SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION (Skazani na Shawshank) scenariusz.txt

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The Shawshank Redemption
1 INT -- CABIN -- NIGHT (1946) 
A dark, empty room. 
The door bursts open. A MAN and WOMAN enter, drunk and 
giggling, horny as hell. No sooner is the door shut than 
they're all over each other, ripping at clothes, pawing at 
flesh, mouths locked together. 
He gropes for a lamp, tries to turn it on, knocks it over 
instead. Hell with it. He's got more urgent things to do, like 
getting her blouse open and his hands on her breasts. She 
arches, moaning, fumbling with his fly. He slams her against 
the wall, ripping her skirt. We hear fabric tear. 
He enters her right then and there, roughly, up against the 
wall. She cries out, hitting her head against the wall but not 
caring, grinding against him, clawing his back, shivering with 
the sensations running through her. He carries her across the 
room with her legs wrapped around him. They fall onto the bed. 
CAMERA PULLS BACK, exiting through the window, traveling 
smoothly outside... 
EXT -- CABIN -- NIGHT (1946) 2
...to reveal the bungalow, remote in a wooded area, the 
lovers' cries spilling into the night... 
...and we drift down a wooded path, the sounds of rutting 
passion growing fainter, mingling now with the night sounds of 
crickets and hoot owls... 
...and we begin to hear FAINT MUSIC in the woods, tinny and
incongruous, and still we keep PULLING BACK until... 
...a car is revealed. A 1946 Plymouth. Parked in a clearing. 
3 INT -- PLYMOUTH -- NIGHT (1946) 3
ANDY DUFRESNE, mid-20's, wire rim glasses, three-piece suit. 
Under normal circumstances a respectable, solid citizen; hardly
dangerous, perhaps even meek. But these circumstances are far 
from normal. He is disheveled, unshaven, and very drunk. A 
cigarette smolders in his mouth. His eyes, flinty and hard, are 
riveted to the bungalow up the path. 
He can hear them fucking from here. 
He raises a bottle of bourbon and knocks it back. The radio 
plays softly, painfully romantic, taunting him: 
You stepped out of a dream... 
You are too wonderful... 
To be what you seem... 
He opens the glove compartment, pulls out an object wrapped
in a rag. He lays it in his lap and unwraps it carefully --
-- revealing a .38 revolver. Oily, black, evil. 
He grabs a box of bullets. Spills them everywhere, all over 
the seats and floor. Clumsy. He picks bullets off his lap, 
loading them into the gun, one by one, methodical and grim. 
Six in the chamber. His gaze goes back to the bungalow. 
He shuts off the radio. Abrupt silence, except for the distant 
lovers' moans. He takes another shot of bourbon courage, then 
opens the door and steps from the car. 
4 EXT -- PLYMOUTH -- NIGHT (1946) 4
His wingtip shoes crunch on gravel. Loose bullets scatter to 
the ground. The bourbon bottle drops and shatters. 
He starts up the path, unsteady on his feet. The closer he 
gets, the louder the lovemaking becomes. Louder and more 
frenzied. The lovers are reaching a climax, their sounds of 
passion degenerating into rhythmic gasps and grunts. 
WOMAN (O.S.) 
Oh god...oh god...oh god... 
Andy lurches to a stop, listening. The woman cries out in 
orgasm. The sound slams into Andy's brain like an icepick. He 
shuts his eyes tightly, wishing the sound would stop. 
It finally does, dying away like a siren until all that's left 
is the shallow gasping and panting of post-coitus. We hear 
languorous laughter, moans of satisfaction. 
WOMAN (O.S.) 
Oh god...that's sooo good...you're 
the best...the best I ever had... 
Andy just stands and listens, devastated. He doesn't look like 
much of a killer now; he's just a sad little man on a dirt 
path in the woods, tears streaming down his face, a loaded gun 
held loosely at his side. A pathetic figure, really. 
FADE TO BLACK: 18T TITLE UP 
5 INT -- COURTROOM -- DAY (1946) 5
THE JURY listens like a gallery of mannequins on display, 
pale-faced and stupefied. 
D.A. (O.S.) 
Mr. Dufresne, describe the 
confrontation you had with your 
wife the night she was murdered. 
ANDY DUFRESNE 
is on the witness stand, hands folded, suit and tie pressed, 
hair meticulously combed. He speaks in soft, measured tones: 
ANDY 
It was very bitter. She said she 
was glad I knew, that she hated all 
the sneaking around. She said she 
wanted a divorce in Reno. 
D.A. 
What was your response? 
ANDY 
I told her I would not grant one. 
D.A. 
(refers to his notes) 
"I'll see you in Hell before I see 
you in Reno." Those were the words 
you used, Mr. Dufresne, according 
to the testimony of your neighbors. 
ANDY 
If they say so. I really don't 
remember. I was upset. 
FADE TO BLACK: 2ND TITLE UP 
D.A. 
What happened after you and your 
wife argued? 
ANDY 
She packed a bag and went to stay 
with Mr. Quentin. 
D.A. 
Glenn Quentin. The golf pro at the 
Falmouth Hills Country Club. The 
man you had recently discovered was 
her lover. 
(Andy nods) 
Did you follow her? 
ANDY 
I went to a few bars first. Later, 
I decided to drive to Mr. Quentin's 
home and confront them. They 
weren't there...so I parked my car 
in the turnout...and waited. 
