Upper Middle Bogan (2013) s03e08 Episode Script

Christmas Break

1 [ALARM CHIRPS.]
Come on home Comin' home, baby, now You know I'm waitin' here for you I'm comin' home now, real soon You've been gone Comin' home, baby, now You don't know what I'm goin' through I'm comin' home I know I'm overdue - Since you went away - Expect me any day now Real soon I'm comin' home and never more to roam - Baby, tell me you're - Baby, I'm for sure Coming home "She was always a devoted wife but it was as my adoring mother that Margaret played her greatest role "and I can't imagine a more wonderful" This is ridiculous.
I'm not practising your eulogy that you wrote.
This might be the last chance we have to go over it! For the last time, Mum, you're not sick! My blood sugar has skyrocketed! Maybe just try 95% harder.
I'm depressed.
Oh, Mum.
You can survive one Christmas without me.
I can't! Why do you have to go to New York? Because we want to.
We want to show the children a white Christmas.
You can have a white Christmas here.
[SIGHS.]
Why don't you take up Aunty June and Uncle Derek's invitation? - They ask you every year.
- Yuck! You love going to visit them in Adelaide.
Not at Christmas.
Christmas in Adelaide is like like sandals and socks.
- Hot? - Wrong! Christmas is with you and This is Danny's idea, isn't it? To take you away from me? Actually, Mum, it was my idea.
I just want one Christmas that's not complicated with two families.
It isn't my fault that it's complicated! It was complicated from the moment that you adopted me.
I tried to hide that for years! If you weren't such a stickybeak, nothing would've been complicated.
I'm gonna call Aunty June.
Can you finish my eulogy first? Read the funny anecdote about the time I met Judi Dench! When did you meet Judi Dench? I'm dead.
You going to quibble? She took it pretty well, considering.
Hey, are you allowed to write your own eulogy? - Are you nervous about flying again? - No.
Don't worry.
- (OSCAR) Dad? - Yep? I need to get my Kris Kringle for school.
Can I get some money from your wallet? Yep, as long as you promise not to buy anything poisonous or illegal.
- Or explosive.
- Or explosive! Anyway, I have dealt with Margaret.
I'm so glad I got the tricky one out the way first.
Julie won't take it nearly as hard.
[SOBS.]
Oh, I'm sorry.
It's just this.
Do you remember the year that we lost this little Rudolph? And Amber thought Brianna had taken it and so she chopped all her plaits off while she was sleeping and then to get her back, Brianna dyed all of Amber's clothes pink.
But it was actually Kayne who had taken it to fix his nose, and so you both put him in the wheelie bin.
Do you remember? Of course we remember, Mum.
It was last year.
I can't believe you both won't be here for Christmas.
You won't? Neither of you? Younis and I are going to Mount Gambier to be with his family.
And we're going up to Townsville with Evan to see his mum.
I'm living the dream, spending Christmas with the school principal's family! Can I have everyone's keys? Pop needs to move the cars so we can assemble Frosty.
Frosty? The snowman.
You should see him.
He's huge.
Our display is finally going to be better than the Caravellos'.
[SOBS.]
Shawn! We'll be here to see the lights, Mum.
We're not going till Christmas Eve.
I know, I know, I know.
It's not like everyone's going away at least I have Bess.
- Well, yes.
But I did - Thank God for Bess! Oh! Actually, I wanted to - Now, about Christmas Day.
- Yes, yes, about Christmas.
I thought it would be easier if you all came to stay on Christmas Eve and then that way, we could all wake up together in the morning and the kids could open their presents.
- What? No.
That'd be too much.
- No, no, no.
It's no problem at all and it's not like we won't have the room.
Is the sleigh in the right pozzie? - Um, I reckon.
- What do you think, Pop? Does the sleigh look good there? Sensational, Kayne.
Santa would be very happy to drive that sleigh.
As opposed to a certain other sleigh, up the street.
- Do you mean the Caravellos'? - Shh! We don't want them to think that we consider them a threat, Kayne.
