796 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
796 lines
33 KiB
Plaintext
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From: imc@comlab.ox.ac.uk (Ian Collier)
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Subject: Holoship script [c. 860 lines]
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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RED DWARF Series V Episode 1, "Holoship"
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1 Model shot.
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Starbug in space.
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2 Int. Starbug rear section.
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The dwarfers are watching a film. We hear a man and a woman speaking in
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melodramatic voices. While this is going on the camera pans over the
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faces of the viewers. LISTER is looking decidedly sad and appears to be
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chewing his hair. CAT is blinking excessively. RIMMER looks totally
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disgusted.
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MAN: Oh, Marnie!
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WOMAN: Oh, my darling, don't! This isn't a time for sadness, it's a time
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for joy! For laughter! Don't you see? Whatever this crazy old world
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throws at us now it doesn't matter -- none of it.
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MAN: Marnie, we can never be together again.
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WOMAN: Oh my darling, you're wrong! We'll always be together. It's
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just... that we'll be apart.
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Film music signals the end of the film.
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KRYTEN: Wasn't that just beautiful? Oh! Well recommended, sir. D'you
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think they ever get back together again?
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LISTER: (In a weepy voice, with head in hands) I don't know.
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KRYTEN: Pardon?
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LISTER: (Even more distraught) I don't know.
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KRYTEN: Wasn't it just wonderful though, sir? The way he sacrificed his
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career, his dreams, everything for the woman he loved.
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RIMMER: I thought it was the worst pile of blubbery school-girl mush I've
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ever been compelled to endure. I consider it an insult to my backside
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I was forced to sit here growing carbuncles through such putrid
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adolescent slush.
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KRYTEN: You didn't find it uplifting?
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RIMMER: It wasn't in the least bit uplifting. It was totally
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unbelievable. Why would he give everything up for a woman he's never
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going to see again?
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KRYTEN: Because she loved him, and he would have that forever. (To
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LISTER) Isn't that right, sir?
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LISTER blows his nose loudly on his sleeve.
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CAT: Personally, I thought it started well but fell apart. All that
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stuff with the ducks all getting into trouble -- that was great. Then
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it all went black and white and I fell asleep.
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KRYTEN: But sir, that was the cartoon before the main programme!
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HOLLY: Hang on chaps, we've got a blip. Quadrant 4, sector 492.
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KRYTEN: I'm on to it right away, Holly. (KRYTEN goes up front.)
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RIMMER: Those kind of films really irritate me. Just not realistic.
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There isn't a man in the universe who wouldn't have taken the job and
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to hell with the woman. Total baloney.
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LISTER: Rimmer, you said that about "King of Kings -- the story of
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Jesus!"
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RIMMER: Well, it's true! A simple carpenter's son who learns how to do
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magic tricks like that and doesn't go into show-business? Do any of us
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believe that, even for a second?
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LISTER: He was supposed to be the Son of God.
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RIMMER: And when he was carrying that cross up the hill, any normal
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realistic bloke would have mule-kicked the guy on the left, clobbered
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the one on the right, and been over that green hill and far away before
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you could say "Pontius Pilate."
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LISTER: Why do I feel that somehow you've missed the point? I mean,
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whether you believe that stuff or not, it's about a dude who sacrifices
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his life for love.
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RIMMER: Not realistic. As if!
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LISTER: You've got no soul, man. No soul.
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KRYTEN: Sirs, I think you should take a look at this.
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3 Int. Starbug cockpit.
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RIMMER: Another vessel?
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LISTER: Too small. (Presses some controls.) May be a missile.
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KRYTEN: Impact in 37 seconds.
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HOLLY: Plotting random evasion course.
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CAT: What? Am I the only sane one here? Why don't we drop the defensive
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shields?
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KRYTEN: A superlative suggestion, sir, with just two minor flaws. One,
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we don't have any defensive shields, and two, we don't have any
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defensive shields. Now I realise that, technically speaking, that's
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only one flaw but I thought it was such a big one it was worth
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mentioning twice.
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CAT: (Patting KRYTEN's shoulder) Good point; well made.
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4 Model shot.
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A blue light formation which looks like a comet flies towards the front
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of Starbug.
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5 Int. Starbug cockpit.
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The blue light flashes past the occupants into the adjoining room and
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turns into a collection of blue spheres swirling around. RIMMER walks
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towards it and steps into the swarm, enraptured.
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LISTER: Rimmer, what are you doing?
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RIMMER: It's incredible! It's beautiful!
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KRYTEN: It's not registering on any scale -- mass, velocity, molecular
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structure -- all the readings are zero!
