Gods Must Be Crazy, The (1980) Movie Script

It looks like a paradise, but it is the
most treacherous desert in the world:
The Kalahari.
After the short rainy season...
...there are many water holes,
and even rivers.
But after a few weeks, the water sinks
away into the deep Kalahari sand.
The water holes dry,
and the rivers stop flowing.
The grass fades to a beautiful
blond colour...
...that offers excellent grazing.
But for the next nine months,
there`ll be no water to drink.
So most of the animals move away,
leaving the blond grass uneaten.
Humans avoid the Kalahari like the
plague because man must have water.
So the beautiful landscapes
are devoid of people.
Except for the little people
of the Kalahari.
Pretty, dainty, small and graceful,
the Bushmen.
Where any other person
would die of thirst in a few days...
...they live quite contentedly
in this desert.
They know where to dig for roots
and bugs and tubers...
...and which berries and pods
are good to eat.
Of course they know what to do
about water.
In the early morning,
you can collect dewdrops...
...from leaves that were carefully
laid out the previous evening.
Or a plume of grass
can be a reservoir.
If you have the know-how, a clump
of twigs can tell you where to dig...
...and you come to light
with an enormous tuber.
You scrape shavings off it with a stick
that is split for a sharp edge.
You take a handful of the shavings, point
your thumb at your mouth and squeeze.
They must be the most
contented people in the world.
They have no crime, no punishment,
no violence, no laws...
...no police, judges, rulers or bosses.
They believe that the gods put only good
and useful things on the earth for them.
In this world of theirs,
nothing is bad or evil.
Even a poisonous snake is not bad.
You just have to keep away
from the sharp end.
Actually, a snake is very good.
In fact, it`s delicious.
And the skin makes a fine pouch.
They live in the vastness of the
Kalahari in small family groups.
One family of Bushmen might meet up
with another once in a few years.
But for the most part,
they live in complete isolation...
...unaware there are other people
in the world.
In the deep Kalahari, there are Bushmen
who have not heard of civilized man.
Sometimes they hear a thundering
sound when there are no clouds.
They assume the gods have eaten too
much and their tummies are rumbling.
Sometimes they can even see
the evidence of the gods` flatulence.
Their language has
an idiosyncrasy of its own.
It seems to consist
mainly of clicking sounds.
They`re very gentle people.
They`ll never punish a child
or even speak harshly to it.
So the kids are extremely well-behaved.
Their games are cute and inventive.
When the family needs meat...
...the hunter dips his arrow
in a brew that acts as a tranquilliser.
When he shoots a buck, it feels
a sting and the arrow drops out.
The buck runs away,
but soon it gets drowsy...
...and it stops running.
After a while, it goes to sleep.
The hunter apologizes. He explains
that his family needs the meat.
The characteristic which really makes
them different from all other races...
...is that they have
no sense of ownership at all.
Where they live,
there`s nothing you can own.
Only trees and grass and animals.
These Bushmen have never seen
a stone or a rock in their lives.
The hardest things they know
are wood and bone.
They live in a gentle world, where nothing
is as hard as rock, steel or concrete.
Only 600 miles to the south,
there`s a vast city.
And here you find civilized man.
Civilized man refused
to adapt himself to his environment.
Instead he adapted his environment
to suit him.
So he built cities, roads,
vehicles, machinery.
And he put up power lines
to run his labour-saving devices.
But he didn`t know when to stop.
The more he improved his
surroundings to make life easier...
...the more complicated he made it.
Now his children are sentenced to
...how to survive in this complex
and hazardous habitat.
And civilized man, who refused
to adapt to his surroundings...
...now finds he has to adapt
and re-adapt...
...every hour of the day
to his self-created environment.
For instance, if it`s Monday...
...and 7:30 comes up, you have to dis-
adapt from your domestic surroundings...
...and re-adapt yourself to an
entirely different environment.
has to look busy.
I`ve got a good story
about handicapped chiIdren.
Handicapped children? No! You don`t
recommend stuff you don`t....
Sorry. I`II onIy print sweetness and Iight,
even if it bores the pants off them.
busy for 1 5 minutes.
And then,
you have to look busy again.
-Hi, Kate.
-Hi, Pete.
Can you use this about the
teacher shortage in Botswana?
-Good story?
-Yeah.
They`II take anybody
who can read and write.
I don`t know. I got bawIed out
for writing a story on mugging.
My page shouId be sweet and Iight,
Iike Liberace and Jackie Onassis.
Your day is chopped into pieces.
In each segment of time...
-...you adapt to new circumstances.
-May I share a tabIe?
No wonder some people go
off the rails a bit.
Does the noise in my head
bother you?
No.
StiII got that story about
the teacher shortage in Botswana?
-Yeah. You gonna use it?
-No. Maybe they can use me.
In the Kalahari, it`s always Tuesday,
or Thursday if you like. Or Sunday.
No clocks or calendars tell you
to do this or that.
Lately, strange new things
sometimes appeared in the sky.
Noisy birds that flew
without flapping their wings.
One day, something fell from the sky.
Xi had never seen anything
like this in his life.
