Friday, 22 October 2021

Shiny



Maurice Hurley :
“I get a call from Paramount saying 
Come and meet Roddenberry, 
we want to consider you as a writer 
for Star Trek: The Next Generation’ 
I said that's A Joke, that's a JOKE. 

But I want to meet Roddenberry. 
Who wouldn't wanna meet Roddenberry? 

I was coming off two cop shows. 
I was coming off Miami Vice, very good show. 
Equalizer, very good show. 

So he gives me the first episode to rewrite. 
We pass each other in the hallway four or five times a day, 
he won't look at me.

Dorothy Fortuna
Apparently Gene didn't like 
What He Wrote. 
It was probably the first time 
we heard them battle.

Hurley :
And he raises up behind his desk, 
this great bird-like creature 
and he points his finger at me like this 
and he says, 
"YOU don't know the difference 
between SHIELDS 
and DEFLECTORS!." 

And that went on for weeks.”

Shatner :
What did that say to you about 
What You Were Confronting? 

Hurley :
He didn't want ME,  
Hurley, The Writer. 

He didn't want me to write Me
he wanted me 
to write HIM…








You cannot have 
A Protagonist 
without Desire.

It doesn't make any sense.
Any fucking sense.

You follow? Good.
Anyone else?

Yes?

Kuafman :
What if A Writer is attempting to create 
Story where nothing much happens?

Where people don't change,
they don't have any epiphanies.

They Struggle and are Frustrated,
and nothing is resolved.

More a reflection
of The Real World.


Lektor :
The REAL World?

Kaufman
Yes, sir.

Lektor :
The Real fucking World.

First of all, you write a screenplay
without Conflict or Crisis,
you'll bore your audience to tears.

Secondly, Nothing Happens
in The World?

Are you out of your fucking mind?

People are murdered every day.

There's Genocide, War, Corruption.

Every fucking day,
somewhere in the world,
somebody sacrifices his life
to save somebody.

Every day, someone somewhere
takes a conscious decision
to destroy someone else.

People find love.
People lose it.

A Child watches A Mother beaten
to death on the steps of a church.

Someone goes Hungry.
Somebody Else Betrays His Best Friend 
for a Woman.

If you can't find that stuff in life,
then you, My Friend,
don't know crap about Life!

And why the fuck are you wasting my two precious hours with your movie?

I don't have any use for it!

I don't have any bloody use for it!

Okay, thanks.

Thank you. You're welcome.

No. Thank you.

Thank you so much, Mr. McKee.

This course makes you look at
writing in a whole different way.

Mr. McKee. 

Yes?

I'm the guy you yelled at this morning.

….I need more.

I'm the one who thought
things didn't happen in life.

Ah. Right. Okay.

Nice to see you. 

I need to Talk.

Mr. McKee, my even standing here is very scary.
I don't meet people well.
But what you said this morning
shook me to the bone.

It was bigger than my screenwriting choices.

It was about my choices as 
A Human Being. Please.

Yeah.

Well, you know, I could
sure use a drink, My Friend.

"...but a little fantastic
and fleeting and out of reach."

Then what happens?

Well, that's the end of the book.
I wanted to present it simply without big character arcs or sensationalizing the story.

I wanted to show flowers as God's miracles.

I wanted to show that Orlean never
saw the blooming ghost orchid.

It was about disappointment.

I see. That's not A Movie.

You gotta go back,
put in The Drama.

I can't go back. I've got pages of
false starts and wrong approaches.

I'm way past my deadline.
I'll tell you a secret.

A last act makes a film.

Wow them in the end,
and you got a hit.

You can have flaws, problems,
but wow them in the end
and you've got a hit.

Find an ending. But don't cheat.

And don't you dare bring in
a deus ex machina.

Your characters must change and The Change 
must come from them.

Do that and you'll be fine.

You promise?

Mr. McKee.

Have you taken my course before?


My Brother did.

My Twin brother, Donald.
He's the one who got me to come.

Lektor :
Twin screenwriters? 

Yeah.

Lektor :
Well, Julius and Philip Epstein,
who wrote Casablanca,
they were twins

You mentioned that in class.


Lektor :
Finest screenplay ever written.



Great writers' residence.

Donald.
Hey, how's your trip going?

You getting it on with that
lady journalist, you dog, you?

Yeah.

