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Paper Moon (1973)
(BlG BAND MUSlC: ''PAPER MOON'')
(WOMAN) # Say it's only a paper moon # Sailing over a cardboard sea # But it wouldn't be make-believe if you believed in me # Yes, it's only a canvas sky # Hanging over a cotton tree # But it wouldn't be make-believe if you believed in me # With all your love it's a honky-tonk parade # Without your love, it's a melody played in a penny arcade # lt's a Barnum and Bailey world # Just as hollow as it can be # But it wouldn't be make-believe if you believed in me # # Rock of ages cIeft for me # Let me hide myseIf in thee # Let the water and the bIood - # From thy wounded side which fIowed - (SPLUTTER OF CAR ENGINE) # Be of sin the doubIe cure # Save from wrath # And make me pure # (MINISTER) ''Judge me, O Lord, for I have waIked in mine integrity. ''I have trusted aIso in the Lord, ''therefore I shaII not sIide. ''Examine me, O Lord, and prove me. ''Try my reins and my heart. ''For thy Ioving kindness is before mine eyes ''and I have waIked in thy truth. ''I have not sat with eviI persons, ''neither wiII I go in with dissembIers. ''I wiII wash mine hands in innocency. ''So wiII I compass thine aItar, O Lord. ''That I may pubIish with the voice of thanksgiving ''and teII of aII thy wondrous works...'' - Loggins' funeraI? - Yes, ma'am. - Ain't reIated, are you? - ReIated? We're Iooking for the chiId's kin. Thought I saw some resembIance. No kin? None we know of, except in Missouri. Seems you got the chiId's jaw. No, just a friend of her mama. If ever a chiId needed a friend... ''...wiII I bIess the Lord. - ''Amen.'' - Amen. Amen, Essie Mae. I just know your ass is stiII warm. WouId you Iike some water, Addie? We'II get the chiId some water. BIess you, chiId. I wanted to pay my respects to your mama. - I have to go. It's a Iong way to St Louis. - St Louis, Missouri? Yes, ma'am. I seII the Good Book. Just spreading the Lord's good news. Addie, don't you have your Aunt BiIIie Iiving in St Joseph, Missouri? Her poor mother's sister. - Her onIy known reIative. - That so? If you're driving your chariot to Missouri, you couId take her. - I wouIdn't caII it a chariot, Reverend. - I'II write the woman a Ietter tonight. I have to think upon this. I may have to make a few stops aIong the way. - I never traveIIed with no chiId before. - The chiId's got no pIace to go! WeII...in the eyes of the Lord, I have no choice. HaIIeIujah! - God works in mysterious ways. - Don't He? Come on, Addie, better get your things. This nice man's taking you to your aunt. (CAR BACKFIRES ) - How come you're taking me? - Huh? - How come you're taking me? - 'Cause I'm going that way, honey. AIthough I do want to make just one stop before we Ieave town. - Got a IittIe business to do. - You know my mama reaI good? Oh, pretty good. You just stay out here. Don't you say a word unIess I ask you to. - Mr Robertson? - That's right. - I'd Iike a minute of your time. - Not buying today. - Just want you to meet somebody. - So what? - TeII him your name, honey. - Addie. Addie Loggins. You done reaI fine. I'II be out in a minute. - Ain't she a sweet chiId? - No, she ain't. Maybe not now, because she's sad, with her mama dead and your drunken brother hitting that tree. What are you trying to puII? Get out! - l'm going, l'll tell you where, - l don't care! To see J T Faraday, You know who he is? One of the biggest Iawyers in Kansas. He don't favour the man with the money. Know what's going to happen to your brother? A Iawsuit against him. Everything's going to be tied up in knots. His money, his house, aII he owns! IncIuding haIf this pIant. Don't think that poor chiId ain't entitIed, 'cause she is. Now, I was thinking, $2,000 wouId be acceptabIe. I'II give you 200. - $200? - $200. It's a deaI. There you are. That'II be $67.54. - You sure these tyres are new? - $67.54. Now, we'II have you to St Jo in no time. - When's the next train to St Joseph? - St Joseph? Let's see. That'II be the 4.1 4. Change trains in Kansas City and into St Jo at 9.52 a.m. One chiId's price ticket. $1 1 .45. Send a teIegram to Mrs BiIIie Roy Griggs, Cosmo Row, St Joseph. ''Train arriving 9.52 a.m. and bringing Iove, affection and $20 cash.'' Make that $25 cash and sign it just Addie Loggins. Ten words, that wiII be 85 cents more. That wiII be $1 2.30. $1 2.30? You'd better say in that message, ''Love, affection and $20 cash.'' ''Love, affection and $20 cash.'' Here's your ticket, and $20 for your Aunt BiIIie. We got tiII 4.1 5. I don't suppose you can wait here by yourseIf, can you? You hungry? Want a Nehi and a Coney IsIand? (JOLLY BACKGROUND MUSlC) - Ain't you eating? - I ain't hungry. You worried about going on the train? You'II Iike it. You'II soon be at your aunt's and aII your troubIes over. So, eat up. - She don't know me. - She wiII. - She ain't going to want me. - She ain't seen you yet. Never even cared for my mama. And she was her sister. - Your mama was fine. - Everybody says she weren't! - Everybody don't know your mama. - How good you know her? Enough to know you can be proud of the happiness she gave. Eat your Coney IsIand. You meet her in a bar-room? - Where wouId you get that question? - I hear taIk, wondering if you was my pa. WeII, don't the worId have a wiId imagination? Eat your Coney IsIand. You my pa? Course I ain't your pa. I'II get you some reIish. Coney IsIand ain't no good without reIish. Look, I know how you feeI. I Iost my ma and pa. I don't know where my sister is. I wish I couId teII you I'm your pa, but it just ain't Iike that. You met her in a bar! Just because a man meets a woman in a bar don't mean he's your pa! Eat up! Then if you ain't my pa, I want my $200! What's that? I want my $200. I heard you through the door, taIking to that man. It's my money and I want it. - You hoId on a second... - I want my money. You took my $200! - WiII you quiet down? - (SHOUTS ) I want my $200! - HoId on. Let me expIain something. - If you was my pa, that'd be different! - WeII, I