Subject:
'The End' script
From:
alien@acheron.amigans.gen.nz (Ross Smith)
Here's
my transcription of the very first episode, 'The End'.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RED DWARF Series I Episode
1, "The End"
1 Int.
Red Dwarf corridor.
Grey
walls, machinery here and there, you know the drill. RIMMER is
carrying
a clipboard; behind him comes LISTER, pushing a trolley full of
tools
and spare parts.
LISTER:
(Singing) To Gannymede and Titan, yes sir, I've been around...
RIMMER:
Lister.
LISTER:
Huh?
RIMMER:
Have you ever been hit over the head with a welding mallet?
LISTER
shakes his head no.
RIMMER:
No? Stop that and push the trolley.
LISTER:
(With a mock salute) Yes, sir, Rimmer!
They
approach a food dispenser.
RIMMER:
Right. Corridor 159.
LISTER
begins humming the same song.
RIMMER:
Lister, shut up!
LISTER:
I'm only humming!
RIMMER:
Well *don't*.
LISTER
stops humming and continues the tune by holding his mouth open and
slapping
his cheeks.
RIMMER:
Lister, don't hum and don't make any stupid sounds with your
cheeks.
LISTER
stops slapping his cheeks and decides to do a rendition of "If I
Only
Had a Heart" by making clicking sounds in his throat.
RIMMER:
Lister, one more sound, anything, and you're on report, my laddo.
What job number's this?
LISTER
mimes talking without making a sound.
RIMMER:
Right! That's it! (Begins writing on his clipboard)
"Lister,
D., Third Technician. Offense:
obstructing a superior technician by
humming, clicking, and being quiet."
When the Captain sees this you're
dead.
LISTER:
Rimmer, I'm bored!
RIMMER:
Bored?! This is essential routine maintenance!
It's absolutely
vital for the well-being of this crew, this
mission, and this ship.
(Reading his clipboard) "Dispenser
172: chicken soup nozzle clogged."
He puts
down his clipboard.
RIMMER:
Pass me a 14B, Lister.
LISTER
hands him a small, white pipe cleaner.
RIMMER:
Lister, is this a 14B? Does it look
even *remotely* like a 14B?
He
reaches into the parts trolley and pulls out another white pipe
cleaner,
indistinguishable from the first.
RIMMER:
*This* is a 14B, Lister. This
(indicating the original) is a
14F.
Are you blind?!
LISTER:
Who cares?
RIMMER:
*I* care, Lister!
RIMMER
looks at them both, realises he can't tell the difference either,
and
quickly puts the one he chose back in the trolley.
RIMMER:
It's *my* career, Lister. I'm the one
who gets it in the neck if
an officer comes along, orders chicken soup,
and gets black currant
cordial with blancmange and two creams and a
sugar.
RIMMER
cleans out the nozzle in the dispenser unit with the 14 whatever.
RIMMER:
(To the dispenser) Chicken soup.
The
machine hums and dispenses a cup of something.
RIMMER takes a sip of
it,
grimaces in disgust, and spits it out.
RIMMER:
Yep. That's working.
LISTER:
It's stupid anyway, all this maintenance business. The only
reason they don't give this job to the
service robots is they've got a
better union than us.
LISTER
picks up the cup of soup and takes a sip.
His reaction is the
same as
RIMMER's, but he sips some more and brings it with him to the
trolley.
RIMMER:
Lister, that is absolute nonsense.
Right. What's next?
(Reading his clipboard) "Botanical
gardens: faulty power circuit. In
corridor 147: sticking door."
LISTER:
It's true, you know, though, Rimmer.
You rank below all four of
those service robots. Even the one that's gone absolutely mad.
RIMMER:
Well, Lister, not for long, matey. Up,
up, up! That's where I'm
going!
LISTER:
Not until you pass your engineer's exam.
And you won't do that
because you'll just go in there and flunk
again.
RIMMER:
Lister, last time I only failed by the *narrowest* of narrow
margins.
LISTER:
You what? You walked in there, wrote,
"I am a fish," four
hundred times, did a funny little dance, and
fainted.
RIMMER:
That's a total lie!
LISTER:
No, it's not! Petersen told me.
RIMMER:
(Mocking LISTER) "No, it's not!
Petersen told me." Lister, if
you must know, what I did was, I wrote a
discourse on power circuits
which was simply too *radical*, too
*unconventional*, too *mould-
breaking* for the examiners to accept.
LISTER:
Yeah. You said you were a fish.
LISTER
lights a cigarette and beings smoking.
RIMMER:
Is that a cigarette you're smoking, Lister?
LISTER:
No, it's a chicken.
RIMMER:
Right! You're on report. Two times in as many minutes, Lister!
I don't know.
