RED DWARF Season IV Episode 5,
"Dimension Jump"
1 Ext.
Open to a view of two
reddish-yellow planets and dramatic music.
Pan
down to the front planet to show a city dome of some sort, then
cut to
the inside of a large greenhouse structure. RIMMER's mother walks out
from between
some foliage.
RIMMER'S MOTHER: Arnold? Arnold!
YOUNG RIMMER: (Age 7, hanging upside-down from a
tree) I'm here, Mother!
RIMMER'S MOTHER: (Approaches him.) Ah. You know your father and I have
been terribly worried about your progress at
school.
YOUNG RIMMER: Yes, Mother.
RIMMER'S MOTHER: You just haven't
been getting the marks we think you're
capable of.
YOUNG RIMMER: No, Mother.
RIMMER'S MOTHER: Well, a
few days ago I went to see the headmaster.
He
said it might be in
your best interest if you were to be kept back a
year -- if you were to stay in Junior D for
another year.
YOUNG RIMMER: Oh.
RIMMER'S MOTHER: Is that all you've
got to say?
YOUNG RIMMER: Well, it is quite difficult to talk when you're
tied
upside-down to a tree.
RIMMER'S
MOTHER: Have you been playing with Howard and Frank?
YOUNG RIMMER:
Yes.
RIMMER'S MOTHER: Well, what on Earth were you playing?
YOUNG
RIMMER: Well, I said it was such a shame we hadn't got a swing, and
they said they could make one. But I didn't realize they was going to
make one out of me.
RIMMER'S MOTHER:
Well, that's nice, darling. Anyway,
your father had a
word with the
headmaster and we explained how much we wanted you to be
a test pilot in the Space Corps, like your
brother John, and how this
could
damage your chances. We got this this
morning. (Opens a
letter.) You realize how important this
is. This decision could
completely alter the whole course of your
life.
On screen:
"Twenty Years Later."
2 Ext. Experimental
spacecraft.
Cut to external view of a small, sleek spacecraft,
3
Int. Spacecraft cockpit.
We see a silver-helmeted pilot as music
plays reminiscent of the film Top
Gun.
4 Ext. Base.
Shot
of the craft landing at a base, with "Space Corps Test
Base/Mimas/Saturn"
superimposed. We see the pilot from
behind, walking
down a corridor past a few uniformed men who applaud. Pan to his front,
as he removes his
sunglasses to reveal a strong, cocksure, handsome
man... ARNOLD
RIMMER. He walks up to SPANNERS, who
looks just like
LISTER but with short hair, a moustache, and eyeglasses,
and a more
"generic" English accent.
SPANNERS:
Woah! Welcome home, Ace!
ACE:
Bless you, Spanners, old friend, it's good to be back.
SPANNERS: Well,
how's she behave?
ACE: The lightship?
Like a frolicking filly in a harvest-time pasture.
How you and your boys down in Engineering
got that crate to break the
light
barrier I'll never know.
SPANNERS: Well, some people might say it's the
devilishly brave and
handsome guy
in the cockpit that did it.
ACE: Tish, pshaw and nonsense. Any old twit can hug the event horizon
of
a black hole, then
loop-de-loop 'round the spinning singularity at
twice the speed of light, then slam the engines into reverse and
blast
out of an imploding
nebula! It's you and your guys with the
magic
wrenches down on
Engineering, Spanners. You're the ones
that break the
records.
SPANNERS:
You'll be going to this party thing they're throwing for you
tonight, I suppose?
ACE: Good god,
no. Heroes' welcomes with 21-gun
salutes in front of the
entire
Admiralty send me to the land of Nod, Spanners. I'll be down in
the
mess with the salt-of-the-earth engineering boys as per usual. See
you there at 1900?
SPANNERS: See ya' later, Ace. (They clasp hands and Ace strides
off.)
What a guy!
Further
down the corridor, ACE RIMMER encounters a chaplain who looks
remarkably
like the CAT, dressed in plain coveralls and sporting a pipe
and grey
moustache.
CAT: Ah, welcome home, son. You've been in all of our prayers, you know?
ACE: Bless you,
Padre. How's little Tommy?
CAT:
He's pulled t'rough. Be on his feet in
no time, t'anks to you.
Sitting
by his bedside day after day, night after night, holding his
hand, reading him stories...
