From:
msmith@rheya.lssec.bt.co.uk (Martin Smith)
Organization: BT D&P,
London Engineering Centre
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
RED DWARF Series II Episode 3,
"Thanks for the Memory"
1 Ext. View of space.
HOLLY:
(In space) Three million years from Earth, the mining ship Red
Dwarf.
Its crew: Dave Lister, the last
human being alive; Arnold
Rimmer,
a hologram of his dead bunkmate; and a creature who evolved
from the ship's cat. Message ends.
(Reappearing) Additional: supplies are plentiful. We have enough food
and drink to last 30,000 years, although we
have run out of Shake n'
Vac.
Additional
additional: Last week we found a planet
with a breathable
atmosphere.
2 Ext. Barren planet.
We see the
surface of a bleak planet with a sun and stars in the
background and pan
across it to where there appears to be a rock concert
in progress. LISTER and the CAT are playing and dancing
exuberantly.
LISTER has a guitar and the skutters are playing on
keyboards. RIMMER is
in a
structure labelled "Hologrammatic Projection Cage" and seems to
be
enjoying it.
HOLLY: We're grooving tonight! Ahead groove factor five. Yeah!
(A
disco type light starts
flashing under his monitor.)
LISTER: Hang on everybody, hang on!
LISTER
stops playing and the music carries on.
He goes to take a pan off
the fire and turns off the music.
LISTER:
The sausages are done.
HOLLY: It's the business innit? It's nice to get out once in a while,
stretch your cables.
RIMMER: (Very
slurred) I can't understand it. I've
had so much to drink
and it
hasn't even afflicted me. I'm not in
the least bit tiddly.
LISTER: Oh yeah?
Why are you dancing then?
CAT: Ha!
You call that dancing? I've seen
people on fire move better
than
that!
HOLLY: We'd better be going.
The moons'll be setting in a bit.
LISTER: Whoa, Whoa! OK then!
A toast. (Raises cup.)
Gentlemen, and
skutters, we are
gathered here today to celebrate the anniversery of Mr
Arnold Rimmer's death.
RIMMER: (Belches
and looks ill.) Right on baby.
LISTER: And for this very special occasion
I have baked -- a cake.
LISTER uncovers the cake. It is covered in icing, with a candle in
the
middle.
HOLLY: What's that then?
LISTER: It's in the
shape of a spanner, Holly, cos he was a technician.
HOLLY: Well that's
very apt that is. If he'd been a
postman you'd have
baked it in
the shape of an envelope I suppose?
LISTER: Yeah!
HOLLY: Gordon
Bennett! It's lucky he's not a
gynaecologist.
LISTER: To Rimmer!
(Raises cup at arms length.)
RIMMER: To me!
RIMMER mimes
drinking a glass of something and appears to get a kick from
it. They all start singing. RIMMER is a bit unsure of the words,
probably
due to his state of inebriation.
ALL: Happy deathday to you! happy deathday to you! Happy deathday, dear
Rimmer!
Happy deathday to you!
Back in one of the Blue Midgets,
LISTER is trying to get it moving.
ALL: (Singing) Show me the way to
go home. I'm tired and I want to go
to
bed...
We see them
from the outside flying off into space towards RED DWARF.
RIMMER:
Are you sure you're alright to drive this?
LISTER: Yeah. (Suddenly sliping it into reverse)
Oops!
ALL: I had a little drink about an hour ago to celebrate Rimmer's
death.
(Breakdown into
laughter.)
3 Int. Sleeping quarters.
The crew is now back
on RED DWARF. RIMMER is sprawled out on
his bunk
and LISTER is doing a jigsaw.
LISTER: What time is
it?
RIMMER crawls unsteadily to the clock and peers at it
blearily. He is
clearly suffering
the awful after-effects of drinking.
RIMMER: Saturday.
LISTER:
Is that the best you can do?
RIMMER: There are some numbers next to it,
but they could be anything.
LISTER: Do you know what I fancy right
now?
