JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO
					
					
					
					  Written by
				  John Patrick Shanley
					




	  GREY SCREEN

	  The TITLE appears in white letters -

				 JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO
					
	  MUSIC.  Borodin's "Polovtsian Dances," Chicago Symphony
	  Orchestra, begins to play.  The stormy part.

	  The CREDITS ROLL.

	  The credits have that depressing, shitty, this is going
	  to be one of those lousy black and white movies from the
	  1950s look.  This is going to be one of those cheap teen
	  sci-fi movies about a creature

	  MUSIC.  When the female star's name appears, Borodin's
	  theme, which will later become adapted into "Strangers In
	  Paradise," plays.  Then we return to the stormy part,
	  which subsides as:

	  The CREDITS END.

	  The following LEGEND appears on the field of grey:

					"You only live twice.
					Once when you're born,
					Once when you look death in the face."

							    -- James Bond

	  The LEGEND remains, but the field of grey turns to a rich
	  texture of solid gold.

	  MUSIC.  "The Girl From Ipanema," sung by the likes of Tom
	  Waits, sung like it was the Downest blues song anybody
	  ever croaked out just before the final curtain.  The
	  MUSIC starts as the field turns from grey to gold.  The
	  MUSIC PLAYS ON.


1	 EXT. AMERICAN PANASCOPE CORPORATION - DAY			   1

	  We're in color now, but it's a grey world.  It's an ugly
	  building about the size of a city block and a couple of
	  stories high.  It's surrounded by hurricane fence topped
	  with barbed wire.  Outside the fence is a muddy parking
	  lot.  On the fence is a sign that reads:

				AMERICAN PANASCOPE CORP.
					
					a subsidiary of
					
						ACHI
											   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 1A.

1	 CONTINUED:									    1

	  The sign also has an abstract logo; a sort've German
	  Expressionist's version of a lightning bolt.  Another
	  sign reads:

				HOME OF THE RECTAL PROBE
					
	  It's a grey winter's morning.  It's raining or snowing or
	  it just has or it's about to.  There's a guard at a gate
	  nodding workers inside the fence.  They trail listlessly
	  past him and continue on their way to the building's
	  entrance.  Most of them carry or are using grey or black
	  umbrellas.  Since they are coming from the parking lot,
	  and since the entrance to the building is still almost a
	  city block away once inside the fence, this straggling
	  line of workers stretches hundreds of yards.  Some of the
	  workers wear hats.

	  We see the line of workers FROM HIGH OVERHEAD

	  The line is in the same shape as the lightning bolt logo.

	  One of these workers is JOE BANKS.  Joe is in his early
	  thirties.  He's wearing a beat-up black trench coat;
	  under the trench coat he's got on a cheap and square
	  jacket and tie.  This is a depressed man.  You can see
	  where he could be cool, where he could have something on
	  the ball.  But he's way too beaten down and depressed to
	  be cool.  Joe steps in a puddle.  He pulls his shoe out
	  of the water.  He notices the sole is coming loose from
	  the shoe.  This depresses him further.  He walks on.  The
	  sound of the WATER SQUISHING in his shoe can be heard.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			  2.


2	 INT. PANASCOPE BUILDING - DAY						2

	  Joe is shuffling down the main walk in the building.  On
	  his left are doors leading to offices.  On his right is
	  the factory, which has the feel of an airplane hangar.
	  The factory is separated from the walk on which Joe
	  progresses by a heavy wire fence twelve feet high.  Joe
	  passes by a sign on this fence that says "Shipping." This
	  area is filled with thousands of brown cardboard boxes; a
	  shipping clerk among these boxes pulls a lever on a
	  device; the device spews out several feet of wet brown
	  tape.  Joe continues on.  He passes a sign on the fence
	  that says "Canteen."  This area contains a row of vending
	  machines and two long tables; a guy who looks like he's
	  going to die is sitting at one of the tables eating pink
	  Hostess snowballs; he eats them in a slow, dismal way, as
	  if they were giant sleeping pills.  Joe continues on.  He
	  passes a sign on the fence that says "Quality Control."
	  This is the biggest area; it's filled with workers in
	  shower caps and worn white jackets; they work a distance
	  apart from each other, at long tables; they are
	  inspecting terrifying medical instruments.  One of these
	  workers, a middle-aged woman named Sally, attaches a
	  catheter to an air pump.  The catheter inflates and
	  finally explodes.  Sally seems satisfied.  Joe continues
	  on, his shoe distantly SQUISHING.  He stops at one of the
	  office doors on his left. The lettering on the door
	  reads:

				 ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
					
	  Joe opens the door and goes in.  The SONG ENDS.


3	 INT. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT - DAY					 3

	  The place is lit with those totally draining, deadening
	  fluorescent lights.  DEDE, a secretary in her late
	  twenties, is sitting at her desk, typing.  She's pretty,
	  maybe a little hard.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			  3.

3	 CONTINUED:									    3

	  She types like an automatic weapon.  Her makeup doesn't
	  really work under these lights.  She nods briefly to Joe,
	  and goes on with her typing.  Joe tries to hang up his
	  hat, but it keeps falling off the hook.  He is endlessly
	  patient.  It's the sound of the typewriter that makes him
	  miss.  At last he succeeds.  Behind Dede, at a bigger
	  desk, is MR. WATURI.  He's leaning back in an executive
	  chair, talking on the phone.  He's middle-aged, olive
	  skinned, in a dark suit that shows up his significant
	  dandruff.  His teeth are yellow as rancid butter.  And
	  there's enough grease shining on his forehead to coat a
	  skillet.  He's talking into the phone.

						  WATURI
				Yeah, Harry, but can he do the
				job?  I know he can get the
				job, but can he do the job?
				I'm not arguing that with you.
				I'm not arguing that with you.
				I'm not arguing that with you

	  Mr. Waturi waves absently at Joe and goes on talking into
	  the phone.