ACE: You
know me, chaplain. Any old excuse to
get out of dinner with the
Admiral. Listen, 1900 we're
having a bit of a bash down in the mess.
It would mean a lot to me if you were there.
CAT: Well, thank you,
son.
ACE: 1900
CAT: Mmm. (Ace
continues down the corridor.) What a guy!
5 Int. Outer office.
Cut
to the outer office of some superior officer.
ACE strides in and is
greeted by the secretary, MELLIE, who bears a
not-so-surprising
resemblance to HOLLY, but with a whole body and shorter
hair.
MELLIE: Say, you dog, you're back.
ACE: Did you ever
doubt it, when I've got someone like you to come back
to?
MELLIE: Ooo, if only it were
true. What are you doing
lunchtime?
ACE: Not sure.
Why?
MELLIE: Because if you're interested, I'll be in my quarters,
covered in
maple syrup.
ACE:
I'm sorry, Mellie, I don't fraternize with the staff.
MELLIE: I
resign.
ACE: I'll be there at 1300.
ACE enters the inner
office, which is occupied by BONGO, who could be
KRYTEN if only he were a
tad more mechanical and had much squarer
features.
BONGO:
You're back.
ACE: 'Fraid so.
BONGO: Had the feeling you might
be. Rubber shares went up this
morning.
ACE: You wanted to see me, Bongo?
BONGO: Ever hear of a
thing called the dimension theory of reality?
ACE: Doesn't that run along
the lines of, there is an infinite number of
parallel universes where every possibility exists?
BONGO:
It's along those lines, yeah. The basic
tenet states that for
every
decision that's made, the alternative decision is played out in
another reality.
ACE: So?
BONGO:
So, the lab boys have come up with a drive that can break the
speed of reality.
ACE: Those boffins
have hammered together a crate that can cross
dimensions? When do I
launch?
BONGO: It's a one-way ticket, Ace. There's no coming back.
ACE: I'm free at 1500.
BONGO:
You do realize, this is a prototype -- there's no way of knowing
if it'll even get there.
ACE: Where's
there, exactly?
BONGO: You'll be transported to an alternative reality, a
reality where
there's another
Arnold Rimmer. Some decision was made
at some point in
your life where
he went one way, and you went the other.
You might
find he's quite
different to you.
ACE: Sounds like quite a caper.
BONGO: You'll do
it?
ACE: I'm a test pilot in the Space Corps, Bongo. It's my job to do it.
BONGO: I know
that this prob'ly won't interest you, but I'd hate myself
for the rest of my life if I didn't at least
suggest it.
ACE: Suggest what?
BONGO: If you're interested, I'll be
in my quarters at lunchtime, covered
in torama* salada.
ACE: I didn't know your bread was buttered that
side, Bongo.
BONGO: It isn't. I've
been happily married for 35 years. It's
just, a
chap like you can turn a
guy's head.
ACE: I'm sorry, Bongo.
Lunch is...on Mellie.
BONGO: Would it make any difference if it
was...hummus?
ACE: I'm sorry, Bongo.
I'm strictly "butter-side-up."
BONGO: Understood. (ACE leaves the office.) What a guy!
6
Int. Prototype's hangar.
MELLIE, SPANNERS, BONGO and the chaplain
are lined up to watch it take
off.
CAT: God speed and bless
you, son!
ACE: (In cockpit) All systems check. Let's get this cart up into the big
black.
Ignition...chocks away... 'Bye, Bongo.
'Bye, Spanners. 'Bye,
Padre.
'Bye, Mellie. Smoke me a kipper,
I'll be back for breakfast.
ALL: 'Bye, Ace!
The prototype ship
launches and moves away.
7 Int. Sleeping quarters.
Inside
a dim cabin. RIMMER is asleep on the
bottom bunk, LISTER is lying
on the top bunk, and KRYTEN is standing with
a fishing hat and a large
net.
KRYTEN holds his finger to his lips as LISTER, wearing fishing
lures
in his hat, quietly gets out of bed and gets a tackle box from the
corner.
RIMMER:
Lights! (Room brightens.)
LISTER:
What?
RIMMER: What are you doing?
LISTER: (Innocently) What are we
doing?
RIMMER: Yes, what are you doing?
LISTER: Just nipping down to
the cinema, to catch the midnight movie.
