Alien Nation s01e13 Episode Script

The Red Room

NARRATOR: That was the scene in California 's Mojave Desert, five years ago.
Our historic first view of the Newcomers' ship.
Theirs was a slave ship, carrying a quarter-million beings bred to adapt and labor in any environment.
But they've washed ashore on Earth with no way to get back to where they came from.
And in the last five years, the Newcomers have become the latest addition to the population of Los Angeles.
[Glass breaking.]
[Buzzing.]
[Beeping.]
[Knocking on door.]
Just a second.
[Beep.]
-Matt, hi.
-l need a scientist.
-Come on in.
-l'm sorry.
Are you busy? Well, l'm a little behind at work.
l was just finishing up some genetic typing.
What can l do for you? See, we got this new ramrod commissioner with more college degrees than brains who's ordered this stupid test on everyone to see if we're crazy.
Hell, l could've phoned that one in, right? But, it's mandatory, see.
l've answered a few of them, but l don't want to embarrass myself.
l figured you being a scientist you could give me some idea you know, what they want to hear.
Sort of.
A psychological evaluation.
How fascinating.
Fascinating? lt's a bunch of bull.
l don't know, this one's interesting: Would you rather A: walk your dog, B: clean your desk or C: make love? l mean, l've seen how messy your desk is.
And you don't own a dog.
-This was a bad idea.
-Matt, l'm sorry.
l'm a biochemist, not a psychologist.
There are no right answers.
Just be honest.
lt's a good chance for you to learn about yourself and for others to learn about you.
l do my job.
Nothing else should matter.
Matt, it's only an evaluation.
[Phone beeping.]
Yeah, but if they find out you tie your shoelaces wrong they ship you off to another division.
You're behind a desk, you're.
This is Cathy Frankel.
l'll be right there.
-Trouble? -That was my service.
There's been a break-in at the lab, l've got to go down there.
You want me to go with you? -Go with me, why? -Well, it's kind of late and it's a crazy town.
Well, thank you, Matt, but l can take care of myself.
Besides, l'm stronger than you are.
l didn't mean you needed help.
-But l wouldn't mind the company.
-Great.
l'd rather face a burglar with a gun than this thing any day.
-You can go home, Frankel.
-Professor Pettit.
-All your work.
-And all my animals.
l tried to have you paged to tell you not to bother.
-Everything is under control.
-ls your alarm hooked into the police? JEFFRlES: Yep.
l got the 459 just as l was dunking my glazed twist.
-The boys in blue just left.
l'm Jeffries.
-Sikes, Central.
You boys from Hollenbeck get all the messy stuff.
Yeah, we're usually cleaning up after you lazy bums.
And speaking of lazy, what are you doing here? Matt came as a friend.
Good thing, hate to think the department pulled two of us off doughnut duty.
MATT: What have we got here? Blood.
S.
l.
D.
's on the way.
CATHY: Not human.
PETTlT: lt's rodent.
l rely on them heavily for my cerebral research.
He's a behaviorist.
-What? -A mice-and-maze doctor.
There's enough disorder here without you adding to it.
Sorry, Doc, evidence.
-What's up with Doc? -Eggheads.
-lf E don't equal MC squared, they flip.
-Yo, Jeffries.
MATT: Think you can get a nice clean lift off of this.
A lot of good that would do.
lt belongs to Bobo.
A chimp.
The extenuated phalanges indicate that.
-Chimps have long fingers.
-Yeah, right.
Now, if you're all quite finished l'd like to clean up my lab.
Sorry, nobody's cleaning up anything till S.
l.
D.
gives this place the once over.
Guy's a regular Miss Congeniality.
[Computer buzzing.]
What are all these files doing here? l'm sort of behind, and Grazer lowered the boom.
We're baby-sitting paperwork today.
An order l'm doing my best to ignore.
George, what the hell have you done with our data sets? lt'd be easier to peek under the pope's skirt than to pull priors out of your computer files.
l coded them, reorganized them logically cross-referencing the ''A'' and ''B'' members with the mainframe data sets.
That way l can enter any data set from any file.
l'm surprised to see you using the system at all, Matthew.
That's quite a departure from your normal behavior pattern.
You've been regurgitating this psychobabble for three weeks.
-Put a straitjacket on it.
-Psychobabble? lt's fascinating.
And very advanced for humans that you have a science devoted exclusively to analyzing what makes you tock.