Listen, I'm just calling to say
congratulations on your script.

Isn't that cool? Marty says he can
get me high-sixes against a mil-five.

That's great, Donald.

I want to thank you
for all your help.

I wasn't any help.

Come on,
you let me stay in your place.

And your integrity
inspired me to even try.

It's been a wild ride.

Catherine says
she wants to play Cassie.

Oh, please! Ha, ha, ha.

Please, Donald?

Catherine Keener?

Catherine Keener's in my house?
Yeah, we're playing Boggle.

She's great. You should really
hang out with her, Charles.

Yeah. Um, look...

I've been thinking.

Maybe you'd be interested in hanging
out for a few days in New York.

Oh, my God, yes.

Yeah?

I was gonna show my script
to some people,

and, well, maybe you could
read it too, you know, if you like.

Of course. I'd be flattered.

Okay.

Thanks, Charles.

Okay, bye.

So, like, what would you do?

The script kind of
makes fun of me, huh?

I'm sorry. I was trying something...
Hey, I don't mind. It's funny.

Good. Okay.

So, what would you do?

You and me are so different,
Charles. We're different talents.

Charlie Kaufman :
I know. Just for fun...
How would the great Donald
end this script?

Heh, heh. Shut up.
"The Great Donald."
I feel like you're missing something.

All right. Like what? 


LookI did a little research
on the airplane.

"Sometimes this kind of story
turns out to be something more, some glimpse of life that expands
like those Japanese paper balls you drop in water and they bloom into flowers and the flower is so marvelous you can't believe there was a time all you saw was a paper ball and a glass of water."

First of all, that's inconsistent.
She said she didn't care about flowers.

For God's sake, it's just a metaphor.

No, it’s NOT, it’s a Similie.

Well, but for what?
What turned that paper ball into a flower?
It's not in the book, Charles.

I don't know. You're reaching.


Maybe.
But I think you actually need to
speak to this woman
To know her.

Charlie Kaufman :
I can't. Really. 

I'll go. I'll pretend I'm you.
I want to do it, Charles.

We'll get to the bottom of this.
We're gonna fix your movie, bro.

Charlie Kaufman :
But you've gotta be exactly me.
I have a reputation to maintain.

You can't be a goofball.
Can't be an asshole.

The Donald :
I'm not an asshole.

Charlie Kaufman :
You know what I mean.
No flirting. No bad jokes.
Don't laugh How You Laugh.

The Donald :
I'm not gonna laugh.
I get to have people think I'm you.
It's an honor.


******
The Donald :
So I guess I'll bring out
the big guns now.

Do you keep in touch with Larouche?
I felt I detected an attraction to him
in the subtext. 
Care to comment?

Uh...

Well, our relationship was strictly reporter-subject.

I mean, certainly an intimacy does
evolve in this kind of relationship.

By definition, I was so interested in everything he had to say.

But the relationship ends
when the book ends.

Mendacious deceit


What?

Nothing.

I just have one more question.
If you could have dinner with one
historical personage, living or dead, who would it be?

Uh, well, I would have to say...
Einstein.
Or Jesus.

Very good.
Interesting Answer.

The Donald :
She's lying. 

Charlie Kaufman :
What do you mean?
What happened?

Nothing. She said everything right.
Too right.

Well, maybe because they're True.
Did you embarrass me?

People who answer questions
Too Right are liars.

Everybody says Jesus and Einstein.
That's a prepackaged answer.

"Jesus and Einstein"?
Listen, Charles, I have an idea.
You'll need to buy me
a pair of binoculars.

What's "Jesus and Einstein"?

Come on.

Sing with me.

What the hell do you need binoculars for?

Let's go, let's go.

She hung up the phone.
She's upset.

Stop watching her.
Leave her alone.

She's crying.
She's at her computer.

This is morally reprehensible.

United to Miami.
Eleven fifty-five a.m. Tomorrow.
Thought she was done with Larouche.

Her parents live in Florida.

That was no parent phone call,
my friend.

Don't say "My Friend."

A guy entering.

Handsome.

Must be her husband.

She's acting weird with him, though, right?

Don't you think?

What's she hiding from him?

Maybe she's a lesbian
and doesn't know how to tell him.

What do you think?

Have you checked out Laroche's porn site?

No. I'm trying to read.

Anyway, I'm gonna look at the porn site. Research.