RIMMER: What, dressed like
that?
LISTER: Yeah. Going to see
Jaws.
RIMMER: You're going fishing, aren't you? That ocean planet we passed
two days ago. You're
going fishing without me.
LISTER: Oh, come off it, man. Don't be ridiculous.
The CAT
walks in, also wearing fishing garb, although of a terribly
fashionable
sort.
CAT: Hey, what are you doing with the lights on? Come on, let's get out
of here before --
RIMMER: I don't
believe it. All three of you.
CAT:
What's he talking about?
LISTER: I dunno.
For some reason he's got this crazy, wacked-out idea
that we're all going on a fishing
holiday.
CAT: A fishing holiday?!
RIMMER: (Picking up a note from the
table, reading it) "Dear Rimmer, We
have gone on a fishing holiday to the ocean planet we passed two
days
ago. We tried to wake you but couldn't. See you in three weeks.
Lister, Kryten, and Cat."
KRYTEN:
Oh, please, sir. They forced me to do
it. I had no choice.
LISTER:
Kryten!
RIMMER: Why did you want to go without me?
LISTER: We didn't
want to go without you. We just thought
it wasn't your
scene. I mean, fishing, that's boring, isn't
it?
RIMMER: I love fishing! The
glow of the dawn, the line arcing into the
water...
LISTER: That's it!
That's exactly the reason we didn't invite you.
There's no fish.
KRYTEN: That, at
least, is true, sir. We sent down a
search probe and
there is no
marine life on the entire planet.
LISTER: We're just gonna sit out on
Starbug, dangle the rods over the
side and have a few cans, you know, chill out.
RIMMER: I don't
believe anybody'd want to go on a fishing holiday where
they know there's no fish.
LISTER:
What, we used to do it all the time, back home. We used to go
down
to the canal. Never any fish in
that! We used to go condom
fishing.
I swear! One time I caught this
two-pound black ribbed
nobler! It was about that
big! (Holds hands about half a
meter
apart.)
RIMMER: Why
didn't you just say, "Dear Rimmer, We're going on a fishing
holiday and we don't want you to
come?"
CAT: See, that's what I said we should say!
LISTER: (To
the Cat) Shh!
RIMMER: I don't know what it is about me. All my life, it's been the
same old story. It's not easy, you know, to come in every night, look
in that mirror, and see a guy nobody
likes.
CAT: How do you think we feel?
We got to look at it all day!
LISTER: (Shushes the Cat.) Look, we
just thought you wouldn't want to
come.
RIMMER: I tried to be liked, god knows I tried. I regaled you with
amusing stories of when I was treasurer of
the Hammond Organ Owners'
Society. You never laugh. I offer to talk you through my photo
collection of 20th century telegraph
poles. You've always got some
excuse!
None of you like morris dancing!
Would that break your
hearts, every once in a while, the four of us getting our knees in
the
air -- the jingle of bells,
the clonk of wood on wood? But no,
every
time I suggest it you all
pretend to be ill.
LISTER: You've got it wrong, man. We just thought you wouldn't want to
come.
Now we know you do, great, you can come. The way you're going
on about it, it's like some major conspiracy, we've been planning
it
for days. We haven't.
RIMMER: Really?
LISTER:
Really.
RIMMER: All right, then, I'll come. I'll just get changed.
Holly?
HOLLY: (Appears on the screen wearing a fishing cap.) Oh,
who woke him
up?
8
Model Shot.
Starbug leaves Red Dwarf and flies through space.
RIMMER:
(VO) Steady now, Kryten.
KRYTEN: (VO) Yes, sir.
Shift view to
cockpit of Starbug, Kryten piloting, Rimmer sitting next to
him.
RIMMER:
Best to get there in one piece than to rush it and cause an
accident, eh?
KRYTEN: I have passed my
test, sir; I am a fully qualified pilot.
RIMMER: (Pointing) Mind that
star!
KRYTEN: Wha- That star is over two light years away, sir. We're nowhere
near it!
RIMMER: There's no percentage
in being a boy racer, Kryten. Okay,
you've
passed your test -- Mind
that planet!
KRYTEN: Which planet?
RIMMER: (Pointing) That
planet!
KRYTEN: That's- That's the planet we're heading to, sir.
