Lost Souls
FADE IN ON:
Black screen
SOUND OS -- a CHOKED BACK BREATH, GASPING, lungs looking for
air, the struggle for life and we --
FLASHCUT TO:
INT. LIMBO/WATER - ANOTHER TIME
GASPING for BREATH continues, more relentless, harder,
heavier and into the FRAME we SEE fragments, slowed into
special motion, dreamlike, surreal:
Dirty blonde hair lifts and tumbles;
Bubbles POP through the murky water;
A hand and then its attached arm swims, in trouble, trying to
climb;
And then floats as if disembodied, momentary;
The SWIMMER drifts, then a brief effort twisting, signs of
struggle;
A leg pushes off the nothingness, threatened, an impossible
fight;
And the claustrophobic GASP, a last chocked back BREATH as
other sounds begin to bleed in: the CRACKLE of a RADIO, a few
VOICES MURMURING and then more clearly --
WOMAN'S VOICE (O.S.)
Jesus, please... Jesus...
The water blurs opaque, into a murky veil of illusion and we
DISSOLVE TO:
INT. FORD FIESTA - MORNING
The cracked windshield of a blue Ford Fiesta. The clouded
form of the drowning SWIMMER is replaced by a small plastic
day-glo cross that sways as the Fiesta is lifted up on a tow
truck hoist. A PARAMEDIC jogs over to the car as
PARAMEDIC (O.S.)
Hold it, hold on...
The Fiesta stops its ascent. The passenger side door opens
and the Paramedic reaches in and snares the bopping cross.
EXT. CITY STREET - MORNING
The Paramedic carries the plastic symbol over to a middle
aged woman who's sitting on a stretcher, wearing a foam neck
brace and looking totally relaxed. This minor fender-bender
is an ignored sideshow on a quiet commercial street.
As the woman reclaims her crucifix, a lanky MAN strides by,
over-coated against the fall weather. We FOLLOW the MAN as
he rounds the corner.
EXT. ANOTHER CITY STREET - MORNING
And as he walks on, he gazes out at a small Catholic Church
ahead.
St. Ursula's is a modest seminary sitting adjacent to the
Church. And just in front, behind a chain link fence, is:
An asphalt playground used by the Church's pre-school
program. A group of CHILDREN play there in happy confusion,
watched by TWO FEMALE DAY-CARE WORKERS.
EXT. PLAYGROUND - MORNING
One of the day-care workers alternately pushes TWO KIDS on
the swings, using one hand. In her other hand, she holds a
cigarette. Her clothes are worn, her sneakers frayed. A
simple gold cross hangs loosely from her neck. She's got
ancient holes in her ear lobes from another, earlier time,
but no longer any earrings. This is MAYA LARKIN. The kids
she's pushing are singing "Frere Jacques" as they soar up and
down on the swings.
The second day-care worker, more nicely dressed, shoots Maya
disapproving glances as she gives her swinging child modest
pushes.
A Latino BOY walks up to Maya, both his shoes are untied and
his jacket's unzipped. He points to his feet.
MAYA:
(with mock severity)
Look at you.
She moves away from the swings, puts out the cigarette and
stoops down, tying his shoes. After she finishes, Maya
watches him run back into the throng. He dashes past the
LANKY MAN, standing just ten feet away. A powerful figure,
CLAUDE LAREAUX is in his sixties. A stern, heavy expression
glances his face.
Maya stands back up slowly, looking at him, a more serious
expression on her face now. She tosses her cigarette as we:
SMASH CUT TO:
EXT. RURAL ROAD - MORNING
A non-descript Chrysler New Yorker as it winds its way down a
rural road.
INT. CHRYSLER MOVING - MORNING
The car's driver is a fleshy man in his forties named JOHN
TOWNSEND. He's anxious, a nail-biter, with the worn hands of
a worker. Townsend's slightly nerve-wracked, but trying to
settle it all inside.
Maya touches a fore-finger across her upper lip, warm, she
moves forward, covering heat vents with a cupped hand,
uncomfortable, then finally flipping off the heat altogether,
which makes a final WHOOSHING GASP. She POWERS OPEN the
electronic window, a rough hum as...
CLOSE ON:
Lareaux, in the back seat watching her. Seated next to
Lareaux is a dark haired, kind looking man in his 30's,
JEREMY.
Maya straightens the cuffs of her shirt sleeves - first the
right, then the left. Then she repeats it all. Townsend
notes the repetitive movement.
And the RADIO is ON in the B.G.:
RADIO DJ #1
So it says here in today's news that
science is looking for a lost minute of
daylight.
RADIO DJ #2
Yeah, what's that all about? They have
satellites now that can read our ATM
receipts from outer space, but no one
knows how we lost a minute of sunlight?
RADIO DJ #1
When they find that minute...
Townsend FLIPS OFF the radio. There is an excruciatingly
loud pause as everyone in the car sits quietly. Then Maya
turns sideways, leaning towards the backseat, and whispers to
Lareaux:
MAYA:
(muffled by ROAR of passing
truck)
Why are you doing this to me?
LAREAUX:
I know, Maya, but you'll understand when
you see this man. I really need your
strength.
Maya silently acknowledges his remark.
LAREAUX (CONT'D)
(subbed, in French)
Ensemble pour toujours quio qu'il
arrive.
Maya reaches over, putting a soft hand on Townsend's knee.
MAYA:
Good seeing you again.
TOWNSEND:
Whish the circumstances were different.
As Maya turns back around in her seat, Lareaux looks up, sees
Townsend's dart of worry in the rear view.
EXT. KINGS COUNTY MENTAL HOSPITAL - MORNING
Institutional 50's architecture. Two-story building on
picturesque grounds. The Chrysler pulls up to the gate.
INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR - MORNING
Lareaux, his overcoat open, walks down the dim corridor. We
now see he's a priest. He's wearing a black cassock with a
waist-high surplice (belt) and a narrow purple stole. He
carries a Bible. Townsend, Maya and Jeremy are right beside
him. We see Jeremy is also a priest. Townsend is carrying a
hard, black leather suitcase.
Large windows, bordered by huge pillars, circumscribe the
never-ending corridors. Thick doors line the walls, each
with a tiny observation window, filled in with octagonal wire
patterns. The foursome avoids looking directly at any of
those windows.
They pass other rooms, doors wide open, lined with several
beds each separated by worn curtains.
INT./EXT. SECOND CORRIDOR - MORNING
Sitting next to a door on this corridor is the hospital's
Chief Resident Psychiatrist, DR. LESLIE ALLEN. She's casual,
calm and intelligent. A mature woman in her late 50's, still
attractive, at peace with herself. As she sips a cup of
peppermint tea, she glances outside, through a window
opposite her chair, at a huge old tree, the antithesis of the
sterile, prison-like environment inside. She finds ways to
remain grounded in this place.
As Lareaux and company approach, Dr. Allen switches her gaze
and --
LAREAUX:
(hands over a document)
Your court order, Dr. Allen.
DR. ALLEN
(standing, makes transition)
You know I'm not comfortable with this.
LAREAUX:
But your patient is legally entitled to
it.
DR. ALLEN
This patient has been plagued with
temporal lobe seizures.
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"Lost Souls" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/lost_souls_902>.
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