The Revenant

Synopsis: While exploring the uncharted wilderness in 1823, legendary frontiersman Hugh Glass sustains injuries from a brutal bear attack. When his hunting team leaves him for dead, Glass must utilize his survival skills to find a way back home while avoiding natives on their own hunt. Grief-stricken and fueled by vengeance, Glass treks through the wintry terrain to track down John Fitzgerald, the former confidant who betrayed and abandoned him.
Production: 20th Century Fox
  Won 3 Oscars. Another 86 wins & 181 nominations.
 
IMDB:
8.0
Metacritic:
76
Rotten Tomatoes:
80%
R
Year:
2015
156 min
Website
6,658 Views


FADE IN:

EXT. UPPER MISSOURI RIVER/1820'S - EVENING

ANGLE ON A SINGLE COTTONWOOD LEAF... brown and crisp...

clinging to its empty branch... the solitary sign of life on

an otherwise barren tree.

A gust of wind... the leaf breaks free... flutters down,

landing in the slow current of the Missouri. The last leaf

of the fall, taking its final journey south.

As it floats along the surface, rising and falling with the

current, all we can hear is the river's gentle movement...

the trickle of water... the splash of timid rapids... until

DISTANT VOICES invade this world... soft at first, but

growing louder... LAUGHTER... SINGING.

And then our leaf CRASHES INTO A WOODEN BOARD... the BOW OF A

BOAT. We hear the VOICES EVEN CLEARER... MEN'S VOICES, as we

rise up the bow... see it's a FLATBOAT BEACHED ON A SANDBAR

at the center of the river.

Beyond the flatboat are the voices... TWENTY MEN of the Rocky

Mountain Fur Company, making camp along the shore... hauling

wood, building campfires, pitching squares of canvas for

makeshift rooftops. And this camp is full of life because

these are some of the first men to ever see this untouched

wilderness... men with a whole new world just waiting for

them to claim their share.

EXT. CAMP - EVENING

CAPTAIN ANDREW HENRY, (late 20's), dressed in a buckskin

jacket with long fringe... thick belt pulled tightly around

his waist with two pistols and a knife hanging from it. He

stands out among the others... like an imposter pretending to

be a member of some exclusive club. He pulls off one of his

gloves... examines the BLOOD-FILLED BLISTERS lining his palm.

From across the camp, JOHN FITZGERALD, (40's), solid and

thick... dark eyes of a killer, watches Henry. He nudges

MACE BOONE, (40's), a thief in a previous life.

FITZGERALD:

Likely got a splinter. Can't

figure what to do without Mama here

to pull it out for him.

Boone chuckles... spits in Henry's direction.

2.

BOONE:

Need a doc, Captain?

Henry looks up... sees Fitzgerald and Boone grinning at him.

He slides his glove back on.

HENRY:

Gather more wood.

Fitzgerald waits for Henry to turn, then gives his back an

exaggerated salute.

FITZGERALD:

(under his breath)

Shame my Pap was a broken down

drunk. Else he could've bought me

a Captain's job too.

Boone snickers. Fitzgerald stomps his boot onto a branch,

easily snaps it into two easy-to-carry pieces.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

We got a plan for these fires,

Captain, or are we roastin' berries

all the way up to Fort Union?

HENRY:

Glass and the others will be back

with some game, Fitzgerald. Just

make sure you have the fires ready.

FITZGERALD:

My supper's in the hands of a

hermit n*gger, a kid and a dummy.

Hell, my belly feels full already.

Fitzgerald's boot CRACKS another branch... and when it does,

we hear the EXPLOSION OF A GUNSHOT.

CUT TO:

EXT. WILDERNESS - EVENING

And a CLOUD OF SMOKE surrounding the LONG BARREL OF AN

ANSTADT RIFLE.

The smoke fades, and at the other end of the rifle we see the

face of HUGH GLASS, (40's), African-American, one eye still

closed, as the other calmly stares down that barrel.

VOICE (O.S.)

Sh*t fire, you got him, Mr. Glass!

3.

Glass lowers the rifle, as PIG GILMORE, (30's), fat and

filthy, races past.

PIG (CONT'D)

Square as a barn door.

JIM BRIDGER, (17), young eyes that have already seen a lot,

nods to Glass as he follows Pig.

Glass watches Pig and Bridger trot through the trees to a

fallen ELK. Glass walks calmly after them, graceful in this

world... his rifle so comfortable in his hand it's like he

was born with it there. Pig crouches over the dead elk...

grins up at Glass.

PIG (CONT'D)

Right where you said he'd be.

BRIDGER:

But bigger than we figured. Gonna

be a load to haul back to camp.

PIG:

Have to split it up I reckon.

GLASS:

Yep. Bridger'll take the tail, and

Pig you haul the rest.

And Fitzgerald was right about Pig being a little slow,

because he just nods... pulls out his knife to cut the tail

off for Bridger.

Bridger and Glass exchange a smile... until Glass notices

something... steps over the elk, his eyes locked on the

ground beside it. He runs a finger over the dirt... touches

a broken twig.

BRIDGER:

Another one close by?

Glass doesn't answer... studies the track... feels the nearby

brush... inhales the scent from his hand. Bridger and Pig

watch him... exchange a confused glance. And then in a flash

of movement, Glass is on his feet, racing away.

PIG:

Hugh?

Glass just keeps running. Pig and Bridger chase after him.

CUT TO:

4.

EXT. CAMP - EVENING

The men building fires... laughing... enjoying themselves.

Boone on the outskirts, gathering branches.

CUT TO:

GLASS - TEARING THROUGH THE WOODS...

...dodging trees... leaping over fallen logs... loading his

Anstadt as he runs.

BRIDGER AND PIG - CHASING AFTER GLASS...

...but not as gracefully. Pig trips... slams to the

ground... scrambles back to his feet to continue on.

CUT TO:

BOONE - CARRYING AN ARMLOAD OF WOOD INTO CAMP...

...seeing other men playing cards. He stops along the edge

of camp, drops the wood to the ground.

BOONE:

No rule says I'm the only one

that's gotta gather this sh*t.

The other men don't even notice. Then an ARROW WHIZZES

THROUGH THE AIR from behind Boone... THWACK... it hits him in

the back of the neck... erupts out the front of his throat.

Boone stands frozen... confused... reaches up and grabs the

bloody arrow... finally drops to his knees. And that's when

a TRAPPER looks up... sees Boone on his knees, holding that

arrow, his mouth open like a dying fish.

AND BEYOND BOONE ARE FORTY ARIKARA WARRIORS CHARGING THROUGH

THE TREES... FEATHERS RISING FROM THE MOHAWKS SPLITTING THEIR

SHAVED HEADS... FACES PAINTED FOR BATTLE.

TRAPPER:

`REE!

WHOOSH... AN ARROW SAILS INTO THE TRAPPER'S CHEST, sending

him flying backward. The camp explodes into chaos... men

YELLING... grabbing for weapons... stumbling over each other

as they duck behind trees.

5.

HENRY - PULLING THE PISTOLS FROM HIS BELT...

...taking aim at the attacking figures.

The Arikara pour into camp, arrows flying... knives and

hatchets swinging. And this is a massacre... the Arikara

wading through the trappers... stabbing... clubbing...

scalping. This once peaceful world is filled with a sickening

mix of war cries and screams of death.

Fitzgerald rises up from behind a log... aims his rifle...

BOOM... takes down one of the warriors. He starts reloading

as ANOTHER WARRIOR charges him... draws back his knife.

Fitzgerald pours the powder, but knows he isn't going to make

it in time... the warrior leaps toward him...

...BOOM... it's like the warrior hits an invisible wall...

flies back to the ground, very dead. Fitzgerald spins...

sees Glass and his Anstadt right behind him.

GLASS:

GET TO THE BOAT!

Fitzgerald takes off... flips his rifle around, swings it

like a club across a warrior's head... WHACK!

GLASS (CONT'D)

(TO HENRY)

THE BOAT, CAPTAIN!

Henry shoves a TRAPPER toward the water. An arrow drives

into the trapper's leg... he goes down. Henry lifts the man

to pull him into the river, but several more arrows bury in

the man's back... he falls limp. Henry FIRES HIS PISTOLS,

dropping the WARRIOR.

Bridger and Pig join Glass... splash into the river, SHOOTING

back at the attacking Arikara. The water deepens, and they

start swimming toward the flatboat.

ARROWS HISS into the water all around them.

Glass is still in the shallows... aims his pistol... BAM...

shoots an oncoming warrior... spins after the other men...

joins them as they near the flatboat.

A final TRAPPER charges down the shore behind them. SEVERAL

WARRIORS pursue him.

TRAPPER:

WAIT!

6.

He aims his pistol over his shoulder as he runs... pulls the

trigger... CLICK... pulls it again... CLICK. But he's too

scared to stop his finger... CLICK... CLICK... CLICK...

THUD... as a hatchet buries in his back. He crashes face

first into the shallows.

The Arikara leader, (ELK'S TONGUE), animal bones braided into

his mohawk, a NECKLACE OF HUMAN EARS around his neck,

straddles the dying man. Elk's Tongue grabs the Trapper by

the hair, and CUTS OFF HIS LEFT EAR, then holds it up to

Glass and the others, as he SCREAMS HIS WAR CRY.

Glass and the men shove the flatboat off the sandbar... start

scrambling aboard, as arrows dart past them... drive into the

wooden boat.

Suddenly a WARRIOR EXPLODES FROM THE WATER... tackles Bridger

as he climbs up the side of the flatboat... jerks him back

into the river. Bridger flails in the water... watches the

warrior raise his hatchet high to slam down... just as Glass

SLAMS THE BUTT OF HIS ANSTADT into the back of the Warrior's

head.

The Warrior collapses under the surface. Glass grabs

Bridger's hand... drags him up onto the deck.

BRIDGER:

Thank you.

But Glass is already gone... FIRING BACK AT THE ARIKARA, as

the current carries them away.

VOICE (O.S.)

HEY!

Pig looks over the side... sees a frantic WILLIAM ANDERSON

gripped to the edge. Pig pulls him onto the boat.

Fitzgerald and Glass grab LONGPOLES... shove them against the

river's bottom to pick up speed.

Henry stands on deck, watching as Elk's Tongue yanks a DYING

TRAPPER's head back by his hair to peel away his scalp.

Henry drops his eyes... can't watch. The TRAPPER'S SCREAM

ECHOES OVER HIM.

EXT. MISSOURI RIVER/FLATBOAT - LATER

Quiet and dark... the battle long over. The flatboat floats

with the gentle current. The NINE SURVIVING TRAPPERS are

scattered around the deck...

7.

Glass digging an arrow out of WALLACE MURPHY'S SHOULDER...

Fitzgerald poling on one side with Anderson on the other...

STUBBY BILL VANCE and Pig standing patrol with their

rifles... Bridger doctoring a badly WOUNDED TRAPPER... and

Henry standing at the front of the flatboat, staring off

blankly.

FITZGERALD:

What's the plan, Captain?

Henry's still lost in those screams.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Captain! What the hell do we do

now?

Henry snaps out of his stare... turns to the men... obviously

doesn't have an answer.

ANDERSON:

We're just floatin' farther from

Fort Union.

Henry's eyes instinctively look to Glass.

GLASS:

The Missouri's no good. Not if the

`Ree's running it.

FITZGERALD:

So we just float the hell down to

Mexico or wherever else this river

takes us?

GLASS:

We get ourselves safe outta range,

then track another course up.

FITZGERALD:

Add weeks to the trip.

BRIDGER:

Better that than endin' up scalped

on the side of the river.

FITZGERALD:

(shoving him away)

Shut up, kid, you don't get no say

in this.

Bridger starts to respond, but Fitzgerald's angry glare stops

him.

8.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

(back to Henry)

And in case you hadn't noticed,

Captain, we're twelve men short of

what we were.

(off the badly wounded

TRAPPER)

Thirteen before long.

HENRY:

I understand our situation, Mr.

Fitzgerald. We do like Glass

said... put some distance between

us and the Arikara, then chart a

course to Fort Union.

Fitzgerald MUMBLES UNDER HIS BREATH... rolls those dark eyes

to Anderson. Glass gives Henry a nod.

EXT. MISSOURI RIVER/FLATBOAT - NIGHT

ANGLE ON THE BADLY WOUNDED TRAPPER... NOW DEAD...

...as hands push the body over the side of the boat. It

splashes into the water... floats downstream.

We PULL BACK... see that the flatboat is beached along the

bank of the river. Glass and Pig watch the body drift away.

PIG:

Reckon it's better `an lettin' the

`Ree find him... take his ears...

slice what's left all to sh*t.

Glass nods... steps down off the boat to Henry and the

others. They're gathered around a map spread out on the

ground. Henry runs his finger along a THIN BLUE LINE.

HENRY:

So we hike west to the Grand, then

follow it up to Fort Union.

FITZGERALD:

On foot? You got any idea how long

that's gonna take? It'll be winter

before we get there.

ANDERSON:

Unless we come across a post...

trade for some horses.

9.

GLASS:

No posts that far out.

FITZGERALD:

So if we do this, we do every step

with our own feet.

HENRY:

We make camp here for the night,

then load supplies and head out for

the Grand at first light.

(BEAT)

And gather extra blankets `cause

there won't be any fires.

More GRUMBLING from Fitzgerald and Anderson, as they move

toward the cover of trees. Bridger walks up beside Glass.

BRIDGER:

Thank you... for what you done back

there.

GLASS:

You'd have done the same for me.

Bridger nods... he hopes so.

EXT. WOODS - NIGHT

Pig on watch... sitting at the base of a tree, rifle across

his lap, eyes wide, scanning the darkness. All clear. He

peers back to camp... Fitzgerald, Anderson, Stubby Bill, and

Murphy wrapped in blankets... passing a bottle of whiskey

around. Bridger across from Fitzgerald, poking at the dirt

with a stick. Henry is off to one side, still studying that

map. Glass sits against a tree, cleaning his Anstadt rifle.

Fitzgerald watches Glass a beat, then...

FITZGERALD:

You treat that Anstadt sweeter than

any woman, Glass.

STUBBY BILL:

Never seen a woman that could stop

a `Ree from three hundred feet.

ANDERSON:

I knew a particular big-breasted

redhead in Boston that might come

close.

10.

The others manage a small laugh. Glass just keeps working on

that rifle.

FITZGERALD:

Bring it over here for me to have a

look.

Glass doesn't look up... wipes a rag down the barrel.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Did you hear what I said, boy?

Still nothing from Glass. And Fitzgerald doesn't like

that... the tension's growing.

BRIDGER:

(MUMBLING)

You seen it before.

Fitzgerald turns that mean, drunken glare on Bridger.

FITZGERALD:

What'd you say, kid?

Bridger hesitates a beat... until the other men's eyes force

a response.

BRIDGER:

(SOFTLY)

I said you shoulda already got a

look when he saved you with it

earlier.

The camp falls still... nobody talks to Fitzgerald like

that... especially when he's drunk. There isn't a sound

except for Glass working methodically on his rifle...

...until the SWISH OF BLADE OVER LEATHER, as Fitzgerald tears

the blade from his belt... flings it into the dirt between

Bridger's legs... AN INCH BELOW HIS CROTCH.

Fitzgerald stares at Bridger, daring him to react. But

Bridger's too scared... doesn't, so Fitzgerald just smiles.

FITZGERALD:

You're lucky you ain't a man yet.

(off the blade)

Else that mighta nicked somethin'.

A few NERVOUS CHUCKLES from the others, hoping this is over.

And it is, because Fitzgerald reaches over and pulls the

knife away... cleans the dirty blade on Bridger's leg.

11.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

And unlike you, I don't need savin'

by him or nobody else. Remember

that.

Fitzgerald stands... wobbles just a bit. He slides the knife

back into his belt, then steadies his drunken gaze on Glass.

The others exchange nervous glances... uh-oh.

Fitzgerald walks to Glass... snaps his fingers for Glass'

Anstadt.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Lemme see what's so special `bout

that shooter of yours.

Nothing from Glass, so Fitzgerald grabs the barrel, but Glass

holds firm.

GLASS:

Middle of workin' on it.

FITZGERALD:

Well you can stop workin' on it,

and let me have a look like I said.

Fitzgerald gives another tug, but Glass' grip only grows

tighter. His eyes roll up to Fitzgerald... make it clear he

isn't giving up his rifle. And they hold that stare just as

hard as they're holding Glass' rifle.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

You forget your place?

GLASS:

Best I can tell, my place is right

where I want it... on the smart end

of my rifle.

Fitzgerald realizes the barrel he's holding is aimed right at

his stomach, while Glass' hand seems suddenly very close to

the trigger. But Fitzgerald's pride and that whiskey won't

let him lose this tug of war.

FITZGERALD:

I'd be careful if I was you, boy.

And this thing's about to turn real ugly... until...

HENRY:

That's enough, Fitzgerald. Go

sober up and get to sleep.

(MORE)

12.

HENRY(CONT'D)

If you're passed out when we break

camp tomorrow, I leave you here.

Fitzgerald holds his glare on Glass, then releases the rifle,

shoving it back at Glass. He glances to Henry, and throws

back a big gulp from the bottle just for spite, before

backing away from Glass.

FITZGERALD:

That's the trouble with this part

of the world. No mirrors. N*ggers

forget what color they are.

Glass ignores Fitzgerald... goes back to his rifle.

Fitzgerald tosses the bottle at Anderson, then jerks his

blanket up... walks off to sleep by himself.

Glass glances up from his work... just long enough to give

Bridger a nod.

EXT. CAMP - LATER

Fitzgerald sleeping off that whiskey. The others snoring in

a cluster at the center of the camp. Henry lies there

awake... looks across to Glass, still sitting against the

tree, a HANDRAWN MAP in his lap, as his eyes pierce the

darkness. Henry eases over to Glass.

