1694 lines
62 KiB
Plaintext
1694 lines
62 KiB
Plaintext
Monty Python and the Holy Grail
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"Monty Python and the Holy Grail"
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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-- the strictly unofficial script of the movie, done in a fit
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of boredom by [AHH 01Jan87]
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-- touched up again by [AHH 25Jan89] (How time flies)
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The Cast (in order of appearance [roughly]):
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KING ARTHUR : Graham Chapman
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PATSY : Terry Gilliam
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GUARD #1 : Michael Palin
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GUARD #2 : John Cleese
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MORTICIAN : Eric Idle
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CUSTOMER : John Cleese
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DEAD PERSON : ???
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DENNIS : Michael Palin
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WOMAN : Terry Jones
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BLACK KNIGHT : John Cleese (?)
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VILLAGER #1 : Eric Idle
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VILLAGER #2 : Michael Palin
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SIR BEDEMIR : Terry Jones
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WITCH : ???
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VILLAGER #3 : John Cleese
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NARRATOR: Michael Palin
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SIR LAUNCELOT : John Cleese
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SIR GALAHAD : Michael Palin
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SIR ROBIN : Eric Idle
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GOD : ???
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FRENCH GUARD : John Cleese
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MINSTREL : ???
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LEFT HEAD : Terry Jones
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MIDDLE HEAD : Graham Chapman
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RIGHT HEAD : Michael Palin
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OLD MAN : Terry Gilliam
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HEAD KNIGHT OF NEE : Michael Palin
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FATHER : Michael Palin
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PRINCE HERBERT : Terry Jones
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GUARD #1 : Eric Idle
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GUARD #2 : ???
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CONCORDE : Eric Idle
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OLD CRONE : ???
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ROGER (THE SHRUBBER) : Eric Idle
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TIM (THE ENCHANTER): John Cleese
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BROTHER MAYNARD: Eric Idle
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SECOND BROTHER: Michael Palin
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Scene 1
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[wind]
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[clop clop]
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ARTHUR: Whoa there!
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[clop clop]
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GUARD #1: Halt! Who goes there?
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ARTHUR: It is I, Arthur, son of Uther Pendragon, from the castle
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of Camelot. King of the Britons, defeator of the Saxons,
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sovereign of all England!
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GUARD #1: Pull the other one!
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ARTHUR: I am. And this my trusty servant Patsy. We have
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ridden the length and breadth of the land in search of knights
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who will join me in my court of Camelot. I must speak with your
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lord and master.
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GUARD #1: What, ridden on a horse?
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ARTHUR: Yes!
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GUARD #1: You're using coconuts!
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ARTHUR: What?
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GUARD #1: You've got two empty halves of coconut and you're
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bangin' 'em together.
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ARTHUR: So? We have ridden since the snows of winter covered
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this land, through the kingdom of Mercea, through--
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GUARD #1: Where'd you get the coconut?
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ARTHUR: We found them.
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GUARD #1: Found them? In Mercea? The coconut's tropical!
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ARTHUR: What do you mean?
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GUARD #1: Well, this is a temperate zone.
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ARTHUR: The swallow may fly south with the sun or the house
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martin or the plumber may seek warmer climes in winter yet these
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are not strangers to our land.
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GUARD #1: Are you suggesting coconuts are migratory?
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ARTHUR: Not at all, they could be carried.
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GUARD #1: What -- a swallow carrying a coconut?
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ARTHUR: It could grip it by the husk!
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GUARD #1: It's not a question of where he grips it! It's a
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simple question of weight ratios! A five ounce bird could not
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carry a 1 pound coconut.
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ARTHUR: Well, it doesn't matter. Will you go and tell your
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master that Arthur from the Court of Camelot is here.
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GUARD #1: Listen, in order to maintain air-speed velocity, a
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swallow needs to beat its wings 43 times every second, right?
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ARTHUR: Please!
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GUARD #1: Am I right?
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ARTHUR: I'm not interested!
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GUARD #2: It could be carried by an African swallow!
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GUARD #1: Oh, yeah, an African swallow maybe, but not a European
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swallow, that's my point.
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GUARD #2: Oh, yeah, I agree with that...
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ARTHUR: Will you ask your master if he wants to join my court
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at Camelot?!
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GUARD #1: But then of course African swallows are not migratory.
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GUARD #2: Oh, yeah...
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GUARD #1: So they couldn't bring a coconut back anyway...
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[clop clop]
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GUARD #2: Wait a minute -- supposing two swallows carried it
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together?
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GUARD #1: No, they'd have to have it on a line.
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GUARD #2: Well, simple! They'd just use a standard creeper!
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GUARD #1: What, held under the dorsal guiding feathers?
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GUARD #2: Well, why not?
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Scene 2
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MORTICIAN: Bring out your dead!
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Bring out your dead!
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[clang] Bring out your dead!
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[clang] Bring out your dead!
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[clang] Bring out your dead!
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[clang] Bring out your dead!
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CUSTOMER: Here's one -- nine pence.
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DEAD PERSON: I'm not dead!
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MORTICIAN: What?
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CUSTOMER: Nothing -- here's your nine pence.
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DEAD PERSON: I'm not dead!
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MORTICIAN: Here -- he says he's not dead!
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CUSTOMER: Yes, he is.
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DEAD PERSON: I'm not!
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MORTICIAN: He isn't.
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CUSTOMER: Well, he will be soon, he's very ill.
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DEAD PERSON: I'm getting better!
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CUSTOMER: No, you're not -- you'll be stone dead in a moment.
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MORTICIAN: Oh, I can't take him like that -- it's against
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regulations.
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DEAD PERSON: I don't want to go in the cart!
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CUSTOMER: Oh, don't be such a baby.
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MORTICIAN: I can't take him...
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DEAD PERSON: I feel fine!
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CUSTOMER: Oh, do us a favor...
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MORTICIAN: I can't.
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CUSTOMER: Well, can you hang around a couple of minutes? He
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won't be long.
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MORTICIAN: Naaah, I got to go on to Robinson's -- they've lost
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nine today.
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CUSTOMER: Well, when is your next round?
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MORTICIAN: Thursday.
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DEAD PERSON: I think I'll go for a walk.
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CUSTOMER: You're not fooling anyone y'know. Look, isn't there
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something you can do?
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DEAD PERSON: I feel happy... I feel happy.
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[whop]
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CUSTOMER: Ah, thanks very much.
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MORTICIAN: Not at all. See you on Thursday.
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CUSTOMER: Right.
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[clop clop]
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MORTICIAN: Who's that then?
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CUSTOMER: I don't know.
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MORTICIAN: Must be a king.
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CUSTOMER: Why?
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MORTICIAN: He hasn't got shit all over him.
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Scene 3
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[clop clop]
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ARTHUR: Old woman!
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DENNIS: Man!
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ARTHUR: Man, sorry. What knight lives in that castle over there?
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DENNIS: I'm thirty seven.
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ARTHUR: What?
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DENNIS: I'm thirty seven -- I'm not old!
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ARTHUR: Well, I can't just call you `Man'.
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DENNIS: Well, you could say `Dennis'.
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ARTHUR: Well, I didn't know you were called `Dennis.'
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DENNIS: Well, you didn't bother to find out, did you?
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ARTHUR: I did say sorry about the `old woman,' but from the
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behind you looked--
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DENNIS: What I object to is you automatically treat me like an
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inferior!
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ARTHUR: Well, I AM king...
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DENNIS: Oh king, eh, very nice. An' how'd you get that, eh? By
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exploitin' the workers -- by 'angin' on to outdated imperialist
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dogma which perpetuates the economic an' social differences in our
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society! If there's ever going to be any progress--
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WOMAN: Dennis, there's some lovely filth down here. Oh -- how
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d'you do?
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ARTHUR: How do you do, good lady. I am Arthur, King of the
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Britons. Who's castle is that?
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WOMAN: King of the who?
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ARTHUR: The Britons.
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WOMAN: Who are the Britons?
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ARTHUR: Well, we all are. we're all Britons and I am your king.
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WOMAN: I didn't know we had a king. I thought we were an
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autonomous collective.
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DENNIS: You're fooling yourself. We're living in a dictatorship.
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A self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working classes--
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WOMAN: Oh there you go, bringing class into it again.
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DENNIS: That's what it's all about if only people would--
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ARTHUR: Please, please good people. I am in haste. Who lives
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in that castle?
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WOMAN: No one live there.
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ARTHUR: Then who is your lord?
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WOMAN: We don't have a lord.
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ARTHUR: What?
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DENNIS: I told you. We're an anarcho-syndicalist commune. We
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take it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the
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week.
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ARTHUR: Yes.
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DENNIS: But all the decision of that officer have to be ratified
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at a special biweekly meeting.
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ARTHUR: Yes, I see.
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DENNIS: By a simple majority in the case of purely internal
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affairs,--
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ARTHUR: Be quiet!
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DENNIS: --but by a two-thirds majority in the case of more--
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ARTHUR: Be quiet! I order you to be quiet!
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WOMAN: Order, eh -- who does he think he is?
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ARTHUR: I am your king!
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WOMAN: Well, I didn't vote for you.
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ARTHUR: You don't vote for kings.
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WOMAN: Well, 'ow did you become king then?
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ARTHUR: The Lady of the Lake, [angels sing] her arm clad in the
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purest shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of
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the water signifying by Divine Providence that I, Arthur, was to
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carry Excalibur. [singing stops] That is why I am your king!
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DENNIS: Listen -- strange women lying in ponds distributing
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swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive
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power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some
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farcical aquatic ceremony.
