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Heritage Falls (2016)
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Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie... Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie! Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie! We're all ready for you, Coach. Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie, Charlie! All right, all right... all right, all right! Well, love that energy. Love that energy. You know, when you think of Stevens County High School basketball, when you mention it, when you say those words, there's only one name that comes to mind. Charlie Fitzpatrick. An amazing man, but now this mountain of a man is retiring from being our basketball coach. I know. I know, I know. I love coach Fitz, too. But this is a day of celebration of this man's amazing career. So without further ado, ladies and gentlemen, I present to you right now the most winningest coach... Say "winningest"! Winningest! Yeah! The most winningest coach in all of Georgia. My coach, my friend... Coach Charlie Fitzpatrick! Let's give it up! Wow, guys, this is fantastic. You know, I was one of the original players back in the day with Coach Charlie. Coach Charlie was always there for me. Whenever I needed someone to talk to or just to pick me up, he was there. Man, Coach Charlie always had time for us. Coach Charlie treated us as equals. He always listened. I mean, anytime I needed someone to talk to or just somebody to pick me up, he was there. He held us Mustangs, to a high standard and himself to an even higher one. He was like... He was, uh... He was like a father. He was like the father that I never had. Thank you all so much. Thank you, Joe. Most of y'all know Joe as Principal Allen. But when I first met Joe, he was a scrawny little kid we called "Jumbo." He ran more suicide sprints and did more burpees than any player I've ever coached. I just never thought he'd end up harassing me about filling out my timecard. Proud of you, Joe. Proud of all you boys, you men. I tell you who really should be up here is the love of my life. Thanks to her patience and persistence and her uncanny ability to defuse what some call my dynamite temper, which I don't know much about. I think it's overrated. Technical foul, right there, right there. Stand up, Laura. Stand up, sweetheart. Take a bow. Give it up for my wife. One of the greatest privileges I have ever had as a coach and as a father is watching my daughter, Harvey play basketball for the Lady Mustangs. Give it up for Harvey. Stand up, sweet girl. Harvey, Harvey, Harvey! Lastly, I don't want to leave out my son. Proud of him, where are ya? You here? Where are you, Junior? Oh. I, uh... I'm proud of him, too. Y'all, I couldn't have done any of this without my family. Give it up for my family! What I'll miss most about this job... is the people. The students, the teachers, parents. We are a team. We are one. We are a family! Hey, Mr. Munpower, this is Evan Fitzpatrick over at Southern Scribes. Yes, sir. I just wanted to let you know that we got your copy of The Last Ride, that Tom Edison novel that you ordered. Well, do me a favor, you take a read, and if it's any good, I'll put it on my reading list. Mm-hmm. Mmm. Well, fantastic. Just let me know. Well, it's here waiting for you, so whenever you want to come in, just pick it up. All right, bye. Hey, Cedric. It's Evan over at Southern Scribes. Yeah, your new Medford book just got here. Yeah, fantastic. Wonderful, yeah. You have a great day, too. Thank you so much. Bye. We should've been there. Yeah, well we weren't invited. - Yes, we were. - No, not by him. Look at that smile on his face. I bet he didn't even realize that we weren't there. What? Look, I hate going back to high school. It's terrible. It's so fake. The fake smiling and the fake handshakes. And then being introduced. Being introduced, "Hey, this is Charlie's boy." "Hey look, it's Charlie's son." And my personal favorite, "Hey, look, it's Junior." Last night wasn't about you. Yeah, well. Those are his people. They love him. I was never part of that world. He didn't need me there. Then stop trying to convince yourself. Convince myself? I'm not. Good morning! Welcome to Southern Scribes. I am not. No, I'm not. What was I supposed to do? Not announce him? Oh, call him. Talk to him. He should call me. Call him! The only one that doesn't respect me is my own son. He loves you. He's just different from you. You think? Hey, remember the time he tried organizing your tools? Yeah, told him not to. I got a system. There's a method to my madness. Mmm. I've always hoped so. Don't you think it's a good idea? What, to call Dad? - Yes! - Oh, darlin'... every conversation I've ever had with that guy, just teakettles into a complete and total argument. I mean, it's a brilliant idea though. I mean, with any other guy, that would make complete and total sense. - What, you mean like with you? - Oh! Hey, what does that mean? It's always his way or the highway. Well, that doesn't sound like anybody I know. I'm his dad. My way is the