RIMMER: A big, fat woman with thighs the size of a hippo's.
LISTER:
No, I want a triple fried egg butty with chili sauce and chutney.
RIMMER:
(Managing to sit down in a chair.) Me too.
LISTER: Well no problem
then. Nothing's too good for the
deathday boy.
RIMMER: Correct!
(Punches air.)
LISTER: Hol, Hol!
HOLLY appears on screen
with a nightcap on.
LISTER: Hol, give us something to eat.
HOLLY:
You what? I'm jiggered man.
LISTER:
Oh come on. You don't sleep.
HOLLY:
Course I do. I've got to offline. I can't keep up my full tilt,
full power, red hot, maximum pace all the
time. I've got to take the
odd breather, haven't I?
RIMMER: I want
a triple fried egg sandwich with ...
LISTER: With chili sauce and
chutney.
HOLLY: You what?
LISTER: It's a state of the art
sarny.
HOLLY: It's the state of the floor I'm worried about. Alright, OK.
RIMMER holds up his
hand and the much discussed food item appears in it.
LISTER: Wow,
trust me!
RIMMER takes a bite and a succession of expressions are
seen on his face.
He ends up at something like a mixture of pain, horror
and shock. He may
be drunk but
he's still got pain receptors.
RIMMER: I feel like I'm having a
baby!
LISTER: It's good innit?
RIMMER: It's incredible. Where did you get the recipe from?
LISTER:
I can't remember. I think it was a book
on bacteriological
warfare.
RIMMER:
It's like a cross between food and bowel surgery.
LISTER: (Nodding) It's
well naughty. The trouble is you've got
to eat it
before the bread
dissolves.
RIMMER: I could never invent a sandwich like this, Lister. You see all
the ingredients are wrong.
The fried eggs: wrong; the
chutney:
wrong. The chili sauce: all wrong. But put them
together and somehow
it
works. It becomes right. It's you -- this sandwich, Lister, is
you.
LISTER: What are you saying to me,
Rimmer?
RIMMER: You're wrong, right?
All your ingredients are wrong.
You're
slobby, you've got
no sense of discipline, you're the only man ever to
get his money back from the Odour Eater
people, but people like you,
don't you see? That's why you're
a fried egg, chili, chutney sandwich.
Now me ... now me ... All the ingredients are right. I'm disciplined,
I'm organised, I'm dedicated to my career,
I've always got a pen.
Result? Total smeghead despised
by everyone except the ship's parrot.
And that's only because we haven't got one. Why? Why is that?
LISTER:
I suppose it's because you ARE a total smeghead.
RIMMER: But I'm not! I'm a nice guy -- I'm a goodie.
LISTER:
No, Rimmer, see the trouble is you've never got time for people.
You're too busy trying to be
successful. It's all midnight
revision
and up, up, up the
ziggurat lickety spit. (Salutes in a
silly way.)
RIMMER: I have got time for people. What about all the time I spent
licking up to Todhunter even though he was a total gimp? And Captain
Hollister? Mr fat bastard
2044. I went out of my way to simp
around
him.
LISTER: Rimmer,
that's not having time for people.
During the following exchange
they speak faster and end up both speaking
at the same time until LISTER
interjects forcefully.
RIMMER: Do you know how many times in my
entire life I made love?
LISTER: No, and I don't want to know.
RIMMER:
I want to tell you.
LISTER: I don't want to know.
RIMMER: No, but I
want to tell you.
LISTER: No, I don't want to know.
RIMMER: I want to
tell you. I'm going... I am going to
tell you. I want
to tell you.
LISTER: (Forcefully)
Listen! Listen, Rimmer. If you tell me, right,
you'll wake up in the morning. You'll have your hang over and you'll
feel like death and you'll walk up to the
mirror and you'll look in the
mirror and you'll remember and you'll go, "Ahahahahah!!"
(Sticks his
fist in his mouth.)
See it's not worth it, I don't want to know and
believe me you don't want to tell me.