First rule of warfare.
I thought the first rule of warfare was "know your enemy".
No, because we know the Caravellos and they're very nice people.
So that doesn't help us go into battle.
Dad, they're not a threat at all! Not now we've got a giant snowman What? What have they got? Oh, don't tell me they've got a giant snowman too.
Worse.
They've got snow.
Actual snow.
Looks like they're gonna cover the whole front yard and the driveway.
For sure, they're gonna do the roof.
The Caravellos have taken it to a whole nother level.
We're in trouble.
Get your Big Issue! - Hey.
- Hey.
Oh.
I'm so sorry.
I thought I had cash.
Oh! My son got into my wallet and he's taken all my money.
Sure, mate.
No, no.
I-I-I-I don't use cash for shopping.
I use Pay Pass.
So I never check that section of the wallet.
- I honestly thought I had cash.
- Sure.
- Merry Christmas.
- Yeah.
Merry Christmas.
I feel like you don't believe me.
Would you accept a, uh, a box of gingerbread Christmas trees? Would you accept a box of gingerbread Christmas trees for work you did? No, no, no, I mean as a gift.
I certainly don't expect a magazine.
Although that probably would pay for a couple but, uh, Merry Christmas.
Oscar! How much money did you take out of my wallet? I just had a very awkward exchange with a Big Issue guy.
Was it like that time with the change? - No.
- Because that was pretty awkward.
Because he spent so long searching for change for my 20 and if I say, "Keep the change," that's fine.
But if he is stalling so that I say We are off topic.
How You took all the money out of my wallet.
I needed it for my Kris Kringle.
Since when does Kris Kringle cost more than $5? What were you doing, shouting the whole class? Oscar? Oscar.
Why did you take the money? Are you in some kind of trouble? Hey, it's okay, mate.
You can tell me.
Come here.
Hup.
- It's all right.
- It's not just any Kris Kringle.
- Hmm? - It's a special Kris Kringle.
I think I've got a crush and I want to buy something really good but I don't know what to buy.
Mate! Why didn't you tell me? You want to buy something special for the girl you like? That's trouble I can help with! I don't like a girl, Dad.
O kay.
I didn't see that coming.
That's You know, maybe I did see it coming.
That's fine, though It's fine! It's more than fine! It's it's great! Okay, because your choice is your choice and I love you and your mother loves you, no matter who you want to bring home.
I think it's against the school rules.
Against school rules? What? What year is this? Did someone actually say that to you? I've seen on the news that teachers get in trouble for it.
I don't know if it's the same for student teachers.
Student tea What are we talking about? Miss Ogilvy.
She's been doing her placement all this semester.
Would you really be all right if I brought her home? No, Oscar, you can't bring Miss Ogilvy home.
But you said that I could! - That's when I thought you were - You thought what? Nothing.
Look, you can't date Miss Ogilvy, okay? But listen.
[SIGHS.]
How about I help you buy her a nice present to say thank you for the semester? Mum? Nanny Margaret just posted an article on Facebook.
They're forecasting dangerous blizzards for New York this Christmas.
Oh, no! Let me see! I hope that we can still go.
Look at the date of this article.
2012? Why would she post an old She doesn't want us to go.
Which is why she posted another one about a New York serial killer from 1975 and another story about the Wall Street crash.
- Poor Nanny Margaret! - [PHONE BEEPS.]
She'll be with Aunty June and Uncle Derek.
- Poor Aunty June and Uncle Derek.
- Dad! Nanny Margaret will be fine.
Goodnight, sweetie.
Julie wants me to pick the stuffing for the turkey.
Craisin and nuts, bacon and cheese, or prawn risotto.
Prawn risotto in the turkey? Craisin and nuts, I think.
Although, bacon and cheese does sound delicious.
Yeah, just a reminder, you won't be enjoying the Craisin and nut stuffing because we have booked a non-refundable hotel and paid for the non-refundable flights.