Another
crew member, Frank Todhunter, walks up to them.
TODHUNTER:
Rimmer, Lister.
RIMMER:
(Standing to attention and saluting) Yes, sir.
LISTER:
Yo, Todhunter, get down!
TODHUNTER:
Indeed. Now, Rimmer, I'm just going
through MacIntyre's
artifacts, and I see that you've filed 247
complaints ... against
Lister.
RIMMER:
(Looking proud of himself) Yes, sir!
TODHUNTER:
That's 123 counts of insulting a superior technician, 39
counts of dereliction of duty, 84 counts of
general insubordination,
and one count of mutiny.
RIMMER:
Yes, sir!
TODHUNTER:
Mutiny, Lister?
LISTER:
I stood on his toe.
RIMMER:
Maliciously, and with intent to wound.
LISTER:
It was an accident!
RIMMER:
Lister, I put it to you, how is it possible to stand on one small
toe by accident? You didn't stand on my toe at all, you stood on my
entire foot, thereby obstructing a superior
technician in pursuit of
vital duty.
LISTER:
But the vital duty was him going to snap my guitar in half!
RIMMER:
Whereupon you leapt from the top bunk onto the whole of my right
foot.
TODHUNTER:
All right, that's enough.
RIMMER:
(Ignoring him) Had there been a crisis situation, Lister, I would
have had to perform my duties hopping,
clearly putting the ship at
risk, clearly therefore mutiny.
TODHUNTER:
Finished?
RIMMER:
(Still ignoring him) However, I'm not a vindictive man, so I
don't intend to apply for the death penalty.
TODHUNTER:
There are 169 people on this ship. You,
Rimmer, are over one
man.
Why can't you two get on?
LISTER
has his cigarette sticking out of his right while he is idly
munching
on some food while he speaks.
LISTER:
You see, I try, sir. I'm not an
insubordinate man by nature. I
try and respect Rimmer and everything, but
it's not easy, 'cause he's
such a smeghead.
RIMMER:
(To TODHUNTER) Did you hear that, sir?
(To LISTER) Lister, do
you have any conception of the penalty for
describing a superior
technician as a smeghead?
TODHUNTER:
(Chuckling) Oh, Rimmer. (Clapping him
on the shoulder) You
*are* a smeghead.
TODHUNTER
leaves them. LISTER is cracking up with
laughter.
RIMMER:
(To Lister) You heard that! (Yelling
after TODHUNTER) With
respect, sir, your career's finished,
Todhunter, you big lig!
2 Int.
Drive Room.
A small
clump of people are standing on one side of the room, facing a
small
round table with a metal cannister on it.
Captain HOLLISTER is
near
the middle of the group, and begins speaking.
HOLLISTER:
We're all gathered here today to pay our last respects to
George MacIntyre. George was an excellent officer and as good of a
friend as anyone could ever hope to
have. And he'll be missed more
deeply and more completely than he could
ever know. And now I commend
his ashes to the stars he loves so much.
He goes
over to the table, picks up the cannister, and gives it a loving
pat.
HOLLISTER:
(To the cannister) Goodbye George, we'll miss you.
He puts
the cannister into a slot in the table and presses a button to
eject
it into space.
HOLLISTER:
This is a piece of music he specially requested. Start the
tape please, Holly.
The
jubilant sounds of "See you later alligator" fill the air, as the
group
bows their heads in solemn silence.
3 Int.
Sleeping quarters.
LISTER
is lying on the upper bunk, listening to the funeral service, and
looking
out the window.
LISTER:
There goes MacIntyre.
The
music plays on: "...so long! Goodbye!"
LISTER:
Goodbye George.
The
view changes to show more of the room.
RIMMER is sitting on the
bottom
bunk writing on his arm. The vid shows
the Captain and the others
at the
funeral service.
LISTER:
That was George!
RIMMER:
Really? I thought it was Mary Queen of
Scots.
Captain
HOLLISTER on the vid starts to say something, but RIMMER is
annoyed
by the distractions.
RIMMER:
Off!
LISTER:
Hey! I was watching that!
RIMMER:
Well, tough!
LISTER
reaches down from the top bunk to pick up his acoustic guitar.
RIMMER:
You touch that guitar, Lister, I'll remove the E string and
garrotte you with it.
LISTER:
Can I do anything? Is it OK if I
breathe? Can I breathe? (He
does so, into Rimmer's face.)
RIMMER:
Lister, I have an exam tomorrow, which I intend to pass.
LISTER:
I know, yeah. By cheating.
RIMMER:
(Holding up his arm, covered in writing) This is not cheating!
It's merely an aid to memory. Helps me marshal the facts already in my
command.
LISTER:
What does? Copying the entire textbooks
onto your body? Why
don't you hand your body in and let them
mark that?