Don't tell my old lady.

You mean Mom?

No, I don't mean Mom.

Still say we should go
to Miami tomorrow.

Forget it.

Some of these chicks look okay.

Hey, guess what.
We're going to Miami tomorrow.

I said, no.
I said, oh, yeah, baby. Come here.

What I came to understand
is that Change is not A Choice.

Not for a species of plant,
and not for me.

It happens, and you are different.

Maybe the only distinction
between the plant and me
is that afterward,
I lied about my change.

I lied in my book.
I pretended with my husband

that everything was the same.

But something happened
in The Swamp that day.

Hey, look —
I told you I'd find
the jewel of the Fakahatchee.

It's A Fower.
Just A Flower.

Well, might as well grab it.
Long as I'm here.

Oh, man.
Boy, my porn site's gonna be big.

Look, something I didn't tell you that 
I want to tell you about The Ghost. Okay?

I think it might help you.

I'd just started at the nursery.
And I went back one night
to pick up something.

They wanted The Ghost
just to extract the drug.

It had been a ceremonial thing,
but the young guys, you know,
they liked to get stoned.

So Matthew?

He was one of the guys who...?
Sure.

Matthew lived on that shit 
till they ran out.

Because there was this one day
he was fascinated by me.

By my hair and my sadness.

Yeah, well, it does that.
That's what I wanted to tell you.

I mean, I think you'd like it, Susie.
It seems to help people 
be fascinated.

I can extract it for you.
I know how. I watched.

I'm probably 
the only white guy who knows.
I want to do this, Susie.

I'm done with orchids, Larouche.

Hello?

Hi.

It's John.

Did you get my package?

John?

John!

Johnny.

Hey, John? Yeah?

Very happy now.

Well, I'm glad.

Very happy.

Um, John? Hm?

Will you go like this...?

No. Keep going.

No. No.

I'm trying to make a dial tone.
And you have to sustain.

And then I will join you, and together...

See, I can't do it by myself.
Which one do you want me to do?

Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. Here we go.

That's it. We got it.

We got it. That's fucking amazing.

The Writer, Susan Orlean :
Do you ever get lonely 
sometimes, Johnny?

John Larouche, 
The Orchid Thief :
Well, I was a weird kid.
Nobody liked me.
But I had this idea...
If I waited long enough, someone 
would come around and just,
you know, understand me.

Like my mom.

Except Someone Else.

She'd look at me and
quietly say, "Yes."
Just like that.
And I wouldn't be 
alone anymore.

The Writer, Susan Orlean :
Oh, I wish I were an ant.
Oh, they're so shiny.

John Larouche, 
The Orchid Thief :
You're shinier than 
any ant, darling.

The Writer, Susan Orlean :
That's the sweetest thing
anybody has ever said to me.

John Larouche, 
The Orchid Thief :
Well,
I like you, that's why.

Wednesday, 20 October 2021

Power + Control





What are you making?

Hinges, sir.

I've got some
workers coming in tomorrow.
Where the hell they from again?

Yugoslavia, 
Herr Kommandant.

I've got to make room.
Make me a hinge.

Yes, sir.

Keep going, you're doing well.
Oh, that's very good.

But I'm a bit confused,
and perhaps you can help me.

What I don't understand
is that you've been working
since I think, what,
about 6:00 this morning?

Yet, such a small pile
of hinges.

Oh, Christ.

May I try that, sir?

Check the angle lever.
Maybe it's bent.

No, no. You wouldn't hear a click
if it was the angle lever.

Maybe it's the pin.
Maybe the pin shaft is greasy.

Ja, come on.

What did I just say? Here.

Herr Kommandant.

I beg to report that my heap of
hinges was so unsatisfactory
because the machines were being
recalibrated this morning.
I was put on to shoveling coal.

Strange, huh?

Yeah.

Thank you, Muek.

Ah, Lisiek. Don't touch the
leather, it's just been oiled.

Rottenfuhrer.
Oh, for me?

Oh, thank you very much,
Herr Direktor.

Herr Direktor!
Herr Direktor!
Herr Direktor.

He was making hinges slowly.

So the man can turn out a hinge in
less than a minute.
Why the long story?

Hmm?

Thank you, sir.

You're welcome.

Nobody knows who
stole the chicken, hmm?

Tell him about the chicken.

