Collateral

Synopsis: LA cabbie Max Durocher is the type of person who can wax poetic about other people's lives, which impresses U.S. Justice Department prosecutor Annie Farrell, one of his fares, so much that she gives him her telephone number at the end of her ride. Although a dedicated man as seen through the efficiency in which he does his work, he can't or won't translate that eloquence into a better life for himself. He deludes himself into believing that his now twelve year cabbie job is temporary and that someday he will own his own limousine service. He even lies to his hospitalized mother that he already owns one, with a further lie that he tells her as such primarily to make her happy, rather than the truth which is that he won't do anything to achieve that dream. One night, Max picks up a well dressed man named Vincent, who asks Max to be his only fare for the evening. For a flat fee of $600, plus an extra $100 if he gets to the airport on time - Vincent wants Max to drive him to five stops tha
Genre: Crime, Drama, Thriller
Director(s): Michael Mann
Production: Paramount Pictures
  Nominated for 2 Oscars. Another 23 wins & 68 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.5
Metacritic:
71
Rotten Tomatoes:
86%
R
Year:
2004
120 min
$100,003,492
Website
3,672 Views


- You okay?

- I'm fine, mate. Don't worry about it.

You all right?

Enjoy L.A.

- He did it.

- It's all right.

Tell me why everything

is always about you.

Everything is not always about me.

That gearhead with his

pocket protector was being sarcastic,

- and you know it.

- Sorry, I just didn't see it that way.

Bullshit. What about the dig about

the makeover? That was really nice.

What do you want me to do?

I work with the man, for chrissake.

You know what? You're perfectly

capable of taking care of your own sh*t.

You know something? The last time

I checked, you were sleeping with me.

So unless you want to start

f***ing him, I suggest...

Hey, pal. Where can I catch a shuttle

to the airport around here?

- Back there.

- Thanks.

It was him in that gold Lexus

on the cell phone.

Are they still asking

for a change of venue?

He's enhanceable because of priors

in the early '80s.

- Where to?

- Downtown. 312 North Spring Street.

Downtown.

Look, the transcriptions need

to be done by 7 a.m., period, okay?

Hold on. Take Sepulveda

to Slauson to La Brea.

Take La Brea north to Sixth

into downtown.

So what? You'll be up late. I'm pulling

an all-nighter too, so save the tears.

I'll take the 105 east to the 110.

- That's faster.

- What?

I said, the 105 to the 110,

that'll get you there quicker.

The 110 turns into a parking lot

around USC.

But once you get to La Brea north

of Santa Monica, then it's jammed.

The 110 north of the 10,

you get people driving to Pasadena,

and they drive slow.

Yeah, they do, but what I do is

I get off on Grand, and then I...

Hey, surface roads is what you want,

that's what we'll do.

- Are we taking bets?

- Are we?

But what if you're wrong?

I don't think I'm gonna be wrong,

but if I am, the ride's free.

Okay, you got yourself a deal.

- Go ahead, say it.

- Say what?

- Go ahead.

- Oh, I got lucky with the lights.

You weren't lucky with the lights.

What you were was right.

I was wrong...

...Max.

You mind turning that up?

- You like the classics.

- I do. I used to play in high school.

- Let me guess. Woodwinds.

- No. Strings.

I never had the lungs

for wind instruments.

Could've fooled me by the way

you were unloading on that cell phone.

Different instrument.

If you had just listened to me, we'd be

all bogged down in traffic right now,

and you would've made yourself

an extra 5 bucks.

Yeah, well, you keep that 5 bucks.

Buy you something special. Go wild.

Really, it's not that... It's not a big deal.

Nothing big here.

Well, how many cabbies

do you know

get you into an argument

to save you money?

There were two of us. I had to kill

the other one. I don't like competition.

Take pride in being good

at what you do?

What, this? Oh, this is...

This is... No, this is part-time.

This is a fill-in job. Pay the bills.

But I will be the best at what I do.

But that's something else.

- What else?

- Just shaping up some things.

Like...?

Tell me.

Limo company I'm putting together.

Island Limos.

It's gonna be like an island on wheels.

A cool groove, like a club experience.

When you get to the airport, you're not

gonna wanna get out of my limo.

