Cannery Row
- PG
- Year:
- 1982
- 120 min
- 646 Views
Cannery Row has never been
like anywhere else.
Its people are different.
When the town died off,
most failed to notice.
Some say nobody would live here
unless they had to,
but some, like The Seer,
wouldn't live anywhere else.
Of all the people on Cannery Row,
Doc is probably the best known.
He makes his living
by collecting marine animals
and selling them
to colleges and museums.
Doc has become
a pillar of the community,
and its fountain of
science and philosophy.
He had friends
he didn't even know about
and some he would never forget.
Friends like Mack and the boys.
Mack leads a small group of men
who have in common no families,
beyond the time
to discuss matters
of interest but little importance.
The youngest and strongest
of the group is Hazel.
A childhood illness left him with a
slightly diminished mental capacity.
As a result, he had the mind of
a small boy in the body of a bull.
Hey, Mack?
What is it, Hazel?
Mack, you said you was gonna
lead us in some exercise.
You said we was out of shape.
- I said that?
- Yeah, that's right.
- I must have been drunk as hell.
- Well, come on. We're waiting.
Here we go. Come on, Mack.
Okay, Mack.
- All right, you ready?
- Yeah.
Touch your toes. Swing your hips.
Jumping Jacks.
Mack, I'm going to La Jolla for a
few days. Feed my mice, will you?
- There's beer in the refrigerator.
- Don't worry about the mice, Doc.
- We'll take care of it.
- Okay.
Doc is a hell of a guy.
Give you anything he's got.
A hell of a guy. We ought to do
something nice for him sometime.
Despite the esteem
in which he was held,
Doc was not fully content.
He'd been afflicted with
a gnawing restlessness.
A sense of something unfulfilled.
So he planned a collecting trip,
hoping to smother his unease
with activity.
At first, he turned up very little.
But by the third day,
his luck began to change.
Under the boulders of the intertidal
zone, he found eight baby octopi.
It was a little bonanza for him,
if he could keep them alive.
He dedicated himself to building an
octopus world within walls of glass,
anticipating every octopus need,
and eliminating every danger.
Doc, I got something important
to talk to you about.
- How much do you need, Mack?
- Two bucks.
Here, take it out of that.
- What about my story?
- What story?
I had a story about
why I needed two bucks.
- You don't need a story.
- The hell I don't!
I worked all night on it.
Hazel cried when I tried it on him.
You see, my aunt in Salinas...
She lost both husbands in the flood.
- I didn't know you had an aunt.
- I don't have an aunt!
That's the goddamn story!
Doc, what is the matter with you?
I got a problem, Mack.
- How am I going to light them?
- Light what?
The octopi.
Octopi are afraid of light. How can
I light them without scaring them?
- Why don't you just give up?
- Mack, octopi are fascinating.
They have emotions like ours.
They show fear, anger and excitement
by colour changes in their bodies.
I need a wide-angle binocularscope.
- What?
- Binocularscope.
Even if I do get the right light...
Doc, look at me.
It's me, Mack, your friend.
What's wrong?
You've redone this tank five times.
I'm all right, Mack. Really.
I need to do something different
for a change. Something of value.
- You ain't done nothing up to now.
- That's just the point.
A man ought to make a mark.
Every year I go to the Congress of
Marine Biologists in San Francisco.
Every year I listen to guys reciting
papers on the stuff they know.
This year,
they'll listen to me for a change.
I know these animals
as well as anybody.
I must be able to find out something
about them that's worth knowing.
I think I'll call my paper...
"Symptoms In Some Cephalopoda...
..Approximating Apoplexy."
- Afternoon. What can I get you?
- Do you know of any work here?
No, not since the canneries closed.
Aren't any of them running?
This is Cannery Row, isn't it?
And we still got cans to prove it,
but no sardines to put in them.
- They disappeared a few years ago.
- What happened to them?
We'd all like to know that.
I think they fished them all out.
Now nothing happens till Mack and
the boys from Ft. Ord come over.
Can I leave my case here
while I look around?
- Sure. I'll put it back here.
- Thanks. What if you're off shift?
- Honey, I ain't never off shift.
- Thanks.
Would you like salami with that?
- I didn't know this was your bag.
- You're welcome to anything in it.
- You've had a rotten day.
- What makes you say that?
I'm a Seer. It's my business
to know these things.
I live alone.
I listen to the waves at night.
I follow the moon and in the depths
of my solitude, I see visions.
Anyone would. Is there anything
I can help you with?
- You expect me to believe all this?
- I don't expect anything.
I don't need anything. My friends
above provide food and lodging.
After you've eaten, come for a swim.
- It'll make you feel better.
- I have to be going.
- I don't even know how to swim.
- I don't, either.
I just go in up to my chest.
- So long.
- So long.
- I'd like to speak to the manager.
- Sure. Come on in.
The oyster fork
goes next to the salad fork.
Like hell. It goes next to
the cheese knife and soup spoon.
- It's the only fork on the right.
- You know nothing.
The table is set with the fork always
on the left and never on the right.
The fork goes on the right
and I know about anything.
So there!
Excuse me, Fauna.
There's a girl here to see you.
- Did she say what she wants?
- No, just to see the manager.
OK. I don't have much time,
but send her in.
Okay, go on in.
The name's Suzy Desoto.
Sit down.
I'll be with you in a minute.
I'd like a job as a waitress.
- A waitress?
- This is the Bear Flag restaurant?
Yeah, but we don't serve
too many sandwiches in here.
- I kind of figured that.
- Sorry we couldn't help you.
- No, wait a minute.
- Yeah?
- I'd still like a job.
- As what?
You know...
..a floozy.
First, we don't call ourselves
floozies in here
and second,
have you ever done this before?
- All you have to do is lie down.
- And pretend that you like it.
Don't you have a hard luck story
to sway me?
No.
- You broke? Where are you from?
- Lots of places.
- You don't give much information.
- I don't want a government job.
I've got to know things
about the people I take on.
I've got all quality girls here.
See them pictures
on the mantelpiece?
All of them are young ladies
from The Flag that married well.
Half of them couldn't even count
when they came here.
Look at this one. That's Wisteria.
Convicted of shoplifting four times.
I taught her all the finer things
and now she is married
to the president of the Salinas
Forward and Upward Club.
Carried the tree on Arbour Day.
Now, tell me what I need to know.
Let's try again. Where are you from?
- Indiana.
- Are your folks still there?
I don't know. I went away
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"Cannery Row" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 19 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/cannery_row_5014>.
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