highway. Hey, guys! Brought your sander back. Hey, Harv. That was you? Mm-hmm. Thought I lost that thing three years ago. - Sorry. - It's all right. I bought a new one. And it wouldn't kill you to ask. I'm borrowing this. Sorry. May I borrow this? Yes, you may. So... you, uh, having Evan's party here? Well, I'm still his mother, aren't I? Maybe he'll show up for that. Come on, Coach. What'd you expect? That my own son would support me. Well, now that you're retired, and, you know, getting... You better not say old. Getting older, maybe it's time for you guys to... you know! No, I don't know. Bond! It's too late. It's too late. - It's too late. - No, Evan. It's never too late. Sometimes, look, just one little phone call can make a big difference. I gotta get going. Markie is coming home at six from college. Wait, the kid's coming home? I thought he had exams. You guys are gonna talk. - We are? - Love you, feed the cats. But... Sure. I love you! "Winningest" isn't even a word. It's ridiculous. You gonna hog 'em, or hand one to me? You want plain or jelly? Jelly. Laura knows you still eat these? What's wrong, Coach? In all the players, over all the years, all of 'em looked up to me. Eventually. Except my own son. Just never connected with him like I did Harvey. Didn't he try out for the basketball team? I had to cut him. Could've just made him the team manager or something. He didn't want to have anything to do with it. I had to make him try out. Okay, so you made him try out, then you cut him. Ouch, Coach. Back when tryouts was over when we played, how'd you get us to come together? How'd you get us to start being a team? Took you up to Heritage Falls. Heritage Falls. Man, you'd run us up there for four weekends. Long ones! Campfires, comradery. Had the obstacle course, the wall! Whoo! Man. But you knew what you was doing. Team building. You know how to build teams. See, this thing you got going with Evan, you two been trying to prove something to each other for far too long. He'd never go for it. Just get the women involved. They'll make it work. Talk to him. So you, uh, you reading anything good? Yeah. Oh, yeah? Whatcha reading? You wouldn't get it. Wouldn't get it? Come on. Give me a shot. Gargantuan the Destroyer. Mm. Gargantuan the Destroyer. - Yeah, it's awesome. - Yeah? You know, you should broaden your horizons and sell some comics at the store. It'd be dope. Yeah, well, you know, all dopeness aside, we're called Southern Scribes, not Southern Pop Culture, so it's a bit of a, you know... - Their loss. - It's just a... A different demographic, you know. So, uh, how's school going? It's fine. Yeah? It's just... It's just fine? It's fine. Did you take your exams? How'd they go? I'm done. You're done with what? You're done with your exams? - It's nothing. - What do you mean, it's nothing? - It's nothing. - It doesn't sound like nothing. Come on, talk to me. Dad, I quit. You quit? You quit what? - Yeah, I quit school. - You quit school? Ugh. You quit? Hey, Heather! Dad, look, college is not for me, man. I'm gonna join a folk band. We're called Three Pronged Toe. Three Prong Toe? No, no. Yes, I am. - No, you're not. You're finishing school. - Dad, I... - You're gonna finish school first. - No, I'm not. - Yes, you are! - I'm 19, man. I'm on my own. You're on your own? Okay, you know what? You're a real man, right? Real men finish things, OK? Real men don't quit. Real men finish things like... school, for example. All right? So here's what's going to happen. You're gonna go to school on Monday, and you're going to take your exams, and you're gonna finish them. And if you fail anything, you're gonna take summer school. - No one goes to summer school anymore. - I don't care! Dad, I know what I want to do with my life. I want music, not books. I'm not like you, man. Stop with the "man" thing, all right? Stop it, knock it off! All right? I'm your father. Yeah, I'm your father. - Dad. - What? - The noodles! - What? Oh! Aww! Hey, look... Hey! - This is... - We're talking about Markie. - I know. - He will come around. It has nothing to do with coming around, OK? He's... He's... Did you hear what was doing? He's talking about quitting school, Heather. He doesn't want to go to school. He wants to leave with Three Pronged Hang Nail, whatever... - It's Three Pronged Toe. - Whatever it is. Three Pronged Toe. And if you would just calm down and talk to him... Hey, look, I am totally calm, all right? I was calm talking to him, I'm fine. I'm fine. No, no, no, no. You didn't... You talked at him. You did not talk to him. - There is a difference. - I didn't... Look... Who is that? It's your mother. Oh, no. Oh, no, no. Don't... I don't want to talk to her. She's gonna talk about the party, it's all gonna be about the party. I don't want to talk about... I don't even want a party. Is this how you want Markie to treat us? Markie's not gonna treat us that way. No! Don't... Don't pick... Don't... Don't... Hello? Yeah, I'm home for now. Why do we still have a landline? This is ridiculous. It was in the bundle. Yeah, of course, I'm coming to his party. Hey, hey! I'm not