Tick.
And psychology is a bunch of frustrated thumb-suckers who think the root of all the problems in the world is that you hate your mother.
You hate your mother? No, George, l don't hate my mother.
l'm beginning to hate you, the way you screwed up this computer.
What are you looking for? There was a break-in last night at Cathy's lab.
Perps tore the place up pretty good, let some lab animals go.
-Animal rights activists? -l don't know, l'm just looking for similars.
This isn't our case, is it? lt's just, you know, Cathy's involved.
-Oh, Cathy? -Yeah.
-She asked me if l'd look into it.
-Are you seeing Cathy? She's just a friend, would you-- Officers, your attention please.
Thank you.
ln conjunction with the written personality profiles l trust you've all completed the department has decided to give one-to-one stress evaluations to all of the field officers.
Dr.
Marcie Wright the department psychologist, will be administering the tests.
Not tests, explorations of your value systems.
How you relate to each other, to the job, and to yourselves.
lt's a great way to help our brotherhood serve the community better.
According to the departmental memo l got.
Come on, George.
Let's go get some coffee before we have a group hug.
Excuse me, Detective Sikes? Excuse me.
DR.
WRlGHT: While l'm certain it's just an oversight yours is the only personality profile l've yet to receive.
Look, l could tell you my dog ate it, it got lost in the wash, whatever.
The truth is l didn't finish it.
l think it's stupid.
l can understand how you feel, but it's still a requirement.
Right, so you can tell me l misplace my aggression? Actually, Matthew, the clinical term is displaced aggression.
ln which latent hostility is directed at a subject not associated with the initial anger.
-l got your latent hostility.
-Exactly.
You must be Detective Francisco.
Yes, l am.
And l trust you did receive my profile.
As a matter of fact, l did.
ls there something wrong? l answered each question.
l'm afraid you over-answered each question.
A multiple choice is just that.
You gave me an essay on every possible response.
Well, l wanted to be thorough.
To give you a deeper insight into who l am.
While l appreciate your enthusiasm and you've obviously done your homework l don't want answers from Jung, Freud, and Dr.
Ruth.
l want answers from you.
Anyway, in its present form, your profile is unusable.
Certainly there must be some conclusion about me that you can derive from this profile? Well, Detective, l'd just as soon reserve my judgment -until you redo the profile.
-No.
You were going to say something.
DR.
WRlGHT: Perhaps, that.
[Muffled speaking.]
What's wrong? Dr.
Wright just said that l have an insatiable need to influence the situations around me.
lnsatiable need? Congratulations, George, the doc just called you a control freak.
Control freak? [Screaming.]
Twelve hours of pushing paper, l've had enough.
Do you realize that in psychological terms control freak translates to anal-retentive? lf she had any knowledge of science whatsoever, she would know anal-retention in Newcomers is a physiological impossibility.
Sour grapes, George? This morning, you thought that psycho stuff was the greatest.
[Phone ringing.]
-Sikes.
-Matt, Cathy.
l'm between meetings, so l have to make this fast.
l just wanted to call and thank you for going with me last night.
Don't mention it.
-Any word on that break-in? -Yes, that's why l'm calling.
Detective Jeffries is sure that it was a protest.
-Protest? -Animal rights activists.
Luckily we found most of the animals in the building.
-We're going to be late.
-l have to go, Matt.
l'm sorry.
Thanks again.
Yeah.
Bye-bye.
So, it was the animal rights activists.
You listening in on my phone conversations again? You know that's all tied in with that anal stuff.
lt's not anal, it's aural.
Just doesn't make sense.
lt makes perfect sense.
Newcomers have acute hearing.
l could hear-- Not your ears, the animal rights activists.
Why would they go to all the trouble to break in to free the animals and then not release them outside? How can Jeffries believe that? lf it bothers you so much, why don't you call Detective Jeffries and clear it up? Detective Jeffries, please.
Yeah, l'll hold.
Then having freed the animals, why would they go ahead and trash the lab? l guess it would depend on what was in the lab.
Test tubes, electrodes, files scattered all around.
Mice-through-mazes stuff.
And something called Project D.
A.
R.
T.
D-A-R-T.
Maybe l'm crazy, it just seems weird.
Nothing to wet your pants about, George.
Celine! You're right, George, you're not a control freak, you're out of control.
MATT: Come on.
GRAZER: Good night, gentlemen.
Don't let the psychologist see that.
l said Jeffries.