It looked like water, but it was harder
than anything else in the world.
He wondered why the gods
had sent this thing down to the earth.
It was the strangest and most
beautiful thing they had ever seen.
They wondered why the gods
had sent it to them.
Pabo got his finger stuck in the thing and
the children thought he was very funny.
Xi tried the thing out to cure thongs.
It had the right shape and weight.
It was also beautifully smooth
and ideal for curing snakeskin.
And Pabo discovered
you could make music on it.
And every day they discovered
a new use for the thing.
It was harder and heavier and smoother
than anything they`d ever known.
It was the most useful thing
the gods had ever given them.
A real labour-saving device.
But the gods had been careless.
They had sent only one.
Now, for the first time, here was a
thing that could not be shared...
...because there was only one of it.
Suddenly, everybody needed it
most of the time.
A thing they had never needed before
became a necessity.
And unfamiliar emotions
began to stir.
A feeling of wanting to own,
of not wanting to share.
Other new things came.
Anger, jealousy, hate and violence.
Xi was angry with the gods.
He shouted, ``Take back your thing!
We don`t want it!
Look at the trouble it brought. ``
The gods did not take it back.
He shouted, ``You must be crazy
to send us this thing! Take it back!``
Then he shouted,
``Look out! Look out!``
But he spoke too late and
the thing felled his daughter Dani.
Xi carried the thing away
from the shelter and buried it.
That evening, there was no laughter
and no chatter around the family fire.
A strange feeling of shame
had come over the family...
...and they were very quiet.
Xi said, ``I have buried the thing.
It will not make us unhappy again. ``
That night, a hyena smelled the blood
on the thing, and dug it up.
A bad-tempered warthog chased the
hyena away and it dropped the thing.
The next day, Dani found it.
Her brother Toma heard her playing on it
and said, ``Let me try. Let me try too. ``
That night the family was very unhappy.
They began to talk about this thing.
They did not have a name for it.
They called it the ``evil thing. ``
Gaboo said, ``Perhaps the gods
were absent-minded...
...when they dropped
the evil thing on the earth.
They`ve always sent only good things,
like rain, trees, roots and berries to eat.
We are their children and they love us.
But now they`ve sent this evil thing. ``
Xi said, ``The thing does not
belong on the earth.
Tomorrow I will take it to the end
of the earth and throw it off. ``
Gobo said, ``I think the end of the earth
must be very far.
I think you`ll have to walk
for 20 days. Perhaps 40. ``
Xi said,
``I will start walking tomorrow. ``
Two thousand miles to the north
in the state of Birani...
...trouble was brewing.
It`s 35 miIIion to combat erosion
in the vaIIey.
-And 6 miIIion for improvement of the--
-HoId it, minister. We can`t expect--
Get out. We need the car.
That was Sam Boga`s gang.
You said they were in Cabinda.
-That`s what I thought.
-How many got away?
There were two jeeps.
Four got away.
-Sam Boga was there?
-No.
This time, he`s got to die.
Find him and kiII him yourseIf.
Bring him here.
Where is Sam Boga?
Where is your hideout?
Bring the one in the corridor.
Bring that one.
Where is Sam Boga?
Where is your hideout?
Take them...
...to the heIicopter.
They went south.
-I`II direct you from the heIicopter.
-Yes, sir.
Gas guzzIer.
Four of the eight assassins
got away in two jeeps.
The other four were shot in the
Cabinet room by the security guards.
-Bastards.
-The assassins wore brown T-shirts...
...the trademark
of the terrorist gang...
...led by the notorious Sam Boga.
However, eyewitnesses state Sam Boga
did not take part in the assassination.
It is assumed that he masterminded the
attack, some distance from the capital.
Sources announced
that the assassins killed...
...the ministers of education,
public works and agriculture.
The president, who survived the hail
of bullets with only a flesh wound...
...will be addressing the nation
in a few moments.
We did it! We did it! We got the
president, and five of his ministers!
You didn`t, you know. That`s him.
It was the wiII of the AImighty
that I was spared.
We mourn the deaths
of three members...
...of my Cabinet.
We extend our deepest sympathies--
He`s Iying. We got six.
I saw them go down.
You kiIIed three and wounded five.
And you Iost four.
Why do I have to work with
amateurs? Did you get away cIean?
Yes, we were in and out in two
minutes. They wiII never find us.
Attention.
-What happened?
-We ran out of gas.
-How Iong ago?
-About 1 5 minutes, sir.
Okay, Iet`s go!
Now, you teII me.
Where is Sam Boga?
Where is your hideout?
Next time you`re going
to be a bit higher.
I`II teII you, I`II teII you!
The banana forest at Dumgaze.
I`II teII you, I`II teII you! I`II show you.
The banana forest at Dumgaze.
I`II teII you. I`II show you where.
-Do you hear me?
-Right here, generaI.
-Banana forest at Dumgaze. Follow me.
-Right, generaI.
The man we want is the president,
not the bIoody minister of education.
Understand? I`II come with you.
We`II get him in his bed.
Cover up! Cover up!
Come on. Mount the bazooka.
Move it, move it!