here. Yeah. No, yeah, he's here. Yeah, he's been here the whole time. Yeah. All right. Yeah, love you, bye. It's for you. Hey, we're not done talking about that thing that we were talking about, OK? All right? Whoa, whoa, whoa... No, no, no. Don't give me that look. You know what? You should appreciate that I want to be a part of your life. OK? You know what? I'm a rarity. Yeah, you're a real gem. I am a real gem. Hey, Mom! It's me. Oh... Hey, Dad. Trouble with your boy? Kids. Mmm. Um... Oh, hey! Congrats on the thing last night, by the way. Yeah, sure. Thanks. - Guess you were tied up, huh? - Yeah. Yeah, I'm sorry we couldn't make it. We had a, you know, inventory at the shop last night. And we had to stay on top of that, so, you know. Yeah. Look, um... like to have your birthday at our place. Yeah, I kind of figured. Mean a lot to your mother. Unless, you know, you got inventory. Okay, look, no candles and no singing. And nobody but family, that's it. - Just family. - Yeah. Just the family. Got it. See ya then. Yeah, I'll see you then. Bye. Three Pronged Toe... They're here. You got this, Coach. Hey, big bro! Hey, Harv! Happy birthday! Thank you! Yeah. You know you should've gone. I had inventory at the store, it was... Mm-hmm. I'm sure. Oh, it was terrible. - Mm-hmm. - Busy. Cheer up! Tonight's about you. - Great. - Hey! Hey, little buddy. So, everything good on your end? I've got it covered. And what about Markie? He's unfortunately and unexpectedly free at the moment. Wow, you're going for it, huh? Yeah, we're going for it. Wait till you hear the name. Oh, yeah, just wait till you hear that name. There they are! Hey, Grandpa. Hey, Markie. Still wearing those elf pants, huh? They're skinny jeans. On some people. It's good to see you, boy. Good to see you, too. Junior, where's your man scarf? Ha. It's... How old are you today? Old enough to stop being called Junior. Hey, come on, everybody inside. Food's gonna get cold. Food! Ow, what? - Be nice. - I'm being nice. You gotta be nice. Happy birthday, son. Hmm. Thanks, Mom. I'm proud of the man you've become. Hey, is Dad losing weight? Eh, just stopped eating donuts with Joe. Why did he retire? Ask him. - Okay. - Yeah. Now, will you try to have a good time? I'm having a great time. Have a good time. See that smile, my boy. How's that? - OK, get in there. Go! - OK. For he's a jolly good fellow For he's a jolly good fellow For he's a jolly good fellow Which nobody can deny No candles and no singing, that was the... Which nobody can deny, Nobody can deny Which nobody can deny... Okay, okay, okay... What'd you wish for, old boy? I wished that my son would graduate college. Well, never let my schooling interfere with my education. Mark Twain said that. Ah, good try, kid. I'm with you, Markie. I wish I'd taken some time off. Taken a gap year. You wanted to backpack Europe, remember? Yeah, I do. I do remember that. But I never did do that. Well, I'm just saying, you know. Markie probably feels like you did back then. Well, yeah, yeah. I'm just saying that Markie wants to quit school, so... Hey, what is that the old man used to say about quitters? I didn't raise no quitter. That's right, boy. - Evan. - What? How about we open some presents? - How about that? - Good idea. Oh, open Dad's first. - Okay. - I was kind of hoping that... What is this? I'd go last, but that's all right. Go ahead. This is a book. Dad, I'm impressed. It only took you, what, 44 years to get in the ballpark. Evan... Honey, just open it, please. Uh, Mom, do you want to save this paper or...? What? Thanks, Harv. Survival in the Wilderness. Curtis Schakleston. "Junior, in honor of your 44th birthday and our Heritage Falls adventure. Love, Dad." Heritage Falls? I don't... Dad's taking you and Markie camping! Me? What did I do? Wow, Pop. You know, that's, uh... That's great! I... I'd love to, but I can't go. I mean, we just had inventory. The shop is gonna be crazy. I really appreciate it. Your schedule's already been cleared. And I'm helping out at the store while you're gone. That's my present, by the way. Uh... Look, Dad, camping's not... It's not my thing. - You know? - Yeah. Yeah, what... Just what is your thing, Junior? Dad. - Huh? - Dad. I mean, just do what you want to do. You always do anyway. I still don't know why I have to go. Ouch. Camping. How bad could it be? Oh, if he's taking me where I think he's taking me, it's... it's gonna be pretty bad. There's bugs and there's ticks. And there's wasps. And there's this obstacle course, there's the wall. - The wall? What's the wall? - Yeah. I don't know, I never made the team. He's right, though. What is he right about? Trying to get you guys to spend time together. It's something you desperately need. I know, I know. I know what he's trying to do. - Well, at least he's trying. - Yeah, but why now? I mean, what is this, what's going on? I mean, first he retires, and now it's this camping thing. I mean, I'm 44. I'm not 14. Better late than never. How do you do that? How do you always make everything so easy and practical? Because it usually is. Camping. It's gonna be like