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The spheres suddenly zoom away past the crew members and out of the ship.
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We see the blue comet shoot off into space and vanish, whereupon a ship
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materialises.
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6 Int. Starbug cockpit.
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KRYTEN: Sir, I'm picking up some kind of energy emission.
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RIMMER disappears in a flash of red light.
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KRYTEN: They've taken Mr. Rimmer. (With more urgency) Sir! They've
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taken Mr. Rimmer!
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CAT: Quick, let's get out of here before they bring him back!
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7 Int. Holoship.
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RIMMER appears. He looks around, astonished. In walks a woman, on whose
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forehead is a letter H in a circle.
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CRANE: I hope we didn't startle you. Nirvanah Crane.
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They shake hands.
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RIMMER: You touched me. I can touch.
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CRANE throws him a glass and he catches it.
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RIMMER: How is this possible?
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CRANE pours RIMMER a drink.
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CRANE: This entire ship, its crew, and everything on it is computer-
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generated.
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RIMMER: You're all holograms, even the ship?
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CRANE: Salut. (They touch glasses.)
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RIMMER: Salut.
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8 Model shot.
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Holoship.
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9 Int. Holoship lift.
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We join RIMMER and NIRVANAH CRANE in the lift.
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RIMMER: How big's the crew?
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CRANE: Just under 2000 -- all top flight personnel.
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RIMMER: Hmmm, what a ship!
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LIFT: Floor 3125: Sports and sexual recreation.
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RIMMER: (Suddenly stops grinning inanely) Sports and what?
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CRANE: Sex. Don't you have a sex deck on your ship?
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RIMMER: Nnno.
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CRANE: Well, what do you do when you want to have sex?
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RIMMER: Well... we go for runs. Watch gardening programmes on the ship's
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vid.
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CRANE: That's very bad for you. Don't you ever feel tense or frustrated?
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RIMMER: Well it's got worse these last ten years or so, I can't deny it.
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CRANE: Extraordinary. It's quite different here. In fact, it's a ship
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regulation that we all have sexual congress at least twice a day. It's
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a health rule.
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RIMMER: Twice a day? That's more than some people manage in a lifetime!
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CRANE looks at RIMMER with a kind of angry astonishment.
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RIMMER: I mean sad, lonely people. But what happens if you don't have a
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partner?
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CRANE: (Not understanding) If you don't have a partner?
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RIMMER: Well I mean some people -- sad, lonely people -- find that that
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people just aren't attracted to them in that kind of way.
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CRANE: I don't understand. Here it is considered the height of bad
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manners to refuse an offer of sexual coupling.
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RIMMER: Well! People have always complemented me on my good manners.
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(To no one in particular) What a ship!
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CRANE: We discarded the concept of "family" in the 25th century when
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scientists finally proved that all our hang-ups and neuroses are caused
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by our parents.
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RIMMER: I knew it!
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CRANE: Families are disastrous for your mental health. So are
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relationships. These are outmoded concepts for us.
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RIMMER: But what about love? Surely people still fall in love?
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CRANE: We have developed beyond love, Mr. Rimmer. That is a short-term
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hormonal distraction which interferes with the pure pursuit of personal
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advancement. We are holograms. There is no risk of disease or
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pregnancy. That is why in our society we only believe in sex --
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constant, guilt-free sex.
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10 Int. Starbug cockpit.
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KRYTEN: Poor Mr. Rimmer. I fear he is in great danger.
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HOLLY: I'm trying to get them to handshake, but they're not responding on
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any frequency.
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CAT: Well, I say let's break out the laser cannons and give 'em both
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barrels.
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KRYTEN: An adroit suggestion sir, with just two minor drawbacks.
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CAT: (Loudly) OK, forget it!
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LISTER: There's nothing to shoot at -- look at the readouts: zero mass.
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KRYTEN: Of course, a holoship!
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LISTER: A holoship?
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KRYTEN: The project was in its initial phase when I left the solar
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system. Ships of no mass or volume able to travel as super-light
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particles -- tachyons -- through worm-holes and star gates crewed by
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holograms of great genius and bravery.
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LISTER: And they've taken Rimmer? (Sarcasticly) He should fit in just
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perfectly!
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KRYTEN: Now I understand why they didn't bother with a handshake. Holo-
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crews are legendarily arrogant. They despise stupidity wherever they
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see it, and they see it everywhere.
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HOLLY: Hang on, I'm getting another energy emission.
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11 Int. Starbug rear section.
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A crew member from the holoship appears in an adjoining room. The
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Dwarfers walk in to investigate.
