A Fantastic Fear of Everything
(TAPPING OF TYPEWRITER KEYS)
(JACK) Once upon a time...
not so long ago...
(BREATH ES HEAVILY)
(CREAKING)
Ah!
(BREATH ES HEAVILY)
This is the story of me.
Jack.
There I am, absolutely shitting it.
I'd been carrying a carving knife
with me for three weeks
due to an irrational fear
of being murdered.
I couldn't sleep at night.
As soon as I got into bed,
I started seeing killers.
(SCREAMING IN DISTANCE)
These killers were the subject
of a series of plays
I had been writing for television.
The nature of the project
necessitated research
into heinous Victorian criminals.
And I had unwittingly familiarized
myself with all the famous hackers,
dosers and severers
of the 19th century.
Faces that would've
frightened the Ripper.
Many a long night I spent there,
drenched in thoughts
of bloody murder.
I became particularly disturbed
by a man I called The Hendon Ogre.
A maniac from North London who had
boiled the arsenic out of fly papers
and introduced the result
into his lodger's broth.
I'd lie awake for hours,
thinking of the brute,
terrified someone was slipping
arsenic into my diet.
In the mornings, I'd inspect
grapefruit and milk bottle tops
looking for evidence of interference
with syringes.
Trivial events became vital clues
in the detection of my assassin.
(TELEPHONE RINGS)
If the telephone rang at half past
four, I'd look at the clock and say,
"it was half past four when the
telephone rang that fateful evening.
"How could anyone
have known at the time
"how important that telephone call
was to become?"
My situation became unbearable.
I suspected everyone and everything.
Innocent passersby.
Creeks in the corridor.
Bumps in the night got so bad,
I started plugging my head shut.
But I'd soon have to get up and
check for killers in the bathroom,
in the kitchen...
in the fridge,
or in the hallway,
where they kept a low profile,
crawling about in the shadows,
lurking behind creaky doors.
Ah!
Bloody windows, bloody draughts.
(WHISPERS) Oh, God, come on.
Argh!
This fear that I would be murdered
all began sometime before.
At lunch, to be exact.
The day I saw my literary agent...
- Newspaper?
- .. Clair De Grunwald.
- Thanks.
- No problem.
(JACK) She'd arranged to meet me at
a respectable establishment in Soho.
(VIETNAMESE ACCENT)
You like newspaper?
- Shall I bring sir the wine list?
- Yes. Okay.
Pleasure.
(JACK) "The body was found
in the East End of London,
"but the Hanoi Handshake
is the unmistakable calling card
"of a Vietnamese gang killing.
"According to one unnamed
police source
"downtown Hackney,
also known as Little Vietnam
"is now a bloody jungle...
"of organized crime.
"The missing fingers have yet
to be found."
Newspaper?
- Whoa, hey, no...
- Sir.
- No, it... Please...
- Jack?
- Clair.
- Under the table already?
It's not even 12:00.
- No, I...
- I'm sorry.
I'm afraid I only have an hour.
I've got to go
meet Ragsie Lawrence.
Remember Ragsie?
The dancing dyke?
She's just been made
commissioning editor at the BBC.
Can you believe it?
Never underestimate a hunchback,
that's what I say.
- Are you staying there all lunch?
- No, sorry.
Anyway...
It's good timing. I can tell her
how busy you are with your murders.
- Up to my elbows.
- Good.
- Do you have a title?
- "Decades of Death".
- Chilling.
- Well, if you want murder...
...then Victorian Britain
is the golden age.
I think murder's lost its sense
of theatre. What do we have now?
- It's just like kids...
- Mindless violence?
Exactly. Yes. Killers don't put any
thought into their murders anymore.
- Have you heard of Long Ear?
- Can't say I have, no.
Terrifying Polish plumber
who hacked off a Frenchman's head.
Disposed of the limbs, but couldn't
think of what to do with the head.
Eventually he utilized
his gas-fired crucible
filled the mouth with lead,
slung the thing in the river.
Can you imagine?
I'm sorry, sir. This is a non-smoking
restaurant. Thank you.
- Are you ready to order, madam?
- Do you know what you're having?
I'll just have a beer.
I'm not very hungry.
- One beer.
- This is my treat, darling.
Well, then I will have the chicory
salad with asparagus croutons,
chorizo and poached egg to start.
Followed by the salmon
and leek fish cake
with mushy peas, chips
and chive cream. Thank you. Lovely.
People love a good murder.
(JACK) I began to tell Clair about
my good friend Professor Friedkin,
author of an inuential paper
on the criminal stare,
an ocular condition
that instantly identified a madman.
Monsieur?
(CLAIR) Jack?
Jack? Jack?
Jack?
- Jack?
- Yes. Sorry.
- Are you all right?
- Yes.
Yes. I'm sorry.
(GIGGLES NERVOUSLY)
- What was I talking about?
- The book.
- The criminal stare.
- Oh, yes, yes. the criminal stare.
Yeah. I found... I've trawled through
hundreds of these photographs and...
Um, when you kill someone,
when you take a life,
you acquire these awful eyes,
you know, like a shark or a chicken.
- How frightful.
- But it's not just a horror show.
I've realised that's not the reason
I have to write this.
No, it's a detective story, you see,
about how they become killers.
How do they get there? What fills
them with need to victimize and kill?
- Why choose mass murder?
- Why not become a writer?
Well, actually, writers
and serial killers are very similar.
They're practically brothers.
Hemingway says,
What do you need to become a writer?
"An unhappy childhood." It's
the same thing with serial killers.
Whatever happened to the hedgehog?
- What?
- He had to cross the road...
...and go into the woods,
but he was afraid.
- Harold the Hedgehog?
- Harold the Hedgehog.
Dear little chap.
Whatever happened to that story?
- You never finished him.
- He nearly finished me.
He wrecked my marriage,
prickly c*nt.
No, he did, Clair.
I'm sorry, the stress of it.
Drove Catherine out of my life.
What do you wanna talk about him for?
Darling, I'm just thinking you need
to earn some money, that's all.
This death thing could take a while.
Timmy the Tortoise can't
pay the bills.
I don't want him to. I didn't mean
to become a children's author.
- It was a terrible accident.
- It was your destiny.
Look, why not rattle off
a little bedtime story, mm?
- Timmy goes to the seaside perhaps?
- Oh, God.
Or Harold. How did it start?
"Once upon a time,
there was a hedgehog called Harold
"Who lived in a bush." (GIGGLES)
(MUSIC BOX PLAYS)
(VOICE ECHOING)
Or Little Johnny Rabbit.
The world is dying
for another Little Johnny Rabbit.
Little Johnny Rabbit is dead.
So is Timmy,
so is the f***ing hedgehog.
They're lying in the road,
covered in blood. I killed them.
Tell that to the kids.
(THUNDER)
Darling, we're going
to make this work.
Just try not to worry too much,
and take care of yourself.
You know me better
than anyone, Clair.
Yes, I do. You're a workaholic
and you're sensitive.
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"A Fantastic Fear of Everything" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/a_fantastic_fear_of_everything_8001>.
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