HENRY:

Can't sleep either?

GLASS:

Never like closin' my eyes when I'm

not sure who'll be standin' over me

when I open `em.

HENRY:

I keep thinking about Boone and the

others... how maybe I should've had

us make camp further up river.

GLASS:

The tracks I saw... those `Ree had

been tailin' us for a while. They'd

have gone as far north as it took.

(BEAT)

You're a good man, Captain. Soon

as you realize that, these others

will too.

Henry likes hearing that... still isn't sure it's true.

13.

HENRY:

Your years trappin' and guidin' out

here... have you had much

experience with the Arikara?

GLASS:

Enough to try and stay outta their

way.

HENRY:

(motions to Glass' map)

But you know this country well

enough to get us past them... up to

Fort Union?

GLASS:

I been here a long while. Whether

that gets us to Union or not...

Henry waits for more... doesn't get it. So he just nods and

starts back to his blanket.... stops.

HENRY:

What Fitzgerald said earlier... he

doesn't speak for the rest.

GLASS:

He wasn't wrong. Truth is that's

what I prefer about this country...

it's got no eye for the color of a

man's skin.

HENRY:

(BEAT)

Try to get some sleep, Hugh.

Henry climbs back under his blanket. Glass just sits there

looking at the map.

ANGLE ON GLASS' MAP...

...primitive at best. Sketched mountains... winding blue

lines for rivers... small dots are scattered about with names

beside them... "Brazeau", "Talbot", "Union". And DOZENS OF

TRIANGLE PINE TREES have been drawn, representing the endless

wilderness.

We TIGHTEN ON THOSE TRIANGLES until we're lost in them.

DISSOLVE TO:

14.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Thick with trees. Henry leads the men single file through

the woods. They each have a canvas sack of supplies over one

shoulder, and their rifle in their hands.

The only sound is their feet crunching the dried leaves, and

even that seems too loud as their eyes dart about, searching

for any sign of attack.

STUBBY BILL:

Shouldn't we have hit the Grand by

now?

HENRY:

We'll reach it soon enough. Glass

said to keep this course.

FITZGERALD:

Glass said. Too bad I don't see

him.

PIG:

That's on account he's up ahead

makin' sure it's clear, and you get

to keep your ears.

Fitzgerald throws Pig an angry glance.

FITZGERALD:

Or he's run off and left us.

BRIDGER:

He wouldn't do that.

Fitzgerald GRUNTS... doesn't believe that.

FITZGERALD:

My bet, that n*gger's used to

runnin'.

EXT. WOODS - DAY

Glass moves slowly through the brush, almost gliding...

subtle twists and turns to avoid branches and leaves...

careful not to leave his scent behind. And his eyes cut

through the trees as he moves... digging for any sign of

movement.

He spots something at his feet... crouches down, running his

finger over the SMALL ANIMAL TRACK in the dirt.

15.

O.S. RUSTLING snaps his head up... to the TREMBLING OF

BUSHES... growing harder... whatever's in there is coming

toward Glass. He calmly raises his rifle... presses the

stock firmly against his shoulder... closes one eye as he

takes steady aim down the long barrel...

...to the shapes rumbling out of the brush... TWO BEAR CUBS

playfully wrestling.

Glass lowers the Anstadt... looks past the cubs for something

else... but the woods are empty. A SUDDEN FEAR FILLS GLASS'

EYES...

...he spins... right into the GIANT GRIZZLY SWINGING ITS PAW

AT HIM... hitting him across the side of the neck. The

animal's razor claws tear into Glass' throat, as the force

sends him flying through the air.

Glass sails into a thick tree... the CRACK OF HIS LEG

SNAPPING against the trunk. The rifle falls from his hand.

The Grizzly lets out a massive ROAR... charges Glass. Glass

crawls to the Anstadt... grabs it... has just enough time to

tilt the rifle toward the bear... BOOM.

CUT TO:

HENRY - HEARING THE BLAST.

HENRY:

UP AHEAD!

Henry takes off at full sprint. The other men follow.

CUT TO:

GLASS - AS THE BEAR LEAPS ON TOP OF HIM...

...tosses Glass aside with a powerful swing. Glass hits the

ground with a PAINFUL THUD. He starts CRAWLING AWAY, pulling

the KNIFE from his belt as the bear rises up like a giant

behind him... swings... tears its claws across Glass's back,

shredding deep into his flesh.

Glass is fighting for his life now... flailing with the

knife... slicing it across the bear's paw as it whips past

him. The wound slows the bear enough for Glass to start

crawling again.

But the Grizzly doesn't give Glass the chance... ROARS... is

on him in a flash, a BLUR OF CLAWS AND FANGS... tearing

across Glass' head... ripping into his face... his chest.

16.

Glass drives his knife into the bear again... deep... trying

to tear through the layers of flesh to something more vital.

CUT TO:

HENRY - LEADING THE CHARGE THROUGH THE FOREST.

CUT TO:

GLASS AND THE GRIZZLY - FIGHTING THIS EPIC BATTLE...

...locked in a death grip... tumbling along the ground...

trading violent blows... Glass' blade versus the Grizzly's

claws and fangs... snapping small trees as they roll over

them... toward the edge of a steep embankment...

... and ROLL DOWN... spinning over and over... each ROARING

AT THE OTHER... Glass pounding the knife into the bear again

and again as they fall... neither willing to surrender as

they careen down the slope at a dizzying pace, then SLAM TO

THE BOTTOM WITH A CRUNCH. And the forest falls still...

Glass hidden somewhere beneath the massive animal... both

deathly motionless.

EXT. WOODS - DAY

Bridger's the first to reach the battleground... sees the TWO

FRIGHTENED BEAR CUBS SCURRY AWAY. He follows the bloody

ground and crushed underbrush to the top of the slope...

looks down to the mass of flesh at the bottom.

BRIDGER:

Christ Almighty.

Henry, Pig, and the others reach the edge.

HENRY:

Glass!

No answer. And all they can see is the bear, so they scan

the trees.

PIG:

HUGH!

Still nothing. So Bridger takes off down the slope... losing

his balance but rolling back to his feet. He reaches the

bear... sees GLASS' MANGLED ARM STICKING OUT FROM BENEATH IT.

17.

BRIDGER:

He's down here!

Bridger uses all his strength to push the bear off, as the

other men scramble down. But Bridger can't budge the massive

carcass... not until Stubby Bill and Pig join in... shove the

animal over, revealing the bloody mass that is Hugh Glass...

...his throat is torn wide open... scalp peeled back from

just above his eyebrows, hanging off the skull... stomach and

chest a gruesome design of gashes and cuts. His right leg

is snapped, the jagged bone jutting out through the skin.

Bridger's legs give out... he drops to a knee and vomits.

MURPHY:

Oh, Jesus.

STUBBY BILL:

He's tore to pieces.

The men stare down at Glass' corpse.

ANDERSON:

Least he took that Grizz down with

him.

FITZGERALD:

Wished he'da done it without firing

his rifle. If there wasn't no `Ree

around before, there will be now.

And that's all Pig can stand... he TACKLES FITZGERALD... they

roll to the ground. And in a flash Fitzgerald is on top,

raining punches down on Pig... turning his face into a bloody

mess.

Henry and Anderson grab Fitzgerald... drag him off.

HENRY:

THAT'S ENOUGH!

Then somehow, GLASS GASPS... this horrible, GUTTURAL MOAN.

BRIDGER:

Holy Christ, he's alive.

Henry and Bridger fall to their knees beside Glass. Glass

looks up at the men, tries to focus through the blood and

pain. His breathing is just a GURGLING WHEEZE... bubbles

forming along the deep gashes in his throat with each gasp.

18.

HENRY:

Get me some water.

Stubby Bill tosses Henry his canteen. Henry empties it over

Glass' throat... his face and scalp. The water hits the

wounds and immediately transforms to blood.

BRIDGER:

Oh, Jesus... Jesus.

Glass lifts a trembling hand to his throat... feels the

gaping wound. His eyes widen in horror. He COUGHS... the

air splashes blood up from the open wounds in his throat.

HENRY:

It's okay, Hugh.

(pushing Glass' hand away)

You're going to be fine.

Henry spins his head away from Glass.

HENRY (CONT'D)

(WHISPERS)

I need some rags before he bleeds

out.

Pig whips a shirt from his bag... shreds it.

HENRY (CONT'D)

And your whiskey.

Pig tosses a bottle to Henry. Henry pours it over the

gashes. The BURNING PAIN arches Glass... he CRIES OUT in

that same horrific moan.

HENRY (CONT'D)

Hold him down, Bridger, goddammit.

Bridger throws his weight against Glass' shoulders.

HENRY (CONT'D)

The rest of you spread out... scout

a circle around us. Fitzgerald,

you and Anderson take west and

north. Murphy and Mike south and

east. Watch for anyone that

might've heard that shot.

And for the first time, Henry seems like a leader of men...

firm... in complete control... just as Glass said he would

be. So the men hurry off to their positions.

19.

PIG:

What about me, Cap?

HENRY:

Get down here and help me tie off

these wounds best we can.

Pig shakily joins Henry in wrapping the wounds. The blood

keeps seeping out, soaking the rags.

PIG:

It won't stop bleedin'.

HENRY:

Shut up, Pig.

(TO GLASS)

We're fixing you up, Hugh.

Glass is like a shredded rag doll... dazed eyes staring up at

them as they work on his wounds... wrapping the rags around

his throat... laying his scalp back over his skull, and tying

another rag around it and under his jaw to hold it in place.

Bridger wipes the blood from Glass' face.

BRIDGER:

It's gonna be fine, Mr. Glass.

Henry glances down to the PUDDLE OF BLOOD spilling out over

his knees... oozing out from beneath Glass.

HENRY:

Roll him over... easy.

They gently push Glass onto one side, revealing DEEP, JAGGED,

GASHES running across the width of Glass' back. Henry stares

at the open flesh, ready to panic again... but he doesn't.

Instead he looks to Pig.

HENRY (CONT'D)

Get me the kit. We need to stitch

his back up.

BRIDGER:

What about the rest of him?

HENRY:

He's losing more blood back here.

(off the throat)

And I don't know what to do with

that yet.

20.

Pig digs out a thick needle and spool of black thread...

hands it to Henry. Henry grabs the whiskey bottle.

HENRY (CONT'D)

I'm sorry for how this is about to

burn, Hugh.

Henry pours the whiskey over Glass' back. And the pain must

be excruciating, because Glass lets out a HORRIBLE WAIL.

CUT TO:

EXT. WOODS - CONTINUOUS

Fitzgerald and Anderson standing watch together in the trees.

Glass' scream erupts through the trees, and they both

immediately crouch down to a knee... out of sight to anyone

out there that might have heard that.

ANDERSON:

They're torturin' the poor bastard.

FITZGERALD:

And riskin' gettin' us killed in

the process. Proper thing would be

to end it for him quick.

ANDERSON:

`Less he could pull through.

FITZGERALD:

You seen what that grizz did to

him. Sh*t, Glass'll be dead inside

a hour. We all will be if he keeps

screamin' like that.

EXT. WOODS - LATER

SERIES OF SHOTS:

HENRY, BRIDGER AND PIG WORKING OVER GLASS... Bridger and Pig

pressing Glass' scalp down, as Henry slides the needle and

thread through the skin, suturing the wound.

HENRY CLEANING GLASS' SHREDDED THROAT.

BRIDGER AND PIG HOLDING THE SCREAMING GLASS DOWN AS HENRY

SNAPS GLASS' LEG BACK IN PLACE.

21.

FITZGERALD PEERING BACK THROUGH THE TREES... to Henry

doctoring Glass. Fitzgerald shakes his head in anger...

turns back to the darkening forest.

EXT. WOODS - EVENING

Glass rests unconscious on the ground. Two branches act as a

splint on his leg. A blanket covers his body... his face is

like a swollen, disfigured, Frankenstein's monster...

stitches of black thread holding it in place.

Henry crouches a short distance away from him, rinsing his

hands under a canteen. Bridger and Pig stand beside him.

BRIDGER:

What now?

HENRY:

We wait. Does he have any kin you

know of?

PIG:

He keeps to hisself. Never

mentioned none.

HENRY:

Go get the others. Tell `em we're

making camp here for the night.

Pig starts hustling away.

HENRY (CONT'D)

And gather some wood, but make sure

it's dry. We don't want much smoke

when we cook that grizzly.

ANGLE ON THE MASSIVE BEAR...

...lying dead on the ground, its claws and fangs soaked with

blood... Glass' blood.

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. WOODS - NIGHT

And what's left of the grizzly... its fur cut away... slabs

of flesh butchered from its skeleton.

A fire burns at the center of camp... a chunk of meat roasts

above the flame. The men sit around the fire...

22.

Murphy reaches up... tears a strip of meat from the roast,

tossing it in his mouth. The men are silent... the pall of

Glass' attack still hanging over them.

Bridger rises... walks to the Grizzly... crouches down over

it, grabbing the animal's enormous paw. It dwarfs his own

hand, as he examines the claws. Bridger pulls out his

knife... stretches the claw out to its full length, and CUTS

IT OFF AT ITS BASE.

FITZGERALD (O.S.)

What makes you think you earned a

claw?

Bridger turns with a start... sees Fitzgerald standing over

him, meat in his hand... his lips shiny with the grease.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

You didn't take that grizz down.

BRIDGER:

It ain't for me.

Bridger stands... walks over to the sleeping Glass. Pig's

already crouched beside him. Bridger lifts Glass' small

leather POSSIBLES BAG from beside the Anstadt rifle... drops

the claw inside... throws a look back to Fitzgerald.

Pig holds his palm out just above Glass' mouth.

PIG:

I can feel some air outta his

mouth. Maybe Captain sealed up his

throat proper, huh?

(off Bridger's silence)

Whatta you figure his odds are,

Jim?

Bridger stares down at what's left of Glass.

BRIDGER:

Long.

EXT. WILDERNESS - MORNING

The sun peeks over the horizon, sending an orange glow across

the treetops.

EXT. CAMP - MORNING

ANGLE ON GLASS...

23.

...unconscious but alive... his raspy breaths are weak and

staggered. The SHADOWS OF MEN hover over him...

...because Henry and the others surround Glass, staring down

at him.

MURPHY:

What that bear did to him... I

didn't expect he'd last this long.

ANDERSON:

I seen a fella go a week once after

a lion jumped him. Fever finally

finished him off.

STUBBY BILL:

Whatta we do, Cap?

A long beat, then...

HENRY:

We give him his chance.

Henry turns and walks away.

EXT. CAMP - NIGHT

The fire has burned down to nothing. The men sleep scattered

about. Murphy stands just outside of camp, rifle ready,

keeping watch.

Glass lies there awake... eyes wide open... a living corpse.

And his breathing is just as labored as before... raspy,

blood-soaked strains.

Fitzgerald tosses and turns, listening to Glass' gurgling.

FITZGERALD:

You ain't doin' him or us no

favors, Captain, lettin' him suffer

that way.

Henry's awake, but doesn't answer. He's holding his pistol

in his hand, as he stares at Glass... thinking the same thing

Fitzgerald just said. But he doesn't move... not yet.

Fitzgerald angrily wraps a blanket around his head, muffling

the sound. Bridger sits beyond him... smiles at Fitzgerald's

misery, as he attaches the BEAR CLAW TO A THIN LEATHER

STRAP... a necklace.

24.

EXT. CAMP - MORNING

Bridger kneels over a SHIVERING GLASS, holding wet rags on

his head. Pig and Henry stand over them, watching.

Fitzgerald, Anderson, Murphy and Stubby Bill sit huddled

across camp.

ANDERSON:

Fever's hit. Won't be long now.

FITZGERALD:

I seen a bad one drag on days.

ANGLE ON GLASS...

...eyes open... he can hear every word.

FITZGERALD (O.S.) (cont'd)

Insides shut down... flesh starts

to spoil and turn. Ain't no way

for...

HENRY (O.S.)

Quiet, Fitzgerald.

FITZGERALD...

...points a stick at Glass.

FITZGERALD:

(TO HENRY)

We keep sittin' here watchin' him

die, only gives the `Ree more

chance to find us.

Henry doesn't answer... just keeps staring down at Glass.

BRIDGER:

He's burnin', Cap. Water turns to

boil as soon as it touches him.

Henry considers this, then...

HENRY:

Pig, take Anderson and scout ahead.

Grand should be just west of here.

Find us the best route.

FITZGERALD:

Tryin' to buy Glass time don't make

sense for the rest of us, Captain.

25.

HENRY:

(TO PIG)

Get movin'.

Pig nods... grabs his gear. He and Anderson take off out of

camp. Henry turns... walks over to Fitzgerald and Stubby

Bill.

HENRY (CONT'D)

(WHISPERS)

You two can start digging a grave.

Fitzgerald tosses the stick away.

FITZGERALD:

Least it's a step in the right

direction.

EXT. CAMP - LATER

Fitzgerald is covered in dirt and sweat, standing knee deep

in Glass' grave. Stubby Bill stands over him.

FITZGERALD:

Any coyote digs that deep deserves

the meal.

He takes Stubby Bill's hand... pulls himself out.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Glass won't know the difference no

ways.

Pig and Anderson walk back into camp.

PIG:

Found it, Cap. Right where Glass

had us headed.

ANDERSON:

No more than a mile or so out.

Henry looks to Bridger, still doctoring Glass.

HENRY:

We could build a litter. Haul him

with us.

ANDERSON:

It's rocky and steep goin'.

Henry looks to Pig for an honest answer.

26.

PIG:

Marshy and thick on the other side.

We could try it, but...

Pig shakes his head.

FITZGERALD:

I signed on as a trapper, not a

goddamn mule.

