The Long Walk Home
- PG
- Year:
- 1990
- 97 min
- 349 Views
Her name was Odessa Cotter.
I called her Dessie.
As best as anyone knows, she was
the first woman to rock me to sleep.
There wasn't anything
extraordinary about her, but,
I guess there's
always somethin'...
extraordinary about
someone who changes...
and then changes
those around her.
That's me.
- Morning, Mary Catherine.
- I was only seven years old.
Excuse me, Odessa.
I didn't mean to run you down.
- Is that a car or a boat?
- It's a piece of sausage.
- You tell her, sweetness. - Odessa,
we're having a cocktail party tonight,
so I'm sending you to Oak Park
with Mary Catherine...
- just as soon as Claudia gets here.
- Yes, ma'am.
Honey.
- Look what you did. Boop. Gotcha.
- Has anyone seen my racket?
- Oh, I know where it is.
- Bye-bye.
- Bye.
- Oh, my clubs.
- I wanna cut something.
- Not today, young lady.
Ah, your hands are sticky.
- Oh, she's been beside herself for weeks.
- That's 'cause you never discipline her.
- Where are you going?
- One guess, Sherlock.
- Trey and I are playing at the club.
- Oh, well.
- I wanna see Trey's car.
- Here are my clubs, honey.
- If you can get 'em to the pro shop.
- I'm givin' a party tonight.
Catch Sara.
She's on her way to the club.
I can't play with the grips like that.
Thank you, sweetie.
- I'll see you at 6:00, huh?
- See you at 6:
00.Odessa, just have 'em
waitin' out here at 3:00.
- I should be back from the beauty parlor
and Junior League by then. - Yes, ma'am.
- You be good, Mary Catherine.
- I will.
Bye!
Feel a tickle comin'.
Go on.
Y'all come on now.
It's time to eat.
Hey!
Hey!
What you doin' here?
Can't you hear me, n*gger?
What are you doin' in this park?
Just takin' care of
Mrs. Thompson's...
Don't give me any of
that mealy-mouthed crap!
Now, this park
is whites only,
and that means n*ggers like you best
answer with "yes, sir" when spoken to.
I don't care who
you're takin' care of!
You don't understand
nothin', do you?
Go on. Get your stuff together
and get on out of here!
Come on, Mary Catherine.
Get your friends. We got to go.
I never heard such
nonsense in all my life.
Let me just see about this.
Commissioner Sellers, please?
Mrs. Norman Thompson.
Well, would you tell
Clyde Sellers...
that one of his policemen threw my
nine-year-old daughter out of Oak Park?
He knows who I am.
- I really appreciate you coming by
this afternoon. - Oh, not at all, ma'am.
- I'm just sorry about the
misunderstanding. - Thank you.
Mrs. Cotter, I would like to apologize
on behalf of myself,
the police department,
and the city of Montgomery for
what happened today in Oak Park.
Hope y'all come back to
the park someday soon.
I hope I didn't cause you too
much trouble, Mrs. Thompson.
I'm sorry if I embarrassed your
maid in front of the children.
Thank you.
- Thank you very much.
- You're welcome, ma'am.
I regret that this happened
in the first place.
- Well, send the commissioner my best.
- I will, ma'am.
Shh.
Y'all come on inside.
Alabama's got a small line,
but they're agile.
Oh, my God.
How's my little Boo-Boo?
Tunker's here.
Tunker.
Tunker, welcome.
- Hello, Norman.
- I'm glad you could make it.
Yeah.
It's a nice-lookin' party here.
- Yeah. We try. We do.
- Hello, Miriam.
- That a bartender?
- Yeah.
- Does I has to tip him?
- Well, being you're my baby brother,
why don't we just say that the
drinks are two bucks, all inclusive.
Thanks. Thanks. Hey, y'all lucky
to get a bartender at all.
The n*ggers are all
movin' to Philadelphia.
- Why's that? - 'Cause they hear
there ain't no work in Philadelphia.
- I don't get it.
- Honey, you never get jokes.
What?
Tunker, don't be so loud
this close to the bar.
- Oh, he didn't hear me.
- You better be careful.
She'll have you out there
apologizin' to him.
What's this?
- Nothin'. It was just somethin' stupid,
that's all. - I'd like to know.
Go on.
Tell him.
Some young policeman
threw our maid out of Oak Park.
Mary Catherine and her friends were
right there, and he was extremely rude.
So I called up Clyde Sellers,
and he had him come out and apologize.
Well, what were you doing sending
your maid into that park anyway?
Tunker, she was takin'
care of the children.
But you shouldn't have the poor fellow come
out and apologize to a n*gger, Miriam.
That's plain old wrong.
Tunker, it's not like she was parading
her own children around the park,
for heaven's sakes.
And you know,
I did grow up with a maid,
and I've had them all my life, and I know
what's right and I know what's wrong.
And I will not have my judgment impugned
by some wet-behind-the-ears patrolman...
or by you.
Excuse me.
Oh, hi, Liz.
How are you?
She's a hellcat, Norman.
I always thought so.
Mr. Sandman
Bring me a dream
Make him the cutest
that I've ever seen
My world was a bubble
when I was seven.
Wars could have been going on
outside our front door,
and I would have been
all the happier.
Thank you, darling.
- In a way, a war was about
to start in Montgomery. - Hey!
- A war of wills...
- Give that back!
in the cradle of
the Confederacy.
- It began on a crisp December day.
- Hey!
Give it back!
Give it back.
Give it back!
Mama!
Where you at?
What you comin' in here
screamin' like a banshee about?
A lady gave these out
to everybody after school.
I'll read it to you.
"This is for...
Monday the"...
Boy, you can't read. We're gonna
die of consumption waitin' for you.
- Can so! Give it back! - Franklin, give
him the paper and let him read it.
Watch it.
"Another Negro woman has
been arrested and thrown in jail
because she refused to get up
out of her seat on the bus...
for a white person
to sit down.
It is the second time
since the Colvin case...
that a Negro woman has been
arrested for the same thing.
This has to be stopped. "
"We're therefore asking
every Negro...
to stay off the buses Monday
in protest of the arrest and trial.
Don't ride the buses to work,
to town, to school...
or anywhere on Monday.
You can afford to stay
out of school for one day,
if you have no other
way to go except by bus.
You can also afford to stay
out of town for one day.
If you work,
take a cab or walk.
- Please, children"...
- I heard about that last night.
- That woman was Miss Parks.
- Rosa Parks?
Yep. They had to bail her out
of jail for sittin' in the bus.
- See, the problem is...
- I'll tell you what the problem is.
I ain't never seen people get so
worked up over a piece of paper.
- I think it's dumb.
- I think you're dumb!
- Shut up, Franklin.
- I bet nobody rides the bus.
- Franklin, sit up.
- Well, if that don't get all.
Here we are without a car,
and somebody tellin' us not to ride the bus?
Theodore and Franklin ready
to follow along like lap dogs.
If that ain't cuttin' your
nose off to spite your face.
She's mad 'cause she ride the bus
out to Newtown on Saturday,
- to see that boy she think like her.
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"The Long Walk Home" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_long_walk_home_20732>.
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