						  WATURI
				Who told you that?  No.  I
				told you that.  Me.  What?
				Maybe. Maybe.  Maybe.

	  Joe hangs up his coat on the coat rack and goes to the
	  coffee set-up at the rear of the office.  He snaps a
	  disposable plastic coffee cup into a permanent plastic
	  holder.  He puts a spoonful of instant coffee in the cup.
	  Then a spoonful of powdered creamer.  Then two spoonfuls
	  of sugar.  He takes a plastic stirrer and stirs the
	  powders.  He pours in the hot water and stirs.  Little
	  clumps of undissolved stuff rise to the top.  Joe tries
	  to break them up with the stirrer and partially succeeds.
	  He feels the glands in his throat.  Maybe they're a
	  little swollen.  He rubs his eyes.  They're burning a
	  little.  He takes his coffee and walks past Mr. Waturi
	  and into his own office.


4	 INT. ADVERTISING LIBRARY - JOE'S OFFICE - DAY		    4

	  The same fluorescent lighting.  There's a small wooden
	  desk which has on it an old electric typewriter and an
	  out-of-place lamp; it's a lamp Joe brought from home. The
	  rest of the office is almost entirely taken up with grey
	  industrial shelving.  On these shelves are brochures
	  depicting various medical instruments.  Samples of each
	  brochure are taped to the appropriate shelf.  Behind
	  Joe's desk is a pipe that runs floor-to-ceiling and is
	  painted fire-engine red.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - 5/16/89				  4.

4	 CONTINUED:									    4

	  In the center of this pipe is a big wheel valve.  Hanging
	  from this valve is a printed metal sign.

	  The sign reads:  THE MAIN DRAIN.  Another sign reads: Do
	  Not Touch.  Joe turns on the lamp, which casts a small
	  ring of golden light, and sits down with his coffee.  He
	  takes off his shoe and examines it.  He tries to huddle
	  close to the lamp, like a cold creature trying to get
	  warm.  Dede comes in.

						  JOE
				Good morning, Dede.

						  DEDE
				Hi, Joe.  What's with the
				shoe?

						  JOE
				I'm losing my sole.

						  DEDE
				Yeah. How you doin'?

						  JOE
				I'm a little tired.

						  DEDE
				Yeah.
					  (she hands him some
					  labels)
				Here.  Each one gets sent five
				catalogs.

						  JOE
				Can't do it.

						  DEDE
				Why not?

						  JOE
				I only got twelve catalogs
				left altogether.

						  DEDE
				Okay.

	  She leaves.  Joe puts his shoe back on.  Mr. Waturi comes
	  in.  Joe cowers.  He's threatened by Mr. Waturi.

						  WATURI
				How you doin', Joe?

						  JOE
				Well, I'm not feeling very
				good, Mr. Waturi.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			A4A.

4	 CONTINUED:   (A1A)								 4

	  Mr. Waturi chuckles.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			 4A.

4	 CONTINUED:  (1A)								   4

						  WATURI
				So what else is new? You never
				feel good.

						  JOE
				Yeah. Well. That's the
				problem. Anyway, I got the
				doctor's appointment today.

										    (CONTINUED)
												 5.

4	 CONTINUED:  (2)								    4

						  WATURI
				Another doctor's appointment?

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  WATURI
				Listen, Joe.  What's this Dede
				tells me about the catalogs?

						  JOE
				I've only got twelve.

						  WATURI
				How'd you let us get down to
				twelve?

						  JOE
				I told you.

						  WATURI
				When?

						  JOE
				Three weeks ago.  Then two
				weeks ago.

						  WATURI
				Did you tell me last week?

						  JOE
				No.

						  WATURI
				Why not?

						  JOE
				I don't know.  I thought you
				knew.

						  WATURI
				Not good enough, Joe!  Not
				nearly good enough!  I put you
				in charge of the entire
				advertising library...

						  JOE
				You mean, this room.

						  WATURI
				I gave you carte blanche how
				to deal with the materials in
				here...

										    (CONTINUED)
												 6.

4	 CONTINUED:  (3)								    4

						  JOE
				You put the orders into the
				printer, Mr. Waturi, not me.
				That's how you wanted it.

						  WATURI
				You're not competent to put
				the orders into the printer!
				That's a very technical...

						  JOE
				I thought you were going to
				explain it to me.

						  WATURI
				I was going to do better than
				that.  I was going to make you
				assistant manager.  I want to
				make you assistant manager.
				But you, you're not flexible!
				You're inflexible.

						  JOE
				I don't feel inflexible.

						  WATURI
				You're inflexible.  Totally.
				And this doctor appointment!
				You're always going to the
				doctor!

						  JOE
				I don't feel good.

						  WATURI
				So what!  Do you think I feel
				good?  Nobody feels good.
				After childhood, it's a fact
				of life.  I feel rotten.  So
				what?  I don't let it bother
				me.  I don't let it interfere
				with my job.

						  JOE
				What do you want from me, Mr.
				Waturi?

						  WATURI
				You're like a child.  What's
				this lamp for?  Isn't there
				enough light in here?

						  JOE
				These fluorescent lights
				affect me.  They make me feel
				blotchy, puffy.  I thought
				this light would...

										    (CONTINUED)
												 7.

4	 CONTINUED: (4)									4

						  WATURI
				Get rid of the light.  This
				isn't your bedroom, this is an
				office. Maybe if you start
				treating this like a job
				instead of some kind of
				welfare hospital, you'll shape
				up. And I want those catalogs.

						  JOE
				Then please order them.

						  WATURI
				Watch yourself, Joe.  Think
				about what I've said.  You've
				gotta get yourself into a
				flexible frame or you're no
				place.