RIMMER:
Lister, do you think it's easy for someone like me to become an
officer?
Someone who wasn't Academy educated?
Someone who didn't have
the right nobby background? Someone who didn't have the right parents?
LISTER:
You didn't have the right parents?
Whose parents did you have?
RIMMER:
*My* parents. The wrong parents.
LISTER:
I'm just saying, you know, if you can't pass fair and square, why
bother?
RIMMER:
Well, you would, Lister, because you've got no ambition, no
drive.
You're perfectly content to be the lowest rank on the ship.
LISTER:
I'm not the lowest rank on this ship.
What about the laboratory
mice?
I tell those mice to do something, they've got to jump to it.
(Squeaky voice) "Yes, sir, Mr Lister,
sir! Eee, eee, eee, eee..."
RIMMER:
Lister, you are a nothing.
LISTER:
I'm not a nothing! I've got me plan.
RIMMER:
What's that, the plan to be the slobbiest entity in the entire
universe?
LISTER:
No. Me five-year plan. You see, I'm going
to do two more trips.
And I've been saving up all me pay--
RIMMER:
Since when?
LISTER:
Since always. That's why I never buy
any soap or deodorant or
socks or anything like that, you know. Anyway, I'm going to buy meself
a little farm on Fiji. And I'm going to get a sheep and a cow, and
breed horses.
RIMMER:
With a sheep and a cow?
LISTER:
No, with horses and horses.
RIMMER:
On Fiji?
LISTER:
Yeah! The prices there are
unbelievable.
RIMMER:
Yes, because they had a volcanic eruption and now most of Fiji's
three feet below sea level!
LISTER:
It's only three feet. They can
wade. That's why the animals are
gonna hafta be quite tall.
RIMMER:
Nice plan, Lister. Excellent plan! Brilliant plan, Lister!
What about the sheep? What are you going to do, buy them
water-wings?
Fit them with stilts? Better still, you could cross-breed them
with
dolphins and have leaping mutton. (Gesturing with his pen to represent
a woolly dolphin leaping out of the water)
Baa, splash, baa, splash.
LISTER:
You can get a drainage grant these days.
RIMMER:
Why bother, Lister? You could be the
first man to produce wet-
look knitwear.
LISTER:
Look, this is why I never ever said anything to you, 'cause I
knew you'd say something like this.
RIMMER:
Lister, you've got the brain of a cheese sandwich. (Miming a
swimmer and putting on a Mummerset voice)
"Mornin', Farmer Lister! I'm
just poppin' down to the shops in my
submarine. Can I buy you
anything?"
There's
a honking sound, and HOLLY's face appears on a monitor.
HOLLY:
The "Welcome Back George MacIntyre" reception is about to begin in
the refectory. George says he'd like to invite everybody, especially
those who weren't able to attend his
funeral.
RIMMER
and LISTER get up. RIMMER picks up
Lister's jacket and starts to
hand it
to him, then drops it on the floor.
LISTER trips RIMMER from
behind
as they leave.
4 Model
shot.
Red
Dwarf.
5 Int.
Mess hall.
We see
the MacIntyre party. People are sitting
around the room,
including
RIMMER, who is sitting at a table by himself and still writing
on his
arm. PETERSEN notices this as he walks
by RIMMER on the way to
the
table where LISTER is sitting with SELBY and CHEN.
PETERSEN:
Have you read Rimmer's arm?
CHEN:
No, I'm waiting for it to come out in paperback!
The
group breaks up laughing.
LISTER:
Petersen, have you got a quarter?
PETERSEN
reaches down and gets a quarter for LISTER.
LISTER:
I've just been shown this great new intelligence test. What
you've gotta do is force the coin onto your
forehead. And then the
more times you can bang yourself on the
head, the more intelligent you
are.
LISTER
demonstrates this to PETERSEN as he is talking. The coin falls
off
after he hits himself on the back of the head four times.
LISTER:
You gonna go for it?
PETERSEN
takes his hat off and steels himself for the task.
HIS
FRIENDS: He's going for it!
LISTER
puts the coin to PETERSEN's head, in preparation.
LISTER:
Ready? OK. Can you feel it?
PETERSEN:
Yep.
LISTER:
Can you feel it?
PETERSEN:
Yep.
LISTER
removes his hand from PETERSEN's forehead.
Without PETERSEN
realising
it, he also took away the coin.
LISTER:
Can you feel it?
PETERSEN:
Yep.
LISTER:
Go!
The
group starts to chant PETERSEN on, and while he pummels himself in
the
back of the head.
At the
front of the room, TODHUNTER, Captain HOLLISTER, and a hologram of
George
MACINTYRE are sitting at a table.
HOLLISTER stands and the room
grows
quiet.