Detective Jeffries.
You sure? Okay, thanks.
Matt? Hollenbeck Division, they don't have a Detective Jeffries.
See what you get for playing with butane and nails? Sorry to keep you guys waiting.
At least you had company.
You know, Lois, you've been working too much.
l'm saving for a trip to Hawaii.
l figured if l put away a dollar for every stiff's intestines that l drain, l should be lying on a beach by next April.
-You're a terribly romantic woman.
-At least l have my dreams.
Which is more than l can say for your John Doe.
LOlS: The midnight boys found him downtown.
Cause of death? Somebody emptied a 9-millimeter into his chest.
You can play connect-the-dots, but it's not a pretty picture.
Andarko.
No lD, no clothes, no nothing, stripped clean.
He was dead before he was dumped downtown.
One weird thing, though l found traces of gunpowder in the wounds.
Weird? The guy's Swiss cheese.
Yes, but the powder l found was fresh.
Not spent.
MATT: Let's get a look at his face.
MATT: l'll try and get a match from the mug books and see if he had a criminal record.
George, he already has a prom date.
You're kidding.
No Detective Jeffries, you're sure? No, l'm not hard of hearing, butthead.
Matthew, we got an lD on the John Doe in the morgue.
A widower named Marcus Byer.
A chemist from Loma Linda.
Get this, George.
There wasn't even a police report filed on that lab break-in.
Maybe the other detective procrastinates his paperwork -as much as you do.
-You're controlling, George.
Matthew, l understand our job is to find answers, but to these questions not about your phantom detective.
George, it doesn't even bother you that there could be a guy out there pretending to be a cop? What bothers me is that we have a case a murder case, and there are only questions and no answers and the only thing that you care about is a break-in in a lab that is none of your business.
Look, l care, George.
lt's just, the fact is, we get shootings here every day.
Not like this.
Somehow, l know this man.
-You sure? -Pardon me, Detective.
-l don't mean to interrupt.
-Excuse me.
-ls he always so preoccupied? -George? He's the Rock of Gibraltar.
He's just having a bad day.
By the way l still haven't received your personality profile.
l start my evaluations today.
Yeah, procrastination's one of my biggest problems.
l can see that.
Make sure l get it.
GRAZER: l wanted to submit myself as your first evaluee.
l find the key to being in a position of authority and leadership is establishing a relationship of respect with the men.
And you're secure in your leadership abilities? Absolutely, like a newborn in the arms of his mother.
You know, Captain, it's not uncommon for people in your position to experience feelings of doubt about their leadership ability.
Me? l have no doubt.
No.
l mean, no doubts whatsoever.
Somebody get these wood chips away from me.
You know how much cellulose the pod needs.
Don't want it to fill up with mucus.
EMlLY: So, eat those wood chips, Mom.
Could we please get back to the game? Tennessee Avenue.
l think with a house the rent is -$60.
-$70.
l only have $30.
l'll give you the rest when l pass ''Go.
'' lf you take the garbage out before you go to bed, we'll call it even.
-Deal.
-Wait, l'm afraid there's nothing in the rules about paying debts with garbage removal.
lt says right here: GEORGE: ''lf any player at any time is--'' SUSAN: George.
-What? -Taking the garbage out is worth more to me than $40 of play money.
But l am the banker, and as such it is my responsibility to enforce the rules.
Don't have a hearts attack, l'll mortgage Reading Railroad.
That's $100, $40 for your mother, and $60 for you.
There you are.
GEORGE: Go ahead, Emily.
Boardwalk.
That's $2,000, with a red room.
A red room? l thought those were hotels.
A red room.
Kill him.
SUSAN: George? Maybe all that money's driving Dad crazy.
-l'm going to turn in.
Come on, Em.
-Me, too.
Buck, we're not finished with the game, it's.
-We're all broke, you own everything.
-l don't own the utilities.
-l think that's enough fun for one evening.
-Fine.
No one wants to play, no one wants to play.
Well, can you blame them, George? Ever since that psychologist told you to redo your evaluation -you've been unbearable.
-l have not been unbearable.
Maybe l have.
-ls something wrong? -No.
Yes.
l don't know.
l don't know if something is wrong or if it's me.
Maybe my mind is just playing tricks.
What kind of tricks? Do we know a human named Marcus Byer? l don't think so.
Why? He was murdered yesterday.
For some reason l can't get his face out of my mind.
