Calvary Movie Script
Calvary Movie Script
Y O U R
C O N S I D E R A T I O N
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2.
1
CONTINUED:
1
MANS VOICE (O.S.)
The mans dead.
LAVELLE
Not right now, no. But Im sure Ill
think of something. By Sunday week.
There is a pause. Then the MAN laughs. The confessional
door is heard opening and closing. LAVELLE waits.
2
3.
4
CONTINUED:
*
*
*
6
4.
9
CONTINUED:
9
MICHEL
A ploy, Father?
LAVELLE
(untying his cincture)
A ploy, Michel. Ive noticed my
stocks of booze appear to be
somewhat diminished of late.
Im wondering is this some kind of
ploy youre working to cover up
for the wine youve been imbibing
on the q.t.
MICHEL
I have no idea what you are talking
about.
LAVELLE
Father Leary does not know you as
well as I do, Michel. Id say he
may well underestimate the depths
of your Machiavellian chicanery.
MICHEL
Can I go now, Father?
LAVELLE
Whats the hurry? Have they called
a meeting at Mafia Headquarters?
They look blankly at one another.
LAVELLE
On your way.
10
10
*
*
*
LAVELLE
You have to detach yourself from
it. Were here to provide solace.
Your personal feelings dont come
into it.
(CONTINUED)
5.
10
CONTINUED:
10
LEARY
I know that. What dyou take me
for? Its very difficult, though.
The mess people make of their lives.
LAVELLE
Whats the problem? Without going
into details, obviously.
LEARY
Your one with the big black eye on
her, have you seen her?
LAVELLE
Veronica Brennan. I have, yeah.
LEARY
Shes an odd one. The things she
comes out with. Its like shes
trying to drag you down into the
muck. Dyou know what felching is?
LAVELLE
I do know what felching is, yeah.
LEARY
I had to look it up.
LAVELLE
This is you not going into details
is it?
LEARY
Oh sorry. Anyway, whatevers going
on with her its obviously all gotten
out of hand and shes being knocked
around now.
LAVELLE
Well if you speak to her shell raise
holy hell and say it was on the basis
of something she said to you in the
confessional.
LEARY
I know, I know. We cant have that.
Shell get me excommunicated, the cow.
LAVELLE
Ill have a word with her. Jack as
well. Part of my pastoral duties and
what-have-you, nothing to do with her
confession or anything. See whats
going on.
LEARY
And that coloured fella, the Ugandan?
Hes one of her lovers, I think.
(CONTINUED)
6.
10
CONTINUED:
10
LAVELLE
Simons from the Ivory Coast.
LEARY
Right, right. I knew it was that,
or Guyana. One of those African
countries.
LAVELLE
Guyana is in South America.
LEARY
I dont think so, now, Father.
I was always pretty good at the
auld geography.
11
*
*
7.
12
12
(CONTINUED)
8.
12
CONTINUED:
12
LAVELLE
Who are those two lads supposed to be?
MICHEL
Dont know. Ive been reading these
ghost stories. Maybe its got something to do with that. Spooky.
13
Puts down the shoe beside its comrade. Gets up and goes to
the desk. Takes off his clerical collar. Pauses.
He looks out the window over the writing desk.
14
14
15
15
9.
15
CONTINUED:
15
LAVELLE
Well enough.
MONTGOMERY
Knowing this man as you do, do you
think it was an idle threat?
LAVELLE
I dont know. Im not sure.
MONTGOMERY
Not sure means its possible.
LAVELLE
Yes. I suppose.
16
(CONTINUED)
10.
16
CONTINUED:
16
LAVELLE
(after a pause)
I dont know what else to say.
17
18
19
19
20
20
21
21
(CONTINUED)
11.
21
CONTINUED:
21
LAVELLE
This is my daughter, Fiona, Milo.
Shes over from London.
HERLIHY
Youre having me on.
LAVELLE
Im not having you on. What are
you on about?
HERLIHY
Youre a priest!
LAVELLE
I was married before I became a
priest. My wife and I had a child,
Fiona. My wife died. And after that
I joined the priesthood.
HERLIHY
You can do that, can you?
HARTE
It would appear so.
(noticing FIONAs bandages)
Dont tell me. You made the classic
error.
LAVELLE
Ive already done that gag, Frank.
HARTE
Youre supposed to cut down-LAVELLE
Ive already done it, I said.
LYNCH (O.S.)
Now, now.
(CONTINUED)
12.
21
CONTINUED:
21
LYNCH
You have an exceedingly dirty
mouth. I like that in a hoor.
LAVELLE
Brendan. Nows not the time.
22
She sips her whiskey. LAVELLE takes one of her hands. Rubs
the bandage with a thumb.
LAVELLE
Razors pain you.
FIONA
(looking at him)
Rivers are damp.
(CONTINUED)
13.
22
CONTINUED:
22
LAVELLE
Acids stain you. And drugs cause
cramp.
FIONA
Guns arent lawful. Nooses give.
LAVELLE
Gas smells awful.
FIONA/LAVELLE
You might as well live.
They smile.
LYNCH studies them from the other end of the bar.
23
23
*
*
*
*
LEARY
We couldnt go on with the old
one anyways. Falling to pieces.
Liable to get someone killed.