RIMMER: (Holds up one
finger.) Once.
LISTER: Smeg!
RIMMER: One time only.
LISTER:
(With ears covered) Don't tell me this, Rimmer. You'll want to
kill
yourself in the morning.
RIMMER: Yvonne McGruder. A single, brief liason with the ship's
female
boxing champion. March the sixteenth, seven thirty one PM to
seven
forty three PM.
LISTER:
Please.
RIMMER: Twelve minutes.
LISTER: (Losing patience)
Please!
RIMMER: And that includes the time it took to eat the pizza.
LISTER:
Please, Rimmer!
RIMMER: In my entire life I have spent more time being
sick.
LISTER: So, I mean, you haven't met the right girl yet.
RIMMER:
(With overdone sarcasm) No, I haven't, Lister.
I haven't met the
right
girl and some just might say, (wags finger) given the fact that
the human race no longer exists, coupled
with the fact that I have
passed
on, some just might say that I'm leaving it a little bit on the
late side.
LISTER: Well you made a
decision, didn't you? I mean you chose
your
career over your personal
life.
RIMMER: Yes, I did. I did,
didn't I? Pearls of wisdom there from
Mr
fried egg, chili, chutney,
sandwich face. (Seriously) Well, I'll
tell
you something, Lister. I'll tell you something. I'd trade it all in
-- all of it. My pips, my long-service medals, my swimming
certificates, my telescope, my shoe
trees. I'd trade everything in to
be loved and to have been loved.
LISTER
is still fiddling with the jigsaw but it's obvious that RIMMER's
speech
has touched a chord.
RIMMER: (Starts singing in a reedy voice in a
pathetic kind of way) I'm a
little
lamb, lost in the wood, maybe I could, really be good, with
someone to watch over me.
RIMMER
goes and lies down on his bunk. LISTER
watches him.
RIMMER: That was going to be our song. But I never found anyone to share
it with.
So now it's just MY song.
LISTER: (Fiddling with jigsaw) Another
bit of sky, that's a star.
RIMMER starts making high pitched crying
type noises. LISTER gets up and
leaves.
4
Ext. Red Dwarf. Establishing.
5 Int. Sleeping quarters. The next
morning.
LISTER is asleep in the top bunk. We descend to see RIMMER, in his "home
sweet home"
pajamas, wake up. RIMMER gets up and
start doing his
exercises to music provided by himself. Suddenly, memories of the
previous
night come flooding back. He sees a
picture of him drinking,
but carries on exercising. He sees himself eating the sandwich
and
shrugs. He then remembers
talking with LISTER: he stops, raises
one
finger and sticks his fist in his mouth. He sits back down on the bunk
with an anguished look.
LISTER:
Ah, me foot! I must have gone to sleep
on it! Oooh!
RIMMER: (Jumps up)
Gah! you were really putting it away
last night,
Lister. You really fell for my joke, didn't
you?
LISTER: Oh god, it's agony!
RIMMER: Ah, that McGruder gag --
fancy falling for that, eh?
(Pause)
I'll give you my
telescope, anything. Please god, don't
tell anyone.
LISTER groans and pulls away the blanket. He discovers that his foot is
in
plaster. They both look shocked.
LISTER:
Have you done that?
RIMMER: When did you do that?
LISTER: I
didn't! I just went to bed and I've
woken up with this.
RIMMER: When did you finish the jigsaw?
LISTER: I
didn't.
HOLLY comes on the screen looking a bit cross.
HOLLY:
Oi. Whose been messing with my star
charts! Here I am trying to
do the comprehensive, nay, definitive A-Z of
the entire universe with
street
names, post offices, and little steeples and everything and some
git's been fiddling with it.
LISTER:
It's not us!
The CAT storms in.
CAT: OK, which one of you
chimpanzees did this?
CAT puts a foot on the table and points at
it. It is also in plaster.
HOLLY:
Look there's a perfectly logical explanation for everything. With
the possible exception of little Jimmy Osmond.