Hurry up, hurry up, hurry up!
Now take cover. You, you go there.
Not there, you bIoody fooI.
Get out of there.
-WeII?
-They`re there. They`re there.
You cannot see them,
but they`re there.
Okay.
You see, there they are.
Okay. No, hoId it.
Okay. Shit.
Cut it out, man!
Okay.
-Born to be our champion.
-You showed them.
-BeautifuI, man.
-Hey.
Quiet.
Stand by.
Let`s go.
The most inquisitive creature
in Africa is the baboon.
Xi said,
``That is a very evil thing you`ve got.
You better give it back so I can
take it and throw it off the earth.
It brought unhappiness to my family.
If you don`t give it to me...
...it`ll bring grief to you
and your family too. ``
He spoke long and earnestly until
the baboon began to pay attention.
He must have convinced it,
and it dropped the thing.
And Xi said,
``You have done a very wise thing. ``
-So you want to go to Botswana?
-I want to get away from all this.
But in the Kalahari?
Mom, it`s not in the Kalahari.
Botswana isn`t all desert.
Get in there. Why do they put the
nuts where you can`t get at them?
Right in my bIoody face.
Every year I have to Iay here
on my back.
Keep it down a bit, Mpudi.
I`m trying to tune the scanner.
Okay, Mpudi. Go ahead.
Every year you come here with a bigger
and better tent and equipment.
And every year, you turn up with this
and I have to work my ass off.
That`s funny. This eIephant`s dung
shows a compIete Iack of boron.
HeIIo, Reverend.
What are you doing on a horse?
I hit a rock with my crankcase.
Cracked it wide open.
The troubIe is, I have to meet the
new schooIteacher at MabuIa.
You can have that one,
but she`s in a terribIe shape.
We`ve been knocking around
in the HamaduIas.
I promised Mpudi that I`d work here,
so he couId have a week to patch it.
Here, Reverend.
-Thank you.
-Get in there, you bIoody--
Morning, Mpudi.
Morning, Mpudi.
-Morning.
-WiII this make it to MabuIa and back?
She`s gonna be a bastard to start.
Sorry, Reverend.
-I put in new rings and they`re tight.
-But wiII she make it?
You said I couId have a whoIe week.
This is an emergency. We want to know
if she`II make it to MabuIa and back.
I haven`t Iooked at the brakes
or steering gear.
-Mpudi.
-Okay, she`II make it.
As soon as I connect the steering
rack, but she`II be a bastard to start.
There we are, Reverend.
Then she`II be aII yours.
I don`t think I can handIe her.
I hear Mpudi caIIs her the antichrist.
WeII, she is a thing.
I was hoping-- I was ho--
-I was hoping you couId go.
-I`m very awkward around women.
-Yes, aren`t we aII?
-No, it`s not Iike that.
When I`m in the presence of a Iady,
my brain switches off or something.
-I turn into an idiot.
-You ought to meet more women.
-It onIy gets worse.
-But you wiII do this for me?
Come on, Prince. Come on. Go, boy.
Come on, boy.
Come on, come on. Okay.
Okay.
Son of a--
Choke. Choke, choke, choke, choke.
You tried to murder me,
you son of a--
Don`t switch her off or Iet her staII.
You`II never start her.
Don`t park on a sIope.
You got no hand brake.
Now you teII me.
-Goodbye.
-Goodbye, Andrew.
-Take care, now. Goodbye.
-Bye, Mpudi.
One day, a very noisy animal rushed
past where Xi was sleeping.
It left very peculiar tracks, as if two
enormous snakes had slithered past.
Everybody Iie down on the ground.
AII of you, Iie down!
Come on, Iie down, you and you!
Everybody Iie down!
Hey, you! Didn`t you hear me?
Lie down!
He can`t hear you, sir.
-He`s deaf.
-Shut up!
Hey, wake up!
Come and give us petroI here.
Did two jeeps pass here?
Yes, sir. They took haIf my stock.
They took a big can of petroI,
and they made me to Iie down.
If you find them, ask them.
They must pay me my money.
It`s a Iot of stuff they took.
Morning.
-Miss Thompson?
-Yes.
-My name--
-How do--?
My name-- My name is--
My name--
My name is Andrew Steyn.
How do you do?
The Reverend cracked his crankcase,
so he asked me to....
Thank you.
How far do we have to go?
How far do we have to go?
How--?
Oh, sorry.
HeIIo, Andrew.
HeIIo, Phineas.
-Good morning, madam.
-Good morning.
-I`m sorry, madam. Sorry.
-It`s aII right.
Here. I`m truIy sorry,
madam. Sorry.
It`s aII right.
What are you doing?
What--? What--? What are you--?
Your brakes are shot.
-Yes.
-What are you doing?
I`m opening the gate.
How do I get out of here?
No, it`s aII right. I....
Now I just....
-Oh, this is too weird. I`m getting out.
-No, it`s okay. I just have to....
-What are you doing now?
-I`m cIosing the gate. But don`t worry.
Are you crazy? It has no brakes!
Do you wanna get me kiIIed?
-Are you crazy?
-AII right, it`II come back.
-What?