FIONA
Its a good gimmick, I suppose.
LAVELLE
Its not a gimmick.
FIONA
Im sorry, I didnt mean...
LEARY
Theyd call it a rebranding in the
advertising world.
(CONTINUED)
14.
23
CONTINUED:
23
FIONA
I suppose you are a corporate entity,
if you look at it in one way.
LEARY
Its the only way to look at it.
We provide a product and a service
and thats all there is to it.
24
15.
24
CONTINUED:
24
LAVELLE
If you dont want to talk to me,
thats fine. Im not here to compel
you to do anything.
VERONICA
You never know, Father, maybe Id
like to be compelled. Maybe Id
enjoy it.
LAVELLE
Ill have a word with Jack.
See what he has to say for himself.
VERONICA
The Grand Inquisitor, hah? Go on
ahead for yourself so. Im sure
hell be only too pleased to have
someone else to bore the ears off.
I stopped listening to his auld
shite a long time ago.
LAVELLE
Thats how it is, is it? I didnt
realise.
VERONICA
You thought we were another Grace
Kelly and Prince Rainier?
LAVELLE
That wasnt a very happy marriage,
so its not a great analogy.
25
(CONTINUED)
16.
25
CONTINUED:
25
LAVELLE
Jack.
(glancing at the ASSISTANT,
who is serving a CUSTOMER)
Could I have a word in private?
BRENNAN
(nervous laugh)
Sounds ominous. Wheres Johnny
Cochran when you need him, hah?
26
26
(CONTINUED)
17.
26
CONTINUED:
26
BRENNAN (CONT'D)
I think shes bi-polar, or lactoseintolerant, one of the two. I never
know where I am with her anymore.
Im glad to have her off my hands,
to be honest with ya.
LAVELLE
Even if this new fellas knocking
her about?
BRENNAN
Sure whats that got to do with me?
Not everyone can carry the weight
of the world, Father.
LAVELLE
What about your marriage? The oaths
you took?
BRENNAN
(with a laugh)
The oaths I took!
27
(CONTINUED)
18.
27
CONTINUED:
27
LAVELLE
Its not about my car. Its about
Mrs Brennan.
19.
27
CONTINUED:
27
LAVELLE
Who?
ASAMOAH
White women. Irish women. Do not
ask me why. You would have to be
a psychiatrist-LAVELLE
Ah thats nonsense. A justification
for your own brutality.
ASAMOAH
No, no, they like to be hit.
In certain...situations. They beg
for it, in fact.
LAVELLE
So she got what was coming to her,
did she?
ASAMOAH
I was speaking generally.
LAVELLE
Oh you were speaking generally.
Well Im speaking specifically.
Dont do it again.
ASAMOAH
You cannot tell me what to do.
We are not in the Missions now.
LAVELLE
Oh the Missions, right-ASAMOAH
Are you going to chop off my hand
if I disobey you?
LAVELLE
You know your history, thats grand.
ASAMOAH
I like to read. You probably do not
think that black people-LAVELLE
Yeah, yeah, yeah, black people,
white people, blah, blah, blah.
20.
27
CONTINUED:
27
28
*
*
LAVELLE
Why is that?
LEARY
If it was him who was laying into
her. Youll have to tread very
carefully there. Its a very
sensitive area.
LAVELLE
Youll have to explain this one
to me, now, Father, Im afraid
youve lost me completely.
LEARY
Well the Church cant be seen to
be getting involved in matters of
diversity and the like, dyou know.
LAVELLE
You mean, like, what if beating her
up is one of those ethnic rituals
or something? Like when they do
that thing when they shake hands?
LEARY
(after a pause)
Youre mocking me, now, I can tell.
LEARY
We have to be very circumspect
in those areas, is all Im saying.
*
*
LAVELLE
Ill be very circumspect, Father.
Dont you worry about that.
29
29
21.
29
CONTINUED:
29
30
LAVELLE is at the stern, a box of provisions beside him -LAVELLEs POV -- the prow of the boat, the island. RYAN
framed in the window of the monastic cottage.
LAVELLE waves.
31
31
RYAN does not return the wave. Disappears from the window.
32
32
33
(CONTINUED)
22.
33
CONTINUED:
33
23.
33
CONTINUED:
33
RYAN
Pragmatism.
LAVELLE
Where would I get a gun from?
RYAN
Aww come on, now, gimme a break.
Youve never been short of guns
in this country, have you?
LAVELLE
God, youre awful maudlin today,
I must say.
34
24.
35
35
25.
35
CONTINUED:
35
FITZGERALD
Oh right. Like a French novel or
something. Whats the fellas name?
Bernanos.
(to FIONA)
Michael Fitzgerald. I bought the
Big House, up the road a-ways there,
beyond.
26.
35
CONTINUED:
35
FITZGERALD (CONT'D)
I have a proposition that might
interest you.
LAVELLE
Really.
FITZGERALD
Yes, really. A financial proposition.
That interests you, doesnt it?
Sure itd be a black day altogether
the day the Roman Catholic Church is
no longer interested in money, hah?
36
27.
37
37
38
38
*
*
LEO
(talking like Leo Gorcey
from The Dead End Kids)
Hey, Fada! Whaddaya hear, whaddaya
say!
LAVELLE
Im sorry, I didnt realise you had
company.