BRIDGER:

(TO HENRY)

Shape he's in... I don't see no way

he'd make bein' drug.

Henry nods, his mind racing for a solution. And before long,

his hand is back on that pistol. He pulls it from his belt.

The other men all drop their heads... except for

Fitzgerald... he's ready to see this end.

Henry stares down at Glass.

HENRY:

Lay that rag over his eyes, Mr.

Bridger.

BRIDGER:

But, Captain.

HENRY:

Do it.

Bridger hesitates, then reaches to fold the wet rag down over

Glass' wide open eyes. And Glass must know what's happening,

because his eyes roll up to Bridger's... his lips try to form

a word... his hand digs its fingers into the dirt beside him.

CUT TO:

GLASS' POV - ON BRIDGER...

...the boy looking away as he pulls the rag over our eyes...

everything goes black.

HENRY (O.S.)

Step clear, Mr. Bridger.

A LONG BEAT in the dark, waiting for that gunshot, then...

BACK TO SCENE:

27.

Henry standing over Glass... pistol aimed down. His hand

trembles slightly.

Pig turns away... presses his hands over his ears.

Bridger takes a few steps back... stares at Henry.

Henry struggles to steady his aim, until finally it calms...

because he's thought of something else.

HENRY (CONT'D)

There's a seventy dollar bonus from

the Rocky Mountain Fur Company to

the two men that stay with Glass...

see this through. Then give him a

proper burial.

BRIDGER:

I'll stay with him... money or not.

PIG:

Same here.

HENRY:

I can't let you stay back, Pig.

Without Glass, I'll need you to

scout.

Henry looks to the others... they all drop their eyes... not

interested.

HENRY (CONT'D)

Just need one more.

FITZGERALD:

Two won't stand much chance against

a party of `Ree, Captain, and

seventy dollars won't buy me a new

setta ears.

HENRY:

A hundred then.

Still nothing from the others.

BRIDGER:

They can have my share too. I owe

Glass that at least.

FITZGERALD:

That case I'll hang back with the

kid. I don't mind fallin' a day or

so behind for two hundred.

28.

HENRY:

But Glass is to be cared for until.

Understood?

FITZGERALD:

(motions to Bridger)

I'll let the young doctor do his

job.

Henry hesitates... doesn't like this, but knows it's the best

option left.

HENRY:

The rest gather your gear.

Bridger reaches down... lifts the rag from Glass' face.

Their eyes meet... Bridger gives Glass a nod.

EXT. CAMP - LATER

Henry and the others are loaded and ready to leave. Pig

bends down over Glass.

PIG:

I'll see ya at Fort Union, Hugh.

Glass's glazed eyes focus on Pig. He moves the only thing he

can... BLINKS a "yes" back at him.

HENRY:

(to Fitzgerald and

BRIDGER)

As long as necessary.

BRIDGER:

I'll look after him.

Henry turns... leads the men into the trees... toward the

Grand... toward Fort Union.

EXT. CAMP - NIGHT

What's left of a small fire is nothing but smoldering ash.

Bridger crouches beside Glass, pouring a thin stream of broth

between his lips. Fitzgerald reaches in... grabs Glass'

Anstadt leaning against the tree.

FITZGERALD:

I'll take first watch.

29.

BRIDGER:

Not with his rifle.

FITZGERALD:

Trust me, kid, he ain't gonna be

needin' it tonight.

Fitzgerald disappears into the trees.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Pig stands on a ridge, scouting a course. He waves back to

Henry and the others. They start toward him.

EXT. CAMP - EVENING

Glass conscious on the ground... that same labored breathing.

CUT TO:

GLASS' POV - ON FITZGERALD...

...smiling down at Glass as he grabs the Anstadt, holds it...

runs his hand down the barrel, as comfortable as if it were

his own.

FITZGERALD:

You were right to protect this.

Then he disappears... and we're left alone, staring up at the

branches above us... the evening sky... accompanied by Glass'

deathly breaths.

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. WILDERNESS/CREEK - DAY

Bridger kneels beside the stream, filling canteens.

EXT. CAMP - DAY

Fitzgerald sits bored against a tree, twisting a knife in his

hands... flipping it point first into the dirt... grabbing...

repeating... twist... flip... thwack. And as he does, his

eyes are locked on Glass.

30.

Finally, Fitzgerald snaps the knife from the dirt, stands,

and walks over to Glass. Glass is asleep. Fitzgerald

crouches down over him... eyes his red, infected wounds.

FITZGERALD:

(WHISPERS)

When are you gonna die, boy?

Fitzgerald reaches out with the blade... gently touches one

of the threads holding Glass' throat together. And when he

does, GLASS' EYES FLY OPEN... focus on Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald doesn't even flinch... just holds that knife tip

there against Glass' throat.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

I'm nearly a week behind Henry's

bunch on accounta havin' to tend to

you. Be easier on us all if you'd

take that last breath.

The two men hold a stare... until Fitzgerald pulls back the

knife... grabs a bloodstained rag from beside them... balls

it up in his fist.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

I could help ya with that if you'd

like. Muzzle ya right now... end

all this sufferin' quick and easy.

Nobody'd ever know you give up.

Fitzgerald moves the rag over Glass' nose and mouth... holds

it there, just inches above.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

You just gimme a blink if you want

me to do it.

Glass locks his eyes on Fitzgerald's... both men unblinking.

A DROP OF BLOOD hangs from the rag... finally falls... lands

on Glass' lips.

Fitzgerald almost smiles, waiting for the inevitable... as

Glass stares back, fighting the urge to blink.

Suddenly Bridger's hand clamps down on Fitzgerald's shoulder.

Fitzgerald spins... startled.

BRIDGER (O.S.)

What's goin' on?

31.

Fitzgerald jumps with a start, sees it's Bridger, and is

pissed that Bridger scared him... and interrupted his

business. He rises quickly, planting his meaty hand in

Bridger's chest, and SLAMMING HIM BACK AGAINST A TREE.

FITZGERALD:

Don't you ever question me, you

little piss-ant.

Bridger tries to fight back, but Fitzgerald's too strong...

holds him pressed against the tree... slams a heavy elbow

into Bridger's mouth, splitting his lip.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

I'd just as soon leave both you and

your n*gger here to rot. `Cept

killin' you ain't worth givin' up

your share.

(LEANS CLOSER)

But that don't mean I can't be

coaxed into changin' my mind.

Fitzgerald shoves him away... Bridger stumbles and falls.

Fitzgerald tosses the bloody rag at him.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

And I was just doin' your job...

cleanin' him up.

Fitzgerald grabs Glass' Anstadt, almost daring Bridger to say

something. Of course Bridger doesn't. Fitzgerald walks

toward the trees.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Why don't ya pour some more broth

down his throat... keep him alive

another week so we can fall farther

back. End up walkin' all the way

to Fort Union on our own. `Ree

would love to poach on just two.

(turns to Bridger)

I promise ya, you'll look a helluva

lot worse than Glass when they're

done with you.

Bridger watches him disappear into the trees... wipes the

blood from his lip with a trembling hand.

DISSOLVE TO:

32.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

From high above the trees. The world is silent... peaceful...

until SEVERAL STARTLED CROWS shoot up from the treetops.

CUT TO:

BLACK...

...the sound of FRENZIED BREATHING.

FITZGERALD (V.O.)

(PANICKED WHISPER)

Bridger! Get your ass up!

Dim light fills the frame... then FITZGERALD'S FACE right in

front of us.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

`Ree.

BRIDGER - SCRAMBLES UP FROM UNDER HIS BLANKET, WIPING THE

SLEEP FROM HIS FRIGHTENED EYES.

BRIDGER:

What?

FITZGERALD:

Keep quiet. I was down at the

creek... there's twenty of `em at

least, comin' this way.

BRIDGER:

Oh, sh*t. Whatta we do?

FITZGERALD:

We run. Now.

And Fitzgerald's just whispering, but it's with such power

that Bridger has no response... watches as Fitzgerald gathers

his bag, starts throwing in food and supplies. Bridger is

scared out of his mind... does the same... grabs for his

rifle, resting near Glass.

Bridger freezes... in his panic, he'd forgotten all about

Glass. And now the wounded man's eyes stare up at him...

understanding perfectly what's happening around him.

BRIDGER:

What about Glass?

33.

FITZGERALD:

He's on his own, same as us.

BRIDGER:

I can't leave him.

FITZGERALD:

Then I'm talkin' to a dead man.

Glass gives Bridger the slightest of nods... go. But

Bridger's frozen... doesn't know what to do... until

Fitzgerald shoves him back to life.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Move.

Glass reaches out a weak hand out for his Anstadt... clawing

for his weapon. Bridger starts to hand it to Glass, but

Fitzgerald grabs it first.

BRIDGER:

What're you doin'? He needs that.

FITZGERALD:

He couldn't hold it if you tarred

it to his hands.

Glass strains to hold out his trembling hand for his gun.

BRIDGER:

It's his goddamn rifle! That's all

he's got!

FITZGERALD:

And more than he'll need.

Fitzgerald scoops up Glass' knife as well.

BRIDGER:

We can't leave him with nothin'.

But Fitzgerald is already sprinting away... disappearing into

the trees. Glass stares after him, his once-calm eyes

suddenly filled with a rage. And Bridger's frozen again,

lost between duty and fear... until finally, he just shakes

his head and takes off into the trees.

Glass's empty hand falls back to the ground... he tries to

yell out in anger, but his throat EXPLODES IN PAIN. His hand

digs into the dirt... pulls him over onto his side. He flops

over to his stomach... GASPS IN PAIN...

34.

then using his one good arm, drags himself over the dirt, his

healthy leg pushing weakly at the ground, trying to propel

him forward... a futile chase after Fitzgerald and Bridger...

...inch by inch... farther than he's been in days. But it's

still only a few yards, and now he lies in the open... a

clear target for the Arikara.

Then he spots that hole... the grave Fitzgerald dug for him.

He grunts into action... grabs SEVERAL, THIN BROKEN BRANCHES

from the ground, then claws forward, each movement

excruciating... until finally, he reaches the hole, and ROLLS

INTO IT... lands with a PAINFUL CRUNCH.

He rests there a moment, trying to regain any ounce of

strength. Finally he fights through the pain... shoves the

branches back up... spreading them across the hole as

camouflage... a thin veil, but all that Glass has.

He lies there defenseless... INSIDE HIS OWN GRAVE. Hiding...

listening for the Arikara's arrival... waiting to die.

CUT TO:

GLASS' POV - OUT OF THE GRAVE... TIGHT AND CLAUSTROPHOBIC...

JUST THE NIGHT SKY THROUGH THOSE BRANCHES... AND THE SOUND OF

HIS PAINFUL BREATHS.

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. WILDERNESS - MORNING

Cold and grey. Fitzgerald crouches beside a small fire,

warming his hands. WHISPS OF SMOKE rise into the sky.

FITZGERALD:

We ran the better part of six

hours. Had to gain some ground on

Henry and them others.

Bridger sits at the base of a tree, not listening...

staring... his mind replaying the desertion of Glass over and

over. He notices the smoke.

BRIDGER:

Best douse that smoke before them

`Ree spot it.

FITZGERALD:

We put enough distance between us

and them. And it's too damn cold

to go without one.

35.

BRIDGER:

All we know, they hoofed it through

the night same as us.

FITZGERALD:

(shakes his head)

A dozen `Ree can't make the time us

two did.

Bridger looks back to the trees... then considers something,

stares at Fitzgerald a beat, before...

BRIDGER:

It was twenty earlier.

FITZGERALD:

What?

BRIDGER:

When you woke me... you said you'd

spotted twenty `Ree.

FITZGERALD:

A dozen... twenty. I wasn't in a

mood to count feathers. Hell, one

`Ree woulda been too many.

Fitzgerald empties his canteen over the fire, killing the

flames. Bridger stares at the water pouring out.

BRIDGER:

What was you even doin' down at the

creak in the middle of the night?

(BEAT)

I'd already brought plenty a water.

Fitzgerald doesn't answer. Bridger tightens his grip on his

rifle... slowly rises.

BRIDGER (CONT'D)

Answer me.

FITZGERALD:

Don't start questionin' me on

accounta you feelin' guilty `bout

leavin' your n*gger buddy behind.

Bridger musters up all the courage he can... aims his rifle

at Fitzgerald.

BRIDGER:

ANSWER ME OR I BLOW YOUR DAMN HEAD

OFF!

36.

Fitzgerald stares back at Bridger and his rifle... eyes

taking in everything... a snake sizing up its prey. Then

Fitzgerald stands... takes a step toward the boy.

FITZGERALD:

What're you askin'? Why it was you

turned your back on Glass? Why you

let him die to save your own sorry

skin?

(BEAT)

`Cause you was scared shitless,

that's why.

BRIDGER:

The `Ree... did you see `em?

(off Fitzgerald's silence)

DID YOU SEE `EM?

FITZGERALD:

(MOVING CLOSER)

Not a one.

Bridger CRIES OUT... starts to pull the trigger, when

Fitzgerald's hand flashes out, grabbing the barrel, and

shoving the butt back into Bridger's face... THWACK.

The force of the blow knocks Bridger back to the ground, but

Fitzgerald holds his grip on the rifle barrel... flips it

around to aim it at the boy. Blood drips down Bridger's head

as he stares up at his rifle pointed down.

Fitzgerald's finger tightens on the trigger.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

So that there is the answer to your

question.

And Fitzgerald PULLS THE TRIGGER... AND BRIDGER SQUEEZES HIS

EYES SHUT IN FEAR... THEN CLICK. Bridger opens his eyes...

sees Fitzgerald sneering down at him.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

And the next time you aim to kill

somebody, kid, best remember your

gun won't fire without a flint.

Fitzgerald tosses the rifle back at Bridger, and turns away.

Bridger's face flushes with rage and humiliation... he

charges Fitzgerald from behind... tackles him to the

ground... starts pounding Fitzgerald with punches.

A few of them land, but it's only a moment before Fitzgerald

is back in control... HEAD-BUTTING Bridger off of him...

37.

tossing him away, then KICKING BRIDGER IN THE STOMACH...

AGAIN. He grabs his knife... is ready to finish Bridger

off...

...but Fitzgerald is smart enough to know that out here, two

are safer than one... even when one is just a kid. He starts

walking away.

BRIDGER:

I'm goin' back for him.

FITZGERALD:

Far as we ran all night, you

couldn't find Glass with dogs and a

map. And I don't believe you

really want to. `Cause after

leavin' him to die the first time,

I doubt he'd be too happy to see

you now.

Fitzgerald digs at the dirt with the knife... covers the

fire's remains.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

And just so we're clear. If you

try to backtrack without me

knowin', or ever get so guilty you

feel the need to tell somebody.

Fitzgerald looks at Bridger... hard... evil.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

I'll have no choice but to gut you

from nuts to nose.

Fitzgerald stares his point home, then shoves the blade into

his belt, and stands.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Now let's go.

Bridger wipes the blood from his face, then throws one last

glance behind him before following Fitzgerald.

EXT. CAMP - MORNING

Empty and quiet... no sign of life... until GLASS' HAND RISES

BETWEEN THE BRANCHES. His fingers dig into the earth,

pulling himself up from the hole... a dead man climbing out

of his own grave.

He rolls out to the ground... arches in pain when his back

hits the cold, hard surface.

38.

Glass lies there shivering, regaining what little strength he

has, then rolls over... starts dragging himself again with

that one good arm. He makes it to the blanket... wraps it

around him.

Glass rests there in the center of camp... unable to move...

his eyes scanning the surroundings... no food... no water...

and he's wide open in this clearing... an easy target for any

predator. So he grabs his Possibles bag and GUNPOWDER HORN,

and drags himself toward the cover of brush.

And every movement takes all the will Glass has... a push

with his good leg followed by a pull with his healthy arm...

inch by inch... foot by foot... sweat pouring down his face

as he finally reaches the cover of the trees... continues

on... dragging himself across the forest floor in a

desperate, hopeless crawl for survival.

But finally it's too much for Glass... the fever and pain

overwhelm him. He collapses... falls unconscious.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Glass lies in the dirt, weak... dehydrated... starving. He

looks at his hands... scratched and bloody from clawing his

weight.

He unwraps his small, leather Possibles bag... dumps it to

the ground, revealing it contents... flints, a straight

razor, his map, and a LEATHER NECKLACE WITH THE SIX-INCH BEAR

CLAW attached. Glass grabs the razor... cuts SEVERAL THIN

STRIPS FROM THE BLANKET, and wraps them around his hands.

He shoves the rest back in the bag, and does the only thing

he can do... start crawling again... push with his healthy

leg... pull with his good arm.

EXT. WILDERNESS - LATER

Glass dragging himself up a steep slope... over rocks... the

jagged edges catching the wounds... tearing the primitive

stitching. The gashes rip wider... blood oozes down, leaving

a crimson trail dripping down the rock behind him.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

The wind is howling through the trees. Glass lies beneath a

cluster of brush... shivering... bleeding. Every aching

breath creates a puff of smoke in the cold, night air.

39.

EXT. MARSH - DAY

Thick with a sea of four-foot high Cattails... like miniature

cornstalks. Looking down from above the marsh we see a two-

foot wide path of crushed plants that reaches the center of

the marsh, and stops.

We tighten on the end of the path, until we see Glass lying

among the Cattails. He's sawing off one of the stalks with

the straight razor... peeling away the husk, and eating the

tender flesh beneath.

Mosquitoes move in clouds around him... over his face...

arms. But Glass' injured body only allows him one action at

a time, so the mosquitoes have their fill of him, as he gnaws

on the Cattail.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Glass pulling himself along the ground... stopping to tear a

FEW BERRIES from a plant, and shove them in his mouth. He

flinches as he swallows. He starts to move again, but

freezes... listens... RUSHING WATER.