RIMMER: Who?
LISTER:
Hang on, today's Sunday, right?
RIMMER: So?
LISTER: Well, this clock;
this clock says, "Thursday," and that clock
says, "Thursday."
CAT: And my
foot says, "Get the person who did this to my foot."
LISTER:
(Looks through a book) Four pages have been torn out of my diary.
RIMMER
snaps his fingers and points around the room.
RIMMER: Somehow we've
lost the last four days.
CAT: Did you look behind the fridge? If you lose something it's nearly
always there.
RIMMER: Aliens!
LISTER:
What?
CAT: What are you talking about, grease stain?
RIMMER: It's a
well documented phenomenon. They kidnap
you, give you a
mind probe, erase
your memory, and put you back.
LISTER: OK, aliens came aboard.
RIMMER:
Without question.
LISTER: They broke my leg.
RIMMER: For some
reason.
CAT: They broke MY leg.
RIMMER: Right.
HOLLY: And then
they did a jigsaw.
RIMMER: Right.
HOLLY: Well, that's cleared that up
then.
RIMMER: Look, you're not thinking alien. That's what aliens are:
alien.
They do alien
things. Things that are... (shrugs)
alien. Maybe this
is the way they communicate.
CAT: By
breaking legs?
LISTER: And doing jigsaws?
RIMMER: Why should they
speak the way we do? They're
aliens.
LISTER: OK, professor, what does it mean?
RIMMER: Maybe,
maybe, OK? Breaking your leg hurts like
hell, OK? "Hel."
They do it below the knee, "lo."
"Hel-lo," gettit? They do it
twice --
twice, "two."
"Hello two." And the jigsaw must mean "you." "Hello
to
you."
CAT: I
wouldn't like to be around when one of these suckers is making a
speech!
(He limps out.)
LISTER: Hang on -- the black box. Holly, the black box will have
recorded everything won't it?
HOLLY:
Yeah, hang on -- I'll fish it out. (His
image disappears briefly
and
reappears.) It's gone! It's been
half-inched. Wait a minute let
me think about this. It gives off a signal. We can trace it.
6 Ext. Model
shot.
Pan past the Blue Midget, making a funny noise.
7
Int. Blue Midget.
We go inside to join RIMMER, LISTER and the
CAT.
LISTER: It's the gearbox, man.
I'm telling you.
RIMMER: Nothing yet.
LISTER: This is
impossible. It could be anywhere. It's like trying to
find a fart in a jacuzzi.
RIMMER:
Look! Down there on that moon.
They
stare at the screen.
8 Ext. Barren planet.
We draw in
closer to a bleak landscape. We see
LISTER and the CAT
walking on it.
LISTER: Are you getting a
picture now?
RIMMER: Yeah but the quality's terrible. It's like watching Spanish
television.
LISTER: Oh my god!
CAT:
What the hell is that?
LISTER: Smegorama!
Err, HOLLY! Errm, start the engines, warm her up. Keep her ticking
over, yeah?
RIMMER:
Err, what is it?
LISTER: It's a footprint the size of a surfboard.
CAT:
(Measuring it out.) I don't believe the size of these feet. Can you
imagine the problems this guy must have trying to get
fashionable
shoes?
LISTER: I
wonder if it's true what they about the size of your feet? I
mean, if it is this guy could probably go to a fancy dress party as
a
petrol pump.
RIMMER: I
think you should come back.
LISTER: There's more of them. They lead round this corner.
RIMMER:
So, a surfboard-foot sized monster came aboard, did a jigsaw,
drained our memories and broke a couple of
legs. So what? "Forgive
and forget" is what I say.
LISTER:
This I don't believe! It's a
gravestone. (Reading it) "To
the
memory..." (trying to
make it out) "To the memory of Lise Yates."
RIMMER: Who's Lise
Yates?
LISTER: You're not going to believe this, but I used to go out with
a
girl called Lise Yates. It's only shallow, the black box is buried
in
the grave. (He picks it up.)
