I got messages
at the Holiday Inn to collect
Molly starts walking forward. On it...
CUT TO:
INT. GRAHAM'S KITCHEN - MOLLY + GRAHAM - NIGHT
are doing dishes. Graham wipes while Molly washes.
MOLLY
He stopped by to see me at the shop
before he came out here.
GRAHAM
What did he want?
4.
MOLLY
He asked how you are.
GRAHAM
And you said?
MOLLY
I said you are fine, he should leave
you the hell alone.
GRAHAM
I'm a forensic specialist, Molly.
You've seen my diploma?
(sarcastic)
I got a diploma and everything.
MOLLY
You mended a crack in the wallpaper
with your diploma.
(heat)
You are open and easy now... It took
you a lot of work to get to that...
GRAHAM
We have it good, don't we?
MOLLY
All the things that happened to you
before make you know that...
There is a soft pleading in her voice.
GRAHAM
What the hell can I do?
MOLLY
(after a pause)
What you've already decided. You're
not really asking.
GRAHAM
If I were?
MOLLY
(facing him)
Stay here with me. Me. Me. Me.
And Kevin.
(heat)
That's selfish, huh?
GRAHAM
(touches the side
of her face)
I don't care.
(beat>
He'll never see me or know my name.
If we find him, the police will have
to take him down. Not me, I'm just
looking at evidence.
5.
As he puts an arm around Molly...
CUT TO:
EXT. BEACH - KEVIN - TWILIGHT
is working in the sand. Behind him Graham is stapling
chicken wire to two foot-high fence posts.
KEVIN
Will it keep them out?
GRAHAM
Yeah. ..
KEVIN
How many turtle eggs you think are
in here?
GRAHAM
In this hatchery? Forty to fifty.
KEVIN
Crabs would get most of the newborns
before they made it to the sea, huh?
GRAHAM
Yeah, but not now.. These will all
make it... guaranteed.
CUT TO:
EXT. GRAHAM HOUSE - CRAWFORD + MOLLY - NIGHT
On the porch swing. Beyond them at the water's edge Graham
nothing to each other the fence. Crawford and Molly say
or a while. Then, finally:
MOLLY
Whatever I say, you'll take him
away, won't you?
CRAWFORD
I have to.
MOLLY
You're his friend, Jack. Why can't
you leave him alone?
CRAWFORD
Because it's his bad luck to be
special.
MOLLY
He thinks you want him to look at
evidence.
6.
CRAWFORD
Nobody's better with evidence. But
he has the other thing, too. He
doesn't like that part of it...
MOLLY
You wouldn't like it, either if you
had it.
There is a pause between them. Molly lights a cigarette.
Crawford leans forward, resting his thick, pale, forearms
on his knees.
CRAWFORD
Talking about 'like,' you don't like
me very much, do you?
MOLLY
No.
(beat)
I don't like people who park in the
'handicapped zone'...
CRAWFROD
I'LL try to keep him as far away from
it as I can...
CUT TO:
EXT. ATLANTA STREET - WIDE - NIGHT
Small poplars line the curb. It rained. The sidewalks are
wet. They are drying in splotches. The street is deserted.
The front walk vertically bisects the FRAME. An Atlanta
Police department car pulls to the curb and stops. The door
opens, lighting the interior and Will Graham starts out the
passenger side.
GRAHAM
(distant)
Thanks for the lift.
OFFICER
I'll come inside with you, if you
like, but Mr. Crawford said you'd
probably want to be alone.
GRAHAM
That's right.
OFFTCER
There's a VTR setup waiting in your
hotel room, that you asked for
They transferred the home movies of
both families once half-inch VHS.
7.
GRAHAM
(getting out)
Thanks.
Graham exits the car and walks TOWARDS us. We PAN AROUND as
he moves through EXTREME CLOSEUP and see the Leeds family house
with all of the Atlanta Police department "crime scene" postings
Graham doesn't enter the front door. Be walks around the side.
CUT TO:
INT. LEEDS HOUSE, KITCHEN - WIDE - NIGHT
Three big sliding glass doors. The center one has been re-
placed with plywood. It's dark. A flashlight's beam starts
playing through the bushes in the side yard.., then the light
appears and blasts IN the LENS. It lights lots of dishes in
the sink. The dark kitchen looks like anybody's kitchen. The
house feels occupied. The Leed's possessions have been
undisturbed.
CLOSE: GLASS DOOR
We hear the lock click and the door slide open as Graham
enters. It's like he's a burglar.
GRAHAM'S FEET
walk through the kitchen as if he knows where he is going.
A thermostat clicks and air conditioning comes on loudly.
Graham's feet pass our of frame...
INT. LEEDS HOUSE, SECOND STORY - FLOOR
is empty. The carpet is dark. We hear Graham's footsteps
up the stairs. Then his feet enter the frame and a flash-
light beam hits the carpet. It dwells on a couple of dark
stains. Track with Graham's feet to the entry to the master
bedroom. The bedroom is dark. We see nothing.
INT. LEEDS MASTER BEDROOM - LIGHT SWITCH
Graham's hand enters. He hits the light switch.
BLOOD
screams at us from the walls.
CLOSE: GRAHAM
doesn't visibly react.
8.
WIDER - GRAHAM
moves into the room. The bloodstains are extensive. Half
the walls look like a monochromatic Jackson Pollock. The
mirrors are smashed. Taped outlines on the mattress indi-
cate where the bodies had been found. Graham opens the
file he carries containing autopsy, lab and crime reports.
OVERHEAD ANGLE - GRAHAM
standing alone in the middle of the master bedroom. The
crime scene -- the disarray, the big splashes of arterial
blood on the walls, the smashed mirrors, taped outlines or
bodies -- is a testament to a violence that is pornographic.
Graham pulls out a tape recorder and starts dictating his
own notes, thumbing through various reports for reference.
GRAHAM
intruder entered through kitchen
sliding door. Probably a glass
cutter. Why didn't he care that he
left AB saliva on the glass? it was
hot out that night. inside, the
house must' have been pleasantly cool
to him.
(beat)
The intruder cut Charles Leeds'
throat as he lay asleep beside Mrs.
Leeds. He shot Mrs. Leeds as she was
rising... Bullet entered the right of
her navel and lodged in her lumbar
spine, but she died of strangulation...
increase of serotonin and free
histimine levels in the gunshot wound
indicates... she lived at least five
minutes after she was shot... All
her other injuries were post-mortem.
(beat>
Then he went toward the children's
room.
(beat)
Direction and velocity of blood
stains on the east wall indicate
arterial spray.;. With his throat
cut, Mr. Leeds still tried to fight.
Because the intruder was moving to
the children's room...
(beat)
in the children's room the intruder
shot the first boy in bed. Second
boy was found in bed, but dustballs
indicate he was dragged out from
under his bed to be shot...
(MORE)
9.
GRAHAM (CONT'D)
(beat)
Profusion of bloodstains and matted
sliding marks on hall carpet and
west wall of master bedroom remain
unexplained... as does superficial
ligature mark around Mr. Leed's
chest, believed to be post-mortem.
What did the killer do with them
after they were dead? And before
he put the boys back in their beds?
CUT TO:
ZNT. LEEDS BATHROOM - MEDICINE CABINET - NIGHT
is dark. We see nothing. Light comes on. Graham enters.
He rests his hands on the sides of the sink. He turns on
the water. He pops two pills, cups his hands under the
faucet and drinks. He looks at himself in the mirror. Be
is breathing normally. Over his shoulder he sees...
ZOOM INTO: MRS. LEEDS' PANTYHOSE
still hanging on a towel railing over the bathtub. Graham
is staring at the normal domesticity of a family bathroom.
He doesn't let it unnerve him.
CUT TO:
EXT. LEEDS' HOUSE; PORCH ROOF - WIDE - NIGHT
The window opens and Graham climbs onto the porch roof and
sits on the gritty shingles. We're looking for a distressed
reaction. There is none. Graham is clamped down. Beyond
him, the lights of Atlanta and the stars are brilliant...
More brilliant than they ought to be. The Delta Aquirid
meteor shower's at its maximum This is not a normal image.
He takes out his tape recorder again.
GRAHAM
There's a wicker dog bed on the back
porch. There's a doghouse in the
back yard. Where's the dog?
HOLD ON Graham.
CUT TO:
INT. ATLANTA HYATT HOUSE, ELEVATOR - WIDE - NIGHT
Graham riding up with two half-drunk CONVENTIONEERS with big
"Hi" badges. One Conventioneer is looking over at the lobby
below.
10.
A good-looking woman in a floral dress walks underneath them.
Graham is leaning against the glass.
CONVENTIONEER #1
...like to rip me off a piece of
that!
CONVENTIONEER #2
Fuck her 'til her nose bleeds.
The other cracks up.
GRAHAM
snaps alert and stares at Conventioneer #2.
CONVENTIONEER #2
sips his gin and tonic, senses Graham's stare. He smiles:
CONVENTIONEER #1
What the fuck are you lookin' at?
Graham looks away. The elevator stops. The door opens.
Conventioneer #1 drags Conventioneer #2.
CONVENTIONEER #l
(being pulled out
of elevator)
What are you, a faggot?
Both Conventioneers laugh as they walk down the hall.
Conventioneer #1 wiggles his fat hips and apes a limp wrist
Graham looks away.
CUT TO:
ZNT. HOLIDAY ZNN ROOM - VTR MONITOR: LEEDS FAMILY - NIGHT
We are seeing a videotape transfer of the Leeds family home
movie. Mr. Leeds and Mrs. Leeds are behind the table while
the youngest boy is in the center. His brother sits next
to him. The birthday cake has eleven candles on it. All
are mouthing silently: "Happy Birthday to you, happy birth-
day to you..." Mrs. Leeds has her arms crossed underneath
her breasts. She's a young mother, sensual and warm. She's
smiling. The camera must be on a tripod because Mr. Leeds
runs into the frame tousles his son's hair and kisses his
wife's cheek. He has thinning hair. He's a big man. He
looks like a nice guy. He darts out of the frame back to
the camera. They finish singing. The youngest Leeds boy
blows out the candles. Mr. Leeds holds up for the camera
a large yellow envelope that says: "Follow the ribbon." A
big yellow ribbon is attached to the envelope.
11.
The camera pans right as the youngest Leeds boy starts to
follow the ribbon... The image suddenly ours out. Video noise.
GRAHAM
has hit the stop button. He picks up a measured field sketch
of the master bedroom. The bloodstains are represented in
outline. Three are along the left wall. The arterial
splashes from Mr. Leeds are on the right wall. Mr. and Mrs.
Leeds' body positions are indicated on the king-size mat-
tress.
GRAHAM
(into the tape
recorder)
When they were dead -- except
possibly Mrs. Leeds -- he smashed
the mirrors and began selecting
shards that he used later on Mrs.
Leeds... What did he do in the
interval? Struggling with Mr.
Leeds and killing the others would
take less than a minute. What
else?
(beat)
Three bloodstains on the east wall,
not from Mr. Leed's arterial spray.
What did killer do after they were
dead?
Graham can't go any further. He is frustrated. He picks
up the phone and dials. He waits. Then:
GRAHAM
(into phone)
Molly?
MOLLY (V.O.)
(asleep)
Huh?
(beat)
Will? Is that you?
GRAHAM
It's me. I'll call you tomorrow,
sweetheart. Go back to sleep.
(beat)
I love you...
MOLLY (V.O.)
Mmmmh... I love you, too, Will.
Good night.
Will hangs up the phone. He reaches over and punches "Play"
on the VTR.
12.
WIDE SHOT: THE ROOM - GRAHAM
VTR backs up, starts to play and we see the image of Mrs.
Leeds again in the home movie: they follow the yellow rib-
bon down the stairs to a bicycle. It's indoors. It's rain-
ing outside. The eleven-year-old Leeds boy is ecstatic.
Mrs. Leeds smiles.
GRAHAM
(into tape recorder)
You moved the kids after you killed
them, didn't you? Did you arrange
them for your performance with Mrs.
Leeds on their bed? Did you tie Mr.
Leeds sitting up in bed? That's the
postmortem ligature on his chest.
Did you make them your audience?
Did you open their eyes? There is
something you can't afford for me
to know about. Isn't there? Mrs.
Leeds was lovely, wasn't she? It was
maddening to have to wear gloves when
you touched her, wasn't it?
(beat)
There was talcum powder on her leg.
There was no talcum powder in the
bathroom.
(beat)
The powder they found came out of a
rubber glove as you pulled it off
to touch her. You took off your
glove to touch her. DIDN'T YOU,
YOU SON-OF-A-BITCH?! You touched
her with your bare hands! And then
you put the gloves back an. And
you wiped her down! While your
gloves were off?
(shouts)
DID YOU OPEN THEIR EYES? THEIR DEAD
EYES?!
FAST MOVEMENTS: GRAHAM'S HAND
snakes out and hits the "Stop" button on the VTR.
PHONE
is picked up and we MOVE WITH IT to his face. Graham punches
numbers into the phone. He waits. He clamps dawn again.
He is cold, calm.
GRAHAM
Jack, this is Graham. Is Price still
in Latent Prints?
13.
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
He's working on the single print
index. What time is it?
Get him to Atlanta.
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
You said the guy down here is good.
GRAHAM
He is good. Bur not as good as Price.