STANTON
Ah sure, its only little Leo.
LEO smirks as he zips up his fly.
38A
*
38A
*
*
*
*
LEO
You checking out my ass, Fada?
LAVELLE
What? No-STANTON
Hes only messing with you, Father.
What can I do for you?
He sips his brandy. LAVELLE glances at LEO.
(CONTINUED)
38A
28.
38A
CONTINUED:
STANTON
Ive nothing to hide from Leo.
Have I, Leo?
LEO
Your life is an open book, Gerry.
Like your ass.
29.
39
39
30.
39
CONTINUED:
39
40
STANTON
I had one of those, yknow.
Early on.
LAVELLE
One of what?
STANTON
Paedophile priest. Twenty years ago
now this was, in Dublin. Young girl
made a complaint. A rape.
LAVELLE
What happened?
STANTON
Ah sure, what dya think happened?
I arrested the bastard and fortyeight hours later I was packing my
bags and making my way out West.
LAVELLE
They moved you on?
STANTON
Reassigned, yeah.
LAVELLE gets into his car.
LAVELLE
What happened to him?
STANTON
I was told they were sending him
to one of the missions overseas.
Africa. He could do whatever he
wanted over there, I suppose.
(CONTINUED)
31.
40
CONTINUED:
40
LAVELLE
Well thanks, anyway.
*
*
STANTON
Like the man in the dicky bow
says, Father, Protect yourself
at all times!
*
*
*
41
42
42
(CONTINUED)
32.
42
CONTINUED:
42
FIONA
I suppose I should.
LAVELLE
We are indeed!
LEARY
Lovely day!
LAVELLE
It is indeed!
LEARY
(esoterically)
Stamps!
43
(CONTINUED)
33.
43
CONTINUED:
43
LAVELLE
Why do people kill themselves.
Thats jumping in at the deep
end. Lots of reasons, I suppose.
Why do you think yourself?
HERLIHY
I dunno. The drink. Depression.
Lack of sex, maybe.
LAVELLE
Youre a presentable young man.
I wouldnt have thought youd have
too much trouble in that area.
HERLIHY
I dont have the gift of the gab.
Never had it.
LAVELLE
And its making you feel suicidal?
HERLIHY
More bored than anything else.
Its either committing suicide or
joining the Army.
LAVELLE
Those are pretty drastic choices,
either way.
HERLIHY
You can learn a trade if you join
the Army.
LAVELLE
You can learn a trade if you dont
join the Army.
HERLIHY
You can experience more of life.
LAVELLE
You think you can become a more
authentic person by fighting in a
war? By killing people?
HERLIHY
Youre against me joining the Army,
is what Im sensing.
LAVELLE
Lets put it this way, Ive always
felt there was something inherently
psychopathic about someone who joins
the Army in peacetime. As far as
Im concerned, people join the Army
because they want to find out what
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
34.
43
CONTINUED:
43
LAVELLE (CONT'D)
its like to kill someone. I dont
think that is an inclination that
should be encouraged in modern
society, do you?
*
*
*
*
35.
43
CONTINUED:
43
HERLIHY
Ah, I feel Ive exhausted all the
possibilities of pornography.
LAVELLE
All of them?
HERLIHY
Well nearly all of them. Im onto
transsexual pornography at the
moment.
44
HERLIHY
Sligo Town, you mean?
LAVELLE
No. I was thinking more Dublin,
London, New York-HERLIHY
New York? Id only end up getting
the Aids. Knowing my luck.
PULL BACK to reveal HERLIHY is astride a motorbike.
HERLIHY
Thanks for taking the time to talk
to me, Father. I cant say its
been of much help, but its good
to get these things out in the open,
I suppose.
He zooms off down the hill.
45
OMITTED
45
(CONTINUED)
36.
45
CONTINUED:
45
*
46
46
(CONTINUED)
37.
46
CONTINUED:
46
47
FITZGERALD
wife. The kids. Even Consuela,
shes from Ecuador. Youd think
wouldnt have a lot of options,
apparently not.
LAVELLE
Well Im sorry to hear that.
FITZGERALD shrugs, takes a swallow of his drink.
LAVELLE
You mentioned a financial proposition?
FITZGERALD
I want to make amends. Do penance
for past sins. Although I suppose
all sins are past, arent they, or
they wouldnt be sins, theyd just
be evil thoughts floating around
in your mind. Why do you wear the
auld soutane, by the way? Trying
to make a statement or something?
LAVELLE looks blankly at him. Sips his water.
FITZGERALD smirks. Shoots back a cuff to reveal a gold Tag
Heuer watch at his wrist.
FITZGERALD
This watch, now. This watch is
making a statement. Its a Tag Heuer.
Really expensive.
(CONTINUED)
38.
47
CONTINUED:
47
LAVELLE
Are you going to get to the point,
Mr Fitzgerald, or are you just going
to ramble on-FITZGERALD
Let me ask you something. What do
you see when you look at me?
47A
47A
39.
47A
CONTINUED:
FITZGERALD
Twas the perfect getaway, Father.
They say charges are going to be
filed against me, for various socalled irregularities, but sure the
Guards are always threatening guff
like that. Theyd have to charge
half the financiers in Ireland,
and half the bank managers along
with them, and troop into government
then and charge those cunts as well,
and we all know full well thats not
going to happen. No, therell be no
punishment forthcoming for a man
such as myself. There never is.
