The Patriot
FADE IN:
CREDITS OVER:
EXT. SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTRYSIDE - DAY
Woodlands. Beautiful. Untamed. Soaring old-growth elms
arch over riverside maples along the shores of the gently
curving, deep-water Santee River.
SUPERIMPOSITION:
SOUTH CAROLINA:
April, 1776
Upstream, the swamps. Beautiful. Hundreds of BIRDS SING.
Shafts of sunlight pierce the canopy, cutting through the
hanging moss and kudzu, falling onto soft, swaying ferns
covering the high ground.
The water is clear, with fields of floating lily pads,
each with a stark white flower rising from it.
SUPERIMPOSITION:
TRUE STORY:
A farm built between the banks of the river and the deep
green of the swamps. Good, fertile land, hacked out of
the wilderness.
The perfectly tended fields are ripe with barley, hops,
alfalfa and tobacco. Two sturdy brothers, NATHAN, 13 and
SAMUEL, 12, work one of the fields, rhythmically swinging
scythes through the barley.
The house, built of native brick, is well-constructed and
well-maintained. There's a barn, a workshop and a forge.
It is a home of substance rather than wealth. On the
front porch, MARGARET, 11, pumps a butter churn while her
brother, WILLIAM, 6, watches.
GABRIEL, 18, strong and handsome, walks out of the woods
with a musket in his hand and a dozen game-birds over his
shoulder. At his side walks THOMAS, 14, also carrying a
musket.
INT. WORKSHOP - DAY
A perfect colonial workshop, fastidiously arranged with
every conceivable tool of the period. A foot-powered
lathe. A drop-forge. A lifting saw. Racks of tools,
planes, hammers, augers, drills, blocks, all hanging in
their places. All very well-worn.
FRANCIS MARION methodically works his lathe, turning a
piece of hardwood, shaving off tiny curls of wood with a
razor-sharp chisel. He's in his late-forties, strong and
weathered. His hands, though big and callused, handle the
chisel with a surgeon's precision. Self-educated and
self-sufficient, he has built himself, as he built his
farm, brick by brick, from the coarse clay of the earth.
A finely-made rocking chair, missing only the dowel on
which Marion is working, sits on the work table. The
chair is a work of art, thin and light, a spider-web of
perfectly turned wood, no nails, no glue.
Sitting on the woodpile, SUSAN, 4, a silent, stone-face
wisp of a child, watches her father.
Marion takes the piece of wood out of the lathe, carefully
fits it into the chair, inserts a peg and taps it into
place. Then he steps back and appraises his handiwork.
He picks up the chair and hooks the top rail to a scale,
countering with a three-pound weight. The chair floats.
Marion blows softly on the weight which sinks. Susan
nods, so far, so good. Marion puts the chair on the floor
and walks slowly around it, checking every angle.
Then, the acid test. He takes a deep breath and lowers
himself onto the seat, gingerly adding an ounce at a time.
Not a creak. He smiles and sits back with a sigh.
CRACK! THE CHAIR SPLINTERS under Marion's weight, DUMPING
HIM on his ass on a pile of broken wood.
MARION:
Damnation!
He picks up some of the wood, about to fling it across the
room but stops as Susan shoots him a disapproving look.
He calms himself.
MARION:
Sorry.
Susan gets down from the woodpile and puts the remains of
the chair in the fireplace. As she climbs back up to her
perch, Marion steps over to his wood rack, extracts a
fresh dowel, fits it into the lathe and starts all over
again.
END CREDITS.
EXT. WORKSHOP - DUSK
Marion leaves the workshop with Susan at his side. Nathan
and Samuel walk past, exhausted from their day in the
field.
NATHAN:
Father, I saw a post rider at the
house.
MARION:
Thank you. Did you finish the upper
field?
SAMUEL:
We got it all cut and we bundled
half of it.
MARION:
Those swimming breaks cut into the
day, don't they?
Marion walks on without waiting for a reply from his
contrite sons who jostle one another, trying to pass off
the blame. Gabriel and Thomas walk out of the barn.
GABRIEL:
Father, a post rider came from
Charleston. You have a letter
inside.
MARION:
Thank you. How's the spotted one's
milk?
THOMAS:
Better. She's near ready to calve.
Marion nods and motions for Susan to go with Gabriel and
Thomas to the house. She does so and Marion walks on
alone toward:
EXT. HILLTOP - POND BLUFF - SUNSET
The loveliest spot on the farm. A beautiful view of the
house, barns, river, fields and hills beyond. A
gravestone stands in the shade of a single apple tree. It
reads:
ELIZABETH PUTNAM MARION 1738-1773
Above her name is a carving of the night sky, at the
center of which is the NORTH STAR, steady and guiding.
Marion approaches. He gives himself a moment to look at
the grave, then he starts picking apples, speaking to the
gravestone in a quiet voice that is more matter-of-fact
than sorrowful.
MARION:
... and they bundled half... almost
no trace of the boys you knew...
A soft wind blows some dry leaves along the ground.
Marion pauses as if listening to a spoken reply.
MARION:
... no, she still hasn't spoken...
Margaret was her age when you... I
remember the time at the river when
we couldn't find Catherine... you
couldn't stop crying... and she was
asleep in the wagon the entire
time...
Marion pauses, remembering. The CRASH OF A PLATE
BREAKING, followed by the SOUND OF AN ARGUMENT rises from
the house below. Marion shakes his head with an
exasperated sigh.
MARION:
Your children.
He heads down the hill toward the house, now glowing from
the lights of candles and oil lamps.
INT. MARION'S HOUSE - EVENING
Pre-dinner chaos. Everyone talking at once. Marion's
seven children and his two family servants, ABIGAIL and
AARON, a middle-aged black couple, prepare dinner. Susan
silently watches from the stairs. Marion walks in.
MARION:
I smell turnips...
WILLIAM:
plate...
SAMUEL:
I did not...
MARGARET:
Dinner...
Marion hands the apples to Abigail and steps over to open
his mail and dispatches.
GABRIEL:
News of Boston, father?
NATHAN:
I hate turnips...
SAMUEL:
William knocked it right out of my
hands...
GABRIEL:
Father...?
MARION:
Samuel, William, both of you clean
it up...
Marion hands a packet of pamphlets to Gabriel and opens a
letter.
MARION:
The Assembly has been reconvened,
I've been called to...
Marion's children go wild.
MARGARET:
Charleston!
NATHAN:
We're going to Charleston!
SAMUEL:
When, father, when?
MARION:
We'll leave tomorrow...
The children ERUPT INTO CHEERS and THUNDER into the dining
room.
THE CHILDREN:
Charleston! We're going to
Charleston!
Marion and Gabriel exchange a stone-faced look. Then
Marion puts on a smile and inhales deeply.
MARION:
I love turnips...
Marion follows his children into the dining room.
EXT. MARION'S HOUSE - NIGHT
Quiet. The only sounds are the soft calls of a few
NIGHTBIRDS and the DRONE OF CICADAS. A faint light moves
through the downstairs, passing windows in the otherwise
dark house.
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"The Patriot" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 23 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_patriot_456>.
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