putting two betta fish in a bowl and telling them to get along. Three betta fish. Oh, I forgot. Three of us in that cabin. Happy birthday to me. Hey, you're getting pretty good with that thing. Yeah, it's pocket-size, so it keeps me sharp. Guitar's still my weapon of choice, though. Oh, of course. I haven't heard you play in a while. Maybe you can bring it with you on the trip? Yeah, maybe. We'll see. You're excited. I reckon so. Don't overdo it out there. I know my limits. You worry too much. No, I don't. Hey, I put together a little care package for you boys. You know, just ice breakers and such. Figured I'd give it to you now, since you're raring to go. You're my girl. How can there be A cherry that has no stone How can there be A chicken that has no bone How can there be a baby With no crying How can you tell a story... Hi, Grandpa. 4:00. We're burning daylight. Hey, it's my party. I'll be late if I want to. Ah, that's funny. Yeah, music joke. Thank you, I'll be here all night. All three nights, in fact. Yay, camping, whoo! You're bringing that? Yeah, I told him. What, why? How far we going? I mean, you know, ta-dah. It's got a handle. Oh, Junior. My son, my son. Okay, listen. You call me Junior one more time, there's not gonna be a camping trip. - Dad, here. - Whoa! All right, give 'em up, cell phones. What, are you serious? Yeah, it's my trip. My rules. You can cry if you want to. Okay, no. Just take it. It's fine. Hey, what are you doing... Hold on. But I need my laptop. No, you don't. Follow me, boys. Let's go, slow poke! Three days. All right! Camping! Here we go! Camp a little while In the wilderness In the wilderness, In the wilderness Camp a little while In the wilderness For I'm a-goin' home You guys in a rush? Have a date? Careful, don't... I'm just getting ready - For I'm going home - Aah! - Come on! - Slow down, come on, Dad! You guys... Guys, wait! Pick it up! For I'm going home Go, go. For I'm going home For I'm going home Is that Heritage Falls? Not even close. For I'm going home Shout a little while In the wilderness Heritage Falls, yep. Great. It'll be so much fun, yeah. For I'm going home How do you get up there so easily? For I'm going home For I'm going home Oh I'm just getting ready For I'm going home I sought my Lord In the wilderness In the wilderness In the wilderness I sought my Lord In the wilderness For I'm going home For I'm going home For I'm going home I'm just getting ready For I'm going home Dad, look, my axe. Great, day one, tetanus. There's no tetanus. Would all the players sleep in there? No, they'd pitch their tents down on the sandbar. You guys get the coach's VIP treatment. Oh, yeah? What's that? You get to sleep indoors. - Ah. - Cool. Excuse me! - It's nice in here. - What? These are just basketball tapes? Kind of boring. Hey, fellas, I got some coffee. Who wants some? No pot. No coffee pot? You'll survive. I thought you said there were three rooms in this cabin. Living room, bathroom, bedroom, three rooms. - Seniority! - Shotgun! Seniority, seniority! Seniority! Seniority? Really, you want to play that card? - Oh, ah, shotgun! - Oh, no. I don't play that game. Whoa, whoa. That's not a game. That's a rule. Not in my house. Hey, you guys should arm wrestle for it. Or we rock, paper, scissors, huh? Arm wrestle. Arm wrestle. I mean, look, I don't want to hurt you, old man. Okay. You know, that old bear rug's pretty comfortable. Not too many fleas. Hey, all right. Arm wrestle it is. Come on, old man. So do you think we'll hear anything? Nah, Charlie has a phone rule. So only if there's an emergency. So no new news is good then? Exactly. What are you doing? Dishes. You know, I thought it was a good idea when Charlie pitched it. But now that they're gone. Aw, honey, don't worry about it. Charlie knows what he's doing. He does? Sure, he does. Look, those boys needed to be thrown into a box and shaken up. Besides, Markie's there to balance them out. Let's do this! - Three! - You're going down, old man. - Two! - Bring it, boy. - One! - Son defeats the father! - Go! - Dun, dun, dun... Ah ha ha! Night, Grandpa, night, Dad. Oh, yeah. Two more nights. Oh, no... Aah! Markie! Come on, boy! Don't make me come up there. - Bonding time, boy. - Okay. Here's coffee. I'm gonna die. Mmm! Ready? You're doing good. You're doing good. Let's go, let's go. While we're young. I thought we were supposed to be bonding. What do you call this? Torture. Well, there it is, boys. I'm not doing that. No way. Cannot get over this without teamwork. - Then we can't do it. - All right, face each other. Link your hands, lace your fingers together. All right, ready? One, two, three. This is not good. Push! Down, down. Come on. Okay, hold on. Ah, Dad! Come on! Grandpa, come on. Little more. Ah, no, no! No, no! - Come on, push! - Go, push! Come on, come on. Push. Down, down. Well, let's try it again with you, Junior. You can pull us up. - Done, done, no. - Where you going? Not part of your team, Dad. Never wanted to be. Hey, Dad, you want to play this? Play what? Oh, no, not right now, kiddo. Whatever. Okay! Well, just remember kid... I