9 Int. Blue
Midget.
They open the box and remove the recording.
HOLLY:
Right, it's loaded.
LISTER: Well play it, sam.
The words
"Black Box Recording, Jupiter Mining Corporation Ship Red
Dwarf"
come on screen followed by HOLLY.
HOLLY: Nice looking bloke.
TAPE:
I don't know whether anyone will ever find this, but if they do and
it's you Dave, or you Arnold, don't ever
play it. Some things are best
left buried.
LISTER: Why have you
frozen him, Hol?
HOLLY: You heard what he said. Knows what he's talking about, that dude.
LISTER: Come on,
Hol, from Saturday night.
HOLLY plays the recording and RIMMER
appears telling LISTER how many
times in his life he's made love. The CAT looks interested.
RIMMER:
Yes, well we all remember this bit.
Spin on, spin on, spin on!
The recording goes into fast
forward. The CAT is disappointed. He
signals to LISTER behind RIMMER's
back.
CAT: (Silently) How many?
LISTER: (Silently, pointing at
RIMMER) Him?
CAT: (Silently) Yes!
LISTER: (Silently) No, no.
The
CAT makes a "Tell me" kind of gesture. LISTER laughs and holds up
one finger. So does the CAT and points at RIMMER who is
oblivious of the
whole thing, he's staring at the screen.
CAT:
(Silently) Him. (Loudly) That
Many?
LISTER and the CAT look busy with the controls as RIMMER turns
to glare
at them. The recording
has reached the point where RIMMER is making sad
noises, just after his
singing. On screen we see LISTER
leave.
10 Int. Red Dwarf corridor. We are now in flashback mode. The
flashing word
REPLAY appears at the top right of the screen. We see LISTER
walking down
a corridor towards camera with the CAT who has a hair net
on.
CAT: This better be good.
I was sleeping, and sleeping's my third
favourite thing! And you
come and wake me up this time of night.
They walk into a square room
with wall to wall monitors, on which various
pictures of Arnie can be
seen. A sign on the door reads,
"No
unauthorised entry."
CAT: What is this
place?
LISTER: It's the hologram simulation suite. This is the room that
creates Rimmer.
CAT: Have we come to
blow this room up?
LISTER: Look, those are his dreams and everything
there. (Fiddles with
controls.) Look, that's what he's dreaming
right at the moment.
We see RIMMER in a top hat and dinner jacket
carrying a cane and singing
the song he sang earlier. We pull back to see he has no trousers
on.
The watchers laugh.
LISTER: I'm going to give Rimmer the
best present he will ever get.
LISTER takes of his hat and puts on a
helmet connected to the console by
a wire. He starts typing at the console and sees the word LOADING
come
up on the screen.
CAT: What are you doing with that?
LISTER:
I'm recording my memory.
CAT: Your entire memory?
LISTER: Yeah,
everything. Everywhere I've been,
everything I've learnt,
my entire
knowledge. (The words LOADING COMPLETE
come up almost
instantly.) Right,
that's it. (He takes off the helmet.)
I'm going to
give Rimmer a love
affair. I'm going to take eight months
out of my
memory and I'm going to
paste it into his. So everything
that's
happened to me he's going
to think happened to him.
CAT: You're going to give him one of your old
girlfriends?
LISTER: I'm going to give him Lise Yates.
LISTER
presses more keys and they stare at the screen. LISTER covers the
CAT's eyes but he takes the hand
away. A rather pretty woman is on
screen
running and laughing. She dives to the
ground.
YATES: God, I love you Dave, I love you so much.
LISTER:
(On memory recording) And I love you Lise.
LISTER: A few minor
adjustments. (Presses some keys and the
scene
replays.)
YATES: God,
I love you Rimmer, I love you so much.
LISTER: (On memory recording) And I
love you Lise.
LISTER: Change the voice.
(Presses more keys and we see it again.)
YATES: God, I love you
Rimmer, I love you so much.
RIMMER: (On memory recording) And I love you
Lise.