	  He starts to leave, but stops and looks back.
					
						  WATURI
				Take that light off your desk.

						  JOE
				I will.

						  WATURI
				Take it off now.

	  Joe unplugs the light and takes it off his desk.

						  WATURI
				Good.

	  Waturi leaves.  Joe sits at his desk, shrinking in the
	  fluorescent light.  He sips his coffee. The PHONE RINGS
	  and he answers.

						  JOE
				Advertising library.  Fifty?
				I'm sorry, we don't have that
				many in stock.  I don't know
				why.  The catalog is a
				thing... I don't know.  It's
				here and it's gone.  I can't
				explain.  It's a mystery.

	  He hangs up the phone.  Dede has quietly come in.  She's
	  looking at Joe.  She speaks to him in a low voice.

						  DEDE
				Why do you let Waturi talk to
				you like that?


						  JOE
				Like what?
										    (CONTINUED)
												 8.

4	 CONTINUED:  (5)								    4

						  DEDE
				What's wrong with you?

						  JOE
				I don't... feel very good.

	  She looks at him.  She's frustrated with this guy.  This
	  is somebody who she could go for, but he's just lying
	  there like a dog waiting to be kicked.  He looks at her.
	  If he had the strength, if he were feeling a little
	  better, he'd make a play for this woman.  But he's
	  helpless.  He just doesn't feel very good.  Absently, he
	  feels the glands in his throat.

						  DEDE
				What's the matter with you?

						  JOE
				I don't know.

	  She stares at him.  She's angry, frustrated.  She turns
	  and walks out. Joe's eyes are shining with tears that
	  will not fall.  He is powerless to help himself.  He
	  mutters to himself, fierce and impotent.


						  JOE
				I don't know.

	  He presses the heels of his hands into his eyes.


5	 INT. DOCTOR'S WAITING ROOM - DAY					  5

	  We discover Joe with the heels of his hands pressed into
	  his eyes.  This room is fluorescently lit, too, and
	  perhaps at first we don't realize we have gone somewhere
	  else.  A nurse's voice is heard.

						  NURSE (O.S.)
				Mr. Banks?  Mr. Banks?

	  Joe, startled, takes his hands from his eyes. The CAMERA
	  PULLS BACK and we see we're in a doctor's waiting room.
	  And now we see the NURSE.  She is a very conservative,
	  W.A.S.P. Nurse .


						  JOE
				Yeah?


						  NURSE
				Doctor Ellison will see you
				now.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			  9.

6	 INT. DR. ELLISON'S OFFICE - DAY					   6

	  The lighting in the doctor's office is the first warm,
	  relaxing light we've seen.  It comes from lamps and a
	  little frosted window.  The office itself is full of old
	  wood and books.  DR. ELLISON sits in a comfortable chair,
	  at an old desk.  He is the last word in doctors.  He's a
	  large, respectable, distinguished, greyed-haired M.D.
	  He's a specialist.  You get the feeling he may be a
	  genius.

						  ELLISON
				How are you feeling, Mr.
				Banks?

						  JOE
				Pretty much the same.  I feel
				puffy, blotchy.  I never seem
				to have very much energy.  I
				get these little sore throats.
				I just don't feel good.

						  ELLISON
				And how long have you felt
				this way?

						  JOE
				Well.  Pretty much since I
				left the Fire Department.  On
				and off. But since then.
				'Bout eight years.

						  ELLISON
				What did you do in the Fire
				Department?

						  JOE
				Well, ah, you know, I put out
				fires.

						  ELLISON
				Was it dangerous?

						  JOE
				Yeah.  Ahm, pretty rough
				stuff. But I came out of it
				okay.  The hard part was not
				feeling good all the time.  I
				started not feeling good all
				the time.  So I hadda quit.

	  Ellison nods.

						  ELLISON
				Yes.  I've gotten the results
				of your tests.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  10.

6	 CONTINUED:									    6

						  JOE
				I've got cancer.

						  ELLISON
				No.

						  JOE
				This new venereal...

						  ELLISON
				No.

						  JOE
				Is there something wrong with
				my blood or urine or...?

						  ELLISON
				No, they're fine.  But there
				is something.

						  JOE
				Tell me.

						  ELLISON
				You have a brain cloud.

						  JOE
				A brain cloud.

						  ELLISON
				There's a black fog of tissue
				running right down the center
				of your brain.  It's very
				rare.  It will spread at a
				regular rate. It's very
				destructive.

						  JOE
				And it's incurable.

						  ELLISON
				Yes.

						  JOE
				How long?

						  ELLISON
				Six months.  You can pretty
				much count on it being about
				that. It's not painful.  Your
				brain will simply fail.
				Followed abruptly by your
				body.  You can depend on at
				least four and half or five
				months of perfect health.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  11.

6	 CONTINUED:  (2)								    6

						  JOE
				But what are you talking
				about, Doctor?  I don't feel
				good right now.

						  ELLISON
				That's the ironic part,
				really. Mr. Banks, you're a
				hypochondriac. There's nothing
				wrong with you that has
				anything to do with your
				symptoms.  My guess is your
				experiences in the Fire
				Department were extremely
				traumatic.  You experienced
				the imminent possibility of
				death.  Several times?
					  (as Joe nods numbly)
				You survived.  But the
				cumulative anxiety of those
				brushes with death left you
				habitually fearful. About your
				physical person.

						  JOE
				I'm not sick?  Except for this
				terminal disease?

						  ELLISON
				Which has no symptoms.  That's
				right.  It was only because of
				your insistence on having so
				many tests that we happened to
				discover the problem.

	  Joe laughs, a little maniacally, then stops abruptly.

						  JOE
				What am I going to do?