don't lose at cards. Let's see what you got, Grandpa. I actually don't think this is a win or lose kind of game. - Yeah, just swirl them around. - Just like this? What? What did your grandmother put in here? Oh. What? What's it say? "If you were a tree, what kind of tree would you be and why?" No. Are you serious? I told you it wasn't a win or lose type of game. Aw, this is just a lose game. No, Grandpa, you have to do it. You can't quit. Hey, you know what? The kid's right. You can't quit, Grandpa. So come on, dig deep. Dig deep. What kind of tree would you be? I reckon I'd be an oak. An oak, really? Pray tell. Why... Why an oak, Grandpa? Well, I'm old, but I'm still standing. And I'm strong. Ha. Yeah, you're a cheater is what you are. - You bent your wrist. - No, he did not. Yes, he totally did. What about you? - Me? - What would you be? Um... Uh, I would be a leaf, so I could leave. That is a terrible joke. Awesome joke. - That's so bad. - What're you talking about? This game is ridiculous. God, it's so stupid. Why would Mom even pack this game? Your mother'd do anything to bring us together. Least you could do is respect that. The only reason why Mom picked this game, Dad, was because there's no competition. All right? She thought it would be safe. That's it. I got it. I would be a sycamore, because I am sick of this. Get it? Sick of... At least he picked a tree. Oh, come on. Where you going? Chop wood. Oh, well, of course you're choppin' wood. That's the coach, manly thing to do. Chop wood. No, I'm just tired of cold beans. You always take it too far, Dad. You know what? It's just it feels so good in the moment. Would you rather be happy and humble, or right and a jerk? Does that really say that? No, it says what kind of season you'd be and why. Well... according to your grandfather, I would be a cold, long, bitter winter. I'm gonna get some air. You enjoy that? Yeah. Good for you. Want to try it? Aw, no, no thanks. - You sure? - Yeah, yeah. I'm good. This uh... This book you got me is pretty interesting. Oh. Yeah, the guy survived seven days in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Made it out alive. How'd he make it? I'll let you know. Love Confusion relation A quick hesitation joy Doubting rebounding A faithless resounding peace Tantrum temptation A faith altercation Hopefulness Hopefulness With the sacrifice of fools I will let my words be few We're all working for a dream They are never what they seem Well I guess I'll play the part Though I don't know where to start There's a failure inside of me Running races eternally Sky A lover of beauty And old-timey movie stars A sparkle of fire This man on a wire waves Thundering oceans Of ceaseless devotion Hopefulness Hopefulness With the sacrifice of fools I will let my words be few We're all working for a dream They are never what they seem Well I guess I'll play the part Though I don't know where to start There's a failure inside of me Running races eternally Come on. Wet kindling. Dang it. You need a hand? Really? You called me to change your tire. Step aside. I was... I was eating those. Lighter. Where in the world did you learn how to do that? A book. What are you doing? Surviving. How many dogs you guys want? Now I don't want to get your hopes up. Please, don't. But I think I figured out a way to make coffee without a pot. Yeah, right. No, seriously. You'll see. Listen, you can really do that? Yep. - Really? - Yep. You can make coffee here without a coffee pot. Just you wait and see. I don't believe you. Must be some book. That book's interesting. Hmm. - Hey, Dad? - Hmm? Why'd you retire? This may not be the time. Well, this is the perfect time. Why the secrecy? Well... um... Well... I've been in remission, but... Wait, what? Remission? - Dad... - Wait, remission from what? Cancer. He had cancer. Wait, is it gone? It was, but now it's back. What? So it's not gone? You're not good? I beat it once, I'll beat it again. You hid this from me. - Didn't want to worry you. - You didn't want to worry me? Got your own life to live. What kind of excuse is that? Mine. It's my excuse to give. Doctors are very confident. Wait, I'm your son. Yeah? Where were you at my last game? Besides, only your mother knew. - What are your chances? - Solid. You're running around. You're chopping wood. Exercise is encouraged. Listen, I look at this as a wake-up call, all right? I've missed enough time with you guys already. Hush-a-bye Don't you cry Go to sleepy little baby When you wake You'll have cake And all the pretty little horses So you're really into your music, huh? Yeah, I guess. Ha, you guess? If you're fixin' to quit school and run off with a band, you better know. Oh, I know, but Dad doesn't. He just thinks it's a joke. I'm pretty sure he doesn't think it's a joke. Look, I know all the arguments. There's no money in music. One in a million make it. It's hard on families. School first, music second. I get it, but... You think you do. But I understand you. See? Thank you. I understand you because he was you and I was him. Only books, instead of music. Yeah, I guess. Don't discount