LISTER: And that's it.
CAT: And when he wakes up he'll think
all this happened to him?
LISTER: Yeah, the whole eight months.
CAT:
Man, that's a fine present. (LISTER
nods.) He was probably only
expecting a tie.
LISTER keeps keying, we see RIMMER asleep
and enter his dreams via a
heart shaped zoom. He is walking with Lise, drinking from a beer can and
smoking. He looks a real slob. RIMMER wakes, looking happy. He goes to
sleep again.
Some
time later LISTER hears music, jumps in the air, and clicks his
heels. He walks into the room to see RIMMER dancing
to the music.
LISTER: You're in a good mood.
RIMMER: Why not
Listy? When life's so good? (He makes A-OK sign and
snaps his fingers.)
RIMMER seems
to have changed somehow. He seems more
normal and less like
the RIMMER we all know. For one thing his shirt is crumpled and
unbuttoned. He seems relaxed and confident.
LISTER:
Why is life so good? (Opens a
beer.)
RIMMER: (Lying on bunk) You wouldn't understand, Lister, you've
never
been in love.
LISTER:
I have!
RIMMER: Oh, not real love, Lister, not like I have. Not fireworks-in-
the-sky, from-here-to-eternity,
rolling-naked-on-the-beach kind of
love. Not like me and
Lise.
LISTER: So, who's Lise?
(Smiles to himself.)
RIMMER: Never you mind, Lister. Someone who was absolutely nuts about
me, that's all you need to know.
LISTER:
Fine, if you want to keep it to yourself.
RIMMER: All I'm saying is, from
now on call me "Tiger." (Growls.)
LISTER: An old girlfriend, was
she? Tiger.
RIMMER: (Gets up.)
What a crazy, crazy year that was. The
first three
months I was at
Saturn Tech doing a maintenance course.
Then for
absolutely no
reason I suddenly moved to Liverpool. I
drank too much,
I smoked too
much, I became a total slob. I met
Lise, of course. I
even started to eat my own toenail
clippings.
Behind him LISTER is doing this as RIMMER speaks, but
doesn't seem to
notice.
RIMMER: My tastes in music radically
changed. I stopped adoring
Mantovani and got into Rastabilly
Skank. Crazy!
LISTER: Well, you
know, you were in love. You go a bit
crazy.
RIMMER: It was weird. I was
absolutely nuts about her but yet I started
to treat her really badly.
LISTER: No you didn't!
RIMMER:
I did! I started to give her some wishy
washy twaddle about not
wanting
to get tied down.
LISTER: But you were young! You didn't want to settle down.
You wanted
to bum around
and have a laugh.
RIMMER: But I hate bumming around and having a
laugh.
LISTER: But that's what you're like when you're young.
RIMMER:
But I wasn't like that when I was young, so why did I say those
things?
LISTER: But, I mean, she wanted
you to have a career. (Spits out
the
word career.)
RIMMER:
That's what I'd always dreamt of, so why did I finish it with
her?
LISTER: Because, you wanted to
play the field.
RIMMER: That's right.
I told her I wanted to play the field.
(Wistfully) I told her that.
I must have been mad. She was
great and
she thought I was
great.
LISTER: (With a strange look) Yeah, man, you're right. You were mad.
RIMMER: She was a lover
and a friend.
LISTER: And beautiful.
RIMMER: Gorgeous.
LISTER:
Great sense of humour.
RIMMER: Terrific.
LISTER: The sex was
fantastic.
RIMMER: Amazing sex.
LISTER: Brilliant sex.
RIMMER:
Oh, primo dynamite sex!
LISTER: Fantastic sex! Stupendous sex!
RIMMER: Lister!
LISTER: The way she
used to-- Oh...
RIMMER: Lister!
LISTER: Oh, sex. Brilliant sex.
RIMMER: Lister,
Lister! How do you know?
LISTER:
I'm just having a guess.
11 Int. Blue Midget.
We come out
of flashback. The crew are watching the
recording.