HOLLISTER:
Folks, today is a day for both sadness and joy. Sadness, for
the passing away of George, and joy, because
George is back with us --
albeit as a hologram.
Now some of you may not have travelled with
a hologram before, so I ask
you to treat him as a normal man, because he
is in every respect like
George.
He has George's personality and George's knowledge and
experience.
Of course, he can't lift anything or touch
anything, so I ask you to
cooperate with his requests. And please, take every care not to walk
through him, not even when you're in a
hurry. Thank you.
General
applause, and cries of "Speech!
Speech!"
MACINTYRE:
I want to thank everybody for giving me such a marvellous
funeral.
I've just seen the vid. And I
want to thank the Captain for
his beautiful eulogy. Beautiful.
But I still don't understand why he
didn't use the one I wrote. (General laughter.)
This must seem pretty spooky for everyone,
but I don't want you to
think of me as someone who's dead, more as
someone who's no longer a
threat to your marriages. (More laughter) I think Joe knows what I'm
talking about.
As you know, Holly's only capable of
sustaining one hologram. So, my
advice to anyone more vital to the mission
than me is: if you die,
I'll kill you. (Laughter followed by applause.)
TODHUNTER:
Please be upstanding for the cutting of the cake.
Everyone
stands and Captain HOLLISTER cuts the cake.
TODHUNTER:
(Raising his glass) Flight Coordinator George MacIntyre.
ALL:
George!
As the
toast is drunk, we hear the sound of someone, probably LISTER,
gargling
into his glass.
HOLLISTER:
OK. Just one thing before the disco,
Holly tells me that he's
sensed a non-human life form aboard.
LISTER:
Sir, it's Rimmer!
HOLLISTER:
We don't know *what* it is, Lister. So
just be careful, OK?
LISTER:
I'm turning you in, Rimmer.
RIMMER
pulls out his notebook and pointedly begins to write.
LISTER:
(With his friends) Ooooh!
6 Int.
Sleeping quarters.
RIMMER
is wearing shorts and singlet, and every visible part of his skin
is
covered with notes.
RIMMER:
Right. They're bound to ask the right
thigh, which is 10 per
cent.
They must ask the left thigh, which is 20 per cent. They've
*got* to ask one of the forearms. Which means I've passed already!
Anything on the left shin's a bonus!
(Looking at one arm) Right. CUTIE:
Current under tension is ...
what's this? Current under tension is equal?
Current under tension is
expandable?
Current under tension is expensive?
What does this mean?
(Begining to panic) What does any of it
mean? I've covered my body in
complete and utter and total absolute
nonsense gibberish! Aaaargh!
Just relax, relax, relax, relax--
LISTER,
sleeping in the top bunk, is woken up by RIMMER's raving. RIMMER
notices
and makes an effort to appear calm.
RIMMER:
Er, plus 20 per cent of the ship's course minus the Pythagoras
theorem multiplied by two over the X axis
minus one equals the total
velocity of Red Dwarf, which means I know
everything about astro-
engineering. Good morning, Lister, for probably the last time.
LISTER:
You've got it all down, have you, Rimmer?
RIMMER:
Couple of blanks, (slapping his buttocks) but I think we're
there.
LISTER:
So you can't remember anything?
RIMMER:
Think what you will, Lister.
RIMMER
begins to pull on his overalls.
LISTER:
Rimmer, F-I-S-H, that's how you spell "fish." Then you just keel
over.
I'm sure it'll all come flooding back to you.
RIMMER:
Dry up, Lister.
The
intercom honks.
HOLLY:
Will entrants for the engineer's examination now make their way to
the teaching room.
LISTER:
Well, Rimmer, honestly, good luck.
RIMMER:
It's all right, Lister. I'm in
*complete* and total control.
RIMMER
picks up his briefcase and leaves the cabin, turning right. After
a short
pause, he hurries back across the doorway in the opposite
direction.
LISTER:
Lock. (Nothing happens.) *Lock!* (The
door closes.)
LISTER
climbs down from his bunk. We hear
faint meows. He opens a
locker,
pulls out a bottle of milk and a bowl, and goes over to an air
conditioning
grating on the wall.
LISTER:
(Calling into the grating) Frankenstein!
Come on, Frankenstein!
LISTER
puts the bowl on the floor and pours some milk into it, spilling
half of
it all over the floor. Then he opens
the grating and lifts out a
large
black cat.
LISTER:
Oh, but you're getting really big now, you know? I hope it's not
twins.
You've already got all me milk ration.
Never mind, when the
baby cat comes, maybe we can give him water
and pretend it's milk.
It's only a baby cat, it won't know, eh?
(Pulling a photo out of his pocket.) Do you
want to see my picture of
Fiji again, Frankie? You're going to love it there. Look.
