The Fugitive (1963) s01e30 Episode Script

The End Game

But, uh, maybe I talk too much, huh? Yeah.
Uh Nothing personal, huh? Oh, it's my fault.
Everybody but the Marines are looking for you, and I stand here playing games.
Police, that out-of-town detective- Gerard? Front view, right side, left side.
Man, they made a commercial out of you.
Look, uh- Honey, you don't wanna get mixed up in this.
You see, I'm a murderer.
Yes, a murderer.
I killed my wife.
And you told him that I had appeared on the television alert.
I simply said an out-of-town detective.
Was that wrong? Yes.
He knows I'm here.
And then what? Then what? What did he say? Oh, he said he didn't want me to, uh, get mixed up with someone who had, uh, murdered his wife.
Didn't say anything about being innocent.
That's what I don't get.
I hear he's always claiming his innocence.
Oh, I told you he was clever.
He saw in the first few seconds that this was a woman who could not only be frightened, but who needed to play a heroine.
Headed west on Avenue L, you said.
Now, wouldn't that be nice if it were true.
Madam, the moment you were out of sight, he changed direction and doubled back.
He's probably through running now, though.
He'll hole up, wait for us to search and give up on Avenue L.
And then, just when we think he's somewhere else, he'll come out and head west on Avenue L.
If you're as clever as you presume to be, then tell me, why haven't you caught him so far? Now just a minute, lady.
It's all right.
If I haven't caught him, madam, it's because of people like you.
People he can use.
Dupes.
You can go now.
Well, lieutenant, I guess we need sleep.
I wouldn't want to be at anything less than my best tomorrow.
Hi.
How's it goin'? Oh, nothing much.
No car, you know.
With that board, you're gonna need a truck.
Oh, I don't know.
Yesterday some cat came along in one of those little foreign jobs.
Heh.
Man, you should have seen that scene.
Do you want to sell that radio? Look, dad, how will I get the surf-reports and weather and all? You buy a better one.
How about 20 bucks? Hey, what's with you? I mean, the stores will be open in a couple of hours.
All right, 30.
Thirty, huh? Hey, look, this ain't one of those imports.
I mean, it's got diodes and all, and- And dig the volume.
Yes.
Forty bucks, huh? You're coming in loud and clear, dad.
Forty.
There's this pro- Program I don't wanna miss.
Heh.
Forty.
Buy a couple for each ear.
"Got this program I don't wanna miss.
" Man, you meet all kinds.
Including the invisible man.
Man.
Crazy weather, huh? Say, you might- English not good.
My day, all right.
How about the radio? "Ray-dee-o"? Not too loud.
Run down battery.
MAN Kimble is described as brown eyes, and hair which has been dyed black.
He is careful about his personal appearance, and his speech is that of an educated man.
If you have any information concerning this man, please contact the police department immediately.
And now news from other parts of the world.
You ever had your name in the papers? Me neither.
But I'll clue you in.
Mine's J.
J.
Watson.
You'll dig it tomorrow on page one.
A stranger offers you $40 for a cheap radio and you're not suspicious? Cheap? What do you mean, cheap? I beg your pardon.
I'm sure it was the best money can buy.
Look, dad, I didn't have to come in here.
I'm not your father.
If I were Yeah? Well, anyhow, I didn't have to come in here.
I mean, I could be out on my board right now with all the chicks digging me.
We appreciate that, Mr.
Watson.
You need him anymore? You know something? After meeting you, I hope he makes it.
Avenue L.
I was right.
He did double back.
But didn't hole up as long as we thought he would.
Oh, he anticipated me.
Lieutenant, this is getting to be quite a chess game.
But I'm not so sure we're winning.
It's the endgame that matters.
He didn't think that beach bum would come to us.
And now he has ammunition, a radio.
Good.
Good? What's good about it? Now h-he knows what we're doing.
Exactly.
Oh, I imagine Kimble's in a relatively safe place feeling more confident.
And for him, confidence is fatal.
If I'd had the chance, I'd have sold him that radio myself.
Ah, lieutenant, which direction would be his best chance of escape? Well, if he heads west, he'll need a boat.
South narrows down, trap him too easily.
East.
East or north, he'd be out in the wide-open spaces.
South.
No.
No, he'd be crazy.
Don't you think even now he's imagining us standing in front of a map? Wondering about his best chance of escape? Let's arrange for a news bulletin to be broadcast by the local stations.
Um, "Richard Kimble has been seen "in the northwest section of the city.
All available police moving into that area.
" Oh, that's what you meant about the radio.
He'll go where we steer him? And he'll move fast.
A car, back of a truck, heading south.
Right into the roadblock he thinks we've lifted.
Check and checkmate.
Hey.
Hey, there he goes.