RIMMER: (On the tape) Kindly don't. No one will ever know how beautiful
the relationship between me and Lise Yates
was.
RIMMER: How could you do this to me?
It's the most heart breakingly
tragic thing it's ever been my misfortune to witness.
CAT:
Popcorn? (Offers it to RIMMER who
declines but LISTER takes some.)
LISTER: Look, I'm sorry, man. I mean, obviously I thought I was
doing
you a favour.
HOLLY:
(Appearing on a monitor) What's all this got to do with jigsaws,
broken legs, and Godzilla-size footprints,
eh?
LISTER shakes his head in bewilderment.
12 Int. Red
Dwarf corridor.
We go into flashback again. The word REPLAY appears on screen as it
did
last time. On the recording we
see RIMMER striding angrily down a
corridor punching the air. He walks into the room where LISTER is
again
working on the jigsaw.
RIMMER: Right, smeg brain, prepare
to die!
LISTER: Eh?
RIMMER: I found the letters.
LISTER: What
letters?
RIMMER: Don't give me "What letters?" The
letters.
LISTER: WHAT letters?
RIMMER: You went out with Lise Yates
too. I found the letters she sent
you.
LISTER: Oh, smeg!
RIMMER: All
the time she was going out with me she must have been seeing
you as well, behind my back. And what is more, to pour salt into
the
wound, you used to take her
to the exact same places I used to take her
and do the exact same things.
LISTER: Rimmer, it's not what
it looks like.
RIMMER: That woman is unbelievable. We spent a night in a hotel in
Southport and made love six times. According to her letter you were in
the exact same hotel and you made love six
times too.
LISTER: Listen.
RIMMER: Twelve times a night? What is wrong with the woman? She's sex
mad!
LISTER: Listen!
RIMMER: It's a good job you were
there. If I'd been on my own I'd
have
been dead within a
week. But it doesn't make sense. I mean, she loved
me.
LISTER: Listen, listen. She wasn't going out with us both at the
same
time.
RIMMER: Come on,
I've checked the dates.
LISTER: She wasn't going out with you at
all.
RIMMER: She ... She didn't go out with me at all?
LISTER: No,
you've never even met her.
RIMMER: Is that the best you can do,
Lister? That's below feeble.
LISTER:
I went down to the hologram simulation suite and I gave you eight
months of my memory.
RIMMER:
What?
LISTER: It was a present.
RIMMER: You gave me eight months of
your memory, as a present?
LISTER: (Nodding) Yeah.
RIMMER: That's why
I was an orphan, even though my parents were alive.
That's why I had my appendix out ...
twice.
LISTER: I thought it was what you needed.
RIMMER: You've
destroyed me, Lister. The woman I loved
most in the whole
world didn't
love me, she loved you.
LISTER: Rimmer, listen. (RIMMER leaves silently.) Rimmer, listen.
Rimmer!
Oh Smeg! (He goes to sit down at
the jigsaw looking upset.)
CAT: You should have bought him a tie.
13
Int. Observation dome.
RIMMER is standing alone in the observation
dome, staring into space.
LISTER climbs the stairs to join him.
LISTER:
Come on, Rimmer, you've experienced love.
It made you more
confident, more secure.
RIMMER: It didn't happen. I never even met her.
LISTER: It did
happen. I mean, you fell in love with
her in a way I
never did. She's yours now and nothing can take her
away from you.
RIMMER: That time she stuck her tongue down my ear. It wasn't my ear at
all -- it was your ear. The woman I loved most in the whole world
had
her tongue down your
ear. The most romantic thing I've ever
had down
my ear is a Johnson's
baby bud.
LISTER: Come on, as far as you're concerned you had a love
affair, right?
Which was
wonderful, yeah? And for some reason
that you can't
understand it all
went hideously wrong. Well, so
what? Join the club,
bucko.
It's just you, me, and everybody else in the world.
RIMMER: I don't
want to feel like this any more.