LISTER
holds the photo up to the CAT, who looks the other way.
7 Int.
Examining room.
RIMMER
and several others are taking the exam.
TODHUNTER is monitoring.
TODHUNTER:
Okay, everybody. You've got three
hours. No modems, no
speaking slide rules. Turn over and start. Good luck.
RIMMER
examines his paper, looking more and more confused. He looks
around
at the others, but they all seem to be doing all right. Finally
(after
checking that TODHUNTER isn't looking) he rolls up his sleeve.
Unfortunately
he discovers that he's smeared all his notes into
illegibility! After sitting there in mortal terror for a
moment, he
simply
slams down his ink-covered hand onto the paper to leave a palm-
print. He signs it, stands up, gives the bemused
TODHUNTER a spectacular
triple-Rimmer
salute, and faints.
8 Int.
Drive room.
Various
people doing the usual technical-looking things that people need
to do
to run a huge spaceship. LISTER walks
in and goes to Kristine
KOCHANSKI's
station.
LISTER:
Hi. Where's the Captain's office?
KOCHANSKI:
Over there, Where it says "Captain's Office." Where it's
always said "Captain's Office."
LISTER:
So that's the Captain's office! So how
are you then?
KOCHANSKI:
Fine.
LISTER:
Do you know what he wants to see me for?
KOCHANSKI:
Yes, I think you've been promoted to Admiral.
LISTER:
Oh yeah?
KOCHANSKI:
Yeah. For your diligence and general
devotion to duty.
LISTER:
Oh yeah?!
Captain
HOLLISTER walks in from his office.
HOLLISTER:
Lister!
He
motions for LISTER to come into his office, which he does.
LISTER:
You asked to see me, Captain?
HOLLISTER:
Where's the cat?
LISTER:
What? What cat?
HOLLISTER:
Lister, not only are you so stupid you bring aboard an
unquarantined animal and jeopardise every
man and woman on this ship --
not only that -- but you take a photograph
of yourself *with* the cat
and send it to be processed in the ship's
lab. Now, I'm going to ask
you again, do you have a cat?
LISTER:
No.
HOLLISTER:
(Holding up a photo of LISTER and FRANKENSTEIN) Have you got a
*cat*?
LISTER:
Er, yes, that one.
HOLLISTER:
Where'd you get it? Titan?
LISTER:
Yes.
HOLLISTER:
Don't you realise that that thing could be carrying
*anything*?
Don't you remember what happened on the "Oregon" with the
rabbits?
Lister, a loose animal aboard this ship could get anywhere.
It could get into the air ducts. It could get into Holly. You know, a
little nibble here and a little nibble
there, Lister, and before you
know it we're flying *backwards*. Now I want that cat, and I want it
*now*.
LISTER:
Sir, just suppose I did have a cat.
Just suppose. What would
you do with Frankenstein?
HOLLISTER:
I'd send it down to the medical centre, and I'd have it cut up
and tests run on it.
LISTER:
Would you put it back together when you'd finished?
HOLLISTER:
Lister, the cat would be dead.
LISTER:
So, with respect, sir, what's in it for the cat?
HOLLISTER:
Lister, give me that cat!
LISTER:
It's not as easy as that! Me and the
cat, we're going to have a
baby cat, and we're going to buy a farm on
Fiji, and we're going to
have a sheep and a cow and three horses,
it's me *plan*, and no one can
get in the way of it, not even you, and I do
respect you!
(Remembering) Sir!
HOLLISTER:
Lister, do you want to go into stasis for the rest of the trip
and forfeit 18 months wages?
LISTER:
No.
HOLLISTER:
Do you want to give me that cat?
LISTER:
No!
HOLLISTER:
Choose.
9 Int.
Corridor.
LISTER
and TODHUNTER are walking down a corridor toward a stasis booth.
TODHUNTER:
Look, today, no one wants to go through with this.
LISTER:
It's okay, I can handle it.
Two
medical technicians are wheeling RIMMER past on a stretcher.
LISTER:
RIMMER, are you all right?
RIMMER:
(In a stupor) I can't really remember.
I think I did quite well.
The
technicians move on.
LISTER:
Is this going to hurt?
TODHUNTER:
Haven't you ever travelled interstellar?
LISTER:
No.
TODHUNTER:
Oh, you don't feel a thing. The stasis
room creates a static
field of time. See, just as X-rays can't pass through lead, time
cannot penetrate a stasis field. So, although you exist, you no longer
exists in time, and for you time itself does
not exist. You see,
although you're still a mass, you are no
longer an event in space-time,
you are a non-event mass with a quantum
probability of zero.
LISTER:
Oh. Simple as that, eh?
TODHUNTER
opens the door, and LISTER steps inside.