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
What do you want to do?
GRAHAM
Mrs. Leeds' fingernails and toenails.
I think he took off his gloves, Jack.
(heat)
And dust all the corneas of all their
eyes.
CUT TO:
INT. ATLANTA DETECTIVE BUREAU - MOVING WITH GRAHAM, CRAWFORD
+ SPRINGFIELD -DAY
down the corridor.
SPRINGFIELD
Our people swear he wore surgeons'
gloves the whole time. They dusted
everything.
GRAHAM
The report didn't mention nails and
eyes.
SPRINGFIELD
Why do you think he took his gloves
off?
GRAHAM
Mrs. Leeds was a good-looking woman.
I'd want to touch her skin in an
intimate situation, wouldn't you?
SPRINGFIELD
(sudden distaste)
'Intimate? !"
GRAHAM
Yes. 'Intimate.' They had privacy.
(beat)
Everybody else was dead.
14.
Springfield looks at Graham. Springfield needs answers, not
voodoo. Then they enter the squad room. Twenty detectives
sit at desks. Graham and Crawford move to the back of the
class.
SPRINGFIELD
All right. House to house interviews
will be extended four additional
blocks. R & I has loaned us two
clerks to help cross-matching airline
reservations between Birmingham last
month and between Atlanta now.
(beat)
Dr. Princi.
DR. DOMINIQUE PRINCI, Chief Medical Examiner for Fulton
County, walks to the front and stands under a drawing of
teeth. He hold's up a dental cast.
DR. PRINCI
This is what the subject's teeth
look like. The Smithsonian in
Washington reconstructed them from
the impressions we took of bite
marks off the Leeds woman here and
off the Jacobi woman last month in
Birmingham.
(beat)
As you can see, he has pegged lateral
incisors -- the teeth here and here.
The teeth look like teeth from a small bear.
SPRINGFIELD
Investigator Graham has worked this
kind of thing before. Can you add
anything?
Graham doesn't like talking in public. He stutters and
starts to say something...
SPRINGFIELD
Can't hear you. Can you come up to
the front?
Graham walks to the front of the room.
GRAHAM
He may have a history of biting --
barroom fights or child abuse.
SPRINGFIELD
He only bit women so far, right?
GRAHAM
That's all we know about.
(MORE)
15.
GRAHAM (CONT'D)
(beat)
Most of the time in sex assaults the
bite mark has a livid spot in the
center. A suck mark. These don't.
So, for him, biting may be a fighting
pattern as much as sexual behavior.
(beat)
You could try emergency room
personnel, treatment for bite wounds.
I know that's pretty thin...
(beat)
He bites a lot.
SPRINGFIELD
What's average?
GRAHAM
Sex murder: three. He likes to
bite. Six bad ones in Mrs. Leeds.
Eight in Mrs. Jacobi...
(beat)
... that's all I have.
Graham sits down.
SPRINGFIELD
All right. Vice and Narcotics, take
the K-Y cowboys and the leather bars.
Marcus and Whitman heads up at the
funeral. The rest of you, your
assignments are on the sheet. Let's
go.
They start to rise. Springfield remembers.
SPRINGFIELD
One more thing: I've heard officers
referring to the killer as the 'Tooth
Fairy.
(on laughter)
Yeah, yeah, but I don't want to hear
that in public or internal memoranda.
That's it.
Detectives file out. Crawford and Graham remain.
Springfield crosses to them and they wait for all the other
detectives to leave.
SPRINGFIELD
(to Crawford)
We don't have shit, and we know it.
Dr. Princi joins them.
16.
SPRINGFIELD
(to Graham)
The Commissioner was saying you
were the one that caught Dr. Lecter
three years ago.
(beat)
He killed nine people, didn't he?
GRAHAM
Nine that we know of. Two didn't
die.
SPRINGFIELD
What happened to them?
GRAHAM
One's on the respirator at a hospital
in Baltimore. The other is in a
private mental hospital in Denver.
SPRINGFIELD
What did the psychologists say was
wrong with Lecter?
GRAHAM
Psychologists call him a sociopath.
They don't know what else to call
him.
SPRINGFIELD
What would you call him?
Graham doesn't answer.
SPRINGFIELD
To yourself...
GRAHAM
I call him a monster.
SPRINGFIELD
I understand he cut you pretty good...
GRAHAM
(cold right turn>
What about the dog?
SPRINGFIELD
It's at the vet's. The kids brought
it in with a puncture wound in the
abdomen. icepick or an awl.
GRAHAM
Was the dog wearing a collar with
the Leeds' name on it?
SPRINGFIELD
No.
17.
GRAHAM
Did the Jacobis in Birmingham have
a dog?
CRAWFORD
(alert)
A cat. We found a litter box
downstairs but not the cat.
Neighbors are watching for it.
GRAHAM
Why don't you get Birmingham P.D.
a methane probe out of D.C. and
have them cover the backyard...
maybe the cat's dead and the kids
buried it.
Crawford starts to move. The PHONE RINGS. Springfield
answers.
SPRINGFIELD
Yeah?
(waits)
Lemme put you on the speaker phone.
JIMMIE PRICE (V.O.)
Who am I talking to?
CRAWIIORD
Jimmie, it's me, Jack Crawford, and
you got Will Graham here.
JIMMIE PRICE (V.O.)
I got a partial with a tented arch
that's probably a thumb print and
a fragment of a palm.
Springfield reacts.
JIMMIE PRICE (V.O.)
Came off the oldest kid's left eye.
It stood out against an eight-ball
hemorrhage from the gunshot wound.
CRAWFORD
Can you make an identification off
it?
JIMMIE PRICE (V.O.)
Don't know. The palm came off the
nail of Mrs. Leeds' left big toe.
I want to work these up in my own
darkroom. I'll fax the prints down
to you this afternoon.
Hangs up.
18.
SPRINGFIELD
thought Graham was ridiculous. Now his expression is very
changed.
GRAHAM
senses Springfield's staring at him. Graham's face is blank.
He leaves. Springfield -- shaking Crawford's hand -- watches
Graham all the way to the door.
CUT TO:
EXT. ATLANTA POLICE HEADQUARTERS - GRAHAM s CRAWFORD - DAY
coming down the stairs. News media are all over Springfield,
the Commissioner, the Mayor's P.R. Officer in the b.g. No-
body recognizes Crawford and Graham except one short man, who
separates himself from the pack and darts up to them. He is
LOUNDS. He starts chasing behind them.
LOUNDS
Will Graham! Remember me? Freddie
Lounds? I covered the Lecter
case for the Tattler. I did the
paperback... !
CLOSE: GRAHAM
walking down the stairs. His face is locked like a steel
trap. He's repressing something powerful.
LOUNDS
(running on, behind
them)
When did they call you in, Will?
What have you got?
Graham won't answer him. They are on the sidewalk by now.
CRAWFORD
Lounds, give it a rest...
LOUNDS
Come on, Graham?! Talk to me!
Graham and Crawford are moving dawn the sidewalk now. Crawford
tries to block Lounds. Lounds moves around him, dogging Graham:
LOUNDS
How does this guy compare with
Lecter? How does he do them?
Right now he makes the mistake of grabbing Graham's arm to
turn him around.
19.
GRAHAM
Grabs Lounds by the labels, kicks his legs out from under
him and throws him over the hood of a car upside-down. The
impact STARS the WINDSHIELD Lounds is scared to death. The
violence totally surprises us. Graham's face is inches from
Lounds.
GRAHAM
(very low)
Keep the fuck away from me!
Crawford is pulling on Graham. He can't budge him. Graham
lets go.
WIDER: CRAWFORD PULLING GRAHAM AWAY
down the sidewalk and Lounds who slides off the car hood and
lands on all fours.
CRAWFORD
(over his shoulder
to Lounds)
Get the hell away from here, Lounds!
CUT TO:
INT. DINER, BOOTH - GRAHAM + CRAWFORD - DAY
Graham is staring into the black deep recesses of his coffee.
Crawford is looking at him. Finally:
GRAHAM
...snuck in the hospital while I
was sedated, flipped back the sheets
and shot pictures. The only decent
thing he did was run a black square
over my balls...
CRAWFORD
I know...
Graham looks away. Then he lights another cigarette.
GRAHAM
(back to business)
Atlanta and Birmingham can run
the thumb print against known sex
offenders. Five will get you
ten they don't come up with an
identification. Jimmie may in the
Finder program... if he's ever been
printed and in his Index.
20.
CRAWFORD
Say we've arrested a good suspect.
You walk in and see him. What
is there about him that doesn't
surprise you?
GRAHAM
I don't know, Jack. He's got no
face for me.
CRAWFORD
You can tell something about him
or we wouldn't have found the finger
print. ..
GRAHAM.
Don't expect too much from me, Jack,
all right?
(pause)
We'll get him one way or the other.
CRAWFORD
What's one way?
GRAHAM
We find an event that connects both
families. Same vacation hotel; same
hospital, different times. Then we
check employees and come up with a
male nurse, hairdresser, whatever...
(beat)
If we find out how he found them,
then we'll find him.
CRAWFORD
We're running it through the
computers now. So far there's no
event or service that doubles back
into both families. Plus they were
big consumers: snowmobiles, fishing
trips, scuba, videogames, lots of
routine medical and dental. It's
a haystack.
(beat)
What's the other?
GRAHAM
He makes noise going in and the
husband gets to a gun in time.
CRAWFORD
No other possibilities?
GRAHAM
You think I'm gonna spot him 'across
a crowded room?' That's Ezio Pinza
you're thinking about.
(MORE)
21.
GRAHAM (CONT'D)
(beat)
The Tooth Fairy will go on until we
get smart or get lucky. He won't
stop.
CRAWFORD
Why?
GRAHAM
Because he has a genuine taste for
it, Jack.
CRAWFORD
See? You do know something about
him.
GRAHAM
(long stare at
Crawford; then)
... I'm going to see Lecter.
Crawford's cup of coffee stops in front of his mouth:
CRAWFORD
For Christ's sake, why?
GRAHAM
(matter-of-fact)
To recover the mind set.
CUT TO:
INT. HOTEL ROOM - GRAHAM - DAY
In the middle of packing. Then the PHONE RINGS.
MOLLY (V.O.)
Hello, hotshot!
GRAHAM
Hey, baby! Where are you?
MOLLY (V.O.)
At the store. You doin' some good?
GRAHAM
None you'd notice. I'm lonely...
MOLLY (V,O.)
Me, too. And very erotic...
GRAHAM
Tell me about yourself.
MOLLY (V.O.)
Which part? That or the day-to-day.
22.
GRAHAM
(laughs)
Let's keep it the day-to-day stuff.
(beat)
How's Kevin?
MOLLY (V.O.)
Kevin's fine. He had to recover the
turtle eggs you two fenced in. The
dogs dug them up. Tell me what
you're doing.
GRAHAM
Eating junk food.
(beat)
They don't have a lock on anything,
Molly. There's not enough
information. Or I haven't done
enough with it...
MOLLY (V.O.)
Will you be in Atlanta for a while?
I'm not buggin' you about coming
home, I just wondered.
GRAHAM
Z don't know. I'm goin' up to
Baltimore this afternoon.
MOLLY (V.O.)
To do what?
GRAHAM
I have to see somebody.
There is a silence. Graham does not want to tell her that
he is going to see Lecter. Molly stays cool, she doesn't
pursue it.
MOLLY (V.O.)
I'm thinking about painting the
kitchen. What color do you like,
Will? Are you there?
GRAHAM
(coming back)
Yeah. Ah... yellow, let's paint it
yellow.
MOLLY (V.O.)
Yellow's a bad color for me. I'LL
look green at breakfast.
GRAHAM
Blue, then.
MOLLY (V.O.)
Blue is cold.
23.
GRAHAM
Hey, goddamn it, paint it shit-
brown for all I care...
(beat)
Look, I'm sorry. When I come home,
we'll go to the paint store together
and get some chips and...
Molly interrupts:
MOLLY (V.O.)
Will, I don't know why I'm talking
about this stuff...
(beat)
I called to tell you: I love you
and I miss you. And you are doing
the right thing. It's costing
you, too. And I know that. And
I'm here. I'LL be here whenever
you come home. Or I'LL meet you
anywhere. Anytime. That's what I
called to say...
Graham holds the phone close to him. As if it were a part of
Molly herself.
GRAHAM
Molly, dear Molly. Go to bed now,
baby. ..
MOLLY (V.O.)
GRAHAM
I love you...
WIDE SHOT: GRAHAM
slowly hangs up the phone. He sits, round-shouldered, on
the bed. All over the room are clothes out of drawers and
closets, videotapes and files: the mess of being only half-
packed.
CUT TO:
INT. CHESAPEAKE STATE HOSPITAL FOR CRIMINALLY INSANE
DR. CHILTON - DAY
DR. CHILTON
Dr. Bloom called me yesterday, Mr.
Graham. Or should I call you Dr.
Graham?
GRAHAM (O.S.)
I'm not a doctor.
(beat)
I need to see Lecter in as much
privacy as possible.
24.
TWO SHOT
Graham sits in front of his desk in a chair. He appears
repressed, clamped down. Dr. Chilton is a sincere Chief of
Staff, but not gifted.
DR. CHILTON
Dr. Lecter will stay in his room.