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BINKS: (Walking around the Starbug) Binks to Enlightenment. Have arrived
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on the derelict. Confirm initial speculation: there is absolutely
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nothing of any value or intrigue here. It's one of the old class-2
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ship-to-surface vessels -- the very model, in fact, that was withdrawn
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due to major flight design flaws. Crew: 3. (Passes along the crew
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members, who are now standing in line) One series-4000 mechanoid --
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almost burnt out. Give it maybe three years. Nothing of salvageable
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value. Ah, Felis Sapiens -- bred from the domestic house cat and about
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half as smart. No value in future study of this species. What have we
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here? A human being, or a very close approximation. Chronological
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age: mid-20s, physical age: 47. Grossly overweight, unnecessarily
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ugly, otherwise would recommend it for the museum. Apart from that of
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no value or interest.
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While BINKS is ending his spiel, LISTER searches his pockets for a
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cigarette packet. He draws one cigarette out as an aerial and begins
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imitating BINKS.
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LISTER: Lister to Red Dwarf. We have in our midst a complete smeg pot.
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Brains in the anal region. Chin absent -- presumed missing. Genitalia
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small and inoffensive. Of no value or interest.
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BINKS: Binks to Enlightenment. Evidence of primitive humour. The human
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has knowledge of irony, satire, and imitation. With patient tuition
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could maybe master simple tasks.
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LISTER: Lister to Red Dwarf. Displays evidence of spoiling for a rumble.
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Seems unable to grasp simple threats. With careful pummelling, could
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possibly be sucking tomorrow's lunch through a straw.
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BINKS: Binks to Enlightenment. The human is under the delusion that he
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is somehow able to bestow physical violence to a hologram.
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LISTER: Lister to Red Dwarf. The intruder seems to be blissfully unaware
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that we have a rather sturdy holowhip in the munitions cabinet. Unless
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he wants his derriere minced like burger meat, he'd better be history
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in two seconds flat!
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LISTER eats the cigarette, quickly removes his jacket, hat, and
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waistcoat, and assumes a boxing stance.
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BINKS: Binks to Enlightenment. Re-con mission complete, transmit. With
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speed, Enlightenment, quickly please!
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BINKS disappears just as LISTER throws his first punch.
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12 Int. Holoship bridge.
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The Captain is present and two officers are in the background typing at
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computer keyboards. NIRVANAH CRANE and RIMMER arrive.
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CRANE: Captain, Mr. Rimmer from the mining ship Red Dwarf.
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She salutes with an index-and-pinky-finger sign held up beside her head.
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PLATINI: Mr. Rimmer. Oh my word it is one of the old class-1 holograms
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-- I didn't realise that you guys were still around. Captain Hercule
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Platini, IQ 212. Number One!
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NUMBER ONE: Commander Natalina Pushkin, IQ 201.
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NUMBER TWO: Commander Randy Navaro, IQ 194.
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RIMMER: Second technician Arnold Rimmer, IQ unknown. Captain, this is a
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magnificent ship.
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PLATINI: So it should be, Mr. Rimmer. After all it was designed to carry
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the hologrammatic cream of the space corps. Every crew member is the
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top gun in his or her field. This is a ship, Mr. Rimmer, of super-
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humans.
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RIMMER: Which is why, Captain, I feel I could really belong here.
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NUMBER ONE: (Incredulous) Are you serious?
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RIMMER: Everything I want in my life is here on this ship. I want to
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join you.
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PLATINI: (Holding a small teacup, daintily) Ah but, Mr. Rimmer, you are
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not an officer.
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RIMMER: Captain, I've been in effective command of Red Dwarf now for
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nearly four years. I've guided that ragamuffin, ragtail crew of
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whacked out crazies and hippy peace-niks through hell and back. If I
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gave the order those guys would crawl on their bellies across broken
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glass with their flies unzipped. So don't tell me I'm not an officer,
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Captain, just because in deep space there's no academy around to award
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me my pips. You've got to take me.
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PLATINI: Unfortunately, it's not that simple, Mr. Rimmer. The
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Enlightenment already has a full ship's complement. The only way in is
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"dead man's boots."
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NUMBER ONE: You'll have to challenge an existing crew member. There are
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tests which tax the entire vista of your intellect.
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RIMMER: Oh.
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NUMBER TWO: Tests that probe every aspect of your mental capability.
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RIMMER: Ah.
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PLATINI: Should you win, your opponent's run-time would be terminated and
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their life force would be used to generate you.
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RIMMER: Who will be my opponent?
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PLATINI: Well I'm sure our computer will come up with the most
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stimulating match up. It has stochastic capabilities.
