Part V: P U L P B I S C U I T (THE UNAUTHORIZED SCRIPT)
written & directed
by
Quentin Biscuitino
stories
by
Quentin Biscuitino
&
Roger Roberts Avery
THREE STORIES...
ABOUT ONE STORY...
May 1993
last draft
I'll cut cutting straight to section
3. THE OLD BISCUIT
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CAPT. KOONS steps inside the room toward the little boy and
bends down on one knee to bring him even with the boy's
eyeline. When Koons speaks, he speaks with a slight Texas
accent.
CAPT. KOONS
Hello, little man. Boy I sure heard a bunch about you.
See, I was a good friend of your daddy's. We were in
that Hanoi pit of Hell over five years together.
Hopefully, you'll never have to experience this yourself,
but when two men are in a situation like me and your daddy
were, for as long as we were, you take on certain
responsibilities of the other. If it had been me who had
not made it, Major Coolidge would be talkin' right now to
my son Jim. But the way it worked out is I'm talkin' to
you, Butch. I got somethin' for ya.
The Captain pulls a well-preserved biscuit out of his pocket.
CAPT. KOONS
This biscuit I got here was first purchased by your
great-granddaddy. It was bought during the First
World War in a little general store in Knoxville,
Tennessee. It was bought by private Doughboy Ernie
Coolidge the day he set sail for Paris. It was your great-
granddaddy's biscuit, made by the first company to ever make
biscuits. You see, up until then, people just made their
own biscuits. Your great-granddaddy carried that biscuit
every day he was in the war. Then when he had done his
duty, he went home to your great-grandmother, took the
biscuit out his pocket and put it in an ol' coffee can. And
in that can it stayed 'til your grandfather Dane Coolidge
was called upon by his country to go overseas and fight the
Germans once again. This time they called it World War Two.
Your great-granddaddy gave it to your granddad for good luck.
Unfortunately, Dane's luck wasn't as good as his old man's.
Your granddad was a Marine and he was killed with all the
other Marines at the battle of Wake Island. Your granddad
was facing death and he knew it. None of those boys had any
illusions about ever leavin' that island alive. So three
days before the Japanese took the island, your 22-year old
grandfather asked a gunner on an Air Force transport named
Winocki, a man he had never met before in his life, to deliver
to his infant son, who he had never seen in the flesh, his
biscuit. Three days later, your grandfather was dead. But
Winocki kept his word. After the war was over, he paid a
visit to your grandmother, delivering to your infant father,
his dad's biscuit. This biscuit. This biscuit was in your
daddy's pants when he was shot down over Hanoi. He was
captured and put in a Vietnamese prison camp. Now he knew if
the gooks ever saw the biscuit it'd be confiscated. The way
your Daddy looked at it, that biscuit was your birthright.
And he'd be damned if slopeheads were gonna put their greasy
yella hands on his boy's birthright. So he hid it in the one
place he knew he could hide somethin'. His ass. Five long
years, he wore this biscuit up his ass. Then when he died of
dysentery, he gave me the biscuit. I hid this uncomfortable
hunk of flour up my ass for two years. Then, after seven
years, I was sent home to my family. And now, little man, I
give the biscuit to you.
Capt. Koons hands the biscuit to Butch. A little hand comes into FRAME to
accept it.
Or, if you want,