Diary of a Madman
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1963
- 96 min
- 464 Views
1
In His infinite wisdom,
the Lord has seen fit
to take from us
a just and courageous friend.
That Simon Cordier
in the prime of his manhood
should have come to his death
as he did,
makes his passing
even a greater shock
to those he has left behind.
As one of France's
most respected magistrates,
Simon Cordier dedicated his life
to the betterment of humanity.
All that Simon Cordier was
can be summed up in these words:
He was a good man.
May God have mercy on his soul.
Make him Eternal...
All those fine words.
I'm glad he's dead.
Mr. D'Arville, Miss Jeanne.
It was Magistrate Cordier's wish
before he died
that we all assemble
after the funeral.
My daughter and I are willing
to respect the wishes of the dead.
More so than if he were living.
We will see you at the gallery, then.
Yes.
Why Magistrate Cordier
should have entrusted this task
to my daughter and to me,
I do not know.
Our feelings toward him
are no secret.
As Father Borman knows,
this chest and the letter
were given to my daughter
by Magistrate Cordier
the night he died.
The letter written by the Magistrate
says that if he died that night,
then, this chest must not be opened
until immediately after the funeral.
But why would he think
he might die?
Surely, it was an accident.
Father Barman,
my investigation proved
that it was not suicide.
The letter requested
that we be present
when the chest is opened,
since it involved matters
important to all of you.
The chest, Mr. D'Arville, please.
A book?
It seems to be a personal diary.
And a note.
"I speak to you from the grave."
"In the sanctuary of my coffin,
I can state certain facts
which I could not do
while I was alive.
If I had attempted to do so
before my death,
I would have been judged insane,
and my warning to mankind
would have gone unheeded."
Warning?
What do you know about this?
Nothing, I swear it, Captain.
I did not know the Magistrate
even kept a diary.
That is the truth.
"Do not regard with cynicism
what you learn now.
Once you have heard
the contents of my diary,
the future will be in your hands.
God be with you,
for you will need His help."
Perhaps that is why the Magistrate
wanted you to be here.
Please, Mr. D'Arville, the diary.
September 17, 1886.
The strange events
which occasion me to begin this diary
started three days
before the murderer Louis Girot
was to go to the guillotine.
And police captain Rennedon
came to my chambers at the tribune.
Oh, Captain.
Is Magistrate Cordier busy?
He's just come from the court.
Come in.
Captain Rennedon, sir.
Oh, tell him to come in.
- Well, Robert.
- Simon.
This is a pleasure,
unless, of course,
you've brought me trouble.
I don't think I have,
considering your endless studies
of the criminal mind,
which I'll never understand.
It concerns Louis Girot.
He wants to talk to you.
Oh, does he want to change
the testimony he gave at the trial?
A strange fish, Girot.
It's hard to tell what he wants.
Well, he goes to the guillotine
in three days.
Perhaps it's his conscience.
A confession?
Maybe. It is possible.
As you say, he is a strange fish.
Girot murdered four people,
without motivation.
He didn't know any of them.
He didn't rob them.
He just killed.
Yes, the case is most perplexing.
Which means that you're curious
enough to see him.
To me, a thief is a thief,
a murderer is a murderer.
Life is much simpler that way.
- Shall we go?
- Yes.
There we are.
I'd better go in with you.
No, he might talk more
if we were alone.
All right, I'll wait here.
Guard.
Magistrate. Cat-flier,
thank you for coming.
It's the only hospitality
I can offer you.
Captain Rennedon believed
you might be ready
to make a statement, Girot.
A statement? Perhaps.
But what is it you want me to say?
Something I did not say at the trial?
If there is truth in it.
Can't you understand, Magistrate?
I told the truth at the trial.
I swear to you.
It was something that...
that used me.
Just as if it took my body
and made me murder.
Please, Girot, you seem to be
a man of some intelligence.
And in three days, my intelligence
will be chopped off at the neck.
Do you think
that I would go on lying,
knowing that I'm going to die?
But a man doesn't kill four people
without reason.
It was a thing that possessed me
that had the reason.
It lives on evil
and grows stronger and stronger.
Please, Girot, sit down.
I didn't even know until afterward
that I had killed.
It had control of my mind.
I had no will of my own.
It forced me to murder.
I couldn't accept
this testimony before.
Do you expect me to believe it now?
I had never thought
that hatred is evil.
- Hatred is evil.
- But that's in you.
And it used that to feed on my will
until it owned me.
Girot, I'm sorry, I had hoped
you'd be able to give me some...
But do you know why
I never asked for a new trial?
I want to die.
Because so long as I live,
the thing can make me kill again.
Girot, what is it?
Your eyes...
It can even make me...
....kill you!
Girot!
Guard!
He tried to kill me.
I warned you, murderers,
they're all the same.
Humanity would be much better off
without them.
Call the doctor, hurry!
Is he badly hurt?
There'll be no need
to chop in the guillotine.
Dead?
But it was so sudden.
One moment he was
completely rational, and then...
This is terrible, Robert, I...
If anything, I wanted to help him.
You had to defend yourself.
It was an accident.
Besides, I'd say you did help him.
This is a much easier way to die.
For the next two days,
I returned home
from my work at the court
with the death of the murderer Girot
still on my mind.
Despite Rennedon's assurance
of my innocence,
somehow the accident
still disturbed me,
and I could not rid myself
of the depression
that weighed so heavily.
- Good evening, sir.
- Good morning, Pierre.
Sir, I'll tell you Louise's secret.
She's preparing your favorite dinner,
baked lamb!
Oh, that's fine, but I...
I think I need a cognac before.
- In the study, please.
- Yes, sir.
Well, Kiki, you're in fine voice.
You must have been practicing
all clay.
And just because you've been
so industrious,
you, too, are going
to have a special dinner.
There you are.
Pierre!
Sir.
Why did you put this back in here?
I...? But I haven't even seen it
since you...
Would I do such a thing?
But it was hanging there
on the wall, Pierre.
Who's been in the house?
Only Louise and myself.
Pierre, what is it?
What has happened?
I... I'm not sure.
You remember the large photograph
of Mrs. Cordier and the boy?
Oh, the one that used to be
in the study?
It was back there tonight.
But how could that be?
It was put away in that trunk
with the other things.
Yes.
"Hatred is Evil."
Those were Girot's words.
Sir?
Pierre.
Somebody must have been up here.
First, the picture, and then...
then the writing on the pedestal.
Writing?
Yes, in the dust there.
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"Diary of a Madman" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/diary_of_a_madman_6877>.
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