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ARTHUR: Be quiet!
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DENNIS: Well you can't expect to wield supreme executive power
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just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you!
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ARTHUR: Shut up!
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DENNIS: I mean, if I went around sayin' I was an empereror just
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because some moistened bint had lobbed a scimitar at me they'd
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put me away!
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ARTHUR: Shut up! Will you shut up!
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DENNIS: Ah, now we see the violence inherent in the system.
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ARTHUR: Shut up!
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DENNIS: Oh! Come and see the violence inherent in the system!
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HELP! HELP! I'm being repressed!
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ARTHUR: Bloody peasant!
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DENNIS: Oh, what a give away. Did you here that, did you here
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that, eh? That's what I'm on about -- did you see him repressing
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me, you saw it didn't you?
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Scene 4
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[battle sounds]
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[Black Knight defeats a worthless-piece-of-shit-knight]
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ARTHUR: You fight with the strength of many men, Sir knight.
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I am Arthur, King of the Britons.
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[pause]
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I seek the finest and the bravest knights in the land to
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join me in my Court of Camelot.
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[pause]
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You have proved yourself worthy; will you join me?
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[pause]
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You make me sad. So be it. Come, Patsy.
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BLACK KNIGHT: None shall pass.
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ARTHUR: What?
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BLACK KNIGHT: None shall pass.
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ARTHUR: I have no quarrel with you, good Sir knight, but I must
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cross this bridge.
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BLACK KNIGHT: Then you shall die.
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ARTHUR: I command you as King of the Britons to stand aside!
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BLACK KNIGHT: I move for no man.
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ARTHUR: So be it!
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[hah]
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[parry thrust]
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[ARTHUR chops the BLACK KNIGHT's left arm off]
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ARTHUR: Now stand aside, worthy adversary.
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BLACK KNIGHT: 'Tis but a scratch.
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ARTHUR: A scratch? Your arm's off!
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BLACK KNIGHT: No, it isn't.
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ARTHUR: Well, what's that then?
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BLACK KNIGHT: I've had worse.
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ARTHUR: You liar!
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BLACK KNIGHT: Come on you pansy!
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[hah]
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[parry thrust]
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[ARTHUR chops the BLACK KNIGHT's right arm off]
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ARTHUR: Victory is mine!
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[kneeling]
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We thank thee Lord, that in thy merc-
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[Black Knight kicks Arthur in the head while he is praying]
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BLACK KNIGHT: Come on then.
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ARTHUR: What?
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BLACK KNIGHT: Have at you!
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ARTHUR: You are indeed brave, Sir knight, but the fight is mine.
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BLACK KNIGHT: Oh, had enough, eh?
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ARTHUR: Look, you stupid bastard, you've got no arms left.
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BLACK KNIGHT: Yes I have.
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ARTHUR: Look!
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BLACK KNIGHT: Just a flesh wound.
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[Headbutts Arthur in the chest]
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ARTHUR: Look, stop that.
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BLACK KNIGHT: Chicken! Chicken!
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ARTHUR: Look, I'll have your leg. Right!
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[whop]
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BLACK KNIGHT: Right, I'll do you for that!
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ARTHUR: You'll what?
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BLACK KNIGHT: Come 'ere!
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ARTHUR: What are you going to do, bleed on me?
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BLACK KNIGHT: I'm invincible!
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ARTHUR: You're a loony.
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BLACK KNIGHT: The Black Knight always triumphs! Have at you!
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Come on then.
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[whop]
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[ARTHUR chops the BLACK KNIGHT's other leg off]
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BLACK KNIGHT: All right; we'll call it a draw.
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ARTHUR: Come, Patsy.
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BLACK KNIGHT: Oh, oh, I see, running away then. You yellow
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bastards! Come back here and take what's coming to you. I'll bite
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your legs off!
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Scene 5
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CROWD: A witch! A witch! A witch! We've got a witch! A witch!
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VILLAGER #1: We have found a witch, might we burn her?
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CROWD: Burn her! Burn!
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BEDEMIR: How do you know she is a witch?
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VILLAGER #2: She looks like one.
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BEDEMIR: Bring her forward.
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WITCH: I'm not a witch. I'm not a witch.
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BEDEMIR: But you are dressed as one.
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WITCH: They dressed me up like this.
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CROWD: No, we didn't -- no.
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WITCH: And this isn't my nose, it's a false one.
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BEDEMIR: Well?
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VILLAGER #1: Well, we did do the nose.
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BEDEMIR: The nose?
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VILLAGER #1: And the hat -- but she is a witch!
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CROWD: Burn her! Witch! Witch! Burn her!
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BEDEMIR: Did you dress her up like this?
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CROWD: No, no... no ... yes. Yes, yes, a bit, a bit.
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VILLAGER #1: She has got a wart.
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BEDEMIR: What makes you think she is a witch?
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VILLAGER #3: Well, she turned me into a newt.
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BEDEMIR: A newt?
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VILLAGER #3: I got better.
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VILLAGER #2: Burn her anyway!
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CROWD: Burn! Burn her!
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BEDEMIR: Quiet, quiet. Quiet! There are ways of telling whether
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she is a witch.
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CROWD: Are there? What are they?
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BEDEMIR: Tell me, what do you do with witches?
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VILLAGER #2: Burn!
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CROWD: Burn, burn them up!
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BEDEMIR: And what do you burn apart from witches?
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VILLAGER #1: More witches!
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VILLAGER #2: Wood!
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BEDEMIR: So, why do witches burn?
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[pause]
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VILLAGER #3: B--... 'cause they're made of wood...?
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BEDEMIR: Good!
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CROWD: Oh yeah, yeah...
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BEDEMIR: So, how do we tell whether she is made of wood?
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VILLAGER #1: Build a bridge out of her.
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BEDEMIR: Aah, but can you not also build bridges out of stone?
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VILLAGER #2: Oh, yeah.
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BEDEMIR: Does wood sink in water?
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VILLAGER #1: No, no.
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VILLAGER #2: It floats! It floats!
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VILLAGER #1: Throw her into the pond!
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CROWD: The pond!
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BEDEMIR: What also floats in water?
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VILLAGER #1: Bread!
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VILLAGER #2: Apples!
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VILLAGER #3: Very small rocks!
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VILLAGER #1: Cider!
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VILLAGER #2: Great gravy!
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VILLAGER #1: Cherries!
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VILLAGER #2: Mud!
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VILLAGER #3: Churches -- churches!
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VILLAGER #2: Lead -- lead!
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ARTHUR: A duck.
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CROWD: Oooh.
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BEDEMIR: Exactly! So, logically...,
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VILLAGER #1: If... she.. weighs the same as a duck, she's made of
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wood.
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BEDEMIR: And therefore--?
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VILLAGER #1: A witch!
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CROWD: A witch!
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BEDEMIR: We shall use my largest scales!
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[yelling]
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BEDEMIR: Right, remove the supports!
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[whop]
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[creak]
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CROWD: A witch! A witch!
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WITCH: It's a fair cop.
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CROWD: Burn her! Burn!
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[yelling]
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BEDEMIR: Who are you who are so wise in the ways of science?
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ARTHUR: I am Arthur, King of the Britons.
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BEDEMIR: My liege!
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ARTHUR: Good Sir knight, will you come with me to Camelot,
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and join us at the Round Table?
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BEDEMIR: My liege! I would be honored.
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ARTHUR: What is your name?
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BEDEMIR: Bedemir, my leige.
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ARTHUR: Then I dub you Sir Bedemir, Knight of the Round Table.
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[Narrative Interlude]
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NARRATOR: The wise Sir Bedemir was the first to join King
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Arthur's knights, but other illustrious names were soon to follow:
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Sir Launcelot the Brave; Sir Galahad the Pure; and Sir Robin the
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Not-quite-so-brave-as-Sir-Launcelot who had nearly fought the
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Dragon of Agnor, who had nearly stood up to the vicious Chicken of
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Bristol and who had personally wet himself at the Battle of Badon
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Hill; and the aptly named Sir Not-appearing-in-this-film. Together
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they formed a band whose names and deeds were to be retold
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throughout the centuries, the Knights of the Round Table.
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Scene 6
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BEDEMIR: And that, my liege, is how we know the Earth to be
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banana-shaped.
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ARTHUR: This new learning amazes me, Sir Bedemir. Explain again
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how sheeps' bladders may be employed to prevent earthquakes.
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BEDEMIR: Oh, certainly, sir.
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LAUNCELOT: Look, my liege!
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ARTHUR: Camelot!
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GALAHAD: Camelot!
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LAUNCELOT: Camelot!
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PATSY: It's only a model.
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ARTHUR: Shhh! Knights, I bid you welcome to your new home. Let
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us ride... to Camelot.
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[singing]
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We're knights of the round table
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We dance when e'er we're able
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We do routines and parlour scenes
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With footwork impecc-Able.