- I know! - Do you, though? Yes! I've figured out how to do it.
- Oh? - In public.
Okay, I'm in.
Clothes on or clothes off? No, I've figured out how to tell Julie that we're going to New York, in public, so she can't make a scene.
[CHRISTMASSY MUZAK.]
So after Wayne and I had a really good chat, I felt so much better.
- You did? - Mm-hm, mm-hm.
I mean, I'm just gonna have to let Christmas go this year.
You know, the kids get older, they meet other people.
I'm just gonna have to deal with it.
I mean, I can't control what everybody does forever, now, can I? That is great, Julie.
Because actually, Danny and I Amber, smile! You don't want to hop in there with them? No.
I mean, I don't want to intrude on that tradition.
They've done that every year? You see? You see, you understand.
It's the tradition, it's the little rituals that everybody does that makes Christmas [SOBS.]
And they're not gonna be here! - No, well, Kayne will be here.
- And you! [SOBS.]
- Julie, I've - Thank God I have you! Kayne, just one with the girls! - Out! Get out! - Out! Okay.
[CAROL OF THE BELLS PLAYS.]
Okay.
It's music and lights, Dad.
Hmm.
Something else, isn't it? Because it's not just Christmas lights anymore.
It's a Christmas show.
Mmm.
It's very clever.
We can get the software from the States.
It syncs up the music to the lights.
- Let's do it.
- Yes! It's funny, I felt a bit emotional after watching that.
Imagine how people on the street will feel when they see our giant snowman flashing to music? Probably need to be careful how we say that in front of the neighbourhood kids.
Fresh from the oven! Here we go! Is that Miss Ogilvy's present? Yeah, sorry.
I haven't given it to her yet.
- Yet? School's broken up! - Yeah? Did you stop feeling the same way, or? Well, why didn't you give it to her? It's just It wasn't the present I would have chosen.
Hazelnut dukkah is a very sophisticated dipping dish, Oscar.
I know.
I'm sorry, Dad.
It was just a teacher present.
Not a special present, like I'd wanted.
[SIGHS.]
Yeah, okay.
Look, I understand.
How about this? How about we both go and choose another gift, a more special one, and send it to Miss Ogilvy via the school? Maybe we can get one of those tops that you bought Mum! - What tops? - You know? With the lace and the straps and the leather? - No! No! - And No! I didn't buy that for your mum.
That was a part of a different outfit that was part of a costume party with it came with a really big woolly jacket.
Look, me buying a present for your mum is completely different to you buying a present for Miss Ogilvy.
- She's your teacher, mate.
- Student teacher.
Yeah, let's focus on the teacher part.
Listen, we're gonna find the perfect gift for a student teacher.
All right? Can we go to the costume shop that you bought Mum's top? No, we can't! (BESS) We weren't expecting you tonight, Mum.
- No, we weren't.
- Don't mind me.
Tried that.
Doesn't work.
I just wanted the children to have time to go over their gifts.
Side table, Royal Doulton dinner set, King George lamp.
What is this, Nanny Margaret? It's all my belongings, itemised.
You and Oscar tick which ones you'd like and I can put stickers on them for when you get back from New York.
- Why? - In case I'm no longer here.
- Mum! - (OSCAR) Will you be in Adelaide? Wouldn't you want your things when you get back? I'm not going to Adelaide.
Derek and June don't really have room with their all their grandchildren this year.
That is completely not true.
Aunty June is desperate for you to go.
She's just being polite.
I can sense when I'm being a burden.
Are you sensing anything right now? But what will you do on Christmas Day? Oh, I'll heat up an old pie from Thomas Dux and have an early night, around 5:00.
- [SIGHS.]
- You should come with us! - Ow, ow! - What? To New York? Yes, to New York! You should come! Yeah, you should come, Nanny Margaret! - She can't.
- No, she can't.
It's completely organised.
Oh, yes, they're right, my darlings.
It's all organised and there'd be so much to think about and I don't even know if my passport is still valid.
