Scarecrows

Synopsis: Five people heist the Camp Pendleton payroll, kidnap a pilot and his daughter, who are forced to fly them to Mexico. Enroute a double cross has one of the thieves parachute with the loot into an abandoned graveyard surrounded by strange scarecrows. Two of the team jump after their loot and their former partner. Everything happens during the course of one very dark night.
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Director(s): William Wesley
Production: Effigy Films
  1 nomination.
 
IMDB:
5.6
Rotten Tomatoes:
50%
R
Year:
1988
83 min
Website
141 Views


Hot and hazy weather,

with temperatures reaching into the 90s,

is expected to continue

throughout the weekend

over most of the Southland.

WORZ news time, 12:00.

Good evening, I'm Don Herbert.

Tonight's lead story is the daring

and deadly paramilitary robbery

at Camp Pendleton.

It left three marines dead and

at least nine others critically wounded.

Earlier this evening,

a heavily armed commando unit

held up the payroll office at the base

and fled with $3.5 million.

The robbers exchanged gunfire

with military police

as they raced to a nearby airfield

and then escaped

in a twin-engine cargo plane.

The pilot and his teenage daughter

are believed to be held hostage

on board the Baja Air...

Turn that bloody radio off.

... was hijacked...

It's okay, Daxie. It's okay.

Here, keep it under radar.

You heard the man.

An intensive manhunt is

underway as marine helicopter units

track down the stolen craft

which was reported heading south,

presumably towards the border.

All right, I'll take care of it.

Hey, Roxanne.

- Where's the fire?

- Back here.

- Hey, somebody...

Bert's taking the money!

Stop shooting, Curry.

He tossed a grenade.

F***, it's somewhere in here.

I'll kill him.

- Where is it?

- Pull up! Pull up, we're too low!

Hold on.

- The grenade.

- Watch out, it's rolling back.

Jack!

Throw it out!

- The money?

- The money is gone.

Get ready to jump,

we're going after him.

- Where's the money?

- It's gone!

What happened to Bert?

He bailed with the money,

dumb ass.

I saw a house back there

where he jumped.

We'll be back, Bert.

Yeah.

We'll be back, Bert.

The plane? Where's the...

Wait, my grenade exploded.

I heard it.

All right, all right,

put it together.

The money. I was right behind it.

Then it dropped by these crosses,

like a graveyard.

Jesus, a scarecrow.

Bloody scarecrow.

I'll be damned, the graveyard.

The money's got to be there.

All right, the house.

There's gotta be a car or a jeep

or something there I can use.

Where the bloody hell...

Bingo!

My lucky night.

Bingo, my lucky night.

What the hell

is down there, Corbin?

Trees and bushes.

Great, let's find that house again.

That's where he'll go,

the simple f***.

I spotted it.

Closing 11 o'clock.

It's the house all right,

looks pretty dead.

Over there.

Hey, Bert, old buddy.

Reading me?

That's right, you no-good, double-crossing,

scum-sucking son of a b*tch.

We are alive.

Damn it, I can't believe it.

- Jack, what's wrong?

- I dropped my harmonica.

You can blow Bert's balls off.

Come on, let's find him.

All right, Bert. Now it's personal.

- Bang.

- I'm dead.

By the way, Bert, buddy,

we owe you a live grenade, pal.

We'll nail you up

like one of these scarecrows.

Then we're gonna burn you, Bert,

just like you burned us, motherf***er.

- Hold it, I saw a light.

- Where?

By the house, a car, maybe.

You're crow sh*t, Bert.

God to Bert,

your birthday's been canceled.

Hey, Corb,

hope you didn't forget your buffalo gun.

- She's right here.

- That's too cruel, man.

That's the gun

with the exploding shells.

And, Bert, this ammo is blessed.

So, when I blow your

ass away, buddy,

every piece of you is

going straight to hell.

Over there, the lights,

they're moving.

Where?

- Come in.

- It's a truck.

Southeast of you. It's gotta be Bert.

Move.

The cornfield.

He's going after the money.

Rox, your transmission's breaking up.

Curry, Jack, come in. Where are you?

Damn it. We're out of range.

Hey, Bert, you dumb f***,

there's only one road and we're on it.

This isn't exactly Route 66, is it?

Here, hold this, will you?

It says keep out.

Will you just hold this?

Come on out here, Bert,

you son of a b*tch.

I'm gonna rip your heart out

and feed it to you on a stick.

- Give me that.