A man walks around with a chicken
and nobody notices this.

Save Yourselves.
Tell him about the chicken.

Still nobody knows.

It was you.
You committed this crime.

No, sir.

But you know who, though.

Yes.

Who?

Him!

He's very gifted.

Yeah, sure.
Bring him over.

Sir. Thank you.

Thank you again, Herr Direktor.

You're welcome again.

It's an honor to work
for such a great company.

It's great to have you.

I promise to learn everything there is to know about enamelware production.

That's great.

Hello? Miss Elsa Krause is here.
I only need 5 minutes.

She wants to speak to the Herr Direktor.

Yes.

He won't see you.

Please, sit down.

Pernod? Cognac?

No. No, thank you.

So, what can I do for you?

They say that no one dies here.
They say your factory is a haven.
They say you are Good.

Who says that?

Everyone.
My name is Regina Perlman,
not Elsa Krause.
I've been living in Krakow on false
papers since the ghetto massacre.

My parents are in Plaszow.
Their names are
Chana and Jakob Perlman.

They are older people.
 They are killing older people now in Plaszow.

They bury them up in the forest. Look, I don't have any money.
I borrowed these clothes.
I'm begging you. Please.
Please bring them here.

I don't do that.
You've been misled.

I ask one thing.
Whether or not the worker 
has certain skills.

That's what I ask
and that's what I care about.

My father is an importer,
not a metalworker.

Such activities are illegal. 
You will not entrap me!

Cry, and I will have you arrested.
I swear to God!

People die.
It's a fact of life.

He wants to kill everybody?
Great!

What am I supposed to do about it?
Bring everybody over?
Is that what you think?
Send them over to Schindler.
Send them all!
His place is A Haven, didn't you know?
It's not a factory.
It's not an enterprise of any kind.

It's a haven for rabbis and orpha
and people with no skills whatsoever!

You think I don't know what you're doing?

You're so quiet all the time.
I know, I know!

Are you losing money?

That's not The Point!

So The Point is?

It's Dangerous!
It's Dangerous to Me!

You have to understand. 
Goeth is under enormous pressure.

You have to think of it in his situation.

He's got this whole place to run.
He's responsible for everything
here, all these people.

He's got a lot of things to worry about.

And he's got The War which
brings out the worst in people.

Never The Good, always The Bad.
Always The Bad.

But in normal circumstances he wouldn't be like this. 
He'd be alright.

There'd just be The Good aspects of him, which...
He's a wonderful crook.

A man who loves good food, good
wine, the ladies, making money...

Killing.

He can't enjoy it.
Bejski told me the other day,
somebody escaped from a work detail outside the wire.

Goeth lined up everybody from
the missing man's barracks.

He shot the man to the left of
Bejski, the man to the right of him.

He walked down the line shooting
every other man with a pistol.

25.

What do you want me to do about it?

Nothing, nothing.

We're just talking.

"Perlman."

Perlman!

Husband and wife.

Jakob and Chana Perlman!

Have Goldberg bring them over.

Mutzen ab!

Appell abtreten!

I'm sure this will be better
than those rags, Lisiek.

Herr Direktor, I was just helping
Lisiek to find something to clean the stains from the Herr Kommandant's bathtub.

Go clean it.

Pardon me, Herr Direktor.

You don't have to report to me, Helen.
You know who I am? Hmm?
I'm Schindler.

Of course. I have heard, 
and you have been here before.

Here, why don't you keep this someplace?

Go on, take it.

I get extra food here.

Well, if you don't want to eat it, 
trade it. Or give it to Lisiek.
Why not build yourself up?

My first day here, he beat me 
because I threw out
the bones from dinner.

He came down to the basement
at midnight, and he...
He asked me where they were.

For his dogs, you understand.

I said to him, 
I don't know how I say this.
I never could say it now,

I said to him,
"Why are you beating me?"

He said, 
“The reason I beat you now
is because you ask why I beat you."

I know your sufferings, Helen.

It doesn't matte
I have accepted them.

Accepted them?

One day he will shoot me.

No, no, no, he won't shoot you.
I know. I see things.

We were on the roof on Monday,
young Lisiek and I,
and we saw the Herr Kommandant
come out of the from door
and down the steps by the
patio, right there below us,
and there on the steps
he drew his gun and he
shot a woman who was passing by.

A woman carrying a bundle.
Through the throat.