Oh, no, it is! Look at that! [LAUGHS.]
Perhaps I should come! I could check if there are any more seats on our flight.
There are I-I would imagine.
[TYRES SQUEAL.]
We wanted to leave them under the tree at home but every time we tried, Mum burst into tears.
No.
No, this is good.
I can give you your presents now too.
Let me guess, it's a goat and three chickens in Somalia.
No, I got the message loud and clear that you didn't appreciate your charity gift last year, Amber.
My charity gift? How is it mine? You give the present, someone else gets it.
As if you'd want a chicken or a goat, Amber.
Yeah, the point is to give it on behalf of you.
On behalf of me? Get fucked.
I'm quite capable of giving to charity myself.
No, you're not.
Anyway, this year, you'll be pleased to know that I got you a coffee machine.
Really? The capsule one? The George Clooney one, not the ALDI one? No, the one that you emailed, asking me to get you.
Where's your tree? Hasn't Danny found the right eco-windmill-greenie-farm forest to get it yet? Where are your decorations? Did you lose them in the move? What's going on? Why does this house look like a funeral parlour? We're not gonna be here.
We're going to New York.
What are you talking about? New York, New York? It's a wonderful town.
What do you mean you're gonna be in New York? You mean for New Year's, you mean in January? - I mean for Christmas.
- Why? Because Danny and I want to take the children to New York.
Well, bad fucking luck! You can't! You have to stay here with Mum.
No, I don't! You've seen the way Mum's been behaving! - Exactly! And I've got two of them! - Ohh! Ever since we all reunited, I have had two mothers fighting over who gets to see me the most.
Last year, we had Christmas Eve drinks at yours, Christmas Day breakfast with Margaret, Christmas Day lunch at yours again, eggnog supper with Margaret, and then Boxing Day picnic with everyone and they both still complained that they didn't get to see me enough.
It's too much! We're going to New York.
This is it, Dad.
Okay.
A scented candle, hand cream, perfect gift.
I just can't believe she gave you her address.
[DOORBELL RINGS.]
Oscar? What? She did give you the address, didn't she? - Not exactly.
- What? Well, Caspian and I have Mr Mitchell's password for the staff Intranet at school, from when he passed out at camp, and I logged in Oscar, that's illegal! Only a little bit! We could get arrested for stalking! Okay, we have to go immediately.
Hello! Um, we're looking for Davros? - Sorry, who? - Um Oscar! Hi! Do you know each other? I just did my teacher's placement at Oscar's school! - How are you? - Good.
- This is so freaky! - [CHUCKLES NERVOUSLY.]
- I'm Katie Ogilvy.
- Danny Bright, Oscar's dad.
You must be so proud.
Mmm.
Who did you say that you were looking for? He said "Davros".
Like from Doctor Who.
But a different Davros, obviously.
Uh, this Davros is tall, with a beard.
Oh.
I think he lives, um, two doors down.
Does he have tatts? Does he have tatts? - I don't know.
- Yes, he does.
And he knows that Davros has tatts.
- I think he's in 15B.
- Ah! Yeah, he's pretty noisy.
Is he? Yeah.
That sounds like our Davros.
Yeah, noisy old Davros! He should be careful or they might exterminate his lease.
Sorry, is that a Doctor Who thing? I don't watch it.
Anyway, we should drop this off to Davros.
It's so nice to see you, Oscar.
- And Merry Christmas! - Bye! 15B.
Davros.
- [DOORBELL RINGS.]
- Oscar, what are you? - Merry Christmas! - Dad! It's actually not for you, Davros.
It's for Miss Ogilvy, two doors up.
Who? My name's Jason.
- Please give it to Miss Ogilvy.
- Oscar.
Enough.
He can say it's from him! I just want her to have it.
[SIGHS.]
Would you mind seeing that this gets to Miss Ogilvy, from you? Sure, man.
Okay.
[TECHNO VERSION OF JOY TO THE WORLD PLAYS.]