Still, I do feel a modicum of guilt
about the whole thing.
LAVELLE
A modicum. Do you?
FITZGERALD
Well. I feel like I ought to feel
guilty. And sure isnt that the same
thing?
48
48
(CONTINUED)
40.
48
CONTINUED:
48
FITZGERALD
But youre a representative of the
Church, are you not?
LAVELLE
If you say so.
FITZGERALD
I do say so. I think youre a very
judgemental man, Father.
LAVELLE
Yes, I am. But I try not to be.
FITZGERALD
You think I have no feelings?
You think I dont care about-LAVELLE
I think you dont want to do penance
at all. I think you asked me here to
make fun of me. But when you do want
to do penance, sincerely, you can
give me a call, at any time, and
Ill try my best to help you.
41.
49
49
50
50
42.
50
CONTINUED:
50
51
52
52
(CONTINUED)
43.
52
CONTINUED:
52
HARTE
The morgue. Best place for them.
LAVELLE
Every life is sacred, Frank, for
Gods sake.
HARTE
Some are less sacred than others.
53
53
54
54
(CONTINUED)
44.
54
CONTINUED:
54
TERESA
It is easier?
LAVELLE
Its never easy. More understandable,
lets say. Less unfair.
TERESA
Unfair.
LAVELLE
Situations like this one, people
are shocked. The randomness of it.
They curse God. Curse their fellow
man. They lose their faith, in some
cases.
TERESA
They lose their faith? It must not
have been much of a faith to begin
with, if it is so easy for them to
lose it.
LAVELLE
Yes. But what is faith, at the end
of the day? For most people its
the fear of death, nothing more than
that. And if thats all it is, then
its very easy to lose.
TERESA
(after a pause)
When we are children we are told to
say our prayers. Our parents tell us,
our teachers. Then we grow up and we
think people who say their prayers
are stupid. Theyre ridiculous.
Unless we want money, of course, or
a good job, or we have a child who
is sick, or a lover who is dying.
Then we are allowed to pray again.
Then it is okay.
LAVELLE
Yes. But the prayer must be answered.
TERESA
Yes, the prayer must be answered.
And if the prayer is not answered
then there is no God and it is all
a lie. If God does not pay attention
to us, because we are so important,
then God does not exist.
LAVELLE
Yes. We must be paid attention to.
(pause)
He was a good man, your husband?
(CONTINUED)
45.
54
CONTINUED:
54
TERESA
Yes, he was a good man. We had a
very good life together. We loved
each other very much. And now he
has gone. That is not unfair, that
is just what happened. But many
people do not live good lives, and
they do not feel love. That is what
is unfair. I feel sorry for them.
LAVELLE
(after a pause)
Will you say a prayer with me,
Teresa?
TERESA
Yes.
LAVELLE
Hail Mary, full of grace-TERESA/LAVELLE
--the Lord is with thee. Blessed
art thou amongst women, and blessed
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for
us sinners, now and at the hour of
our death. Amen.
55
55
(CONTINUED)
46.
55
CONTINUED:
55
HARTE (CONT'D)
One part humanism to nine parts
gallows humour. Playing you,
though, that might be interesting.
LAVELLE
Playing me. Whos me?
HARTE
The good priest.
56
(CONTINUED)
47.
56
CONTINUED:
56
MICHEL
I know plenty.
LAVELLE
Michel, why did you become an
altar boy? I ask this because it
can safely be said, without fear
of contradiction, that you have
no vocation whatsoever.
MICHEL
My Ma told me they give you money
at weddings and christenings.
LAVELLE
I see. It was purely a moneymaking
scheme on your part.
MICHEL
Yeah. To pay for my oils.
LAVELLE
To pay for your oils.
MICHEL
Yeah. And I havent had a sovereign
off anybody. People round here are
pure mean.
57
57
(CONTINUED)
48.
57
CONTINUED:
57
LAVELLE
I do so. A Webley. Circa 1920.
Still in good working order, though.
Or so Ive been told by a man who
would know.
RYAN
Hand it over, then.
LAVELLE
I dont have it on me.
RYAN
I knew it. Worried I might follow
through with it, huh?
LAVELLE
You might take a potshot at me,
for all I know.
RYAN
Why would I do that? What have
you ever done to me except talk
garbage?
LAVELLE
Sure that doesnt mean anything.
Bloody idiots cant even be bothered
coming up with a reason for murder
these days. They wake up in a foul
mood and its bang bang bang.
RYAN
Oh I dont know about that.
Some people have very good reasons.
58
58
(CONTINUED)
49.
58
CONTINUED:
58
FIONA
You think what happened was unimportant. Insignificant in the
great scheme of things. To provoke
such a reaction. But what may mean
nothing to you may be very important
to me.
LAVELLE
Id never say it was unimportant.
Id just say that the choices you
make when youre thirty are not
the same choices youd make when
youre sixty.
FIONA
Thats irrelevant. Every moment of
living has its own logic.
LAVELLE
Maybe so. Maybe youre right, there.
Id have to have a think about that.
(pause)
Its a tired old argument, I suppose,
but what about those you leave behind.