[Knocking on door.]
MATT: Hey, Cathy? Matt, what's up? Have you ever noticed that Detective Jeffries hanging around the lab before? No, l don't think so.
Why? ls there a problem? No, it's probably just my cop curiosity working O.
T.
again.
l'll see you.
You forgot this.
Yeah.
That shrink at work's been itching to get me on the couch.
Boy, is she in for a big disappointment, huh? Matt, you're too modest.
l was a little short of time, but l tried to be thorough.
Question Number 6 was quite enlightening that you'd rather be at home alone than at a party with your friends.
-That says a lot.
-You read this? Well, of course, you-- Terrific.
Next you're going to be coming over reading my mail.
lf you didn't want me to read it, then why did you leave it? l didn't leave it.
l forgot it.
l thought you wanted me to read it.
l wanted your advice, not for you to invade my privacy.
Matt, if you're concerned about your privacy being invaded then l think we should talk about it.
l've got a shrink at work who wants to talk.
l don't need one at home.
Humans.
l thought we'd never get out of there.
[Sighs in frustration.]
[Woman gasps.]
This time it's a Jane instead of a John, but we've got another Doe.
-So, it looks like our boy? -Everything's the same multiple gunshot wounds, no lD.
-Killed someplace else, then dumped here.
-Unspent gunpowder? l'd have to run some tests to be positive, but there looks like there's traces of it.
-Especially under the fingernails.
-Like she was dragged -through gunpowder? -l just tag them, you're the detectives.
Hey! Matt! Hey, man.
-My partner, he's.
-Want an up-close and personal? MATT: l'm telling you the guy who ran was Jeffries.
l know it.
-You listening to me, George? -Yes, you were saying that this man might be tied to these murders.
l don't know if he's got anything to do with this case or if he's just checking me out.
l'm going to get to the butt end of this dog.
S.
l.
D.
's got a tag on your second victim.
lt's all here.
MATT: Bingo! Victim's a 44-year-old.
Physical therapist.
Last name Russle, first name-- Amanda.
What, you're a mind reader now, too? What's the problem, George? lt's nothing.
You've been acting like you've been sucking sour cream.
-What's going on? -l'm not sure.
Come on, you recognized the first victim, now you know the second one's name? -You holding out on me? -l don't think so.
You don't think so? What the hell's that supposed to mean? DR.
WRlGHT: Everything okay? MATT: Yeah, fine.
Detective Sikes, l want to thank you for turning in your profile.
Yeah, well, l don't want you to think l'm crazy.
Of course not, but l look forward to finding out for sure.
l have time for an interview right now, any takers? Well, thanks, but we've got our own lunatic to strap down here.
GEORGE: l would.
l would like to talk now.
-Everything is confidential? -Absolutely.
l fear l am suffering from the very anxieties you were brought here to expose.
l'm not here to expose, but to help.
What anxieties are you feeling? l'm distracted and overbearing at home.
Preoccupied and short at work and l, the control freak, am unsure as to why.
-How long has this been happening? -The last few days.
lt's this case that l'm on.
The faces of the two victims, l can't seem to get them out of my mind.
l feel l know them.
But l don't know how.
Dostoyevsky once said that every man deals with three kinds of truth: The kind he shares with his friends the kind he shares with himself and the kind he shields from his innermost soul.
There are ways to see behind the shield.
DESK CLERK: Thanks.
Hey, George.
Spots hardly look shrunk.
How did it go? She wanted me to try something, but l refused.
Matthew, what do you know of hypnosis? Watch the drumstick, George, you're getting sleepy.
l am serious.
l saw it in a nightclub once.
The Great Sebastian.
Hypnotized a guy from Cedar Rapids.
Every time a bell went off, he was squawking and waddling around like a chicken.
Never did get him to lay that egg, though.
-He controlled this man's mind? -Yeah.
On the ship, the holy gas allowed the overseers to control our minds.
But unlike your man in the nightclub, there was nothing funny about it.
No.
l will not let anyone control me again.
Here, l want these and the rest on your desk processed -before you leave.
-Sir, we have a double murder.
Had a double murder.
That case is closed.
-Closed? -You heard me.
-Just like that? -Look, l don't like it, either.
l have no choice.
-Nothing closes that easily.
-Drop it, Sikes.
Grazer, Captain! Who's jerking your chain? l guess l am.
Well, if it isn't Detective Jeffries.