D.A. 
With what intention? 
ANDY 
I'm not sure. I was confused. Drunk. 
I think mostly I wanted to scare them. 
D.A. 
You had a gun with you? 
ANDY 
Yes. I did. 
FADE TO BLACK: 3RD TITLE UP 
D.A. 
When they arrived, you went up 
to the house and murdered them? 
ANDY 
No. I was sobering up. I realized 
she wasn't worth it. I decided to 
let her have her quickie divorce. 
D.A. 
Quickie divorce indeed. A .38 
caliber divorce, wrapped in a 
handtowel to muffle the shots, 
isn't that what you mean? And then 
you shot her lover! 
ANDY 
I did not. I got back in the car 
and drove home to sleep it off. 
Along the way, I stopped and threw 
my gun into the Royal River. I feel 
I've been very clear on this point. 
D.A. 
Yes, you have. Where I get hazy, 
though, is the part where the 
cleaning woman shows up the next 
morning and finds your wife and her 
lover in bed, riddled with .38 
caliber bullets. Does that strike 
you as a fantastic coincidence, Mr. 
Dufresne, or is it just me? 
ANDY 
(softly) 
Yes. It does. 
D.A. 
I'm sorry, Mr. Dufresne, I don't 
think the jury heard that. 
ANDY 
Yes. It does. 
D.A. 
Does what? 
ANDY 
Strike me as a fantastic coincidence. 
D.A. 
On that, sir, we are in accord... 
FADE TO BLACK! 4TH TITLE UP 
D.A. 
You claim you threw your gun into 
the Royal River before the murders 
took place. That's rather convenient. 
ANDY 
It's the truth. 
D.A. 
You recall Lt. Mincher's testimony? 
He and his men dragged that river 
for three days and nary a gun was 
found. So no comparison can be made 
between your gun and the bullets 
taken from the bloodstained corpses 
of the victims. That's also rather 
convenient, isn't it, Mr. Dufresne? 
ANDY 
(faint, bitter smile) 
Since I am innocent of this crime, 
sir, I find it decidedly inconvenient 
the gun was never found. 
FADE TO BLACK: STH TITLE UP 
6 INT -- COURTROOM -- DAY (1946) 6
The D.A. holds the jury spellbound with his closing summation:
D.A. 
Ladies and gentlemen, you've heard 
all the evidence, you know all the 
facts. We have the accused at the 
scene of the crime. We have foot 
prints. Tire tracks. Bullets 
scattered on the ground which bear 
his fingerprints. A broken bourbon 
bottle, likewise with fingerprints. 
Most of all, we have a beautiful 
young woman and her lover lying 
dead in each other's arms. They had 
sinned. But was their crime so 
great as to merit a death sentence? 
He gestures to Andy sitting quietly with his ATTORNEY. 
D.A. 
I suspect Mr. Dufresne's answer to 
that would be yes. I further 
suspect he carried out that 
sentence on the night of September 
21st, this year of our Lord, 1946, 
by pumping four bullets into his 
wife and another four into Glenn 
Quentin. And while you think about 
that, think about this... 
He picks up a revolver, spins the cylinder before their eyes 
like a carnival barker spinning a wheel of fortune. 
D.A. 
A revolver holds six bullets, not 
eight. I submit to you this was not 
a hot-blooded crime of passion! 
That could at least be understood, 
if not condoned. No, this was 
revenge of a much more brutal and 
cold-blooded nature. Consider! Four 
bullets per victim! Not six shots 
fired, but eight! That means he 
fired the gun empty...and then 
stopped to reload so he could shoot 
each of them again! An extra bullet 
per lover...right in the head. 
(a few JURORS shiver) 
I'm done talking. You people are 
all decent, God-fearing Christian 
folk. You know what to do. 
FADE TO BLACK: 6TH TITLE UP 
INT -- JURY ROOM -- DAY (1946) 7
CAMERA TRACKS down a long table, moving from one JUROR to the 
next. These decent, God-fearing Christians are chowing down on 
a nice fried chicken dinner provided them by the county, 
smacking greasy lips and gnawing cobbettes of corn. 
VOICE (O.S.) 
Guilty. Guilty. Guilty. Guilty... 
We find the FOREMAN at the head of the table, sorting votes. 
FADE TO BLACK: 7TH TITLE UP 
8 INT -- COURTROOM -- DAY (1946) 8
Andy stands before the dias. THE JUDGE peers down, framed by a 
carved frieze of blind Lady Justice on the wall. 
JUDGE 
You strike me as a particularly icy 
and remorseless man, Mr. Dufresne. 
It chills my blood just to look at 
you. By the power vested in me by 
the State of Maine, I hereby order 
you to serve two life sentences, 
back to back, one for each of your 
victims. So be it. 
He raps his gavel as we 
CRASH TO BLACK: LAST TITLE UP. 
9 AN IRON-BARRED DOOR 9
slides open with an enormous CLANG. A stark room waits beyond.
CAMERA PUSHES through. SEVEN HUMORLESS MEN sit side by side at
a long table. An empty chair faces them. We are now in: 
INT -- SHAWSHANK HEARINGS ROOM -- DAY (1947) 
RED enters, removes his cap and waits by the chair. 
MA...
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