Glass digs his fingers into the ground with new energy...

pulls himself toward the sound... up over a ridge... and

there it is at the bottom of the ridge...

...THE GRAND RIVER... WATER. Glass crawls down toward it.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

Glass drags himself to the river's edge, cupping handfuls of

water and rubbing it over his parched lips... withstanding

the pain to gulp it down.

As he does, Glass notices a FISH hovering in the shallows

beside him. He makes a desperate grab for the fish, but it

darts easily away.

Glass cups more water to his mouth, but with each drink, he

feels the water leak from a hole in his throat... run down

his neck. He leans out over the surface to check his

reflection... barely recognizes the swollen, stitched-

together, disfigured face staring back at him. He fights off

the urge to vomit... pulls the razor from the leather bag,

and cuts more strips of blanket, soaking them in the river,

then cleaning his wounds.

40.

He runs a finger up to his shredded throat... around the

open, wet hole. He cups another handful of water to his

mouth... strains to swallow, then feels the liquid GURGLE OUT

OF THE HOLE.

Glass shoves the cloth against the wound... tries to press

the flesh together... no good. He dumps out his Possibles

bag... stares at the meager contents. He picks up one of the

flints... looks to the powderhorn.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - LATER

ANGLE ON A SMALL CLUMP OF DRIED GRASS...

...as Glass SPARKS one of the flints... ignites the grass.

As the fire grows, Glass pours a handful of GUNPOWDER from

the horn, and RUBS IT ALL OVER THE HOLE IN HIS THROAT.

He lifts several small blades of burning grass... a miniature

torch. And only then do we realize what he's about to do...

because he stares at the flame a beat, then raises it toward

his gunpowder-covered throat.

The flame nears the black powder, and LEAPS OFF THE GRASS,

igniting the powder, and SETTING GLASS'S NECK ON FIRE.

Glass falls back to the ground in agony... TRIES TO SCREAM,

but his burning, shredded vocal chords won't allow him.

The gunpowder sizzles and burns... the flame spreads...

Glass' flesh sears... melts. And the pain is too much for

Glass... he passes out.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - NIGHT

ANGLE ON GLASS... looking dead beside the river, but we know

he's alive because we can hear those same painful, raspy

breaths.

And then we hear something else... an O.S. RATTLING, growing

LOUDER... FASTER... BUZZING... until Glass' eyes flash open.

CUT TO:

GLASS' POV - ON A RATTLESNAKE COILED INCHES FROM HIS FACE.

Glass stares back in horror... has time to throw up his arm

in protection as the snake STRIKES... SINKS ITS FANGS INTO

HIS FOREARM.

41.

He shakes it free, but can't escape the snake's next

strike... locking its jaws onto Glass' burned throat. Glass

opens his mouth to scream.

CUT TO:

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

And Glass' eyes flying open in the glaring sun, as he awakens

from his nightmare... looks to his arm... no snake. His hand

instinctively jumps to his melted throat. No bites.

But that's when he hears it... we all do... that same

RATTLING FROM HIS DREAM. Glass slowly turns his head toward

the sound...

...and there's a RATTLESNAKE COILED just a few feet away.

Only it isn't poised to attack Glass. It's facing the other

way, its target a FIELD MOUSE, trapped against a rock.

The snake attacks, sinking its fangs into the mouse. The

field mouse tumbles over... quivers as the poison runs

through its body, then dies.

As Glass watches the snake begin to make a meal of the mouse,

his hand grips a rock. He drags himself toward the occupied

snake... raises the rock high, then SMASHES IT DOWN ON THE

SNAKE'S HEAD.

Glass immediately pulls the razor from his bag, and slices

off the rattlesnake's head, the field mouse still lodged

halfway inside. Glass then drags the razor down the length

of the snake... digs his fingers under the fresh seam, then

peels the outer layer down off the rattler.

With the skin still hanging off the round tube of flesh,

Glass BITES INTO THE SNAKE, tearing off a chunk of meat. He

gobbles it down, slowing only to painfully swallow the food

past his injured throat.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - LATER

ANGLE ON THE REMAINS OF THE SNAKE...

...the head, skin, and not much else.

GLASS - at the water's edge, drinking... touching his

charred, melted throat... no leaks. He opens his Possibles

bag... pulls out the GRIZZLY CLAW NECKLACE... stares at it a

beat, then slips it over his head.

42.

He drags out the map... spreads it on the ground, then throws

a glance around him... fingers the point on the blue line...

a rough guess of his location.

ANGLE ON THE MAP...

...Fort Union at the top... hundreds of miles north. Fort

Brazeau south... but not nearly as far away.

Glass gazes north up the Grand, as if he can see Fitzgerald

and Bridger just ahead of him. Then he looks back down to

his reflection in the water... battered and scarred. He

looks to his leg... all but worthless for now... his one good

arm. It's clear he's not ready to take revenge on anyone.

So Glass shoves the map back into the bag... ties it around

his arm with the powderhorn and blanket, then grabs a THICK,

FALLEN LOG, and rolls it into the river. Glass crawls in

behind it... deeper, until the current grows strong enough to

carry the weight of his mangled body downstream.

Glass drapes his healthy arm over the log, and starts

floating... letting the river do the work. He watches the

land move past him faster than it has in days... and without

all the agony of every move.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

Winding through the open prairie. Glass hangs onto the

log... floats with the gentle current.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - EVENING

The sinking sun casts an orange glow over the water. Glass

floats downstream... past a HERD OF ELK grazing along the

riverbank. The animals don't even notice him.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - NIGHT

Dark... the moon hidden behind clouds. A heavy mist hangs

over the river. Glass is draped across the log, eyes

closed... letting the slow current carry him south. But then

his eyes open... because he hears something... a LOW RUMBLE.

Glass looks to the river banks... too foggy to see anything

clearly. The RUMBLE GROWS LOUDER. He peers ahead... too

dark to see much... just ANOTHER SPLINTERED LOG floating in

front of him, its one jagged branch rising up in the air.

43.

But then THE LOG VANISHES. Glass squints through the fog,

scanning the surface. But it's gone... the water's empty...

that LOW RUMBLE GROWS EVEN LOUDER.

Glass looks to the water beside him... a BRANCH GLIDES PAST

AT A HIGHER SPEED. And now Glass knows what's coming, but

it's too late... because the world suddenly turns upside

down, as Glass tumbles over the edge of a TWENTY FOOT

WATERFALL.

He spirals downward... crashes into the rushing current.

He's washed forward with the suddenly violent rapids. They

pull him under the surface, then toss him GASPING back out.

The river carries him blindly through the mist... tossing...

turning... SLAMMING HIM INTO A HUGE BOULDER... CRACK... he

spins off, swept away headfirst... the foaming water sucking

him down the rocky gauntlet.

He tumbles over more boulders... his Possibles bag snaps

loose... Glass makes a grab for it, but is suddenly flipped

down another set of falls.

The Possibles Bag is lost in the raging river.

Glass sinks beneath the surface, then floats back up, as the

rapids calm... spit Glass to the gentle shallows. His body

drifts face-down toward shore.

And just when we're sure Glass has to finally be dead, his

arm reaches up from the water... he digs his fingers into the

muddy bank, and drags himself out of the river.

Glass collapses unconscious to the ground, his body shrouded

in that mist.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

TIGHT ON THE LEFT SIDE OF GLASS' FACE... the right still

pressed into the muddy bank. The sun beats down... then

SHADOWS APPEAR... BOUNCE ACROSS HIM... something is standing

over Glass.

And then a VULTURE'S HEAD DROPS INTO FRAME...

...latches its beak onto Glass' cheek... tugs at it...

stretches it. Glass' eyes pop open... we PULL BACK to see

THREE VULTURES surrounding Glass' body, pecking and clawing

at his battered wounds.

44.

Glass swings his good arm, knocking one of the vultures away.

He tries to cry out, but only that PRIMITIVE HISS ERUPTS from

his throat.

The vultures dance away from his flailing... aren't willing

to give up their meal so easily... dart in for quick attacks

on his flesh.

Glass grasps a branch... swings at the birds, beating them

back. The vultures give up the battle... fly away.

Glass crumbles back to the ground... squints up into the

sun... the SILHOUETTES OF THE VULTURES CIRCLING ABOVE HIM...

waiting for him to die.

Glass looks down to his wounds, again oozing blood. He

glances around... sees a ridge just a few hundred yards away.

At the base of the ridge, a GIANT BOULDER has broken free,

creating a partial cave. Glass starts crawling toward it.

And if it's possible, he looks even closer to death now than

when he started this journey.

EXT. CAVE - DAY

No more than ten feet deep, but enough to hide from

predators. Glass drags himself as far back in the recess as

he can... collapses against the rock wall.

INT. CAVE - DAY

Glass gathers loose sticks and grass into a small pile...

begins sparking rocks together to build a fire.

INT. CAVE - LATER

The fire burns beside Glass, as he TEARS A SINGLE THREAD of

cloth from the tattered blanket, then feeds it through a tiny

hole in a JAGGED, NEEDLE-SIZED SLIVER OF SHARPENED ROCK... a

man-made needle and thread.

Glass goes to work on the open wounds of his chest...

piercing his skin with the rock... wincing with pain as he

tugs the thread through the fresh hole in his skin... pierces

the other side of the wound, then pulls the flesh tightly

together... before repeating the excruciating process all

over again... pierce... pull... pierce... tighten.

45.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - NIGHT

The moon's glow reflects off the water.

INT. CAVE - NIGHT

ANGLE ON GLASS' HAND...

...holding a small sharp stone, and SCRATCHING LETTERS INTO

THE CAVE'S ROCK WALL.

WE PAN DOWN TO THE GROUND... still listening to the

SCRATCHING OF THE ROCK as we glide across the dirt... reach

the fire... its flame warm and strong. We TIGHTEN ON THE

FIRE, until WE'RE INSIDE IT... and then WE PULL BACK...

...and we see the fire has long died away... just black ash.

The O.S. SCRATCHING has silenced. We glide back across the

cave floor... to Glass unconscious on the ground. And above

him on the wall, we see what he had been scratching...

"Robbed and left to die by Fitzgerald and Bridger. If find

eether kill for Hugh Glass"

We hold on those words a beat, then...

DISSOLVE TO:

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

DROPS OF RAIN dot the surface. THUNDER RUMBLES... the rain

grows heavier.

EXT. CAVE - NIGHT

Rain pouring... gullies of water run down the ridge, spewing

over the mouth of the cave. But inside, Glass doesn't

stir... lying there just as we last saw him.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

Rain coming down in buckets. The river's raging.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

Clouds drift across the moon... the storm has ended.

46.

EXT. CAVE - DAY

Sunny and clear. A rabbit hops along... stops for a moment

outside the cave. Beyond it, Glass is still sprawled on the

cave floor... he must be dead. The rabbit continues on past.

INT. CAVE - DAY

TIGHT ON GLASS' FACE... as his eyes flutter open. He stares

straight ahead, unmoving.

EXT. CAVE - DAY

Glass crawls out of the crevice... shields his eyes from the

sun, as he takes in the scene.

The river has sunk back to normal, leaving the banks battered

and muddy. The water is thick and brown with all the flooded

earth it pulled up.

Glass uses all his strength to rise up to his knees, then

higher... onto his healthy leg. He braces himself against a

tree. He's still crooked and hunched over, but for the first

time since the Grizzly attack, he looks more like a man than

an animal. He bends down... picks up a BROKEN TREE BRANCH.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

Glass limps along the bank... beside the brown water stirred

up from the flood. He moves along the washed-out area,

searching for food... grabs some plants... tears them from

the ground to chew on the roots.

He continues on... spots a DEAD SNAPPING TURTLE drowned in

the flood, frozen on its back. Glass kneels down to pick up

the turtle... sniffs it. As he does, he spots something

across the river... a DEER, staring back at him.

Glass slowly raises his IMAGINARY RIFLE... takes careful aim

at the deer... pulls the trigger. If only he had his Anstadt.

But then the deer's head snaps... to something beyond Glass.

Glass follows the animal's eyes... turns to the ridge... and

the FIVE ARIKARA WARRIORS STANDING AT GLASS' CAVE.

Glass drops flat to the ground behind a tree uprooted in the

flood. He looks back across the river... THE DEER IS LONG

GONE.

47.

Glass inches his head up over the tree... to the warriors now

crouched outside the cave... studying the tracks.

Glass' eyes jump to the soft dirt along the river... HIS

FOOTPRINTS CLEAR... an obvious trail leading right to him.

He throws a glance around... nowhere to run even if he could.

So he starts backing into the river on his stomach... feet-

first... dragging a small branch over the tracks around him,

wiping them away as he moves. And his eyes are locked on the

Arikara... watching to see if they spot him.

But they haven't yet, and Glass keeps sliding backward...

five feet off shore... only three feet deep in the murky

water and sludge. But if he goes any further, the current

will catch him... pull him into the next set of violent

rapids... and make him a clear target.

The Arikara follow the tracks down from the cave.

Glass sinks neck-deep into the water... the Arikara keep

coming... near the river. So Glass drops beneath the surface.

CUT TO:

UNDERWATER -

And Glass' eyes spread wide... searching the muddy water. He

grabs a LARGE ROCK... rolls onto his back, and places the

rock on his stomach, its weight holding him firmly to the

river bottom.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - DAY

ANGLE ON THE ARIKARA WARRIORS... following Glass' tracks to

the edge of the river... looking out over the brown river.

CUT TO:

UNDERWATER -

Glass pressing his head back against the bottom... staring up

through the cloudy water... to the FIVE SHADOWS STANDING ONLY

A FEW FEET AWAY.

EXT. GRAND RIVER - CONTINUOUS

The Arikara... unknowingly standing just above Glass...

looking back to the tracks... scanning the water. But the

surface is empty, and the river's too thick with mud to see

anything below.

48.

But they keep looking... and we're waiting for Glass to

explode from the river, gasping for air. But he doesn't...

and they keep scanning for what seems an eternity, until

finally, the warriors turn... start walking back up the path.

Behind them, Glass' face inches to the surface... pulls in

some oxygen... watches as they fade into the trees.

Then Glass rolls the rock away... starts moving deeper into

the river... fighting the current to grab rocks and

boulders... pulling himself to the other side.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Glass limps through the trees, still dripping with the muddy

water of the Grand.

EXT. WILDERNESS - LATER

Glass is on his knees, desperately grabbing for a TINY FIELD

MOUSE. The rodent escapes into a hole. Glass claws at the

ground after it. He's starving to death.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

The rain beating down through the trees. Glass huddles in a

cluster of bushes, trying to stay dry... shivering in the

cold. He reaches out from the cover, grabbing his moccasin

boot standing in the rain. He pulls it in... slurps back the

rainfall that it's caught.

EXT. PRAIRIE - EVENING

Glass limps slowly across the rolling prairie. He's weak...

starving... isn't going to make it much further. He drops to

his hands and knees.

And then he feels something... the ground almost trembling

under his hands. He watches his hands quiver with vibration.

A RUMBLE BUILDS. Glass strains to hear... looks to the crest

of a hill... labors up the gentle slope toward the sound.

EXT. PRAIRIE/HILL - EVENING

Glass reaches the crest... looks over the other side to a

HERD OF BUFFALO THUNDERING ACROSS THE PRAIRIE.

49.

An incredible site... hundreds of massive creatures... their

hooves tearing up the earth, leaving a cloud of dust behind

them.

Behind the herd, a PACK OF WOLVES FIGHT OVER A FALLEN

BUFFALO.

Glass lies in the high grass, watching the wolves SNARL AND

SNAP over the remains. And he eyes that buffalo... the

closest he's been to food in days.

EXT. PLAINS - NIGHT

The five wolves rest around the downed buffalo, their snouts

bloody from the meal. Suddenly, one of the wolves' heads

snaps up... bares its teeth... SNARLS.

And then we see what the wolf is growling at... Glass...

limping out of the shadows toward the animals, holding a

BURNING SAGE BUSH IN EACH HAND... like giant FLAMING HANDS

clawing in the night.

The wolves jump to their feet, unsure of what's approaching.

They growl at Glass. But Glass keeps coming... doing his

best to YELL... more like GROWL back at the wolves. He

swings the flaming brush, tossing glowing sparks through the

air.

The wolves spread out, instinctively surrounding Glass. But

Glass singles out each one... charges, waving the flames...

driving each wolf back.

Four of the wolves back away, but the leader holds its

ground... even moves toward Glass... only a few feet away...

SNARLING... bloody jaws ready to attack, but still not sure

what its up against.

Glass shakes the flames at the wolf... it SNAPS AT GLASS'

ARM. Glass swings the other... slams the fiery plant across

the wolf's head.

The wolf YELPS... leaps back... starts to run away, but turns

back... makes another charge at Glass. But Glass is ready...

throws the flaming ball of sage at the wolf, then clubs it

with the other. The animal's fur begins to burn.

The frightened wolf has had enough... rolls on the ground,

then spins to join the rest of its pack. They run a safe

distance, then stop... keeping a watch on Glass.

50.

Glass drags the burning sage bushes along the ground,

igniting the grass and brush... creating a foot-high flaming

wall between him and the wolves.

He stretches the flame into a circle, a fiery ring surrounds

the fallen buffalo.

The wolves have seen enough... turn... race away from the

flames.

As the grass around him burns, Glass drops the sage plants...

attacks the buffalo remains, tearing away bloody chunks of

flesh from the carcass, and shoving them into his mouth... a

starving animal that's finally found food.

EXT. PRAIRIE - NIGHT

From high above the prairie... Glass and the buffalo at the

center of that glowing ring of fire.

EXT. PRAIRIE - DAY

The wind's gusting... bending the high golden grass over on

its side. Glass moves slowly across, pulling his collar up

to shield his face from the cold winds. He spots something

in the distant sky ahead... a THIN LINE OF BLACK SMOKE.