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NUMBER ONE: It predicts the future with only a five percent error margin,
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simply by extrapolating the most likely outcome of all known variables.
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I am asking it for your best chance of success. (Types something.) And
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here it is: your best shot is crew member 4172. You have a 96
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probability of failure.
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PLATINI: Mr. Rimmer, you have 24 hours to prepare.
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He gives the "Enlightened" salute in farewell.
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13 Int. Holoship corridor.
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RIMMER and CRANE are walking down a corridor.
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RIMMER: Well, thank you, commander, for a most fascinating afternoon.
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It's been most ... fascinating.
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CRANE: Perhaps, if you're not in any great rush, Mr. Rimmer, we could
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retire to my quarters and have sex for a few hours.
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14 Int. CRANE's quarters.
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They are now lying on a bed, in a semi-dressed state.
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RIMMER: That was just unbelievable!
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CRANE: It's never been like that before.
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RIMMER: (Worried) Was it OK?
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CRANE: It was ... different.
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RIMMER: Different?
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CRANE: You make love like a Japanese meal: small portions, but _so_ many
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courses.
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RIMMER: Erm, look, Nirvanah--
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CRANE: Must dress and go now. (Gets up and dons a robe.)
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RIMMER: Look, Nirvanah, what I'm trying to say is--
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CRANE: Please, don't say anything.
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RIMMER: I hope you didn't get me wrong just then. That meant nothing to
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me. Truly less than nothing really.
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CRANE: Good.
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RIMMER: We may as well have been playing tennis.
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CRANE: As it should be.
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RIMMER: I, er, don't suppose you'd fancy a tie-break?
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CRANE: I'm sorry, I've got things I should do.
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RIMMER: Nyet problemski.
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CRANE: You know ... we usually talk.
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RIMMER: What do you talk about?
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CRANE: Oh, research, new theories, mission profiles.
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RIMMER: I'm sorry. I must have seemed very ignorant. I hardly said
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anything apart from, "geronimo."
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CRANE: Thank you for the work-out.
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RIMMER: Dress! (He is suddenly clothed.)
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CRANE: Transmit! (RIMMER disappears.)
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A computer screen says "message waiting." CRANE presses a key.
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CRANE: Privacy off. (NUMBER TWO appears on the screen.)
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NUMBER TWO: Commander, some amusing news. Stocky has chosen you to meet
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our guest's challenge.
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15 Model shot.
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The Red Dwarf is seen passing the Holoship.
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16 Int. Red Dwarf.
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KRYTEN: What you're suggesting is immoral and illegal. Mind patching is
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outlawed.
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RIMMER: But it _is_ possible.
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KRYTEN: Possible but highly dangerous. The side effects can be
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devastating. You could be reduced to a gibbering simpleton.
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CAT: Reduced?
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RIMMER: I don't care. I'm prepared to take the chance.
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LISTER: Even if it costs you your mind?
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CAT: It's a small price to pay.
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RIMMER: Look, on that ship I can touch, I can feel, I can taste. I'm not
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a half man any more. With them I'm whole again.
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||
|
LISTER: Rimmer, they're a bunch of arrogant, pompous, emotionally-weird,
|
||
|
stuck-up megalomaniacs. Do you really think you're going to fit in
|
||
|
with them? (Pause) What am I saying? Bon voyage!
|
||
|
KRYTEN: He's right, sir. Why do you want to throw in with people like
|
||
|
that?
|
||
|
RIMMER: Because I want to _be_ somebody. I want to have a position of
|
||
|
authority on a scout ship exploring uncharted space. Work alongside
|
||
|
educated men and women. Officers, people who count. Lister, this is
|
||
|
my one chance to seize my dream. To be with the winners. Look at me.
|
||
|
What do you see?
|
||
|
LISTER: Tell me.
|
||
|
RIMMER: You see a sad and lonely guy. A guy who left home at sixteen to
|
||
|
become an officer and a gentleman, and ended up as a chicken soup
|
||
|
machine operative. Is it any wonder my father had four strokes? Is it
|
||
|
any wonder he used to sit by the window and dribble? _I_ did that to
|
||
|
him. Me!
|
||
|
LISTER: Look, there's nothing wrong with what you did. It was just a
|
||
|
job.
|
||
|
RIMMER: You _are_ your job.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Oh, not so, sir. Now was Albert {Camou} a goal keeper or a
|
||
|
philosopher? Was Albert Einstein a clerk in a patent office or the
|
||
|
greatest physicist who ever lived? And of course there's the oft told
|
||
|
tale of the simple carpenter's son who went on to own the largest chain
|
||
|
of pizza stores in history, Harry {Biedelbau}.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Kryten, Albert Einstein didn't spend the best years of his life
|
||
|
picking out lumps of dessicated poultry from the end of his nozzle
|
||
|
cleaner.