That is absolutely the only place
where he is not put in full body
restraints. One wall of his room
is a double barrier. I will have
a chair put just outside.
GRAHAM
I might have to show him some
material that could stimulate him.
DR. CHILTON
As long as it's on soft paper.
You may(Pause) find this curious.
He pulls an EKG tape from a drawer and points to the
spiky lines.
DR. CHILTON
Here Lecter's resting on the
examining table getting an
electrocardiogram. Complained of
chest pains. Pulse seventy-two.
Here he grabs the nurse's head and
pulls her down to him. Here he's
subdued by the attendant and
Lecter's shoulder is dislocated.
Do you notice the strange thing?
(pause)
His pulse never got over eighty-
five. Even when he tore into her
face.
Dr. Chilton looks over at Graham, perhaps expecting a.
response. There is nothing to read in Graham's face. It is
a blank.
DR. CHILTON
The consensus around here is that
the only person who has demonstrated
any practical understanding of Dr.
Hannibal Lecter is you, Mr. Graham.
Can you tell me anything about him?
GRAHAM
No.
25 .
DR. CHILTON
When you saw Dr. Lecktor's murders,
their 'style,' so to speak, were you
able to reconstruct his fantasies?
And did that help you identify him?
DR. CHILTON
looks at Graham. Dr. Chilton has seen a lot of hostility.
Right now he's seeing some more.
GRAHAM
(stands)
I want to see Lecktor now.
DR. CHILTON
Uh... sure...
INT. MAXIMUM SECURITY SECTION - DOOR - DAY
We hear three locks opening. The door opens. Graham enters.
An attendant behind Graham closes the door and we hear the
bolts lock again. As Graham is walking towards us, we WIDEN
and TRACK IN. It makes the b.g. disorienting as we get closer
to Graham's face. The CAMERA DROPS as Graham sits in a single
chair. We haven't yet seen what Graham looks at. Now:
GRAHAM'S POV: BARRED CELL
A 6x10 cage. In the center of the bars separating Graham
from the Occupant is a three-foot-square perspex sheet. The
occupant can't get at someone sitting in front of him. In
the perspex square is a letter -- passing drawer. In the
cell -- laying on his bunk -- is DR. HANNIBAL LECKTOR. He
appears to be asleep. His back is to Graham. He has not
stirred. Then:
LECKTOR
That's the same atrocious aftershave
you wore in court three years ago.
GRAHAM
I keep getting it for Christmas.
CLOSE: LECKTOR'S HEAD
turns to us. His small eyes drill into Graham's brain.
Lecktor's attitude is professionally psychiatric, as if Graham
is the patient.
LECKTOR
Did you get my card?
GRAHAM
I got it. Thank you.
26.
GRAHAM' S
struggle will be to keep locked-down inside himself all his
emotional reactions.
LECKTOR
And how is Officer Stuart? The one
who was the first to see my basement.
GRAHAM
Stuart is fine.
LECKTOR
Emotional problems, I hear. He was
a very promising young officer. Do
you ever have any problems, Will?
GRAHAM
No.
LECKTOR
Of course, you don't.
(pause)
I'm glad you came. My callers are
all professional. Clinical
psychiatrists from cornfield colleges
somewhere. Second-raters, the lot.
GRAHAM
Dr. Bloom showed me your article on
surgical addiction in the journal
of Clinical Psychiatry.
LECKTOR
And?
GRAHAM
Very interesting, even to a layman.
Lecktor rolls around and examines the term "layman" in his
head. Then:
LECKTOR
A layman.., layman. Interesting
term. So many experts on government
grants. And you say you're a
'layman?' But it was you who caught
me, wasn't it, Will? Do you know
how you did it'
GRAHAM
You've read the transcript. It's
all there.
LECKTOR
No it's not. Do you know how you
Did it Will?
27.
GRAHAM
It's in the transcript. What does
it matter now?
LECKTOR
(smiles)
It doesn't matter to me, Will.
GRAHAM
I want you to help me, Dr. Lecktor.
LECKTOR
Yes, I thought so.
GRAHAM
It's about Atlanta and Birmingham.
LECKTOR
Yes .
GRAHAM
You read about it, I'm sure.
LECKTOR
In the papers. I don't rear out the
articles.
(laughs)
I wouldn't want them to think I was
dwelling on anything morbid. You
want to know how he's choosing them,
don't you?
GRAHAM
I thought you would have some ideas.
LECKTOR
Why should I tell you?
GRAHAM
There are things you don't have.
Research materials... I could speak
to the Chief of Staff...?
LECKTOR
Chilton? Gruesome, isn't he? He
fumbles at your head like a freshman
pulling at a panty girdle.
(laugh;)
He actually tries to give me a
Thematic and Apperception test.
Hah. Sat there waiting for MF-13 to
come up. It's a card with a woman
in bed and a man in the foreground.
I was supposed to avoid a sexual
interpretation. I laughed in his
face.
(beat)
Never mind, it's boring.
28.
GRAHAM
You'll get to see the file on this
case. And there's another reason.
LECKTOR
Pray tell.
GRAHAM
I thought you might be curious to
find our if you're smarter than
the person I'm looking for.
LECKTOR
Then by implication, you think that
you are smarter than me, since you
caught me.
GRAHAM
No. I knew that I'm nor smarter
than you are.
LECKTOR
Then how did you catch me, Will?
GRAHAM
You had disadvantages.
LECKTOR
What disadvantage?.
GRAHAM
You're insane.
LECKTOR
You're very tan, Will.
Graham does not answer, If anything happens, there is a
tightening of the musculature repressing his reactions to
Lecktor.
LECKTOR
Your hands are rough. They don't
look like a cop s hands anymore.
That shaving lotion is something a
child would select. It has a ship
on the bottle, doesn't it?
Another silence. Lecktor's eyes look as if they're drilling
into Graham's head, trying to find out things. Trying to
find a way to hurt Graham. He's very threatening. Then
relaxes:
LECKTOR
Don't think you can persuade me with
appeals to my intellectual vanity.
29.
GRAHAM
I don't think I'll persuade you.
You'll do it or you won't. Dr.
Bloom is working an it anyway, and
he's the best...
LECKTOR
(interrupts)
Do you have the file with you
GRAHAM
Yes.
LECKTOR
Pictures?
GRAHAM
Yes.
LECKTOR
let me have them,, and I might
consider it.
GRAHAM
No.
LECKTOR
Do you dream much, Will?
GRAHAM
Good-bye, Dr. Lecktor.
LECKTOR
You haven't threatened to take away
my books yet.
Graham gets up and starts to walk away.
LECKTOR
let me have the file. Then I'll
tell you what I think.
Graham stops at the door before he knocks for the attendant.
Then he folds the abridged file tightly into the sliding
tray. Lecktor pulls it through.
GRAHAM
sits in the chair. He wants a cigarette. He doesn't take
one. He waits. And he watches. What he sees:
30.
GRAHAM'S POV: EXTREME CLOSE PAN THROUGH CELL OP
DR. LECKTOR
Toothbrush, mirror, sink, Sryrofoam cups, soft paper jour-
nals, T-shirts, neatly stacked hospital pads, sneakers with-
no shoelaces, the wall, seatless toilet bowl, etc, etc
All the objects are brilliantly lit with sharp bluish light.
Their edges are sharper and more defined than normal. The
shadows of the bars make hard-edged stripes. It is a high
resolution, highly brilliant sec of images. It feels like a
hyper-perception of reality, a super-realism perceived by the
mind of Graham. It is interrupted when:
LECKTOR (O.S.)
There is a very shy boy, Will.
GRAHAM
snaps back to the present, looks at Lecktor.
LECKTOR
What were the yards like?
GRAHAM
Big backyards, fences, some hedges,
why?
LECKTOR
Because, my dear Will, if this
Pilgrim imagines he has a
relationship with the full moon,
he might go outside and look at it.
Have you seen blood in moonlight,
Will? It appears quite black. If
one were nude, it would be better
to have outdoor privacy for this
sort of thing.
GRAHAM
That's interesting.
LECKTOR
It's not 'interesting'. You thought
of it before.
GRAHAM
Yes. I'd considered it.
LECKTOR
You came here to look at me, Will.
To get the old scent again, didn't
you?
GRAHAM
I want your opinion.
31.
LECKTOR
I don't have one right now.
GRAHAM
When you do have one I'd like to
hear it.
LECKTOR
May I keep the file?
GRAHAM
I haven't decided yet.
LECKTOR
I'll study it, Will. When you get
more files, I'd like to see them,
too. You can call me. When I
have to call my lawyer, they bring
me a telephone. Would you like to
give me your home number?
Threat.
GRAHAM
No.
LECKTOR
Do you know how you caught me,
Will?
GRAHAM
Goodbye, Dr. Lecktor. You can
leave messages for me at the number
on the file.
Graham bangs on the door. Locks are starting to be unlocked.
Graham can't wait to get out of here. He wants the locks to
get unlocked faster!
LECKTOR
Do you know how you caught me?
The door is now open. Graham fights down the impulse to run
through. As Graham -- controlled -- steps out, what he hears
is :
LECKTOR (O.S.)
The reason you caught me, Will, is:
we're just alike. You want the
scent? Smell yourself.
The DOOR SLAMS shut on Lecktor.
CUT TO:
32.
INT. CHESAPEAKE: STATE HOSPITAL FOR THE CRIMINALLY
INSANE, CORRIDOR - GRAHAM - DAY
walks down the corridor. He's very stiff. He's walking
towards the outside door. The door is a rectangle of white
light that sends daggers of brilliance across the highly
polished institution's floor. Graham walks for the light.
CUT TO:
EXT. CHESAPEAKE STATE HOSPITAL FOR THE CRIMINALLY
INSANE - ENTRANCE - DAY
The DOOR SLAMS open and Graham comes out into daylight and
air. The air is tactile to him. He can almost feel the
motes of dust and light that swim freely. He breathes.
GRAHAM'S POV: GRASS
is dappled with pointillist points of color: a spectral
breakup. As it returns to a normal green...
TIGHT SHOT: GRAHAM
breathes. He stands in front of the sign on the building:
"CHESAPEAKE STATE HOSPITAL FOR THE CRIMINALLY INSANE." He
leans against the railing and breathes clean air. The image
is flattened in a LONG LENS. We hear a CLICK. It FOCUSES
and DE-FOCUSES.
CUT TO:
INT. CXR - FREDDIE LOUNDS - DAY
is photographing Graham with a Nikon and a 500mm Questar
reflector. Be puts the camera to his eye again and hits the
button. The MOTOR DRIVE knocks off three shots.
CUT TO:
INT. G:,TEWAY LABS - SCREEN DIVIDED INTO FOUR QUADRANTS - DAV
The quadrants display 4 home movies at six times normal
speed: an old couple, 2 men, a baby and a family. The fam-
ily quadrant slows to normal. We TIGHTEN in on it. We will
come to know these people as the SHERMANS. An 11-year-old boy,
a I4-year-old girl, Mr. Sherman and Mrs. Sherman. A handmade
sign says: "THE NEW HOUSE - SWIMMING POOL." Mrs. Sherman has
brown hair. She wears a bikini. She has a nice body. She's
sensuous and tan in her thirties. She dives into the pool.
The next shot: water. Out of the water surfaces Mrs.
Sherman. She shakes her head and water sprays off her hair.
33.
A couple drops hit the lens and diffuse a small area of the
image. Mrs. Sherman puts her hands on the side of the pool
and shoves down to hoist herself out. Her breasts are glis-
tening. Her teeth are white. She smiles at the camera.
Whoever controls the console puts Mrs. Sherman in reverse.
It runs forward again. Mrs. Sherman's glistening body coming
our of the water...
REAR SHOT: CONSOLE AND A MAN
Beyond is the screen. The man at the console is FRANCIS
DOLLARHYDE. He has a weightlifter's body. We don't see his
face. Black goggles with red lenses are on the console. He
puts them on and watches Mrs. Sherman...
CUT TO:
INT. NEGATIVE PROCESSING ROOM - DOOR - DAY
It slams open. Dollarhyde enters and walks through the dim
green light past the developers in his black goggles with
red lenses. Thousands of feet of negative move through the
tank on rollers. Dollarhyde walks past the baths. We TRACK
WITH him to the door.
CUT TO:
INT. LIGHT TRAP-DOOR - DAY
slams open. Dollarhyde enters. As he reaches the next door...
CUT TO:
INT. DRYER ROOM - DOLLARHYDE - DAY
enters and we TRACK WITH him past film snaking across pul-
leys and rollers through the drying cabinets. As Dollarhyde
passes the dryers...
INT. CAFETERIA - DOLLARHYDE - DAY
in the brilliant aluminum and peach cafeteria gets coffee.
A newspaper's under his arm. As he waits to pay, EILEEN
approaches. She, too, wears goggles, but on a lanyard around
her neck. She's petite, fragile. Dollarhyde towers over her.
EILEEN
Mr. Dollarhyde?
CLOSER - DOLLARHYDE
looks up.
34.
His face bears the scars of a Z-plast procedure to fix a
harelip and cleft palate. Immediately, in characteristic
gesture, he curls his right hand under his nose to hide
his Z-plast scars.
DOLLARHYDE
Yes, Eileen.
EILEEN
Bill told me to tell you there was
a variation in the gamma of the
number three developer. But he
caught it.
DOLLARHYDE
And?