- Here.

What's in there?

The Playboy Mansion.

- That's it?

- Scarecrows.

Scarecrows.

Jack, Curry, come in.

- We're here.

Bert's heading for the gate.

Are you guys on that road?

- Yeah.

- Well, stay on it.

He's gonna have to come

through you guys.

Here.

Coming to get you, Bert,

you son of a b*tch.

Good job.

Come on, Jack. Heaven can't wait for you.

Heaven?

Graveyard has gotta be on this road.

There. There it is.

Can't you fly this crate

any faster?

I'm in full throttle.

He picked up the money.

He's getting away.

You're pathetic.

Should I splatter your face

around the cockpit or what?

There he is. Swing around and get him.

Swing around again.

He's headed your way, guys.

Which way is that?

Behind us or in front of us?

Stupid a**holes.

Damn, he's turning off the road.

I'm coming down.

Look for a place to land.

This terrain's for sh*t.

We can't land down here.

We're landing.

- You'll never make it. Never!

- Kellie, stay out of this.

You know, Bert, we were kind of

hoping you were coming down that road

to give us back our money

and straighten things out,

but you let us down again.

Now you've gone too far, dirtball.

Yeah, Bert, I think I'm gonna

have to cut you out of my will.

God damn, now what?

The tank's full.

The f***ing thing's flooded.

What the...

No engine? Wait a minute.

This is impossible.

What is this?

Some kind of f***ing joke?

Listen up, guys. Bert's stopped

the truck. I can't tell what he's up to.

But he's on foot now,

about a half mile west of the house.

We're almost there.

I can smell him, he's toast.

No, take him alive. The first bullet

through his head is mine.

We're landing this sucker right now.

There's a field at 4 o'clock.

It may be long enough.

So, how's it feel, Bert?

I mean, it must be awful frustrating

to have to die

with all that money in your hands.

Yeah, real frustrating.

That money must be getting

awful heavy.

$3.5 million is a lot of bread

for one guy.

It ain't right to be so greedy.

All right, a**hole,

just hold it right there.

- You see him?

Shut up.

Oh, yeah, yeah. There he is.

Hey, Bert, we're gonna hang you up

like one of these scarecrows

and stuff you full of crow sh*t.

Hey, Corbin,

start bagging some crow turds.

He didn't hear you, man.

He's into his jungles and Rambo bullshit.

With his radio turned off, right?

Whoa, there he is again.

I got him on my scope. Don't move.

Stand still, Bert.

Just one second, it'll all be over.

Turn around, Bert.

I wanna shoot you in the back.

Over here.

Where is he?

He's coming toward us.

Keep coming, Bert.

You're heading right for me.

I don't even have to move.

Over here, Bert, towards your left.

- Pretty lousy shooting.

- Bert's aim always sucked.

Everything he did sucked.

Now we're both right behind you,

a**hole.

We got you covered, Bert,

from behind these scarecrows.

Put the gun down.

You're not going to hurt us.

Curry?

Jack?

Curry? Jack?

Look, you want the money? Take it.

Curry!

Jack! Take the money.

Please, don't kill me.

Who's he talking to, Curry?

Curry? Jack?

Look, take it.

- We don't want your money.

- We want your blood, Bert.

Do you want me to run?

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Richard Jefferies

John Richard Jefferies (6 November 1848 – 14 August 1887) was an English nature writer, noted for his depiction of English rural life in essays, books of natural history, and novels. His childhood on a small Wiltshire farm had a great influence on him and provides the background to all his major works of fiction. Jefferies's corpus of writings includes a diversity of genres and topics, including Bevis (1882), a classic children's book, and After London (1885), an early work of science fiction. For much of his adult life, he suffered from tuberculosis, and his struggles with the illness and with poverty also play a role in his writing. Jefferies valued and cultivated an intensity of feeling in his experience of the world around him, a cultivation that he describes in detail in The Story of My Heart (1883). This work, an introspective depiction of his thoughts and feelings on the world, gained him the reputation of a nature mystic at the time. But it is his success in conveying his awareness of nature and people within it, both in his fiction and in essay collections such as The Amateur Poacher (1879) and Round About a Great Estate (1880), that has drawn most admirers. Walter Besant wrote of his reaction on first reading Jefferies: "Why, we must have been blind all our lives; here were the most wonderful things possible going on under our very noses, but we saw them not." more…

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    "Scarecrows" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 24 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/scarecrows_17556>.

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