						  ELLISON
				Well, if you have any savings
				you might think about taking a
				trip, a vacation?

						  JOE
				I don't have any savings.  A
				few hundred bucks.  I've spent
				everything on doctors.

				ELLISON
				Yes.  Perhaps you'll want a
				second opinion?

						  JOE
				A brain cloud.  I knew it.
				Well, I didn't know it, but I
				knew it.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 12.

6	 CONTINUED:  (3)								    6

						  ELLISON
				Yes.

						  JOE
				What am I going to do?

						  ELLISON
				You have some time left, Mr.
				Banks. You have some life
				left. My advice to you is:
				Live it well.

						  JOE
				I've got to go.  I'm on my
				lunch hour which is over.

	  Joe gets up and Ellison follows suit, putting out his
	  hand.

						  ELLISON
				I'm sorry for what I had to
				tell you. I wish the news had
				been better.

	  Joe doesn't take his hand.

						  JOE
				Yeah .

	  Joe leaves. Ellison starts to sit down. Joe comes back
	  in.

						  JOE
				I'm sorry I didn't shake your
				hand.

	  Joe takes the doctor's hand and shakes it.  Then he drops
	  it and exits abruptly.  Ellison sits there a moment, not
	  moving.  Then he opens a drawer in his desk and takes out

	  a flask.  He pours himself a drink and begins to drink
	  it.


7	 EXT. MEDICAL LEAGUE BUILDING - DAY					7

	  This is the building Ellison's office is in.  Joe's car
	  is parked out front.  Joe comes slowly out.  It's still
	  overcast, but lighter and dryer than it was earlier. As
	  Joe walks down the steps, an elderly woman approaches
	  with her dog, Molly, a mutt.  Joe sees the dog and stops,
	  fixed on it.  He pats the dog on the head.  The elderly
	  woman thinks this is nice.

	  Then Joe embraces the dog, and kneeling down, hugs it
	  intensely.  The elderly woman is alarmed and pulls the
	  dog away.  Joe looks after them.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 13.

7	 CONTINUED:									    7

	  Then he gets in his car, which is beat-up and beige.
	  Drives off.


8	 EXT. AMERICAN PANASCOPE CORPORATION PARKING LOT - DAY		8

	  Joe drives INTO FRAME.  He gets out and we FOLLOW him as
	  he approaches the GUARD at the gate.  The Guard nods him
	  in.  He starts to walk past.  Then he goes back to the
	  Guard.

						  JOE
				What's your name?

						  GUARD
				Fred.
					
						  JOE
				Fred.

	  He thinks that over and then goes on his way.


9	 INT. PANASCOPE BUILDING - DAY						9

	  Joe standing outside the door marked Advertising Dept. He
	  is thoughtful.  He goes in.


10	INT. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT - DAY			   10

	  Joe comes in.  Dede is typing away.  Mr. Waturi is on the
	  phone.  Joe hangs up his coat.  He misses with the hat
	  again because of Dede's typing.  He leans over and
	  switches the typewriter off.  Then he picks up his hat,
	  dusts it off and throws it in the garbage can.

						  WATURI
					  (on phone)
				No.  No.  You were wrong.  He
				was wrong.  Who said that?  I
				didn't say that.  If I had
				said that, I would've been
				wrong.  I would've been wrong,
				Harry, isn't that right?

	  Mr. Waturi's attention is split between his call and Joe,
	  who is walking around the office like a tourist.

						  WATURI
				Listen, let me call you back,
				I've got something here, okay?
				And don't tell him anything
				till we finish our
				conversation, okay?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  14.

10	CONTINUED:									   10

	  Mr. Waturi hangs up the phone.  Joe is looking at the
	  coffee set-up.

						  WATURI
				Joe?

						  JOE
				Yeah?

						  WATURI
				You were at lunch three hours.

						  JOE
				About that.

	  Joe wanders away, into his office.  Waturi looks after.


11	INT. JOE'S OFFICE - DAY							11

	  Joe is staring at the big wheel valve sporting the sign
	  that says Main Drain.  Mr. Waturi comes in as Joe moves
	  forward and, with great effort, rotates the wheel to its
	  opposite extreme.  This scares Waturi.

						  WATURI
				Joe, what are you doing?

						  JOE
				I'm opening, or closing, the
				main drain.

	  Nothing happens.

						  WATURI
				You shouldn't be touching
				that.

						  JOE
				Nothing happened.  Do you know
				how long I've been wondering
				what would happen if I did
				that?

						  WATURI
				What's the matter with you?

						  JOE
				Brain cloud.

						  WATURI
				What?

						  JOE
				Never mind.  Listen, Mr.
				Waturi. Frank.  I quit.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 15.

11	CONTINUED:									   11

	  Joe starts to take some stuff out of his desk.  He looks
	  at his lamp, gets the cord, plugs it in, and turns it on.

						  WATURI
				You mean, today?

						  JOE
				That's right.

						  WATURI
				That's great.  Well, don't
				come looking for a reference.

						  JOE
				Okay, I won't.

						  WATURI
				You blew this job.

	  Joe takes in the little room.

						  JOE
				I've been here for four and a
				half years.  The work I did I
				probably could've done in
				five, six months. That leaves
				four years leftover.


	  He's been filling up a shopping bag with stuff from his
	  desk:  three books (Romeo and Juliet, Robinson Crusoe and
	  The Odyssey), an old ukulele and his lamp.  Now he's
	  finished.  He walks out of the room without even looking
	  at Waturi.  Waturi goes after him as he exits.


12	INT. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT - DAY					12

	  Joe is walking towards the front door.  Waturi follows
	  him in.  Joe stops at Dede's desk. She's typing.  He
	  looks at her.  She stops typing.