Glass picks up his pace... hope spurring him on.

EXT. BURNED ARIKARA VILLAGE - DAY

The charred, skeletal remains of a tribe's village... just

black posts where tee-pees once stood... a half-burned log

lodge still smokes, sending that black line into the sky.

Glass limps through the graveyard of structures... all signs

of life in this village long gone. He searches a basket...

pulls out a BLANKET... wraps it around his shoulders.

INT. LODGE - DAY

Glass steps into the smoky warmth of the lodge... black and

empty. He slides down to the floor... unwraps strips of

roasted buffalo from what's left of his blanket. He starts to

take a bite, when SOMETHING DARTS PAST THE DOORWAY TO THE

BACK ROOM. The O.S. SHUFFLING OF FEET.

Glass freezes... he isn't alone. He rises... grabs a

splintered post like a spear... eases toward the doorway...

raises the post to swing...

51.

...and sees the SMALL PUPPY standing in the back room. The

dog takes off around a crumbled wall. Glass follows it.

INT. LODGE/BACK ROOM - CONTINUOUS

Glass limps across the room... turns the corner of the

crumbled wall... and sees the dog slide to a stop beside an

ANCIENT ARIKARA SQUAW, huddled in the corner, her bony arms

outstretched in front of her in weak defense. And her eyes

are SOLID WHITE... the old woman is blind. She CRIES OUT A

CHANT over and over... her death chant, as she waits for this

stranger to kill her.

Glass stands frozen... confused. He tries to speak, but his

throat still won't let him. He crouches down in front of the

old woman... reaches for her hand, but she flails him away.

He grabs her again... gently... just holds it until she

calms... studying the woman... her hollow face all skin and

bones... she's obviously dying.

He pulls the strip of buffalo meat from his pocket... pushes

it into the squaw's hand. She immediately jerks it to her

mouth... and that's when Glass sees the WOMAN HAS NO TEETH...

she can't eat.

Glass turns to an old pot tipped over on the floor.

EXT. BURNED ARIKARA VILLAGE - DAY

Glass carries the pot toward a nearby stream. The dog

scurries out behind him... follows Glass to the water.

INT. LODGE/BACK ROOM - DAY

The pot boils over burning logs. Glass dips a cup in,

pulling out a warm broth. He carries it to the squaw, still

sitting in the corner... takes her hand, placing the cup in

it for her. She gulps the liquid back.

Glass goes back to refill the cup. The old woman MUMBLES

SOMETHING we can't understand... over and over, as Glass

brings the cup back to her. He tries to ease it into her

hand, but the woman pushes it away... slides her hand up

Glass' arm to his face... patting it... MUMBLING THOSE SAME

WORDS... thanking Glass.

52.

EXT. BURNED ARIKARA VILLAGE - EVENING

Glass carries several blankets toward the lodge. The puppy

trails behind him, biting at one of the corners... hanging on

as Glass pulls him across the dirt.

INT. LODGE - EVENING

Glass enters the back room with the blankets... stops when he

sees the old woman slumped over to the floor, her white eyes

frozen open in a lifeless stare.

EXT. BURNED ARIKARA VILLAGE - NIGHT

Glass has stacked several burned posts into a crude pyre at

the edge of the village. The squaw lies atop the pyre,

covered in the blankets he gathered for her. Glass stands

beside the pyre, a FLAMING TORCH in his hand. The puppy

rests at his feet.

EXT. DISTANT RIDGE - CONTINUOUS

THREE INDIANS sit on horseback, watching Glass light the

pyre... the flames rise into the night.

EXT. BURNED ARIKARA VILLAGE - NIGHT

Glass crouches... pets the dog, as he watches the flames

spread... engulf the woman.

ANGLE ON THE GLOWING EMBERS...

...floating into the night. Beyond the sparks, we see

something else... THOSE THREE INDIANS GALLOPING TOWARD THE

VILLAGE... FAST.

And now Glass sees them too... knows it's too late to run, so

he just stands there. But the dog's seen enough... darts

away.

Glass watches the Indians ride into the village... their

braided hair and dress is different than the Arikara we've

seen earlier, because these are SIOUX WARRIORS, and Glass

knows it.

The Sioux surround Glass on horseback... stare down at Glass.

The lead warrior (SPOTTED HORSE), (30's), poised and strong,

points to the flaming pyre... says something to Glass.

53.

Glass tries to answer... can't... touches his scarred throat.

Spotted Horse slides gracefully off his horse. The other two

warriors, (THREE FEATHERS and RUNNING FOX) do the same...

close in on Glass.

Glass stands firm. Spotted Horse says something else to him.

Again, Glass touches his throat... holds his jacket out from

his sides... no weapons. Spotted Horse studies Glass hard...

reaches out, wiping his finger down Glass' cheek, almost

testing to see if the color comes off.

One of the other warriors pats Glass' hair... smiles... says

something to the others. Spotted Horse and the other warrior

join him, each touching Glass' hair.

Then Spotted Horse spots Glass' necklace... the grizzly claw

hanging from it. He examines the enormous claw, then nods to

Glass' stitching and scars.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Griz-lee.

Glass hears the familiar word... nods. Three Feathers pulls

a WHITE SPECK from the back of Glass' neck... holds it up to

Spotted Horse.

Spotted Horse jerks out his knife. Glass is confused...

holds up his hand, as he takes a step back. But Three

Feathers and Running Fox grab Glass... secure him... pull his

jacket down off his shoulders, exposing his shirt, as Spotted

Horse walks around behind Glass... raises the knife... Glass

GROWLS A PLEA... but Spotted Horse slices the knife down

Glass' back... just cutting open his shirt... and revealing a

MASS OF WHITE WORMS... MAGGOTS... COVERING THE DEEP GASHES ON

GLASS' BACK.

The three warriors exchange glances... they've obviously

never seen anything like this. Glass sees their reaction...

throws a nervous glance... what?

Three Feathers runs his hand across Glass' back, dragging a

HANDFUL OF WORMS for Glass to see. As Glass' eyes widen in

panic, Spotted Horse SLAMS THE BUTT OF HIS KNIFE against

Glass' head.

Glass drops to his knees... makes a dazed grab for Spotted

Horse... misses... and Spotted Horse HITS GLASS AGAIN. Glass

tumbles unconscious to the dirt.

Spotted Horse says something to the others... they grab

Glass' limp arms... drag him toward the horses.

54.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - NIGHT

Dozens of glowing campfires dot the prairie, along with a sea

of tee-pees, their willow poles fanning against the night

sky. Animal hides and painted designs decorate the various

tee-pees and lodges. SIOUX CHILDREN laugh and play about the

village... freeze when they hear Spotted Horse and the other

riders splash across the stream.

The warriors ride into the village, Glass' body tossed over

the back of Three Feather's horse. The children race to them.

ANGLE ON GLASS... regaining consciousness... eyes blinking...

trying to focus.

CUT TO:

GLASS' POV - FROM THE BACK OF THE HORSE...

...to the children's eager faces swarming around him...

studying this strange face.

Spotted Horse - YELLING SOMETHING at the children... they

back away from Glass... fall into line behind the riders.

Sioux MEN and WOMEN watch as the procession moves past... to

a tee-pee set away from the rest... its hide walls decorated

with wild lightning bolts and buffalo and vaguely human

figures circling the sun.

An OLD MEDICINE MAN, gnarled and leathery, a DEAD RAVEN tied

in his long hair, his naked chest painted with red and black

stripes, steps out of the tee-pee. He eyes Glass, as Three

Feathers and Running Fox carry him inside.

Suddenly, the Medicine Man begins CHANTING.

CUT TO:

A FLURRY OF IMAGES ACCOMPANIED BY THE MEDICINE MAN'S V.O.

CHANTING...

LEATHER STRAPS SNAPPING AROUND GLASS' WRISTS AND ANKLES...

stretched tight.

Glass, naked, on his stomach at the center of the tee-pee,

his arms and legs outstretched, secured to wooden stakes in

the ground. The white worms cover his back.

55.

The Medicine Man... CHANTING... waving burning sticks in the

air.

A THICK LIQUID BOILING IN A POT... the Medicine Man's twisted

hand reaching a gourd container in... filling it with the

steaming mixture.

The liquid POURING OVER GLASS' BACK.

GLASS' FACE... arched to the sky... twisted in horrible pain.

He SCREAMS THAT HORRIBLE GROWLING CRY.

MORE IMAGES... even faster... the CHANTING more frantic...

A SIOUX WOMAN,(WAKI), staring down.

HANDS wiping a GREEN SLUDGE over Glass' neck... chest.

The Medicine Man dancing... chanting... shaking sticks lined

with RATTLESNAKE TAILS.

The moonlight shining through the tee-pee, illuminating the

images of the buffalo and dancing shapes.

Waki gently pouring fluid into Glass' mouth.

The Medicine Man holding the SEVERED HEAD OF A SNAKE...

lightly sinking the fangs around the wounds on Glass' throat.

GLASS' EYES... wide open... rolling up white into his head.

AND THE CHANTING STOPS... the world goes dark.

EXT. YELLOWSTONE RIVER - DAY

Cutting through the open prairie. Snow-covered peaks touch

the sky in the distance.

Fitzgerald and Bridger trudge their way across the prairie,

dressed in furs. They rise up a steep slope... reach the

top, and spot the cluster of log buildings inside a massive

thirty-foot tall wooden fence. Fort Union.

Bridger smiles... relieved.

FITZGERALD:

`Bout goddamn time.

They start down the slope. Fitzgerald grabs Bridger's arm...

firmly.

56.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

And we're understood on

everything... Glass' dyin' in his

sleep... us buryin' him like was

agreed.

Bridger doesn't respond. Fitzgerald doesn't like that.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

You're as guilty as me in leavin'

him. Don't you forget that. You

got a future up here. No sense

tossin' it away when he was as good

as dead already. Sh*t, all we did

was skip the funeral.

Bridger pulls his arm free... continues on.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

I won't take to givin' up that two-

hundred on accounta you gettin'

weak-kneed.

Bridger keeps walking. Fitzgerald follows behind.

INT. FORT UNION - DAY

Like a small town surrounded by a log wall. The main TRADING

POST BUILDING is busy... TRAPPERS, SIOUX, all with things to

trade. But most of the life is in the FORT UNION SALOON next

door... crowded with customers downstairs, and just as busy

in the whores' rooms upstairs.

A small village of tents rests off to the side of the

buildings, holding the overflow of traffic.

INT. SALOON - DAY

Fitzgerald and Bridger enter the crowded room... squeeze

their way to the bar.

FITZGERALD:

Twice the folks here than when we

left.

BRIDGER:

We should go see Captain Henry.

FITZGERALD:

Far as we hiked... we got time for

a drink on the company's tab.

57.

PIG (O.S.)

Jim!

They spin... see Pig, Murphy and Stubby Bill sitting at a

table. Pig scrambles up... rushes to Bridger, locking him in

a big bear hug.

PIG (CONT'D)

You made it! I was scared the `Ree

mighta caught up to ya.

FITZGERALD:

If your fat ass could get through,

we didn't have no worries.

Pig glares at Fitzgerald... watches him walk to the table,

joining the others.

PIG:

(off Fitzgerald, to

BRIDGER)

Had to be a helluva long walk for

you.

Bridger nods... Pig has no idea.

PIG (CONT'D)

Hugh?

Bridger hesitates a beat, then just shakes his head.

PIG (CONT'D)

Guess we all knowed how it would

turn out. Did he suffer much more?

Another long beat, then...

BRIDGER:

I hope not.

A PROSTITUTE walks down the stairs... stops on the landing,

waiting for her next customer. Fitzgerald spots her...

grins.

FITZGERALD:

(TO BRIDGER)

Maybe we best go see Henry, kid. I

just got a itch to spend the first

of my two-hundred.

The other men laugh. Not Bridger.

58.

INT. ROCKY MOUNTAIN FUR COMPANY OFFICE - DAY

Henry sits at his desk. Fitzgerald and Bridger stand across

from him. The others... Pig, Anderson, Murphy, and Stubby

Bill crowd the room behind them.

FITZGERALD:

I won't pretend to been his friend,

but I respect any man that fights

the way he done.

HENRY:

And the grave?

FITZGERALD:

We had those extra days so we went

deeper... covered it in rocks. To

keep the scavengers off him.

HENRY:

Any sign of hostiles?

FITZGERALD:

Not a one.

The words are like a punch in the gut to Bridger. He can't

take the pain... opens his mouth to speak, but Fitzgerald

beats him to it.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

Truth is, I was worried `bout `Ree,

and ready to get movin', but

Bridger here argued to stay and

make a cross for the grave.

Bridger's head snaps to Fitzgerald... don't make this worse.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

So that's what we did.

Pig reaches up... gives Bridger a pat on the back. But to

Bridger, it feels like a red-hot blade.

HENRY:

Glad to hear you pulled your

weight, Mr. Bridger. I knew you

would.

FITZGERALD:

More than his share, Captain.

59.

And now Fitzgerald has snared Bridger into his lie. Bridger

drops his eyes to his feet.

HENRY:

Speaking of shares.

Henry turns to a SAFE resting against the wall. Fitzgerald

watches as Henry spins the dial... locks in the combination,

then pulls the latch. The safe door swings open...

...revealing STACKS OF CASH.

Fitzgerald's eyes lock on all that money. Henry pulls out a

handful... starts counting them out onto the desk.

HENRY (CONT'D)

Am I to assume the agreed

arrangement didn't change?

FITZGERALD:

Fortunate for me, it did not.

HENRY:

Well thank you both for your

courage and honor. You have done

yourselves proud.

Fitzgerald swipes up his pile of bills. Henry drops a couple

bills in front of Bridger.

HENRY (CONT'D)

You're owed something for what you

did.

Bridger stares down at the bills a beat, then snatches

them... pushes his way out of the office before he might have

to look someone in the eye.

FITZGERALD:

He's beat hisself up most of the

trip... wishin' he'da done more.

HENRY:

We all saw the shape Glass was in.

There was no more to be done.

FITZGERALD:

That's what I been tellin' him.

60.

INT. BUNKHOUSE - DAY

Empty, except for Bridger curled up on his cot, squeezing

those crumpled bills in his hand, crying.

DISSOLVE TO:

INT. TEE-PEE - DAY

Glass sleeps under a buffalo robe. His eyes flicker open.

CUT TO:

GLASS' POV - ON THE BUFFALO AND DANCING FIGURE DESIGNS

SHADOWED THROUGH THE TEE-PEE.

GLASS - His hand reaching up to his throat. It looks much

better than we last saw. And the stitches are gone from his

face, now just long, pink scars. He stiffly raises himself

up... remembers his back... struggles to reach behind him...

scarred but clean... no maggots.

He looks beside him... sees BUCKSKIN PANTS AND SHIRT resting

on the ground... waiting for him.

EXT. TEE-PEE - DAY

ANGLE ON GLASS... dressed... pushing his way out through the

flap of the tee-pee... limping out into the midday sun, and

shielding his eyes. He looks like a man that hasn't seen the

light of day for weeks.

Glass adjusts to the brightness... stares in wonder at the

scene.

And then we see what Glass is looking at, and understand his

reaction... the entire village is blanketed in snow. The

Sioux VILLAGERS move about, wearing heavy skins and furs.

A WOMEN'S O.S. VOICE turns Glass...

...to WAKI, the woman from the images, walking toward him,

bundled in fur. She says something else we can't

understand... points to Glass' feet. Glass looks down... to

his BARE FEET BURIED DEEP IN THE SNOW. He hadn't noticed.

And then Waki smiles... a sweet, pretty smile. She takes his

hand... leads him back into the tee-pee.

61.

INT. TEE-PEE - CONTINUOUS

Glass and Waki enter. She pulls a pair of moccasins from a

basket... hands them to Glass.

He slips them on, then presses his fingers against his

throat... almost trying to hold it all inside to make it

work, then...

GLASS:

(scratching and rough)

Thank you.

Waki doesn't understand... just raises a cup of liquid...

says something, then touches his throat... motions for him to

drink. Glass sips the drink... grimaces... shakes his head,

trying to give the cup back, but Waki refuses... points at

his throat, and motions for him to drink. Glass stares in

the cup a beat, then gulps it back... shakes his head.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Bad medicine.

Waki smiles... hands him his BEAR CLAW NECKLACE. Glass nods

in thanks, then achingly lifts his arms up to slip it over

his head.

GLASS (CONT'D)

How long have I been here?

Waki just stares back... no idea what Glass said.

GLASS (CONT'D)

You're Sioux. I only know a bit a

Pawnee.

Glass stumbles through a sentence of Pawnee. Waki shakes her

head... throws a jumble of Sioux back at him.

GLASS (CONT'D)

The snow... my healin'.

(points to himself)

Me.

(points to the ground)

Here. How long?

Waki shakes her head again. Glass leads her outside.

62.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - CONTINUOUS

Glass points to the sun overhead, then raises both hands,

fingers outstretched.

GLASS:

How many suns? Ten?

Waki studies Glass... the sun... begins to understand. She

nods... SAYS A WORD... holds up all ten of her fingers.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Ten suns?

Then Waki closes her hands into fists... opens them again...

closes them again... SAYS A DIFFERENT WORD.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Christ.

Glass glances around... for the first time, notices Sioux MEN

and WOMEN staring at him. Children freeze in the middle of

their play... all eyes locked on Glass. TWO SMALL BOYS, (NEW

MOON and LITTLE ONE), repeat the same TWO WORDS to each

other...

BOYS:

Tatanka Wicasa.

...over and over.

Glass stares back, unsure. Then...

SPOTTED HORSE (O.S.)

Buff-A-lo Man.