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We dine well here in Camelot
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We eat ham and jam and spam a lot
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[dancing]
|
||
We're knights of the Round Table
|
||
Our shows are for-mid-able
|
||
Oh many times we're given rhymes
|
||
That are quite unsing-able
|
||
We not so fat in Camelot
|
||
We sing from the diaphragm a lot
|
||
[tap-dancing]
|
||
Oh we're tough and able
|
||
Quite indefatigable
|
||
Between our quests we [something]
|
||
And impersonate Clark Gable
|
||
It's a bit too loud in Camelot
|
||
I have to push the pram a lot.
|
||
|
||
ARTHUR: Well, on second thought, let's not go to Camelot -- it is
|
||
a silly place. Right.
|
||
Scene 7
|
||
GOD: Arthur! Arthur, King of the Britons! Oh, don't grovel! If
|
||
there's one thing I can't stand, it's people groveling.
|
||
ARTHUR: Sorry--
|
||
GOD: And don't apologize. Every time I try to talk to someone
|
||
it's "sorry this" and "forgive me that" and "I'm not worthy". What
|
||
are you doing now!?
|
||
ARTHUR: I'm averting my eyes, oh Lord.
|
||
GOD: Well, don't. It's like those miserable Psalms -- they're so
|
||
|
||
depressing. Now knock it off!
|
||
ARTHUR: Yes, Lord.
|
||
GOD: Right! Arthur, King of the Britons -- you're Knights of the
|
||
Round Table shall have a task to make them an example in these dark
|
||
times.
|
||
ARTHUR: Good idea, oh Lord!
|
||
GOD: 'Course it's a good idea! Behold! Arthur, this is the Holy
|
||
|
||
Grail. Look well, Arthur, for it is your sacred task to seek
|
||
|
||
this Grail. That is your purpose, Arthur -- the Quest for the
|
||
|
||
Holy Grail.
|
||
ARTHUR: A blessing!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: A blessing from the Lord!
|
||
GALAHAD: God be praised!
|
||
Scene 8
|
||
[clop clop]
|
||
ARTHUR: Halt! Hallo! Hallo!
|
||
GUARD: 'Allo! Who is zis?
|
||
ARTHUR: It is King Arthur, and these are the Knights of the Round
|
||
|
||
Table. Who's castle is this?
|
||
GUARD: This is the castle of my master, Guido Wommer!
|
||
ARTHUR: Go and tell your master that we have been charged by God
|
||
|
||
with a sacred quest. If he will give us food and shelter for
|
||
the night he can join us in our quest for the Holy Grail.
|
||
GUARD: Well, I'll ask him, but I don't think he'll be very
|
||
keen... Uh, he's already got one, you see?
|
||
ARTHUR: What?
|
||
GALAHAD: He says they've already got one!
|
||
ARTHUR: Are you sure he's got one?
|
||
GUARD: Oh, yes, it's very nice-a (I told him we already got one)
|
||
ARTHUR: Well, um, can we come up and have a look?
|
||
GUARD: Of course not! You are English types-a!
|
||
ARTHUR: Well, what are you then?
|
||
GUARD: I'm French! Why do think I have this outrageous accent,
|
||
you silly king!
|
||
GALAHAD: What are you doing in England?
|
||
GUARD: Mind your own business!
|
||
ARTHUR: If you will not show us the Grail, we shall take your
|
||
castle by force!
|
||
GUARD: You don't frighten us, English pig-dogs! Go and boil your
|
||
|
||
bottoms, sons of a silly person. I blow my nose at you,
|
||
so-called Arthur-king, you and all your silly English kaniggets.
|
||
Thppppt!
|
||
GALAHAD: What a strange person.
|
||
ARTHUR: Now look here, my good man!
|
||
GUARD: I don't want to talk to you no more, you empty headed
|
||
animal food trough water! I fart in your general direction! You
|
||
mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!
|
||
GALAHAD: Is there someone else up there we could talk to?
|
||
GUARD: No, now go away or I shall taunt you a second time-a!
|
||
ARTHUR: Now, this is your last chance. I've been more than
|
||
reasonable.
|
||
GUARD: (Fetch-e la vache.) wha?
|
||
GUARD: (Fetch-e la vache!)
|
||
[moo!]
|
||
ARTHUR: If you do not agree to my commands, then I shall--
|
||
[twong]
|
||
[mooooooo]
|
||
Jesus Christ! Right! Charge!
|
||
ALL: Charge!
|
||
[mayhem]
|
||
GUARD: Ah, this one is for your mother!
|
||
[twong]
|
||
ALL: Run away!
|
||
GUARD: Thpppt!
|
||
[ after running away...]
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Fiends! I'll tear them apart!
|
||
ARTHUR: No no, no.
|
||
BEDEMIR: Sir! I have a plan, sir.
|
||
[later]
|
||
[chop]
|
||
[rumble rumble squeak]
|
||
MUTTERING GUARDS: ce labon a bunny do wha? un codoo?
|
||
|
||
a present! oh, un codoo. oui oui hurry! wha-? let's
|
||
go!
|
||
[rumble rumble squeak]
|
||
ARTHUR: What happens now?
|
||
BEDEMIR: Well, now, uh, Launcelot, Galahad, and I, wait until
|
||
nightfall, and then leap out of the rabbit, taking the French by
|
||
surprise -- not only by surprise, but totally unarmed!
|
||
ARTHUR: Who leaps out?
|
||
BEDEMIR: Uh, Launcelot, Galahad, and I. Uh, leap out of the
|
||
rabbit, uh and uh....
|
||
ARTHUR: Oh....
|
||
BEDEMIR: Oh.... Um, l-look, if we built this large wooden
|
||
badger--
|
||
[twong]
|
||
ALL: Run away! Run away! Run away! Run away!
|
||
[splat]
|
||
GUARDS: Oh, haw haw haw.
|
||
Scene 9
|
||
Pictures for Schools, take 8.
|
||
DIRECTOR: Action!
|
||
|
||
NARRATOR: Defeat at the castle seems to have utterly disheartened
|
||
|
||
King Arthur. The ferocity of the French taunting took him
|
||
completely by surprise, and Arthur became convinced that a new
|
||
strategy was required if the quest for the Holy Grail were to be
|
||
brought to a successful conclusion. Arthur, having consulted his
|
||
closest knights, decided that they should separate, and search for
|
||
the Grail individually. Now, this is what they did--
|
||
[clop clop]
|
||
[An unknown knight rides in and stabs the narrator]
|
||
WOMAN: Greg!
|
||
Scene 10
|
||
NARRATOR: The Tale of Sir Robin.... So each of the knights
|
||
went their separate ways. Sir Robin rode north, through the dark
|
||
forest of Ewing, accompanied by his favorite minstrels.
|
||
MINSTREL (singing):
|
||
Bravely bold Sir Robin, rode forth from Camelot.
|
||
He was not afraid to die, o Brave Sir Robin.
|
||
|
||
He was not at all afraid to be killed in nasty ways.
|
||
|
||
Brave, brave, brave, brave Sir Robin!
|
||
|
||
He was not in the least bit scared to be mashed into a pulp,
|
||
|
||
Or to have his eyes gouged out, and his elbows broken.
|
||
|
||
To have his kneecaps split, and his body burned away,
|
||
|
||
And his limbs all hacked and mangled, brave Sir Robin!
|
||
|
||
His head smashed in and his heart cut out,
|
||
|
||
And his liver removed and his bowels unplugged,
|
||
|
||
And his nostrils ripped and his bottom burned off,
|
||
|
||
And his balls...
|
||
ROBIN: That's -- that's, uh, that's enough music for now, lads.
|
||
|
||
Looks like there's dirty work afoot.
|
||
DENNIS: Anarcho-syndicalism is a way of preserving freedom.
|
||
WOMAN: Oh, Dennis, forget about freedom. Now I've dropped my
|
||
mud.
|
||
ALL HEADS: Halt! Who art thou?
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): He is brave Sir Robin, brave Sir Robin, who--
|
||
ROBIN: Shut up! Um, n-n-nobody really, I'm j-just um, just
|
||
passing through.
|
||
ALL HEADS: What do you want?
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): To fight, and--
|
||
ROBIN: Shut up! Um, oo, n-nothing, nothing really -- I, uh,
|
||
j-j-ust to um, just to p-pass through good Sir knight.
|
||
ALL HEADS: I'm afraid not!
|
||
ROBIN: Ah. W-well, actually I am a Knight of the Round Table.
|
||
ALL HEADS: You're a Knight of the Round Table?
|
||
ROBIN: I am.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: In that case I shall have to kill you.
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: Shall I?
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: Oh, I don't think so.
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: Well, what do I think?
|
||
LEFT HEAD: I think kill him.
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: Well let's be nice to him.
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: Oh shut up.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: Perhaps-
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: And you.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: Oh quick get the sword out I want to cut his head off!
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: Oh, cut your own head off!
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: Yes, do us all a favor!
|
||
LEFT HEAD: What?
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: Yapping on all the time.
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: You're lucky, you're not next to him.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: What do you mean?
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: You snore.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: Oh I don't -- anyway, you've got bad breath.
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: Well its only because you don't brush my teeth.
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: Oh stop bitching and let's go have tea.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: All right all right all right we'll kill him first
|
||
|
||
and then have tea and biscuits.
|
||
MIDDLE HEAD: Yes.
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: Oh, but not biscuits.
|
||
LEFT HEAD: All right all right not biscuits, but lets kill him
|
||
anyway.
|
||
ALL HEADS: Right!
|
||
LEFT HEAD: He buggered off.
|
||
RIGHT HEAD: So he has, he's scarpered.