						  JOE
				Four years.  If I had them
				now. Like gold in my hand.
				Here.  This is for you.
					  (gives Dede the lamp)
				'Bye-bye, Dede.

						  DEDE
				You're going?

						  WATURI
				Well, if you're leaving,
				leave.
					    (MORE)
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  16.

12	CONTINUED:									   12

						  WATURI (CONT'D)
				You'll get your check.  And, I
				promise you, you'll be easy to
				replace.

						  JOE
				I should say something.

						  WATURI
				What are you talking about?

						  JOE
				This life.  Life?  What a
				joke. This situation   This
				room.

						  WATURI
				Joe, maybe you should just...


						  JOE
				You look terrible, Mr. Waturi.
				You look like a bag of shit
				stuffed inna cheap suit.  Not
				that anyone would look good
				under these zombie lights.  I
				can feel them sucking the
				juice outta my eyeballs. Three
				hundred bucks a week, that's
				the news.  For three hundred
				bucks a week I've lived in
				this sink. This used rubber.

						  WATURI
				Watch it, mister!  There's a
				woman here!

						  JOE
				Don't you think I know that,
				Frank? Don't you think I'm
				aware there's a woman here?  I
				can taste her on my tongue.  I
				can smell her.  When I'm
				twenty feet away, I can hear
				the fabric of her dress when
				she moves in her chair.  Not
				that I've done anything about
				it.  I've gone all day, every
				day, not doing, not saying,
				not taking the chance for
				three hundred bucks a week,
				and Frank the coffee stinks
				it's like arsenic, the lights
				give me a headache if the
				lights don't give you a
				headache you must be dead,
				let's arrange the funeral.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  17.

12	CONTINUED:  (2)								   12

						  WATURI
				You better get outta here
				right now!  I'm telling you!

						  JOE
				You're telling me nothing.

						  WATURI
				I'm telling you!

						  JOE
				And why, I ask myself, why
				have I put up with you?  I
				can't imagine but I know.
				Fear.  Yellow freakin' fear.
				I've been too chicken shit
				afraid to live my life so I
				sold it to you for three
				hundred freakin' dollars a
				week! You're lucky I don't
				kill you! You're lucky I don't
				rip your freakin' throat out!
				But I'm not going to and maybe
				you're not so lucky at that.
				'Cause I'm gonna leave you
				here, Mister Wa-a-Waturi, and
				what could be worse than that?

	  Joe opens the door and leaves.  Mr. Waturi and Dede are
	  frozen.  The door reopens and Joe comes halfway back in.

						  JOE
				Dede?
					
					
						  DEDE
				Yeah?
					
						  JOE
				How 'bout dinner tonight?

						  DEDE
				Yeah, uh, okay.

	  Joe smiles for the first time since we've met him, and
	  closes the door again.

						  DEDE
				Wow.  What a change.

						  WATURI
				Who does he think he is?

13	INT. "THE SPANISH ROSE" RESTAURANT - NIGHT			 13

	  Joe and Dede are sitting at a table, steaming plates of
	  food before them.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			 18.

13	CONTINUED:									   13

	  They are drinking red wine.  Joe is caught up in a big
	  idea.  Dede is mesmerized.

						  JOE
				I mean, who am I?  That's the
				real question, isn't it?  Who
				am I? Who are you?  What other
				questions are there?  What
				other questions are there,
				really?  If you want to
				understand the universe,
				embrace the universe, the door
				to the universe is you!

						  DEDE
				Me?

						  JOE
				You.  Me.

						  DEDE
				You are really intense.

						  JOE
				Am I?  I guess I am.  I was.

						  DEDE
				What do you mean?

						  JOE
				I mean, a long time ago.  In
				the beginning.  I was full of
				piss and vinegar.  Nothing got
				me down.  I wanted to know!

						  DEDE
				You wanted to know what?

						  JOE
				Everything!  But then, I had
				some experiences... I was
				talking to this guy today, he
				says I got scared.

						  DEDE
				Scared of what?
		   
						  JOE
				Have you ever been scared?

						  DEDE
				I guess so.  Sure.

										    (CONTINUED)

												19.

13	CONTINUED: (2)								    13

						  JOE
				What scared you?

						  DEDE
				A lot of things.  At the
				moment, you scare me a little
				bit.

						  JOE
				Me?

						  DEDE
				Yeah.

	  Across the room, at another table, three guys with
	  guitars, in traditional Spanish costumes, sing a happy
	  Castilian song.  Dede and Joe turn and take in the
	  singers.

						  JOE
				Why would I scare you?

						  DEDE
				I don't know.  There's
				something going on with you.
				This morning you were like a
				lump and now you're... How do
				you feel?

						  JOE
				I feel great.

						  DEDE
				See?  You never feel great.

						  JOE
				No, I never do.

	  He laughs.

						  DEDE
				What's funny?

						  JOE
				I do feel great.  And that is
				very funny!

						  DEDE
				Where are you?

						  JOE
				I'm right here.

						  DEDE
				I wish I was where you are,
				Joe.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			19A.

13	CONTINUED:  (3)								   13

						  JOE
					  (nodding)
				No, you don't.  Did I ever
				tell you that the first time I
				saw you, I felt I'd seen you
				before?

	  She shakes her head.


						  JOE
				Wait a minute.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 20.

13	CONTINUED:  (4)								   13

	  Joe gets up, goes over to the three guys with guitars,
	  slips them a fin, confers briefly, and returns to the
	  table.

						  DEDE
				What'd you do?

						  JOE
				I bribed them to sing a song
				that would drive us insane and
				make our hearts swell and
				burst.

	  Whereupon the three guys with guitars arrive at the table
	  and launch into an extremely passionate Castilian love
	  song.  The song makes conversation impossible.  Joe pours
	  Dede some more red wine.  They toast, looking into each
	  other's eyes.  The scene ends, but the SONG CONTINUES
	  through the following.