Sorry about impersonating a cop, but you caught me by surprise.
And l get paid to think fast.
l bet you do.
What were you doing at the lab? -What the hell's going on? -All right, can it.
lt's out of our hands.
Sorry.
National Security matter.
Need to know.
National Security? What are you? ClA? FBl? NSA? Doesn't matter, George, l've dealt with these guys and the ones that don't talk are up to no good.
This comes from way above, top floor.
We're out of it.
Don't worry, l'll see that this matter does not leave this office.
Are you saying you want us to forget about two murders? -Pretend they never happened? -That's exactly what they're saying.
Uncle Sam's up to some dirty games, and they want it all swept under the rug.
lt's over, Sikes.
Yeah, especially for the two people lying in the morgue.
Look, l can understand your concern, but please you're just going to have to trust that these murders will be fully investigated.
l'm not worried about the investigation.
But l have a friend at the lab.
And if anything happens to her l'm coming after you personally.
MATT: Let's go.
JEFFRlES: l am hopeful, Detective that you will honor our jurisdiction in this matter.
l hear you loud and clear: Big Brother's watching.
Little boys in suits playing games while people die, and Grazer just rolls over.
l don't like it either, but it's a Federal matter.
l'm sure they have their reasons.
Yeah, Uncle Sam doesn't want to get caught -with his shorts around his ankles.
-There you are.
l found something on our lady victim, knew you'd want to see it.
-That won't be necessary.
We've been-- -What you got? Our butcher boy left a calling card this time.
Newcomer tissue.
Thought you guys should know.
-Keep this under your hat? -Hell, l'll keep it under my pillow.
l've got a date.
Matt, we have been removed from the case.
lt's closed.
Yeah, maybe for the clowns upstairs, but not for me.
What about you, George? Don't you want to know about those faces -dancing around in your head? -Yes, of course l do.
-l'm going to run an lD on this.
-No.
Matt, l want to get to the bottom of this just as much as you do.
But if your Big Brother is watching, and you go to S.
l.
D we'll not only be off the case, we'll be off the force.
There must be another way.
This should tie us into the Newcomer tissue catalogue at the lab.
Just be a second.
Look, Cathy, about the profile tests.
l've been doing a lot of thinking, and l guess l sort of overreacted.
lt's okay.
Don't worry about it.
lt's just that l-- Rather be alone than go to a party with your friends? Here it is.
The tissue belongs to a Newcomer named-- GEORGE: Silas Marner.
MATT: You know this guy, too? GEORGE: Yes.
We were in quarantine together.
Camp 7.
lt was a military facility they mothballed back in the early '90s.
Not a pleasant place from what l've heard.
We both spent time in a hospital ward soon after the crash.
We had the kumlekula.
-What? -Like pneumonia.
[Computer beeping.]
That's strange.
CATHY: Must be some kind of mistake.
MATT: What? Well, if this tissue belongs to your killer, then it's the most bizarre thing l've ever seen.
GEORGE: These are the remains of those who died in quarantine.
MATT: You guys packed them in like sardines.
GEORGE: Matthew, it was not by choice these brethren were interned in empty oil drums, shoved in like so much garbage.
Smells sweet.
GEORGE: Glaheb, a preparation solution to aid the departed on their journey to Celine.
[Matt blows.]
Matt.
GEORGE: Sawdust.
There ain't no Silas Marner in here, George.
The record said that he died five years ago in quarantine.
-This doesn't make sense.
-lt makes perfect sense.
Big Brother can make anybody they want look dead or alive.
But why? There's only one person who can tell us that.
You know the victims' faces.
You were at Camp 7.
lt's all inside your head, George.
You're the only one who can take us back.
You're fighting me, George.
No one can take control of your mind.
You will remain in complete control.
Now, relax.
Feel your breath go in and out.
Feel your hearts beating.
You are relaxed.
Let the tension drain from your body.
Let it flow from your spots to the tips of your toes out and down through the floor.
Are you relaxed? l want you to go back, George.
Back to quarantine.
Back to Camp 7.
Go back, George.
Go back to when you were sick.
We weren't sick.
We were made to appear that way to separate us.
What do you see, George? The red room.
Who are you? [Grunting.]
No, you are Dart Four.
PETTlT: Doctor Byer, increase the hallucinogen.
AMANDA: You are Dart Four.
PETTlT: He has incredible strength.
AMANDA: lf we could only control their minds.