|
||
|
LISTER: That doesn't make you a failure.
|
||
|
RIMMER: It does in my parents' eyes. It does in my brother's eyes. It
|
||
|
does in the eyes of everyone _with_ eyes. That's exactly what it makes
|
||
|
me.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Sir, I beg you to reconsider. If not for your sanity, you
|
||
|
haven't even considered the moral implications of your decision. You
|
||
|
will be joining a society where you will be compelled to have sex with
|
||
|
beautiful, brilliant women twice daily, on demand. Now, am I really
|
||
|
the only one here who finds that just a little bit tacky? (LISTER and
|
||
|
CAT are speechless) Well, quite clearly I am!
|
||
|
|
||
|
17 Int. Red Dwarf lab.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER is lying on some kind of "operating table" in a laboratory, and
|
||
|
KRYTEN is standing by.
|
||
|
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Sir, I've uploaded the two candidates to be inserted into your
|
||
|
mind, science officer Buchan -- excellent scientific background, one
|
||
|
hundred and sixty nine IQ -- and flight coordinator McQueen --
|
||
|
superlative mathematician, one hundred and seventy two IQ. Now, even
|
||
|
taking into account the enormous drag-factor of your own mind, I still
|
||
|
think we'll come up with something pretty special.
|
||
|
RIMMER: But I will still have control?
|
||
|
KRYTEN: You will have access to their knowledge, but your personality
|
||
|
will have the power of veto. But sir, I implore you to reconsider. If
|
||
|
not for yourself, then for the poor officer whose life you will take.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Wasn't it St. Francis of Assisi himself who said, "Never give a
|
||
|
sucker an even break?"
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Well if he did, sir, it was strictly off the record.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Come on Kryten, get on with it.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Commencing integration.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Glory or insanity awaits.
|
||
|
|
||
|
KRYTEN presses a control and an electronic arm starts passing over RIMMER
|
||
|
from his feet towards his head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
18 Int. Red Dwarf corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
KRYTEN and LISTER are walking down a corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
LISTER: He's read every book in the medical library?
|
||
|
KRYTEN: In under three hours. The change is quite astonishing. But sir,
|
||
|
I feel I should warn you: this is not the pile of human wreckage we
|
||
|
know as Arnold Rimmer. Prepare yourself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They arrive at a room where RIMMER is sitting in front of a computer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Sir, we've received the co-ordinates. Perhaps we should be,
|
||
|
ahem, making tracks?
|
||
|
RIMMER: (Spoken in a patronising manner with the second syllable
|
||
|
stressed) Kryten.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER turns around and we can see that he is wearing reading glasses and
|
||
|
holding his head up in a pompous manner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: Just thinking. Assuming of course we're not dealing with five-
|
||
|
dimensional objects in a basic Euclidean geometric universe and given
|
||
|
the essential premise that all geo-mathematics is based on the
|
||
|
hideously limiting notion that one plus one equals two, and not as
|
||
|
{Astemeyer} correctly postulates that one and two are in fact the same
|
||
|
thing observed from different precepts, (Loudly breathes out through
|
||
|
his nose.) the theoretical shape described by {Siddus} must therefore
|
||
|
be a poly-dri-doc-deca-wee-hedron-a-hexa-sexa-hedro-adicon-a-di-bi-
|
||
|
dolly-he-deca-dodron. (Loudly breathes out through his nose again.)
|
||
|
Everything else is popycock. Isn't that so?
|
||
|
LISTER: (Incredulous) Rimmer?
|
||
|
|
||
|
19 Int. Red Dwarf corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
LISTER, RIMMER, and KRYTEN are walking down a corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: I wrote a palindromic haiku this morning -- perhaps you'd like to
|
||
|
hear it.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: I'm afraid we don't speak Japanese, sir.
|
||
|
RIMMER: I could translate it into mandarin for you.
|
||
|
LISTER: Rimmer, we don't speak Japanese, we don't speak mandarin, and we
|
||
|
don't speak satsuma!