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): Brave Sir Robin ran away
|
||
ROBIN: No!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): Bravely ran away away
|
||
ROBIN: I didn't!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): When danger reared its ugly head,
|
||
|
||
He bravely turned his tail and fled
|
||
ROBIN: No!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): Yes Brave Sir Robin turned about
|
||
ROBIN: I didn't!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): And gallantly he chickened out
|
||
|
||
Bravely taking to his feet
|
||
ROBIN: I never did!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): He beat a very brave retreat
|
||
ROBIN: Oh, lie!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): Bravest of the brave Sir Robin
|
||
ROBIN: I never!
|
||
Scene 11
|
||
NARRATOR: The Tale of Sir Galahad
|
||
[boom crash]
|
||
[angels singing]
|
||
[pound pound pound]
|
||
GALAHAD: Open the door! Open the door!
|
||
[pound pound pound]
|
||
In the name of King Arthur, open the door!
|
||
[squeak thump]
|
||
[squeak boom]
|
||
ALL: Hello!
|
||
ZOOT: Welcome gentle Sir knight, welcome to the Castle Anthrax.
|
||
GALAHAD: The Castle Anthrax?
|
||
ZOOT: Yes... oh, it's not a very good name is it? Oh! but we are
|
||
|
||
nice and we shall attend to your every, every need!
|
||
GALAHAD: You are the keepers of the Holy Grail?
|
||
ZOOT: The what?
|
||
GALAHAD: The Grail -- it is here?
|
||
ZOOT: Oh, but you are tired, and you must rest awhile. Midget!
|
||
|
||
Crepper!
|
||
MIDGET and CREPPER: Yes, oh Zoot!
|
||
ZOOT: Prepare a bed for our guest.
|
||
MIDGET and CREPPER: Oh thank you thank you thank you--
|
||
ZOOT: Away away vile peasents! The beds here are warm and soft
|
||
-- and very, very big.
|
||
GALAHAD: Well, look, I-I-uh--
|
||
ZOOT: What is your name, handsome knight?
|
||
GALAHAD: Sir Galahad... the Chaste.
|
||
ZOOT: Mine is Zoot... just Zoot. Oh, but come!
|
||
GALAHAD: Look, please! In God's name, show me the Grail!
|
||
ZOOT: Oh, you have suffered much! You are delirious!
|
||
GALAHAD: L-look, I have seen it! It is here, in the--
|
||
ZOOT: Sir Galahad! You would not be so ungallant as to refuse
|
||
our hospitality.
|
||
GALAHAD: Well, I-I-uh--
|
||
ZOOT: Oh, I am afraid our life must seem very dull and quiet
|
||
compared to yours. We are but eight score young blondes and
|
||
brunettes, all between sixteen and nineteen and a half, cut off in
|
||
this castle with no one to protect us! Oh, it is a lonely life --
|
||
bathing, dressing, undressing, making exciting underwear.... We
|
||
are just not used to handsome knights. Nay, nay, come, come, you
|
||
may lie here. Oh, but you are wounded!
|
||
GALAHAD: No, no -- i-it's nothing!
|
||
ZOOT: Oh, but you must see the doctors immediately! No, no,
|
||
please, lie down.
|
||
[clap clap]
|
||
PIGLET: Ah. What seems to be the trouble?
|
||
GALAHAD: They're doctors?!
|
||
ZOOT: Uh, they've had a basic medical training, yes.
|
||
GALAHAD: B-but--
|
||
ZOOT: Oh, come come, you must try to rest! Doctor Piglet,
|
||
|
||
Doctor Winston, practice your art.
|
||
PIGLET: Try to relax.
|
||
GALAHAD: Are you sure that's necessary?
|
||
PIGLET: We must examine you.
|
||
GALAHAD: There's nothing wrong with that!
|
||
PIGLET: Please -- we are doctors.
|
||
GALAHAD: Get off the bed! I am sworn to chastity!
|
||
PIGLET: Back to your bed!
|
||
GALAHAD: Torment me no longer! I have seen the Grail!
|
||
PIGLET: There's no grail here.
|
||
GALAHAD: I have seen it, I have seen it. I have seen--
|
||
GIRLS: Hello.
|
||
GALAHAD: Oh--
|
||
VARIOUS GIRLS: Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello.
|
||
|
||
Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello. Hello.
|
||
|
||
Hello.
|
||
GALAHAD: Zoot!
|
||
DINGO: No, I am Zoot's identical twin sister, Dingo.
|
||
GALAHAD: Oh, well, excuse me, I--
|
||
DINGO: Where are you going?
|
||
GALAHAD: I seek the Grail! I have seen it, here in this castle!
|
||
DINGO: No! Oh, no! Bad, bad Zoot!
|
||
GALAHAD: What is it?
|
||
DINGO: Oh, wicked, bad, naughty Zoot! She has been setting
|
||
alight to our beacon, which, I just remembered, is grail-shaped.
|
||
|
||
It's not the first time we've had this problem.
|
||
GALAHAD: It's not the real Grail?
|
||
DINGO: Oh, wicked, bad, naughty, evil Zoot! Oh, she is a naughty
|
||
|
||
person, and she must pay the penalty -- and here in Castle
|
||
Anthrax, we have but one punishment for setting alight the
|
||
grail-shaped beacon. You must tie her down on a bed and spank her!
|
||
GIRLS: A spanking! A spanking!
|
||
DINGO: You must spank her well. And after you have spanked her,
|
||
you may deal with her as you like. And then, spank me.
|
||
VARIOUS GIRLS: And spank me. And me. And me.
|
||
DINGO: Yes, yes, you must give us all a good spanking!
|
||
GIRLS: A spanking! A spanking!
|
||
DINGO: And after the spanking, the oral sex.
|
||
GIRLS: Oral sex! Oral sex!
|
||
GALAHAD: Well, I could stay a BIT longer.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Sir Galahad!
|
||
GALAHAD: Oh, hello.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Quick!
|
||
GALAHAD: What?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Quick!
|
||
GALAHAD: Why?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: You're in great peril!
|
||
GALAHAD:
|
||
ZOOT:
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Silence, foul temptress!
|
||
GALAHAD: Now look, it's not important.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Quick! Come on and we'll cover your escape!
|
||
GALAHAD: Look, I'm fine!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Come on!
|
||
GALAHAD: Now look, I can tackle this lot single-handed!
|
||
DINGO: Yes! Let him tackle us single-handed!
|
||
GIRLS: Yes! Tackle us single-handed!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, Sir Galahad, come on!
|
||
GALAHAD: No, really, honestly, I can go back and handle this lot
|
||
easily!
|
||
DINGO: Oh, yes, let him handle us easily.
|
||
GIRLS: Yes, yes!
|
||
GALAHAD: Wait! I can defeat them! There's only a hundred and
|
||
fifty of them!
|
||
DINGO: Yes, yes, he'll beat us easily, we haven't a chance.
|
||
GIRLS: Yes, yes.
|
||
[boom]
|
||
DINGO: Oh, shit.
|
||
[outside]
|
||
LAUNCELOT: We were in the nick of time, you were in great peril.
|
||
GALAHAD: I don't think I was.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Yes you were, you were in terrible peril.
|
||
GALAHAD: Look, let me go back in there and face the peril.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, it's too perilous.
|
||
GALAHAD: Look, [something] as much peril as I can.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, we've got to find the Holy Grail. Come on!
|
||
GALAHAD: Well, let me have just a little bit of peril?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, it's unhealthy.
|
||
GALAHAD: Bet you're gay!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, I'm not.
|
||
Narrative Interlude
|
||
NARRATOR: Sir Launcelot had saved Sir Galahad from almost certain
|
||
|
||
temptation, but they were still no nearer the Grail. Meanwhile,
|
||
|
||
King Arthur and Sir Bedemir, not more than a swallow's flight
|
||
away, had discovered something. Oh, that's an unladen swallow's
|
||
flight, obviously. I mean, they were more than two laden swallow's
|
||
flights away -- four, really, if they hadn't a cord of line between
|
||
them. I mean, if the birds were walking and dragging--
|
||
CROWD: Get on with it!
|
||
NARRATOR: Oh, anyway, on to scene twenty-four, which is a
|
||
smashing scene with some lovely acting, in which Arthur discovers
|
||
a vital clue, in which there aren't any swallows, although I think
|
||
you can hear a starling -oolp!
|
||
Scene 12
|
||
OLD MAN: Ah, hee he he ha!
|
||
ARTHUR: And this enchanter of whom you speak, he has seen the
|
||
grail?
|
||
OLD MAN: Ha ha he he he he!
|
||
ARTHUR: Where does he live? Old man, where does he live?
|
||
OLD MAN: He knows of a cave, a cave which no man has entered.
|
||
ARTHUR: And the Grail... The Grail is there?
|
||
OLD MAN: Very much danger, for beyond the cave lies the Gorge
|
||
|
||
of Eternal Peril, which no man has ever crossed.
|
||
ARTHUR: But the Grail! Where is the Grail!?
|
||
OLD MAN: Seek you the Bridge of Death.
|
||
ARTHUR: The Bridge of Death, which leads to the Grail?
|
||
OLD MAN: Hee hee ha ha!
|
||
Scene 13
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee!
|
||
ARTHUR: Who are you?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: We are the Knights Who Say... Nee!
|
||
ARTHUR: No! Not the Knights Who Say Nee!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: The same!
|
||
BEDEMIR: Who are they?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: We are the keepers of the sacred words: Nee, Pang,
|
||
and Nee-wom!
|
||
RANDOM: Nee-wom!
|
||
ARTHUR: Those who hear them seldom live to tell the tale!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: The Knights Who Say Nee demand a sacrifice!
|
||
ARTHUR: Knights of Nee, we are but simple travellers who seek the
|
||
|
||
enchanter who lives beyond these woods.
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Nee! Nee! Nee! Nee!
|
||
ARTHUR and PARTY: Oh, ow!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: We shall say 'nee' again to you if you do not
|
||
appease us.
|
||
ARTHUR: Well, what is it you want?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: We want... a shrubbery!
|
||
[dramatic chord]
|
||
ARTHUR: A what?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Nee! Nee!
|
||
ARTHUR and PARTY: Oh, ow!
|
||
ARTHUR: Please, please! No more! We shall find a shrubbery.