EILEEN
On the densitometer it came out
within tolerances.
DOLLARHYDE
Thank you, Eileen.
Graciously Dollarhyde lets her go first and then he crosses
to an empty table. He opens his newspaper.
TRACK ACROSS FRANCIS DOLLARHME'S BACK
where the fabric stretches between his shoulder blades and
past his cheap haircut's line at the nape of his neck into
his left shoulder to reveal he's reading the National Tattler.
It's about Will Graham with a Freddie Lounds byline. The
only words we catch are: "FBI Manhunter Consults Fiend Who
Tried To Kill Him, by Freddie Lounds." We also catch: "The
Tooth Fairy - Psychopathic Slayer of Entire Families in
Birmingham and Atlanta..."
CLOSE: FRANCIS DOLLABHYDE
takes off the black goggles with red lenses. His eyes are
white violet. He turns the page.
NATIONAL TATTLER'S OLD PICTURE OF GRAHAEI
It's the one Lounds took after Graham was slashed by Lecktor.
It's a black-and-white square image of a sleeping man with a
myriad of tubes running into his stomach and a temporary
colostomy bag. A black square is imposed over his genitals.
The caption reads: "Federal Manhunter Will Graham Recover-
ing from Near-Fatal Slashing By Hannibal 'the Cannibal'
Lecktor."
35.
EXTREMELY CLOSE: SECOND IMAGE OF WILL GRAHAM
in newsprint, the one Lounds took at the Chesapeake hospi-
tal. The half-tone dots comorising the image are visible.
Dollarhyde's massive finger slides across the image, brush-
ing it sensitively. It works its way to Graham's face and
the finger stops and blots it out.
CUT TO:
INT. CHESAPEAKE STATE HOSPITAL FOR THE CRIMINALLY INSANE,
LECKTOR'S CELL - LECKTOR - NIGHT
receives a telephone. The attendant who brought it waits.
LECKTOR
Thank you so much. I'll call you
when I'm finished.
Attendant hesitates. Then he leaves. Lecktor is allowed to
call his attorney in privacy.
LECKTOR
picks up the phone and punches in his number.
LECKTOR
Can I have the number of Dr. Sidney
Bloom, University of Chicago,
Department of Psychiatry, please?
(beat)
Thank you.
(dials again)
Dr. Sidney Bloom, please.
OPERATOR (V.O.)
He's not in today, bur I'll connect
you with his office...
LECKTOR
What's his secretary's name
again...?
OPERATOR (V.O.)
Linda King. Just a moment.
The TELEPHONE RINGS four times.
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
Linda King's desk.
LECKTOR
Hi, Linda. ..
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
Linda doesn't come in nights.
36.
LECKTOR
Maybe you can help me. This is
Bob Greer of Blaine & Edwards
Publishing Company. Dr. Bloom
asked me to send a copy of 'The
Psychiatrist and the Law' to
someone. Linda never sent me the
address and phone number.
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
She'll be in, in the morning...
LECKTOR
I have to catch Federal Express
within about five minutes. I'd be
immensely appreciative if you'd
pull it out of her Rolodex for me.
There is a pause. Lecktor is waiting.
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
She doesn't have a Rolodex.
LECKTOR
(smiling)
I'LL bet she has a call caddy right
next to her phone.
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
Yeah. ..
LECKTOR
Well, zip that little Pointer right
on down to the letter G.
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
Okay.
LECKTOR
We're looking for Graham. The man
the book is supposed to go to is a
Ms. Will Graham.
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Tenth and Pennsylvania, Washington,
D.C.
LECKTOR
Now I'll bet it has his home
address there, too
GRADUATE STUDENT (V.O.)
(beat)
3680 DeSote Highway. Marathon,
Florida.
37.
LECKTOR
Thank you very much.
ON the phone as Lecktor hangs up.
CUT TO:
INT. L1011, COACH SECTION - CRAHAM - DAY
Squeezed into a narrow seat. He sits on the aisle. Next to
him is a seven-year-old girl, at the window her mother. He
opens and reads a Telex in yellow envelope: "BIRMINGHAM P.D.
FOUND JACOBI CAT DEAD IN BACK YARD. KIDS MUST HAVE BURIED
IT. HE KILLS THE PETS. REGARDS, CRAWFORD."
STEWARDESS
Clears the trays.
GRAHAM
contorts his body to pull his briefcase from under the seat
in front. He extracts the Leeds and Jacobi files. From each
he takes a snapshot of a happy family picture and paperclips
them to the front of the files. He stands them on the dinner
tray and stares at them.
GRAHAM'S POV: HAPPY FAMILY PORTRAITS
SLOWLY ZOOM IN TO the Jacobi family. As we get CLOSER and
CLOSER TO Mrs. Jacobi in a bikini, her face abstracts into
pointillist dots of color...
DISSOLVE TO:
EXT. MARATHON BOATYARD - DIESEL ENGINE - DAY
moves down to us...
MOLLY
approaches in SLOW MOTION raising a bag of shrimp and a six-
pack of Dos Equis.
INT. UNFINISHED HULL - GRAHAM
guiding the engine down, wears faded violet shorts and no
shirt. We see a huge circular scar ending in a hook on his
abdomen as the engine lands...
38.
GRAHAM
(reverb, distant)
Block her off, Mitch...
Graham waves to Molly...
DISSOLVE TO:
GRAHAM
On the dock. The hot sun turns the water a brilliant aqua
and silver. Graham's tan body in the violet shorts on the
silver wood... Molly reaches in the bag for another shrimp.
Graham looks at her...
MOLLY SMILES
as she rips the head off the shrimp. The warm mouth, Her
shiny teeth look like a Pepsodent commercial.
HEAD COMING OFF SHRIMP
Viscera trail. As the shrimp is ripped apart we see:
GRAHAM'S EYES
In horror. And O.S., we hear SCREAMING coming from a differ-
ent place as we...
CUT TO:
INT. L1011 - GRAHAM - DAY
snaps awake. The child next to Graham is screaming. People
stare. The mother is shouting at him. Graham is confused,
stunned... He doesn't know what's wrong. He looks around...
The Stewardess is handling things on his tray in front of
him.
TRAY
The file has spilled open. Crime photos of the Leeds and
Jacobi families with mirrors in their eyes and the almost
separated head of Mr. Jacobi glaring at a weird angle -- the
pornography of it all -- are spilled across Graham's tray and
in his lap...
GRAHAM
mumbles apologies, scrambles to collect crime photos. The
mother wants her seat changed.
39.
Graham is excruciatingly embarrassed, clumsily shoving them
back into their files...
CUT TO:
INT. JACOBI HOUSE, LIVING ROOM - WIDE ON DOOR - DAY
We MOVE INTO the knob... it starts to turn. Slowly. Sud-
denly: door SLAMS open revealing real estate agent GEEHAN
and Graham,
GEEHAN
It was last Thursday. This
couple from Duluth. I had them
down to the short strokes talking
mortgages -- I mean, that man could
have written a check for the whole
goddamn place. I'm figuring:
Geehan , you lucky sonofabitch, you
gonna unload this turkey.
(beat)
Then the squad car rolls up. They
ask a coupla questions. The good
officers give them the whole
fuckin' guided tour. Who was
laying where. Where all the blood
sprayed... terrific!
(beat)
Off they go in their Sedan DeVille
the hell out of here.
GRAHAM
Have any single men asked to look
at it?
GEEHAN
Haven't asked me.
(beat)
Took four coats of interior latex,
five in places.
(pause)
You can drop that key in the
mailbox. You don't have to come
back by, do you?
GRAHAM
Uh-uh.
Geehan leaves. The door closes with a SLAM.
WIDE - GRAHAM
In the empty white living room. Graham walks OUT OF FRAME.
Bare floors and dead air. His footsteps echo in the empty
house.
CUT TO:
40.
EXT. JACOBI HOUSE - WIDE - DAY
An image from Bill Owens' "Suburbia." A family house. No
different than any other family house around. But it is
somehow sinister in its vacancy. It ought to be littered
with bicycles and wagons: the signs and symbols of suburban
normalcy. TRACK LEFT to reveal the back of Graham staring at
the house from across the street.
CUT TO:
EXT. NEXT DOOR HOUSE - GRAHAM - DAY
In a different position staring at the rear of the house from
a neighbor's bushes. We don't know why Graham is staring at
the Jacobi house from different vantage points.
CUT TO:
EXT. SIDEROAD - GRAHAM'S POV: 3/4 VIEW OF JACOBI HOUSE
DAY
Graham looking at the house from the third vantage point.
JACOBI BACKYARD
And turned earth where the cat was found.
REARSHOT: GRAHAM
starts backing up and we MOVE WITH him. He looks over his
shoulder at us and keeps walking backwards. Trees enter the
frame on the left and right.
TRACKING GRAHAM IN PROFILE
He stumbles through underbrush into a dry streambed. He
backs up a slope on the other side and finds himself in some
trees. There are three. Graham looks around.
BRANCHES
now obscure the Jacobi house. Something glints right...
SEARCHING THROUGH GRASS
At the base of one elm tree. A ring tab from a soft drink
can is half-buried in leaves. Graham's fingers move leaves
aside.
41.
GRAHAM
looks slowly up the tree trunk.
RED CREEK MUD
Wedged into the first strong limb, it's from the instep of
a boot.
GRAHAM
hangs his coat on the branch of a neighboring tree and climbs
the far side of the elm. His head and his cheek raise
through limbs. His eye is six inches away when he finds a
soft drink can wedged between limb and trunk.
GRAHAM
I love it. Sweet Jesus, yes come
on, can.
He photographs its placement with the camera on his belt,
bracketing exposures. Then he tears a small branch and uses
it to put the can in an evidence bag. Graham climbs higher
until his foot is level to where he saw the mud. He looks
to his left. Something he sees stops him cold.
A SYMBOL
is carved in the wood.
GRAHAM
photographs this as well as a branch that's been trimmed by
a cutting tool. Then he looks...
OVER GRAHAM'S SHOULDER: THE JACOBI HOUSE
A perfect view.
GRAHAM
high in the tree, leans back against the trunk. Re seems
frozen. Then:
GRAHAM
(mumbling to himself)
... after you killed the cat and
threw it into the yard, my man,
you climbed up hero and waited.
You used a cutting tool on these
branches so you could see.
(MORE)
42.
GRAHAM (CONT'D)
You watched the children and passed
the time whittling and dreaming.
(beat)
When night came, you saw them
passing their bright windows and
you watched the shades go down,
and you saw the lights go out one
by one. And after a while, you
climbed down and you went in to
them, didn't you?
(shouts)
DIDN'T YOU, YOU SON OF A BITCH!
YOU WATCHED THEM ALL GODDAMN DAY
LONG! !
(beat)
That's why you like houses with big
yards, the easier to see them
CUT TO:
INT. JACOBI HOUSE - GEEHAN + PROSPECTIVE BUYERS
DAY
Geehan showing some new candidates around the house. It's a
YOUNG COUPLE and they look interested.
GEEHAN
They don't build houses this way
anymore: solid lath and plaster
construction. None of your drywall
stuff and aluminum studs here. No
sirree Bob!
WIFE
I like it, hon.
HUSBAND
Let's go to your office and see if
we can work out some terms...
GEEHAN
Great. You goin' love this house!
Geehan's got a sale. He's at the front door. He opens
it.
CUT TO:
EXT. JACOBI HOUSE - DOOR - DAY
The door is opened by Geehan and his big smile, shepherding
his customers-to-be out the front door. The smile falls off
Geehan's face. The young buyers look quizzically.
43.
GEEHAN
has deflated against the doorframe.
GEEHAN'S POV: THREE ATLANTA P.D. CARS, A FORENSICS
TRUCK, + ATLANTA P.D. HELICOPTER
with flashers going are converging onto the scene. Will
Graham is at the nearest police car talking on a cellular
phone .
GRAHAM
I'm sending the can to Jimmie
Price to dust for prints.
(fast beat)
I need Bowman in Documents to fall
on this carving. Then I need the
Firearms and Toolmarks Section out
here on the severed branch. I
need to know what kind of cutting
tool he used.
CUT TO:
INT. WASHINGTON, FBI OFTICE - CRAWFORD - DAY
On phone to Graham.
CRAWFORD
Is it weird?
GRAHAM (V.O.)
The mark? Yes.
CRAWFORD
If the Documents section can't do
it... I'll send it up to Langley...
GRAHAM (V,O.)
Did Price get anywhere with the
single prints off the Leeds?
As another line on Crawford's phone rings, we PULL BACK to
his secretary, SARAH's area.
SARAH CRAWFORD
(fading up) (fading down)
Special Agent Crawford's No. The killer's not in
office.. the Single Print Index. He
must never have been printed.
TIGHTEN ON Sarah. We don't hear what's said to her.
44.
SARAH
No, Mr. Graham is not in the
office, bur let me...
(beat)
Wait, I'll be glad to...
(beat)
Yes, he'll be in the office later,
but let me...
She holds the receiver as though it had died in her hand
and crosses into Crawford's office.
CRAWFORD
(to Graham)
... bur if we find him, the print
as evidence will get a conviction,
Hold on. What?
SARAH
He asked for Will. He said he
might call back tonight. I tried
to hold him... I'm sorry... He said
'tell Graham "broken mirrors."'