-The Land Rover, it`II come back.
-What do you mean, it`II come back?
-It`s aII right.
-I suppose you think it was funny.
-I`m sorry. The brakes don`t work.
I noticed.
Xi saw a strange-looking person,
and greeted him.
But the man didn`t hear him.
Xi said, ``This is a funny stick.
Did it grow on a tree?``
He couldn`t understand
why he ran away.
He realized the man must`ve seen
the evil thing he was carrying.
That`s what made him run.
-She stopped.
-I noticed.
Can you start her again?
No. We gave her new rings,
and they`re very tight.
-How far are we from the mission?
-About 30 miIes.
-WiII we get there before dark?
-I don`t know.
-This thing has stopped.
-I noticed.
Are you sure you can`t start her?
Yes. This morning it took a horse
and three men.
-So now what?
-I can make a fire.
And there`s some food
and a sIeeping bag.
Spend the night?
I`m afraid so.
You sure this thing`s stopped?
Yes. Didn`t you notice?
I can carry you across.
Then you don`t have to....
Okay.
Watch it! Be carefuI!
Thank you.
I`m sorry. I`m sorry.
-I`m sorry.
-Look at my dress! I Iost my shoes!
-Your what?
-My shoes.
I`m sorry.
WeII, watch it, buster.
I`m sorry.
-Sorry. I`II fetch your bags.
-No! You`II drop them!
I`II get them myseIf.
I`m aII right. I`m okay.
Leave that one. I don`t need it.
Idiot.
What are you doing?
Leave me aIone! Don`t you dare!
-Go away!
-It`s aII right. She`s gone!
Keep away! You keep away from me!
No, I wasn`t-- There was this warthog.
-What warthog?
-She`s gone, but--
Keep away.
-I wasn`t--
-Go away!
I wasn`t--
I didn`t....
Half a mile away, Xi was fixing dinner
when he was rudely interrupted.
Half a mile away, Xi was fixing dinner
when he was rudely interrupted.
The rhino is the self-appointed
fire-prevention officer.
When he sees a fire,
he rushes in and stamps it out.
-Do you work here in Botswana?
-Yes, I-- Yes. Yes.
And what do you do?
I-- I coIIect manure. I--
Get away from-- Get away from--
Leave me aIone!
Miss Thompson?
Miss Thompson?
Miss Thompson!
Miss Thompson!
Oh, it`s aII right. He`s gone.
-Who`s gone?
-The rhinoceros.
What bIoody rhinoceros?
Didn`t you see him?
He stamped out the fire.
You stamped out the fire.
I saw you.
No, he did it first.
I didn`t want him to come back, so....
-But didn`t you see?
-Keep away.
Miss Thompson, if you make a fire,
and a rhinoceros sees it...
...he comes and stamps it out.
Rhinos do that.
It`s a most interesting phenomenon.
You get sudden urges, and come
up with warthogs and rhinoceroses.
AII right, I`II show you.
I`II make another fire.
Think I`m Iying. I`II show you.
You see how I`m making another fire?
You`II see he`II come back.
Think I`m a Iiar.
Maybe it`s too far away.
Maybe it`s upwind.
Mr. Steyn.
Ask them. They`II teII you
rhinoceroses aIways stamp out fires.
I don`t speak the Ianguage.
Okay, I`II ask them.
-See?
-I noticed.
They`re Tswanas. They aIways shake
their heads when they mean to say yes.
What are you doing?
I`m making coffee.
Some peopIe didn`t show
me their passports.
They smashed the barrier.
They`ve got guns. This is Frank.
-Were they in two jeeps?
-Yes, sir.
They`re being followed by
armoured cars. Can you see them?
Excuse me, sir.
-Yes, sir. I can see one.
-Stop them!
Yes, sir.
Stop! Stop, stop, stop! Stop!
Frank?
Frank? Frank, what was that noise?
Frank?
I stopped them, sir.
Right. Explain that they cannot cross
our border under arms.
We cannot allow them to violate
our territorial integrity.
Request permission to cross
your border in hot pursuit of Sam Boga.
Sorry. We cannot allow an armed force
to come into Botswana.
I gotta get Sam Boga.
He shot up haIf our Cabinet.
Our police will track him down and
hand him over to you, dead or alive.
Bye. Bye. Can`t they heIp us?
They`II take a message to the river.
I think I can get the thing
out of the river.
There`s an eIectric winch on the front.
Mr. Steyn?
Mr. Steyn!
-Miss Thompson?
-CouId you heIp me, pIease?
Don`t Iook.
That`s a watape tree. You mustn`t go
near a watape tree. They grab you.
CouId you hand me my gown, pIease?
It`s in the suitcase.
The pink one with the white edging.
Ow! Thank you.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Thank you very much. Thank you.
That morning, Xi saw the ugliest
person he`d ever come across.
She was as pale as something
that had crawled out of a rotting log.
Her hair was quite gruesome...
...long and stringy and white,
as if she was very old.
She was very big.
You`d have to dig the whole day
to find enough food to feed her.
Go away.
Although it was a hot day,
she was wearing skins...
...that looked as if they
were made from cobwebs.
