Trumbo
CUT TO:
EXT. LAZY-T RANCH - 1947 - DAWN
Alone in a vast, serrated mountain range a hundred miles
north of Los Angeles, it looks from the outside like a rustic
sprawl. The day is a gold sliver in a navy sky.
INT. LAZY-T RANCH - BATHROOM - DAWN
Writer DALTON TRUMBO, 41, debonair, heartfelt and combative,
is naked in a tub, his copyholder on a wood plank as the
steam rises.
INT. LAZY-T RANCH - TRUMBO’S STUDY - DAWN
Like the whole home, beautifully appointed. Trumbo, kindled
cigarette in its holder, attacks the keys of a typewriter on
his desk, the fastest two-fingered typist ever as we --
QUICKLY CUT AROUND HIS OFFICE,
Taking in:
-The American Booksellers National Book Award for his novel,
Johnny Got His Gun.
-The poster for his movie, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
-His Oscar nomination for the screenplay of Kitty Foyle.
TIGHT ON TRUMBO’S TYPEWRITER
As the inky letters CHOP movie dialogue across the white
paper, Trumbo writing like a boxer working a speed bag --
MANNY:
What do you want?(CONTINUED)
TRUMBO - JOHN MCNAMARA 2.
CONTINUED:
MORE QUICK POPS - TO SHELVES AND TABLETOPS
Thick with framed photos of:
-Trumbo with KATHARINE HEPBURN at a United Refugee Committee
dinner.
-Trumbo as a World War II correspondent in his dress
uniform, boarding a plane.
-Trumbo in muddy fatigues, among battered SOLDIERS on a
battle-scarred beach in the South Pacific.
BACK TO A TIGHT CLOSE-UP OF TRUMBO’S WRITING
Words racing across the page:
What we all want.
ATOP HIS DESK - FRAMED FAMILY PICTURES
In them, WE SEE both Trumbo’s furious pecking reflected on
glass, animatedly overlaying stills under glass of:
-Trumbo’s wife Cleo in a stunning portrait.
-Trumbo and Cleo with their three children, blowing out
Niki’s eighth birthday cake.
BACK TO TRUMBO AT THE TYPEWRITER
Lemony morning light now paints the windows. Trumbo writes:
To not die young, poor...
And now we HEAR --
EDWARD G. ROBINSON (PRE-LAP)
What do you want? What we all
want. To not die young, poor...
-- as the final words of Trumbo’s speech strike paper -
...or alone.
-- Trumbo SLAPS the return and in a WHITE BLUR we’re now -INT.
A NEW YORK ALLEY (MGM SOUNDSTAGE) - NIGHT
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
...or alone.
(CONTINUED)
TRUMBO - JOHN MCNAMARA 3.
CONTINUED:
EDWARD G. ROBINSON -- a charismatic, stocky man of 53, both
assertive and refined -- plays “MANNY,” stepping from a
sedan, moving toward a SUPPORTING PLAYER as “ROCCO,” on his
knees, bloody lip, torn jacket.
“ROCCO”
Manny, these guys... I don’t give
’em what they’re after, they’ll
kill me.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON/“MANNY”
Hold it, Rocco.
“Manny” takes out his revolver -- and aims it at “Rocco,” who
freezes as he stands.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON/“MANNY” (CONT’D)
If we don’t fight these guys,
sure, maybe you -
As “Manny” gestures with the gun, its cylinder dislodges from
the barrel -- and several bullets FLY out and comically
CLATTER to the stage floor at Robinson’s feet.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON/“MANNY” (CONT’D)
Sh*t.
The director is out of his chair and on his feet -- SAM WOOD,
early 60s, sharp, authoritative.
SAM WOOD:
Cut! Goin’ again, Eddie.
A BELL sounds. The CREW rustles in the shadows.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
Sorry, Sam. Sorry, everybody. Of
course, the one day the author’s
among us.
Trumbo sits nearby, in a bespoke suit, calmly smoking.
Robinson settles in a canvas chair with his name on the back.
