Jeopardy
- PASSED
- Year:
- 1953
- 69 min
- 142 Views
Vacation time in the United States
means traveling.
And traveling in the United States
is wonderful.
Fill your gas tank and hit the road.
The big rolling freeways
and the fantastic traffic patterns.
Monuments to a civilization
that moves on wheels.
There's a turnoff to everywhere...
... and you can go straight ahead too,
if you only know how.
Some people go to the mountains
or the shore...
... we packed two weeks' camping
equipment in a trailer and headed south...
... to a place I'd never seen.
And something happens to you when
you cross the border into another country.
It's exciting, even if it's only
the country next door.
Hello. Where do you going in Mexico?
We stay here in Tijuana tonight.
In the morning, we head south of Ensenada.
Born in the United States?
And you?
Thank you.
Tijuana is fun, like a carnival.
Strange people, strange words.
You name it, and they've got it.
It's a boomtown with tourists
for oil wells.
And if you want to build up
your sales resistance...
... well, this is the place.
Sombrero, seor?
- I never use them.
- No?
Shoes for the little boy?
- Post cards?
- No, thank you.
Spider? Very pretty. Look.
For the little boy.
Music?
- No, thanks.
- No?
Oh, horses, maybe. I know the man.
He make good deal for you.
Okay, boy. Just a minute.
Watch the camera.
Smile.
That's it, boy.
It'll be a lovely picture, seora.
You'll like it, you'll see.
Well, it's duty free.
Every time you save me money,
you cost me money.
You just don't understand
the simplest facts.
- Sexish.
- The simplest facts.
But don't they catch cold?
- Oh, no.
- For the little boy, maybe?
No, he's getting a little too old
for that sort of thing.
Post cards? Very pretty.
South of Tijuana, the highway settles down
to a single winding tape of asphalt...
You don't have to worry
which road to take. There's only one.
It's marked, "Mexico 1," and the sign
says, "Ensenada, 92 kilometers."
That's about 60 miles.
Say, honey...
...how about putting the top down
after we get out in the country?
- Won't blow too much.
- Sure, it's a wonderful idea.
It was a little foggy
when we got to Ensenada.
But even with the fog
it has something...
... with its quiet harbor,
... and a sign, "Bienvenidos."
That means welcome.
It's the place where you fill your gas tank,
check your tires. You'd better.
It'll be a long time
before you get another place to do it.
When you see a map, you see
what isolation you're heading into.
Tijuana, Ensenada up at one end,
and then 400 miles to La Paz...
... the only other town
at the other end.
In between, nothing but names.
Oh, picturesque names.
Mission Santo Toms,
Colonia Guerrero, El Rosario...
... but just names.
Ancient settlements and missions
no longer existing, ghost towns, ruins.
Below Ensenada, it's a road of dirt
and desolation.
A road of shifting sands
and bruising rocks...
... of quail that scoot
through clumps of cactus...
... and doves that rise in soft,
whirring clouds.
High adventure beckons
down this road...
... but never again will it beckon to me.
Turista pass.
Keys to the back.
You are Douglas Stilwin?
You are Mrs. Stilwin?
- This is your son?
- Yes.
He must be the boss, that fellow.
He's a captain,
or maybe even a colonel, I don't know.
Dad, what's going on?
Go ahead.
Say, Dad,
what was going on back there?
Well, I'll tell you, sonny. Somebody
probably lost a goat or a cow or something.
- Mexicans have a way of taking things big.
- Mexicans?
Why, you and Bobby acted as if you
hadn't seen a police car in your lives.
Oh, Mom, you always
treat me like a kid.
I wonder why.
- What was it really?
- Who knows?
Checking stolen cars, looking for contraband,
I don't know. What difference does it make?
- You could've asked.
- Never would've told me.
- How do you know?
- Four years in the Army. They never tell you.
Besides, I didn't want them to go
poking around in that zippered bag.
Why not?
Oh, Doug,
what did you bring this thing for?
- Is it loaded?
- Certainly not...
...but there's a clip of bullets in the case.
Helen, it's not a bad thing to have.
It is pretty desolate country down here.
You never know.
Never fired it once in the Army.
Thought we might pop off a can
or two, huh, Bobby?
You bet.
And maybe we'll need it for protection.
Who knows what perils
there are down here.
- Honey, we'll use it for target practice.
- Well, don't use me for the target.
What are you smiling about?
Nothing, nothing at all. I love you.
Well, I love you too,
but what are you smiling at?
Cut it out.
Will we get to the ocean in time
for lunch, Pop?
I hope so.
Gosh, we must have hit a nest
of rattlesnakes.
And they all landed in the radiator.
It's boiling again.
There's a place ahead
where we can pull off.
We'll get a chance to use
that five-gallon water can of ours.
- Well, that is...
- What's the matter, Mom?
Well, the fact is, it's empty.
What? Who was the vice president
Doug, I'm sorry. I forgot to tell you
to fill it at the last service station.
Gee, Mom, you didn't forget?
Yes, I goofed off,
but it's really no problem.
Of course not. We'll probably run into
a 50-pump gasoline station any minute.
We'll get plenty of water.
Why, I think I see one right up ahead
right now.
Where, Dad, where?
Pay no attention to your father, son.
He's just being humorous.
Dad, this is no time for jokes.
Why, we might be in perils.
- Are we, Mom?
- No, darling.
Look, "Garaje, water."
I live right.
Well...
...it may not be 50 pumps,
but we'll get some water.
Maybe we can even
get something to eat.
ice-cold glass of tea...
...breast of chicken salad, with just
a touch of lettuce and watercress.
Say, that's pretty good, Dad.
Oh, look, fiesta.
- That was two days ago.
- They should be back.
Takes them three days
to get over a fiesta.
- What's a fiesta?
- A feast day.
Feast day. Gee, I'm starved.
We'll have lunch at the beach.
If we ever get there.
We were looking for water, amigo,
remember?
- You look around the back, Bobby.
- Okay.
Let's see, tires, tubes, stuff like that.
- I've got some, I've got some.
- That's a good boy.
Least we can do for them.
See that rock formation up ahead?
Those funny-looking boulders?
- What about them?
- I remember them.
- We're getting closer.
- I'm glad we're getting close to something.
What a memory, Dad.
Look at the quail.
I suppose you recognize
some of them too.
Seems like only yesterday
Joe and I were scouting...
...Iooking for some of the best
fishing and hunting.
Those were the days. What an outing.
Tell about it, Dad.
Whatever became of Joe?
He probably never survived the outing.
Doug, are you sure
we're on the right road?
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"Jeopardy" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 19 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/jeopardy_11234>.
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