Tobacco Road
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1941
- 84 min
- 312 Views
This is Tobacco Road today,
... when the first Lesters
came to Georgia, it was different.
It run 15 miles down the ridge
to the Savannah River...
... through the richest
cotton and tobacco plantations...
... in the whole South...
... past fine big homes that the Lesters
themselves built and lived in.
But that was a hundred years ago.
Come a time then
when the land fell fallow...
... and worse and worse.
But you think the Lesters
would leave it? No, sir.
They stayed on and on...
... but all that they had
and all that they were...
... that's all gone with the wind
and the dust.
And this...
This is Tobacco Road today.
Whoa.
Hi, Henry. How come?
Can't complain, Jeeter.
That's good. Hey, is it...?
Is it true what I hear,
that Bessie's back?
Yes, sir, last week.
Buried her husband
down at Statesboro.
Wasn't hardly cold
before she picked up and hiked home.
Well, ain't that good?
Say, is she...?
Is she still full of spirit?
Jeeter, it's worse and more of it.
I do declare, it looks like my head's
gonna split open...
...with all this singing
and yelling and hallelujah-ing.
Whoo! She sure got a powerful voice.
Ain't been quiet since she got back.
Yeah, well, so long, Henry.
You know you got a blowout there?
I can get home
as long as I got one good one.
I'm gonna trade this darned car in
next year.
Well, so long, Henry.
What's the matter?
- Supper ready?
- Supper? Huh.
What about that wood?
Well, there it is, can't you see it?
How come I can still see it?
How come you didn't sell it?
Well, you can't sell no wood if nobody
wants to buy no wood, can you?
You're the craziest old fool
I guess I ever did see.
That's the fourth time you've taken
that same load to town...
...and brung it back.
Ain't even had it out of the car.
No, and I ain't gonna
take it out of the car.
Hey, here comes Lov.
It's got something in it.
Reckon it's turnips
he's got in that sack.
Turnips? Mm.
I sure could use me
If it is, Lov sure will give his wife's
poor old ma some of them turnips.
He'll give me some...
...because Lov and me, we certainly
think a whole heap of each other.
Come on, get back.
Pretend like you didn't see him.
Come on, let's get back
and just act natural-like.
Hi, Lov! Ain't seen you in a long time.
Say, you must be plumb worn out...
...toting whatever it is
you got in that old croker sack.
- I ain't tired.
- How's Pearl, Lov? Is she all right?
That's what I come for.
I wanna talk to Jeeter about Pearl.
Well, what's she done now?
She been treating you mean again?
Jeeter, you gotta
say something to Pearl.
of the way she's acting.
Well, are you treating her right?
What's that gotta do with it?
She's married to me, ain't she?
Well, what's she done now?
Well...
...one thing, she won't talk to me.
- What do you want her to say to you?
Anything, I don't care what.
She could ask me is my back tired...
...when I come home
from the coal chute, couldn't she?
Or do I think it's gonna rain...
...or when is I gonna get my hair cut.
There's a lot of things
she could ask me...
...but she won't say one darn word.
Well, maybe you don't
go about it right.
Why, I tried every way I know how.
I kicked her
...and I chucked rocks
and sticks at her...
...and all she does
is bawl a lot when she's hurt.
You can't call that talking.
Well, her not talking
ain't anything to get mad about.
Why, Ada here
never spoke a word to me...
...for the first 10 years
we was married...
...and them was the happiest
10 years of my life.
She runs away too.
I'm sick and tired
of the whole business.
Give her time, boy. She'll be all right.
She ain't but 13, remember.
You listen to me, Lov Bensey.
If you don't like what she's doing,
bring her back home.
You can have Ellie May.
Oh, every time I say anything,
y'all want me to marry Ellie May.
Well, it ain't no use,
that's all there is to it.
I want a young wife. I ain't gonna take
no 23-year-old woman for a wife...
...and have everybody
laughing at me.
- Hey, Lov.
- Hey, Ellie May.
Lov, will you tell me whatever it is
you got in that croker sack?
I been looking at it
since you come here...
...and Lord knows
I'm just dying to know.
Turnips, by cracky.
Turnips. I ain't...
I ain't had me a good turnip
since a year ago last spring...
...and, oh, the good Lord only knows
how bad I've wanted one.
Why, you know, I could eat me
that whole croker sack full of...
I could eat me
a whole wagonload full of turnips...
...between now and sundown.
Don't look for me to give you none,
because I ain't.
Well, that's a whopping mean thing
to say to Pearl's poor old pa.
Ain't you gonna give me
just a bite, Lov?
No.
I tell you what I'll do.
I'll make you a trade
for some of them there turnips.
I ain't trading turnips with nobody.
If you'll give me
some of them turnips...
...I'll go to your house
the first thing in the morning...
...and tell Pearl to behave herself.
Tell her that ain't no way
to treat a man...
...who's gone to the bother
of marrying her.
And I'll tell her she's gotta
stop hiding in them bushes...
...and ask if it's gonna rain.
- And are you gonna get your hair cut.
Well, what do you say, Lov?
I don't gotta pay you for that.
I already give you some quilts
and two quarts of cylinder oil...
...and $ 7 to marry Pearl,
and that's enough.
You gotta make her behave
for nothing.
Just one little bitty bite, Lov?
It ain't no use you niggling at me.
Lov.
Please, Lov.
All my children
all the time blaming me...
...because the old good Lord
made me poverty-stricken.
Them and their ma's
all the time bawling me out...
...because they ain't got nothing to eat,
as if I had anything to do with it.
Yes, sometimes it looks to me...
It looks to me like the good Lord's got
it in good and plenty for a poor man.
But I ain't complaining.
No, sir, I ain't complaining.
Ow! Ow!
Hold him, Ellie May,
hold him, hold him.
Hold him, hold him, Ellie May.
Hold him, Ellie May.
Hold him, honey.
Give me my turnips, you old fool.
You old fool.
Give me my turnips.
Give me my turnips.
Give me some of them turnips,
you old fool.
Let go my leg.
Let go my leg, you fool dog.
Let me out of here.
Hold him, Ellie May.
Hit him in the head.
Hey, give me some
of them turnips, you old fool.
Give me some of them turnips.
I wish I'd known what kind of family
I married into. I wouldn't have done it.
I hope Lov don't hold
no hard feeling agin me.
Whoo!
- Hallelujah, Brother Jeeter.
Hallelujah, Sister Bessie.
Welcome home.
Thank you, Brother Jeeter.
Brother Jeeter,
will you join me in a song?
Sure, I'd like to. What'll we sing?
- "It's the Old-Time Religion. "
- That's good enough for me.
That's enough.
That was all right.
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"Tobacco Road" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 17 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/tobacco_road_21999>.
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