RIMMER:
Excellent. Excellent. Plot an orbital course, we'll be there
in
no time.
KRYTEN: Yes,
sir, I have done, sir.
RIMMER: Yes, and get the second stage under
way.
KRYTEN: I already have done, sir.
RIMMER: But you haven't
correlated the data with the main computer banks,
have you?
KRYTEN: Yes, sir, I have,
sir.
RIMMER: You know- You now your trouble, Kryten?
KRYTEN: What,
sir?
RIMMER: You're a git.
Shift view to the back compartment,
where Lister and the Cat are seated.
CAT: Stupid. Three weeks stuck with Captain Yawn.
LISTER:
Look, it wasn't my fault. I could've
sweet-talked our way out of
it if
you hadn't've blown the whole gaffe.
CAT: Me? What did I do?
LISTER: I could've sweet-talked my way out of
it, but oh, no, you had to
come
blundering in with your size 12's.
CAT: You are so two-faced! Why haven't you got the guts just to tell
the
dude nobody likes him?
LISTER:
Oh, yeah, great. Brilliant. What'm I supposed to say? "Excuse
me, man. D'you know
you're about as popular as a horny dog at a Miss
Lovely Legs competition?"
CAT:
That's what I'd do! I'd say -- (RIMMER
walks in.) Hi, buddy, how's
it
goin'?
RIMMER: Agh, I just had to get out of there. He's driving me nuts! I
cannot stand front-seat drivers.
Well, come on, there's not a lot
going on in here. We're on
holiday! Let's cheer things up a
bit. How
'bout some music? I've brought my Hammond CD's with me. How about
"Reggie Wilson plays the Lift Music Classics?" (LISTER shakes
his
head.) What about
"Sounds of the Supermarket: 20
Shopping Greats?"
CAT: Has anyone seen the keys to the medical
cabinet? I feel a sudden
urge to suffocate myself with a two-pound
black ribbed nobler.
LISTER: Not Reggie Wilson, please, Rimmer.
RIMMER:
You don't like Reggie Wilson?
What? Not even "Pop goes
Delius"
or "Funking up
Wagner?"
LISTER: I prefer something slightly more melodious, like the
long, drawn-
out death rattle of
a man suffering from terminal flatulence.
RIMMER: Come on, you bores. Let's do something. How about we all sing
campfire songs? (Singing) Kumbaya, my Lord, Kumbaya -- Everyone!
Kryten!
-- Kumbaya, Kumbaya.
HOLLY: (Appearing on the screen) Purple alert,
purple alert!
LISTER: What's a purple alert?
HOLLY: Well, it's sort
of like, not as bad as a red alert, but a bit
worse than a blue alert.
Kind of like a mauve alert, don't want to say
"mauve alert."
RIMMER:
Holly! Wipe the rabid foam from your
chin and start again.
HOLLY: There's some sort of disruption to the
time-fabric continuum. At
least, I presume that's what it is, it's
certainly got all the signs.
There's this big wibbly-wobbly swirly thing that's headed straight
towards us.
RIMMER: (Runs forward to cockpit. To KRYTEN) What is it?
KRYTEN: I don't
know, sir. Whichever way I maneuver it
follows us! It
seems to be locked in on us. Wait -- there's something coming out
of
it. It's going to hit us!
Collision course!
ACE's ship comes out of the swirly thing,
headed straight for Starbug.
Alarms sound.
KRYTEN: Good
god! Emergency, emergency! Adopt crash procedure!
RIMMER: (Runs
back to rear compartment.) Where's the card?
Who's got the
card?!
LISTER:
What card?
RIMMER: The plastic card, the plastic card with the cartoons of
the crash
procedure on it!
LISTER:
Don't panic, man!
RIMMER: It should be in the netting behind the
seats. Haven't we got to
sit behind a woman clutching a baby? What's the drill?!
LISTER: Look, I know
what is it!
RIMMER: What?
LISTER: Sit down, tuck your head between
your legs and brace yourself.
RIMMER: (Bracing) Now what?
LISTER:
Then you open the in-flight magazine and start reading. Thing
is*, the articles act as a sedative.
I mean, look at this:
"Contents
List: Salt, an Epicure's Delight; Classic Wines of
Estonia; Flemish
Weaving the
Traditional Way." (To the CAT, whose head is lolling) Don't
fight it, man, let it take you.