Glass turns... sees Yellow Horse stepping out of a tee-pee.

Spotted Horse (cont'd)

(very broken english)

What they call you.

(points to Glass' hair)

Fur of Buff-A-lo.

Glass touches his hair... nods... smiles. The children smile

and laugh now too... repeat the words LOUDER.

GLASS:

You speak English.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Need words when trade with whites.

63.

GLASS:

Well I'm grateful for you bringing

me here... havin' them care for me.

(off Spotted Horse's nod)

Now if you could point me which way

it is you do your tradin'... with

the whites.

SPOTTED HORSE:

(POINTS)

Whites. Bra-zo.

GLASS:

Fort Brazeau? That's where I'm

tryin' to get. Is it far from here?

Spotted Horse doesn't understand. Glass motions into the

distance.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Far? Long way?

Spotted Horse points to a horse, then holds up three fingers.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Three days on horse?

Spotted Horse nods... looks Glass over, and shakes his head.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Not walk. Hides soon.

Glass doesn't understand... until Spotted Horse points to a

ROW OF BUFFALO HIDES hanging from a line.

Spotted Horse (cont'd)

We trade Bra-zo.

Glass stares at the tanning hides, then down at his leg.

Finally, he nods. Spotted Horse starts walking... waves for

Glass to follow.

Spotted Horse (cont'd)

Come. Eat.

Glass follows after him. The children sneak in behind,

giggling as they tail Glass across camp.

Glass glances back... New Moon and Little One duck behind a

tee-pee... wait for him to continue before they scoot back

out after him.

64.

INT. CHIEF'S LODGE - NIGHT

Glass, Spotted Horse, Three Feathers, Running Fox and OTHER

WARRIORS sit around a fire, eating with CHIEF RED HAWK, the

Medicine Man, and several other TRIBAL ELDERS.

GLASS:

The men stole my rifle.

The Sioux don't understand. Glass reaches over, taking

Spotted Horse's plate.

GLASS (CONT'D)

They took. They took...

Glass aims an imaginary rifle.

GLASS (CONT'D)

...my rifle. My gear.

Now Spotted Horse understands... translates for the others.

GLASS (CONT'D)

They left me to die. So I mean to

find `em both. Get my rifle back.

Spotted Horse translates again. Red Hawk nods, studying

Glass.

Red Hawk SAYS SOMETHING to Glass... motions to the BEAR CLAW

NECKLACE. Glass looks to Spotted Horse.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Red Hawk ask who kill griz-lee.

Glass touches his chest. Red Hawk nods, impressed. Glass

points to the JAGGED SCARS running up Red Hawk's neck to a

MISSING RIGHT EAR.

GLASS:

Grizzly?

Red Hawk smiles... shakes his head.

RED HAWK:

Arikara.

That word, Glass understands. Red Hawk rambles a long

sentence in Sioux. The other members LAUGH.

65.

SPOTTED HORSE:

He say Arikara take right ear of

Sioux. Left ear of whites. Not

know what they take from you.

Glass smiles along with the others. They continue their meal.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - DAY

Snow falls over Glass, as he stands outside the tee-pee,

flexing his injured leg... putting more weight on it...

testing its recovered strength.

Suddenly, a SPEAR PLANTS INTO THE GROUND BETWEEN HIS FEET.

Glass turns, startled... sees Spotted Horse, Three Feathers,

Running Fox, and several OTHER WARRIORS staring at him.

Glass' eyes jump from the spear to the warriors, unsure.

Spotted Horse strides to Glass... grabs the spear, then spins

it sideways... stares at Glass, until a smile spreads across

Spotted Horse's face... he holds the spear out to Glass.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Buff-A-lo Man hunt with Sioux?

Glass relaxes... nods... takes the spear from Spotted Horse.

Three Feathers hands a BUFFALO HIDE to Glass... motions for

Glass to put it on.

THREE FEATHERS:

Tatanka Wicasa.

Glass wraps the hide around him. The Warriors smile and nod.

EXT. FOREST - DAY

A world of silent white... like we're inside a giant snow-

globe. The sky is emptying all the snow it has over us...

pouring down... the only sound comes from the flakes hitting

the already fallen snow. The pale trunks of Cottonwoods rise

up from the white ground.

Then out of the white... a SHAPE APPEARS... a GIANT WOLF

WALKING ON ITS HIND LEGS. But as the wolf comes closer, we

see it's not a wolf at all... it's THREE FEATHERS, wearing

his WOLF SKIN. He CRIES OUT... HOWLING WILDLY.

A few yards beside him, another WARRIOR is doing the same...

CHANTING... beating his spear against the Cottonwoods as he

walks.

66.

GLASS - WEARING THE BUFFALO HIDE...

...walking slowly through the trees, carrying the spear.

Yellow Bear is beside him... motions for Glass to spread out.

FROM ABOVE THE TREES...

...we see the fur-covered warriors are formed into a wide

circle... and slowly converging... YELLING... pounding their

spears... making as much noise as possible, as they tighten

their ring.

POV FROM THE BRUSH...

...watching DISTANT CHANTING WARRIORS pushing through the

trees. V.O. SNORTING... our POV darts sideways... charges

through the brush... slides to a stop when we see Running Fox

moving toward us... spins back another direction.

GLASS - MOVING THROUGH THE FOREST...

...the falling snow clinging to his face... covering the

buffalo hide.

And then a MASSIVE SHAPE BLASTS through the trees ahead of

him. Glass freezes, his grip tightening on the spear. He

looks to Spotted Horse, who nods... YELLS OUT, beating his

spear against the trees, and motioning for Glass to do the

same.

Glass is apprehensive at first... just lightly tapping his

spear. But as the other warriors' chants grow, Glass gets

caught up in the hunt... begins beating the trees... YELLING

as loud as his throat will allow.

THE WARRIORS - EYES PIERCING THROUGH THE SNOW... CHANTING...

BEATING THE BUSHES.

OUR LOW POV AGAIN - RACING CHAOTICALLY THROUGH THE BRUSH...

...to Spotted Horse waving his spear... back over the snow...

to Three Feathers SCREAMING... we spin again... crash through

bushes, then suddenly TUMBLE... DROP THROUGH THE SNOW.

67.

GLASS - HEARING THE ANIMAL'S WAIL...

...seeing Spotted Horse pick up his pace... start trotting

forward. Glass does the same... all the hunters converging

around a LARGE BLACK HOLE IN THE SNOW...

...and the ELK trapped at the bottom.

The warriors cry out victoriously... begin DRIVING THEIR

SPEARS INTO THE TRAP, killing the animal.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - EVENING

The elk roasts over a fire at the center of the village.

Glass sits alone outside the tee-pee, using the sharp tip of

the spear to carve into a small chunk of wood.

As he carves, New Moon and Little One sneak around the tee-

pee behind him... watch Glass work. Glass hears them

GIGGLING... doesn't react... just keeps carving... tilts the

long handle of the spear as he works, tapping the side of the

tee-pee, and SHAKING LOOSE A CLUMP OF SNOW DOWN ONTO THE

BOYS.

The shocked boys freeze in the cold... wipe the snow from

their faces to see Glass grinning at them. The little boys

charge Glass, leaping onto him... wrestling him to the

ground, as they squeeze his hair.

BOYS:

Tatanka Wicasa! Tatanka Wicasa!

Spotted Horse stands across the village, watching Glass and

the boys play in the snow.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - NIGHT

Glass stands at the edge of the village, carving at the wood

with the spear tip, and watching the Sioux from a distance.

Yellow Bear sees him... approaches, carrying his SON on his

shoulders. The little boy gnaws on a strip of meat.

Spotted Horse holds out a bowl of food to Glass.

GLASS:

Thank you.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Good hunt.

68.

GLASS:

Yes.

Glass smiles up at Spotted Horse's son.

SPOTTED HORSE:

You. Fam-i-lee?

GLASS:

(shakes his head)

No.

SPOTTED HORSE:

No wom-an?

(pointing to son)

Wakayaja?

A long beat, then...

GLASS:

No. Not for a long time.

Glass continues eating... watches Spotted Horse bounce the

giggling little boy on his shoulders.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - DAY

Glass steps out of his tee-pee, whittling with the spear tip.

He glances up... freezes because he sees several Sioux

pulling the hides from the line... rolling them up to carry.

Spotted Horse (O.S.)

Bra-zo.

Glass turns to Spotted Horse, pointing to the hides. Glass

nods... looks back to the last of the hides being pulled

down... doesn't seem as excited as he once might have been.

EXT. SIOUX VILLAGE - LATER

Spotted Horse and Three Feathers sit atop their horses.

Three Feathers holds the reins to another horse packed with

hides. An empty horse stands beside them... waiting for

Glass.

Glass is leaning over to New Moon and Little One... handing

them the CRUDE BUFFALO CARVING he made from the wood.

GLASS:

(taps his chest)

Tatanka Wicasa.

69.

The little boys smile. Glass nods to Waki, then waves to Red

Hawk and the Medicine Man. They return it... watch Glass

climb onto his horse.

Glass, Spotted Horse and Three Feathers ride out of the

village.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Glass, Spotted Horse and Three Feathers ride along a high

ridge, surrounded by empty snow-covered wilderness. They

have the world to themselves.

EXT. CAMP - NIGHT

Glass crouches over a shallow, five-foot long hole surrounded

by deep snow. The hole is filled with small fires and rocks.

And he's watching Spotted Horse and Three Feathers tossing

rocks into their own matching holes, then dragging the dirt

back into them. Spotted Horse throws a glance back to Glass,

making sure he understands.

Glass nods... pulls the dirt back in, covering the flames.

He watches Spotted Horse spread a blanket over the warm

ground, then does the same. He sits on the mound of dirt...

leans back against a tree... feels the warmth rise up from

beneath him.

He nods to Spotted Horse, who is already resting under his

blanket.

GLASS:

Nice.

SPOTTED HORSE:

(NODS)

Nice.

Glass pulls the buffalo hide around himself... keeping watch.

SPOTTED HORSE (cont'd)

Sleep. No Arikara.

Glass nods... but still doesn't close his eyes. Spotted

Horse tosses his knife over beside Glass. Glass takes it...

nods to Spotted Horse.

SPOTTED HORSE (cont'd)

Me sleep.

70.

Spotted Horse rolls over, turning his back on Glass...

trusting him with the knife. Three Feathers does the same.

Glass just stares out into the night.

INT. FORT UNION/BUNKHOUSE - NIGHT

Dark and quiet... except for the SNORING of a few men.

Fitzgerald sleeps on his cot. A shadow glides across him...

hovers over his face.

Fitzgerald's eyes blink open.

CUT TO:

FITZGERALD'S POV...

...on GLASS STANDING OVER HIM... his scarred face calm and

deadly... raising a knife to drive down into Fitzgerald's

chest.

FITZGERALD:

No... please.

But Glass swings the blade.

CUT TO:

EXT. WILDERNESS - MORNING

And Spotted Horse shaking Glass awake from his dream. Glass'

hand flies up, the knife gripped. But Spotted Horse grabs

his arm... stops it in mid-swing... holds it until Glass

realizes it was a dream... relaxes.

SPOTTED HORSE:

We go.

Glass calms... nods.

EXT. FORT BRAZEAU - DAY

Just a small cluster of log buildings sitting along the banks

of the Missouri. Dozens of tee-pees and tents are set up

outside the complex.

Glass follows Spotted Horse and Three Feathers into the camp.

BEGGING INDIANS and DRUNK TRAPPERS paw at the men as they

ride past, pleading for handouts.

71.

One of the Indians grabs for the hides. Three Feathers

plants his foot in the Indian's chest... shoves him back into

the snow.

They continue on... climb off their horses outside the

TRADING POST. Three Feathers stays to guard the hides, as

Spotted Horse and Glass enter.

INT. TRADING POST - DAY

A small, dingy room lined with shelves, all stacked high with

pots, pans, dry goods, whiskey, blankets, weapons... anything

that can be traded. KIOWA BRAZEAU, (60's), French-Canadian,

stands behind the counter... looks up when the BELL over the

door RINGS... sees Spotted Horse with Glass behind.

BRAZEAU:

(thick French accent)

Bon jour, Spotted Horse. You come

with many hides I hope.

(off Spotted Horse's nod)

We make good trades then.

Brazeau's eyes lock on Glass... stares at him, unsure.

BRAZEAU (CONT'D)

Monsieur Glass?

GLASS:

Good to see you again, Mr. Brazeau.

BRAZEAU:

Jesus Christ, what happened to your

goddamned face?

GLASS:

Had a tussle with a grizzly.

Glass shakes Brazeau's hand. Brazeau studies his face...

notices the Bear Claw Necklace... smiles.

BRAZEAU:

And now the grizzly, he don't look

so good either, eh?

Glass shakes his head.

BRAZEAU (CONT'D)

(off Spotted Horse)

You run with the Sioux these days?

72.

GLASS:

They looked after me for a spell.

I'm on my way to catch back up with

Captain Henry... at Fort Union.

Needed to trade for some supplies

on the Company's credit if I could.

BRAZEAU:

Oui, of course. Anything you like.

Glass pulls down a KENTUCKY LONG RIFLE.

GLASS:

We can start with this.

INT. TRADING POST - LATER

Glass is loaded with gear. He signs a ticket for Brazeau.

BRAZEAU:

You can pick up the horse at the

livery in the morning.

(off Glass' nod)

I wish I could give you a room for

the night, but...

Brazeau looks to SEVERAL TRAPPERS standing across the room,

glaring at Glass.

BRAZEAU (CONT'D)

I cannot risk the trouble of

letting a colored stay inside.

Glass glances to the trappers... one of them spits in Glass'

direction... makes some MONKEY SOUNDS... daring Glass to

respond. Glass just turns away.

GLASS:

Won't be the last night I sleep on

the ground.

Glass nods to Brazeau, then walks out.

BRAZEAU:

Take care of that face, Glass.

EXT. TRADING POST - DAY

Spotted Horse and Three Feathers sit on their horses. The

other horses are now packed with new goods. Glass

approaches.

73.

GLASS:

(points to the tents)

You stay here tonight?

Spotted Horse shakes his head... motions back toward the

wilderness. Then he points to the trading post... the

TRAPPERS.

SPOTTED HORSE:

Your people?

Glass looks back to all the white faces... trappers, drunks,

prostitutes. He shakes his head.

GLASS:

No.

SPOTTED HORSE:

You come then.

Spotted Horse taps his own chest... points back the way they

came. Glass hesitates, almost like he's considering it...

then he shakes his head again... points the opposite way.

GLASS:

Fort Union.

Spotted Horse stares at Glass a long beat, then...

SPOTTED HORSE:

You spend your life hunting enemy.

Enemy wins.

GLASS:

It will be over soon.

Then Glass pulls the Bear Claw Necklace off... hands it to

Spotted Horse. Spotted Horse holds it... then proudly slides

it over his head.

GLASS (CONT'D)

(IN SIOUX)

Thank you.

Spotted Horse raises his hand in goodbye, then spins his

horse and starts away. Three Feathers does the same. Glass

returns it... watches them ride off.

EXT. FORT BRAZEAU - NIGHT

Glass is in the trees beyond the tents and tee-pees...

crouched on the ground...

74.

dragging the dirt back over the fire and rocks. He slides up

onto the mound... feels the warmth, and smiles... just a

little.

EXT. MISSOURI RIVER - MORNING

Glass rides a PAINT MARE along a ridge overlooking the river.

Fort Brazeau stands in the distance behind him.

EXT. OPEN COUNTRY - DAY

Snowy and cold. Glass leads the line of riders through the

snow.

EXT. FORT UNION - EVENING

But you can't tell if it's day or night through the blizzard.

Fitzgerald, Pig, Anderson, Bridger, Murphy and Stubby Joe

trudge through the snow in their snowshoes... finally reach

the bunkhouse.

INT. BUNKHOUSE - EVENING

Anderson shoves the door closed against the wind... latches

it. The men look worn and battered... wind-burnt faces,

icicles in their beards.

FITZGERALD:

I had enough of this cold as hell

sh*t.

ANDERSON:

What'd you figure when ya signed on

outta that St. Louis whorehouse you

was workin'? That you was headin'

off to paradise?

Pig snorts a laugh at Fitzgerald's expense.

FITZGERALD:

I tell ya what I figured, I figured

I'd be somewhere the piss wouldn't

freeze before I got it outta my

pecker.

BRIDGER:

Figured wrong.

75.

Fitzgerald throws Bridger a glare... wants to throw more, but

Bridger's returning the stare... hard... so Fitzgerald

decides he'd better not push it.

FITZGERALD:

Waste a time to check traps in this

weather... while Henry sits warmin'

his ass on the stove in his office.

STUBBY BILL:

Why don't you go tell him that,

Fitz? Then start your hike back to

St. Louie.

FITZGERALD:

Sh*t, I walked up here, I got no

problem walkin' back.

MURPHY:

Contracted for twelve months. We

all did.

FITZGERALD:

Henry can shove that contract up

his toasty warm ass, or I'll do it

for him.

The others laugh at Fitzgerald's rambling.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

You don't think I will?

The men shake their heads. Fitzgerald grabs his gloves...

starts strapping his snowshoes back on.

ANDERSON:

Just give that fat little whore

you're so sweet on a couple extra

bits... she'll have you thinkin'

it's Spring already.

The men laugh as Fitzgerald walks out... leaves the door wide

open for the cold wind to pour over the others. Pig scurries

over, shoving it closed.

As the other men gather around a table to play cards, Bridger

pulls a JOURNAL from under his cot... falls onto the cot, and

starts writing.

INT. ROCKY MOUNTAIN FUR COMPANY OFFICE - EVENING

Fitzgerald enters... looks around the empty office.

76.

FITZGERALD:

Hello? Captain?