There he goes.
Hey.
Hey.
There he goes.
Hey.
Hey, hey.
I see the man.
I see the man.
He jumped out of the truck.
Are you sure it was Kimble? Yes.
I'm sure.
I've seen him on TV.
All right.
What's in this area? Factories, old houses, vacant lots.
Seal it off.
Finally, Kimble, the endgame.
There are eight square blocks.
Not one chance in a hundred.
As soon as you've got your men posted, we'll go in.
Be dark in a couple of hours.
We don't get him by then- Lieutenant, there's an expression in prizefighting: "When you've got your man going, don't lose him.
" I've heard it.
It's called the killer instinct.
I thought I heard somebody down here.
And look who.
On your feet, Mr.
Kimble.
On your feet before you die right where you're sittin'.
If you're not too busy watching that shoot-'em-up, look what I got.
Oh, don't bother me, Devlin.
It's Kimble.
Richard Kimble.
What? Well, you're right.
For once.
Standing right here in our living room.
Guilty as sin.
Just like I always knew he was.
I said it before the trial, I said it during the trial, and I said it after the trial.
Guilty.
And that's the way the jury found him, not like what you thought, Reed.
The jury was wrong.
I didn't kill anyone.
Ah! Oh, shut up, Devlin.
You never heard of reasonable doubt? Of course you haven't.
You just believe what you wanna believe.
That's a hot one.
Everybody in the world says he's guilty except Sam Reed.
Not everybody in the whole world says he's guilty.
Just one jury.
A-and not even all of them.
Four of them held out over three days.
Four of 'em agreed with me.
There was a reasonable doubt.
And I still say there's a reasonable doubt.
And that's why they're chasing him now.
Just because he's so innocent.
'Cause he's- Hey, hey, you.
And that's why he's trying to sneak out now, 'cause he's so innocent.
Sit down.
Not there, that's my chair.
Uh, y-you're welcome to mine, Kimble.
Well, now, ain't you the generous one, Reed.
You expect him to sit on the floor? After breaking into my house, you want me to give him a meal and a cigar? "My house.
My house.
" Like I don't own the other half of it.
Half of this, and half of the downstairs- What are you doing? What's it look like I'm doin'? I'm getting dressed.
You want me to take him down to the cops in my underwear? Oh No, thanks.
If you hadn't had the phone taken out last year Why support the phone company? We didn't get any calls for a month.
We got calls.
We got plenty of calls.
Oh, sure.
Insurance agents, salesmen- Ah, shut up.
Come on, Kimble, get to your feet.
We're going downtown.
Oh, "we're going downtown"? What are you doing, playing the big shot? Playing Dick Tracy? Well, I ain't gonna sit here on my tailbone and wait for the cops to come.
I wanna tell you this it's a long walk from here to the police.
I'm going to get away.
Yeah, you hear that? That sound innocent? I'll do whatever I have to do to get away.
Not because I'm guilty but because I'm innocent.
If the police take me, they'll execute me.
You see that, Devlin? What? It's in his face.
You see it? The truth.
He's telling you the truth.
Ah, the truth.
You wouldn't know the truth- You said it yourself.
The police will be here.
Couldn't we just wait for them? Well, well, sure they will.
Uh, didn't we see it on the TV? How they're staking out the whole neighborhood? Well Sit down.
Ahem, now, like I say, we're gonna sit here until the cops come.
positively known to be within these eight square blocks.
Jimmy? Jim, would you go over there and see if you can get Lieutenant Gerard for me, please? We're hoping to interview Lieutenant Philip Gerard, who instigated this manhunt.
And ladies and gentlemen, I'm finding it hard to describe the- The Roman holiday that I see here.
There we are.
Red Hots, Red Hots right over here.
Ice-cream sandwiches, all kind of pop.
Come on, folks, there we are.
Thank you.
I guess I just described it, Roman holiday.
Now, to those of you who are watching, do not, and I repeat, do not come here and add to the confusion.
Stay where you are and you will see this manhunt better than if you were here.
I've got a man stationed at all of these exits.
And this is the hill road up there? Yeah, that's not really fit for travel.
The road's old.
Been washed out half a dozen times.
But I've got a roadblock set up here, and I got a lookout here with a walkie-talkie.
This side is a sheer drop, maybe 400 feet.
Uh-huh.
Excuse me, lieutenant, uh, I was wondering if you'd like to say a few words to the TV camera.
What words? Well, I mean, you know, like, uh, "cooperate with the police.
" Yeah, all right.
Okay, okay.
That's 65.
Sixty-five.
Thank you.
Who's next? Step right up, let's go.
Get out of here.
Oh, just a minute, now.
I'm not gonna tell you again.
Hey, look, I got a license.