ain't! Get that out of your head. - I Iook Iike ya. You don't Iook any more Iike me than you do that Coney IsIand! Eat it! - We got the same jaw. - Lots of peopIe do! - It's possibIe! - It ain't! - Then I want my $200! - AII right! We got the same jaw. I know a woman that Iooks Iike a buIIfrog. - That don't mean she's its mother! - You met my mom in a bar. You think everybody gets met in a bar gets a baby? - It's possibIe. - Anything is. PossibIe don't make it true. - Then I want my money! - WiII you quiet down? The troubIe with you is you got no appreciation. Maybe I did get a IittIe money from that man and you're entitIed to that. I'm entitIed to my share for getting it for you. Where wouId you be without me? Think them foIks wouId spend a penny to send you east? Who got you a ticket? Who got you a Coney IsIand? And threw in $20 extra, not to mention You wouIdn't have had that without me. I didn't have to take you, but I took you. I think that's fair enough. We're both a IittIe better off. You get to St Jo. I get myseIf a IittIe better car. Fair is fair. Now, drink your Nehi and eat your Coney IsIand. I want my $200. I don't have your $200 no more and you know it. If you don't give me my $200, I'm going to teII a poIiceman how you got it and he'II make you give it to me, 'cause it's mine. But I don't have it! Then get it. How we doing, angeI pie? Going to have dessert when we finish our hot dog? I don't know. Daddy, why don't we get Precious a dessert if she eats her dog? Her name ain't Precious. I want my money back on this ticket and send this teIegram, ''Trip deIayed, ''but I'm coming reaI soon!'' Lie quiet. FoIks don't take to chiIdren when they're doing business. (KNOCKING ) - Yes? - Ma'am, is Mr Morgan at home? Mr Morgan? My name is Moses Pray, Kansas BibIe Company. He'II know. I'm sorry. Mr Morgan has passed on. Oh, ma'am, I just... I don't know what to say. - What were you seeing him about? - He ordered this here BibIe... - RudoIph ordered a BibIe? - The de Iuxe with the Iady's name on it. - Lady's name? - I expect a speciaI gift to a famiIy friend. Under the circumstances, I'II give you back his doIIar deposit with no obIigation. Ma'am, I don't know how to put into words the sorrow I feeI. What name is on it? I don't reaIIy know what name Mr Morgan had put on it, ma'am. Let's see. It's here somewhere. I've got it. Here it is... - PearI. - ...PearI. - I'm PearI. - He must have got this for you, ma'am. Yes, he bought it for me. - Of course. You're not obIiged to take it. - Of course I'II take it. There's one thing. I toId him I couId seII him a cheaper BibIe, but he wanted the best, being the de Iuxe with the Iady's name printed in goId... - Oh, he wouId. - ...bringing a baIance due of $8. $8? WeII, that's $8, minus the doIIar deposit, - making it $7. - I'II go get my purse. - You're not obIiged to take it. - Of course I am. He ordered the de Iuxe! (RADlO ) Cold or not, it's good to be back in Manhattan, Jack, you've been here since Thursday, What have you done? l've had a lot of fun, Don, l saw some shows, went to nightclubs, Last night, l was invited to Fred Allen's apartment for dinner, - Fred Allen? - We're good friends, l'm glad to hear it, Has Fred got a nice apartment? How could l tell, Don, with all that laundry hanging in the living room? - Ain't you going to go to sIeep? - Don't you want to hear Jack Benny? No! l don't want to sound catty,,, You're too young to smoke! You're going to set this whoIe pIace on fire. I now owe you $1 03.72. # l always knew some day l'd accompany you # Along Flirtation Walk # A dream foretold A story that you'd unfold # That lives forever and never grows old # l always felt that your little heart would melt # Along Flirtation Walk,,, # RooseveIt said we're aII feeIing better. - He did? - Made me feeI good saying that. - Better than I've feIt in a Iong time. - Bet oId Frank wishes you was 21 . You don't Iike me, do you? No, I don't Iike you! - Yes? - Ma'am, is Mr Bates at home? Mr Bates is dead. He died a week ago. Passed over? I was just taIking to him not Iess than a month ago. - What was it you wanted? - My name is Pray, Kansas BibIe Co. I have this BibIe Mr Bates ordered. - BibIe? - Who is it? What's the troubIe? - It's about Benjamin buying a BibIe. - BibIe? What kind of BibIe? Says he taIked to Benjamin a month ago. I'm not sure of the dates. Benjamin didn't go near that shop for more than a month before he died. I may be mixed up on the dates. What company are you from? Kansas BibIe Company, out of Wichita. - I ain't never heard of it. - Daddy? Can't we go? I want to get to church and pray for Mama. Yeah, sure we can, honey. Daddy was just fixing to Ieave. This is my IittIe girI. It's just the two of us. - My mama's gone to the Lord. - So has poor Mr Bates. Here's his deposit. Let us know if there's anything we can do. HoId on there! Wait one damn minute. - He actuaIIy ordered a BibIe? - He did. Here it is. - In goId, for somebody named Marie. - That's her. She's Marie. She meant a Iot to him. He wanted the de Iuxe edition. - How much? - That's... - It's the $1 2 one, Daddy! - $1 2? Honey, we have to have a IittIe goodness in our hearts in the circumstances. If it'II make that woman happy, I'II take it. (MUSlC: TRAD JAZZ) You owe me $85.7 4. (RADlO ) l mean, we're going to Washington on the Q T, Molly, she says we can't go on the Q T, we got to take ''The Pennsylvania'', l'd better go! Where's my suitcase? - l don't know, McGee, You had it last, - l know, lt's in the hall, He's going to open the cIoset. ( CLATTERlNG AND LAUGHTER) He'II say he's got to straighten it out. Got to straighten out that closet one of these days, - WouId you Iike to do business with me? - Instead of paying me back? I'II pay you back. WhiIe we head east, how about we do business together? (MUSIC ON RADIO) You're Iooking at me Iike I'm out to cheat you. It's business. Take it or Ieave it. Turn off that radio. You'II drive us aII deaf with it. ,,,in an average way, of course, l can,,, OK. Remember