|
||
|
|
||
|
20 Int. Red Dwarf transmission room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
LISTER: (To KRYTEN in a quiet voice as they enter the transmission room)
|
||
|
He is really beginning to get on my pecks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER is standing apart from them, making strange pointing motions
|
||
|
towards the ceiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
KRYTEN: You must remember, sir, that he's operating on a completely
|
||
|
different level to us now. To him we are the intellectual equivalent
|
||
|
of domestic science teachers.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Subject ready for transfer.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Farewell gentlemen. Glory awaits! (Disappears.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
21 Model shot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Holoship and Red Dwarf.
|
||
|
|
||
|
22 Int. Holoship test suite.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Captain PLATINI appears on a computer screen and begins addressing the
|
||
|
test candidates. We see RIMMER and the other candidate in turn listening
|
||
|
to the message.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PLATINI: Test candidates, to preserve the pure intellectual nature of
|
||
|
this challenge you will remain in separate suites. The questions will
|
||
|
come through your headphones in a variety of different languages to
|
||
|
confuse and disorient you. There will be a total of two hundred
|
||
|
thousand questions in this initial session. After you have completed
|
||
|
the tasks at workstation A you may proceed to workstation B.
|
||
|
RIMMER: I shall undertake both tasks simultaneously if it's all the same
|
||
|
to you. (Puts on a pair of headphones.)
|
||
|
PLATINI: Mr. Rimmer, that is impossible.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Nevertheless, I shall attempt it. (Puts on a second pair of
|
||
|
headphones.)
|
||
|
PLATINI: It begins.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We see a blue computer screen with white text (it says: ":q Given
|
||
|
initial tangential deviation of theta/pi find the chord subtended by
|
||
|
fractional derivative of the third quotient of theta"). RIMMER starts
|
||
|
typing (we see ":a Negative vect" before the camera cuts away). Then we
|
||
|
see RIMMER typing on two keyboards, one with each hand. The other
|
||
|
contestant also types. We see shots of both contestants, and a score
|
||
|
screen with headings "Challenger" and "Crew member 4172" which counts
|
||
|
upwards from 225 129. RIMMER swaps his hands between the keyboards and
|
||
|
starts typing with his arms crossed. The score goes up to 369 219.
|
||
|
Suddenly, RIMMER freezes. His score stops at 369 while the crew member's
|
||
|
score continues to increase. He removes his glasses, rubs the bridge of
|
||
|
his nose and runs into the corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
23 Model shot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Red Dwarf and the Holoship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
24 Int. Red Dwarf.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We see RIMMER materialise and start running down a corridor. Meanwhile,
|
||
|
the others are interviewing a female hologram. KRYTEN has in front of
|
||
|
him a printout of all the candidates' details.
|
||
|
|
||
|
LISTER: Erm, well you sound exactly like what we're looking for. Are
|
||
|
there any questions that you'd like to ask us?
|
||
|
HARRISON: I just want to get one thing clear in my mind. This is an
|
||
|
opportunity to be revived as a hologram and become a part of the crew,
|
||
|
and the crew is you three.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The three in question smile encouragingly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
HARRISON: Basically you spend your time salvaging derelict spaceships,
|
||
|
playing poker, and eating curries.
|
||
|
LISTER: Well we don't do that much salvaging.
|
||
|
HARRISON: But you do sound like you eat a lot of curries.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Well, we don't eat curry every night if that's what you think.
|
||
|
In fact I remember quite clearly last June: Mr. Lister had a pizza.
|
||
|
You remember? (LISTER nods in agreement.)
|
||
|
LISTER: Yeah.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: And you didn't like it. But then I poured curry sauce all over
|
||
|
it and he just yummed it up!
|
||
|
HARRISON: And the all-night poker sessions -- is it always strip poker?
|
||
|
LISTER: It depends on how drunk we are.
|
||
|
CAT: Or how much curry he's had.
|
||
|
HARRISON: So, and this probably sounds like a stupid question, you don't
|
||
|
really have much interest in horse riding or ballet.
|
||
|
LISTER: F-fine by us -- as long as we can have a curry afterwards, we're
|
||
|
cool. But of course, there's one or two other people that we have to
|
||
|
see, but in theory if we offered you the post of replacement hologram
|
||
|
would you accept?
|
||
|
HARRISON: No.
|
||
|
LISTER: No.
|
||
|
HARRISON: No, I think, erm, I'm better off where I am.
|
||
|
CAT: But you're dead!
|
||
|
HARRISON: And meeting you guys has really made me appreciate it a whole
|
||
|
lot more.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Well, thank you very much, (Consults his paper) Ms. Harrison.
|
||
|
Thank you. Thank you very much.
|
||
|
LISTER: Next! (HARRISON disappears.)
|
||
|
HOLLY: Next candidate: (A man appears.) Deck sergeant Sam Murray.
|
||
|
LISTER: Ah, Sam. Now, as Holly will have told you--
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER rushes in and interrupts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: Kryten, my own mind's come back -- you've got to help me.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Well, what happened exactly? Was it a slow deterioration in your
|
||
|
own intelligence or did it happen in seconds?
|
||
|
RIMMER: Seconds. I'm in the middle of the assessment. You've got to
|
||
|
give me another mind patch pronto.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Oh, I'm sorry sir, it's classic rejection syndrome. Once the
|
||
|
minds are unmeshed there is nothing we can do.
|
||
|
RIMMER: What are you talking about?
