O. Henry's Full House
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1952
- 117 min
- 439 Views
Hey, Charlie. Your lawyer's here
with the bail money.
Tell him I ain't in.
You're what?
You heard me.
Tell him I ain't in.
That man with the pencil
is the real star of this picture.
He was a writer-
many kinds of a writer:
A social critic, a humorist
and a technician.
His name was
William Sidney Porter...
but you'll remember him
by his pen name.
That's part of our language now-
O. Henry...
I'm a writer too.
My name is John Steinbeck.
a writer should be read, not seen.
But O. Henry's dead.
He can't speak for himself.
I wonder if he would
if he could.
Remember O. Henry.'s safecracker,
Jimmy Valentine?
Little boys still want to grow up to be like
the Cisco Kid, the Robin Hood of the West.
Our folklore is full of O. Henry. -
his courage and his gaiety and his people.
He wrote so many good stories,
it's hard to choose.
- Here's one in point.
- "The Cop and the Anthem." You wanna hear it?
"When wild geese
honk high of nights...
and ladies without fur coats
grow kind to their husbands...
then you may know
that winter is near at hand...
and that the time has come to resolve oneself
into a Committee of Ways and Means...
to provide against
the coming rigors.
Lf, in addition, one is a denizen
of the city's parks...
like our good friend
Soapy here...
the need is not only great, but a state
of real emergency may be said to exist. "
Yes, Officer. Certainly.
At once.
Good morning,
Mr. Throckmortonl
Ah, good morning,
Truesdale.
- Kind of chilly, ain't it?
- Bracing, my boy. Bracing.
Have you made any plans
for the winter yet, Mr. Throckmorton?
- You may call me Soapy, Horace.
- Thank you, sir. Have you?
- Naturally.
- You ain't thinkin' of going to jail again, are ya?
- And why not?
- Because jails ain't what they used to be.
They're lettin' 'em
run down something awful.
They say almost anybody
can get in 'em nowadays.
My dear fellow, you must not listen
From long experience,
l can assure you that our fair city boasts...
of no finer institution
than its penal system.
What is more to the point, I am a man
of simple, if discriminating, tastes.
Three months in jail,
safe from wind and snow...
and the bludgeons
of the blue-coated minions of the law.
Good morning, Officer.
Three months, I say...
uh, of assured bed, board
and congenial company...
at the city's expense
are all that I ask of life.
I don't know, Soapy.
To me, jail's jail.
##[Small Band,
People Singing]
I'm, uh, considering
Florida myself.
Florida, that crass, unspeakable place,
the Coney Island of the tropics?
Fit only for millionaires and reluctant
witnesses? No, my friend.
For 15 years now,
a hospitable, luxurious...
well-heated cell has been
my winter quarters.
I would not swap one night
of it for a full season at Palm Beach.
that these people run...
some nice places downtown
for dependents like us.
Charity? No, thank you. I'll take
the law over philanthropy any day.
For every benefit received
at the hands of charity, one must pay-
If not in coin, at least in humiliation
of spirit.
For every bed,
there is the toll of a bath.
Nor, may I add,
does the law insist on prayer...
morning, noon and night.
How are you going
to work it this year, Soapy?
my friend.
Wait here.
- Say, look here! That's my umbrella!
- Oh, it is, is it?
- Yes, l-
- Suppose you call a policeman and tell him that.
Go on. Call him.
There's one
at the corner.
Why don't you call him
and tell him I took your umbrella?
- If you don't, I will. Officer-
- I'm sorry, but you know how these things happen.
I picked it up in a restaurant this morning,
by mistake, of course.
If you recognize it as your umbrella,
l hope you'll excuse me.
Dirty crook.
There are other ways, my friend, one of these
being first to satisfy the inner man.
Shall we go?
No, no, no. Ah.
What are you gonna order,
Soapy?
How 'bout some, uh, roast mallard duck
to begin with...
accompanied by a bottle of Chablis wine,
provided the year and vintage are right.
- Duck for breakfast?
- Breakfast, by all means.
After which, perhaps, uh, a Camembert,
coffee and, unquestionably, a cigar.
Under the circumstances, I would think
a dollar cigar would be just about right.
A whole dollar
for one cigar?
My dear fellow, upon such occasions as this,
one cannot afford to be niggardly.
Wait for me there
on the curb.
- Yes, sir?
- Cigar, please.
- Yes, sir. Any particular brand, sir?
- Your best.
Yes, sir.
- Enjoy your breakfast, sir?
- The duck was slightly overdone.
I do suggest you speak
to your chef about that.
- Oh, yes, sir. Certainly, sir.
- It's inferior. Is this your choice brand?
- Yes, sir.
- It is?
- Allow me, sir.
- Will there be anything else, sir?
- Just my check, please.
- Yes, sir. The check.
Yes, sir.
Check coming up.
It may interest you
to know, my good man...
that I and the minutest
coin of the realm are total strangers.
- Uh, how's that?
- I said I was broke.
Don't just stand there with your adenoids
showing. Go and call a cop.
- What's the matter?
- He says he isn't going to pay for it.
- He hasn't got any money.
- No money?
No money.
- Come on, you-
- Come on, you thief!
- What do you think, coming in here-
Oh! What are you
doing to that man?
- He- He hasn't any money.
- After eating everything on the menu too.
- Is this true?
- They neglected to add...
that I also ordered
a dollar cigar.
Although I must say that any resemblance
between it and tobacco is purely coincidental.
- A cop will know what to do with his kind.
- Never mind. Let him go.
- Let him go?
- You heard what I said. It's on the house.
- You stay out of this. Nobody asked your opinion.
- Poor devil's probably starving.
Get him outside as quietly as you can.
I don't want any trouble.
Trouble? You don't want
any trouble?
Listen, you nincompoop.
I don't want any of your charity.
I am a citizen.
I stand on my constitutional rights!
Do you understand me? Arrested!
- Outside!
- No! You can't do this to me!
Have me arrested, you dogs!
Have me arrested!
- Soapy!
- What happened?
- I've been double-crossed.
- Are you hurt?
- Physically, no.
- Didn't work, eh?
- Due to circumstances beyond my control, no.
However,
I'm not discouraged.
Two battles lost does not mean
that the war is lost.
It only means that some other way than
through the stomach must be thought of.
- Shall we leave this loathsome neighborhood?
- Take this with you!
- Are you hurt?
- No, thank you.
Gosh. Your umbrella.
Are you all right?
for this banana.
Oh, I'm sorry, sir.
- What was that?
- Call the police!
- Police!
- Who threw it there?
- I did.
- Which way did he go?
- There! There he goes!
- Hold that man!
- Hey, wait a minute. I did it!
Hey, come backl
l did itl
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"O. Henry's Full House" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/o._henry's_full_house_15055>.
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