his advice. Advice? You mean, commands. He's a smart man. Listen to what he has to say. Think it over. Then you make your own decision. You gonna be okay, Grandpa? Shoot. You saw me arm wrestle. Snake, snake! Aah, snake! Snake in there, snake in there! Big snake, snake! That's your mama's robe? Where is it? No snake here. It was right there. It was right there. - I swear to you it was right there. - Well, it's not there, so... Not there now. Well, where is it? Gotta be somewhere. Nothing. Ya, ya, ya, ya! Dad, there's no snake. Keep looking. Big baby. Mouse traps. A lot of good those are doing. What's the matter with you? Oh, that was a good one. That was a good one. There ain't no way I'm sleeping tonight with that thing still slithering around here. Out of sight, out of mind. Ha. Ain't gonna work, Markie. Just stick in a tape. No. No, no, no. No basketball, no way. By the way, I'm taking the bed tonight. I get it, seniority. Snake's gone, get over it. Easy for you to say. - Night. - Good night. Hey, Dad, do you want the couch? No, snakes like crevices. Okay, your loss. Ah. What are you doing? Better than nothing. You know that snake was probably in here since we got here. Don't want to talk about it. Why not? Because that snake was in the shower. All right? In the shower. He was all up in my shampoos and stuff. I mean, you don't just recover from something like that. The shower is a sacred place, all right? You're wet, you're naked, you're vulnerable. Snake can't respect that, none of us are safe. Gotcha. You know, I heard your, uh... I heard you play some of your song earlier. It was, uh... It was interesting. Yeah, it took me almost a year to get it right. You wrote that? Yeah, I write all my stuff. You write? Yeah. Wow. Can I give you some advice? No. Just hear me out, okay? Writing is writing whether it's a novel, all right? Whether it's poetry or if it's music. It doesn't matter. If you can't take advice from your old man about something... Take advice from a failed novelist who knows nothing about music and owns a boring old book store? Dad, how can you make me better? You don't even think I can be successful. Whoa, no. No, no. That's not it at all. I think you're great. And you're right. I am a failed novelist. So I should know. If I hadn't have gone to college, and if I hadn't gotten a business degree, and if I didn't have that boring old book store that takes care of us... Look... All I'm saying is that, if-if-if you don't make it as a musician. - If- - Not now, Dad, okay? I know this sermon. Hey, babe. Everything okay? Yeah, yeah. I'm fine. You're breaking your phone rule. I told him. How'd he take it? Fine, I guess. Not so sure what a great idea this was. We haven't really come any farther than we were when we started. Did you look in my little goodie bag? No. Well, yeah. Markie did. Thanks for the ice-breaker game by the way. Hey, what did you say for what color best describes your temperament and why? Got as far as, "I am an oak," and then things kind of fell apart. Mmm. Well... Go back and look in the bag. I put a little reminder in there for ya. "The Strength of My Father," by Charles Evan Fitzpatrick Jr. "To be a man, to be a king. That is my dream. To soar like the birds and roar like a lion. To be strong and bold, big and strong. To be the man that my father would have me be. To see him smile and know that he is proud of me. That is my dream. This is my dream." Teenagers. Markie... Markie. Shh, don't make a sound. You gotta see this. Look at your dad. Oh, my gosh. What kind is it? Black razor, I think. Is that bad? Well, they ate a man under his pillow, but it's not poisonous. What do we do? Just watch and enjoy. What? Good morning, Evan. Evan wake up, son. You, uh... You got a snake on your belly. Is that your new man scarf? It's crucial that you don't move or make a sound. Get it off. Get it off. Don't let him wrap around your neck. Can you help me? Help me. Dad, don't... Don't move! - Okay... - It's a constrictor. It's a constrictor moccasin. It's got... It's got big fangs. Shh! Let's go... Let's go back outside. I think it's a black mamba. Ah, ah, he's around my neck. He's around my neck. I told you there was a snake. I told you there was a snake. You have to be very, very quiet and very, very still. If he closes that coil... We'll just... Ah, ah... Oh, we'll just... Okay. Oh! Oh. Will you help me, please? It's a lost cause now. Come on, come on, come on, come on! I got it! Grandpa, help me. I thought you had it trapped. I did. - Don't tell him. - Don't tell him. Oh... Oh, I hate snakes! I hate camping! I hate camping! I hate it! Smoke! I hate beans, I hate hot dogs! Ah, smoke! I smell like smoke! I haven't slept! Okay. So, it's just one more day. Okay. I want to conquer that wall. I want my name on it. - Huh? - Really? Let's go right now. Come on, just a little more. Just a little more. Come on. - Come on, man, you got it. - Almost there. You almost had it. Come on, a little higher. - A little higher, a little more. - Come on, Dad. Ah! - Here. - All right, let's go. - Come on. - Get yourself up. Okay! Pull