RIMMER:
How can you be so mind-bogglingly flippant?
Don't you know
what's
going to happen? We're going to
crash!
LISTER: You've got to stay calm!
It's a well-known fact, the more
relaxed you are, the less likely you are to be injured.
KRYTEN:
Good luck, everybody, here it comes!
ACE's ship strikes Starbug a
glancing blow.
LISTER: (Reading) The ancient Egyptians were great
believers in salt.
CAT: (Reading) When most people think of classic wines,
they are unlikely
to consider the
Estonian reds, yet Estonian grapes are among the
fruitiest and most subtle.
RIMMER:
(Reading) Since the beginning of the 13th century, Belgium has
been the home of some of the most remarkable
weaving to come out of
northwest
Europe.
Starbug crashes on the ocean world below, crashing through a
jagged pile
of rock and landing in the water. KRYTEN comes back to the others.
Only
RIMMER is still in his seat; LISTER has been thrown behind
some debris
and the CAT is lying on the floor under more junk.
KRYTEN:
Is everyone all right?
RIMMER: Yes, thank god, I'm fine.
LISTER:
(Standing up) Cat!
CAT: Oh, it's bad, buddy, it's real bad. (LISTER and RIMMER uncover
him.) See what I mean? (Points to his leg.) Red with apricot. I look
like a jerk. I'm bleeding
an unfashionable color. If I'd known I
was
going to get my leg crushed
I'd've worn white. It goes with
everything.
LISTER: Is anything
broken?
CAT: Yeah. All the
stitching's come away, and the lining's ripped.
Somebody, please, get me a tailor!
LISTER: Kryten, get the
First Aid box. We have to clean this
up, make
sure he doesn't get
gangrene.
CAT: Gangrene? You think
I might get gangrene?
LISTER: Yeah.
CAT: Hey, that might work! Green with apricot -- I think I could
pull
that off!
KRYTEN: It's
a break, sir. Quite a bad one. I'm going to have to snap
the bone back into line, and there's no
anaesthetic.
LISTER: Here, read the in-flight magazine.
CAT:
(Reading) "Salt: an epicure's
delight. The salt on a typ--"
(His
leg makes a cracking sound
as ACE sets it.) Oooh, my god!
KRYTEN: Did it hurt?
CAT: No, I'm
talking about the article! Have you
done my leg yet?
RIMMER: Holly, what's the damage?
HOLLY: (Appearing
on the screen, tilted 45 degrees clockwise) It doesn't
look good.
We've lost the port engine, the starboard engine's packed
up, the fuel line's severed, we're taking in
water through the hull,
we've
lost the landing jets, half the electric's out, and the elastic's
snapped on the furry dice.
RIMMER: What
does that mean in real terms?
HOLLY: Well, it means you got a more
tasteful cockpit. but unless you
fix that starboard engine in the next 40
minutes we're going to start
sinking.
RIMMER: Anything we can do?
HOLLY: We could try to
hire a dance band and get it to play "Abide With
Me."
LISTER: I'm going to have to
go out there and fix the engine.
RIMMER: You don't know anything about
engines!
KRYTEN: Besides, there's a 40-knot gale out there. You'd have to be
insane to even attempt it. Only a fool or a hero would even
consider
it.
9 Ext.
Ace's craft.
10 Int. Ace's cockpit.
ACE: Bingo! Down there, they've ditched into the
drink. I'm bailing
out, Computer!
COMPUTER VOICE: (Just
like HOLLY's) But, Ace, it's a suicide mission!
ACE: I caused the smash,
should apologize. Only manners. Bring her
'round for another pass.
COMPUTER VOICE: Please, Ace, don't
go. I love you.
ACE: Stiff upper
modem, old girl. Smoke me a kipper,
I'll be back for
breakfast.
View
shifts back to Starbug as ACE walks in.
ACE: Name's Commander
Rimmer. Arnold Rimmer. Friends call me "Ace."
I've come from another dimension. Explain later. But first of all,
let's get you out of this pit.
(To KRYTEN) What do they call you,
matey?
KRYTEN: Uh, Kryten, sir.
ACE: Series 4000
mechanoid, am I right? Salt of the
Space Corps. (To
LISTER) Spanners!
LISTER: Eh?
ACE:
I'm sorry, you reminded me of a fellow I once knew. What's your
handle?