Somewhere in there a man is trying to hang on to his life.
You've got no right to capitalize on that.
Get him out of here.
Hey, I got a license.
Close it up.
Free enterprise- You heard what the man said.
All right, but I got all these- Close it.
All right.
Traced here by detective work that would have done credit to Sherlock Holmes.
Oh, here's Lieutenant Gerard now.
Lieutenant, would you be kind enough to briefly tell us how we stand up to this point? Um, well, all our men are posted and, uh, all the avenues of escape are blocked.
We'll get him tonight.
Tonight, eh? You sound very confident, sir.
I am.
We hear that the fugitive is unarmed.
Would you still consider him dangerous? Richard Kimble is a convicted murderer- It's sealed off.
All right, let's start the house-to-house.
Excuse me.
Certainly, lieutenant.
That was Lieutenant Philip Gerard, ladies and gentlemen.
And right now, this word for the people that are bringing you the exclusive coverage of this manhunt that has electrified this country.
Well, you just heard him, Reed, a murderer.
A convicted murderer.
Mr.
Devlin, you're a logical man.
Ask yourself: Do you honestly think that the courts have never convicted an innocent man? That's right, Devlin.
Why, th- Why, there's books on it.
So what? It ain't up to me to decide.
But you are deciding.
I'm just gratified to- To know that Mr.
Reed believes it.
Oh, hold on, I didn't say that.
Well, you're acting that way.
Reasonable doubt.
Reasonable doubt.
I know my law.
Yeah, he knows his law.
If he'd known 10 cents about war surplus, we'd still be in business.
Oh, that's right.
Blame me for the bankruptcy.
Blame me.
Oh, what's the use? I'm gonna get a sandwich.
Oh, uh, you want one? Not in my house.
He can sit in my chair and eat the food I pay for.
Well, thank you, but, no, thanks, Reed.
Oh, Reed, is it? Well, ain't that chummy.
Oh You're, uh, just going to sit there and turn me in to the police when they come.
Well, I've got to give you credit, you're doing what you think is right.
I guess you didn't believe my defense about the real killer being the man with one arm.
Not for one second.
Well, you know, I saw him again.
About two or three months ago in Chicago, Chicago Heights.
Well, he was getting on a bus.
I chased him, and he ran.
Now, would he have run if he weren't guilty? Well, like you say, I'm just doing what I think is right.
Except that you're wrong.
You know, one day after I'm executed they'll prove their case against that one-armed man.
But then it'll be too late.
They will have executed the wrong man.
Good, they're here already.
Let's get going this end.
That's right, Devlin.
They're gonna find that man with the one arm.
Then what'll you say? Yes, sir.
I'll be the one who was right.
And I'll be dead.
And you'll be the one who was wrong.
Reed'll be sitting right here, saying, "I told you so.
" Yes, sir.
I figure I got a good 20 years left in me.
Twenty years of saying it: I told you so, I told you so, I told you so, I told you so, I told you so.
There's a relic.
Better take a look at it.
Right.
Nobody living down here.
Well, if they haven't got a key upstairs, we'll go in the window.
Oh, Lieutenant Gerard.
Saw you on TV today.
Where's the key to downstairs? Why? Oh, heh, oh, sure, you don't wanna miss a bet, huh? Here.
Very handy.
Well, uh, going in and out all the time.
Uh, we're redecorating.
We? Uh, fella that owns this place with me.
Name is Devlin.
And where is he? Here.
I'll check this floor.
Uh, were you watching television too, Mr.
Devlin? Good, then you know why I'm here.
Can you give us any help? Uh, afraid not, lieutenant.
We didn't see or hear anything.
Uh-huh.
Except television.
That's, uh, right.
Well, thank you for your cooperation, gentlemen.
I needn't tell you to get in touch with us if you see or hear anything about him.
Thank you.
Well? Not a sign.
Oh, sorry I had to wait so long.
I didn't think you were gonna get here in time.
They were crawling all over the street.
One of their cars is still down at the end.
Now, uh, you go around the back and up the stairs and I'll lock this.
Thanks, Reed.
Oh, not yet.
We're not out of the woods yet.
He has to be in here.
Only two sections left.
If they report negative- If they report negative, we'll start over again.
Lieutenant Gerard, I've come to have a lot of respect for you, but remember this: I've gone along with everything you asked because of what that man means to you, but this is still my city.
What does that mean? That when you're gone I have to live in it.
I have to give the taxpayers the protection they're entitled to.
And? Well, the captain called a few minutes ago making noises, loud noises.
Claiming your hunt for Kimble is uncovering other parts of the city.
I'll talk to him.
You're welcome to, but it won't do any good.
If we don't find Kimble by midnight, we'll have to pull out.
Midnight.