CRAWFORD
(to Graham)
Will. Get right back here. He
just called.
EXT. JACOBI HOUSE - GXAHAM - DAY
GRAHAM
Who did he ask for?
CBAWFORD (V.O.)
You.
CUT TO:
INT. WASHINGTON FBI OFFICE - CRAWFORD + GRAHAM- LATER
It's now sunset out the window. Both men are tense. On
Crawford's desk are two new telephones and a tape recorder.
Also in the room are Sarah and DR. SIDNEY BLOOM, a forensic
psychologist. Food wrappings and Styrofoam coffee cups
litter his desk. Bloom only ate half his pastrami on rye:
DR. BLOOM
Anybody want the rest of the
cholesterol special?
CRAWFORD
Thanks, no.
GRAHAM
...so how do I play him, Sidney?
45.
DR. BLOOM
Compliment him. Tell him most
people don't have the intellectual
capacity to understand what has
happened, that sort of thing.
(beat)
If he's paranoid, play into his
grievance. Let him air it.
(beat)
If he's picked you as an adversary
and wants to gloat, give him what
he's after. A little at a time.
CRAWFORD
... very little. If it's all
electronic switching we'll need a
minute for the trace.
Graham turns to the window. Crawford taps a pencil on
his desk. They wait,
CUT TO:
SAME - LATER - NIGHT
Crawford's feet are on his desk. Sarah yawns. Graham leans
against the other wall. Stony silence. RING. They react.
FOUR more RINGS.
SARAH
(into phone)
Special Agent Crawford's office.
(beat)
Bill, call back on twenty-four four.
We need to keep this line clear...
She hangs up. Crawford takes Bill's call on the other line.
The rest exhale tension and go back to waiting.
CUT TO:
INT. MEN'S ROOM - FAUCET - NIGHT
Runs water.
GRAHAM.
stares at it. He puts his hands under and runs cold water
on his upturned wrists.
CUT TO:
46.
INT. CBAWFORD'S OFFICE - CRAWFORD - NIGHT
Looking through reports. He picks up a pencil and starts
to correct a line when: RING.
CRAWFORD
Where the hell's Graham!
RING .
SARAH
He went to the men's room.
RING .
CRAWFORD
For Christ's sake get him!
An assistant runs out. RING. Sarah's anxious.
CUT TO:
EXT. CORRIDOR - GRAHAM - NIGHT
Running. He slips on the polished floor, recovers himself
... He darts through Crawford's door.
CUT TO:
INT. CXAWFORD'S OFFICE - GRAHAM
tries to catch his breath as Sarah snaps up the phone.
SARAH
Special Agent Crawford's office.
(she nods; it's him)
Could you hold on a second, I'll
see if I can find him.
Sarah punches hold. Crawford is counting seconds. He
raises his thumb. Graham grabs the phone.
GRAHAM
(calm)
This is Will Graham. Can I help
you?
VOICE (V.O.)
No. I can help you.
GRAHAM
I don't understand.
VOICE (V.O.)
Atlanta and Birmingham.
47.
CRAWFORD
scribbles on a piece of paper.
GRAHAM (O.S.)
Do you know something about that?
VOICE (V.O.)
Why do you think I called?
GRAHAM (O.S.)
I get a lot of calls. Most of them
are from people who say they know
things .
Crawford holds up the piece of paper. It says: "Chicago
phone booth. Police scrambling."
GRAHAM
Talk to them a few minutes and
you can tell they don't have the
capacity to even understand what's
going on. Do you?
VOICE (V.O.)
You tell me what you know about him.
I'll tell you whether you're right
or not.
GRAHAM
Let's get straight who we've
talking about.
(beat)
Are you the man I'm interested in?
VOICE (V.O.)
I don't think I'll tell you.
GRAHAM
He's right-handed.
VOICE (V.O.)
Most people are.
GRAHAM
He's misunderstood.
VOICE (V.O.)
Cut the general crap.
Graham stares at Crawford. Crawford makes a circular motion
with his hand: string him on.
GRAHAM
He's very strong physically.
VOICE (O.S.)
That's true.
48.
GRAHAM
He's white and six feet tall. You
haven't told me anything yet.
VOICE (O.S.)
Describe exactly what you think he
did to Mrs. Leeds and I'll tell you
if you're right or not.
GRAHAM
I don't want to do that,
VOICE (O.S.)
Goodbye.
Graham and us hear a telephone booth door slam open. We hear
a receiver fall with a CLANG. He hear faint voices. The
receiver bangs as it's swung on the cord. Everyone in the
outer office hears it on the speaker phone. They also hear:
2ND VOICE (V.O,)
Freeze. Don't even twitch. Now
lock your fingers behind your head
and back our of the booth slowly.
Spread 'em!
Graham drops the phone. Tension floods out of him. In the
outer office people are cheering,
CLOSE ON GRAHAM
His eyes almost start to tear in relief as he turns his back
and looks out the window.
CRAWFORD'S
ecstatic .
2ND VOICE (V.O.)
Who am I speaking to?
Graham grabs the phone.
GRARAM
Will Graham, FBI.
2ND VOICE (V.O.)
This is Sergeant Stanley Riddle,
Chicago Police Department. Will
you tell me what the hell's goin'
on
GRAHAM
You tell me. You have a man in
custody?
49.
SERGEANT RIDDLE (V.O.)
Damn right.
(beat)
Freddie Lounds.
ZOOM IN ON Graham's face. It locks in rage.
SERGEANT RIDDLE (V.O.)
Can you hear me?
(beat)
Are you preferring charges against
him or you want him to just run along...
GRAHAM
(hollers)
Yeah. I'm preferring charges!
Obstruction of justice. You lock
that asshole up. You hold him for
the U.S. Attorney! You...
CUT TO:
EXT. CHICAGO STREET, PHONE BOOTH - FREDDIE LOUNDS - NIGHT
grabs for the phone.
LOUNDS
Will, listen...
CUT TO:
INT. CHESAPEAKE HOSPITAL, DR. CHILTON'S OFFICE -
DR. CHILTON - NIGHT
There is a KNOCK on his door.
DR. CHILTON
Come in.
GUARD
Dr. Chilton.
DR. CHILTON
Yes?
GUARD
When we were cleaning out Dr.
Lector's cell, he heard us coming
and hid something in a book.. We
got him out of there and dug around...
Dr. Chilton reacts.
DR. CHILTON
(fast)
Do you have it?
50.
GUARD
Yeah. It's right here.
Guard pulls three sheers of toiler paper with writing on them
out of his pocket. We HOLD ON it.
DR. CHILTON
is already dialling a number.
DR. CHILTON
Put it down on my desk blotter and
don't touch it again. Has anyone
else handled it except you?
GUARD
No.
CUT TO:
INT. CRAWFORD'S OFFICE - NIGHT
Sarah answers the phone.
SARAH
Special Agent Crawford's office.
In the b.g. all hell is breaking loose. Crawford and Graham
are both hollering into the phone at Freddie Lounds.
SARAH
Speak up, please. I can hardly
hear you!
DR. CBILTON (V.O.)
(shouting)
I said I need to speak to Special
Agent Crawford or Mr. Graham.
Right away!
SARAH
(holding one ear
closed)
I'm sorry. Special Agent Crawford
and Graham are tied up tight now.
Can I get them to call you back?
DR. CHILTON (V.O.)
(going nuts)
This is Dr. Chilton. At the
Chesapeake Hospital. Will you
please call them this is very,
very urgent!!
(beat)
I'll hold on.
51.
Sarah puts Chilton on "Hold." TRACK her INTO the room. She
starts to say something. Crawford holds up a hand...
CRAWFORD
(hollering)
How'd you know 'broken mirrors?'
Bribe a cop?
(beat)
Tell it to the U.S. Attorney,
Lounds!
GRAHAM
(seeing Sarah)
What is it?
SARAH
It's a Dr. Chilton, sir. He says
it's urgent.
Graham punches the phone and takes the call. Crawford's
yelling at Lounds.
GRARAM
It's Will Graham...
DR. CHILTON (V.O.)
Well, it's about goddamn time! I
have a note here, or two pieces of
a note, that appears to be from the
man who killed those people in
Atlanta and....
GRAHAM
Where did you get it?!
Graham waves Crawford to the other phone.
DR. CHILTON (V.O.)
From Hannibal Lecktor's cell. It
was hidden in a book.
CRAWFORD
(to Lounds)
Run along to the police station,
Freddie. We'll talk to you when
we get around to it...
Crawford punches into Dr. Chilton's call.
CUT TO:
INT. CHESAPEAKE HOSPITAL - DR. CHIITON - NIGHT
GRAHAM (V.O.)
Can you read it to me?
52.
DR. CHILTON
It's written on toilet tissue.
(reads )
'My dear Dr. Lecktor, I wanted to tell
you I'm delighted that you've taken an
interest in me. I know that you alone
can understand what I'm becoming.
(reads )
'I know you alone understand the
reality of the people who die to
help me in these things,
understand that they are only
elements undergoing change to fuel
the radiance of what I am becoming.
Just as the source of light is
burning.
(beat)
Mr. Graham, there's a hole torn
and punched our, then it says...
(reads)
'I have a complete collection of
your press notices. f think of
them as unfair. As unfair as
mine. The "Tooth Fairy." What
could be more inappropriate.
Investigator Graham interests me.
Very purposeful locking. I hope
we can correspond.
(beat)
There's another piece missing here.
I'LL read the bottom part.
(reads )
'After I hear back from you, I
might send you something wet.
Signed: Avid Fan.
(to Graham)
It has teethmarks pressed in it at
the bottom.
CRAWFORD
punches the other line.
CBAWFORD
Sarah, order a chopper. I want the
next thing smoking and I don't care
whose. Ours. DCPD. Or the Marines.
Then call Documents. Tell them to
scramble a team. I want everybody
moving in five minutes.
(punches into Dr.
Chilton's line)
Dr. Chilton, please do not handle
the note. I have a Documents team
on the way to you by helicopter to
pick it up.
53.
GRAHAM
After we've worked the note we
want to replace it in Lecktor's
cell. I don't want him to know
we found it.
(beat)
Where's Lector now?
DR. CHILTON (V.O.)
In a holding cell.
GRAHAM
How long can you keep Lecktor out
without him getting suspicious?
DR. CHILTON (V.O.)
Three, four hours.
CRAWFORD
Have your building superintendent
shut off the water and most of the
lighting in Lecktor's hall. Have
him walk through carrying tools
and being pissed off or something,
DR. CHILTDN (V.O.)
Yes. We can manage all that.
CRAWFORD
(hits another line)
Brian. We have a note coming in on
the fly. Possibly from the Tooth
Fairy. Number one priority.,
It has to go to Hair and Fiber,
Latent Prints and Documents.
Graham and I will be walking it
through...
CUT TO:
INT. FBI BUILDING, HAIR AND FIBER SECTION - BEVERLY KATZ
- NIGHT
is bent over a microscope. She's under it. Behind her
a male assistant brushes a child's bib overalls with a
metal spatula. He is collecting whatever debris comes off
the clothing onto a white paper sheet. BEVERLY KATZ lifts
something with tweezers. She leans away from the micro-
scope .
BEVERLY KATZ
One hair, Graham. Maybe a thirty-
second of an inch. A couple of
blue grains. I'll work it up.
What else have you got?
54.
GRAHAM
Hair from Lecktor's comb. Whiskers
from an electric razor they let
him use. This is hair from the
cleaning man.
CUT TO:
INT. LATENT PRINTS - JIMMIE PRICE - NIGHT
winces at the sight of the paper. He slips it under the
helium cadmium laser.
THE HELIUM CADMIUM LASER
bombards the toilet paper with light. Growing smudges appear
on the paper.
PRICE (O.S.)
Perspiration stains, nothing else.
(beat)
How many guys handled this without
gloves ?
GBAHAM (O.S.)
The cleanup man and Lecktor...
PRICE (O.S.)
The cleanup man scrubbing sinks
probably had the oil washed off
his fingers. But the others...
(beat)
I could fume it, Will, but couldn't
guarantee the iodine stains would
fade our in the time you've got to
get it back.
GRAHAM (O.S.)
Ninhydran? Boosted with heat?
PRICE (O.S.)
No. We couldn't wash it after. I
can't get a print off this, Will.
There isn't one.
CRAWPDRD (O.S.)
Dammit.
CUT TO:
INT. DOCUMENTS - LLOYD BOWMAN - NIGHT
is underlit by his translucent light box. The note is on
it.
55.
BOWMAN
(without looking up)
How long do I have?
CRAWFORD
Twenty minutes max.
GRAHAM
The main thing is: how was Lecktor
to reply.
BOWMAN
That's probably in the part Lecktor
tore out.
(beat)
At the top it says: 'I hope we can
correspond.' And then the hole
begins .
(beat)
It looks like Lecktor went over it
with a felt tip pen and then folded
it and pinched most of it away.
GRAHAM (O.S.)
He doesn't have anything to cut with.
BOWMAN
moves under a rostrum camera setup. There are lights mounted
on a 360-degree rim even with the base of the rostrum Bowman
hits a switch. The top lights go out. The side lights are
very oblique.
MACRO CLOSEUP: NOTE
Under the oblique light the tooth impressions stand out.
We hear a SHUTTER CLICK as they are photographed.
BOWMAN (O.S.)
Now we can mash it a little.