FIONA
I belong to myself, not to anybody
else.
LAVELLE
True. False.
*
*
*
FIONA
(after a pause)
The absurdity of existence versus the
absurdity of nothing.
(CONTINUED)
50.
58
CONTINUED:
58
LAVELLE
Tough choice when you put it like that.
59
60
(CONTINUED)
51.
60
CONTINUED:
60
LAVELLE
Theres no capital punishment in
Ireland, Freddie, as you well know.
Why do you want them to hang you?
JOYCE
Cause thats the way Lesley Ryan
died.
LAVELLE
Youre saying you feel remorse.
JOYCE
Im not a monster. Do I look like
a monster?
LAVELLE
What do monsters look like?
JOYCE
To thine own self be true, they
say. Well I was, and look where
its got me.
LAVELLE
Theyve never really thought that
one through, youre right.
JOYCE
Its a terrible world. When you
think about it.
LAVELLE
Yes it is. And a beautiful one.
JOYCE
It wasnt for me.
LAVELLE
Youre not the whole world.
JOYCE
Thats a matter of opinion.
52.
60
CONTINUED:
60
LAVELLE
Have I hurt your feelings?
53.
60
CONTINUED:
60
54.
60
CONTINUED:
60
JOYCE (CONT'D)
them in any way.
(sobbing again)
God made me, didnt he? I mean,
didnt he? He understands me.
He must do.
61
(CONTINUED)
55.
61
CONTINUED:
61
LAVELLE
Yes, I suppose it is. Been getting
the full use out of your library
card, there, Brendan.
LYNCH
The librarys been shut down,
did you not hear? Cutbacks.
62
62
63
56.
64
64
*
*
LAVELLE
Its been a tough day, lets put
it that way.
LEARY
How can you ever hope to connect
with someone like that?
LAVELLE
Nothing human is alien to me.
Or shouldnt be, anyways.
LEARY
I cant see the point in it myself.
Dead loss.
STANTON
Who are you talking about?
Not Freddie Joyce?
LAVELLE
I visited him in prison today.
STANTON
Why?
LAVELLE
Prisoners deserve spiritual guidance
as much as anyone else. Maybe more
so.
STANTON
Is that right? So they can find God
and then say God has absolved them
of all their sins and what they did
didnt really matter anyways cause
now theyre saved?
LAVELLE
Something like that, yeah.
LEARY
(to STANTON)
Calm down. You dont know what
youre talking about.
(CONTINUED)
57.
64
CONTINUED:
64
Sending him flying into the table at which sit JACK and
VERONICA BRENNAN, glasses shattering -BRENNAN
Jesus, lads, mind the drinks, for
Christs sake!
HARTE, HERLIHY, ASAMOAH, FIONA and the SURFERS look round.
Then continue on as if nothing has happened.
65
*
*
FIONA
Fine-looking man.
LAVELLE
Id watch yourself around him.
FIONA
Oh I gave up the cocaine a long
time ago.
LAVELLE
You took cocaine?
She shrugs. She smiles.
FIONA
How about a dance? Or what did
they call it in your day, a jive?
*
*
*
LAVELLE
Ah now, Im not cut out-FIONA
Ah come on.
*
*
58.
66
66
67
67A
59.
67B
67B
67C
60.
67D
67D
68
LAVELLE
So now were being burnt out.
LEARY
Whod do a thing like this?
LAVELLE
Somebody with a grudge against the
Church, obviously.
STANTON
Sure that could be half the country.
LEARY
Burning the place down, though?
LAVELLE
People are angry. Theyve a lot to
be angry about.
STANTON
Unless theres a personal angle.
LAVELLE glances at him. FIONA noticing the look.
FIONA
How dyou mean?
STANTON
Nobody with a grudge against you,
Father, no?
LEARY
Why would anyone have a grudge
against us?
*
*
61.
68
CONTINUED:
68
STANTON (CONT'D)
the sky? And if were good well go
to Heaven? And if were bad well
go to Hell?
LAVELLE
Yknow for a policeman you seem to
know very little about human nature.
STANTON
Maybe youre right. Sure youd know
more than me. Dont touch anything,
now, Ill have to get the forensic
boys down, the supercilious pricks.
LEARY
What do we do now?
LAVELLE
Well have to rebuild it, I suppose.
FIONA
Maybe use bricks next time, might be
a good idea.
She looks at LAVELLE. He smiles.
LEARY
Sure thatll take ages.
LAVELLE
Is there somewhere you have to be?
69
69
*
*
*
*
(CONTINUED)
62.
69
CONTINUED:
69
*
*
LAVELLE
I have no evidence its the same man.
Its the same
nerve to burn
if you have a
grievance. If
MONTGOMERY
man. Takes a lot of
down a church. Helps
burning sense of
youll pardon the...
(CONTINUED)
63.
69
CONTINUED:
69
MONTGOMERY
Those rosesll want cutting.
70
70
*
*
*
*
LAVELLE
Really?
VERONICA
Yeah. Most people can. The only
ones who cant, had problems to
begin with.
LAVELLE
We shouldnt write them off,
though, the ones who had problems
to begin with.
*
*
LAVELLE
What do you want to do with your
life, Veronica?
*
*
*
VERONICA
Nothing. Consider the lilies of
the field, how they grow. They
toil not, neither do they spin.