[LOUDER, ELECTRONIC VERSION OF JOY TO THE WORLD PLAYS.]
They must've got the software too! They've got a bigger crowd.
We need to up the ante.
Their song sounds cool, Dad! I'm not sure the crazy polka's right! Crazy polka is perfect! It's not about the music.
There's an element that's missing.
- What? Amber! - Just You need to find a girlfriend.
- When? - (BRIANNA) Now! Is there a girl you like? - Uh - Come on, Kayne! Maybe I like the girl at the 7-Eleven! Sometimes I find myself going and buying a banana in there, which makes me think I like her, because bananas aren't that nice at the 7-Eleven.
You need to ask her out before Christmas.
So you can go to her house for lunch.
But I don't know if she likes me! And also, I think she's from India.
- Do they celebrate Christmas? - Who doesn't celebrate Christmas? I don't want to go to her house! I want to be with Mum and Dad! We're sending Mum and Dad to Thailand for Christmas because Aunty Susan and Uncle Keith are gonna be there and we can't afford to pay for you to go too.
Thailand? Why? Because her sister is going to be there.
- What about Bess? - Bess is going to New York.
- What? - She's going to New York.
- [MUSIC STUTTERS.]
- Huh? [BOTH YELL.]
Bess is going to New York for Christmas! [ELECTRICITY CRACKLES.]
Dad! They've shorted! Come on.
This buys us some time.
(JULIE) What did you say about Bess going to New York? Silent night, holy night - When were you gonna tell me? - Julie, hi! Or were you just gonna send a postcard from the Statue of Liberty with some some tinsel in your hair and let me work it out? Julie, I am so sorry.
I kept trying to tell you, but you were already so upset, I didn't know how.
Yeah, because you knew it was wrong! Wrong? No.
[MARGARET CALLS.]
Bess? Bess, are you upstairs? Oh, this'll be good, if you think I've cracked it, wait till she finds out.
Which jacket do you think for Christmas dinner? I think they're both lovely, but Oh, hello, Julie.
- You're taking her with you? - Yes.
No.
I didn't ask her to come, she booked her own ticket.
You'll all be together on the other side of the world? Is there something you'd like me to pick up at Bloomingdale's? You have chosen her over me? I haven't chosen anyone.
I didn't want Margaret to come to New York.
- At first.
- At all! The point of going to New York was that I didn't have to choose one of you.
I am so tired of you both making me choose.
(BOTH) How do we make you choose? - I asked you first.
- Oh, my God.
[LAUGHS.]
I'm like a Christmas bonbon.
Tug at me long enough and a pair of mini-binoculars will come flying out of my arse.
Bess! Where do you get bonbons with mini-binoculars? I am not doing this anymore.
I just want you to be here, Bess.
Christmas is when we should all be together.
We have we have so many family traditions They are not my traditions.
We have only known each other for two years.
You can't suddenly dictate where I'll be and what I'll be doing.
I'm sorry.
But I'm going to New York.
- I'm sorry too, Julie.
- You're not coming, Mum.
Any luck? Neither of them are answering my calls.
I hope the plane goes down.
That'll teach them not to speak to me.
- That's a figure of speech.
- It's actually not.
They'll come round, okay? Julie'll get used to the downsizing and Margaret will be fine with June and Derek, once Derek gets a couple of drinks into her.
I know.
Okay, I'm going to regret asking you this, but, are you sure you still want to go? Both of them not talking to me is proof that I am doing the right thing.
- Yes.
- [LAUGHS.]
- Happy Christmas Eve, my babies.
- Mmm.
- What's up, buddy? - She's met someone.
- Who's met someone? - Miss Ogilvy.
She just posted on Facebook, "Christmas dreams can come true.
" - (DANNY) Davros.
- Jason.
I told you it was a good present.
Oh, mate, come here.
Come here.
Hup.
Look, I know it's hard to believe now, but you'll meet another Miss Ogilvy.
One that you don't have to call Miss, 'cause she'll be your own age.