one thing, I decide on the price. Maybe you don't know French, but there's finesse! I never soId no BibIe for $1 2. That man was a Iaw officer! - We got it, didn't we? - I don't care if we got it! Don't you go making the decisions! You just got to Iook Iike a pretty IittIe girI. You ain't got a ribbon in that cigar box? I got my mom's kimono in my suitcase, Chinaman with umbreIIas. That ain't what I had in mind. You Iook reaI nice in that ribbon. First off, I didn't know was she a boy or a girI. - I'm a girI! - WeII, it makes aII the difference. - Ain't she got a sweet face? Somehow. - We'II take a ribbon in each coIour. - How much is that going to cost me? - That'II be 1 5 cents. Bought my grandchiIdren ribbons just Iike this, Iast hoIiday. GrandchiIdren? I don't beIieve it. Break a five? You can beIieve it aII right. I'm just as oId as I Iook. Now, here you be. That's one, two, three, four, five. This waIIet's about to bust inside. I give you five ones, you give me that $5 biII. - How many grandchiIdren you got? - I got two granddaughters, nine and ten, two grandsons near 1 6 and I got a grandson 35 years oId! Come on! Why don't you just give me a $1 0 biII? Here's the five. The ones are there. It won't be so quick to break. - Six chiIdren! - I got a daughter 51 ! I don't mean to be handing you no Iine, but that's pretty hard to beIieve. - You can beIieve it aII right! - I'd have to see it. Much obIiged. - See you again! - Y'aII come back! (ENGINE STARTS UP) It just don't seem quite right. Somehow. - Yes? - I'm Iooking for Mr StanIey. - Mr StanIey's dead. - I'm Iooking for Mr Warren M StanIey. Warren's passed on, sir. I was just taIking to him not more than two weeks back. He ordered this BibIe. He spent money on a BibIe? - Yes, with the name EIvira in the corner. - Why wouId he buy a BibIe? He took fast to the idea. He Ieft a baIance to it. Not counting the deposit... - This one's aIready paid for! - Huh? Mr StanIey paid for the whoIe thing, don't you remember? (BABY CRYING ) - Afternoon, ma'am. Mr Huff at home? - Mr Huff passed away a week ago. Gee, I was taIking to him a month ago. - What was it you wanted? - My name is Pray, Kansas BibIe Co. He ordered this BibIe for Edna. - That's my name. - You don't have to take it. - I'II give you back his deposit and... - Of course I want to keep it. He bought me a BibIe. I toId him I couId seII him a cheaper one, but he wanted the best, the best being the de Iuxe with the name printed in goId Ietters, bringing up a baIance... Of $24! $24. I'II get my purse. What's your name, honey? - Addie. - What a sweet IittIe name. - Addie Pray, ma'am. - Addie Pray, I'm going to get you $24 and an extra five for just coming to my door. - Praise the Lord. - Praise the Lord. # Keep your sunny side up, up # Hide the side that gets bIue # - Let's give 'em some money. - No. Just a IittIe bit. We got $305.1 6. It's a whoIe other business giving it away. - They're poorIy! - The whoIe country is. - Frank RooseveIt said to care for peopIe. - I don't care about RooseveIt. - He says it! - That so? He's taking care of himseIf. You think he don't eat off siIver trays? He couId eat off tabIe tops. He don't. Because that wouId make him Iook common. He ain't running this. I am. - You don't say what we give away. - It's mine, too. - $200 beIongs to me, don't forget. - You want it? Put my share in my pocket and I'II take you to a train station. You Iike that? Find out where the nearest depot is. First you overcharge, then you give it away! - Where are we? - PIainviIIe. $1 2 for a BibIe! Then it's up to $24! If I stay with you, I'II end up in jaiI! - You can take me to the LincoIn depot. - You bet I wiII! - Where's LincoIn? - There. - You think I'm taking you over there? - We'II hit one in SyIvan Grove. - Where's SyIvan Grove? - Here. - That's through Lucas. - You got to go some way! - I'm not compIaining! - You got to go through WaIdo, Luray... Luray? Those are pretty good towns. We couId do some business. - We won't. We're nearIy out of BibIes. - What? Why didn't you teII me? - You Iook in the box! - You've aIways got an excuse. - You aIways bIame me! - You shouId have toId me! - We're running out of BibIes! - We got to get new ones in Great Bend. - Great Bend's the other way. - We got to have BibIes, don't we? We can veer down to Lucas and WiIson. Veer off to Lorraine and Bushton. We couId veer off to Hoisington. Just have to keep on veering, that's aII. - I'm getting hungry. You hungry? - Uh-huh. (RADlO ) # Just one more chance # To prove it's you alone l care for # Each night l say a little prayer for,,, # (DOOR CLOSES - LAUGHING ) (WOMAN) Sometimes l just don't know, Keeping people with all the Doodley-do! (PRAY) Doodley-do! Doodley-do! You go on back now. I'II see you another time. - Don't send me back. - You got to go. Another time, I promise. What you trying to keep secret? You got diamonds and rubies in there? - Go on, go on. - OId Fido! Night-night, oId Fido! - Woof! - Woof, woof! (RADlO ) # Still l'm hoping all the while # You'll give me just one more word,,, # (RADIO OFF) (TRAIN HOOTS IN DISTANCE) (LIGHT SNORING ) (SNIFFS ) There it is! - Much obIiged. - Thank you, sir. AII right, boy, you're next. I ain't a boy! - Don't Iet it bother you. - It ain't funny. - There's no reason to get that sore. - He caIIed me a boy. - He just got mixed up, that's aII. - He Iooked me straight in the eye! - So am I and I think you're beautifuI. - You're just saying that. You're as beautifuI as your mama and she put every fIower to shame. They feared she'd droop the tuIips in HoIIand, and you got aII her Iooks. - Then how come he caIIed me a boy? - I don't know. - Maybe it's 'cause of what you got on. - What's wrong with it? Nothing. It just...don't exactIy make you Iook feminine. Maybe we shouId get you fixed up. Get you a new dress, a fancy new hat. It wouIdn't exactIy hurt business either. - You reaIIy think I'm pretty as Mama? - Course I do. - How much money's in the box? - $405.1 6. - Give me a twenty. - What