14	EXT. SPANISH ROSE - NIGHT						   14

	  Against a slightly tilting lamp post leans a sailor in
	  uniform.  Joe and Dede emerge from the restaurant and get
	  in his beat-up car.  The car pulls away.  The SONG
	  CONTINUES through the following.


15	EXT. STATEN ISLAND FERRY - JOE'S CAR				  15

	  The ferry pulls away from the shore.  Joe and Dede go to
	  the railing and look back at Manhattan, all lit up,
	  receding.  They kiss and look again.  The song continues
	  through next.



16	EXT. STATEN ISLAND - THREE FAMILY HOUSE - NIGHT		 16

	  Joe's car pulls to a stop in front of it, and he and Dede
	  get out.  There are some steps.  He kisses her and
	  carries her up the steps.  Then he puts her down to open
	  the door.  The SONG ENDS.


17	INT. JOE'S APARTMENT - FOYER - NIGHT				  17

	  Joe throws open the door with one hand.  He's got Dede on
	  his arm.  They kiss passionately.  Joe reluctantly ends
	  the kiss.

						  JOE
				Listen.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			 21.

17	CONTINUED:									   17

						  DEDE
				What happened to you?

						  JOE
				Huh?

						  DEDE
				What happened to you that
				you're ... so alive?  I can
				see it.

						  JOE
				The doctor told me I've got
				this thing wrong with my
				brain.  It's not catching.
				But I've just got five or six
				months to live.

						  DEDE
				What?

						  JOE
				I'm gonna die.  And it's made
				me. very appreciative of my
				life.

	  Dede shrinks from him, clutching her coat, suddenly cold.

						  DEDE
				I've gotta go.

						  JOE
				Please don't.

	  He reaches for her.  She steps back.

						  DEDE
				I've gotta go home.  You
				may've quit, but I got the job
				in the morning.

						  JOE
				Dede, I really want you to
				stay.

						  DEDE
				You're gonna die?

						  JOE
				Yeah, but so what?  Stay!
				Just tonight.  Tomorrow'll
				take care of itself.

	  She hesitates on the brink of staying, lifts her hands to
	  say yes, but her courage fails her.

						  DEDE
				I can't handle it, Joe.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			21A.

17	CONTINUED:  (2)								   17

	  She drops her hands, grabs the doorknob, and opens the
	  door.

						  DEDE
				Sorry.

					
	  She quickly goes, slamming the door after her.  Joe looks
	  after her blankly.  Then he takes off his coat, tie and
	  jacket, and throws them on the floor.  He walks off down

	  the hall.


18	INT. JOE'S KITCHEN - PREDAWN						18

	  Joe is making some real coffee.  He's changed into
	  bathrobe.  He's got a little lamp on, not the overhead
	  light.  He opens the refrigerator and takes out a loaf of
	  white bread.  He puts a couple of slices in the toaster.
	  Then he looks at his little tin dining table and at
	  window.  The window is so dirty it's opaque.  You'd like
	  to open it to see out.  He pulls the table over to
	  window.  Then he pulls a chair over to face the window.
	  The window looks out on a long little street.  At the end
	  of the street is a brightness, where the sun will be.  He
	  brings his coffee to the table, and a napkin, and a a
	  spoon. He hears the TOAST POP.  He gets it, puts it on a
	  plate, butters it, and brings it to the table.  He sits
	  down. He takes a sip of coffee and a bite of toast.  He
	  1ooks out the window.  The sun is just starting to come
	  up. He looks at the coffee, at the little whiff of steam
	  rising from the cracked cup.  The crack's in the shape of
	  ACHI logo.  He looks at the toast with one bite missing
	  and the butter melting into the golden bread.  He 1ooks
	  at the sun's splendid red rim.  These things are so
	  beautiful.  His eyes well up.  He takes another bite of
	  the toast and another sip of the coffee and looks at the
	  rising sun.  It's so great that he's here to experience
	  these things, and so sad that he's leaving.  He goes back
	  to the refrigerator and takes out the loaf of bread. He
	  puts a couple of more slices in the toaster and the
	  almost full loaf of bread next to the almost full pot of
	  coffee.


19	INT. JOE'S KITCHEN - MORNING (COUPLE OF HOURS LATER)		 19

	  The loaf of bread is almost gone and the pot of coffee is
	  empty.  Now we PULL BACK and see Joe sitting by the
	  window with his feet up, some crusts of toast lying on
	  the plate next to him.  The sun has risen a goodly bit,
	  and can no longer be seen by us.  But Joe is dappled with
	  sunlight.  He is no longer in the thrall of a big
	  emotion, but he is extremely deep in the thought.  The
	  DOORBELL RINGS.  Joe doesn't move.  It RINGS AGAIN.  Did
	  he hear the doorbell?  It RINGS AGAIN.  He is now
	  satisfied the doorbell is ringing.  He gets up and out
	  into the foyer.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 22.

20	INT. JOE'S FOYER - DAY							 20

	  The DOORBELL starts to RING AGAIN as Joe opens the door.
	  In the hallway is a powerful, glittering-eyed old man of
	  seventy, MR. GRAYNAMORE.  He's wearing a long, black
	  cashmere overcoat, a dramatic but not silly black fedora,
	  and cowboy boots.  He carries a vacuum-sealed can of
	  Planter's Peanuts in his pocket.  He's got a cane with a
	  duck's head.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Joe Banks?  Mr. Joe Banks?

						  JOE
				Yeah?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Have I come at a bad time?

						  JOE
				Yeah.  No.  I don't know how
				to answer that question.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Can I come in? Can we talk?

	  Joe throwing the door open.  He's in his bathrobe.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				You're not dressed?