LISTER:
OK, I'm ready.
TODHUNTER:
See you in 18 months.
TODHUNTER
closes the door
TODHUNTER:
(To HOLLY) Holly, activate the stasis field.
HOLLY:
OK, Frank.
We see
LISTER waving through a window in the door.
Suddenly he freezes.
10
Model shot.
We see
the Red Dwarf drifting through space while the clock-like music
indicates
the passage of time.
11 Int.
Stasis booth.
LISTER,
in the same pose as before, unfreezes.
The door opens and he
walks
out.
HOLLY:
Good morning, Dave. It is now safe for
you to emerge from stasis.
LISTER:
Haven't I just gone in?
HOLLY:
Please proceed to the Drive Room for debriefing.
LISTER
walks down the corridor, looking around.
As he enters the mess,
he
notices small piles of white powder on some of the tables.
LISTER:
Where is everybody, Hol?
LISTER
sticks his finger in one of the piles of white powder and tastes
it.
HOLLY:
They're dead, Dave.
LISTER:
Who is?
HOLLY:
Everybody, Dave.
LISTER:
What, Captain Hollister?
HOLLY:
Everybody's dead, Dave.
LISTER:
What, Todhunter?
HOLLY:
Everybody's dead, Dave.
LISTER:
What, Selby?
HOLLY:
They're all dead. Everybody's dead,
Dave.
12 Int.
Corridor.
LISTER
is still trying to understand what HOLLY is saying.
LISTER:
Petersen isn't, is he?
HOLLY:
Everybody is *dead*, Dave.
LISTER:
Not Chen?
HOLLY:
Gordon Bennett! Yes! Chen, everybody. Everybody's dead, Dave.
LISTER:
Rimmer?
HOLLY:
He's dead, Dave. Everybody's dead. Everybody is dead, Dave!
LISTER:
Wait. Are you trying to tell me
everybody's dead?
HOLLY:
I wish I'd never let him out in the first place.
13 Int.
Drive room.
LISTER
enters. There are more of the little
piles of white powder
everywhere.
LISTER:
How?
HOLLY:
The drive plate was inefficiently repaired.
It blew, and the
entire crew was subjected to a lethal dose
of cadmium 2 before I could
seal the area.
LISTER
brushes the powder off a chair and sits in it.
LISTER:
Oh, this is terrible. And why is it so
dirty around here, Hol?
What is this stuff?
LISTER
dips his finger in another pile and tastes it.
HOLLY:
That is Catering Officer Olaf Petersen.
LISTER:
(Quickly spitting it out) Aaaah! I've
been eating half the crew!
And who's that?
HOLLY:
That's Captain Hollister.
LISTER:
And that's Todhunter.
HOLLY:
No, that's Second Technician Rimmer.
LISTER:
Oh, yeah? I didn't recognise him
without his report book. What
was Rimmer doing in the Drive Room?
HOLLY:
He was explaining to the Captain why he hadn't sealed the drive
plate properly.
He
brushes Petersen's remains onto the floor and puts his feet up.
LISTER:
So wait on. How long was I in stasis?
HOLLY:
Well, I couldn't release you until the radiation reached a safe
background level.
LISTER:
How *long*?
HOLLY:
Three million years.
LISTER:
Three million years?! (Pause) I've still got that library book.
And what about Krissie? What about Krissie Kochanski?
HOLLY:
She's dead, Dave.
LISTER:
Oh, hey!
HOLLY:
I don't suppose it's any consolation, but if she *were* still
alive, the age difference would be
insurmountable.
LISTER:
She was part of me plan. I never got
round to telling her, but
she was going to come with me to Fiji. She was going to wear a white
dress and ride the horses and I was going to
take care of everything
else.
It was me plan. I planned it.
HOLLY:
Well, she won't be much use to you on Fiji now. Not unless it
snows and you need something to grit the
path with.
LISTER:
Holly!
HOLLY:
Sorry. I'm sorry about that. I've been on my own for three
million years, and I'm just used to saying
what I think. I think I've
gone a bit peculiar, to tell you the truth.
LISTER:
So everyone's dead? I'm on me own? There's just me?
HOLLY:
Well, technically speaking, yes.
LISTER:
What do you mean, "technically speaking?"
RIMMER
walks in. He's a hologram.
RIMMER:
Hello, Lister. Long time no see.
LISTER:
Rimmer! You're a hologram?!
RIMMER:
Yes. That's because I'm dead. Dead as a can of spam. And it's
all thanks to you.
LISTER:
Me? What did I do?
RIMMER:
If you hadn't kept that stupid cat, Lister, and hadn't been sent
to stasis, I would have had some help when I
was mending the drive
plate, and I wouldn't be dead.
LISTER:
What's it feel like?