for? Give me a twenty! - Come on. - Where? To get us new outfits with your money from Aunt HeIen. - I don't have no Aunt HeIen. - Sure you do. Let me expIain it to you. - Yes, sir? - An Ipana toothpaste and Sen-Sen. - 20 and 5. - 25. - Yes, sir. - There. and 1 5 makes 20. Thank you very much. I don't need a bag. - Thank you very much. - Thank you. Bye now! - How much is this? - 35 cents. - 65 cents makes $1 . Thank you. - Thank you. - Yes? - A bottIe of purpIe toiIet water, pIease. That'II be 25 cents. There you go! Lady, you made a mistake. Huh? I give you $4.75. - I gave you a $20 biII. - Uh-uh. You gave me a five. No, ma'am, it was a $20 biII. You give me a five and I give you $4.75. It was a $20 biII. No twenties in with no fives. - What's aII the turmoiI? - This girI gave me a $5 biII. I gave her a $20 biII, I know I did. It was a birthday present from my Aunt HeIen. She wrote ''Happy Birthday, Addie'' on it. You just go Iook and see! That's it, right there! That's my $20 biII I got from my Aunt HeIen! - Give the chiId her $20 biII! - I am. - Give the chiId her $20. - Yes, sir! - And some candy. - Yes, sir! - And pay attention to things! - Yes, sir! Get your cotton candy! Sweet hot cotton candy! - Five cents. - Do you have change for this five? There you are, IittIe girI. Cotton candy! Cotton candy! Mister, this purse is fuII. If you give me a five, I'II give you five ones. - Get your cotton candy right here! - Mister! UnIess you've got a $1 0 biII? I'II give you the five back, aIong with the five ones. There. Now, don't bother me any more. Cotton candy! Step up and get your cotton candy! (MUSIC: ''HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN'') (SCREAMS FROM THE RIDES ) Get your tickets for a fourth of a dollar! The show goes on in five minutes! Six unusuaI Iadies unveiIing the secret of passion, found onIy a few years back in the Egyptian tomb of Queen Neferetti, and featuring the Iuscious Miss Trixie DeIight! - I had my photo took! - You did? - Come get a photo with me? - Not now. - It'II onIy take a minute! - Not now! - It won't be here after tonight! - I can't heIp that. - How many times wiII you see it? - As many as I Iike. - You've seen it haIf a dozen. - I might see it more. Go pIay bingo. - I don't want to. - Write another Iove note to St RooseveIt. - Maybe I wiII! - Stop standing around checking on me. I ain't about to Ieave some poor chiId stranded. I got scrupIes, too. - You know what that is, scrupIes? - No. But if you've got them, it's a sure bet they beIong to somebody eIse. And his name ain't Frank! It's FrankIin! (BELL DINGS - CHEERING ) (CAROUSEL MUSIC ) Hey there, I wondered where you got to. Where's your pa? - Is my picture ready? - Sure. Excuse me, foIks. Sit back in the moon there. I'II be right with you. Here it is. Hey now, I thought you were going to sit in the moon with your pa? He ain't my pa! Hi! Get ready! SmiIe! HoId it, hoId it! BeautifuI. I don't want you smoking in the car tomorrow. - What? - I didn't say nothing. I'm Iistening to you. There'II be two extra peopIe riding with us and one don't Iike smoke. - What extra person? - What? - What extra person? - A Iady I'm taking to Topeka. - I didn't know we was going there. - You don't know everything. What's the Iady's name? Miss DeIight. Miss Trixie DeIight. She's a reaI Iady! I'm just giving her a ride! That's what you're aIways taIking about, heIping other peopIe out! (WATER SPLASHING IN BASIN) Don't drop nothing, Imogene. Take care of those breakabIes. Yes, Miss Trixie. Morning! Car is right over here. You better ride in the back. Come on, lmogene, you don't want to keep these nice people waiting, (TRIXIE CHATTERS AND LAUGHS ) Then I danced in TuscaIoosa and the Mayor said the nicest things about me. The newspaper ran a big photo on me. I got a scrapbook on me from aII over. TeII him about the time that man tried to crack your head with a bottIe. Imogene, you siIIy oId thing. You know that's not true. He wasn't going to hit me with no bottIe. He was horsing around. Ask me nice and I'II teII you about that. TeII him about the time you aImost got thrown in jaiI. I don't understand it, Daddy. This IittIe baby has to go winky-tinky aII the time. - Don't worry. We'II stop here for dinner. - We just stopped for her at Iunch. Right, and now we're stopping for dinner. Come on. I ain't hungry. # The whole day through # Just a little song,,, # - Want one? - OK. - How oId are you? - I don't know, 1 5. Why? - Just asking. Where are you from? - Nowhere. - You've got to be from somewheres. - Down by Troy, I guess. How Iong you work for her? Ain't kept count. A year, maybe. How oId you be? Nine. She reaIIy do aII that dancing? If you want to caII it dancing. AII she do is waggIe her hips and shake her behind. How come she Ieave that job? The boss try to make her put out for his friends. - She don't put out for free. - She put out much? Like a gum machine. Drop something in and she'II put something out. - How much she charge? - Most she can get. But she aIways asks for $5. She ain't putting out for your pa, though. Says she's going to get aII she can first. He say he was my pa? I heard him mumbIing something Iike he didn't want to taIk about it. Ain't he? I'm with him, ain't I? How do you come to be with her? She promised to give me $4 every week. She ain't gave me nothing! Except a nickeI or dime. - Why don't you quit? - Quit? How I'm going to quit? And what if I do? Ain't got no money to get home to Mom. And what if I do get home? They got hard times as it is. My mama say, ''Go work for a white Iady, she'II take good care of you.'' Know what I think? You know that white speck on top of chicken doo-doo? That's the kind of white she is. She's just Iike that IittIe white speck on top of oId chicken shit! I just Iove it, Iove it, Iove it! AII this white. It is absoIuteIy the proper thing for my kind of appearance. You need a new dress. The right dress makes aII the difference in a face, especiaIIy since you've got the right kind of bone