me up! Your hands are slipping. No, don't let me go! Don't let me go! Hold on, hold on. You all right, Dad? Yeah. Yeah, come on, let's go again. Let's go! Let's call it a day, Evan. There's someplace I want to show you. Nah, come on. Let's go again. - Son? - What? I want to show you something. Hey, wait, Markie? Follow me. There it is, boys. Heritage Falls. Wow. This is not what I expected. You know, when I'd, uh... camp with the team, I'd come here in the mornings first thing, for a little peace, a little prayer before I'd start my day. This is my spot. Yeah. It's an epic spot, Grandpa. It's beautiful. It is, Grandpa. - If something happens to me... - Dad... If something happens, this is where I'd like to be remembered. I'm sorry I didn't tell you, Evan. You guys want a coffee? Really? So now, uh, what is this concoction? That is a coffee filter and some dental floss. Huh. Tell you what, give that boy a book. Hey, Pop, I got a question for ya. Ha, well, I don't want to be a tree or a flower or a dadgum weather pattern. No, if, uh... If you could have had Grandpa teach you anything that he didn't teach you when you were a kid, what would it have been? Well, it's gonna sound kinda silly, but... I always wanted Dad to teach me how to tie a tie. He was an insurance salesman and wore a tie every day. I'd ask him, "Can you teach me how to tie that thing?" He said "Sure, I will. Tomorrow," and tomorrow he'd be gone again. Ah... so that's why you wear clip-ons. You never learned how? Never did. Hmm. What about you, Dad? What do you wish Grandad would have done for you? Why don't we keep it light, huh? Nah, come on... I wanna know. - Nah, Dad... - Tell me. Really. Well, I, uh... I really wish that you had read my book. I've read your book. - No, you didn't. - Yeah, I... started it. You didn't, but, you know, that's fine. No... No, it's not fine. Not fine at all. What about you, kiddo? Saw that comin'. No... Come on, tell me. I wanna know. - No, you wouldn't. - I do. I do wanna know. Come on, you can tell me. I'm not gonna be mad. I guess I wish you'd let me be my own man. Markie... Aw, man, I love you. I know. - I-I just want the best for you. - Dad, I know. You gotta understand where I'm comin' from when I say these things to you. Okay, Dad. This is why I didn't want to do this, okay? Can we just leave the dirty laundry for home and talk about this later? Okay, look, just hear me out. Okay, I've been through what you're going through. - It's different. - No, no. Everybody says that, but it's not. I wanna help you make the right decisions. I get it. Look, you don't. You don't get it. Look... I don't want you five, ten years down the line regretting that you didn't get a college education. - I know your perspective. - Well, if you know my perspective, then why aren't you listening? Because I wanna make my own decisions, okay? Look, I want to be my own man! - But, you're making a mistake. - Well, then I'll learn from it! You don't have to learn from it, that's the point. I'm here to spare you from this. Kid, look... your music... - your music is always gonna be there. - Well, so will school. No! It's not. With school, it's not that simple. Guys! I've made up my mind. Well, I, uh... I can't. I can't let you do this. Well, I'm nineteen. You can't do anything about it. Oh, really? Who pays your bills? - You'd cut me off? - Try me. All right, let's just take this down. - You stay outta this. - Grandpa gets me. Oh, really? Grandpa gets you? What are you, encouraging this behind my back? - No. - You're a hypocrite, that's what you are. - You watch yourself! - Hey, don't undermine me! Look at you two! Look at us! What a joke. Let's just quit and go home. Who do you think you are? - Son... - No, really. Who are you? Because this guy... This guy right now, this isn't the father that I grew up with. The father that I grew up with could have cared less what it was that I wanted. And now my son wants to go off, and he wants to go join a band, and you're encouraging this? I told him to listen to you. You told him to listen to me? Those were your words? - Yeah. - Yeah? Well, that's funny 'cause you've never listened to anything that I've said! - I listened. - You have never listened to me! You never listened to me. You never encouraged me. - I wanted to be a writer! - You tried. Yeah, I did. I tried that. I wanted to be a writer, and you wanted me to be you. Or at least one of your beloved Mustangs. That's true. I did. It's time to go. Markie's right. Hey, kid... Ya here? Markie! He's not here! Huh? I said he's not here. Relax. Probably just somewhere blowing off steam. Give him some time. - Dad? - Yeah? - Let's go find him. - Let's go! Markie! Markie! Markie! Markie! Markie! Where could he have gone? Markie! Dad! Take a look at this. He went the wrong way at the fork. Jewelry's better than bread crumbs. Markie! Markie! Markie! Markie! - Hey! - What? Listen... You hear that? That's his harmonica! Markie! Markie! Dad, I'm over here! Markie... Whoa! Whoa! That's what happened to me. You okay? Yeah, I got too close to the edge and it gave way, twisted my