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Well you just don't have the sort of brain that can accept an
|
||
|
implant, sir.
|
||
|
RIMMER: (Distraught) No!
|
||
|
KRYTEN: I'm sorry sir.
|
||
|
RIMMER: There must be something you can do!
|
||
|
KRYTEN: I'm afraid not.
|
||
|
RIMMER: But I'm winning, I'm so close! (Noticing Sam Murray) Who's this?
|
||
|
I'm not even gone and you're choosing my replacement!
|
||
|
LISTER: We thought you weren't coming back.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Well, you should have known better, shouldn't you? You actually
|
||
|
expect something to go right for me? Arnold schmucko Rimmer? Tosspot
|
||
|
by royal appointment? (Starts to walk away.)
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Well, where are you going, sir?
|
||
|
RIMMER: I'm going to withdraw.
|
||
|
|
||
|
25 Model shot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Holoship and Red Dwarf.
|
||
|
|
||
|
26 Int. Holoship's lift.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER, NUMBER ONE, and another female hologram are in the lift.
|
||
|
|
||
|
NUMBER ONE: I hear you're doing really well in the assessment.
|
||
|
RIMMER: (Mockingly) HmmMMmmmMMMm.
|
||
|
NUMBER ONE: Well listen, if you make it through maybe you'd like to have
|
||
|
sex some time next week? I'm free Wednesday Morning.
|
||
|
RIMMER: I'm sorry, I'm busy Wednesday. I'm killing myself.
|
||
|
LIFT: Floor 6120: botanical gardens.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two women exit the lift and NIRVANAH CRANE enters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CRANE: Arnie, where've you been?
|
||
|
RIMMER: To hell and back. I've withdrawn from the challenge.
|
||
|
CRANE: But you're winning!
|
||
|
RIMMER: I was using a mind patch.
|
||
|
CRANE: A mind patch -- are you insane?
|
||
|
RIMMER: I would have done anything to get on this ship. Every time I
|
||
|
look in the mirror, I see this. (He points at his letter H.) Only to
|
||
|
me it doesn't mean hologram, it means half-wit, hopeless, hideous
|
||
|
failure. This was a chance to be somebody. Somebody I liked.
|
||
|
CRANE: I've never met anyone like you before.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Everyone says that.
|
||
|
CRANE: (Taking hold of RIMMER by the cheeks) Listen to me mister!
|
||
|
Underneath all that neurotic mess is someone nice trying to get out.
|
||
|
Someone who deserves a chance to grow. So, you won't give up, OK? OK?
|
||
|
RIMMER: I cheated.
|
||
|
CRANE: You're going to win, Arnie. You're going to get your dream. I
|
||
|
promise you.
|
||
|
RIMMER: You really think?
|
||
|
|
||
|
CRANE kisses her finger and touches RIMMER's lips. The lift door opens.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CRANE: I really think. (Leaves.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
27 Model shot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Red Dwarf.
|
||
|
|
||
|
28 Int. Red Dwarf corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER materialises on the Red Dwarf and walks down a corridor into the
|
||
|
room where LISTER and CAT are.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: (Seemingly dejected) I won.
|
||
|
LISTER: (Incredulous) What?
|
||
|
RIMMER: My opponent withdrew. I won. I'm an officer. I leave tonight.
|
||
|
(Leaves.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
29 Int. Red Dwarf transmission room. That night.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER is saying goodbye to the other Dwarfers, rather falteringly. His
|
||
|
letter H is now in a circle and he's dressed as a member of the
|
||
|
Enlightenment's crew.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: Look, I'm not much good at big speeches, and I know I haven't
|
||
|
always been an easy guy to get on with. And I know that, given the
|
||
|
choice, I probably wouldn't have chosen you as friends. But, I just
|
||
|
want to say ... that over the years, ... I have come to regard you ...
|
||
|
as ... people ... I met. I'd just better go, OK?
|
||
|
LISTER: See you smeghead.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Transfer.