structure. Oh my, oh my, Daddy, but wouIdn't you Iook handsome behind the wheeI of that? Everything is in the bone structure. A person can teII his whoIe Iife by his bone structure. I tried pushing her out of a window. (TRIXIE) I think there are bugs aII over. I just hope there's no snakes round here. I think we ought to go now, you know? Thank you. Now, hurry... Oh! Come on, get those things in there. Don't break anything, either. (CRASH) - Let's go! - Baby's got to go winky-tinky. Don't worry. - Hey! - (CROCKERY CRASHES ) Come on, we're ready. - Come on! - I ain't ready! You don't Iook busy. Come on. - I ain't coming! - You Iisten here... - No, I won't Iisten here! - What's up with you? I want to sit in front. How come we ain't working no more? We're on vacation. Miss DeIight and me are in front because we're grown-ups. That's where grown-ups sit! ChiIdren do not teII grown-ups what to do with their Iives. She ain't my grown-up and I ain't sitting no more in the back. - Not for no cow! - Keep your voice down! Miss DeIight ain't no cow. She has a high schooI dipIoma! And she's got to go to the bathroom, so get to the car! She's aIways in the bathroom! She must have a bIadder Iike a peanut. I ain't getting back in that car tiII she's out of it! (INAUDIBLE) What's up? Daddy says you're wearing a sad face. That ain't good. How wouId you Iike a coIouring book? You Iike Mickey the Mouse? Oh! Son of a bitch! Come down to the car and Iet's aII be friends. You see me smiIe? Let's see you smiIe Iike Aunt Trixie. Come on down with MademoiseIIe. Kiddo, I understand how you feeI. You don't have to worry. One of these days you're going to be just as pretty as MademoiseIIe, maybe more. You aIready got bone structure. When I was your age, I didn't have any. Took me years to get bone structure. Don't think that's not important. Nobody started to caII me MademoiseIIe tiII I was 1 7 and getting bone structure. At your age, I was skinny. Never thought I'd have nothing up here. You're going to have them up there, too. TeII you what, want me to show you how to use cosmetics? I'II Iet you put on my earrings. You'II see how pretty you're going to be. I'II show you how to make up your eyes and your Iips. I'II see to it you get a IittIe bra, or something. Now, pick your ass up, sit in the back, and cut out the crap, you understand? You're going to ruin it, ain't you? I don't want to wipe you out and I don't want you wiping me out, you know? So I'm going to IeveI with you, OK? With me, it's just a matter of time. I don't know why, but somehow I just don't manage to hoId on reaI Iong. So, if you wait it out a IittIe, it'II be over, you know? Even if I want a feIIa, somehow or other I manage to get it screwed up. Maybe I'II get a new pair of shoes, a nice dress, a few Iaughs. Times are hard. If you fooI around on the hiII up here, then you don't get nothing, I don't get nothing, he don't get nothing. So, how about it, honey? Just for a IittIe whiIe? Let oId Trixie sit up front with her big tits. (HORN) Hey, come on! We're coming, and if you don't find me a gas station soon, this IittIe oId snowfIake's going to wet her pantaIoons! Whoo! Oh my, I aImost feII down! (TRIXIE) Yoo-hoo! Look what we got! Ain't she the sweetest thing? Don't he Iook Iike a prince in this? Imogene, get everything in here. We got more room than Kansas! Listen to the horn! BIow the horn, Daddy! - (HORN) - (TRIXIE LAUGHS ) - Do it again! - (HORN) (LAUGHTER) (MOZE CHATTERS WITH TRIXIE) This girI's sitting on the troIIey, takes out a magazine and starts to read it. She ain't read more than two pages and, reaI sIow, she takes her stockings down and takes off her shoes. She turns the stockings wrong side out and puts them back on. AII the passengers are wondering what's going on. This oId guy asks her, ''I saw your strange procedure. What were you doing?'' She said, ''I was reading this magazine and found it to be such hot stuff, ''I feIt compeIIed to turn the hose on myseIf.'' Have they a room with a canopy bed? - Have you a room with a canopy bed? - No, but I got one with a firepIace. I'd Iike that one, Daddy. It ain't no canopy bed, but it sure opens up a whoIe new can of peas! - Can of peas! Ain't that cute! - (BELL) How's that? Imogene, heIp the boy with these things. Give them 234, 235 and 236. They're fixing the eIevator. First fIight up, if you don't mind. It's aII right. Thank you. - Can of peas! - What was that? WeII, you know, canopy, can of... They rhyme. I see! Can of peas, canopy. I get it now. I knew you'd get it. (RADlO ) # Picture Henry Ford without a car # Picture heaven's firmament without a star # Picture Fritzi Kreisler without a fiddle # Picture poor Philadelphia without a Biddle # Picture Central Park without a sailor # Picture Mister Lord minus Mister Taylor # Mix 'em all together and what have you got? # Just a picture of me without,,, # There's a rip in the seam of that dress. Get it sewed up. And wash these hose. - Yes, Miss. - My bath ready? - Yes, Miss Trixie. - You've made it awfuI hot IateIy. - I knows you Iike it hot, Miss Trixie. - Not that hot! Finish up aII these things. - Come back in an hour and dry me off. - Yes, Miss Trixie. - What you doing up there? - I got an idea. Come on! - What kind of idea? - Come in here and I'II teII you. Go on. What wouId Miss Trixie do if somebody offered her $25 to put out? You crazy? For that much money, she'd drop her pants in the road. That's what I figured. You want to get away from Miss Trixie? If you heIp me, I'II give you money to get home. - How much money? - $30. - When do we start? - Tomorrow. Miss Trixie, you know the man at the desk who checked us in? Yeah? He teII me he'd pay $25 just to have a good time with you. What? That IittIe two-bit-bum nerve of that guy! Bet he don't make that in a week, Where would he get that? I don't know. AII I know is what he toId me. $25, huh? I'd sure have to see the money to beIieve it. There you go. You come back and see us again reaI soon. Hmm! - I'II have a Juicy Fruit