There is this really pretty girl in Year 12.
Yep, that's a start.
- You ready to cheer Mum up? - If this doesn't, nothing will.
[TECHNO VERSION OF JOY TO THE WORLD PLAYS.]
[EXCITED CHEERING.]
This is Brianna.
(WOMAN) Hi.
Oh, my God.
White Christmas.
Excited? [MUSIC CONTINUES.]
[CHEERING.]
[LAUGHS.]
(WAYNE) Merry Christmas! Beautiful, baby! [LAUGHS, CHEERS.]
[CHEERING.]
[CROWD CLAPS IN TIME TO MUSIC.]
Love you, guys! (KAYNE) Rudolph! Wayne, stop him.
(WAYNE) Rudolph, settle down.
- Rudolph! - [KAYNE SHRIEKS.]
[THUD!.]
(WAYNE) Kayne! Kayne! [PHONE RINGS.]
It's Julie.
Hello? [AIRPORT ANNOUNCEMENT OVER P.
A.
.]
Danny, stop.
Merry Christmas.
Silent night Holy night I wish you were in New York now, and I wish you were in Townsville and I wish you were in Mount Gambier, Brianna.
All last week I was doing everything I could to make you stay here and now all I want for Christmas is Sorry.
I'm sorry for being so selfish.
I'm sorry, Bessie.
Sleep in heavenly peace All the tests went very well.
No concussion and the C scans came back all clear.
I think our initial concern stemmed from the amount of blood on the face, but that was just due to the light bulb exploding.
So better use a plastic one next time, okay, Rudolph? And, um his brain? No sign of trauma, same as it always was.
So, there's some bad news after all? No, there's been no impairment at all to the head.
Did you have a really good look? He will have exactly the same mental capacity as he's always had.
- As a 5-year-old.
- She's relieved.
This is her being relieved that he's all right.
I'm really, really sorry, everyone.
I got caught up in the applause.
(WAYNE) Mate, you need to stop apologising.
The upside is, when the ambos came and we had all the drama, no one was down at the Caravellos'.
[KAYNE LAUGHS.]
Not that there was an upside.
The tests were all clear, he's going to be fine.
Oh, thank goodness! So, he can come downstairs for a while? Well, it's Christmas Day, after all.
Well, I reckon you got what you wished for.
My brother to have a head injury? No, Christmas Day with one family.
Hmm, I did.
- (JULIE) Here, Bessie.
- (MARGARET) Come and sit here.
Bess, take this seat.
- Sorry we're not at your mum's.
- Me too.
I could be drunk, yelling at my sister about the government right now.
- I didn't get to meet your sister.
- Next Christmas.
[TEXT MESSAGE ALERT.]
"Send all our love to the family.
PS, we think Brianna is the petrified girl in the world.
" They think I'm petrified? That's kind of mean.
- Prettiest.
It's predictive text.
- Totally! That's it.
Mum loves predictive text, even when it's wrong.
She means prettiest, which is 1 million per cent true.
Technically, you can't have 1 million Seriously? You're right, it's Christmas.
It's barbecue chook, not turkey, but you get the idea.
Dad, imagine if we opened a barbecued turkey shop.
A pop-up? Just for Christmas.
Yeah.
Listen, mate, really sorry about the fall, I should've rehearsed.
Dad, it was my fault.
I got carried away being Rudolph.
I really wanted to guide your sleigh and It's all good.
We learned our lesson.
But we're going to try again next year, aren't we? Oh, we'll give it another crack for sure.
Okay, everybody got a drink? No.
No, Oscar, not you.
To our family.
- Merry Christmas.
- (ALL) Merry Christmas.
[TECHNO VERSION OF JOY TO THE WORLD PLAYS.]
- (BESS) Merry Christmas.
- (KAYNE) Cheers, Amber.
- (AMBER) Want a sip? - (KAYNE) Yeah.
(AMBER) As if I'm gonna give you some! Margaret.
Here's to you.
(SANTA) Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho!
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