RIMMER:
Death? It's like being on holiday with
a group of Germans.
LISTER:
No, I mean being a hologram.
LISTER
waves his hand through RIMMER's stomach.
RIMMER jumps back in
disgust,
and LISTER looks at his hand in amazement.
RIMMER:
Do you mind? Being a hologram is fine,
Lister. I still have the
same drives, the same feelings, the same
emotions, but I can't *touch*
anything.
Never again will I be able to brush a rose against my cheek,
cradle a laughing child, or interfere with a
woman sexually.
LISTER:
Rimmer, you never used to do any of those things anyway!
RIMMER:
But I would have done one day, murderer!
LISTER:
Hey, hey! I didn't do anything! It was *you* who didn't fix the
drive plates properly.
RIMMER:
(Looking at one of the piles of powder) Is this me here?
LISTER:
Yeah.
RIMMER:
Me?
LISTER:
Come on, Rimmer, look on the bright side.
RIMMER:
The bright side? *What* bright
side? I'm dead, I'm composed
entirely of light, and I'm alone in space
with a man who'd lose a
battle of wits with a stuffed iguana. Where's the bright side?
LISTER:
What's an iguana? And look, look,
you're not dead, are ya? I
mean, you're dead! But you're not *dead* dead, because you're still
here, aren't you?
RIMMER:
Lister, I'm not really here! I'm not
really *me*! Don't you
see?
I'm a computer simulation of me.
That's me, there, that pile of
albino mouse droppings.
LISTER:
Come on. Lot's of people have
died. Lots of people have died
and then gone on and done really, really
well. You're a hologram. So
what?
RIMMER:
I suppose you're right, Lister. I've
got to pull myself
together.
But you've got to help me.
You've got to be my hands and my
touch.
LISTER:
I know the sort of things you like to touch.
No way, Rimmer.
Forget it.
RIMMER:
Are you smoking, Lister? In the Drive
Room?
LISTER:
Yeah. I stopped for quite a while, but
I'm back on them now.
RIMMER:
You're on report, squire. (He reaches
for his notebook, but it's
not there.) I can't write it down. I'll remember it.
LISTER:
Ohhh! Rimmer, look, I know it's wrong
of me to speak ill of the
dead and all that, but you're still a
smeghead.
RIMMER:
I beg your pardon?
LISTER:
(Leaving the room) I said, you're still a smeghead.
RIMMER:
Lister, do you have any conception of the penalty for describing
a deceased superior technician as a
smeghead?
RIMMER
goes to lean on a table, and falls through it.
14 Int.
Another corridor.
RIMMER
is following LISTER.
RIMMER:
Lister, will you listen to me? Just
listen to me.
LISTER:
Just shut up. Shut up.
They
proceed out of sight. After they're
gone, an air vent falls off the
wall,
and a guy dressed in a pink suit climbs out of the duct. This is
the
CAT. He does a somersault and three
twirls.
CAT:
Aaahhh, ooowww, eee! How am I
looking? (He pulls out a small
mirror.) Looking nice. No, wait a minute. I'm looking better than
nice.
I'm looking dangerous. Aaaoooww,
dangerous! Aaaooowww!
Hey, what's that? Oh, it's my shadow. Hey,
even my shadow's looking
nice!
I'm looking nice, my shadow's looking nice -- what a team! We
are unbelievable! OK, team, this way. (He
points in one direction and
then changes his mind) No, this way. Aaaooowww, yeah. (He reaches an
intersection) This way!
15 Int.
Another corridor.
RIMMER
is still following LISTER.
RIMMER:
Lister, just hold your horses. Listen
to me--
He's
interrupted by the CAT spinning into view.
CAT:
Aaaooowww! (Notices LISTER and RIMMER)
Uh oh. Better make myself
look big!
The CAT
holds up his claws and looks fierce.
LISTER and RIMMER turn tail
and
run.
CAT:
Hee hee! Fearsome. I was fearsome! (Singing) Just me and my
shadow, ooohhh! Come on boy, walking down the avenue...
16 Int.
Mess hall.
LISTER
and RIMMER are backing away from the door, until LISTER backs into
a table
and nearly jumps out of his skin.
LISTER:
Aaahhh! Holly, what was that?
HOLLY:
During the radioactive crisis, Dave, your cat and her kittens were
safely sealed in the hold. And they've been breeding there for three
million years, and have evolved into the
life form you just saw in the
corridor.
LISTER:
I don't get it.
HOLLY:
Well, you know how mankind evolved from apes?
LISTER:
Yeah, I know that.
HOLLY:
He evolved from cats. His ancestors
were cats. He's descended
from cats.
He is a cat.
Suddenly
the CAT enters the room, twirling and howling.