|
||
|
KRYTEN: Transfer. (RIMMER disappears.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
30 Model shot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The translucent holoship is drifting by when it turns into a blue comet
|
||
|
and flies away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
31 Int. Holoship room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
NUMBER TWO and RIMMER walk into a room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
NUMBER TWO: Here are your quarters, Mr. RIMMER.
|
||
|
RIMMER: There must be some mistake -- these are commander Crane's
|
||
|
quarters.
|
||
|
NUMBER TWO: Oh, didn't you know? She was your opponent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Music starts playing, as from the film which was playing at the start of
|
||
|
the episode.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER walks into the captain's room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: Navigation officer Rimmer reporting, sir.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The music starts fading out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PLATINI: Arnold, welcome aboard. (Salutes) I trust everything's to your
|
||
|
sa--
|
||
|
RIMMER: Permission to speak, sir. I wish to resign my commission, sir.
|
||
|
PLATINI: Resign. Ah, may I ask your reasoning please?
|
||
|
RIMMER: Flight commander Crane has taken leave of her senses and fallen
|
||
|
in love with me, sir.
|
||
|
PLATINI: Love? Surely not. Commander Crane is far too intellectually
|
||
|
advanced to submit to a mere short-term hormonal imbalance.
|
||
|
RIMMER: That's why she withdrew from the challenge and allowed me to win,
|
||
|
sir.
|
||
|
PLATINI: Mr. Rimmer, what you are suggesting is that somehow she cared
|
||
|
more for your happiness than she did for her own life.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Am I? Yes sir, I suppose I am, sir.
|
||
|
PLATINI: And now you are doing something equally unfathomable --
|
||
|
resigning so that she can be reinstated, even though here you could
|
||
|
have everything: a position of command, an effective physical
|
||
|
presence, everything.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Perhaps you'd be kind enough to pass this note on to her, sir.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He hands over an envelope as the music swells up again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
PLATINI: I understand your gesture, but really your resignation solves
|
||
|
nothing. After all, the two of you will still be... apart.
|
||
|
RIMMER: Permission to return to Red Dwarf, sir.
|
||
|
PLATINI: Granted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER stands to attention and gives the Enlightened salute. He begins
|
||
|
to leave, but stops and turns around.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: Oh and sir, you're wrong. We won't be apart, we just ... won't
|
||
|
be together.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A look of disgust comes over RIMMER's face.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER: I cannot believe I just said that!
|
||
|
|
||
|
RIMMER leaves. While the music is coming to an end, the screen narrows
|
||
|
to letterbox format and "The End" appears in a suitably tacky cursive
|
||
|
script.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Credits:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rimmer Chris Barrie
|
||
|
Lister Craig Charles
|
||
|
Cat Danny John-Jules
|
||
|
Holly Hattie Hayridge
|
||
|
Kryten Robert Llewellyn
|
||
|
Nirvanah Crane Jane Horrocks
|
||
|
Captain Platini Matthew Marsh
|
||
|
Commander Binks Don Warrington
|
||
|
Harrison Lucy Briers
|
||
|
Number Two Simon Day
|
||
|
Number One Jane Montgomery
|
||
|
Associate Producer Julian Scott
|
||
|
Director Juliet May
|
||
|
Producer Hilary Bevan Jones
|
||
|
Executive Producers Rob Grant
|
||
|
Doug Naylor
|
||
|
Music Howard Goodall
|
||
|
Casting Jane Davies
|
||
|
Production Accountant Joanna Birkinshaw
|
||
|
Unit Manager Irene Gibbons
|
||
|
Video Effects Bruce Steele
|
||
|
Jez Gibson
|
||
|
Production Team Nichol Hoye
|
||
|
Mairead Curtin
|
||
|
Camera Supervisor Rocket
|
||
|
Vision Mixer Simon Sanders
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Vision Supervisor Mike Spencer
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Gaffer Ron Green
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Consol Operator Dai Thomas
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Property Master Paul Purdy
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Properties Buyer Stella McIntyre
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Technical Manager Jeff Jeffery
|
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Videotape Editor Graham Hutchings
|
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Stage Manager Kerry Waddell
|
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Production Assistant Christine Moses
|
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Costume Design Howard Burden
|
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Gill Shaw
|
||
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Make Up Design Andria Pennell
|
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Belinda Parresh
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Visual Effects Design Peter Wragg
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Paul McGuinness
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Sound Supervisor Keith Mayes
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Lighting Director John Pomphrey
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Production Design Mel Bibby
|
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Stephen Bradshaw
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Red Dwarf V (C) BBC TV MCMXCII
|
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Ian Collier
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Ian.Collier@prg.ox.ac.uk | imc@ecs.ox.ac.uk
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