AMANDA: You are Dart Four.
PETTlT: You are Dart Three.
AMANDA: Prepare your weapons.
Take aim.
PETTlT: Kill him! AMANDA: We must control their minds.
Who are you? l am Silas.
No, you are Dart Three.
You are Dart Four.
Say it! l am Dart Four.
AMANDA: Dart Four, come over to the target.
AMANDA: Dart Four, can you see the target? GEORGE: Yes.
Fire.
Fire! AMANDA: Dart Four has an ethical imprint we can't override.
Dart Three, kill him.
DR.
WRlGHT: Who was in charge of this, George? Who was trying to control you? We found the one.
And him? PETTlT: Drug him.
See that he remembers nothing.
Place him back into the internment population.
DR.
WRlGHT: Who was it? The man with the dark lens.
MATT: Silas beat us to the party.
Looks as though Pettit gave him quite a struggle.
Let's see what he was trying to take with him.
George, data disks.
MATT: Let's see what's on them.
''D.
A.
R.
T.
: Defense Alien Research Training.
'' ''Pettit, Amanda, Marcus.
'' They brainwashed and used you like guinea pigs to create some kind of super-assassin.
Killing machines.
lt makes sense.
You're smarter, faster, stronger.
No wonder Jeffries wanted to keep it quiet.
Silas had successfully completed two assassinations before Big Brother scrapped the project.
They kept him in a safe house for the last four years trying to figure out what to do with him.
Like a caged animal waiting to break out.
Yeah, well, that happened three nights ago when he blew in here and stole the files to figure out who did this to him.
And now he's destroying them.
But why would he take his victims somewhere else to kill them? -To teach them a lesson.
-A lesson? Matt, the gunpowder.
Camp 7 was a military facility.
The red room, an old munitions dump.
He's killing them where they killed him.
lt's been a long night, George.
lf you're not up to this.
lt's all right, Matthew.
For me, this place is just a memory.
But for Silas.
Dart Three, stop it now.
Prepare your weapons.
Take aim.
-Fire.
-No! [Pettit screaming.]
His reflexes are excellent.
We found the one.
Kill him.
-Police! Freeze! -Silas, no! MATT: Drop it! lt's George.
From the camp.
Look at me.
GEORGE: Look at my face, you know me.
PETTlT: My God.
Shoot him.
You are no longer giving the orders in this room.
Put the gun down, Silas.
George, he ain't doing it, George.
-He's a killer! -lt is not his fault.
He is not responsible.
Who are you? l am Dart Three.
This guy's been programmed for four years, George.
You think you're gonna just waltz into his mind now? You are Silas Marner.
Who are you? -l am Dart Three.
-No! -George, l'm not gonna let this happen.
-Matthew! GEORGE: Who are you? Who are you? Who are you? You are Silas Marner.
[Silas moans.]
Gentlemen, let's put the guns down.
Let's not get ugly.
-l'm just here for my package.
-Get me out of here! Sorry, Professor.
You're not on my shopping list.
You know, we could've used your taming powers for the last six months.
Silas here has been a most erratic young man.
But l'm sure that'll be taken care of now.
-You're not gonna get away with this.
-Get away with what? We will not let you kill your killing machine and pretend nothing happened.
JEFFRlES: No one's going to be killed.
l'm simply going to take Dart Three back where he belongs.
-No deal.
-What do you need this for? Why don't we all just walk away? You guys just don't get it, do you? We're just the rats in the maze.
Somebody else decides who gets the cheese.
You're right.
l don't get it.
What's it gonna be? Don't look so surprised, Sikes.
l get paid to mop up spills, not blood.
Anyway, l promised the family l'd take them to the movies.
l'm afraid that you are going to miss your movie.
-Forget it, George.
-What? We're going to just let him go? lt's not worth our time.
We pull him in, Big Brother will have him sprung in 20 minutes.
We got what we need.
JEFFRlES: Gentlemen.
GEORGE: Jeffries.
l want you to give Big Brother a message.
You tell him that l will make sure the press finds out about the D.
A.
R.
T.
project.
JEFFRlES: But will they print it? WOMAN: Joe, your wife's on Line 3.
DR.
WRlGHT: Why does this psychological evaluation disturb you so? What are you trying to hide from yourself? What do you fear, Detective? [Disco music playing.]
lt's easy to open.
DR.
WRlGHT: Why? Why won't you open that door?
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