						  JOE
				No.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Doesn't bother me if it
				doesn't bother you.

	  Graynamore strides past Joe into Joe's living room.  Joe
	  looks after, in a bit of a daze.  Then he follows.


21	INT. JOE'S LIVING ROOM - DAY						21

	  It's modest, to say the least.  It's messy and cheaply
	  furnished.  An enormous crack runs up the wall and across
	  the ceiling.  Graynamore takes the room in.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Not a nice place you have
				here, Joe.  Mind if I call you
				Joe?

						  JOE
				No.

	  Graynamore smacks a hole in the wall with his cane.
											   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 23.

21	CONTINUED:  (Al)								  21

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Dingy, shabby, dinky, not
				much.

	  He rips off his coat with gusto and tosses it away.  He
	  sings a little of "Someone's in the Kitchen With Dinah."

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 24.

21	CONTINUED:								 21

	  He's a rich man, from out West, and that's what his
	  clothes look like.  He seems to be enjoying himself very
	  much.  He sticks out his hand to Joe.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I see it as a sign of
				tremendous sophistication that
				you haven't demanded my name
				or asked me what I'm doing
				here.  My name is Samuel
				Harvey Graynamore.

	  They shake hands.

						  JOE
				Joe Banks.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I know.
					  (stares into Joe's
					  face)
				I'm trying to see the hero in
				there.
		   
						  JOE
				What do you mean?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				You dragged two kids down a
				six-story burning staircase.
				That was brave.  But then you
				went back up for the third.
				That was heroic.  Com'on,
				you're a hero.

						  JOE
				That was a long time ago.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Yes, it was.

	  Graynamore opens the nuts and dumps them on the table.

						  JOE
				How do you know my name?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I know all about you.  As much
				as I could learn in twenty-
				four hours, anyway.  Peanuts?

						  JOE
				No.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			24A.

21	CONTINUED:  (1A)								  21

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Quit your job, huh?

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Well, sounded like a dumb job.
				No family?

						  JOE
				No.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  25.

21	CONTINUED: (2)								    21

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Good for you.  Families are a
				pain in the neck. What do you
				know about superconductors ?

						  JOE
				Nothing.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Me neither.  But I own a huge
				company that dominates the
				world market for
				superconductors.

						  JOE
				Really.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Yes.  Sit down.

	  Graynamore sits down, suddenly grounded and serious.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I got a call from Dr. Ellison.
				You were at his office
				yesterday?

	  Joe nods.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				He told me your news.  I hope
				you won't be angry with him.
				He thought you and I might be
				able to help each other.  Got
				any whiskey?

	  Joe shakes his head.  Graynamore produces a pipe.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I want to hire you, Joe Banks.
				I want you...

	  Graynamore strikes an enormous match and lights up.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				to jump into a volcano.

	  Joe jumps up.

						  JOE
				I do have some whiskey.

	  Joe pulls a bottle of cheap scotch out of a cabinet,
	  along with two glasses.  He pours them both a drink and
	  sits down.  Graynamore downs his whiskey which makes his
	  eyes glitter all the more.  He leans forward and speaks
	  with great intensity.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  26.

21	CONTINUED:  (3)								   21

						  GRAYNAMORE
				There's an island in the South
				Pacific called Waponi Woo. The
				name means 'The Little Island
				With the Big Volcano.' The
				Waponis are a cheerful people
				who live a simple existence
				fishing in the lagoon and
				picking fruit.  They have one
				fear.  That's a big volcano,
				they call it The Big Woo. They
				believe an angry fire god in
				the volcano will sink the
				island unless, once every
				hundred years, he is appeased.
				It's been ninety-nine years,
				eleven months, and eleven days
				since the fire god got his
				propers and the Waponis are
				scared.

						  JOE
				How's the god appeased?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Of his own free will, a man's
				got to jump into the volcano.
				Now as you might imagine, none
				of the Waponis are anxious to
				volunteer for the honor of
				jumping into the Big Woo.  And
				the problem is that whoever
				does it gotta do it of his own
				free will so what do you do?

						  JOE
				What do you do?

	  Graynamore gets up and starts to move around the room.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				You do some tradin'.  There's
				a mineral on that island, Mr.
				Banks. It's called bubureau.
				I don't know anywhere else on
				the planet where you can find
				more than a gram of this
				stuff, and believe me I've
				looked.  Because without
				bubureau I can't make my
				superconductors.  I've tried
				to get the mineral rights from
				the Waponis, but I don't seem
				to have anything they want.
				But they do want a hero, Mr.
				Banks.  And they'll give me
				the mineral rights if I find
				them one.

						  JOE
				Why would I jump into a
				volcano?
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  27.

21	CONTINUED:  (4)								   21

	  Graynamore moves behind Joe.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				From your exploits in the Fire
				Department, I think you've got
				the courage.

						  JOE
				You do?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Does it take more guts to
				twice traverse a staircase in
				flames, or to make a onetime
				leap into the mouth of a
				smoking volcano? Damned if I
				know, kimosabe.  All I know is
				when you're making those kind
				of calls, you're up in the
				high country. From your
				doctor, you know you're on
				your way out anyway.  You
				haven't got any money.  I
				checked.
					  (grabs Joe by the
					  shoulders)
				Do you want to wait it out
				here, in this apartment?  That
				sounds kind a grim to me.
				It's not how I'd wanna go,
				I'll tell you that.

	  Graynamore lets go of his shoulders.  He takes out his
	  wallet and lays out four credit cards on the stereo
	  console:  Diner's Club, Gold Visa, Gold Master, and Gold
	  American Express.  The cards have Joseph Banks printed on
	  them.  Joe looks at the cards.  We hear Graynamore's
	  voice as we look at the cards.