*
*
*
*
LAVELLE
Thats a very nice quotation.
(CONTINUED)
64.
70
CONTINUED:
70
VERONICA
Ah sure everybody knows that one.
LAVELLE
Its hackneyed, yeah. Like Turn
the other cheek, and Judge not,
lest ye be judged.
They look at each other.
VERONICA
Id like to be an actress, maybe.
Ive got an absent father and a
domineering mother.
*
*
*
*
LAVELLE
Well its a start. When did your
father leave?
VERONICA
He didnt leave, he was killed.
*
*
LAVELLE
He was murdered?
VERONICA
Hunting accident.
(pause)
Completely random.
(pause)
So theres no use persevering,
Father. Im a lost cause.
*
*
*
LAVELLE
No ones a lost cause, Veronica.
*
*
*
*
65.
71
71
*
*
FITZGERALD
True dat.
(to LAVELLE)
Sorry about the other day, Father.
That was the drink talking.
LAVELLE
What can we do for you?
FITZGERALD
Well it follows on from what I was
saying. And it seems more necessary
now than ever.
(producing a cheque-book)
Id like to make a donation.
LEARY
(getting up)
Oh thats grand!
LAVELLE
To salve your conscience?
FITZGERALD
Surely thats in the nature of all
philanthropy? The expiation of guilt?
LEARY
Im sure you have nothing major to
feel guilty about, Mr Fitzgerald.
(CONTINUED)
66.
71
CONTINUED:
71
FITZGERALD
Oh youd be surprised, Father.
And call me Michael.
LEARY
Michael it is. Any charity is always
gratefully received.
FITZGERALD
I know. I believe thats Church
doctrine. And the Church needs all
the help it can get these days, hah?
LEARY
Why would you say that?
FITZGERALD
Well, yknow, what with all the
compensation thats been paid out
over the years.
LEARYs superficial smile freezes on his face.
FITZGERALD
I read where its up to two billion
now. And thats just the Yanks.
And sure we all know they werent
the worst, now, dont we?
LAVELLE looks blankly at him. Then blankly at LEARY to
gauge his reaction.
LEARY
I dont know about that, now. And
anyways, most of those cases were
forty or fifty years ago. Raking up
old ground, its always seemed to
me. Its time to forgive and forget.
*
*
FITZGERALD
Oh I agree with you, I agree with
you. Its time to move on. Whats
past is past. Et cetera, et cetera.
LEARY
Ah...Would you like a cup of tea,
Michael, or something--
FITZGERALD
No, no, cant stop.
He sits in LEARYs chair. Waves the cheque-book --
FITZGERALD
What are we talking? Ten? Twenty?
LEARY
Twenty thousand?
(CONTINUED)
67.
71
CONTINUED:
71
FITZGERALD
Twenty thousand euros, yeah.
LEARY
Why thatd be grand. Thatd help
with getting the initial building
work off the ground.
FITZGERALD
Twenty it is, then.
(producing a beautiful
Pierrot White fountain pen)
This is a David Oscarson pen.
Really expensive.
LEARY
Its lovely.
LAVELLE
Why not make it fifty?
FITZGERALD and LEARY look at him. FITZGERALD smiles.
LEARY
Ah now, Father--
LAVELLE
If moneys no object, make it fifty.
FITZGERALD
Why not make it a hundred?
LEARYs jaw drops open. He looks at LAVELLE.
FITZGERALD
Means nothing to me.
LAVELLE
I know it doesnt.
FITZGERALD
A hundred thousand euros, Father.
For your pet project. What do you
say to that?
LAVELLE
I say, Thank you, Mister Fitzgerald.
FITZGERALD grins.
72
72
(CONTINUED)
68.
72
CONTINUED:
72
FIONA
Good dog. Arent you a good dog.
Yes you are.
73
FIONA
How is it your fault what some
crazy person-LAVELLE
I should have done something.
Said something.
FIONA
(after a pause)
What was Stanton was getting at?
LAVELLE
If I could tell you I would.
You know that.
FIONA
I thought I was the one supposed
to be in trouble, not you.
They look at each other.
VERONICA (O.S.)
Hows the fish?
They look up to see VERONICA BRENNAN, coked up, standing
over them. Glamorously dressed, a gin-and-tonic in her
hand.
LAVELLE
Too many little bones.
VERONICA
Isnt that always the way.
She grabs a chair and sits at their table. FIONA looks at
her, then at LAVELLE.
VERONICA
Im not stopping. Meeting the fella.
LAVELLE
Youre informing me of your adultery
in advance?
(CONTINUED)
*
*
69.
73
CONTINUED:
73
VERONICA
Isnt that more honest than in the
confessional when its all done-anddusted and theres nothing you can
do about it?
FIONA
What are you expecting him to do
about it now?
VERONICA
Stop me from committing a mortal sin.
LAVELLE
You have to stop yourself. I cant
stop you.
VERONICA
Then what good are you at all?
*
*
LAVELLE
What makes you think Im a virgin?
Fionas my daughter.
VERONICA
Oh I thought she was just some young
one you were fiddling around with.
LAVELLE almost flinches.
FIONA
Oh you bitch.
LAVELLE looks at VERONICA with utter disgust. She notices
this, and smiles.