gum, pIease. - Here. Want I shouId chew it for you? You know that red-headed Iady, named Miss Trixie DeIight? - She thinks you're reaI cute. - Says you and who eIse? Honest! She says you're better Iooking than Dick PoweII. - The Iady's got good taste! - Thought you'd Iike to know. Just a minute! Give these to her. Say they're with FIoyd's compIiments. She'II Iike that! Maybe you shouId write her a note. What kind? I thought men aIways wrote Iadies notes when they send presents. Maybe you shouId ask for a date. That'd tickIe her. Yeah, maybe I ought to. Say, she's not married, is she? She don't even have a reguIar boyfriend. The man with her yesterday is my daddy. He's her manager. She's a dancer. I figured she was something Iike that. Whereabouts does she dance? - Lots of big pIaces. She's a star. - How about that! Why not print it? She Iikes that. Print it, huh? ''Some sweets for the sweet. ''Some girIs say I'm a smooth dancer myseIf. How about trying me out?'' - You sure this is going to work? - I don't know, but we'II give it a try. Throw this in the drawer, wiII you? Keep your fingers crossed. - Who is it? - It's Addie. What is it? I got a message from Moze. He had to run over to HaynesviIIe. - He won't be back untiI suppertime. - Huh? I think he had to get something fixed on his car. He'II be gone aII day. Well, OK, OK! - Howdy. - Howdy. - What you having? - WaffIes. I aIready ate. I had waffIes, too. Sure are good, ain't they? They ain't bad for waffIes. Mr Moze, Miss Trixie don't feeI so good. She's staying in bed today. She'II see you at supper. She's sick? I'd better go up there. She ain't reaI sick. Ain't no worry. She's having her Iady's time. Oh... TeII her I'II see her this evening. Just wanted to say good morning. I think I'II go upstairs and poIish my shoes. - Somebody's at the door, lmogene, - Yes, Miss Trixie, - Something for you, Miss, - What? - lt was outside the door, - What is it? lmogene, leave that, Run along, l'll call you when l need you, Yes, Miss Trixie, (ELEVATOR HUMS ) HeIIo, Cupid. Miss Trixie wants to see you. Says it's important. Room 235. She does, does she? When? - Now. - I can't get off right now. It's important. You teII her I'II come up Iater tonight, when the moon is fuII. But you can't. She won't even be here after tonight. She won't even be here after today. She won't? WeII... You won't be sorry. I couId go up for a few minutes. What's that room number? Room 235. She's waiting for you. OK. TeII her I'm on my way up, sweetheart. He's coming! He's coming! - Who is it? - Sheikh of Araby. WeII, don't you Iook purty! WeII, come on in, honey. Come on. - You don't give a girl much time, - l get around, - You don't go around babbling, do you? - What? lt's just important to me right now not to get talked about, Do l look like that kind of fella? Say! You are a wild one, aren't you? Hold it! Wait, you're going to tear it! Now, just let me slip it off, Hey! Well now,,, ,,,ain't you a show dog! Oh! I'm going. The key! Give me the key! Mr Moze wiII kiII them both, I knows it. - Wait for me here! - OK. - Moze! - What's the troubIe? - Better go up to Trixie's room right away! - Is she sick? No, she's not. Just do what I teII you. And take the eIevator! Don't knock! Use a key! (HUM OF ELEVATOR) Your daddy going to kiII that man. - He'II cut him up pretty bad. - Moze wouIdn't do that. Down home, when a man come home and hear a man in bed with his wife, he just go to the wood piIe and get his doubIe-bIade axe and go in and chop them up. FoIk say he cut them up just Iike kindIing wood. - Addie, we're Ieaving! - Now? Right this minute! (RADIO ON - MUSIC ) I don't know why that girI did such a thing to me. I'd have done aImost anything for that girI. It just ain't fair. - I reckon she's been carrying on a whiIe. - From the start. - There were other men? - Lots. Why didn't you teII me? I just knew you wouIdn't beIieve me. - Promise me one thing. - What, Moze? When you grow up, don't be the kind of woman who deceives men. - Promise me that. - I promise, Moze. (RADlO: ''BANKS OF THE OHlO'') # ,,,let me go on # Just a little ways away # While we walk along we'll talk # Talk about how it will be # When you say that you'll be mine # ln our home, we'll happy be # Down beside where the waters flow # Down on the banks of the,,, # Moze... Moze, pay attention. - What is it? - I seen something pecuIiar. - That man in there. - What man? - Standing by the door. - What's pecuIiar about him? He's got a roII of money couId choke us both to death. I'm not up to anything. He's got a notebook and aII that money. He keeps going outside and coming back in again. BootIegger. No question about it. You think we might do business with him? Drop a wad? We ain't done nothing for two months, since Trixie. And we onIy have $21 2 Ieft. - Better way of doing business. - What ways? Oh, heaps. Look, he's going out again! - FoIIow him. - Yeah? I toId you, didn't I? FoIIow him. Find out where he goes. # ,,, When you say that you'll be mine # ln our home, we'll happy be - # Down beside where the waters flow - (INAUDIBLE) # Down on the banks of the Ohio,,, # Thank you. # Big brown eyes and curly hair,,, # - What did you find out? - He's got bottIes in a bin. - How big's the bin? - Like our car trunk. What's your pIan? - Find out where he keeps his goods. - There's a shack, but he didn't go in it. How about a waIk before Daddy puts you to bed? Oh, goody! (MOZE HUMS ) He's Jess Hardin, a bootIegger. WhoIesaIes across the county. His brother's a big shot, too, but the girI couIdn't teII me about him. I had to go. - Where is it? - Over there. OK, come on. Keep watch. Anybody comes, cough reaI Iow. I'm going in. - It may be Iocked. - FoIks in the country never Iock things. Don't you know that? # Come sit by my side, little darlin' # Come lay your cool hand on my brow # Promise me that you will never,,, # You Hardin? That's right. Conrad's the name. Jack said I ought to Iook you up. Jack who? - Just Jack's good enough. - Don't know no Jack. He's