LISTER: So, so you're in pain, yeah? I know, but Rimmer, if you go
through life without feeling, if you go
through life never
experiencing,
you're no better than a jellyfish. No
better than a bank
manager.
RIMMER:
I don't want this feeling any more. I
want my own memory back.
LISTER: OK, OK, OK. I'll erase the last four days.
The incident will
never
have happened.
RIMMER: But you'll know about it!
LISTER: Well I'll
erase my memory from Sunday too.
RIMMER: And the Cat's and Holly's.
LISTER:
Fine, if they agree.
RIMMER: And what about the black box.
LISTER:
(Sighs.) I'll destroy it.
RIMMER: It's indestructible.
LISTER: OK,
I'll shoot it off into space.
RIMMER: Someone might find it.
LISTER:
OK, OK. We'll bury it. We'll bury it on some planet, yeah?
14
Ext. Barren planet.
The same bleak landscape as before appears
before us. We see the black
box
buried in its shallow grave. RIMMER is
watching as LISTER and the
CAT carry a large slab.
LISTER: I'm
going to drop it, I'm going to drop it!
Put it down man, put
it
down! (They drop the stone
heavily.)
CAT: Why does he want a grave stone?
LISTER: He said he
just wanted something somewhere. So it
didn't, like,
disappear.
They
pick up the stone again and carry it on a bit.
The crater it left
behind looks rather like a footprint. After a short time they drop it
again
and this time it lands on their feet.
LISTER: Aaaagggghh! My foot!
I've broken my foot! It's
broken!
CAT: Help me find my toes.
15 Ext. Blue Midget.
Jetting
back to RED DWARF.
16 Int. Sleeping Quarters.
We are
still in flashback. RIMMER is lying on
the bunk. LISTER and the
CAT
enter. LISTER looks tired.
LISTER:
OK, that's it. (He picks up his diary
and tears out some pages.)
Let's
go and erase our memories.
They all troop out, or limp out in some
cases. LISTER stops and puts the
final
piece into the jigsaw. The picture is
of the RED DWARF in space.
We zoom into it.
The
End
Credits:
Rimmer Chris Barrie
Lister Craig Charles
Cat Danny John-Jules
Holly Norman Lovett
With:
Lise Yates Sabra Williams
Written By Rob Grant
Doug Naylor
Music Howard Goodall
Graphic Designer Mark Allen
Unit Manager Kelvin Jones
Associate Producer Ann Zahl
OB Lighting David Parker
Vision Supervisor John Battye
Technical Coordinator Andrew Cowley
Camera Supervisor Melvyn Cross
Vision Mixer Jill Dornan
Prop Buyer Mike Fallon
Visual Effects Designer Peter
Wragg
Videotape Editor Ed Wooden
Production Team Helen Campbell
Kate
Preston
Assistant
Floor Manager Dona DiStefano
Production Assistant Anna Staniland
Production Manager Mike Agnew
Costume Designer Jacki Pinks
Make-Up Designer Bethan Jones
Sound Supervisor Tony Worthington
Lighting Director John Pomfrey
Designer Paul Montague
Executive Producer Paul Jackson
Produced and Directed By Ed
Bye
Notes and Trivia:
This is one of my favourite episodes. I like the way Rimmer
interprets all the
clues to the 'aliens' and it all gets explained at the
end, totally
differently.
I understand how Rimmer's memory
could be erased, he's a hologram. Holly could
probably have it done too,
but what about Lister and Cat?
Suppose Lister had got Holly to
manufacture a similar fake incident and feed
it to Rimmer a la Virtual
Reality. How should Rimmer then have felt? What if
he never found out?
What if I have another drink? That's more like it!
This episode,
along with 'Kryten' and 'Better Than Life' is on BBC Video BBCV
4749.
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Martin
Smith | 'You've got a magic
carpet for three people to fly to
msmith@lssec.bt.co.uk | the King of the
Potato People to plead your case and
BT D&P London | you're trying to tell me you're
sane?' - A.J. Rimmer
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