A pane of glass descends on the note and flattens the jagged
edges of the hole.
EVEN CLOSER: THE EDGES
are tattered and smeared with vermillion ink.
LIGHTING PANEL
Bowman's fingers hit it. The room is darkened, except for a
dull glow from the infrared source..
56.
BOWMAN
(chants under
his breath)
You're so sly, but so am I...
ROSTRUM
Bowman switches to a closed-circuit TV camera.
MONITOR
The image focuses as Bowman focuses the lens. Then:
The ink smear is gone. Fragments of writing appear.
BOWMAN (O.S.)
Aniline dyes in the inks in felt-tip
pens -- which is what Lecktor has
-- are transparent to infrared. The
Tooth Fairy's ballpoint isn't...
CRAWFORD (O.S.)
That could be the tip of a 't.
Here and here. And here.
BOWMAN (O.S.)
At the end is the tail of what
could be an 'r.
GBAHAM, CRAWFORD + BOWMAN
at the monitor lit by the infrared glow.
GRAHAM
We know the Tooth Fairy reads the
Tattler. The stuff about me and
Lector? I don't know any other
paper that carried it...
CRAWFORD
...there's three 't's' and an 'r'
in Tattler.
GRAHAM
Personal ads?
As they run out of the room:
CUT TO:
INT. FBI CONFERENCE ROOM - WIDE SHOT - NIGHT
Everyone we've seen is assembled: Graham, Crawford, Beverly
Katz, Jimmie Price and Bowman.
57.
CRAWFORD
The Chicago office is running through
all the personal ads in the Tattler
right now.
BOWMAN
When do they go to press?
GRAHAM
In thirty-five minutes.
BOWMAN
Christ!
CRAWFORD
After we find Lecktor's response,
we substitute our own. Somewhere
tomorrow night the Tooth Fairy will
actually buy Tattler, looking for
Lecktor's message. Here's
what he'll find, Bill.
BILL
(reads )
'Dear Avid Fan: inherit my mantle
and surpass my achievements.
Mementoes for you at Baltimore
Central. Left luggage 72683.
CRAWFORD
It's a Secret Service letter drop
and stakeout. He shows: we take
him.
(beat)
Anything from Chicago?
SARAH
Not yet.
CRAWFORD
Let's get to the physical.
PRICE
There was no print. I'm here for
kicks .
BEVERLY KATZ
One whisker. Scale counts and core
size match Hannibal Lecktor's. So
does color. The color's different
than the Tooth Fairy's taken in
Birmingham and Atlanta. Three blue
grains and some dark flecks went to
Brian's end.
58.
BRIAN ZELLAR
The grains are commercial granulated
cleanser with chlorine. Must be from
the cleaning man. There are several
particles of dried blood. Not enough
to type.
GRAHAM
Bowman?
BOWMAN
It's Snow White toilet paper.
National distribution.
Bowman sets up his photographs on an easel.
BOWMAN
(beat)
If there's any doubt, we matched the
indents of the bitemark on the note
against the Smithsonian teeth. This
is your boy...
(beat)
He folded the bottom part, including
what Lecktor tore out. In this
enlargement of the back side,
oblique light revealed impressions.
We can make out: 'six-six-six'.
(beat)
I didn't spot it until I had this
high-contrast print. I advised
Chicago as soon as I saw it.
CRAWFORD
Issue the toilet paper tear as a...
The phone RINGS. Graham punches the speaker.
CHESTER (V.O.)
This is Chester here. Who am I
talking to?
GRAHAM
Will Graham, Jack Crawford...
CHESTER (V.O.)
We got an ad order in tonight's
"Tattler" with 'six-six-six' in it.
It's being Telexed to you right now.
GRAHAM
Read it.
CHESTER (V.O.)
(reads)
'Dear Pilgrim, you honor me.'
59.
GRAHAM
That's it. Lecktor called him a
Pilgrim when he was talking to me...
CHESTER (V.O.)
'You're very beautiful.
CBAWFORD
Christ...
CHESTER (V.O.)
'I offer one hundred prayers for
your safety. Find help in john
6:22, 8:16 9:1;Luke l:7, 3:1;
Galatians 6:11. 15:2; Acts 3:3;
Revelations 18:i; Jonah 6:8...
(beat)
It's signed: 'Bless you, 6:6:6'
Bowman is already running through the onion-skinned pages of
a Bible he took from a shelf. Nobody talks to him.
CRAWFORD
(checks watch)
... twenty-eight minutes.
(low to Sarah)
Cryptography at Langley?
SARAH
They got shot a Telex. They're on
if now...
Everybody exhibits disciplined surface calm. The tension is
screaming underneath.
BOWMAN
furiously looking through pages of the Bible, suddenly stops.
BOWMAN
(to Graham)
No.
(beat)
The numbers aren't right for a
jailhouse alphabet code. It's a
book code.
(beat)
And your message has to go out in it,
or he'll know it's not Lecktor talking
to him.
CRAWFORD
Book code?
60.
BOWMAN
'One hundred prayers' could be the
page number. The paired numbers
and the scriptural references could
be line and letter. But what book?
CBAWFORD
Not the Bible?
BOWMAN
No. Galatians 15:2? Galatians
has only six chapters. The same
with Jonah 6:8 -- Jonah has four
chapters. Lecktor wasn't using a
Bible.
GRAHAM
Then the Tooth Fairy named the
book in the part Lecktor tore out.
BOWMAN
Right .
(beat)
What about sweating Lecktor?
GRAHAM
They tried sodium amytal on him
three years ago to find where he
buried a Princeton student.
(beat)
He gave them a recipe for potato
chip dip.
BOWMAN
it has to be a book the Tooth Fairy
would know Lecktor has in his cell.
GRAHAM
He'd know it from articles he's
read about Lecktor...
CRAWFORD
Willingham, when he tossed his
cell, took Polaroids so they could
get everything back in place...
BOWMAN
Have him meet me with pictures of
Lecktor's books...
CRAWFORD
Where?
BOWMAN
Library of Congress.
Bowman's our the door.
61.
GRAHAM
Twenty-five minutes. We won't
make it in time.
CRAWFORD
(looks at watch)
We let Lecktor's message run as is
and decode it after. Or we pull
it, work our the code and put ours
in next week.
GRAHAM
Can we still get Lecktor's message
out of the paper?
CRAWFORD
Yes. And I'm leery of running
Lecktor's message without knowing
what it says.
GRAHAM
And if we pull it, we lose a week...
We only have two to the next full
moon .
CRAWFORD
It's your call, Will. What do we
do?
Graham has to decide. Long pause. Then he looks up:
GRAHAM
Run it.
CRAWFORD
What if it encourages the Tooth
Fairy to do something besides
write?
GRAHAM
We will feel sick for a very long time.
CUT TO:
INT. ST. LOUIS AIRPORT NEWSSTAND - FLOOR - DAY
The floor is in focus. In the b.g., are busy, out-of-focus
images: newspapers, magazines, people passing. We don't
know why we are HOLDING on the empty floor. Then, a stack
of "Tattlers" hits the floor. The headlines include: "HEAD
TRANSPLANT and ASTRONOMERS GLIMPSE GOD!"
CUT TO:
INT. WASHINGTON HOTEL ROOM - WILL GRAHAM - NIGHT
asleep in bed. Sheets are twisted between his legs.
62.
His arms are widespread. The phone RINGS. Will Graham
doesn't hear it. It keeps RINGING. MOVE IN on Graham.
Finally, he stirs, then fights his way up out of sleep.
PROFILE: GRAHAM
sits up. His hand snakes out and grabs the phone to make it
stop ringing.
GRAHAM
Who is it?
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
Will, Bowman just broke the code. It
was a James Beard cook book. You
need to know what it says right now.
GRAHAM
What'd it say?
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
I'll tell you in a second. Now
listen to me: everything is okay,
I'm taking care of it, so stay on
the phone when I tell you.
GRAHAM
Tell me now.
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
It says: 'Graham home, 3860 DeSoto
Highway, Marathon, Florida. Save
yourself. Kill them all.
(beat)
It's your home address, Will. The
bastard gave him your home address.
GRAHAM
Get me a plane...
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
Wait, Will...
GRAHAM
Get me a plane!
CRAWFORD (V.O.)
I'll pick you up in...
GRAHAM
I won't be here.
On the move...
CUT TO:
63.
INT. GRAHAM HOUSE, MARATHON, FLORIDA, BEDROOM - MOLLY
NIGHT
She's asleep. Kevin enters.
KEVIN
Mom. ..
Kevin looks over her shoulder out the window as if he's
scared of something.
MOLLY
What time is it?
KEVIN
Mom, someone's outside. There's
noises ...
MOLLY
starts and sits up...
INT. GRAHAM HOUSE - HALLWAY & KITCHEN
are empty. Dark shadows play against darkened walls. O.S.
we hear crashing wave. Moonlight makes trees whipped in
the wind throw dappled shadows across the corridor. Molly
enters the frame in CLOSE SHOT. We TRACK WITH her in a
THREE-QUARTER REAR SHOT behind the back of her head. She
feels vulnerable. The dappled leaves whip across her face
in a sudden gust. Molly's head snaps around.
MOLLY'S POV: GLASS PORTICO
with the tree moving in the wind. Beyond is the ocean with
moonlight on the surf. Nothing.
MOLLY
moves into the kitchen. A streetlight hits part of the
kitchen with a dim phosphorescent green.
KEVIN (O.S.)
Mom?
MOLLY
(whispers)
Go into your room and lock the door.
KEVIN (O.S.)
Mom?
64.
MOLLY
Go ahead!
He catches Molly's eye:
MOLLY'S POV: KITCHEN WINDOW
A silhouette shape moves past the window. The angle of the
streetlight plays its shadow on the wall against Molly.
FRONTAL CLOSEUP: MOLLY
frozen. She hears the outer screen door being opened...
BEHIND MOLLY & OVER HER SHOULDER TO KITCHEN DOOR
The shape is at the door. Molly takes a couple of steps,
and can't go any further.
MOLLY
breathless, opens the door. Fast.
DOOR
reveals Florida State TROOPER.
TROOPER
Are you all right, ma'am?
MOLLY
(fast breathing)
Yes. Why?
(beat)
What's going on
CUT TO:
EXT. GRAHAM HOUSE - TROOPER + MOLLY - NIGHT
As Molly comes out of the house, we PULL BACK and CRANE UP
INTO a very HIGH ANGLE WIDE SHOT revealing: Four state
trooper cars parked on Graham's property. On the road are
two roadblocks 100 yards apart on either side of Graham's
house. All their flashers are going. Molly looks around in
confusion. We see her turn to the sea, a coast guard launch
pulls to 100 yards off the beach. Its searchlight plays on
the water's edge then across the property. Molly look; at
all the policemen...
CUT TO:
65.
EXT. AIRPORT - GULF STREAM JET - DAY
advances on us, its engine screaming. Its front wheel brakes
to a stop right before CAMERA.
DOOR
opens. Running down the stairs and across the tarmac is
Will Graham in shirtsleeves with a Car-15 assault rifle with
collapsible stock. His eyes scan the perimeter.
FBI MEN
moving fast, follow Graham. Their eyes sweep the terminal area.
One carries an Uzi submachine gun, the other two, handguns.
A CORDON OF FLORIDA STATE TROOPERS
hussle Molly and Kevin between them from their cars towards
Graham. Two carry suitcases.
GRAHAM + MOLLY + KEVIN
inside the protective barrier of men.
HIGH ANGLE: THE AIRPORT
Graham moves Molly and Kevin up into the Gulf Stream. FBI
men follow. The troopers back off. The flashers on their
cars are still turning. PAN RIGHT with the Gulf Stream as
it taxis to the head of the runway. It pauses a moment, then
blasts down the runway and up into the morning sun.
CUT TO:
INT. BALTIMORE SAFE HOUSE, FOYER - DOOR - DAY
HOLD. Then it opens. Molly and Kevin, followed by Graham.
Unmarked FBI cars are parked on the front lawn. Molly enters
the foyer, looks around and stops.
HOUSE INTERIOR
Holiday Inn decor.
MOLLY
Who decorated this place, Richard
Nixon?
Molly takes a deep breath. Then lets it out. She's tired.
Graham takes her hand.
66.
GRAHAM
...sorry, Molly. I'm sorry this
happened to you.
MOLLY
You didn't do it to me, Will; it's
happened to us.
(touches his face)
And if I survive the wallpaper
we'll be okay...
(Graham has to smile)
He's after you now, isn't he?
She didn't check to see that Kevin is our of earshot.
Graham does.
GRAHAM
It's a precaution...
(to Kevin)
Why don't you run down to the bay.
They got a swimming float.
KEVIN
I'll hang around in here. I'll
just be in the kitchen, Mom...
GRAHAM
(to Molly)
What is he? Afraid to leave you
alone with me now?'
(beat)
He read the Tattler piece, didn't
he?
MOLLY
He didn't know you had been in a
mental institution. Be asked me
if I knew. I said yes. I wanted
to talk to him. He said he wanted
to bring it up to you. Face to
face .
GRAHAM
Good for him.
(beat)
Thanks a lot, Freddie!
(to Kevin)
Kevin. We're going grocery
shopping .
