Norma Rae
- PG
- Year:
- 1979
- 114 min
- 962 Views
Ain't no miracle bein' born
People doin' it every day
Ain't no miracle growin' up
People just grow that way
So it goes like it goes
Like the river flows
And time, it rolls right on
And maybe what's good
Gets a little bit better
And maybe what's bad gets gone
Bless the child of a workin' man
She knows too soon who she is
And bless the hands of a workin' man
He knows his soul is his
So it goes like it goes
Like the river flows
And time, it rolls right on
And maybe what's good
Gets a little bit better
And maybe what's bad gets gone
Yeah, it goes like it goes
Like the river flows
And time keeps rollin' on
And maybe what's good
Gets a little bit better
And maybe what's bad
Gets gone
That's all you're eating
for lunch? An apple?
I'm dieting.
I got to keep my strength up.
I put these preserves up myself.
Sunday, Russell and I put up
over 60 quarts of peaches.
What did you do over
the weekend, Norma?
I soaked my feet.
I saw you in town Sunday.
Your friend drives
a mighty big car.
If you'd looked on the motel
register, you'd seen my name, too.
It's none of m business.
Mama, you haven't opened
up your sack yet.
Mama, aren't you hungry?
Mama?
Mama, you feeling all right?
Mama?
Mama, can you hear me?
Mama?
Mama!
Mama, come on. Come on.
She didn't hear one word I said!
You know that happens.
Well, it doesn't happen to my mama!
It'll pass off.
It's just temporary.
That makes it OK!
She's only deaf all day!
She can get another job.
What other job in this town?
I'll give her a note.
They'll send her home.
Come on, Mama.
They don't care anything about you.
You all right out there?
I'm fine.
You're going to get all bitten up.
I'll be in. Just a minute.
Well...
I'm going to let this pot soak.
There's one soaking from breakfast.
Now it's got company.
Hey, you kids.
10 more minutes of this junk,
then do your homework.
I did it.
Unsatisfactory in
lettering and reading,
and your numbers aren't too good.
You haven't done much homework.
- Shh!
- Shush! I'll shush you.
What are you getting fixed up for?
I'm going into town.
What do you need in town?
Things.
OK. I'll drive you in.
You got Bonanza on next.
I'll miss that. It's
the same every week.
I'm going to J.C. Penney's,
buy myself some panties and a white
cotton brassiere, size 32-B.
If you want to sit outside
the dressing room
and have the ladies look
at you, then come on.
No, ma'am.
You coming straight back?
No.
I'm going to the drugstore,
and a Cosmopolitan magazine.
Mm-hmm. Then you coming home?
Yeah. I'll be so tired
from all the excitement,
I'll be coming home.
Hi.
Mr. Witchard?
That's right. Vernon Witchard.
Who are you?
My name is Reuben Warshovsky.
Warshovsky. What kind
of name is that?
The kind you have to spell for
telephone operators and headwaiters.
What do you want?
I'd like a room with a mill family.
What for? We got a hotel,
a motel with 36 rooms.
I want to get to know
some mill hands.
Why is that?
I'll tell you.
I just got into town
about an hour ago.
Hi. How are you?
Right away, the police chief
was saying, "Who are you?"
So I told him I'm a
labor organizer.
I've come to put a union in
the OP. Henley Textile Mill.
He said, "The hell you are, boy!"
He was dead right.
You people are Communists,
agitators, crooks, or Jews,
or all four rolled together.
You make folks lose their jobs,
get their heads busted...
Excuse me, sir.
How much do you make an hour?
I make $1.33 a frame.
When was your last
cost-of-living raise?
I haven't had that.
With today's inflation,
that makes you a schlemiel.
You calling me some kind of name?
You're underpaid.
You're overworked.
They're shafting you right
up to your tonsils.
You need me, sir.
If you run real fast,
you'll get to your car
before my dog bites you.
We ain't even got a dog.
You don't need one.
Hey. How you doing?
Do you have any vacancies?
Yes.
Hi.
Hey.
Friendly little town you got here.
So far I've been told
to shove off, get off, and go away.
Oh, it's OK.
Make sure they spray
your room for roaches.
You got roaches down here?
I'm very familiar with roaches.
Do you have a room with a view?
You got the back alley
or the parking lot.
Which?
Give him 31, Alston.
Can't hear the drunks
from in there.
I'll be back this way next
Wednesday after dinner.
I'm having dinner
with my wife's folks.
Tonight was the last time, George.
You don't say, Norma Rae.
Well, now, isn't that
a surprising turn?
No. Been coming on for some time.
You know something funny?
I didn't notice it.
Didn't you get your steak dinner
and your box of pralines?
Didn't you come three times in
a row in that bed over there?
I wasn't counting.
Ha ha ha!
Well, well, well.
Looks like I don't know what it
takes to satisfy you these days.
It just doesn't sit well
with me anymore, George.
You got your wife, your
two kids in high school.
There's a lot of gossip.
I got my two kids.
I don't know.
It just doesn't make me feel good.
You're here to make me feel good.
I'm not trotting down here anymore.
Why, you hick.
You got dirt under
your fingernails.
You pick your teeth
with a matchbook.
What the hell are you
good for, anyway?
You come outta that factory,
you wash under your armpits,
you come on down here and
spread your legs for a poke,
and you're dumping me?
I heard a hell of a thump.
That was me, getting
throwed across the room.
I have some ice for that.
Sit down. Please.
You look all shook up.
Here, put this on.
I thought everybody down
South was Ashley Wilkes.
You lie down with
dogs, you get fleas.
Does this look broken to you?
Go like this.
No, I don't think so.
Do you want aspirin?
No, thanks.
Band-Aid? Valium?
You're a whole drugstore.
I'm a mild hypochondriac.
Keep that on it.
Ohh.
Me and men.
no right from the start.
But if it wasn't men, I don't
know what it would be.
You got a lot of books.
I'm terrified I'll wake up
in a motel room one morning
and have nothing to read
but the phone book.
She got big eyes.
Yeah, got a big brain, too.
What's her name?
Dorothy Finkelstein.
She's a hotshot labor
lawyer out of Harvard.
She must be your girlfriend if
you haul her picture around.
We sleep together
on Sunday mornings
and read The New York Times.
I guess that makes
her my girlfriend.
Hey.
- I'm Norma Rae Wilson.
- Reuben Warshovsky.
Nice meeting you.
My pleasure. Keep
that on your nose.
I'm sorry about my daddy.
He got a short fuse.
My credentials keep me
out of a lot of places.
But once in a while,
someone puts me in
their best bedroom
and treats me like a cousin.
- Ha ha ha!
- What?
That sure as heck
wouldn't be my daddy!
You a Jew?
I beg your pardon?
Are you a Jew?
Born and bred.
I never met a Jew before.
How you doing?
I heard you all had horns.
Circumcised, yes. Horns, no.
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"Norma Rae" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/norma_rae_14933>.
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