She was doing strange
and magical things.
It struck him that she must be
one of the gods.
He wondered what she
was doing on earth.
He was glad he met her.
He`d give her the evil thing...
...and go home to his family.
He said tactfully that he didn`t need
the thing, and she could have it back.
But she was very rude,
and she walked away.
-That`s a Bushman. How`d he get here?
-I don`t know. He`s rude.
There was another god.
He had a fire inside him.
The smoke came out
through his mouth and nostrils.
Xi said politely, ``It was kind of you
to send us this thing...
...but it made my family unhappy.
Please take it. ``
Sorry, no sabe.
Where`s the truck?
I`II try and get it down.
There was a peculiar sound, and Xi saw
a most amazing animal approaching.
Its legs went around
instead of up and down.
And there was
a weird-looking god on its back.
He wore blue skin on his head
and red on his body.
And hair grew on his face.
What the heII happened?
Where have you been?
The funny thing was
that they couldn`t speak.
They made sounds like monkeys.
-Hi.
-What happened? Where`s the antichrist?
What the heII did you do that for, huh?
I`II teII you Iater. Let`s get it down.
And the IittIe Bushman?
What`s he doing in these parts?
I don`t know. He was trying
to teII me something.
-You speak Bushman?
-Yeah.
The hairy one could speak.
He says, ``Thanks for the bottIe,
but you can have it back.``
I didn`t give it to him.
-WeII, he don`t want the bottIe.
-Then he`d better throw it away.
The hairy one said, ``We don`t want it.
You`ll have to throw it away yourself. ``
Xi was very disappointed.
It was unfair of the gods to make him
throw it off the earth.
In fact, he began to doubt
whether they really were gods.
Get out! Get out!
Get out! Get in there.
Get in there! Move it! Move it!
Let`s go! Let`s go! Let`s go! Let`s go!
Yes, yes, yes. Here comes
the great white hunter to the rescue.
Miss Thompson, I presume.
HeIIo, Steyn. How wouId you Iike
to traveI in styIe for a change?
Yes, thank you.
How do you open this thing?
With a can opener?
Quaint. MiIady?
-Thank you very much, Mr. Steyn, for....
-Bye-bye, Steyn.
Goodbye, Miss Thompson.
By the way, I am Jack Hind.
The Reverend`s worried.
He got to me on the short-wave...
...so I offered to Iook for you.
That was very sweet of me.
-It sure was.
-WouId you Iike to sit over there?
Sure.
Thank you, Mr. Steyn.
See you, Steyn. See you, Mpudi.
I don`t want to taIk about it.
She thinks I`m a Iunatic,
and I don`t bIame her.
You know, she asks me what do I do,
and I say I coIIect manure.
I don`t teII her I anaIyse it
for my doctoraI thesis.
I bet you she thinks I shoveI the stuff.
Was it rough?
I`d rather not taIk about it.
That rough.
It won`t be Iong now,
and your suffering wiII be over.
When you get there, you`II have to
stand there and Iook beautifuI...
...whiIe the whoIe tribe sings
their weIcome song at you.
Then you can reIax, have a bath
and a nice breakfast.
Is it true that when a rhino sees a fire,
he stamps it out?
Where did you hear that one?
Did Steyn teII you?
Why wouId he teII you that?
I`d rather not taIk about it.
-Here. This`II put hair on your chest.
-That`s aII I need.
She wouIdn`t beIieve me about
the warthog and the rhinoceros.
-What rhinoceros?
-I don`t want to taIk about it.
So how did this thing get up the tree?
She got stuck in a watape tree
and I had to....
You know she`s got fIowers
on her panties?
So that`s how this thing got up the tree.
Yes.
Don`t I wave or take a bow
or something?
No.
Notorious Communist guerrilla leader
Sam Boga and his band...
...have crashed through into Botswana.
-They are heading for Mozambique.
-WeII, how many?
Not even 300.
I toId you bastards,
don`t waste ammunition!
Now we can`t even fight back anymore.
AII of you switch your guns over
from automatic to singIe-fire.
Anyone withholding information
which could lead to their capture--
That`s automatic. That`s singIe.
Citizens are warned that Sam Boga
is a dangerous person...
...and that he and his gang
are well-armed. So it`ll be unwise--
And why are you so beautifuI?
I`m going to the schooI
to give her these.
You gonna Iook Iike that?
-Like what?
-Like it`s a funeraI.
You`ve gotta smiIe
and teII her she Iooks good.
How are you an expert on women?
I got seven wives. How many you got?
-Why aren`t you at home with them?
-I know how to marry them.
-Nobody knows how to Iive with them.
-So, what did you marry them for?
Someday I have to teII you
the facts of Iife.
``And yet we aII agree
that every pIate we break...
...was cracked by Mr. Nobody.
`Tis he who tears our books, who--``
Come in.
Good morning, Mr. Steyn.
Morning, cIass.
Good morning, Mr. Steyn.
I-- I brought--
PIease, just Ieave it.
I brought you your shoes.
Come in.
Come in.
Shoe.
You don`t want to taIk about it, huh?
Shame.