Think.
Where? Where? They're still there.
You sure that neither one of you said anything to make 'em suspicious? No.
At least I didn't.
You? You were so scared, you just stood there looking stupid.
Stupid? Ah.
You know, when this is all over, he's gonna try and take the credit for it.
Why shouldn't I take the credit? I was with him from the minute I saw him.
N-now wasn't I, Kimble? Well, yes, you were.
The only reason you were for him was because I was against him.
That's not true at all.
I was for him way back during the trial.
I, at least, stuck to my guns.
Yeah, pigheaded is more like it.
L-look, I'm very grateful to both of you.
You, uh, Reed, because you, uh, believed in me from the beginning.
Thank you.
And you, Mr.
Devlin, because you were man enough to admit that there is a reasonable doubt.
I am grateful to both of you, but I am still here and they're still out there.
So the problem is how to get you out.
That's not it at all.
The problem is how to get them away.
Well, that's part of getting him out, ain't it? Look, you're both right.
Kimble, I've been thinking.
We can try the old hill road.
Now, the police can't stay here forever.
Sooner or later, they gotta leave.
I heard that.
That's what I said.
How to get the police away.
Now, you can stay here till the cops clear out.
Downstairs maybe.
Uh, you'll be snug as a bug till this whole thing blows over.
If it blows over.
If they don't come back.
If you don't get caught.
Serve you right if you did get caught.
Hang it, Devlin, I'm sick of you.
Twenty-five years of twisting every word that comes out of my mouth! Yeah? And don't think I ain't had enough of you.
Go on, butter him up.
Whisper together, the both of you.
Maybe you'd like to move in, huh? Take over and pay half the rent.
How'd you like that? Living with a convicted killer.
Oh, no, you don't.
All right, ten-four.
I'm sorry, lieutenant, but that's it.
Last two sections reported negative.
I tried to hang on to the men for another 12 hours, but What time is it? Ten.
When the clock strikes 12, we have to retreat.
Well, every report negative.
Lieutenant, I don't know how he did it, but somehow he got out of there.
No.
No, he's still in there.
I know it.
He's gone.
He's gonna turn you in just to get back at me.
Patrol car's gone.
Well, it'll take him a few minutes to get to Gerard.
If he's not there already.
The car.
Does it run? Sort of.
Yeah, the car, and the old hill road.
If we get to the road, there'll be roadblocks.
That's just exactly what I'm thinking about.
What do you say, lieutenant, we get back to town, get some sleep? Lieutenant Gerard? Remember me? Name's Devlin.
Uh-huh.
If you want Kimble- Where? At the house.
He's selling a bill of goods to that jackass I live with.
Come on.
The car! They've taken it.
The darn fools, they'll kill themselves.
What do you mean? Those brakes aren't worth a dime, and that road's a mess.
If they've taken any of the main streets, we've got them.
Not the main streets.
The hill road.
I heard them.
Alert the roadblocks.
Unit one.
MAN All set here, lieutenant.
All right, Bill.
Keep an eye out.
Ten-four.
Roadblocks all set.
Let's get up there.
So this is how it ends.
Reed you crazy fool.
I should have stayed.
I should have stayed with you.
Well, lieutenant, like you said: "It's the endgame that counts.
" Yeah, the endgame.
Why? Stupid old goat.
Never had a chance.
Stupid old goat.
How did you get out? Stupid? Half the cops in the state are right here and I'm stupid.
And you'd like to know how I did it, wouldn't you? Well, we stopped, got out, pulled out the throttle and let her roll.
Knew that when she blew up everybody'd come running to X marks the spot.
Kimble.
Where's Kimble? I'm afraid he's gone, lieutenant a long, long time ago.
I think you better come with us.
I don't suppose it entered that thick skull of yours that that car was half mine.
Well, that's just too bad about you.
Anybody who'd turn into a Judas don't deserve- Don't you call me that, Reed.
Besides it's "doesn't deserve," not "don't deserve.
" You don't even speak English good.
Tsk.
You know, Devlin, sometimes I wonder how you can stand to look at your face in the mirror.
Well, if I don't look at myself, I gotta look at you.
Well, you won't have to for a while.
I wonder how long they'll- They'll, uh- I mean, aiding and abetting's not very serious, is it? I- I don't know.
Maybe, uh, six months? Hm.
Well, at least I won't have to drink that miserable coffee you make.
Miserable coffee? You're a fine one to be calling names.
Never lifting a finger to help with the meal.
Sitting, watching that TV.
Oh, Devlin, will you shut up.
No, I won't shut up.
Oh.
The endgame.
He has won.
But for how long? Another night and another road, and still the deadly game goes on.
So must he.
North, south, east, west.
A man alone.
A fugitive.

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