Swordfish
FADE IN:
INT. STARBUCKS COFFEE SHOP - MORNING
Three men sit at a window booth drinking coffee and
talking. Two of the men sit on one side of the table;
STANLEY is in his early thirties, AGENT ROBERTS, early
forties. Both wear suits, the younger's is fairly
expensive and well cut, the other's is polyester, enough
said. The MAN across, however, is quite different. He
is what they used to call a "cool-cat."
GABRIEL (MAN)
Take Dog Day Afternoon for
example. Arguably Pacino's
greatest performance, excepting
The Godfather, Part I, and
Scarface, of course. A
masterpiece of directing, easily
Lumet's best. The acting, the
script, cinematography, all top
notch. But, they didn't push the
envelope. What if in Dog Day,
Sonny really wanted to get away
with it? What if, and here's
where it gets tricky. What if
they'd started killing hostages?
No mercy, no quarter, meet our
demands or the cute blonde in the
bell bottoms gets one in the back
of the head, bam, splatter. What?
Still no bus?
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
2.
1 CONTINUED:
1GABRIEL (CONT'D)
How many innocent victims would
they let get sprayed across the
windows before the city reversed
its policy on hostage situations?
And this was 1976. No C.N.N., no
C.N.B.C., no M.T.V. No Internet.
Fast forward to the present, same
situation. Can you imagine the
feeding frenzy of the modern
media? In hours it would be the
top story from Boston to Budapest.
All caught in 150 millimeter zoom,
computer enhanced, and color
corrected. You would practically
taste the brain matter. Six
hostages die. Ten. Twelve.
Twenty. Thirty. Relentless. One
after another. All over a bus, a
plane, and a couple of million
dollars that were federally
insured.
He sits, letting the pictures sink in, then:
GABRIEL:
Just a thought. I mean it's not
really within the realm of
conventional cinema, but what
if...?
ROBERTS:
You know, this movie of yours, I
don't think it would have worked.
GABRIEL:
Really? How come?
ROBERTS:
(shrugs)
Audiences love happy endings.
GABRIEL:
Pacino escapes. With the money.
Boyfriend gets the sex change
operation. They live happily ever
after.
Stanley shakes his head.
GABRIEL:
No?
(CONTINUED)
3.
1 CONTINUED:
(2) 1STANLEY:
No.
GABRIEL:
Homophobia?
Stanley shakes his head.
STANLEY:
Bad guy can't win. It's a
morality tale. One way or the
other, he's gotta go down.
GABRIEL:
Oh, well. Life does tend to be
stranger than fiction.
(looking at watch)
Well, guys, gotta jet. This place
is kinda dead.
CAMERA PANS AROUND the coffee shop. Not a soul in the
place. We CONTINUE TO PAN AROUND 270 DEGREES TO the
front door, which is open. Outside the open doorway are
crouched a squad of heavily body-armored SWAT members,
packed together, and aiming automatic weapons inside.
ANGLE ON GABRIEL
GABRIEL:
Thanks for the coffee.
He gets up. In his left hand, which has been hidden by
the table until now, he is holding a strange-looking
spring-loaded grip. Gabriel is looking back at them.
Smiles.
GABRIEL:
Rene Descartes is sitting in some
bar in Paris. Bartender says,
'Hey, you want another drink?'
Descartes says, 'I think not.'
And disappears.
He smiles at his own joke, then turns and walks over to
the front door.
GABRIEL:
Move.
No one even twitches.
GABRIEL:
I won't ask again.
(CONTINUED)
4.
1 CONTINUED:
(3)He lifts up the device in his left hand.
1
ANGLE ON ROBERTS
who nods his head. The SWAT team moves back, lettingGabriel out of the coffee shop.
GABRIEL:
Thank you.
Gabriel looks back at Stan sitting in the booth.
GABRIEL:
Stanley... you coming?
Stan slides from the booth as Gabriel exits the coffee
shop -2
EXT. STARBUCKS COFFEE SHOP - DAY 2
SILENCE -- no sounds on the SOUNDTRACK.
Gabriel and Stanley stop just outside the doorway.
Gabriel dons a pair of hip little shades, then continuesacross the sidewalk and into the street.
He nonchalantly looks up. Suddenly the THUMP ofHELICOPTERS and the WAIL of SIRENS dominates the
soundtrack.
Pandemonium. HELICOPTERS RIP the sky, L.A. County PD anda bunch of news vultures. Squad cars block off both endsof the street while SWAT trucks, news vans, and lookyloos
are packed together into the distance.
Sharpshooters lean out of windows and snipers arepositioned on every open rooftop. Hundreds of weaponsare pointed at this man who saunters across the street asif he's on his way to Sunday service, without a care inthe world.
Slowly, Stanley follows Gabriel into the street.
Gabriel steps up on the far sidewalk, a huge armored busblocks most of the windows. He walks beside the bus,
under a huge "WORLD BANC" sign, and through the glassfront door, which shuts IN OUR FACE.
3 INT. BANK - CLOSEUP - GABRIEL - DAY 3
He turns away from the window and we FOLLOW him.
(CONTINUED)
5.
3 CONTINUED:
3The interior of the bank looks like New Orleans on Fat
Tuesday. Three Hummers sit in the middle of the floor,
surrounded by broken glass. Between them rests a brightred Ferrari F50 (Gabriel's).
All but one of the front windows of the bank, the one
with the door in it, has been welded over with 3/4 inchplate steel.
Over two dozen hostages lie face down on the floor, armscable-tied behind their backs. Something has been duct-
taped around their chests and each is wearing whatappears to be a dog collar.
The other occupants of the room are nine men. All of
whom would look as if they were attending the fashionevent of the year were it not for the automatic weaponseach one carries.
How we doin'?
GABRIEL:
One of the ARMED MEN finishes putting a collar on ayoung, normally good-looking-but-now-covered-in-mascara,
whimpering blonde girl.
MARCO (ARMED MAN)
Done.
Good.
GABRIEL:
Take her out.
SUPERIMPOSE:
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18 8:41:22...The front door opens and one of the suited men drags outthe pretty blonde from earlier. She is sobbing and is insuch grief she can't even walk.
On the sidewalk, the suited man, his automatic weaponslung, holds her up for everyone to see.
Gabriel grabs his cell and dials.
6 INT. STARBUCKS COFFEE SHOP - DAY 6
Roberts sits in the Starbucks which has been transformed
into a high-tech command center reading a newspaper.
(CONTINUED)
6.
6 CONTINUED:
6We cannot see the headlines. Federal and state officers
scramble around handling problems. The PHONE RINGS.
Assistant Director Bill Joy (A.D. JOY), an older-looking
guy who looks more like an accountant than an assistant
director of the FBI, is handed the phone.
A.D. JOY
Is everyone in position?
SWAT LEADER:
Almost, sir.
ROBERTS:
(looks up from
paper)
What are you doing?
We PAN AROUND.
A.D. JOY
(to SWAT LEADER)
Get her at your first opportunity.
SWAT LEADER:
(into mike)
High ground one and two. You
have a green light.
ROBERTS:
I've seen what this man is capable
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"Swordfish" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/swordfish_672>.
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