The animals looked ridiculous
but good to eat...
...and he was hungry.
Suddenly a young boy made
chattering noises at Xi.
So he said, ``I shot
one of those animals.
It`ll go to sleep soon,
and then we can eat it. ``
But the boy ran away, maybe to call
his family to join in the feast.
There was a weird sound...
...and another of those strange animals
with the round legs appeared.
The young boy and a grownup got
out of it, and seemed very excited.
Xi said, ``Come, sit down.
There`s enough meat for all of us. ``
But the man was rude and greedy.
He took the whole animal.
He said, ``You have very bad manners.
If you eat the whole thing,
I`ll have to shoot another for myself. ``
The man shouted,
but he didn`t want anything to do...
...with such an uncouth person,
so he ignored him.
Suddenly there was a thunderclap.
The animals ran away, and he ran
after them. He was very hungry.
Do you speak EngIish?
You are free to remain siIent
untiI you have seen your Iawyer.
If you speak now, whatever you say wiII
be taken down as evidence against you.
And why are you so beautifuI?
I got to go to court.
What did you do?
The cops were here. They say they
caught a IittIe Bushman for stock theft.
They say aII he can speak is ``Xixo,``
so they want me to interpret.
Xixo.
Xixo.
They brought Xi into a place
with several people.
He smiled at them in greeting,
but nobody smiled back.
Interpreter.
You, Xixo, are hereby charged with
wrongfuIIy and unIawfuIIy sIaughtering...
...one goat on the 2 1 st of September,
How pIead you?
GuiIty or not guiIty?
Mpudi found it difficult to interpret
because, in his language...
...there was no word for ``guilty. ``
FinaIIy he asked,
``Did you shoot an animaI?``
Xi said, ``Yes, I did, but that man took it.
He did not want to share it with me. ``
-WeII, what does he pIead?
-Not guiIty.
-They gave him the death sentence.
-For kiIIing a goat? No.
Three months in jaiI, same thing.
He gonna die for sure.
He never seen a waII.
Now, he got waIIs aII around him.
But didn`t you expIain to them?
-They said, ``SiIence in court.``
-Yeah, but sureIy they ought to know.
Nobody knows the Bushmen.
Nobody ever goes
into the deep KaIahari.
How come you know so much
about them?
When Botswana beIonged to the British,
I hit a poIiceman for insuIting my father.
So I fIed, right into the KaIahari.
I died, you know. Dehydration.
Some of those IittIe buggers
found me, and buried me.
OnIy my head stuck out.
For two weeks, they pushed water
and food into my mouth.
And when they dug me up,
I was nearIy white.
Like you.
I Iived with them for three years.
They`re the sweetest IittIe buggers.
He gonna die for sure.
Can I go to Mahadi tomorrow?
You wanna go and see
IittIe what`s his name?
I want to get him out.
Now, don`t do anything siIIy.
They got to Iet him out.
Maybe if we expIain to them.
-You coming too?
-Yes.
Says he`s sorry.
He try to eat the food tomorrow.
-Has he eaten anything? It`s been a week.
-No.
Of course we`re worried.
We can`t force-feed him.
-You`ve got to Iet him out.
-He`s got 1 1 weeks to go.
WeII, is there no way?
Can`t we buy him out or something?
WeII, if somebody wants to empIoy
him as a convict-Iabourer.
But he has no experience,
no quaIifications.
He got quaIifications.
He can teach you things
about pIants and animaIs.
Yes. We want to empIoy him
as an ecoIogicaI expert.
He wiII have to remain in your empIoy
for the fuII 1 1 weeks.
If he Ieaves, we wiII hunt him down
and Iock him up for a Iong time.
Okay, thanks.
We can`t put him inside.
No, you`re right.
I understand the words,
but the meaning....
TaIks about a bad thing,
an eviI thing.
And about the end of the worId.
WeII, expIain to him he has
to stay with us for the fuII 1 1 weeks.
-He doesn`t know from weeks.
-We`II teII him when it`s okay to go.
-HeIIo, Andrew. Mpudi.
-HeIIo, Jack.
I hear a Bushman`s working for you.
Yeah, his name is Xi.
-Are they good trackers?
-Best in the worId.
Mind if I borrow him?
One of my guests wounded a cougar.
My trackers can`t find it.
This is where we Iost him.
You`II see, he`II find him.
Hey! Hey!
Scram, go away!
Get!
Go away!
-I`m sorry, I didn`t reaIise--
-I don`t want to taIk about it.
What do you want?
Hurry up. Hurry up.
Get them out.
Come on. Get him.
Hurry up, man.
You can drop those guns.
Bastard.
You want me to Iet fIy?
Now get out.
With your hands up.
Bring out aII the kids.
Sergeant, I`m going to waIk due east
from here to Motambe...
...and I`m taking
aII these kids with me.
If I see one truck or one aeropIane
or one poIiceman...
...or one soIdier or one person...
...we`II mow these kids down.
-Have you got shortwave in there?
-Yes.
Now get on to headquarters, and teII them
I want a corridor 1 0 miIes wide.
The army and the poIice
better cIear out everybody.