ankle. You hurt bad? It's no mint under the pillow, but I'm okay. You got any rope or a ladder back at the cabin? Not a thing. What are we gonna do? All right, I'm going down there. You gotta lower me down, okay? You're gonna both end up stuck down there. I don't care. That's my boy. He's coming outta that hole. So lower me down. Okay, Dad, just be careful. Easy does it. Wait, wait! Wait, wait, wait! All right, I gotta let you go. - Slow! Slow! Slow! Slow! - Dad! - You okay, Dad? - Yeah, I'm fine. Dad, give me the water bottle and the head lamp. - What for? - You'll see, hurry up! - How you doin' kid? - Good. - Heads up! - Yeah! OK. - Whoa. - Ta-da! Huh? - That from the book? - Yes, sir! Nice, Dad. Here... Look, kid, let's get you out of here. All right... Your foot, your foot. Go, go, go! Go! Go! Push. - Got him? - Got him! Hang on, Markie. That's it, boy! All right, fellas... my turn. All right, Dad. - You ready? - You'll have to jump! - You got this, Dad. - Come on, son. All right. You got this, Dad. - Right here! - Almost! Almost! Come on, Dad. One more. Here we go! Evan. What? We're a team. - We are one. - We are one. We're a family. Atta boy! Got it! Come on! Pull, pull, pull, pull, pull. Pull! - Oh! - Oh! Oh! You okay, kid? I owe you a new headlamp. Well, I can't walk, so who's carrying me? Grandpa. Uh-huh. In your dreams. I'm goin' home On the morning train You know I'm goin' home On the morning train The road is long The river's high That's why I'm goin' home On the morning train Take my hurt and relieve my pain Please Lord take my hurt And relieve my pain Mountain peaks and valleys wide That's why I'm goin' home On the morning train I'm goin' home on the morning train You know I'm goin' home On the morning train The road is long The river's high That's why I'm goin' home On the morning train Hold me close Time is running low I said hold me close Time is running low The days are hot The evenings cold That's why I'm goin' home On the morning train I'm goin' home on the morning train You know I'm goin' home On the morning train The road is long I tell you what, there's not a bit of quit in our boy. Got a better hang time than Michael Jordan. It's true. Michael Jordan's a basketball player. I know he's a basketball player. - Okay, just making sure. - Kid what... And Grandpa totally beat Dad in the arm wrestling! He... Whoa, whoa! - Dad! - I won the other thing... what was the game called? You can't win the icebreakers game. - Icebreaker game. I totally won that! - You can't win that game. A leaf. You were a leaf! Part of a tree. You wouldn't believe the stuff he came up with. He started a fire with corn chips. - You did that? - I did. I did do that. But my true masterpiece was my coffee. All that's in the book? Next time, we're definitely bringing pots. I'm getting better at camping. I'm liking... I'm enjoying camping more. Who is he? Hey, Pop! Got a sec? - Yeah. - Well, I, uh... - I got you somethin'. - What's that? Why don't you open it up and find out? A little late, but happy retirement. Oh, boy... look at that. I thought you'd like that. Uh-oh. It's not a clip-on. No, it's not, but why don't we, uh... Let's put it on you. You wanna give it a shot? Turn around. Okay. You know what? Why don't you do it, and I'll walk you through it? - I don't know how. - Well, I'll show ya how. Take this guy. Take the big guy, and wrap him over this guy, little guy, two times. - Around it? - Yep. Around it. You got it. Now throw it over again. OK, and up and under. Right through here. - Up and under. - Like that? Perfect. Perfect. Now just pull it down through this little loop... make a loop... pull it right down through there. And now hold onto the small side, pull on the big guy. Hey. There you go. Pop this guy down. There, turn around, let me have a look at ya. All right. Lookin' good! Hey, guys, what are ya doin'? The girls want to play hearts. Tell 'em we're on our way. Coming! Hey, guys, where'd you go? Come on, I want to hear more about this snake. It was really scary. It was a huge snake, come on! We're burnin' daylight. And... there we go. Music's made you soft, Junior. No, college has. You're welcome. Last one to the falls sleeps on the bear rug. To be a man To be a king That is my dream To be a man To be a king That is my dream To soar Like a bird And to roar Like a lion To be strong and bold Big and strong To be the man That my father would have me to be That my father would have me to be To see him smile And to know he is proud of me Oh To see him smile And to know he is proud of me Oh Yes that is my dream Yes that is my dream Yes this is my dream I am a poor wayfaring stranger While journeying Through this world of woe If there's no sickness No toil and danger In that bright world To which I go I'm going there To see my father I'm going there No more to roam I'm only going over Jordan I'm only going over home I'm going there To see my father I'm going there No more to roam I'm only going over Jordan I'm only going over home I'm only going over home Ooh! That was good, Clay! Wow! |
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