running the biggest whoIesaIe business in the state. - You seIIing? - Right. Ain't interested in shiney. I ain't seIIing shiney. I deaI in bonded goods. What kind? - I have a good deaI on Three Feathers. - How much? It depends. You take 20 cases, I'd Iet them go for $25 per. Too much. - You can't get it that cheap IegaIIy. - Ain't IegaI here. - AII the more reason it's a bargain. - Give you $20. Can't do it. Price is set down in Wichita. How Iong before deIivery? How's earIy in the morning? You got it in the county? That's right. # ,,,My mother is dead and in heaven,,, # Where do I pick it up? - OK. - You Ieave some? PIenty. He'II never miss it. Moze! Moze, we'd better get. - Here. - It's aII fiIIed up! Them's for me. Get going! (ENGINE RUNNING ) Hurry! Get up there! Now, hoId on! And make sure nothing spiIIs off! WeII, you'd better go sIow. And hurry! - (SQUEALS ) Easy! - I got to turn corners, don't I? Won't he miss his whiskey? In a week. By then, we'II be in Missouri. He can't do nothing once we're in Missouri. (CAR ENGINE) Where is it? Brrm-brmm. (OWL HOOTS ) (CRICKETS CHIRP) Scoot over! - How much you get? - $625. $625 and he bought his own whiskey! That's $625, pIus the $21 2 we aIready got. If we drop some waIIets and do some twenties... - What's that? - Where? - Behind us. - I don't see nothing. - Something's back there. - Nothing but bIack. - I thought I seen something fIicker. - Nothing there. - You put the money in the box? - Uh-huh. I'II be gIad to get out of this town, I'II teII you that. There it is again! Dad bIam it! - Something fIickered, sure as heII! - Nothing behind us! Uh-oh! I toId you! (SIREN) - Who couId it be? - Christ! - Don't stop, keep going! - I can't. The car's in front of me. It'II be OK. Let me do the taIking. - PIaying games with us? - I didn't know who it was. It's risky. Might get your tyres shot off. Where are you heading? Me and my girI are going to St Jo. - Live there? - Nearby. What's your business? Livestock. MuIes, horses, cattIe. That's funny. I heard you was a bootIegger. No, sir. Must be a mistake. Maybe. Maybe not. Way I hear it, you just had a transaction by the oId barn. - Where wouId you hear that? - A famiIy friend. I don't know what you're taIking about. I'm taIking about bootIegging. I'm taIking about $625. - Where's that? - I don't have no $625. I don't know what you mean. I don't even know where the oId barn is. WeII, I reckon we'II just have to expIain a IittIe more thoroughIy, won't we? Beau, you take a ride with these nice peopIe. We're aII going back to town. (DEPUTY HUMS ) Damn! Just when you think you got it made. Just ain't made. - You good at this? - Not too good. Not too good? BootIegger's sitting there with his own IittIe game and he ain't even good at his own IittIe game. Yes, sir, that is some good joke. Found these on the seat. Wasn't any money in the car. I gone aII through it. Livestock business, huh? That whiskey's for a friend. HoId out your hands. I said hoId out your hands. You heard me. I didn't say put them down, did I? CIean hands for Iivestock. Don't Iook Iike they do much but pIay a IittIe casino. - It's for a friend. I didn't see no harm... - Didn't see no harm? Hear that, Beau? BootIegger cIaims he don't know the Iaw. I don't need no bottIes to book you. Law says aII I need is one IittIe oId drop. And Iaw says you use a vehicIe to transport aIcohoI, the said vehicIe is confiscated to be soId at pubIic auction. Kiss that pretty IittIe car goodbye. - HoId on! That seems rough... - I didn't teII you to Iower your hands. I teII you to Iower them, you Iower them. You don't do nothing tiII I say. Understand? Yes, sir. I aIready did. Ain't nothing in his cIothes except him, and he ain't worth five cents. She ain't got nothing on her, either. You don't know what kind of troubIe you're in. Better start thinking on it. I got a case against you for possessing and transporting whiskey. I can think of a few other things. Better face it. You're going to be here for a whiIe working on the county roads. With Iuck, you're out in six months. Six more for infIuencing a chiId. Maybe six years for that. - Maybe we couId work something out? - What's there to work out? I sure don't Iike to send a man to the road gang. AIways feIt sorry for them. But I can't overIook the fact that you've been paid $625 and you ain't teIIing me where it is. I know you're a bootIegger, so what's there for me to work out? Let's cut this ring around the rosy. Where's that... ...money? You think I'm fooIing around? I ain't fooIing around. Maybe you'II come around in time. Get a IittIe thirsty, get a IittIe hungry. Time has a way with criminaIs. - Don't it, Beau? - Sure do. It's aImost five. Somebody ought to be stirring at the caf. I'II step over there. See if that famiIy friend is there. I'II be back before Iong. I got aII day, you know? Got aII the time in the worId. # ,,,trouble's just a bubble and the clouds will soon go by # So let's have another cup of coffee Let's have another piece of pie # Let a smile be your umbrella for it's just an April shower # Even John D Rockefeller,,, # Sir, may I get my things, pIease? OK. # ,,,so now's the time to buy So let's have another cup of coffee # And let's have another piece of pie Daddy, I need the shithouse. There's one down the haII. Daddy, I'm scared. I want you to come and stand by the door. AII right if I go with her? Down there. - Run! - You crazy? Where are we running? God! Stop them bootIeggers! - This is the craziest... - Hurry! I'm hurrying! - BootIeggers! - Oh, Jesus! (SIREN) - I'II hit him! - He can jump! I couId've kiIIed him! They couId've had me for murder! - They're shooting at us! - They're missing. Go! We won't make it! Not in this car! Every Iawman in Kansas wiII be Iooking for it. We got to cross the river! - Where's the bridge? - Jesus! - What? - The bridge is the other way! - What?! - Hang on! (SIREN) It's no good! We'II make it too easy for them! We got to get off this road! HoIy smoke! - BIow your horn! - Won't heIp. He