The place is empty. Fitzgerald eyes Henry's desk... then

past his desk... to the SAFE... its door CRACKED OPEN...

STACKS OF MONEY visible inside.

Fitzgerald glances around... looks back to that safe.

EXT. FORT UNION - NIGHT

Dark and quiet. The snow has stopped.

INT. BUNKHOUSE - NIGHT

Fitzgerald eases up from his cot... looks around at the

sleeping men.

EXT. FORT UNION - NIGHT

Fitzgerald slips out of the bunkhouse door... across the

compound... toward the front gate.

MURPHY (O.S.)

Where're you headed?

Fitzgerald looks up... sees Murphy in the Blockhouse on

sentry duty.

FITZGERALD:

To the river, Murphy.

Murphy squints down into the shadows.

MURPHY:

That you, Fitzgerald?

FITZGERALD:

Left my rifle down there... don't

want it out all night.

MURPHY:

That weren't too smart.

FITZGERALD:

Just don't take a shot at me when I

come back in.

MURPHY:

We'll see.

77.

Murphy waves Fitzgerald out.

FITZGERALD:

Not that you'd hit me if you tried.

Murphy fakes a laugh... raises his rifle down at Fitzgerald.

CUT TO:

POV DOWN MURPHY'S RIFLE...

...on Fitzgerald moving toward the river... disappearing into

the darkness.

EXT. MISSOURI RIVER - NIGHT

Out of sight from the fort. Fitzgerald slides the ANSTADT

FROM UNDER HIS COAT... hurries down the bank... searches

under the brush and snow... pulls out an OVERTURNED CANOE.

He drags it to the icy edge... slides it across the ice

toward the middle of the river, where the water still hasn't

frozen over. The ice CRACKS UNDER HIS FEET. Fitzgerald

climbs in the canoe... pounds the ice with the oar, breaking

it loose.

The current seeps through the cracks... catches the canoe,

pulling it to the center of the wide river... sends

Fitzgerald shooting south. He throws a glance back at the

shadow of Fort Union in the distance... growing smaller.

EXT. WILDERNESS - DAY

Clear blue sky. The sun glistening off the snow-covered

ground. Glass is bundled under furs, as he rides through the

snowy trees.

EXT. WILDERNESS/CAMP - NIGHT

Tucked under the rooftop of trees. A small fire burns.

Glass sits on his fire-bed, looking over a map.

An O.S. SNORT from the Paint Mare, tied to a tree. Glass

looks over in time to see the horse's ears perk up.

With his eyes searching the darkness, Glass slowly reaches

over... grabs his rifle. Then he drops to his stomach...

slides backward into the brush.

78.

Glass peers through the brush... the woods seem empty...

until SEVERAL DARK SHAPES APPEAR... moving through the

distant trees... coming straight toward Glass' camp.

Then an O.S. SNAP BEHIND GLASS... he glances back in time to

see an ARIKARA WARRIOR SWINGING A HATCHET.

Glass spins his rifle... shoves it into the stomach of the

Warrior as he swings... BOOM... the Warrior flies back.

The dark woods suddenly ERUPT IN WAR CRIES... Arikara appear

from all sides... charge toward the camp.

Glass scrambles up... races toward the Paint Mare as ARROWS

AND GUNSHOTS FLASH THROUGH THE AIR ALL AROUND HIM.

Glass swings up onto the Paint Mare... spots ELK'S TONGUE

leading the charge... the necklace of ears hanging around his

neck. And Elk's Tongue's eyes are locked on Glass... almost

like he remembers him.

Glass takes off through the forest.

EXT. FOREST - NIGHT

Glass hanging onto the paint mare, as she gallops through the

trees... the animal's nostrils spread wide, pulling in all

the oxygen it can.

Glass glances back... sees SHAPES BEHIND HIM... HORSES...

ridden by Elk's Tongue and eight other warriors.

Glass digs his heels into the horse, squeezing every ounce of

speed from her legs... pushing her toward the clearing up

ahead... throwing another glance back... then looking in

front of him, and realizing it isn't a clearing at all...

...it's the edge of the world.

The paint mare explodes from the trees, then runs out of

ground... because she's just galloped off the side of a

cliff.

The horse sails downward toward a thick forest of trees, its

legs flailing for something to stand on.

Glass drops the rifle to grip the horse's mane, hanging on

for what seems an endless fall.

79.

The mare SLAMS LEG-FIRST INTO THE TREE-TOPS with Glass still

on her back. The Paint Mare SQUEALS as she drops into the

snow-covered trees, carrying Glass with her.

CUT TO:

EXT. FOREST - CONTINUOUS

And the horse comes crashing through the branches... the

massive limbs slowing her fall... snapping off as her body

hits and twists... tosses Glass away.

The Paint Mare continues her deadly descent, the trees

tearing at her body... catching her head... SNAPPING her

neck.

Glass slams off a branch... tumbles to the ground with a

thud. The Paint Mare hits the snow beside him... very dead.

Glass struggles to breath... finally GASPS... sucks in the

oxygen. He lays there a moment... stares up through the

trees...

...to Elk's Tongue and the others staring down from the top

of the cliff... with no way to get to Glass.

Glass rises to his knees... glances around for his rifle...

lost. He flinches with what must be broken ribs... drags

himself up, and staggers to the horse... pulls his knife and

cuts the snowshoes from the back of the saddle.

He throws the snowshoes over his shoulder... continues on,

through the woods... alone... in the middle of nowhere...

again.

EXT. OPEN COUNTRY - DAY

From high above... the small shape of Glass making his way

over the snowy ground... heading toward TWO DISTANT SHACKS.

EXT. FORT TALBOT - DAY

A makeshift town on the banks of the Missouri. Two

ramshackle structures... the General Store and a tattered

livery stable filled with horses.

80.

INT. FORT TALBOT/GENERAL STORE - DAY

More like a saloon that sells a few supplies. A gang of

TRAPPERS drink and play cards. A RUNTY MAN stands behind the

counter, watching them...

...until the door blows open, and in steps Glass. He pulls

the fur hat away from his face, and what a sight he is...

scarred face stiff from the cold... ice frozen in his beard.

The room falls silent... everyone staring at Glass. Until

TRAPPER #1 snorts a laugh. Glass limps to the counter. All

eyes follow him.

GLASS:

(struggling to make his

frozen lips move)

I'm Hugh Glass of...

RUNTY MAN:

We don't serve n*ggers.

Glass stares at the Runty Man a beat, then...

GLASS:

Of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company

on my way to Fort Union.

RUNTY MAN:

I don't care if you was with Lewis

and Clark headed for the new world.

We don't serve n*ggers.

GLASS:

All I need is a horse and enough

supplies to...

TRAPPER:

Ice musta froze up his ears, `cause

he ain't listenin' to you, Cees.

GLASS:

...to get me to Fort Union. I can

sign a draft made good by Captain

Henry.

The Runty Man just stares at Glass... grins a TOOTHLESS GRIN.

RUNTY MAN:

What the f*** happened to your

face, boy? You try to slice all

the black off?

81.

TRAPPER #2

Maybe we oughta help him do it

right.

FAT TRAPPER:

Best get on your way, boy.

Glass stares back at the men for a long beat, then...

GLASS:

I'm Hugh Glass of the Rocky

Mountain Fur Company, and all I

need is...

RUNTY MAN:

(to the trappers)

Do you believe this sh*t?

Trapper #1 and Trapper #2 pull the SKINNING KNIVES from their

belts... start toward Glass.

FAT TRAPPER:

Hell, I warned ya.

GLASS:

All I need...

And that's when Trapper #1 grabs for Glass, but in a flash of

movement that catches them all off-guard, Glass has is own

knife pulled and JAMMED UNDER TRAPPER #1's CHIN.

Everyone freezes.

GLASS (CONT'D)

...is a horse and enough supplies

to get me to Fort Union.

Then Glass slides Trapper #1's PISTOL from his belt... aims

it at the other men.

GLASS (CONT'D)

And this shooter here. All made

good by Captain Henry and The Rocky

Mountain Fur Company.

EXT. FORT TALBOT - DAY

The snow pours down on the Runty Man and the trappers, as

they stand outside, rifles aimed into the distance.

RUNTY MAN:

Shoot him, goddammit!

82.

TRAPPER #2

I can't get a clear look.

RUNTY MAN:

Shoot `em both!

The Runty Man snatches one of the rifles... BOOM... fires a

wild shot past the riders.

CUT TO:

GLASS - GALLOPING AWAY ON HORSEBACK...

...with Trapper #1 sitting backward on the horse behind him.

Glass has the pistol jammed into his ribs, and keeps glancing

back to the men growing smaller behind him.

Finally, Glass shoves the man off the back of the horse.

Trapper #1 tumbles into the snow.

The RUMBLE OF DISTANT GUNSHOTS... too far away to reach

Glass, who just keeps racing north.

CUT TO:

THE RUNTY MAN - WATCHING GLASS ESCAPE.

RUNTY MAN:

Get after the son of a b*tch!

The trappers exchange glances... don't move.

TRAPPER #2

It's cold as hell, Cees.

FAT TRAPPER:

And he did say to put it all on the

Rocky Mountain tab.

The Runty Man glares at the trappers.

EXT. OPEN COUNTRY - EVENING

Glass riding the horse at a trot through the snow.

EXT. FORT UNION - NIGHT

Thick with fog, and silent as death. The moon fights its way

through the mist, sending an eerie glow over the fort.

83.

EXT. FORT UNION/BLOCKHOUSE - NIGHT

Stubby Bill sits dozing in a chair, his rifle across his lap.

O.S. CRUNCHING... getting louder... loud enough to nudge

Stubby Bill awake. He sits up... peers over the wall, but

can't see anything in the fog... just hears the CRUNCHING

MOVING CLOSER... FOOTSTEPS IN THE CRISP SNOW.

CUT TO:

STUBBY BILL'S POV...

...on the blanket of fog hanging in the air... that same

CRUNCHING, as a SHADOW APPEARS... growing clearer... a FIGURE

walking... leading a horse behind him... appearing out of the

mist like a ghost... GLASS.

STUBBY BILL - STARES DOWN IN SHOCK...

...sure his eyes are betraying him. But then Glass looks

straight up at Stubby Bill, and there's no doubt.

STUBBY BILL:

Jesus Christ.

INT. BUNKHOUSE - NIGHT

Dark and quiet... just Pig's snoring rattling the silence.

Suddenly the door kicks open... SLAMS into the wall... and

there's GLASS' SILHOUETTE FILLING THE DOORWAY.

GROANS from the awakened men... hands moving through the dark

for oil lamps... turning them bright... until the room's

fully lit... and they all see Glass standing there... eyes

floating across the room, searching for a target.

The men just stare back at him, like they're all part of the

same dream.

Except for Bridger, who's propped up in his cot like he's

been waiting all night... waiting every night... for Glass to

appear in that doorway.

BRIDGER:

I'm sorry.

Glass raises the stolen pistol... aims it at Bridger. And

the young man doesn't flinch... almost as if he wants to make

sure Glass doesn't miss.

84.

The other men just watch in silence, not sure what the hell's

going on.

Glass holds his aim on Bridger's face... a face that's

haunted him... kept him alive.

GLASS:

You took everything I had... left

me to die.

Glass walks toward Bridger, the gun still raised... each step

of his feet on the wood floor is like the thud of an

executioner's drum.

MUMBLING from the other men, as they watch this ghost reach

Bridger... stand over him, the pistol aimed down.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Why?

BRIDGER:

I was scared of dyin'.

(BEAT)

But every day since, I've wished I

had.

Glass' finger tightens on the trigger, ready to make

Bridger's wish come true.

The rest of the bunkhouse watches this execution in wide-

eyed, stone silence, afraid to move.

GLASS:

There wasn't no `Ree that night,

was there?

A long beat, then...

BRIDGER:

No.

Glass PISTOL WHIPS BRIDGER, knocking him to the floor. And

before Bridger can crawl away, Glass in over him... those

aching, frozen fists beating mercilessly down on Bridger.

And Bridger doesn't fight back... just does his best to cover

up, but the blows keep coming, and Bridger's face is covered

in blood...

...just as Henry runs inside, half-dressed from where Stubby

Bill awoke him. Henry grabs Glass... pulls him off.

Glass spins... jams his pistol right in Henry's face.

85.

HENRY:

Hugh. Wait.

Glass is crazy with rage... barely stops himself from pulling

that trigger. But finally, he calms... his arm sinks,

lowering his aim. He glances around the bunkhouse.

GLASS:

Where's Fitzgerald and my rifle?

HENRY:

Deserted two days ago. Along with

about five hundred dollars of

company money.

(BEAT)

Let's get some coffee to warm you

up.

(to Glass, but looking at

BRIDGER)

I wanna hear what happened.

Glass looks back to Bridger... they hold a long stare, until

Glass walks out.

BRIDGER:

Wait. Please!

But Glass and Henry disappear, leaving Bridger alone with all

those eyes burning into him. Bridger looks to Pig, but Pig

just lowers his eyes... can't even look at the boy.

The men step into their boots and furs... file out after

Glass and Henry... leaving Bridger alone in the bunkhouse.

INT. ROCKY MOUNTAIN FUR COMPANY OFFICE - NIGHT

Glass sits by the warmth of the stove, sipping coffee.

Henry's behind he desk, with the other men scattered around.

GLASS:

I cut the shoes loose of her, and

hiked over to Fort Talbot.

STUBBY BILL:

Christ almighty.

GLASS:

And you may hear from the fella

there about a stoled horse and

supplies charged to you.

86.

HENRY:

We'll take care of it. You should

go settle in.

MURPHY:

There's a couple fair whores next

door that'll ease the miles on ya,

scars or not.

Stubby Bill gives Murphy an elbow.

ANDERSON:

Jesus, Murph.

MURPHY:

I just meant I'd go roust one of

`em for ya if you wanted.

GLASS:

She can take the night off, but I

wouldn't mind the use of her bed.

HENRY:

(TO MURPHY)

Go clear out a room. The rest head

on back to bunk.

Murphy hustles out. The others move toward the door, each

stopping to shake Glass' hand, or give him a pat on the back.

PIG:

I told ya I'd see ya up here. You

remember that, Hugh?

GLASS:

I do, Pig. You must have a little

gypsy in ya.

Pig grins and nods.

PIG:

I'll see ya in the mornin'.

Pig exits, leaving just Glass and Henry, sitting in a beat of

silence, until...

HENRY:

Can I talk you outta what you're

planning?

Glass doesn't answer... just stands, placing the coffee cup

on the table.

87.

GLASS:

Thank you for what you done for

me... stitchin' me back together...

givin' me a chance.

HENRY:

I'm offerin' you another right

now... to stay here... let this

thing go.

GLASS:

(BEAT)

He thinks he let me die. But he

don't know that he's the one that's

kept me alive... for the chance of

findin' him... makin' him pay for

what he done.

HENRY:

The law will make Fitzgerald pay.

Glass stares out the window... his SCARRED REFLECTION stares

back at him.

GLASS:

You told me once that other men

didn't think like him.

(BEAT)

But the truth is, most do. I seen

it my whole life... the looks folks

give... the whisperin'. I watched

my wife and son die from the fever

on accounta no white doctor would

care for `em. Wasn't no different

to them than if their neighbor's

dog was sick.

(BEAT)

So I don't figure nobody's gonna

care much that Fitzgerald took some

dyin' n*gger's rifle, and left him

in the middle of nowhere.

(turns to Henry)

Do you, Captain?

Henry doesn't answer... because he knows Glass is right.

GLASS (CONT'D)

I thank you for the coffee.

Glass walks out. Henry just sits there.

88.

EXT. FORT UNION - DAY

Glass, Pig and Murphy stand by Glass' horse, as he ties off

his supplies.

MURPHY:

He said he was goin' to get his

rifle...

And then Murphy catches himself... shrugs.

MURPHY (CONT'D)

Your rifle. But he never showed

back up. The next day I figured

him mighta fell in, but then Pig

seen the canoe was missin'.

PIG:

And the Captain found the money

gone.

GLASS:

I'll make my way down river. See

what turns up.

Glass pulls the cinch tight around the horse. Stubby Bill

comes waddling toward them.

STUBBY BILL:

The kid's gone... gear and all.

Musta slipped out before light.

Stubby Bill waves Bridger's journal at them.

STUBBY BILL (cont'd)

Just left this on his bunk.

Henry takes the journal... flips it open.

HENRY:

(READING)

"Every day I think about what I

done. I want to tell Pig and the

others the truth but am afraid what

they'll think of me. I look at

Fitzgerald and want to kill him but

am afraid to try. I am a coward

and wish he hadn't been lyin about

the Ree that night. I wish they

had come and kilt us both."

Glass considers the words a beat, then swings onto his horse.

89.

GLASS:

If I run across the boy, I'll send

him back your way.

Glass sees Henry on horseback, trotting toward them.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Where're you headed?

HENRY:

Fitzgerald stole five hundred

dollars. Rocky Mountain Fur

Company wants him too.

GLASS:

I can do this on my own.

HENRY:

I know you can. But maybe you

won't have to.

Glass stares at Henry a beat, then finally just pulls his

horse around... heads for the river. Henry nods to Pig and

Murphy as he follows after Glass.

EXT. ROCK LEDGE - DAY

From above Fort Union. Our POV on Glass and Henry riding

south along the icy river.

And then we see our POV is Bridger's... standing along the

ledge, loaded with all his gear. He watches the riders

another moment, then turns... hikes the opposite direction...

leaving Fort Union behind forever.

EXT. FORT TALBOT/GENERAL STORE - DAY

The Runty Man behind the counter. A few of the same Trappers

drinking... playing cards. Just another day at Fort Talbot.

The door swings open, and a FUR-COVERED FIGURE enters.