CUT TO:
INT. SUPERMARKET - GRAHAM + KEVIN - DAY
push a basket collecting stuff from the shelves. Other
families are shopping The place is medium-crowded. Mind-
dulling MUZAK comes from the ceiling.
67.
KEVIN
Is there anything I need to know to
see about Mom?
GRAHAM
No. You're very well-protected.
No one can find our where you are.
KEVIN
Barry's mom had this newspaper. It
said you killed the guy in
Minnesota and were in a mental
hospital. Is it true?
GBAHAM
Yes .
KEVIN
I figured I'd ask you...
GRAHAM
I was in the psychiatric wing. It
bothers you, finding out I was in
there... doesn't it?
KEVIN
I told my dad before he died, I'd
take care of Mom. And I'll do it.
(beat)
This guy wants to kill you?
GRAHAM
We don't know that.
KEVIN
Are you gonna kill him?
GRAHAM
No. It's just my job to find him.
(beat)
I was in the hospital after Garrett
Jacob Hobbs.
KEVIN
How did it happen?
GRAHAM
Hobbs was insane. He was attacking
college girls and he killed them.
KEVIN
How?
GRAHAM
With a knife.
(MORE)
68.
GRAHAM (CONT'D)
(beat)
I found a curly piece of metal in
the clothes of one of the girls.
The kind of shred a pipe threader
makes. I was taking a look at
steam fitters, plumbers. It took
a long time. In one place there
was a resignation letter from a
man named Hobbs. I saw it and it
was.., peculiar.
(beat)
I was going up these stairs to
Hobbs' apartment. I was halfway
up when he shoved his wife down
at me. She was dying.
(beat)
I sent the officer with me to call
a SWAT team. But I could hear kids
in there and screaming. I couldn't
wait .
KEVIN
You went in the apartment?
GRAHAM
Yes. Hobbs had one of his
daughters from behind. He was
cutting her. I shot him.
We get the feeling Graham is leaving out lots of pieces and
gives Kevin only the bare bones of what he needs to know.
GRAHAM
I kept thinking there must be some
way I could have handled it better.
It kept replaying in my mind.
Later I got depressed. A doctor
friend of mine, Dr. Bloom, asked
me to go into a hospital. After a
while I got some distance on it
and was okay.
KEVIN
Did the girl die?
GRAHAM
No.
KEVIN
She got all right?
GRAHAM
...after a while.
KEVIN
And Hobbs died?
69.
GRAHAM
(nods)
... yes.
Kevin pauses, then asks with 11-year-old innocence:
KEVIN
Killing somebody feels that bad?
EXTREMELY CLOSE: GRAHAM
turns and stares at Kevin:
GRAHAM
Kevin: it's the ugliest thing in
the world.
Kevin thinks about this for a long time. He nods. He feels
he understands Graham and is closer to him for it:
KEVIN
What kind of coffee do you like?
GRAHAM
Huh?
KEVIN
You like that Colombian stuff, don't
you?
Kevin reaches for the coffee and puts it in the basket.
KEVIN
Mom likes that, too.
REAR SHOT: KEVIN + GRAHAM
walk down the aisle. Graham puts his hand over Kevin's
shoulder. They look like father and son. As they disappear
around a corner...
CUT TO:
EXT. BALTIMORE SAFE HOUSE, BACKYARD - REAR SHOT: GRAHAM +
MOLLY - NIGHT
Beyond is Chesapeake Bay and the nightlights of Baltimore
reflecting across it. The swimming float bobs in the
distance. One yellow light is on it.
FRONTAL: MOLLY + GRAHAM.
The grass looks cold in the moonlight. Holly wears a heavy
cardigan.
70.
Behind them -- with yellow lights -- the house looks like
a motel.
MOLLY
It's hard to have anything, isn't it?
Rare to get it, hard to keep it. This
is a damn slippery planet.
When she said this she was staring out to sea. Now she turns
to look at Graham and puts a hand on his arm. He still stares
out to sea:
GRAHAM
Slick as hell.
Then Graham looks at her and covers her hand with his own.
MOLLY
You remember when we first met?
And were together alone in that
room. And the exhilaration was
too much to hold on to. And then
something flickered across your
face like a shadow and I asked you
what was wrong?
GRAHAM
I remember.
MOLLY
Do you remember what you said?
GRAHAM
Yes. I said this is too good to live...
Molly stares into his eyes.
MOLLY
Time is luck, Will.
(heat )
I know the value of our days...
They stare into each other. There's a pause. They rise.
She puts her arm around Graham's waist. They start towards
the house.
MOLLY
Let's go to bed. I'll rub your back.
CUT TO:
INT. FBI CAFETERIA - CRAWFORD + BLOOM - DAY
CRAWFORD
I need to talk to you about Will
Graham.
71.
BLOOM
What about him?
CRAWFORD
I need to ask you questions of a
psychological nature.
BLOOM
Remember when you asked for a
study on him, I refused. Same
goes for now.
CRAWFORD
That was Peterson upstairs.
BLOOM
It was you who did the asking.
CRAWFORD
He doesn't think you run mind games
on him.
BLOOM
I wouldn't presume to try.
CRAWFORD
You're never alone in a room with
Graham, are you? You're smooth
about it, but you're never one-on-
one with him. Why's that? Do you
think he's psychic?
BLOOM
He's an eideteker. He has almost
total recall. But I don't think
he's psychic. What he has it empathy
and projection He can assume your
point of view and mine.., and some
other points of view that scare and
sicken him.
CRAWFORD
Why aren't you ever alone with him?
BLOOM
Because I'm professionally
concerned about him. And he'd
pick up on that. He's fast. He
hates being prodded and poked.
(beat)
So do I.
(beat)
What do you want?
CRAWFORD
His nervous breakdown followed Hobbs.
Could he kill again if he had to save
his life? Or would he hesitate?
72.
BLOOM
I'll tell you the events. The
psychology's none of your business.
Hobbs was trying to cut his eleven-
year-old daughter's throat. Graham
shot him with his .38 six times.
Hobbs still didn't go down. He had
to wade in...
CRAWFORD
That's when it happened?
BLOOM
No. It happened when Graham went
to see Hobbs' daughter four months
later in the hospital. She saved
her carotid artery.., but lost
three fingers and her larynx. She
was connected up to a voice box.
When Graham went to see her, she
asked him -- through the speaker:
'Why did you have to kill my
daddy? '
(beat)
That's when Graham had his nervous
breakdown.
CRAWFORD
What's the bottom line?
BLOOM
If he pushes too deep into our boy's
mind-set, he may destroy himself.
(beat)
What are you planning, Jack?
CRAWFORD
Could he handle a direct contact?
BLOOM
I don't recommend it.
GRAHAM (O.S.)
You don't recommend what, Sidney?
Crawford is surprised at Graham's entry. Bloom isn't.
BLOOM
Crawford has a proposition. I
don't think it's a good idea.
GRAHAM
If the Tooth Fairy listens to
Lecktor, he'll come for me. So
we're going to set me up as bait
to draw him out. Give him a
clean shot.
(MORE)
73.
GRAHAM (CONT'D)
(beat)
That's what you were thinking,
isn't it?
Crawford's embarrassed. Bloom said Graham was fast.
GXAHAM
I'll use Lounds.
Now Bloom's surprised...
GRAHAM
Sidney, he doesn't read the "Sunday
Times literary supplement. He
reads Lounds in the "Tattler."
(beat)
And I want this over with... Fast.
CUT TO:
INT. WASHINGTON APARTMENT - GRAHAM + LOUNDS - DAY
Graham leans against a table, his back to a window.
GRAHAM
I believe he's socially
maladjusted. Laughed at by his
contemporaries...
LOUNDS
How does he rate compared to Dr,
Hannibal Lecktor?
GRAHAM
He's not as intelligent.
PULL BACK to reveal Bloom, Crawford, a photographer and
assistant. Graham motions for Lounds to turn off his
tape recorder.
GRAHAM
(to Bloom)
What have we missed?
BLOOM
He may have an unconscious
homosexual conflict. A fear of
being gay. He objects to the word
'fairy.' Plus smeared bloodstains
indicate that he put the shorts on
Charles Leeds after he was dead.
I believe he did this to emphasize
his lack of interest in Mr, Leeds.
Graham motions Lounds to turn the tape recorder on again.
74.
GRAHAM
The killer has sexually molested
all his male victims. He is a
homosexual and impotent with
persons of the opposite sex.
(beat)
Our forensic psychologists have
projected he may have been the
product of an incestuous home
life .
(added afterthought)
And probably had sexual relations
with his mother...
Crawford stifles a laugh...
LOUNDS
How long will you stay in
Washington?
GBAHAM
Until we've taken out the Tooth
Fairy.
Graham gestures for Lounds to turn off the tape recorder.
GRAHAM
All right. Let's shoot the
pictures .
LOUNDS
(to Crawford)
I want shots with me and Graham
together .
Graham reacts.
LOUNDS
C'mon, c'mon, c'mon. You want
this to look real, don't you?
STILL PHOTOGRAPHER'S POV THROUGH CAMERA: GRAHAM + LOUNDS
Lounds lays Graham's arm over his own shoulder and mugs :or
the camera. Behind him is the flood-lit Capitol dome and
the sign of a motel across the street.
GRAHAM
Keep the motel sign across the
street just slightly out of focus.
He has to be able to read it, but
it can't look too obvious.
Lounds barks orders to the still photographer and splits.
The photographer starts breaking down his gear. Crawford
takes Graham aside.
75.
CRAWFORD
(low)
Asian studies at Langley said the
mark you found on the tree is a
Chinese character considered a
positive or a lucky sign in
gambling. The character also
appears on a mah-jongg piece.
(beat)
It means Red Dragon.
(beat)
That mean anything to you?
GRAHAM
No.
CUT TO:
EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. PARKING LOT - GRAHAM, CRAWFORD + SPURGEN
7:30 PM
SPURGEN, chief SWAT instructor from Quantico, examines the
parking lot. We've cut in mid-dialogue.
SPURGEN
...if he's smart he'll approach
from the front, pass, and take you
from the back. How well do you
hear?
GRAHAM
Pretty well.
SPURGEN
I'm gonna spray your suit jackets.
It'll be invisible in this light,
but you'll stand out like a zebra
for us.
(beat)
They told me you checked out a .44
Charter Arms Bulldog.
GI(AHAM
Yes .
SPURGEN
Good. You'll load these, Ever
fire them?
Spurgen hands Graham a glycine envelope containing 25 rounds
of .44 Special ammunition.
GRAHAM EXAMINES ONE ROUND
Instead of a lead bullet, there's a matte-black, blunt-nosed
cylinder .
76.
GRAHAM
Glaser Safety Slugs?
SPURGEN
(nods )
... commercially prohibited.
(beat)
Number Twelve shot in liquid Teflon
in a copper casing. On impact it
all opens up in the target. Expect
the recoil. They're hot loads.
Body armor?
GRAHAM
Kevlar Second Chance.
SPURGEN
I hope you have a second chance...
GRAHAM
Because he's gone for the head shot
seven out of eight times'
SPURGEN
You got it.
GRAHAM
Let's walk the route.
As they start across the parking lot:
CUT TO:
INT. LAMBERT ST. LOUIS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT - FLOOR
DAY
We've been here before. The floor is empty. In the WIDE
ANGLE -- OUT OF FOCUS -- the NEWSSTAND OPERATOR is squatted
down reading the "Chicago Tribune." In the empty space is
dumped a bundle of "Tattlers" A pair of black zippered boots
enters and stands behind the man.
NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
(without looking)
What is it?
VOICE (O.S.)
A "Tattler."
NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
You'll have to wait until I bust a
bundle.
One black boot kicks the "Tattler" bundle.
VOICE (O.S.)
Now.
77.
NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
(hot)
I said wait 'til I bust a bundle.
Understand?
A hand and a flash of bright steel rip through the FRAME.
The wire is cut with a POP. A dollar bill is thrown on
the floor. The hand whips a "Tattler" out from the center of
the bundle. RAISE UP WITH the outraged Newsstand Operator.
NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
Hey. Hey you.
The retreating man turns to face him. It is Francis
Dollarhyde.
DOLLARHYDE
Me?
NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
Yeah, you. Fuckin' told you...
DOLLARHYDE
(interrupting)
You told me what?
He starts coming back. He rakes off his silver sunglasses
revealing the white violet eyes.
DOLLARHYDE
You told me what?!
CLOSE: NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
NEWSSTAND OPERATOR
You got a quarter comin' back.
CUT TO:
EXT. WASHINGTON APARTMENT, PARKING LOT - GRAHAM'S CAR -
NIGHT
pulls into the prescribed space. It's raining. He kills the
engine and gets out.
HIGH ANGLE: GRAHAM
exiting the car. The image is in GREEN AND BLACK. We are:
EXT. ROOFTOP - SWAT #1
behind the balustrade in a prone firing position sighting
through a heavy-barrelled Heckler and Koch Model 93 with a
Startron scope.
78.
A SECOND HIGH ANGLE: GRAHAM
also in GREEN AND BLACK. Reveal we are:
EXT. SECOND ROOFTOP - SWAT #2
with the same rifle sweeping the parking lot. He reacts to
something to his left.
GRAHAM
... walking along the determined line, fifty yards from the
apartment building.., hears something through the delicate
patter of the rain.
GRAHAM'S POV: CORNER OF BUILDING
A distant "plop-plop-plop" of running feet...