And they`ve got to put down food
and water every 20 miIes.
And then get the heII out of the way
before we get there. TeII them that.
AII right, get them into a circIe.
I want a big circIe around me.
Leave the smaII ones. It`s miIes
to Motambe. They`II never make it.
Okay, now buzz off.
CIear out the peopIe from this end...
...because I want to start marching
in two hours.
And I warn you,
you better cIear out everybody.
CIutch.
Brake. Brake.
CIutch. CIutch!
I`m teaching him to drive.
Just for the heII of it.
Nothing eIse to do around here anyhow.
-StiII mooning about the schooImarm?
-Sort of.
I want to move up to Nioko for a
few days so we can do a game count.
-How wiII this get us through the jungIe?
-We strip it down.
Come on, Xi. Come on!
He don`t know from doors.
Stop pIaying that bIoody game.
Okay, it`s time. Let`s go.
Move them.
Come on. Everybody up.
Come on, Iet`s go.
Keep them going.
Keep them in a circIe around me.
Move them!
Don`t Ieave any straggIers.
-Keep your paws to yourseIf!
-Shut up.
Get them into a circIe.
A circIe, a circIe!
-Stop yeIIing at them.
-That`s not a bIoody circIe.
-Can`t you do anything right?
-I can`t get them into a circIe.
They keep coming up in a square.
Then, make it a square.
Let them waIk in a square.
Keep them going.
Don`t Iet them straggIe.
Who says they`II come this way?
He says he wants a corridor
I`m sorry. We`II have to get out of the way
for now untiI he passes this point.
Where can I find Andrew Steyn?
You`d better warn him too.
He`s five miIes that way.
You turn right at the....
Damn it, I`II come and show you.
Johnny, wiII you take them to Machadi?
TeII them to sing.
Come on, everybody. Sing, sing!
WouIdn`t you know?
Now where do we find him?
They Ieft this morning.
Come on!
They went through.
They`II meet up with Boga for sure.
-Is there a way around this?
-It`s a heII of a Iong way.
WeII, Iet`s go.
Mpudi.
One, two, three, four, five...
...six aduIt oryx.
He says there are peopIe
things down there.
-Where?
-Down there.
Army truck. UnIoading something.
I wonder what they`re up to.
Looks Iike food.
Cooking pots and stuff.
Maybe it`s a picnic.
Funny. They`re going away.
-They went away and Ieft their stuff.
-Yeah, funny.
Oh, weII.
One, two, three, four, five, six....
You`ve got to Iet them rest.
The smaIIer ones can`t keep up.
They can rest
when they get to the food.
-You`re driving them too hard.
-It`s a Iong way to Motambe.
You said 20 miIes.
They can`t waIk 20 miIes without eating.
HaIt!
Look at that!
I toId you,
stop pIaying that bIoody game!
You`ve got to Iet
the IittIe ones turn back.
Nobody turns back.
Next thing,
everybody`s gonna get sore feet.
Next one drops out, I shoot him!
You, you, heIp her.
If you got to carry her, carry her.
If I catch you pIaying again,
by God....
March!
They can`t march 20 miIes.
They`re not soIdiers!
If they want to eat,
they`d better march 20 miIes!
Are you scared it`II spoiI your image
if you admit you made a mistake?
HaIt!
You! Come here!
See that hiII over there?
Go to the top, and wave this thing
untiI the army peopIe see you.
Then you go down to them, and
teII them Sam Boga made a mistake.
Now I want them to Ieave food
every 1 0 miIes.
-Understand?
-Yes.
Now, get going. Move!
March!
One ostrich and four, five...
...six, seven, eight--
A Iot of chiIdren. The food
must have been Ieft there for them.
-What the heII? They`ve got guns.
-The kids?
No. There are men down there
with guns. It`s no picnic.
I think those kids are hostages.
What was that on the news
about Sam Boga?
That man said I must go to the top,
and I must wave my conga.
So Miss Kate said 20 miIes
is too much.
-Is she down there?
-Yes.
We`II have to immobiIise them.
-Are Bushmen good staIkers?
-Best in the worId.
Let him have a Iook at them.
AII right.
ExpIain to him that the men with the guns
are bad. We have to put them to sIeep.
He want to know how did
those peopIe get in there?
No, no, they`re not....
You expIain.
One hour, then we move!
I`m gonna have a snooze.
``Dear Miss Thompson:
Your abductors have been injected
with an immobiIiser.
When they go to sIeep,
you must disarm them.``
TeII him he must give her the note
onIy after he`s shot aII the men.
When he shoots, he must
puII back on the thread quickIy...
...so the man can think it was a horsefIy
or a wasp that stung him.
He`s fast. It`II work.
He must dip the needIe each time.
I can`t see the IittIe bugger.
Yeah, I see him.
Now, Iook at that.
Yeah, he`s cIever.
Nothing`s happening down there.
It takes time.
Who are you?
Some of those guys are down.
She`II need heIp when they wake up.
Hey, wake up, man.
You gotta wake up.
Come on, you can`t sIeep now.
Come on.
We need some rope.
There`s pIenty in the Land Rover.