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: You must return here with a shrubbery or else you
|
||
will never pass through this wood alive!
|
||
ARTHUR: O Knights of Nee, you are just and fair, and we will
|
||
return with a shrubbery.
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: One that looks nice.
|
||
ARTHUR: Of course.
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: And not too expensive.
|
||
ARTHUR: Yes.
|
||
HEAD KNIGHTS: Now... go!
|
||
Scene 14
|
||
NARRATOR: The Tale of Sir Launcelot.
|
||
|
||
FATHER: One day, lad, all this will be yours!
|
||
HERBERT: What, the curtains?
|
||
FATHER: No, not the curtains, lad. All that you can see!
|
||
Stretched out over the hills and valleys of this land! This'll be
|
||
your kingdom, lad!
|
||
HERBERT: But, Mother--
|
||
FATHER: Father, I'm Father.
|
||
HERBERT: But Father, I don't want any of that.
|
||
FATHER: Listen, lad. I've built this kingdom up from nothing.
|
||
|
||
When I started here, all there was was swamp. The king said I was
|
||
|
||
daft to build a castle in a swamp, but I built it all the same,
|
||
|
||
just to show 'em. It sank into the swamp. So, I built a second
|
||
one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third one. That
|
||
burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth
|
||
one stayed up. An' that's what your gonna get, lad -- the strongest
|
||
castle in these islands.
|
||
HERBERT: But I don't want any of that -- I'd rather--
|
||
FATHER: Rather what?!
|
||
HERBERT: I'd rather... just... [music] ...sing!
|
||
FATHER: Stop that, stop that! You're not going to do a song
|
||
while I'm here. Now listen lad, in twenty minutes you're getting
|
||
married to a girl whose father owns the biggest tracts of open land
|
||
in Britain.
|
||
HERBERT: But I don't want land.
|
||
FATHER: Listen, Alice...
|
||
HERBERT: Herbert.
|
||
FATHER: Herbert. We live in a bloody swamp. We need all the
|
||
land we can get.
|
||
HERBERT: But I don't like her.
|
||
FATHER: Don't like her?! What's wrong with her? She's
|
||
beautiful, she's rich, she's got huge... tracts of land.
|
||
HERBERT: I know, but I want the girl that I marry to have...
|
||
|
||
a certain... special... [music] ...something...
|
||
FATHER: Cut that out, cut that out. Look, you're marryin'
|
||
Princess Looky, so you'd better get used to the idea. [smack]
|
||
|
||
Guards! Make sure the Prince doesn't leave this room until I come
|
||
and get 'im.
|
||
GUARD #1: Not to leave the room even if you come and get him.
|
||
GUARD #2: Hic!
|
||
FATHER: No, no. Until I come and get 'im.
|
||
GUARD #1: Until you come and get him, we're not to enter the
|
||
room.
|
||
FATHER: No, no, no. You stay in the room and make sure 'e
|
||
doesn't leave.
|
||
GUARD #1: And you'll come and get him.
|
||
GUARD #2: Hic!
|
||
FATHER: Right.
|
||
GUARD #1: We don't need to do anything, apart from just stop him
|
||
|
||
entering the room.
|
||
FATHER: No, no. Leaving the room.
|
||
GUARD #1: Leaving the room, yes.
|
||
FATHER: All right?
|
||
GUARD #1: Right. Oh, if-if-if, uh, if-if-if, uh, if-if-if we...
|
||
FATHER: Yes, what is it?
|
||
GUARD #1: Oh, if-if, oh--
|
||
FATHER: Look, it's quite simple.
|
||
GUARD #1: Uh...
|
||
FATHER: You just stay here, and make sure 'e doesn't leave the
|
||
room. All right?
|
||
|
||
GUARD #2: Hic!
|
||
FATHER: Right.
|
||
GUARD #1: Oh, I remember. Uh, can he leave the room with us?
|
||
FATHER: N- No no no. You just keep him in here, and make sure--
|
||
GUARD #1: Oh, yes, we'll keep him in here, obviously. But if he
|
||
had to leave and we were--
|
||
FATHER: No, no, just keep him in here--
|
||
GUARD #1: Until you, or anyone else,--
|
||
FATHER: No, not anyone else, just me--
|
||
GUARD #1: Just you.
|
||
GUARD #2: Hic!
|
||
FATHER: Get back.
|
||
GUARD #1: Get back.
|
||
FATHER: Right?
|
||
GUARD #1: Right, we'll stay here until you get back.
|
||
FATHER: And, uh, make sure he doesn't leave.
|
||
GUARD #1: What?
|
||
FATHER: Make sure 'e doesn't leave.
|
||
GUARD #1: The Prince?
|
||
FATHER: Yes, make sure 'e doesn't leave.
|
||
GUARD #1: Oh, yes, of course. I thought you meant him. Y'know,
|
||
it seemed a bit daft, me havin' to guard him when he's a guard.
|
||
FATHER: Is that clear?
|
||
GUARD #2: Hic!
|
||
GUARD #1: Oh, quite clear, no problems.
|
||
FATHER: Right.
|
||
[starts to leave]
|
||
Where are you going?
|
||
GUARD #1: We're coming with you.
|
||
FATHER: No no, I want you to stay 'ere and make sure 'e doesn't
|
||
leave.
|
||
GUARD #1: Oh, I see. Right.
|
||
HERBERT: But, Father!
|
||
FATHER: Shut your noise, you! And get that suit on! And no
|
||
singing!
|
||
GUARD #2: Hic!
|
||
FATHER: Oh, go get a glass of water.
|
||
|
||
Scene 15
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well taken, Concorde!
|
||
CONCORDE: Thank you, sir! Most kind.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: And again... Over we go! Good. Steady! And now, the
|
||
big one...Ooof! Come on, Concorde!
|
||
[thwonk]
|
||
CONCORDE: Message for you, sir.
|
||
[fwump]
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Concorde! Concorde, speak to me! "To whoever finds
|
||
this note, I have been imprisoned by my father, who wishes me to
|
||
marry against my will. Please, please, please come and rescue me.
|
||
|
||
I am in the tall tower of Swamp Castle." At last! A call, a cry
|
||
of distress! This could be the sign that leads us to the Holy
|
||
Grail! Brave, brave Concorde! You shall not have died in vain!
|
||
|
||
CONCORDE: Uh, I'm-I'm not quite dead, sir.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, you shall not have been mortally wounded in
|
||
vain!
|
||
CONCORDE: Uh, I-I think uh, I could pull through, sir.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Oh, I see.
|
||
CONCORDE: Actually, I think I'm all right to come with you--
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, no, sweet Concorde! Stay here! I will send help
|
||
as soon as I have accomplished a daring and heroic rescue in my own
|
||
|
||
particular... (sigh)
|
||
CONCORDE: Idiom, sir?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Idiom!
|
||
CONCORDE: No, I feel fine, actually, sir.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Farewell, sweet Concorde!
|
||
CONCORDE: I'll-uh, I'll just stay here, then, shall I, sir? Yeah.
|
||
|
||
Scene 16
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Ha-ha! etc.
|
||
GUARD #1: Now, you're not allowed to come in here, and we're-ugh!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: O fair one, behold your humble servant Sir Launcelot
|
||
|
||
of Camelot. I have come to take -- oh, I'm terribly sorry.
|
||
HERBERT: You got my note!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Uh, well, I got A note.
|
||
HERBERT: You've come to rescue me!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Uh, well, no, you see--
|
||
HERBERT: I knew that someone would, I knew that somewhere out
|
||
there... there must be... [music] ...someone...
|
||
FATHER: Stop that, stop that, stop it! Stop it! Who are you?
|
||
HERBERT: I'm your son!
|
||
FATHER: No, not you.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: I'm Sir Launcelot, sir.
|
||
HERBERT: He's come to rescue me, father.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, let's not jump to conclusions.
|
||
FATHER: Did you kill all the guard?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Uh..., oh, yes. Sorry.
|
||
FATHER: They cost fifty pounds each.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, I'm awfully sorry, I'm -- I really can explain
|
||
everything.
|
||
HERBERT: Don't be afraid of him, Sir Launcelot, I've got a rope
|
||
all ready!
|
||
FATHER: You killed eight wedding guests in all!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, you see, the thing is, I thought your son was a
|
||
lady.
|
||
FATHER: I can understand that.
|
||
HERBERT: Hurry, Sir Launcelot! Hurry!
|
||
FATHER: Shut up! You only killed the bride's father, that's all!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, I really didn't mean to...
|
||
FATHER: Didn't mean to?! You put your sword right through his
|
||
head!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Oh, dear. Is he all right?
|
||
FATHER: You even kicked the bride in the chest! This is going to
|
||
cost me a fortune!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, I can explain. I was in the forest, um, riding
|
||
north from Camelot, when I got this note, you see--
|
||
FATHER: Camelot? Are you from, uh, Camelot?
|
||
HERBERT: Hurry, Sir Launcelot!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Uh, I am a Knight of King Arthur, sir.
|
||
FATHER: Pretty nice castle, Camelot. Uh, pretty good pig
|
||
country....