CAT:
Aaahhh, ooohhh, yeah-- (Freezing as he notices the others.)
LISTER:
Hello ... Cat?
CAT:
(Noticing something on his sleeve) Whoa!
Crease!
CAT
pulls out a small steam iron and runs it over the sleeve.
RIMMER:
Stand back, Lister.
Screaming
incoherently, RIMMER takes up a Kung Fu posture and leaps at
the
cat, hands and feet flying everywhere.
He passes straight through
the
astonished CAT and disappears out the door.
17 Int.
Sleeping quarters.
LISTER
retrieves the milk and bowl and some cereal from his locker and
pours
some out.
LISTER:
Here you go, Cat.
CAT:
Ah, Krispies!
LISTER:
Holly says you like these.
CAT:
Mmmm!
LISTER
puts the bowl down on the floor, in the place he used to feed
Frankenstein.
CAT:
Hey! You monkeys eat off the
*floor*? Ain't you got no style or
sophistication?
LISTER:
Oh, I'm sorry, Cat. I'm sorry.
LISTER
picks up the bowl and puts it on the table in front of the CAT.
CAT:
You people are unbelievable.
CAT
starts to lick up the cereal and milk with his tongue.
LISTER:
Where are all your other catty friends, Cat?
CAT:
Good Krispies, man!
LISTER:
But where are all the other little kitties?
Are they gone? Are
they dead?
Have they left you?
RIMMER:
Who cares? I want it off the ship!
LISTER:
No! He's coming home with us, aren't you, Cat?
RIMMER:
Home? And where exactly is home
supposed to be?
LISTER:
Earth.
RIMMER:
Earth? What makes you think there'll be
any Earth, Lister? And
even if there is, look what it's done to a
household pet in three
million years.
CAT
takes out a toothbrush and begins grooming his eyebrows.
RIMMER:
Can you imagine what humankind has evolved into? To them, you'll
be the equivalent of the slime that first
crawled out of the oceans.
LISTER:
I could smarten meself up a bit.
RIMMER:
Naah. You're a dinosaur. You're extinct. You've got nothing.
LISTER:
Hey, hey! I've still got me plan. And I've still got a cat.
OK, it's not Frankenstein, but it's still a
cat.
CAT:
Did you say Frankenstein?
LISTER:
Yeah. She was your great great great
great great great
grandmother or something.
CAT:
The Holy Mother? The Virgin Birth? No one believes that stuff!
RIMMER:
The Virgin Birth?!
LISTER:
No, it was a big black tom on Titan.
CAT:
Frankenstein, yeah! I remember that
stuff from kitty school. The
Holy Mother, saved by Cloister the Stupid,
who was frozen in time, and
who gaveth of his life that we might live.
LISTER:
No! No, it's not Cloister, it's me, it's Lister! It's *Lister*
the ... stupid?!
CAT:
Who shall returneth to lead us to Fushal, the Promised Land.
LISTER:
No, it's not Fushal, it's Fiji! And I
will! I'll lead you
there.
(To RIMMER) *That's* where we're going.
Holly, plot a course
for Fiji.
Look out, Earth -- the slime's coming home!
Overlayed
on the screen in title characters, we read:
THE BEGINNING.
Credits:
Rimmer Chris Barrie
Lister Craig Charles
Cat Danny John-Jules
Holly Norman Lovett
Todhunter
Robert Bathurst
Chen Paul Bradley
Selby David Gillespie
Captain Hollister Mac McDonald
MacIntyre Robert McCulley
Petersen Mark Williams
Kochanski C P Grogan
Written by Rob Grant
Doug
Naylor
Music
Howard Goodall
Developed for Television by Paul Jackson Productions
Graphic Designer Mark Allen
Visual Effects Designer Peter Wragg
Properties Buyer Duncan Wheeler
Assistant Floor Manager Dona Distefano
Production Assistant Alison Thornber
Unit Manager Mario Dubois
Production Manager George R. Clarke
Costume Designer Jacki Pinks
Make-up Designer Suzanne Jansen
Vision Mixer Jill Dornan
Camera Supervisor Melvyn Cross
Technical Co-ordinator Ron Clare
Videotape Editor Ed Wooden
Lighting Director John Pomphrey
Sound Supervisor Tony Worthington
Designer Paul Montague
Executive Producer Paul Jackson
Produced & Directed by Ed Bye
MCMLXXXVII
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
...
Ross Smith (Wanganui, NZ) ............ alien@acheron.amigans.gen.nz ...
"Among
the gods, there is a dispute as to which one of them originally
thought
of Christianity; or, as they call it, the Great Leg Pull. Apollo
has the
best claim, but a sizeable minority support Pluto, ex-God of the
Dead,
on the grounds that he has a really sick sense of humour." (Tom Holt)