LISTER: Lister.
Dave Lister.
ACE: Of course it is.
Put it there, Dave. You look a
gr3eat bloke to be
in a scrape
with. (Looks at the CAT) What about the
guy in the sharp
suit?
LISTER:
He hasn't got a name; we just call him Cat.
ACE: Looks like you bought
yourself a broken leg there, Cat. I
love the
Cuban heels. (Looks at HOLLY.) Who's the beautifully*
delicious,
stunningly gorgeous
computer?
HOLLY: Holly. (Swoons
off side of screen.)
RIMMER walks in.
ACE: My god, it's
me, only much more handsome! Well,
looks like I'm
superfluous. Old Arnie'll have you out of here in no
time!
LISTER: He's a hologram. He
can't touch anything.
ACE: (To RIMMER) Dead. eh? Well, commiserations,
old man. What a
crashing bore that must be.
RIMMER:
You're me?
ACE: Don't quite understand the science, but it's got something
to do
with us living identical
lives up until a certain point, where a
decision was made, and you went one way, I went the other. (To all)
Still, can't hang around chin-wagging all day. Let's get this box up
into the air, shall we? What's your plan, Arn?
RIMMER: I
haven't got one.
ACE: Okay, right, well, um... I suggest this: the starboard engine is
repairable, but it's a two-man job. Any volunteers?
LISTER: Yeah, okay,
count me in. I've got a window in my
schedule this
afternoon.
ACE:
Not so fast, Davy boy, you leapt in so quick you didn't give Arnie
here a chance to speak. He was just about to volunteer, weren't
you,
Arn?
RIMMER: No, I
wasn't.
ACE: Okay, well, um, let's get cracking, shall we, Dave? What's the
starboard engine's thrust-to-input ratio, Arn?
RIMMER:
What's that?
ACE: Well, you can work it out: what's the craft's inertia rating?
RIMMER: I don't
know.
ACE: Well, what's the p.s.i.?
RIMMER: I don't know!
ACE:
Oh. Okay, we'll work it out when we get
there, shall we? Come on,
Dave, better grab a brolly, there's a bit of
a drizzle outside.
KRYTEN: (To ACE) Sir, can I have a word in
private?
ACE: Of course, old friend!
Excuse us.
ACE and KRYTEN move into the cockpit and KRYTEN
closes the door aft.
ACE: What's the prob, Kryters*?
KRYTEN:
Well, I have a limited understanding of medicine, sir, but it's
plainly obvious even to me that your left
arm is broken in several
places.
ACE: Took a bit of a tumble in the landing. It's only a scratch.
KRYTEN: I cannot
allow you to go out in this storm, sir.
Not with your
arm in that
condition. I must insist you allow me
to go in your place.
ACE: I see.
(Turns away from KRYTEN.) The Series 4000 isn't waterproof,
is it?
KRYTEN: That's besides the
point, sir.
ACE: Look, I'll tell you what we'll do. (Turns around and punches
KRYTEN, who falls into the pilot's seat.)
Sorry, old chum, no option.
(Returns to the aft compartment.) Arnie, Kryten's taken a bit of a
whack.
I want you to rewire his circuitry and bring him back on-line.
RIMMER:
How?
ACE: You don't know how to do that?
RIMMER: No.
ACE:
(Turning away) Come on, Dave, let's catch a breath of fresh air.
(To RIMMER) Smoke me a kipper -- can you do
that? -- I'll be back for
breakfast.
ACE and LISTER head
out, and RIMMER gives ACE's back a middle-finger
salute.
11
Ext.
Cut to outside, in a raging storm, where LISTER and ACE are
standing on a
sort of catwalk along Starbug's hull.
ACE:
(Shouting) What's your favorite music, Dave?
LISTER: Eh?
ACE: Keeps
your spirits up if you* sing a song.
LISTER: I like rasta* Billy
Skank.
ACE: Right!
LISTER cries out as he slips and falls
through the railing. He grabs the
rail
and hangs off the side of the catwalk.
ACE dangles his broken left
arm down to him.
ACE: Grab
my arm, Dave! Grab my arm! (LISTER does, and hauls himself
back up.) 'Fraid I'm going to have to do
something a bit sissy now:
black
out. (Slumps against LISTER for about
three seconds.) Sorry
about
that! Let's get cracking*! (Singing) Whether you like rasta,*
Billy -- Go on, Dave, sing that song!
