A Hole in the Head
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1959
- 120 min
- 216 Views
Today I may not have
A thing at all
Except for just a dream or two
But I've got lots of plans for tomorrow
And all my tomorrows
Belong to you
Right now it may not seem
Like spring at all
We're drifting
And the laughs are few
But I've got rainbows
planned for tomorrow
And all my tomorrows
Belong to you
No one knows better than I
That's fate
But with you there at my side
I'll soon be turning the tide
Just wait
As long as I've got arms that cling at all
It's you that I'll be clinging to
And all the dreams
I dream, beg or borrow
On some bright tomorrow
They'll all come true
And all my bright tomorrows
Belong to you
Once upon a time, there were... hm...
three handsome hitchhikers.
Jerry Marks on the right,
Mendy Yales on the left,
and that's me in the middle,
Tony Manetta.
We came down from the Bronx
to make our fortune here in Florida.
First thing in Miami, we finagled
a cab and we're in business.
That's me in the middle.
Today, 20 years later, Jerry Marks is one
of the biggest promoters in the country.
Last year, Mr Fabulous,
as the papers call him,
he paid over $5 million in taxes.
Mendy? Well, Mendy's still pushing a cab.
As for me, I'm still in the middle.
I'm in the hotel business in Miami Beach,
working on my first million.
The Garden Of Eden.
But like good old Adam,
my weakness is Eves.
(swing band plays)
My current Eve is a Lulu. She would've
made the serpent eat the apple.
(woman) Yahoo!
Miami Beach!
If anyone thinks
I'm a well-heeled big shot out on a spree,
they've got a hole in their head.
Truth is, I'm busted.
He would like to own it, but I wouldn't give
you a quarter for the whole stinkin' beach.
- All right, tiger, down. The cops.
- (giggles)
- You wanna fight, huh?
- Come on, now.
(horn blares)
Oh, I forgot. I've got a son.
How about that?
(car horn)
(Tony) Knock it off.
You wanna get us pinched?
- You're just chicken, landlord. Whee...
- What a kook. Out, kook, out.
I feel like swimming.
Let's go swimming, huh, landlord?
Out, out. You're going to bed.
Go to bed, Ally.
- I'm a nose cone. And I want music.
- You're a kook nose cone.
(music plays)
- You'll wake up the kid. Get your key.
- Lookee, let's play fireman.
- Whoops, I'm decelerating.
- Andy, get her key right away.
I love you, landlord.
You love me?
- Any law against loving a landlord?
- There's a law against killing a landlord.
- Lookee, there goes Mars.
- Hurry up. Open her door wide.
The ride's getting bumpy.
Aren't we going to land?
Any minute now.
- No, no!
- Oh, keep quiet.
No, no!
- (music plays)
- Oh... Oh, no.
- Turn this radio off.
- I don't love you.
Who are you that I should love you?
I'm going swimming. Bye.
(hums)
Yahoo!
What a kooky broad.
(sighs)
Pop...
- Pop.
- What's the matter? What happened?
We are being evicted.
- What, are you kidding?
- I was trying to reach you all afternoon.
How do you like that?
A guy misses one lousy payment...
- Five payments.
- Oh, OK, five payments.
out on the street.
He must think
I'm a jerk from Jerkville.
- Mr Diamond's right, you know.
- Right? What do you mean, right?
If we can't meet our payments...
He's a big lawyer now.
Pshew, corporation lawyer.
What do we care
what it says in the lease?
Who needs this crummy, beat-up hotel,
anyways? Fleabag.
You know these architect drawings?
I didn't tell you about my brainchild.
It'll make me bigger than Jerry.
We could buy it for a song.
About three, four million dollars.
Maybe five million.
We take the buildings down
and we build a Disneyland.
Pretty big blockbuster idea, huh?
I got three or four guys
who want to put in...
Abe Diamond.
If the word gets around,
my credit will be worth about two cents.
I'll figure something out.
Hey!
- Sleepy? I'll run you a little gin.
- It's four o'clock in the morning.
So it's four o'clock. What, are you sleepy?
Come on, we'll play cards.
In 1931, when Mickey Walker gave up the
middleweight crown, who fought for it?
- What are we gonna do?
- Answer the question.
- Ben Jeby and Gorilla Jones.
- Right for $1 million.
- What are we gonna do, Pop?
- Stop worrying about it.
- Maybe if we sell the car.
- I'm gonna have to flatten you.
If you're gonna play cards, play.
Tomorrow I'll go see Mr Diamond
and ask him to tear up the eviction notice.
- What if he don't?
- Then I'll go to a bank.
You think Marty Elkins
is gonna turn me down?
- He'd give me the money in two minutes.
- I thought you went to him last month.
Don't go getting smart with me, Ally.
I'll call up your Uncle Mario.
- Uncle Mario?
- Now that's very nice.
- Nice respect to show for your relatives.
- Gee whiz, Pop.
Don't you remember after Mama died
how they started all that stuff
about you can't take care of me, and all?
- So?
- I wanna stay here with you.
Look, in the first place, I'm not going to
call up Uncle Mario unless it's desperate.
In the second place, I'm not gonna
let anybody take you away from me.
What am I gonna do?
Sell you for a few dollars for money?
- Play cards and answer the question.
- James J Corbett.
I didn't ask the question yet.
- Five points.
- What five points?
Go to bed. A kid playing gin
at four in the morning.
Next thing you know,
you'll be smoking and drinking.
OK, once more.
Who's the greatest champ of all times?
- For $1 million?
- For $1 million.
That's easy - you are.
I ought to punch you in your funny nose.
Except it looks like your mother's.
You know how you look like her?
Look how look like her.
Little Millie. She was so good.
Pop, please don't let me
go live with Uncle Mario.
- What are you talking?
- I know if you call him for money...
I never saw such a worrypuss.
Come here.
You know what I'm gonna do for you
when I'm on Easy Street?
I used to dream about it
when I was in the Bronx.
I'm gonna buy you the biggest house
you ever saw. Big as a castle.
We're gonna have flowers and dogs,
and beautiful horses
with their tails way up in the air.
And maybe a big white yacht. Hm?
go up and down the Hudson.
I used to say to myself "Yes, sirree, boy,
one of these days,
all of that is for my little Ally."
Me too, you.
"Me too, you?" What kind of talk is that?
When I grow up and be a famous scientist,
- Hotels.
- Shut up.
I'll do all the buying in this family.
That gives me a good idea.
Cos right next to that big house,
I'll build a very big scientific building.
Every afternoon, I can watch
the professors shoot rockets to the moon.
Hm?
Nah.
First, we've got to get you a bank,
something solid, you know?
Real solid. We'll have your name
in gold letters that high.
President Ally, banker.
Boy, we sure could use
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"A Hole in the Head" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/a_hole_in_the_head_10049>.
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