VERONICA
You want to hit me now, dont ya?
Go on. Hit me.
LAVELLE looks blankly at her. She grins.
Suddenly, FIONA hits her a massive slap to the face --(CONTINUED)
70.
73
CONTINUED:
73
74
LAVELLE
I dont know what the third-act
revelation would be, though.
FIONA
Neither do I.
(CONTINUED)
71.
74
CONTINUED:
74
LAVELLE
Your mother dying killed a little
something in both of us, I know that.
FIONA
It was a long goodbye if ever there
was one. I sometimes wish she hadnt
hung on as long as she did.
LAVELLE
She was stubborn, alright. But brave,
too. I wonder if Ill be that brave,
when it comes down to it.
FIONA
It wasnt just her dying. You were
missing in action a long time.
Before and after. When I needed you
the most.
LAVELLE
Was it really that bad?
FIONA
I dont know, maybe Im exaggerating.
You were a highly-functioning
alcoholic, Ill give you that.
LAVELLE
Ive always thought the highlyfunctioning part should cancel out
the alcoholic part. Like a double
negative.
72.
74
CONTINUED:
74
LAVELLE
A hat. You dont give much away, do
you, Michel? You shouldve been in
the French Resistance, they couldve
done with men like you.
FIONA laughs.
75
75
*
*
*
LAVELLE
I have a vocation. I wasnt trying
to escape or-FIONA
I know that. I know youre sincere.
But the fact remains, first she went
away and then you went away. I lost
two parents for the price of one.
(CONTINUED)
73.
75
CONTINUED:
75
LAVELLE
I never went anywhere. Im still here.
FIONA
I think youre being a little naive,
there, Father.
76
LAVELLE looks at him. Holds out the glass. RYAN pops two
large pills from a vial into his mouth. Takes the glass -RYAN
Heres mud in your eye!
Tosses back the bourbon in one go. Motions for another.
(CONTINUED)
74.
76
CONTINUED:
76
RYAN
Thats great stuff! Makes me feel
like bursting into song.
77
75.
78
78
79
79
*
*
So you say.
She smiles, and disappears into the station.
80
*
80
(CONTINUED)
76.
80
CONTINUED:
80
GIRL
The beach.
LAVELLE
Its nice at the beach, isnt it.
Do you surf?
GIRL
No, my Da wont let me. He says
its too dangerous.
LAVELLE
Ah, what does he know. Big meanie.
GIRL
Yeah.
LAVELLE
Well never mind. We wont hold it
against you-Suddenly, a car screeches to a halt on the main road in
front of them. A MAN gets out, angry -MAN
Janine! Get in the car, now.
The GIRL quickly crosses to the car.
MAN
(softly)
Where the hell dya get to, honey?
Ive been looking all over for ya.
The GIRL gets in. The MAN turns to LAVELLE, angry again -MAN
What were you saying to her?
LAVELLE
I wasnt saying anything to her.
MAN
Oh really. You looked deep in
fucking conversation to me.
He glares at LAVELLE. Gets back in the car. Drives off.
(CONTINUED)
77.
80
CONTINUED:
80
81
(CONTINUED)
78.
81
CONTINUED:
81
LYNCH
Yourself?
HARTE
One ice cube this time.
Two just get in the way.
(CONTINUED)
79.
81
CONTINUED:
81
BRENNAN
Im not codding, Im being serious.
Im having doubts, like. A crisis
of faith.
LAVELLE looks blankly at him. Takes his drink and gets up.
BRENNAN
Ah now, I didnt mean to offend ya,
Im sorry. Really I am. As sure as
theres a hole in a goat.
LYNCH laughs as he pours the Guinness. LAVELLE heads for
the pool room.
BRENNAN
Im an awful messer, Father, God
forgive me! Dont go away mad!
82
82
80.
82
CONTINUED:
82
LAVELLE
Do you need help?
LEO
Youre starting to sound a little
screwy, now, Fada. Maybe ya need
to see a headshrinker yerself-LAVELLE
Do you need help? Are you okay?
LEO
Theres nothing wrong with me,
my friend, Im feelin fine.
He smacks in a ball.
83
83
(CONTINUED)
81.
83
CONTINUED:
83
HARTE (CONT'D)
And that it will not end, that it
will always be this way?
LAVELLE
What the fuck? Why the fuck would
you tell me a story like that?
*
*
*
HARTE
*
*
No reason.
84
LAVELLE rears up --
*
84
(CONTINUED)
82.
84
CONTINUED:
84
LYNCH
Yeah your kind. Your time has gone,
and you dont even fucking realise it.
LAVELLE
My time will never be gone.
LYNCH
You hear that? The arrogance of the
man.
ASAMOAH
You need to be a little more humble,
Father.
LYNCH
He needs taking down a peg or two,
is what he needs.
85
86
86
87
(CONTINUED)
83.
87
CONTINUED:
87
LEARY
Jesus Christ! What happened to you?
*
*
LAVELLE
Brendan Lynch.
LEARY
Brendan Lynch? Sure hes a Buddhist.
LAVELLE
So what if hes a fucking Buddhist?
You think Buddhists dont beat people
up? You think Buddhists dont fuck
their kids just like everybody else?