LISTER:
(Singing) Whether you like OBrasta,* Billy...
12 Int. Starbug rear
section.
CAT: (Muttering) Paisley with stripes. That's nice. Green anoraks with
fuzzy collars, they're great.
KRYTEN: Oh, sir! He's delirious!
CAT: Oh, rubber
trousers, held down with bicycle clips.
Wow!
RIMMER: "Commander Rimmer!" I ask you. "Ace!" Barf city. I bet you
anything he wears women's underwear. They're all the same, this type,
you know, Hurly-burly, rough-n-tumble macho marines in public,
and
behind closed doors he'll be
parading up and down in taffeta ballgowns,
drinking mint juleps, whipping the houseboy.
KRYTEN: Sir,
he's you! It's just that your lives
diverged at a certain
point in
time.
RIMMER: Yes, I went into the gents and he went the other way.
KRYTEN:
I assume, sir, you are making fatuous references to his
sexuality.
If I may point out, if --
ACE and RIMMER come in, jubilant,
and do a little celebratory dance like
professional athletes sometimes do
after winning a match.
LISTER: Yes!
We did it!
ACE: A wooga, a wooga, a wah, a wah, a wooga, a wooga, a
wah!
ACE: (To LISTER) What a team!
How you got that housing clear I'll never
know.
LISTER: Come on, Ace, it was
you! I could never have reconnected
that
fuel line.
ACE: Well, I
wouldn't have been able to do it if you hadn't been holding
my ankles.
LISTER: Well how could you
hang upside down and fix the starboard engine?
It was totally brutal!
ACE: What a team.
LISTER: What a
team!
RIMMER: Now I know where I've seen you two! Weren't you the double-
action centerfold in July's issue of
"Big Boys in Boots?"
ACE: Now, look here, Arnie. You can say what you like about me, but
I
won't hear a word against
Skipper here.
RIMMER: Skipper?
ACE: A man like him deserves a
nickname. I thought "Skipper"
sat rather
well.
RIMMER:
"Ace and Skipper?" You sound like a kid's TV series about a boy
and his bush kangaroo!
ACE: Don't
listen to him, Skipper. Let's get this
tea chest back up into
the stars
and back to the small rouge one, eh?
RIMMER: Yeah, the sooner we get back
the sooner you two can climb into a
nice, hot, soapy bath and play "spot the submarine."
KRYTEN:
Sir -- the Cat -- I don't think he's going to last much longer!
The
CAT is on the floor, all four limbs in the air. View changes to
Starbug landing inside Red Dwarf, then the
CAT being wheeled along on a
gurney.
CAT: Bry* nylon
underwear. Sock suspenders. Suits with cardigans!
KRYTEN: Oh, sir,
he's delirious! His leg's all
swollen. I- I think he
may lose it.
LISTER: Lose his
leg?!
KRYTEN: I fear so. The
operation to save it is beyond my expertise.
CAT: Lose my leg? Hey, that's terrible. None of my suits will fit!
ACE: Kryten,
I'll need 500 cc's of corticoadrenaline, two pints of
plasma, a laser scalpel, and some kind of
tissue sample a microboliton*
will do.
RIMMER: (Disgusted) Oh, my god!
ACE: Field
microsurgery: all part of basic
training in the Space Corps
Special Service. I'll go scrub
up.
RIMMER: I'll go and throw up.
Fade to view of LISTER and
RIMMER's cabin. RIMMER is there, and
LISTER
walks in.
RIMMER: How's the Cat?
LISTER: Oh, Ace
did it. Cat's fine now, he's just
sitting up in bed
looking through
some swatches. Trying to find the
material he likes
for his
dressings. I don't know how Ace does
it. He's been on his
feet for 36 hours, he's still laughing and
joking. What a guy. He's
just nipped off to teach Kryten how to play the piano. Amazing dude.
RIMMER: So, is it simple
registry office, or a full church do for you
two?
LISTER: I don't understand your attitude, Rimmer. He's you!
RIMMER: He's not me, I'm
me. He's a me who had all the luck, all
the
chances. all the breaks that I never got.
LISTER:
No, it was just a single incident. And
your lives went off in
completely
different directions. It's incredible
to think that one
decision in
your childhood could produce such drastically different
people.