can't puII off the road. SeIIing whiskey to a sheriff's brother! (SIREN) - Hang on to your hat! HoId on! - Oh, God! - You aII right? - Uh-huh. We heId them, but we got to get off this road or we'II be in town. Get that money out! You'II stop my heart! We made it, didn't we? Anybody to home? Howdy. Need to get rid of my car here. I need to get rid of my car. Sheriff wants to put her in an orphanage. Know anybody that might want to swap? How about that truck there? We'II just Iet him chew on it a whiIe. WeII, the rear tyres Iook new, anyway. - The radio Iooks OK. - Think it runs? - It better! - Where wiII we go? Out of Kansas, across the river to St Jo, that's where. Here he comes. (MOZE) Look at them aII. I want a swap and three days' start before you take it out. (HORN) It's aII IegaI. Got the papers here. FiII out the form and you own it. Ain't going to swap. It's brand-new. - That car ain't no good! - What's the matter with it? Can't hauI nothing in it. If that's aII, you can seII it and get two trucks to do your hauIing. Ain't going to swap. - RassIe you for it. - You crazy? If I win, we swap. You win, keep the car and the truck. Quiet. - What kind of rassIing? - You name it. - Catch as can? - Shoes or barefoot? - Makes no never mind to me. - Barefoot. (ALL) Ya-ha! Go on, Leroy, go on! You'II get kiIIed just to give something away. Ain't got no choice. (OLD MAN) Get that city boy! Get the city boy! - Let's go. - Make him say ''caIf rope'', Leroy. Come on, Leroy. Get him, Leroy. Get him! You stop that! You make him fight fair! Look out for that rake! Watch out! Let's go in the car! Yee-ha! Ya-hoo! Whoo! (THEY BEEP THE HORN) (TRUCK RATTLES ) - Are you pushing? - Of course I'm pushing! OK, it'II go now. Put your foot on the brake. - The brake! - It don't work! The brake, goddamn it, the brake! - Don't you know where the brake is? - It don't work. Oh! WeII, it figures. WeII, we're in Missouri. What'II we do now? Drop some twenties? - How much money we got? - $837 and some change. We're just outside St Jo. - So what? - So... It's a big town. We can do better than twenties. (RADlO ) Y'all know that one, ''Let's have another cup of coffee, '' lt's 1 0,30 Sunday morning in St Jo and y'all get to church now, OK? Here's the news, ln Omaha, President Roosevelt told the nation,,, Moze, what if he don't beIieve you? He wiII. He's out to make a kiIIing, just Iike us. - Maybe he don't have a siIver mine? - I checked. Where's the money? He's just what peopIe say he is. Rich and greedy. PuII up your socks. We couId get a house and everything. Everything, just everything. # Just around the corner There's a rainbow in the sky... # Got it? Corner of East Waring and BurIington, 1 1 .00. Just show up with tears in your eyes. Don't forget the money. Of course I won't. See you in 30 minutes. Moze, couId we get a piano? A piano? We'II have a whoIe factory. # Just around the corner There's a rainbow in the sky # I guess you just didn't make a good enough swap. My brother's reaI sore at you. Seems you soId him his own whiskey. You can't arrest me here. Your brother's a bootIegger! You got an awfuI big mouth, mister. Maybe I can't arrest you in Missouri. Maybe I don't want to. But I can make sure you ain't going to feeI good whiIe you're here. Let's go! (CLOCK CHIMES ) (TYRES SQUEAL) (FAINT) Addie! Addie. Moze! Moze. - I...I swaIIowed my goId tooth. - Oh, Moze... - They took it aII. - You're aII beat up. Nothing's Ieft. I've been keeping $1 0 for emergencies! What'II we do with $1 0? Buy BibIes. Do a IittIe widow business. Must be Iots of good towns around here. Do twenties, drop some waIIets. Before you know it, we'II be good again. I'II bet in no time, we couId have a whoIe new car and everything. You're taking me to Aunt BiIIie's now, ain't you? I won't. - Don't cry. - I won't. It's where we set out for, ain't it? Looks nice. Yeah, Iooks reaI fine. - That must be your uncIe. - He Iooks nice, too. Yep, reaI nice. Maybe if RooseveIt comes by, they'II take me to see him. - If you write him, he can write back now. - He might at that. Course he wiII. Ain't no question but he wiII. AII this taIk's just wasting time. There's your skates and your radio. - Where wiII you go? - I got pIans. New ideas coming in every day. Get going. If I knew for sure you wasn't my pa... It's for sure I ain't. Sometimes I used to figure Mr Connors couId have been my pa. The way he touched my shouIder. Get me things from the candy counter free. And Mr Pritchard, he smiIed at me once, reaI nice. Except they don't have my jaw or nothing. So Iong. Ain't you coming to the door with me? There it is. Right there. - They'II wonder how I got here. - TeII them a famiIy friend brung you. You had troubIe on the way with your car and with finances. Get going. (TRUCK BACKFIRES ) Yes? Yes? I'm Addie. Addie! Aah. I've been worried sick about you! Come on in. (RADIO - MELANCHOLY MUSIC ) (RADIO OFF) I've been writing, and your UncIe DanieI's been trying to caII to see where you've been. You're the spitting image of your mother. Pretty as a picture. I don't know why I go on. What you need is coId Iemonade. You sit right there and I'II be right back. Everybody's going to be so happy to see you. (AUNT) We'll get those clothes off you and you're going to get into a nice bath, Then you're going to sleep in your own little bed, alongside your cousin Edna, l near give up on you, child, l bet you're starving to death, l'm going to cut you a big piece of pie, We got those telegrams, Then we never did hear from you, (BREATHING HARD) I said I don't want you riding with me no more. You stiII owe me $200. Look! (HE SIGHS ) Come on! Hurry up! # Keep your sunny side up, keep it up! # Hide the side that gets blue # lf you have nine sons in a row # Start a baseball team They make money, you know! # Keep your funny side up, don't let up! # Let your laughter come through, do! # Stand upon your legs Be like two fried eggs # Keep your sunny side up! # |
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