So I do this part-time

to get my Benz off leases,

staff up, get the right client list.

You know, things like that.

How do you like being a lawyer?

- What are you, psychic?

- Little bit.

There's the dark pinstripe suit.

Elegant, not too flashy.

That rules out advertising.

Plus a top-drawer briefcase

that you live out of.

And the purse. A Bottega.

Anyway, a man gets in my cab with

a sword, I figure he's a sushi chef.

You? Clarence Darrow.

Well, no, not quite.

He worked defense. I'm a prosecutor.

- Big case?

- Yeah.

- Got us here fast.

- Of course.

But you didn't answer my question.

Do you like what you do?

Yeah.

But not today.

No, I do. Like, I can't wait.

I love standing in that courtroom.

At the same time,

I get this clenched-up thing

the night before the first days.

Clenched up? How?

I think I'm gonna lose.

I think the case sucks,

my exhibits aren't in order,

I'm not prepared enough,

people are gonna find out

that I don't know what I'm doing,

and I've been running some charade

all these years.

I represent

the Department of Justice,

and my opening statement is gonna

fall flat at the most important point,

and the jury's gonna laugh at me.

And then I cry. I don't throw up.

A lot of people throw up.

I have a strong stomach.

And then I pull myself together,

I rewrite my opening statement,

work my exhibits, and that's

what I do for the rest of the night.

That's my routine.

- In the morning, it starts, and I'm fine.

- You need a vacation.

I just had a vacation

on the Harbor Freeway.

No, no, not in a cab. I mean,

you need to get your head straight.

Get your unified self up.

Get harmonic. You know...

When was the last time

you took a break?

I go on a vacation all the time.

- How often?

- A dozen times a day.

My favorite spot.

Maldives Island.

It's my own private getaway.

Things get heavy for me,

I take five minutes out,

and I just go there.

And I just concentrate

on absolutely nothing.

- Here. Take it.

- Oh, no. I couldn't do that.

Take it. Take it, because you

need it a lot more than I do.

And it'll help you. I guarantee it.

Thanks, Max.

Go get 'em.

Hey.

I don't know,

in case you ever wanna investigate

a Fortune 500 company or...

...argue cab routes.

Hey.

Oh, whoa, whoa. Hey, yeah.

Come on, man, I'm sorry.

I didn't hear you, man.

Come on. I'll take you.

- Where to?

- 1039 South Union Street.

Gotcha.

- How long you think this'll take?

- Seven minutes.

Seven. Not eight? Not six?

Two minutes to get across the 110

to Normandie.

Normandie to Venice, three minutes.

Over to Union is one.

Plus one for "sh*t happens."

- Okay if I time you?

- Knock yourself out.

What do I get if you're wrong?

A free ride?

You get an apology.

I already offered my free ride today.

- To who?

- Some girl.

Did you get a date with her?

- First time in L.A.?

- No.

Tell you the truth, whenever I'm here

I can't wait to leave.

Too sprawled out, disconnected.

You know.

- That's me. You like it?

- It's my home.

Seventeen million people.

This was a country,

it'd be the fifth biggest economy in the

world, and nobody knows each other.

I read about this guy,

gets on the MTA here, dies.

Six hours he's riding the subway

before anybody notices his corpse

doing laps around L.A.,

people on and off sitting next to him.

Nobody notices.

This is the cleanest cab

I've ever been in.

- Regular ride?

- Yeah, I share it with the day-shift guy.

- Because you prefer nights?

- Yeah, people are more relaxed.

Less stress, less traffic, better tips.

- How are the benefits?

- Oh, no. It's not that kind of job.

I'm not in this for the long haul.

I'm just filling in, you know.

Just temporary while I'm getting

some things shaped up.

This is just temporary.

- How long you been driving?

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Stuart Beattie

Stuart Beattie (born 1972) is an Australian screenwriter and film director. His screenplay for Collateral (2004) earned him nominations for the BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay, Satellite Award for Best Original Screenplay and Saturn Award for Best Writing. Beattie attended Knox Grammar School, in Sydney, New South Wales, where his mother, Sandra, was a languages teacher; and later Charles Sturt University in Bathurst. more…

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