Just a woman on her way
somewhere, you know?

She was no fatter or thinner
or slower or faster than anyone else,
and I couldn't guess what had she done.

The more you see of the Herr Kommandant, the more you see 
There is No Rules 
That You can Live By.

You can't say to yourself, 
"If I follow these rules, 
I will be safe."

He won't shoot you because
he enjoys you too much.

He enjoys you so much he won't
even let you wear The Star.

He doesn't want anyone else to know
it's a Jew he's enjoying.

He shot the woman from the steps
because she meant nothing to him.

She was one of a series,
neither offending or pleasing him.

But you, Helen.

It's all right. 
It's not that kind of a kiss.

Thank you.

Shh.

Here.

Right. The wine.

Wonderful party, Amon.
Thank you.

Why do you drink
that motor oil?

Hmm? I send you good
stuff all the time.

Your liver's going to explode
like a hand grenade.

You know, I look at you.
I watch you.
You're never drunk.

Oh, that's...
That's real control.
Control is Power.
That's Power.

Is that why they fear us?

We have the fucking power to
kill, that's why they fear us.

They fear us because we have
the power to kill arbitrarily.

A man commits a crime,
he should know better.

We have him killed, 
and we feel pretty good about it.

Or we kill him ourselves
and we feel even better.

That's not Power, though.

That's Justice.
It's different than Power.

Power is when we have
every justification to kill,
and we don't.

You think that's Power?

That's what the emperors had.
A man stole something, he's brought in
before The Emperor,
he throws himself down on the
ground, he begs for mercy.

He knows he's going to die.

And the emperor pardons him.

This worthless man.
He lets him go.

I think you are drunk.

That's Power, Amon.
That is Power.

Amon The Good.

I pardon you.

What do they want?

I don't know, but they're in
my office now reviewing our books.

As my accountant, tell me, should
I be alarmed that the auditors
are reviewing my books?

Well...

Or have you done
your job properly?

You needn't be alarmed.
I needn't be alarmed.

I'm sorry, sir.

Do you know how much
this saddle is worth?

Do you know how much it costs?

All right.
All right.

Stern, what the hell are you
doing following me around?

Baracken eins, elf
funfzehn und zwounddreiBig
am Appellplatz melden.

She was smoking on the job.

Tell her not to do it again.

I have to report, sir.

I've been unable to remove
the stains from your bathtub.

What are you using, Lisiek?

Soap, Commandant.

Soap? Not lye?

Go ahead, go on, leave.
Leave, I pardon you.

I pardon you.



Virgil: 
Now the first time you kill somebody, 
that's the hardest. 
I don't give a shit if you're fuckin' Wyatt Earp 
or Jack the Ripper. Remember that guy in Texas? 
The guy up in that fuckin' tower that killed all them people? 
I'll bet you green money that first little black dot he took a bead on, that was the bitch of the bunch. 

First one is tough, no fuckin' foolin'. 
The second one... the second one ain't no fuckin' Mardis Gras either, 
but it's better than the first one 
'cause you still feel the same thing, y'know... except it's more diluted, y'know it's... it's better. I threw up on the first one, you believe that? Then the third one... the third one is easy, you level right off. It's no problem. Now... shit... now I do it just to watch their fuckin' expression change.

Comprehension



“She Understands;
She Does Not Comprehend.”

— River Tam




Have you ever seen a shape in a cloud, or a face in a knot of wood? 


Every few months Jesus appears to the unsuspecting in a piece of toast.


Or does He? Human Beings 

are pattern-seeking animals.


For thousands of years, Our Survival depended on being able 

to spot patterns in Nature 

to find predators hiding in 

The Wild.


And so now, centuries later, 

we are still looking, still searching every cloud for faces, 

as if our lives depend on it.


So strong is our belief that 

A Pattern must exist 

that The Human Mind 

will project the pieces that don't fit.


So, where The Pessimist sees Danger 

hiding behind every back, 

The Optimist sees Friendship.


Which is Why

When We Encounter Coincidence

We often see Conspiracy.


Scene 6.