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Yes.
|
||
HERBERT: Hurry, I'm ready!
|
||
FATHER: Would you, uh, like to come and have a drink?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Well, that's, uh, awfully nice of you.
|
||
HERBERT: I am ready!
|
||
[start to leave]
|
||
LAUNCELOT: --I mean to be, so understanding.
|
||
[thonk]
|
||
HERBERT: Oooh!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Um, I think when I'm in this idiom, I sometimes get a
|
||
bit, uh, sort of carried away.
|
||
FATHER: Oh, don't worry about that.
|
||
HERBERT: Oooh!
|
||
[splat]
|
||
Scene 17
|
||
[wailing]
|
||
FATHER: Well, this is the main hall. We're going to have all
|
||
this knocked through, and made into one big, uh, living room.
|
||
RANDOM: There he is!
|
||
FATHER: Oh, bloody hell.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Ha-ha! etc.
|
||
FATHER: Hold it, hold it! Please!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Sorry, sorry. See what I mean, I just get carried
|
||
away. I really must -- sorry, sorry! Sorry, everyone.
|
||
RANDOM: He's killed the best man!
|
||
[yelling]
|
||
FATHER: Hold it, please! Hold it! This is Sir Launcelot from
|
||
the gorge of Camelot -- a very brave and influential knight, and my
|
||
special guest here today.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Hello.
|
||
RANDOM: He killed my auntie!
|
||
[yelling]
|
||
FATHER: Please, please! This is supposed to be a happy occasion!
|
||
|
||
Let's not bicker and argue about who killed who. We are here
|
||
today to witness the union of two young people in the joyful bond
|
||
of the holy wedlock. Unfortunately, one of them, my son Herbert,
|
||
has just fallen to his death. But I think I've not lost a son, so
|
||
much as... gained a daughter! For, since the tragic death of her
|
||
father--
|
||
RANDOM: He's not quite dead!
|
||
FATHER: Since the near fatal wounding of her father--
|
||
RANDOM: He's getting better!
|
||
FATHER: For, since her own father... who, when he seemed about to
|
||
|
||
recover, suddenly felt the icy hand of death upon him,--
|
||
[ugh]
|
||
RANDOM: Oh, he's died!
|
||
FATHER: And I want his only daughter to look upon me... as her
|
||
own dad -- in a very real, and legally binding sense.
|
||
[clapping]
|
||
And I feel sure that the merger -- uh, the union -- between
|
||
the Princess and the brave, but dangerous, Sir Launcelot of
|
||
Camelot--
|
||
LAUNCELOT: What?
|
||
RANDOM: Look! The dead Prince!
|
||
CONCORDE: He's not quite dead!
|
||
HERBERT: Oh, I feel much better.
|
||
FATHER: You fell out of the cold tower, you creep!
|
||
HERBERT: No, I was saved at the last minute.
|
||
FATHER: How?!
|
||
HERBERT: Well, I'll tell you... [music]
|
||
FATHER: Not like that! Not like that! No, stop it!
|
||
SINGING: He's going to tell! He's going to tell!
|
||
FATHER: Shut up!
|
||
SINGING: He's going to tell! He's going to tell!
|
||
He's going to tell! He's going to tell!
|
||
He's going to tell! He's going to tell!
|
||
He's going to tell! He's going to tell!
|
||
CONCORDE: Quickly, sir! This way!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, it's not in my idiom! I must escape in my own
|
||
particular....(sigh)
|
||
CONCORDE: Dogma, sir?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Dogma! Hee! Ha!
|
||
[crash]
|
||
Excuse me, could, uh, could somebody give me a push,
|
||
please...?
|
||
Scene 18
|
||
[clop clop]
|
||
ARTHUR: Old crone! Is there anywhere in this town where we could
|
||
buy a shrubbery!
|
||
[dramatic chord]
|
||
CRONE: Who sent you?
|
||
ARTHUR: The Knights Who Say Nee.
|
||
CRONE: Agh! No! Never! We have no shrubberies here.
|
||
ARTHUR: If you do not tell us where we can buy a shrubbery, my
|
||
friend and I will say... we will say... `nee'.
|
||
CRONE: Agh! Do your worst!
|
||
ARTHUR: Very well! If you will not assist us voluntarily,...
|
||
nee!
|
||
CRONE: No! Never! No shrubberies!
|
||
ARTHUR: Nee!
|
||
BEDEMIR: Noo! Noo!
|
||
ARTHUR: No, no, no, no -- it's not that, it's 'nee'.
|
||
BEDEMIR: Noo!
|
||
ARTHUR: No, no -- 'nee'. You're not doing it properly.
|
||
BEDEMIR: Noo! Nee!
|
||
ARTHUR: That's it, that's it, you've got it.
|
||
ARTHUR and BEDEMIR: Nee! Nee!
|
||
ROGER: Are you saying 'nee' to that old woman?
|
||
ARTHUR: Um, yes.
|
||
ROGER: Oh, what sad times are these when passing ruffians can
|
||
`nee' at will to old ladies. There is a pestilence upon this land,
|
||
nothing is sacred. Even those who arrange and design shrubberies
|
||
are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
|
||
ARTHUR: Did you say `shrubberies'?
|
||
ROGER: Yes, shrubberies are my trade -- I am a shrubber. My name
|
||
|
||
is Roger the Shrubber. I arrange, design, and sell shrubberies.
|
||
BEDEMIR: Nee!
|
||
ARTHUR: No! No, no, no! No!
|
||
Scene 19
|
||
ARTHUR: O, Knights of Nee, we have brought you your shrubbery.
|
||
|
||
May we go now?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: It is a good shrubbery. I like the laurels
|
||
particularly. But there is one small problem.
|
||
ARTHUR: What is that?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: We are now... no longer the Knights Who Say Nee.
|
||
RANDOM: Nee!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Shh shh. We are now the Knights Who Say
|
||
Ecky-ecky-ecky-ecky-pikang-zoom-boing-mumble-mumble.
|
||
RANDOM: Nee!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Therefore, we must give you a test.
|
||
ARTHUR: What is this test, O Knights of-- Knights Who 'Til
|
||
Recently Said Nee?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Firstly, you must find... another shrubbery!
|
||
[dramatic chord]
|
||
ARTHUR: Not another shrubbery!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Then, when you have found the shrubbery, you must
|
||
place it here beside this shrubbery, only slightly higher so you
|
||
get a two-level effect with a little path running down the middle.
|
||
RANDOM: A path! A path! Nee!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Then, when you have found the shrubbery, you must
|
||
cut down the mightiest tree in the forest... with... a herring!
|
||
[dramatic chord]
|
||
ARTHUR: We shall do no such thing!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Oh, please!
|
||
ARTHUR: Cut down a tree with a herring? It can't be done.
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh! Aaaugh!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Don't say that word.
|
||
ARTHUR: What word?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: I cannot tell, suffice to say is one of the words
|
||
|
||
the Knights of Nee cannot hear.
|
||
ARTHUR: How can we not say the word if you don't tell us what it
|
||
is?
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh! Aaaugh!
|
||
ARTHUR: What, `is'?
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: No, not `is' -- we couldn't get vary far in life not
|
||
|
||
saying `is'.
|
||
BEDEMIR: My liege, it's Sir Robin!
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): Packing it in and packing it up
|
||
|
||
And sneaking away and buggering up
|
||
|
||
And chickening out and pissing about
|
||
|
||
Yes, bravely he is throwing in the sponge
|
||
ARTHUR: Oh, Robin! ROBIN: My liege! It's good to see you!
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: He said the word!
|
||
ARTHUR: Surely you've not given up your quest for the Holy Grail?
|
||
MINSTREL (singing): He is sneaking away and buggering up--
|
||
ROBIN: Shut up! No, no no-- far from it.
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: He said the word again!
|
||
ROBIN: I was looking for it.
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh!
|
||
ROBIN: Uh, here, here in this forest.
|
||
ARTHUR: No, it is far from--
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Aaaaugh! Stop saying the word!
|
||
ARTHUR: Oh, stop it!
|
||
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Oh! He said it again!
|
||
ARTHUR: Patsy!
|
||
HEAD KNIGHT: Aaugh! I said it! I said it! Ooh! I said it
|
||
again!
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh!
|
||
Narrative Interlude
|
||
NARRATOR: And so Arthur and Bedemir and Sir Robin set out on
|
||
their search to find the enchanter of whom the old man had spoken
|
||
in Scene 24. Beyond the forest they met Launcelot and Galahad,
|
||
and there was much rejoicing.
|
||
ALL: Yay! Yay!
|
||
NARRATOR: In the frozen land of Nador they were forced to eat
|
||
Robin's minstrels. And there was much rejoicing.
|
||
ALL: Yay!
|
||
NARRATOR: A year passed. Winter changed into Spring. Spring
|
||
changed into Summer. Summer changed back into Winter. And Winter
|
||
gave Spring and Summer a miss and went straight on into Autumn.
|
||
|
||
Until one day...
|
||
Scene 20
|
||
|
||
ARTHUR: Knights! Forward!
|
||
[boom boom boom boom BOOM boom boom boom boom]
|
||
What manner of man are you that can summon up fire without
|
||
flint or tinder?
|
||
TIM: I... am an enchanter.
|
||
ARTHUR: By what name are you known?
|
||
TIM: There are some who call me... Tim?
|
||
ARTHUR: Greetings, Tim the Enchanter.
|
||
TIM: Greetings, King Arthur!
|
||
ARTHUR: You know my name?
|
||
TIM: I do.
|
||
[zoosh]
|
||
You seek the Holy Grail!
|
||
ARTHUR: That is our quest. You know much that is hidden, O Tim.
|
||
TIM: Quite.
|
||
[pweeng boom]
|
||
[clap clap clap]
|
||
ARTHUR: Yes, we're, we're looking for the Grail. Our quest is to
|
||
find the Holy Grail.