RUNTY MAN:

We ain't got no food to spare,

friend, if that's what you're

lookin' for.

The figure pulls back his furs, and we see it's Fitzgerald...

cold and miserable.

90.

FITZGERALD:

Then what the hell have ya got?

RUNTY MAN:

Whiskey and blankets mostly.

Weather's held back deliveries.

Fitzgerald throws a glance to the Trappers.

FITZGERALD:

Gimme a couple bottles then.

Goddamn ice shredded my boat. Been

walkin' for two days.

The Runty Man hands Fitzgerald the bottles. Fitzgerald pops

one... gulps some down.

FITZGERALD (CONT'D)

How much for one of them horses out

there?

RUNTY MAN:

Horses ain't cheap this time a

year.

FITZGERALD:

Whatever the price, Rocky Mountain

Fur Company's good for it.

And those words stop everything. The Trappers all turn from

their game. The Runty Man glares at Fitzgerald.

RUNTY MAN:

You're the second son of a b*tch

come in here makin' that claim.

And the first one left a bad taste.

FITZGERALD:

That right? Well I don't know

nothin' about that. Just that I

need a horse.

RUNTY MAN:

So did this other fella. So he

stole one... along with Lange's

pistola.

Trapper #1 nods to Fitzgerald.

FITZGERALD:

Fine then, I'll pay cash for the

horse. How much?

91.

RUNTY MAN:

How `bout you pay for your friend's

too.

TRAPPER #1

And my shooter.

FITZGERALD:

Wasn't my friend.

Trapper #1 stands up.

TRAPPER #1

Then from where I stand, you don't

got no friends at all.

The other Trappers glare at Fitzgerald. The Runty Man just

grins that toothless smile of his. Fitzgerald's in a bind,

and he knows it.

FITZGERALD:

Yeah, okay. I'll collect from him.

How much?

RUNTY MAN:

How `bout we say eighty...

(sees Fitzgerald doesn't

ARGUE)

...five.

Fitzgerald starts digging into his pocket.

FITZGERALD:

You boys are leavin' me with

nothin'. Better be a helluva

horse.

RUNTY MAN:

Pick of the litter.

The Runty Man snatches the cash.

RUNTY MAN (cont'd)

And when you see that scarred-up

n*gger, you tell him he'd best not

show up here again.

Fitzgerald freezes... not sure he heard correctly.

FITZGERALD:

When I see who?

92.

RUNTY MAN:

The black son of a b*tch that

robbed me. You tell him that.

A long beat, then...

FITZGERALD:

Scarred up, you say... and headed

up to Union?

RUNTY MAN:

That's what he told us. Seemed

real anxious to get there too.

FITZGERALD:

(NODS)

I'll make sure to give him the

message when I find him.

EXT. FORT TALBOT - DAY

Fitzgerald sits on the horse, staring back over the ground...

his LINE OF TRACKS LEADING THROUGH THE SNOW. He turns...

looks south, then back to the tracks.

Finally, Fitzgerald digs his heels into the horse. The

animal takes off, right along Fitzgerald's tracks in the

snow... right back toward Glass.

EXT. MISSOURI RIVER - DAY

Thick ice along the edges, tapering to a narrow stream of

flowing water at the very center.

Glass and Henry ride along the snow-covered bank.

HENRY:

Hugh.

Henry points. Glass follows his finger along the river... to

a CANOE resting on the bank ahead. They dismount... examine

the canoe... the letters "RMFC" painted on the side.

HENRY (CONT'D)

That's it.

Glass runs his mittened hand along the gashes in the wood.

GLASS:

Ice tore it up.

93.

Glass looks to the FOOTPRINTS IN THE SNOW, leading deep into

the trees. He glances up to the sky... clear and blue.

GLASS (CONT'D)

If the snow holds off, we'll have a

good trail to track.

HENRY:

What's out that direction? Talbot?

GLASS:

And the Missouri. Doubt he'd risk

the river with the `Ree. Likely

grab a horse, and cross over

high... take his chances goin' east

against the weather. When'd you

say he skipped out?

HENRY:

Three days ago now.

GLASS:

We best pick up our pace.

They climb back onto their horses... trot into the trees.

EXT. OPEN COUNTRY - DAY

Glass and Henry gallop across, their path dead on

Fitzgerald's tracks.

EXT. FOREST - DAY

The snow is shallow here, the ground protected by the trees.

There's a black spot where a fire once burned, and footprints

all over the place. Glass is off his horse, crouched,

studying the site... lifting the charred chunks of wood.

HENRY:

This was Fitzgerald camped here?

GLASS:

Couple nights back. But these

tracks aren't all his.

HENRY:

He's travelin' with somebody?

94.

GLASS:

(shakes his head)

Came in after. Prints are smooth.

Mocassins.

Henry throws Glass a look... he knows what that means.

GLASS (CONT'D)

Could be Sioux... Blackfoot even.

HENRY:

But you figure they're `Ree.

GLASS:

I don't figure nothin', Captain.

But whoever it is, they're a good

day behind Fitzgerald.

Glass walks, leading his horse, as he follows the tracks away

from camp. Henry rides after him.

GLASS (CONT'D)

And they're on his trail too, so we

should keep it quiet... don't

announce we're back here.

HENRY:

You told me once you knew enough to

keep away from the `Ree.

GLASS:

I do.

HENRY:

You figure this is smart then?

Glass swings up onto his horse.

GLASS:

You're welcome to head back,

Captain.

Glass trots off. Henry watches him a beat, then throws a

glance into the trees... follows after Glass.

EXT. WILDERNESS/CAMP - NIGHT

Glass kneels on the ground, building a fire-bed... dragging

the dirt over the fire and rocks. Henry's under a blanket,

watching him.

95.

HENRY:

What if we find Fitzgerald... and I

ask you not to do this?

Glass spreads a blanket over the ground.

GLASS:

Don't ask me.

Glass settles in on the warm earth. Henry just keeps

watching him.

EXT. WILDERNESS/CAMP - LATER

ANGLE ON HENRY...

...asleep under the blanket. O.S. RUSTLING sends his eyes

flashing open. He raises up... rifle ready.

He glances at Glass, who puts a finger over his lips.

HENRY:

(WHISPERS)

`Ree?

Glass doesn't answer... just keeps searching the brush.

Henry's groggy eyes dart around the night... spots MOVEMENT

IN THE BRUSH.

HENRY (CONT'D)

There!

GLASS:

Wait!

But it's too late... Henry fires... BOOM... the shot explodes

through the night...

...and the DEER leaps away.

Henry looks to Glass... shakes his head... sorry.

HENRY:

So much for stayin' quiet.

CUT TO:

96.

FITZGERALD - SQUATTING BESIDE A SMALL FIRE...

...staring out into the darkness, as the GUNSHOT ECHOES OVER

HIM. Fitzgerald immediately throws dirt over the flames.

EXT. WILDERNESS/CAMP - NIGHT

Glass and Henry are loaded up, back on their horses.

HENRY:

Guess you would've been better off

on your own.

GLASS:

We needed to pick up some time

anyways.

The two riders disappear into the dark trees.

EXT. WILDERNESS/CLEARING - NIGHT

Glass and Henry riding across a meadow. Glass stops... tilts

his head back to sniff the air.

HENRY:

Whatta ya got?

GLASS:

Smoke.

Glass pulls some snow from his horse's mane... tosses it in

the air, and watches it blow to the side.

Glass turns his horse toward the breeze... squints out into

the night.

GLASS (CONT'D)

No more than mile out that way.

(pulls his rifle)

I'll head in from the west... you

take the east.

HENRY:

What if it's `Ree?

GLASS:

Then we leave `em be... meet back

up here.

97.

Henry nods... Glass takes off at a trot. Henry veers the

other direction... splitting up across the snow.

EXT. FOREST - NIGHT

Splinters of moonlight shoot through the pines. Glass on

horseback, walking through the trees... appearing and

disappearing.

He spots something in the distance... the slightest of glows.

Glass eases off his horse... wraps the reins around a branch.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

Henry's already off his horse... leading it through the

trees... searching as he walks.

EXT. FOREST - NIGHT

Glass moves silently through the darkness... rifle poised to

aim and fire... just like the first time we saw him,

perfectly comfortable in this world.

His eyes shine in the darkness, drifting back and forth...

picking up everything.

He reaches the glow... the remains of a campfire. The

slightest bit of dying smoke rises into the air. Glass

crouches down, studying the surround ground... HOOF-PRINTS

blended in with the other tracks.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

Henry's horse is making too much noise with each step. He

stops walking... wraps the reins around a tree... walks back

around the horse...

...AND THERE'S FITZGERALD STARING AT HIM...

...Glass' Anstadt aimed and ready to fire.

FITZGERALD:

Didn't figure an important man like

you to be away from your stove on a

night as cold as this, Captain.

You lost?

Henry just stares back at Fitzgerald and that rifle. His

eyes drift to his own rifle, still strapped onto his saddle.

98.

HENRY:

I'm here to save your life.

FITZGERALD:

I done told you boys... I don't

need savin' by you or nobody else.

Henry knows he's only got one chance... he makes a grab for

the rifle.

EXT. FOREST - NIGHT

Glass running his fingers across the tracks. Suddenly an

O.S. GUNSHOT EXPLODES IN THE DISTANCE. Glass spins to it...

races back through the trees toward his horse.

EXT. FOREST - NIGHT

Glass at full gallop through the woods... veering between

trees... ducking branches.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

Glass charges from the forest... spots Henry's horse standing

in the trees... tears through the snow toward it... leaps off

the still-moving animal in a fluid slide... hits the ground

with his rifle ready...

...and sees HENRY'S BODY face-up in the snow.

Glass drops to a knee... scans the darkness, as he slides

over to Henry...

...and we see he's a bloody mess... a GUNSHOT WOUND in his

chest leaking out onto the snow... HIS HEAD SCALPED... LEFT

EAR SLICED OFF.

Glass stands back up, turning in a circle, as he peers into

the distance around him. But there's nothing out there.

Glass SCREAMS in rage.

He turns back to Henry... crouches down over him.

GLASS:

You shouldn't a come.

As Glass looks at Henry, he notices something... takes Henry

by the chin, and tilts his head. And HENRY'S RIGHT EAR HAS

BEEN CUT OFF AS WELL.

99.

Glass stares at Henry a beat, then squints out into the

forest.

GLASS (CONT'D)

(repeating Spotted Horse's

words under his breath)

Arikara take right ear of Sioux.

Left ear of whites. Not know what

they take from you.

EXT. WILDERNESS/CLEARING - NIGHT

Glass on horseback, leading Henry's horse behind him across

the snow-covered meadow. Henry's fur-covered body is draped

over the saddle.

EXT. FROZEN RIVER - NIGHT

A thick layer of ice covers the narrow river, thinning just a

bit at the center. Glass kneels near the middle, chopping at

the thick ice to get to the water beneath. He makes a

hole... dips his canteen down into it, glancing around into

the darkness.

Then Glass turns... stares up a slope into the dark forest

beyond... like he knows what's waiting for him there.

He walks to the horses, tied in the trees at the base of the

slope... Henry still laying across the saddle of his horse in

his bloody furs.

Glass SNAPS A BRANCH FROM A FALLEN TREE... looks back up that

slope.

EXT. WILDERNESS - NIGHT

OUR POV FROM DEEP IN THE FOREST...

...watching from the shadowy brush, as Glass appears up over

the distant slope... riding through the trees, with Henry

draped over the horse behind.

The forest is quiet... just the CRACKING of crusty snow and

branches under the horses' hooves.

Then BOOM... as the ANSTADT BARREL WE HADN'T SEEN BESIDE US

FLASHES IN THE NIGHT...

...and Glass tumbles off his horse.

100.

The horses prance around with a start, then settle... and

then FITZGERALD RISES FROM THE BRUSH BESIDE US... eases

toward the horses, reloading the Anstadt as he moves.

He reaches Glass, face down in the snow... his furs covering

him.

And Fitzgerald has that rifle aimed, ready for Glass to

suddenly roll over firing...

...but Glass doesn't move. Fitzgerald nudges him with his

boot, then crouches down... grabs Glass by the shoulder, and

pulls him over...

...and there's HENRY'S LIFELESS FACE HIDDEN BENEATH THE

FURS... and that BROKEN BRANCH sticking up along his back.

ANGLE FROM BEHIND HENRY'S HORSE...

...on the REST OF THE BRANCH RIGGED TO GLASS' SADDLE to hold

Henry upright...

...and then what we thought was Henry flung over the second

horse... MOVING... the bloody fur-covered arm lifting a

rifle... the head raising up... it's GLASS... taking aim...

...as Fitzgerald realizes what's happened... spins with the

Anstadt...

...to Glass laying across the horse... rifle dead set on

Fitzgerald... BOOM... BOOM... both rifles explode...

...Fitzgerald goes flying backward into the brush.

Fitzgerald's wild shot hits Henry's horse, sending it rearing

up, tossing Glass to the ground.

But Glass is on his feet in a flash... reloading as he

charges into the brush...

...but FITZGERALD IS GONE.

Until the flash of movement behind Glass... he turns... as

the butt of the Anstadt whips through the air... WHACK...

clubs him across the head, sending him tumbling down the

slope to the frozen river.

Fitzgerald swings the Anstadt back over his BLOODY SHOULDER,

snatches up his knife, and charges down the slope to finish

Glass off.

101.

EXT. FROZEN RIVER - NIGHT

Glass lies on the ice, barely conscious. Blood oozes down

his head... over his eyes. He wipes it away to see

Fitzgerald barreling down toward him.

Fitzgerald dives in attack, but Glass kicks up his leg,

sending Fitzgerald flying over... SLAMMING into the frozen

river, his head CRACKING THE ICE.

Glass rips the knife from his belt... moves after Fitzgerald,

his feet slipping and sliding under him.

Fitzgerald rises to his feet... the men charge like two wild

animals... crash into each other... knives flailing.

They roll along the ice, blades glistening... slicing through

furs... across flesh.

Fitzgerald thrusts his knife down... plants it through the

back of Glass' hand, pinning it to the ice. Glass CRIES

OUT... drops his own knife to pull Fitzgerald's out. As he

does, Fitzgerald kicks Glass in the face, sending him sailing

back... sliding to the center of the river.

The thin ice around him splinters... cracks. Glass looks

up... sees Fitzgerald stalking toward him, HOLDING BOTH

KNIVES now. Glass is trapped...

...until he pounds his elbow down on the weakened ice... it

begins to give... he pounds it again and again... Fitzgerald

speeds up to get to Glass in time... raises one of the

knives, as Glass shatters the ice... drops beneath the

surface.

Fitzgerald rushes after him, but the ice cracks under his

feet, forcing him back.

CUT TO:

UNDERWATER...

...and Glass just under the ice, floating with the current.

His fingers search for a hole, but there's nothing.

CUT TO:

102.

FITZGERALD...

...making his way down the river, peering through the ice,

searching for Glass. He spots something... stops... leans

close to make out the shape... it's GLASS' FEET.

Then suddenly, GLASS' FIST EXPLODES THROUGH THE ICE AT

FITZGERALD'S FEET... grab Fitzgerald's leg, pulling him down.

Fitzgerald crashes to the ice... it splinters around him...

gives away, and he sinks into the icy water... but the

ANSTADT STRAPPED AROUND HIM CATCHES ON THE ICE... holds him

against the current.

Glass drags himself from the water... stands... stares down

at Fitzgerald trapped in the hole... his face looking up at

Glass through the ice. Glass lifts one of the fallen

knives... stands over Fitzgerald.

FITZGERALD:

(through the water and

ICE)

Help me!

(off Glass' stare)

Glass... please!

Glass hesitates a beat, staring at him, just as he did with

Bridger that night in the bunkhouse. And then Glass leans

down... grabs the Anstadt to pull Fitzgerald up.

Except Glass SLICES THE BLADE ACROSS THE STRAP OF THE

ANSTADT, sending Fitzgerald floating away under the ice, as

Glass holds on to the Anstadt.

CUT TO:

FITZGERALD...

...floating under the surface... pounding at the ice as he

drifts, until his swinging slows... stops... his body drifts

away.

EXT. FROZEN RIVER - NIGHT

Glass stands on the ice, blood dripping down his face,

holding his Anstadt. He begins to tremble... not from the

cold, but from finally reaching the end of this journey. His

eyes begin to fill with tears...

103.

...and then he sees ELK'S TONGUE, and SEVERAL OTHER ARIKARA

WARRIORS watching him from the other side of the river.

Glass and Elk's Tongue exchange a long stare, until finally

Glass SCREAMS OUT.

GLASS:

I am Tatanka Wicasa! I have killed

whites and I have killed Arikara

and I have killed grizzly! AND I

WILL KILL YOU!

Elk's Tongue doesn't move... just stares back at Glass...

soaked in blood and water. Then Glass CRIES OUT at the

warriors again.

GLASS (CONT'D)

COME ON!

But the Arikara don't attack... don't move at all... until

Elk's Tongue gives Glass the SLIGHTEST OF NODS, then turns...

they disappear back into the trees.

Glass watches them fade away, then collapses to his knees on

the icy river... exhausted in every possible way.

He begins to cry.

FADE OUT.

THE END:

Rate this script:4.0 / 3 votes

Mark L. Smith

He wrote and directed the 2006 film Séance, which won the Festival Prize at the Eureka Springs Digital Film Festival and the Horror Genre Award at ShockFest. Since then he has worked as a screenwriter. Smith's writing credits include the 2007 horror film Vacancy and its prequel, Vacancy 2: The First Cut, and the 2009 Joe Dante film, The Hole. Together with Alejandro González Iñárritu, he co-wrote The Revenant, based in part on the novel of the same name by Michael Punke. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hardy and Will Poulter. Shooting began in September 2014. The film was released on December 25, 2015. more…

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