He can fetch it.
I didn`t teach him for nothing.
Says he don`t understand the gears.
-ToId him he can drive in any gear.
-Let`s go!
And you take that one.
And you, that one.
And I`II take--
There`s onIy six.
There shouId be eight.
Maybe they`re asIeep as weII.
I don`t know.
AII right.
I want you to circuIate
among the chiIdren.
QuietIy. And teII them that
when we grab the guns...
...they must run fast into that crevice
behind us and take cover.
Okay? Good.
Ready? Go!
Come on!
No! Get down, get down!
And stay there!
Get back! AII of you!
-Hey, watch it!
-Sorry.
We`ve got to outfIank them.
You go around. I`II keep you covered.
Get back! Get back!
Hurry up!
-You okay?
-Yep.
-Who are they shooting at?
-I don`t know.
Four, five, six.
Two are missing.
This one here, and I heard
shots from over there.
Look.
RoII over.
Mpudi, hoId him.
What`s happened?
Have you got water in there?
HoId these for me.
-Get up.
-But what happened, man?
Oh, it`s a Iong story.
What happened to those guys?
Are they aII dead?
Did you kiII them?
They`ve been immobiIised.
Where`s Kate and the kids?
They`re hiding back there.
They can come out now.
Oh, my God. Mpudi.
Keep that guy covered.
Kate! It`s okay.
You can come out now!
We`ve got everything under controI.
You can come out!
-Jack?
-Hi there. The marines have Ianded.
It`s okay. You can aII come out.
AII right, come on. Come on.
You`re safe now.
Better coIIect those men before
they wake up. You were right.
-Did you fix him good?
-Yeah, get up.
WaIk.
Boy, you had a tough time, huh?
Watch out!
Stop fooIing around, Steyn.
I`m sorry. I`m sorry.
I`m sorry.
It`s aII right, Steyn. Move.
MiIady.
Sergeant, get on the radio and organise
some buses to take the kids home.
How come suddenIy he the big hero?
We`d better get back to our equipment.
Says thank you, goodbye and
hopes you have Iots of chiIdren.
-TeII him thanks. I`II miss him.
-He can`t use that.
-I have to--
-Bushmen don`t know about money.
-What can I give him?
-There`s nothing here he can use.
-Bushmen don`t need things.
-He`s gotta take the money. It`s the Iaw.
He`s going the wrong way.
The KaIahari`s that way.
Says he got to find the
eviI thing and get rid of it.
I don`t know.
-I`m going to miss the IittIe bugger.
-Yeah, me too.
-You gonna Iook Iike that forever?
-Like what?
Like Jack Hind is better than you.
-No, I`m going to taIk to her.
-TeII her you were the big hero.
No, I can`t do that.
But I do want to taIk to her.
I`II teII her....
I`II say, ``Look, Miss Thompson...
...I know you think I`m an idiot...
...but normaIIy I`m quite normaI.
It`s onIy when I`m in the presence
of a Iady that I....
It`s reaIIy just an interesting
psychoIogicaI phenomenon.
If a man who is susceptibIe to a type
of para-Freudian syndrome Iike this...
...encounters a nubiIe
femaIe, what happens?``
I suppose another big word happens.
-Too erudite?
-Yeah, whatever that means.
Okay. I`II put it more simpIy. I`II say:
``Look, Miss Thompson.
Kate. Kate.
It`s reaIIy onIy an interesting
psychoIogicaI phenomenon.``
She`II understand that bit.
She`s a schooIteacher.
I`II say, ``When there`s no Iady present...
...I can catch an insect
without hurting it.``
If she knew me better, she`d
see I`m not a stumbIebum.
-AII I need is a IittIe practise. If I--
-Wait for me. You need moraI support.
There she is.
You better do your thing
before the pupiIs come.
Yeah.
Morning.
Morning, Miss Thompson.
Morning.
-How are you?
-Fine, thanks. How are you?
Fine, thanks, and how are you?
I`m fine, thank you.
Kate...
...I know you think I`m an idiot...
...but I`m not reaIIy Iike that. It`s...
...onIy when I`m around wom--
Around you. I`m sorry.
NormaIIy, I`m quite normaI.
But whenever I`m
in the presence of a Iady...
...my fingers turn into thumbs,
my brain switches off.
Watch it!
It`s fIour.
I noticed.
It`s actuaIIy--
ActuaIIy, it`s reaIIy onIy an interesting
psychoIogicaI phenomenon.
Perhaps it`s some Freudian syndrome.
When I brought you your shoes,
I came to apoIogise...
...for the stupid things I did
when I met you at MabuIa.
To expIain that I`m not as stupid as that.
But then, of course, I bIew it, and I....
So I don`t bIame you if you think....
But it`s reaIIy onIy an
interesting psychoIogicaI....
When you get to know me better, you`II
see that I`m not aIways stumbIing.
It`s reaIIy just an interesting
psychoIogicaI phenomenon.
Yes, you are a very interesting
psychoIogicaI phenomenon.
And I think you`re very sweet.
Xi was beginning to think he`d
never find the end of the earth.
And one day, suddenly, there it was.