LEARY
Youre obviously very upset--
LAVELLE
Tibetans spit on blind people in the
street. Theyre killing albinos in
Africa. You are so fucking naive.
LEARY
Please dont curse at me, Father.
And I think itd be best if we
continue this conversation in the
morning when youre sober--
LAVELLE
Why are you a fucking priest at all?
You should be a fucking accountant
in a fucking insurance firm!
He slams shut the door.
88
88
LAVELLE lying prone on his bed, bruises all over his body,
still wearing his trousers and socks. His soutane in a
black pile on the floor.
He awakens. Gives a wretched groan.
89
89
LAVELLE (O.S.)
Youre leaving.
LEARY turns. LAVELLE is standing there, squinting in the
sunlight. Wearing a horrible woollen V-neck sweater.
Drinking from a pint-glass of water.
(CONTINUED)
84.
89
CONTINUED:
89
LEARY
I think its for the best.
LAVELLE
Because of last night?
LEARY
Because of a lot of things. Not just
last night, or whats happened here.
Ive been having doubts...about my
sexuality, if you must know.
LAVELLE
Youre not gay, Father. Youre not
interesting enough to be gay.
*
*
*
*
*
LAVELLE
Listen, Im sorry about what I said
last night.
*
*
*
LEARY
You said what you said with such
venom. I didnt realise you hated
me that much.
LAVELLE
I dont hate you at all.
LEARY
Then why...
*
*
LAVELLE
Its just that you have no integrity.
And thats the worst thing I can say
about anybody.
LEARY
Well thats...Thats just...
He heads for the car.
*
*
LAVELLE
I hope you find what youre looking
for. Good luck.
LEARY gets into the cab. It drives away.
85.
90
90
91
91
92
92
93
93
94
94
*
*
LAVELLE
Oh hello.
TERESA
You are going to Dublin?
LAVELLE
Yes.
(pause)
Just getting away for a while,
yknow.
*
*
TERESA
I heard about your church.
A terrible thing.
(CONTINUED)
86.
94
CONTINUED:
94
LAVELLE
Yes.
TERESA
You must be very upset.
LAVELLE
Yes I am.
LAVELLE glances out the window -LAVELLEs POV -- a coffin is being escorted to the plane
by TWO BAGGAGE HANDLERS.
LAVELLE turns back to TERESA. She is watching the coffin.
TERESA
I am bringing him home to his
family in Italy. Dublin and then
Rome.
LAVELLE
How have you been?
TERESA
People here have been very kind.
LAVELLE
I mean...
TERESA
Some times I think I cannot go on.
(turning to look at him)
But I will go on.
95
95
96
96
96A
*
96A
97
*
97
TITLE -- Sunday.
A light breeze is blowing through the open window and
gently lifting the lace curtains.
(CONTINUED)
87.
97
CONTINUED:
97
98
99
99
(CONTINUED)
88.
99
CONTINUED:
99
FITZGERALD
Not wanting to do anything. Finding
nothing worthwhile. A sense of...
disassociation. Detachment.
LAVELLE
You have a lot to be thankful for,
objectively.
FITZGERALD
I had a wife and kids and they meant
nothing to me. I have money and it
means nothing to me. I have life and
it means nothing to me.
LAVELLE
Where do you think this sense of
detachment comes from?
FITZGERALD
From nowhere.
(pause)
From nowhere.
100
101
102
102
(CONTINUED)
102
89.
102
CONTINUED:
103
(CONTINUED)
103
90.
103
CONTINUED:
RYAN
Doctor Harte was out fishing at the
crack of dawn. He begrudgingly gave
me a ride. Hes a wonderful doctor,
but a completely appalling human
being. Where are you headed?
LAVELLE
Just down to the beach there.
RYAN
Want some company?
LAVELLE
Not really, no. Maybe later.
RYAN
Fair enough. I wont keep you.
He starts to move off, leaning on his shillelagh.
LAVELLE
Did you finish your book?
RYAN
I did. Not sure how good it is...
LAVELLE
Im sure itll be grand.
Youre a fine writer.
RYAN
(moved)
Thank you, James.
LAVELLE nods and walks on.
104
104
105
106
106
106
91.
106
CONTINUED:
92.
107
OMITTED
107
108
108
*
*
*
LAVELLE
Yes it did.
(CONTINUED)
108
93.
108
CONTINUED:
BRENNAN
Did you cry?
LAVELLE
Yes I did.
BRENNAN
Thats nice. And when you read about
what your fellow priests did to all
those poor children down all those
years, did you cry then?
LAVELLE looks blankly at him.
BRENNAN
I asked you a question. Did you cry
then?
LAVELLE
No.
BRENNAN
Thats right.
LAVELLE
No, I suppose-BRENNAN
Yeah?
LAVELLE
I suppose I felt detached from it.
The way you are when you read anything in a newspaper or see it on
televis-BRENNAN raises the gun and fires --
109
OMITTED
110
94.
111
111
112
MICHEL drops his brush and runs down through the dunes -113
113
113
95.
113
CONTINUED:
OMITTED
114
115
115
*
116
117
118
119
120
*
96.
121
121
122
122
123
124
124
125
126
126
127
127
FADE TO BLACK.
128
128
128
97.
128
CONTINUED:
FIONA waits. Tears in her eyes.
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