|
||
KNIGHTS: It is, yes, yup, yes, yeah.
|
||
ARTHUR: And so we're, we're, we're, we're looking for it.
|
||
KNIGHTS: Yes we are we are.
|
||
BEDEMIR: We have been for some time.
|
||
ROBIN: Ages.
|
||
ARTHUR: Uh, so, uh, anything you can do to, uh, to help, would
|
||
be... very... helpful...
|
||
GALAHAD: Look, can you tell us wh-
|
||
[boom]
|
||
ARTHUR: Fine, um, I don't want to waste anymore of your time,
|
||
but, uh I don't suppose you could, uh, tell us where we might find
|
||
a, um, find a, uh, a, um, a uh--
|
||
TIM: A what...?
|
||
ARTHUR: A g--, a g--
|
||
TIM: A Grail?!
|
||
ARTHUR: Yes, I think so.
|
||
KNIGHTS: Yes, that's it. Yes.
|
||
TIM: Yes!
|
||
KNIGHTS: Oh, thank you, splendid, fine.
|
||
[boom pweeng boom boom]
|
||
ARTHUR: Look, you're a busy man, uh--
|
||
TIM: Yes, I can help you find the Holy Grail.
|
||
KNIGHTS: Oh, thank you.
|
||
TIM: To the north there lies a cave -- the cave of Kyre Banorg --
|
||
|
||
wherein, carved in mystic runes upon the very living rock, the
|
||
last words of Ulfin Bedweer of Regett [boom] proclaim the last
|
||
resting place of the most Holy Grail.
|
||
ARTHUR: Where could we find this cave, O Tim?
|
||
TIM: Follow! But! follow only if ye be men of valor, for the
|
||
entrance to this cave is guarded by a creature so foul, so cruel
|
||
that no man yet has fought with it and lived! Bones of four fifty
|
||
men lie strewn about its lair. So, brave knights, if you do doubt
|
||
your courage or your strength, come no further, for death awaits
|
||
you all with nasty big pointy teeth.
|
||
ARTHUR: What an eccentric performance.
|
||
Scene 21
|
||
[clop clop whinny]
|
||
???: They're nervous, sire.
|
||
ARTHUR: Then we'd best leave them here and carry on on foot.
|
||
|
||
Dis-mount!
|
||
TIM: Behold the cave of Kyre Banorg!
|
||
ARTHUR: Right! Keep me covered.
|
||
???: What with?
|
||
ARTHUR: Just keep me covered.
|
||
TIM: Too late!
|
||
[chord]
|
||
ARTHUR: What?
|
||
TIM: There he is!
|
||
ARTHUR: Where?
|
||
TIM: There!
|
||
ARTHUR: What, behind the rabbit?
|
||
TIM: It is the rabbit!
|
||
ARTHUR: You silly sod! You got us all worked up!
|
||
TIM: Well, that's no ordinary rabbit. That's the most foul,
|
||
cruel, and bad-tempered rodent you ever set eyes on.
|
||
ROBIN: You tit! I soiled my armor I was so scared!
|
||
TIM: Look, that rabbit's got a vicious streak a mile wide, it's
|
||
a killer!
|
||
???: Get stuffed!
|
||
TIM: It'll do you a trick, mate!
|
||
???: Oh, yeah?
|
||
ROBIN: You monkey's scot's get!
|
||
TIM: I'm warning you!
|
||
ROBIN: What's he do, nibble your bum?
|
||
TIM: He's got huge, sharp-- he can leap about-- look at the
|
||
bones!
|
||
ARTHUR: Go on, Boris. Chop his head off!
|
||
BORIS: Right! Silly little bleeder. One rabbit stew comin'
|
||
right up!
|
||
TIM: Look!
|
||
[squeak]
|
||
BORIS: Aaaugh!
|
||
[chord]
|
||
ARTHUR: Jesus Christ!
|
||
TIM: I warned you!
|
||
ROBIN: I peed again!
|
||
TIM: I warned you! But did you listen to me? Oh, no, you knew
|
||
it all, didn't you? Oh, it's just a harmless little bunny, isn't
|
||
it? Well, it's always the same, I always--
|
||
ARTHUR: Oh, shut up!
|
||
TIM: --But do they listen to me?--
|
||
ARTHUR: Right!
|
||
TIM: -Oh, no--
|
||
KNIGHTS: Charge!
|
||
[squeak squeak]
|
||
KNIGHTS: Aaaaugh! Aaaugh! etc.
|
||
KNIGHTS: Run away! Run away!
|
||
TIM: Haw haw haw. Haw haw haw. Haw haw.
|
||
ARTHUR: Right. How many did we lose?
|
||
???: Gawain.
|
||
???: Hector.
|
||
ARTHUR: And Boris. That's five.
|
||
GALAHAD: Three, sir.
|
||
ARTHUR: Three. Three. And we'd better not risk another frontal
|
||
|
||
assault, that rabbit's dynamite.
|
||
ROBIN: Would it help to confuse it if we run away more?
|
||
ARTHUR: Oh, shut up and go and change your armor.
|
||
GALAHAD: Let us taunt it! It may become so cross that it will
|
||
make a mistake.
|
||
ARTHUR: Like what?
|
||
GALAHAD: Well,....
|
||
ARTHUR: Have we got bows?
|
||
???: No.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: We have the Holy Hand Grenade.
|
||
ARTHUR: Yes, of course! The Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch! 'Tis
|
||
one of the sacred relics Brother Maynard carries with him! Brother
|
||
Maynard! Bring up the Holy Hand Grenade!
|
||
[singing]
|
||
How does it, uh... how does it work?
|
||
???: I know not, my liege.
|
||
???: Consult the Book of Armaments!
|
||
MAYNARD: Armaments, Chapter Two, Verses Nine to Twenty-One.
|
||
BROTHER: "And Saint Atila raised the hand grenade up on high,
|
||
saying, 'Oh, Lord, bless this thy hand grenade that with it thou
|
||
mayest blow thy enemies to tiny bits, in thy mercy.' And the Lord
|
||
did grin, and people did feast upon the lambs, and sloths, and
|
||
carp, and anchovies, and orangutans, and breakfast cereals, and
|
||
fruit bats, and large --"
|
||
MAYNARD: Skip a bit, Brother.
|
||
BROTHER: "And the Lord spake, saying, 'First shalt thou take out
|
||
the Holy Pin. Then, shalt thou count to three, no more, no less.
|
||
|
||
Three shalt be the number thou shalt count, and the number of the
|
||
counting shalt be three. Four shalt thou not count, nor either
|
||
count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to three. Five is
|
||
right out. Once the number three, being the third number, be
|
||
reached, then lobbest thou thy Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch towards
|
||
thou foe, who being naughty in my sight, shall snuff it.'"
|
||
MAYNARD: Amen.
|
||
ALL: Amen.
|
||
ARTHUR: Right! One... two... five!
|
||
???: Three, sir!
|
||
ARTHUR: Three!
|
||
[boom]
|
||
Scene 22
|
||
|
||
???: There! Look!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: What does it say?
|
||
GALAHAD: What language is that?
|
||
ARTHUR: Brother Maynard, you're our scholar!
|
||
MAYNARD: It's Aramaic!
|
||
GALAHAD: Of course! Joseph of Aramathea!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Course!
|
||
???: What does it say?
|
||
MAYNARD: It reads, 'Here may be found the last words of Joseph of
|
||
|
||
Aramathea. He who is valiant and pure of spirit may find the
|
||
Holy Grail in the Castle of uuggggggh'.
|
||
ARTHUR: What?
|
||
MAYNARD: '... the Castle of uuggggggh'.
|
||
BEDEMIR: What is that?
|
||
MAYNARD: He must have died while carving it.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Oh, come on!
|
||
MAYNARD: Well, that's what it says.
|
||
ARTHUR: Look, if he was dying, he wouldn't bother to carve
|
||
'aaggggh'. He'd just say it!
|
||
MAYNARD: Well, that's what's carved in the rock!
|
||
GALAHAD: Perhaps he was dictating.
|
||
ARTHUR: Oh, shut up. Well, does it say anything else?
|
||
MAYNARD: No. Just, 'uuggggggh'.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Aauuggghhh.
|
||
???: Aaauggh.
|
||
BEDEMIR: You don't suppose he meant the Camauuuugh?
|
||
???: Where's that?
|
||
BEDEMIR: France, I think.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Isn't there a Saint Aauuuves in Cornwall?
|
||
ARTHUR: No, that's Saint Ives.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Oh, yes. Saint Iiiives.
|
||
SEVERAL: Iiiiives.
|
||
BEDEMIR: Oooohoohohooo!
|
||
LAUNCELOT: No, no, aauuuuugh, at the back of the throat.
|
||
|
||
Aauuugh.
|
||
BEDEMIR: No, no, no, oooooooh, in surprise and alarm.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Oh, you mean sort of a aaaagh!
|
||
BEDEMIR: Yes, but I-- Aaaaagh!
|
||
???: Oooh!
|
||
???: Oh, no!
|
||
[roar]
|
||
MAYNARD: It's the legendary Black Beast of aaauuugh!
|
||
ARTHUR: Run away!
|
||
ALL: Run away! Run away!
|
||
[roar]
|
||
NARRATOR: As the horrendous Black Beast lunged forward, escape
|
||
|
||
for Arthur and his knights seemed hopeless. When, suddenly, the
|
||
|
||
animator suffered a fatal heart attack. [ulk] The cartoon
|
||
peril was no more. The Quest for Holy Grail could continue.