The Greatest Single Benefit to 
Hiring 
A Leader to Rule over You 
and 
Govern The Village 
in your stead —

Is that you never have to listen to a bloody word they ever say to you —







SCENE 6
(Mulder's holding cell. THE GUARD opens the cell door for SCULLY and SKINNER. This is a different cell. A darker cell. There's a small window at the very top of it. MULDER is standing in front of that window stretching upward and facing the light. He has his back to the door.)
(THE GUARD closes the door. He remains outside.)
SCULLY: Mulder.
(MULDER turns around slowly. He moves away from the light and a little closer to SCULLY and SKINNER. He has a strange look on his face.)
SCULLY: Mulder!
(MULDER sniffs the air around him. He fixes his stare only at SCULLY and says ...)
MULDER: I smelled you coming, Clarice.
(SCULLY and SKINNER look a little stunned. SCULLY throws an uncertain glance to SKINNER. MULDER releases a chuckle and a smile. SCULLY takes a deep breath at being once again exposed to MULDER'S exquisite sense of humour.)
SCULLY: Oh, my ...
(SCULLY doesn't seem too amused. She also hasn't moved closer to MULDER. She remains where she is since she came into the cell, quite a length away from MULDER with SKINNER between them.)
SCULLY: Damn it, Mulder. It's not funny to see you putting on that act.
MULDER: No, that is funny.
(MULDER fixes SCULLY with a look and begins to walk toward her.)
MULDER: What's not funny is what they do to you in here if you don't put on that act.
(MULDER finally sounds like his old self.)
(MULDER reaches for SCULLY, cups the back of her head with both hands, and draws her to him. MULDER kisses SCULLY leisurely taking his time, his thumbs gently caressing her cheek. SCULLY reaches up and touches MULDER. This is the reunion they both need. MULDER wraps his arms around SCULLY, drawing her nearer to him without breaking the kiss. They embrace each other in their passion. For one moment now and after, they simply hold each other.)
(SKINNER standing close to them, averts his eyes allowing them what little privacy he can.
(MULDER and SCULLY pull away from each other. MULDER humorously turns to SKINNER.)
MULDER: Come here, you big, bald, beautiful man.
SKINNER: The only thing you're going to be kissing, Mulder, is your sweet ass good-bye, with the trouble your in.
MULDER: Uh-huh, I kind of gathered that right around the 50th brainwashing session.
(MULDER inches a little closer to SCULLY, he's holding her hand and lifts it to his lips.)

SCULLY: 
Mulder, why are they 
doing this to you?

MULDER: 
They think that They're preparing me for My Trial. 
For My Testimony.

SKINNER
Your Testimony's not going to matter
Not with the case They're building.

MULDER: Not building. Rigging.


SKINNER: 
Yeah, I don't think you understand the seriousness of the charges. 
This isn't some routine wrist-slapping
You're on Trial for Your Life.

MULDER
My Trial's a forgone conclusion

What They really want is 
for me to admit My Guilt 
and Help Them Out

What's really on Trial here 
is The Truth.

SCULLY: 
Mulder, They're saying you killed a man.
MULDER: Have they produced a body?
(Neither SCULLY nor SKINNER answer. SCULLY looks over at SKINNER.)
MULDER: 
You can't produce a body 
because you can't kill 
a man who won't die.
SKINNER: Well, body or not, they've got 30 witnesses from that government facility ready to testify against you.

SCULLY: Mulder, we'll get you the best lawyer.
(MULDER lets out a smile and a laugh.)

MULDER: 
To you defend a man 
who believes in aliens 
against the FBI and the military? 
It's never going to happen. Skinner can defend me.

SKINNER
I can't represent you….!

MULDER
You know all the facts
the details, the whole government conspiracy.

 More than that, 
I Trust You.


(SKINNER is stunned silent by the weight of MULDER'S complete faith in him ... of MULDER'S willingness to put his life in SKINNER'S hands.)
SCULLY: Mulder ...
MULDER: They can't try me without exposing themselves. I know what I'm doing.
(The three are silent for a moment. The cell door opens. DOGGETT and REYES enter.)
MULDER: Whooo, now it's a party.
(DOGGETT stops in the cell and looks at MULDER. The two men look at each other.)

DOGGETT: 
Agent Mulder.

SCULLY: 
What's the matter?

REYES: 
We've been working off what little we have but A Military just got back to us.
DOGGETT: You ready for this? I know this is impossible, but they're saying they got Knowle Rohrer's body.

(They all know this is a lie. They're in for a tough battle ahead.)

[Fade to black]

Tuesday, 19 October 2021