RIMMER: Right. He probably got to go to some really great
school, while
I was lumbered with
Io House. He got to meet all the right
people,
greased his way up the
old boy network, towel-flicked his way into the
Space Corps, Masonic-handshook his way into flight school, and
brown-
tongued his way up the
ranks.
LISTER: You'd think you'd be pleased that somewhere, in some
other
dimension, there's another
you, another you doing really well for
himself.
RIMMER: Oh, come on.
How'd you feel if some git arrived from another
dimension, another Lister, with wall-to-wall
charisma and a Ph.D. in
being handsome and wonderful?
LISTER:
Hey, man, I am that Lister!
RIMMER: No, come on, how would you feel if there
was another Lister doing
a hell
of a lot better that you are?
LISTER: There is! Ace knows him. That's why
he called me Spanners when
he
first came in. In Ace's dimension, he's
a flight engineer in the
Space
Corps, married to Christine Kochanski, twin boys, Jim and Bexon*.
I made up for him! Whatever he did that I didn't, he deserves the lot.
For me it makes sense, him having all this
stuff. To think that in
every dimension, every possibility is played
out -- hell, there's
probably a really,
really weird dimension where you're better-looking
than me.
RIMMER: Well, it just makes me
bitter. You know I've always had
this
thing about not getting the
breaks. Well, there's living proof of
what
I could've achieved if I'd
gotten the one he got.
ACE: (Calling in from corridor) Skipper, got a
mo'?
RIMMER: Go on, he's probably picked a ring.
LISTER goes
out to the corridor, where ACE is just finishing sewing up
his own left
arm.
ACE: Skipper, I've decided I'm not going to stay.
LISTER:
Why?
ACE: Him and me. It would
never work. I just can't stand to be
near the
man. To see myself so warped, so bitter, so
weasely. The man's a
maggot.
LISTER: So where're you going
to go?
ACE: Just out there. I
can't go back, But there's a billion other
realities to explore. A
billion other Arnold Rimmers to meet.
Maybe
somewhere there's
one who's more of a pain in the butt than him.
But I
doubt it.
LISTER:
Well, good luck, man. And, look, don't
be too hard on Rimmer.
You got
the break, he didn't. He's just
bitter.
ACE: D'you know what that break was? At the age of seven, one of us was
kept back a year, the other wasn't. (Gestures to knot on his arm
stitches.) Put your finger on that, will
you, Skipper? (Tugs sharply
on thread and breaks it.)
LISTER: And
that's the only difference? Rimmer went
down a year, and you
stayed
up?
ACE: No, I was the one who went down a year. By his terms, he got the
break. But being kept down a
year made me. The humiliation...
Being
the tallest boy in the
class by a clear foot. It changed me,
made me
buckle down, made me
fight back. And I've been fighting back
ever
since.
LISTER: While he
spent the rest of his life making excuses.
ACE: Maybe he's right. Maybe I did get the lucky break... I'll grab
my
things and be off, Dave. Smoke me a kipper, Skipper, I'll be back
for
breakfast.
ACE
walks off along the corridor. We shift
to see RIMMER hunched over
next to a robot arm which is holding a line
attached to something big
suspended over a doorway.
RIMMER: Ha,
hah. (To robot arm) Ready? (Arm nods up and down.) I'll
smoke him a smegging kipper.
ACE
passes through the rigged doorway.
RIMMER: Now!
The robot
arm pulls the line, and nothing happens.
ACE looks up over the
doorway at the big object still suspended
there and shakes his head.
Closing shot is ACE's craft leaving Red Dwarf
to the accompaniment of
another Top Gun theme.
ACE: In the
decades that followed, Ace Rimmer searched countess realities
and met thousands of different Arnold
Rimmers. However he never
encountered an Arnold Rimmer as deeply sad
and worthless as the one
he'd met
aboard Red Dwarf. His impossible search
continues...
RIMMER'S VOICE: It's Wednesday night; it's amateur Hammond
organ recital
night. Okay, take it away, skutters!
The
end theme song is played as on a Hammond organ, rather stylized, with
plenty
of repetitive background and no vocals.
The
End
Additional
credits:
Mrs. Rimmer Kalli
Greenwood
Young Rimmer Simon Gaffney