GRAHAM'S
eyes tighten.
CORNER OF BUILDING
HOLD. Then entering around the corner is a running MAN.
He's 6'2". He's heavy and wears a running suit with the
hood up. His face is lost in its shadow.
RUNNER'S RIGHT HAND
is gloved and slips into the pocket of his jacket, grasping
something...
RUNNER'S FEET ACROSS WET BLACK TARMAC
splash through shallow puddles.
GRAHAM'S FACE
in anticipation. The foot beats are getting LOUDER...
GBAHAM'S EYES
like taut wire about to snap.
79.
WIDE PROFILE: GRAHAM
on the left. The Runner enters on the right. In SLOW MOTION
as they cross, Graham slams him sideways...
RUNNER
is knocked off balance and slams face forward into the side
of a car. He comes off the car violently, to turn, to
fight ...
.44 BULLDOG
comes up.., pressure on the trigger.
RUNNER'S HEAD
turns INTO CAMERA. He is a black man with a moustache and
scared eyes staring into the .44. His hands shoot into the
air:
RUNNER (MAN)
Yo, boss. Plastic and cash in the
right pocket...!
GRAHAM
(re the mistake)
God-dammit!!!
Walking away, Graham rips off his jacket: and the Kevlar vest.
Coming off the expectation of contact, Graham is explosive.
The Runner looks at Graham as if he's crazy: Spurgen and two
D.C. cops are running in.
RUNNER
Arrest dat sucker...!
Crawford catches up to Graham:
CRAWFORD
You okay?
Graham shoulders past Crawford He throws the Kevlar vest
across the parking lot. He almost killed the man. Meanwhile,
Spurgen is with the Runner.
SPURGEN
It was a mistake . Sorry we...
RUNNER
'Sorry' yo' mama!!
Runner pissed off -- starts towards Graham. Spurgen stops
him.
80.
SPURGEN
Hold on! We thought you were
someone we're trying to catch...
RUNNER
(backs up)
Hold onto this!!
(grabs his groin)
I get dat cannon stuck up mah
face?! Car dirt splattered up
and down mah Calvin Kleins?!
'Catch somebody?!' You couldn't
catch yo' ass with yo' right hand!
You lucky you muther-fuckers catch
a cold! Who the hell goin' pay my
cleanin' bill? Huh?
HUGE LAUGHTER which is coming from...
CUT TO:
INT. "TATTLER" GARAGE - ELEVATOR DOOR - NIGHT
slides open. Lounds and TWO SECRETARIES are cracking up.
He apparently told them the funniest joke they ever heard.
SECRETARY
See you, Freddie.
LOUNDS
pleased with himself, walks to his car.
REAR: LOUNDS' HEAD
enters FRAME, unlocking his car door. A hand falls on
Lounds' shoulder and turns him INTO CAMERA: Lounds' self-
satisfied smile still beams. A chloroformed rag jams
into his face. A massive hand holds his head and neck
steady and is nor bothered by his struggles.
CUT TO:
INT. DOLLARHYDE HOUSE (ST. LOUIS) - LOUNDS - NIGHT
is unconscious. A hand puts ammonia under his nose.
Lounds regains consciousness. He tries to move. He can't.
There are sanitary napkins covering Lounds' eyes and mouth.
The one on his mouth is removed. We will see ONLY Lounds.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Are you cold? Would you like a
blanket?
81.
LOUNDS
Was I in an accident?
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
No, Mr. Lounds. You'll be just fine.
LOUNDS
My back hurts, my skin. Did I get
burned? I hope to God I'm not burned.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Burned? Burned. No. You just
rest there. I'll be right back.
LOUNDS
Let me lie down. Listen, I want
to call my office. My God, I'm in
a Stryker frame. My back's broken.
Tell me the truth.
Footsteps are going away.
LOUNDS
What am I doing here?
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Atoning, Mr. Lounds.
Lounds reacts.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Do you know who I am, Mr. Lounds?
LOUNDS
I don't want to know.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
According to you I'm a sexual
failure. An animal, you said.
(beat)
You know now, don't you?
LOUNDS
Yes .
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Do you feel privileged?
LOUNDS
I'm very scared.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Do you pray to God, Mr. Lounds?
LOUNDS
Yes .
82.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Do you believe God is in attendance
here, Mr. Lounds?
LOUNDS
I don't know...
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
In a little while I'll help you
understand.
A kettle WHISTLES.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
I'll be right back.
(singsong)
Don't... go away...
As if he had any choice. Lounds' face moves; He strains.
His arms are glued to the chair. Dollarhyde's hand comes
back with a cup of tea and a straw. Lounds sips.
LOUNDS
I'd do a big story. Anything you
want to say. Describe you any way
you want or no description!
The hand rips off the sanitary napkins covering Lounds' eyes.
Lounds jams his eyes shut. The lights brighten. A single
finger taps the top of his head.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Open your eyes, Mr. Lounds.
LOUNDS
No. I don't want to see you.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Mr. Lounds, you're a reporter.
You're here to titillate your
readers. If you don't open your
eyes, I'll staple your eyelids to
your forehead.
A finger taps Lounds on his chest. A touch on his eyelids.
Lounds slowly opens his eyes. His face goes white.
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
(singsong)
Well: here...I...am...
LOUNDS' POV: THE RED DRAGON
Dollarhyde opens and drops the black silk kimono.
83.
His muscular frame bears the full body tattoo of William
Blake's Red Dragon -- the head on Dollarhyde's chest, the
tail snaking down and wrapping around one of Dollarhyde's
legs. His back is to us in a weight-lifter's pose. A
rolled-up stocking covers Dollarhyde's head to just below
his nose. Dollarhyde's teeth are jagged and brown-stained.
And he smiles at Lounds in front of the white screen.
LOUNDS (O.S.)
Oh my dear God Jesus.
LOUNDS
turns away. The shape of Dollarhyde passes behind his head.
The kimono is on again.
PAST LOUNDS' HEAD: SCREEN
A slide appears. It is Blake's painting.
DOLLARHYDE
Look at the screen. That is William
Blake's 'The Great Red Dragon and
The Woman Clothed with the Sun.
Do you see?
LOUNDS
Yes ...
Next picture: Mrs. Jacobi, eyes wide.
DOLLARHME
Do you see?
LOUNDS
Yes .
CLICK. Next slide. Mrs. Leeds alive, locked into a silent
scream in her bedroom.
DOLLARHYDE
Do you see?
LOUNDS
Yes.
CLICK.
LOUNDS
staring in horror. We will not see the rest of the slider.
DOLLARHYDE
Mrs. Leeds harlequined with blood,
her husband beside her. Do you see?
84.
LOUNDS
Yes .
DOLLARHYDE
Mrs. Jacobi after her changing.
(as Lounds nods)
The Dragon rampant. Do you see?
LOUNDS
Yes .
DOLLARHYDE
Freddie Lounds. Your photograph.
Do you see?
LOUNDS
Oh, God.
DOLLARHYDE
Do you see?
LOUNDS
Please, no.
DOLLARHYDE
'No' what?
LOUNDS
Not me.
DOLLARHYDE
Are you a man?
LOUNDS
Yes.
DOLLARHYDE
Do you imply that I'm a queer?
LOUNDS
God, no.
DOLLARHYI)E
Are you queer, Mr. Lounds?
LOUNDS
No.
REAR OF DOLLARHYDE'S HEAD
Beyond him is the screen and the image of Freddie Lounds with
Graham's arm over his shoulder.
85.
DOLLARHYDE
Before me you are a slug in the sun.
You are privy to a great becoming
and you recognize nothing. You are
an ant in the afterbirth.
(beat)
It is your nature to do only one
thing correctly: tremble. Bur fear
is not what you owe me. Lounds:
you and the others, YOU OWE ME AWE!
(long pause)
We have one more piece of work to do.
Dollarhyde leaves. Lounds closes his eyes.
LOUNDS
(to himself)
Didn't take off the mask. Please,
God, let him not take off the mask.
If he comes back with it off, I'm dead...
DOLLARHME'S HAND
carries a tape recorder. We PAN it across the room to Lounds'
face .
DOLLARHYDE (O.S.)
Open your eyes, Mr. Lounds.
Lounds obeys.
CLOSE: DOLLARHYDE
The stocking mask and teeth -- stained and jagged -- are in
place.
DOLLARHYDE
Now you will read this into the
tape recorder.
ON LOUNDS
LOUNDS
'I have had a great privilege. I have
seen with wonder the strength of the
Red Dragon. All I wrote about him
before was lies from Will Graham. He
made me write them. Now I understand.
(beat)
'Will Graham: you will learn from my
own lips how much you have to dread.
Because I was forced to lie, he will
be more merciful to me than to you.
(beat)
'I will be a testament to the truth, now.
About his work. About his becoming.'
86.
DOLLARHYDE'S HAND
turns off the tape recorder.
DOLLARHYDE
You did very well. I apologize for
the crude images. Next time I'll
have film stock that doesn't need
lights .
LOUNDS
You'll let me go now?
DOLLARHYDE
You will tell the truth?
LOUNDS
Absolutely,
DOLLARHYDE
Good .
(beat)
We'll seal your promise with...
DOLLARHYDE'S FACE,
with the stocking rolled down over his nose, smiles his
dentured smile. And with his kimono open, revealing the
face of the dragon emblazoned in crimson on his muscular
torso; he leans INTO CAMERA...
DOLLARHYDE
... with a kiss.
VERY WIDE ANGLE
The figures seen from the back. We don't know what Dollar-
hyde, leaning over Lounds, is doing, but Lounds screams.
CUT TO:
EXT. CHICAGO ALLEY - WIDE SHOT - NIGHT
Dollarhyde's van is on the left against the wall. The alley
is empty. Then we see shapes between the van and the wall.
CLOSER: OVER LOUNDS' RIGHT SHOULDER
We do not see his face. We see his shoulder and his lap.
From an unseen facial wound, blood drips onto his pants' leg.
Dollarhyde starts spilling liquid on Lounds. Lounds starts
to moan and rouse from unconsciousness. His head starts to
turn. He knows he's going to die. And he has some courage.
87.
LOUNDS
Go 'head and kill 'ee, you 'astard!
You rot in 'ell. rot in 'ell!
CUT TO:
INT. "TATTLER" GARAGE - OVER PARKING ATTENDANT'S RIGHT
SHOULDER ON THE RACING FORM - NIGHT
He pencils some selections. START TRACKING LEFT ACROSS
the back of his neck. Midway we hear the SQUEAK of a wheel-
chair. The parking attendant hears it, too. As the TRACK
CONTINUES OVER his left shoulder he puts down the Racing
form and looks. Nothing. Then he goes back to the Racing
Form.
PARKING ATTENDANT
reads. Now the wheels SQUEAK and ECHO LOUDER. His head
raises again...
OVER PARKING ATTENDANT'S LEFT SHOULDER
He turns INTO CAMERA. There's a loud WOOSH. His eyes go
wide. He explodes out of his chair, SCREAMING.
WHAT HE SEES: LOUNDS IN WHEELCHAIR - A MAN AFLAME
Lounds is a fireball racing TOWARDS US. Just before the
fireball would smash into CAMERA...
CUT TO:
INT. BALTIMORE SAFE HOUSE, KITCHEN - GRAHAM + MOLLY - NIGHT
Graham and Molly are sitting at the kitchen table over cups
of coffee. It's dark. Graham is looking down into the Formica.
He and Molly say nothing for a long time. Then:
MOLLY
Can I have one of your cigarettes?
GRAHAM
(surprised)
You haven't smoked in two years.
MOLLY
I'd like one of your cigarettes,
please.
Graham gives her one. Molly lights up. She picks a piece or
tobacco from her lips. She's trying to control fear.
88.
MOLLY
Have you ever omitted telling me.
things before?
GRAHAM
No.
MOLLY
Then why?
GRAHAM
I wanted it over fast.
(beat)
It felt dirty to not tell you.
MOLLY
Can you quit?
GRAHAM
No.
MOLLY
And... where are things?
GRAHAM
Where we're at is nowhere. We have
nothing. We're running out of time.
There is a long pause. Molly suspects:
MOLLY
What will you do?
GRAHAM
I have to go back to Birmingham.
MOLLY
Is Crawford going with you?
GRAHAM
No. I have to be. in there...
alone. Maybe there's something for
me if I know how he feels and thinks.
MOLLY
William: you are going to make
yourself Sick or get yourself killed.
Graham says nothing.
MOLLY
Kevin and I have lived through... with
Kevin's father... once before... and
we can't...
She can't finish. There's a pause. Then: She looks at him.
89.
GRAHAM
You should go to Montana. Stay with
Kevin's grandparents. They haven't
seen him for a while.
(beat)
I'll come and get you afterwards...
MOLLY
Will…
He shakes his head and locks away from her, wondering about
himself:
GRAHAM
Molly.
(pause)
… I love you. And I'm not really
going to be fit to be with for
awhile...
They are both frozen: in the same room but very separate.
Molly's eyes are moist. She gets up and leaves. Graham
sits at the kitchen table by himself, both hands around
his mug of coffee. Slowly, deliberately, he picks up the
mug to take a sip. Then he sits alone in the kitchen.
CUT TO:
INT. BALTIMORE AIRPORT - GRAHAM - DAY
On a p