|
||
Scene 23
|
||
|
||
ARTHUR: There it is! The Bridge of Death!
|
||
ROBIN: Oh, great.
|
||
???: Look!
|
||
ARTHUR: There's the old man from Scene 24!
|
||
BEDEMIR: What is he doing here?
|
||
ARTHUR: He is the keeper of the Bridge of Death. He asks each
|
||
|
||
traveller five questions--
|
||
???: Three questions.
|
||
ARTHUR: Three questions. He who answers the five questions--
|
||
???: Three questions.
|
||
ARTHUR: Three questions may cross in safety.
|
||
ROBIN: What if you get a question wrong?
|
||
ARTHUR: Then you are cast into the Gorge of Eternal Peril.
|
||
ROBIN: Oh, I won't go.
|
||
???: Who's going to answer the questions?
|
||
ARTHUR: Sir Robin!
|
||
ROBIN: Yes?
|
||
ARTHUR: Brave Sir Robin, you go.
|
||
ROBIN: Hey! I've got a great idea. Why doesn't Launcelot go?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Yes, let me go, my liege. I will take him
|
||
single-handed. I shall make a feint to the north-east--
|
||
ARTHUR: No, no, hang on hang on hang on! Just answer the five
|
||
|
||
questions--
|
||
???: Three questions.
|
||
ARTHUR: Three questions as best you can. And we shall watch...
|
||
and pray.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: I understand, my liege.
|
||
ARTHUR: Good luck, brave Sir Launcelot. God be with you.
|
||
KEEPER: Stop! Who would cross the Bridge of Death must answer me
|
||
|
||
these questions three, 'ere the other side he see.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Ask me the questions, bridge-keeper. I'm not afraid.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your name?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: My name is Sir Launcelot of Camelot.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your quest?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: To seek the Holy Grail.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your favorite color?
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Blue.
|
||
KEEPER: Right. Off you go.
|
||
LAUNCELOT: Oh, thank you. Thank you very much.
|
||
ROBIN: That's easy!
|
||
KEEPER: Stop! Who approaches the Bridge of Death must answer me
|
||
|
||
these questions three, 'ere the other side he see.
|
||
ROBIN: Ask me the questions, bridge-keeper. I'm not afraid.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your name?
|
||
ROBIN: Sir Robin of Camelot.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your quest?
|
||
ROBIN: To seek the Holy Grail.
|
||
KEEPER: What is the capital of Assyria?
|
||
ROBIN: I don't know that! Auuuuuuuugh!
|
||
KEEPER: Stop! What is your name?
|
||
GALAHAD: Sir Galahad of Camelot.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your quest?
|
||
GALAHAD: I seek the Holy Grail.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your favorite color?
|
||
GALAHAD: Blue. No yel-- Auuuuuuuugh!
|
||
KEEPER: Heh heh. Stop! What is your name?
|
||
ARTHUR: It is Arthur, King of the Britons.
|
||
KEEPER: What is your quest?
|
||
ARTHUR: To seek the Holy Grail.
|
||
KEEPER: What is the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow?
|
||
ARTHUR: What do you mean? An African or European swallow?
|
||
KEEPER: What? I don't know that! Auuuuuuuugh!
|
||
BEDEMIR: How do know so much about swallows?
|
||
ARTHUR: Well, you have to know these things when you're a king
|
||
you know.
|
||
Scene 24
|
||
|
||
ARTHUR: Launcelot! Launcelot! Launcelot!
|
||
BEDEMIR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
|
||
ARTHUR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
|
||
BEDEMIR: Launcelot! Launcelot!
|
||
[angels singing]
|
||
ARTHUR: The Castle Aggh. Our quest is at an end! God be
|
||
praised! Almighty God, we thank Thee that Thou hast [something]
|
||
safe [something] the most-
|
||
[twong baaaa]
|
||
Jesus Christ!
|
||
GUARD: 'Allo, daffy English kaniggets and Monsieur Arthur-King,
|
||
who is afraid of a duck, you know! So, we French fellows out-wit
|
||
you a second time!
|
||
ARTHUR: How dare you profane this place with your presence!? I
|
||
command you, in the name of the Knights of Camelot, to open the
|
||
doors of this sacred castle, to which God himself has guided us!
|
||
GUARD: How you English say, I one more time-a unclog my nose in
|
||
your direction, sons of a window-dresser! So, you think you could
|
||
|
||
out-clever us French folk with your silly knees-bent running about
|
||
|
||
in dancing behavior! I wave my private parts at your aunties, you
|
||
|
||
heaving lot of second hand electric donkey bottom biters.
|
||
ARTHUR: In the name of the Lord, we demand entrance to this
|
||
sacred castle!
|
||
GUARD: No chance, English bedwetting types. I burst my pimples
|
||
at you and call your door opening request a silly thing. You
|
||
tiny-brained wipers of other people's bottoms!
|
||
ARTHUR: If you do not open this door, we shall take this castle
|
||
by force!
|
||
[splat]
|
||
In the name of God and the glory of our--
|
||
[splat]
|
||
Right! That settles it!
|
||
GUARD: Yes, this time and [something] any more or we fire arrows
|
||
at the tops of your heads and make castanets out of your testicles
|
||
already! Ha ha!
|
||
ARTHUR: Walk away. Just ignore them.
|
||
GUARD: No, remain ??? illegitimate faced buggerfuls! And, if you
|
||
think you got nasty taunting this time, you ain't heard nothing
|
||
yet! Daffy English kaniggets! Thpppt!
|
||
ARTHUR: We shall attack at once!
|
||
BEDEMIR: Yes, my liege!
|
||
ARTHUR: Stand by for attack!
|
||
[ ending nonsense ]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
# Monty Python and the Holy Grail
|
||
- M0nti Pyth0n lk den H0lie Grailen
|
||
- R0tern nik Akten Di
|
||
- Wik
|
||
- Als0 wik
|
||
- Wi n0t trei a h0liday in Sweden this yer?
|
||
- See the l0veli lakes
|
||
- The wonderful teleph0ne system
|
||
- And mani interesting furry animals
|
||
- The Producers would like to thank The Forestry Commission
|
||
Doune Admissions Ltd, Keir and Cowdor Estates, Stirling
|
||
University, and the people of Doune for their help in the
|
||
making of this film.
|
||
The Characters and incidents portrayed and the names used
|
||
are fictitious and any similarity to the names, characters,
|
||
or history of any person is entirely accidental and
|
||
unintentional.
|
||
Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
|
||
- Including the majestic m00se
|
||
- A M00se once bit my sister ...
|
||
- No realli! She was Karving her initials on the m00se
|
||
with the sharpened end of an interspace t00thbrush given
|
||
her by Svenge - her brother-in-law - an Oslo dentist and
|
||
star of many Norwegian m0vies: "The H0t Hands of an Oslo
|
||
Dentist", "Fillings of Passion", "The Huge M0lars of Horst
|
||
Nordfink".
|
||
- We apologise for the fault in the
|
||
subtitles. Those responsible have been
|
||
sacked.
|
||
- Mynd you, m0se bites Kan be pretty nasti...
|
||
- We apologise again for the fault in the subtitles. Those
|
||
responsible for sacking the people who have just been sacked
|
||
have been sacked.
|
||
- M00se trained by TUTTE HERMSGERV0RDENBR0TB0RDA
|
||
- Special M00se Effects OLAF PROT
|
||
M00se Costumes SIGGI CHURCHILL
|
||
M00se Choreographed by HORST PROT III
|
||
Miss Taylor's M00ses by HENGST DOUGLAS-HOME
|
||
M00se trained to mix
|
||
concrete and sign com-
|
||
plicated insurance
|
||
forms by JURGEN WIGG
|
||
M00ses' noses wiped by BJORN IRKESTOM-SLATER WALKER
|
||
- Large m00se on the left
|
||
half side of the screen
|
||
in the third scene from
|
||
the end, given a thorough
|
||
grounding in Latin,
|
||
French and "O" Level
|
||
Geography by BO BENN
|
||
- Suggestive poses for the
|
||
M00se suggested by VIC ROTTER
|
||
Antler-care by LIV THATCHER
|
||
- The directors of the firm hired to
|
||
continue the credits after the other
|
||
people had been sacked, wish it to
|
||
be known that they have just been
|
||
sacked.
|
||
- The credits have been completed
|
||
in an entirely different style at
|
||
great expense and at the last
|
||
minute.
|
||
- Executive Producer
|
||
JOHN GOLDSTONE & "RALPH" The Wonder Llama
|
||
Assisted by
|
||
EARL J. LLAMA
|
||
MIKE Q. LLAMA III
|
||
SY LLAMA
|
||
MERLE Z. LLAMA IX
|
||
Directed By
|
||
40 SPECIALLY TRAINED
|
||
ECUADORIAN MOUNTAIN LLAMAS
|
||
6 VENEZUELAN RED LLAMAS
|
||
142 MEXICAN WHOOPING LLAMAS
|
||
14 NORTH CHILEAN GUANACOS
|
||
(CLOSELY RELATED TO THE LLAMA)
|
||
REG LLAMA OF BRIXTON
|
||
76000 BATTERY LLAMAS
|
||
FROM "LLAMA-FRESH" FARMS NEARE PARAGUAY
|
||
and
|
||
TERRY GILLIAM AND TERRY JONES
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
This has been your installment of the periodical Newsletter of the Barbarian
|
||
Horde.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Jokes Chris Edmunds Home
|
||
|
||
|
||
Send comments on this page to: ( cedmunds@sdl.usu.edu ) or leave me a note.
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