SAM WOOD:
(as he glides past to talk
to the CAMERAMAN)
“Among us.” Sure ain’t one of us.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
(keeping it light)
What’s the brilliant line, Trumbo?
(CONTINUED)
TRUMBO - JOHN MCNAMARA 4.
CONTINUED:
(2)DALTON TRUMBO:
“If we don’t fight these guys,
sure, maybe you get that long,
happy life we all want.”
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
Then what is it you’ve got me
fighting for again?
DALTON TRUMBO:
“Peace on Earth, good will toward
men.”
Nearby, Wood SNORTS. Yeah, right.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
You can’t do that, this is America.
DALTON TRUMBO:
How about sex and money?
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
There you go, two things we all
love. None of your little sermons
on citizenship.
EXT. A BEVERLY HILLS MANSION - BACKYARD - NIGHT
A flat half-acre dominated by a massive pool that GLOWS with
a hundred floating candles. A PARTY where:
-MEN are in black tie, WOMEN in gowns, everyone smokes,
everyone drinks. Different time, different world.
-There’s MUSIC from a live BIG BAND.
VOICES overlap and compete as we snag snippets:
PARTYGOER 1
“...I don’t love it but Zanuck
does...”
PARTYGOER 2
“...make the Indians the good guys,
that’s the twist...”
PARTYGOER 3
“Now the actors want to go on
strike. Who’s next? Lassie?”
CLEO TRUMBO, 30s, hovers at the edge of a GROUP OF WOMEN
about her age.
(CONTINUED)
TRUMBO - JOHN MCNAMARA 5.
CONTINUED:
She’s beautiful, observant, sensitive, often silent, as she
is here, excusing herself with a warm smile to look for
someone at the party, passing by --
A GROUP OF MEN. Louder, more boisterous. Within that group,
Edward G. Robinson.
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
(in mid-sentence)
...still doing reshoots, what else?
Luckily, Mayer lined up the A Team,
Sam Wood to shoot, Dalton Trumbo
for rewrites, so, fingers
crossed...
From across the lawn, TWO MALE VOICES suddenly RISE, so we
hear before we see:
SAM WOOD (O.S.)
...Jesus, Trumbo, a goddamn six-
month strike, for what?
DALTON TRUMBO (O.S.)
(dryly)
Well, I think... money.
Cleo Trumbo turns to that second VOICE with minor dread and
as she does, she and Robinson clock one another with the same
thought:
Jesus, here we go...As they both zero in on:
Director Sam Wood, more than a little drunk.
SAM WOOD:
Laugh it up. I had no crew! I
couldn’t work -
(shouting at Trumbo)
-- you wouldn’t work, God forbid
you cross a picket line. For set
builders. What do set builders
have to do with writing?
DALTON TRUMBO:
What writers write, builders build.
What they build, you film. You
make all the money you possibly
can, so do I, why shouldn’t they?
And why can’t we help them? In the
long run, it’s better for everyone -
(CONTINUED)
TRUMBO - JOHN MCNAMARA 6.
CONTINUED:
(2)SAM WOOD:
-- said the Swimming Pool Soviet.
DALTON TRUMBO:
(calmly)
Sam. You won. The strike’s over,
the union’s history. We’ve all
gone back to being good little
worker bees making sweet movie
honey and you --
(now, just a little sharp)
-- might just try being a gracious
winner.
That last comes with a gentle poke into Wood’s lapel from
Trumbo’s fingers, which hold his cigarette. Wood does not
appreciate the jab or the accompanying smoke in his face.
SAM WOOD:
It’s never over with you people --
strike, after strike, after strike!
Wood is SHOUTING now. Among the Guests: HEADS turn... SMILES
falter... CONVERSATIONS stop.
SAM WOOD (CONT’D)
Y’know what? I’m going on strike --
against people WHO GO ON STRIKE!
DALTON TRUMBO:
And I won’t cross your picket line,
either.
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"Trumbo" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 27 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/trumbo_578>.
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