						  GRAYNAMORE (O.S.)
				These are yours if you take
				the job.  It'd be twenty days
				from today before you'd have
				to actually jump in the Big
				Woo.  You could shop today,
				get yourself some clothes, you
				know, for an adventure.  Then
				tomorrow a plane to L.A. first
				class, naturally. You'll be
				met.  Stay in the best hotel.
				Then the next day, you board a
				yacht.  My competitors
				sometimes watch the airports.
				The yacht's a real beauty.
					  (produces wallet photo
					  of the yacht)
				It belongs to me.  Gourmet
				chef.
					    (MORE)

										    (CONTINUED)
						  ### - continued & page number
	  missing
						  GRAYNAMORE (O.S.) (CONT'D)
				   You sail to the South Pacific.
				   Then, fifteen days. The Waponis
				   come out to meet you, a total
				   red carpet situation, you're a
				   national hero. You're Charles
				   Lindbergh. It's wine, women and
				   song in the sweetest little
				   paradise you ever saw. Then you
				   jump in the volcano. Live like a
				   king, die like a man, that's what
				   I say. What do you say?

				   (picks up the credit cards and looks
				   ###ks at Graynamore.

						  JOE
				   Alright. I'll do it.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				   Here's my card and your plane
				   ticket. American, noon out of
				   Kennedy tomorrow.

				   (picks up his coat and hat and 
				   heads for door)

						  JOE
				   Mr. Graynamore?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				   Yes?

						  JOE
				   What if I use the cards and take
				   the plane and go on the yacht and
				   party on the island and then I
				   change  my mind and I don't jump in
				   the volcano?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				   Why then I'd kill you in a very
				   slow and painful way.  But you'll
				   jump.

				   (laughs in a warm and wonderful way, 
				   goes to door, opens it, and leaves.)  
			 
				   Joe stands there,
				   ###er him for a moment, and then 
				   pulls out the
				   ###s.  He flips through, finds what 
				   he wants, and	 
				   ### number.

						  JOE
			  Hi, I'd like to rent a limousine
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		    A28A.

21	CONTINUED:  (6)								   21

						  JOE (CONT'D)
				Thank you?  Yes, I do.
				American Express.  The Gold
				Card.  Can I have a white
				limousine?

	  Joe smiles, looking at the card in his hand.


22	EXT. WHITE LIMOUSINE IN LOWER MANHATTAN - DAY		   22

	  The car has just emerged from Staten Island Ferry
	  traffic.  We see the friendly face on the front grill of
	  the limousine.  It is a slightly overcast day.


23	INT. LIMOUSINE - DAY							   23

	  Joe is sitting in the back, idly plucking his ukulele,
	  looking out the windows, stretching his legs. Driver is a
	  middle-aged black man; his name is MARSHALL.  He's
	  wearing a jacket and tie and sunglasses. He seems
	  reserved and efficient

						  MARSHALL
				So where would you like to go?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - -Rev. 3/23/89		    28A.

23	CONTINUED:  (A1)								  23

						  JOE
				Excuse me?

										    (CONTINUED)
												29.

23	CONTINUED:									   23

						  MARSHALL
				Where would you like to go,
				sir?

	  Joe thinks for a moment.

						  JOE
				I thought I might like to do
				some shopping.

						  MARSHALL
				Okay.  Where would you like to
				go shopping?

						  JOE
				I don't know.

	  Marshall is disgruntled, but hides it behind his reserve.

						  MARSHALL
				Alright.

						  JOE
				Where would you go shopping?
					
						  MARSHALL
				For what?  What do you need?

						  JOE
				Clothes.

						  MARSHALL
				What kind of clothes?  What is
				your taste?

						  JOE
				I don't exactly know.

	  Marshall pulls the car over and stops.

						  JOE
				Why'd you stop?

						  MARSHALL
				I'm just hired to drive the
				car, mister.  I'm not here to
				tell you who you are.

						  JOE
				I didn't ask you to tell me
				who I am.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 30.

23	CONTINUED:  (2)								   23

						  MARSHALL
				You were hinting around about
				clothes.  It happens that
				clothes are very important to
				me, Mister..

						  JOE
				Banks.

						  MARSHALL
				Banks.  Clothes make the man.
				I believe that.  You say to me
				you wanna go shopping, you
				wanna buy clothes, but you
				don't know what kind.  You
				leave that hanging in the air,
				like I'm going to fill in the
				blank, that to me is like
				asking me who you are, and I
				don't know who you are, I
				don't wanna know.  It's taken
				me my whole life to find out
				who I am and I'm tired now,
				you hear what I'm say in'?
				What's your name?

						  JOE
				Joe.

						  MARSHALL
				My name's Marshall, how you
				do?

	  They shake hands quite seriously.

						  MARSHALL
				Wait a minute.  I'm coming
				back.


	  Marshall gets out of the driver's seat, goes back and
	  gets in next to Joe.

						  MARSHALL
				Now what's your situation?
				Explain your situation to me?

						  JOE
				I'm going away on a long trip.

						  MARSHALL
				Okay.

						  JOE
				I've got the opportunity to
				buy some clothes today.

						  MARSHALL
				Yes.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 31.

23	CONTINUED:  (3)								   23

						  JOE
				Money's no object.

						  MARSHALL
				Good.  Where you going?

						  JOE
				Well.  I'm going out tonight
				in the city.

						  MARSHALL
				Nice places?

						  JOE
				I hope so.  Then tomorrow I'm
				flying to L.A.

						  MARSHALL
				First class?

						  JOE
				Yeah.
		   
						  MARSHALL
				Good.
					

						  JOE
				Then I'm getting on a yacht
				and sailing to the South
				Pacific.

				MARSHALL Hawaii?

						  JOE
				No.  A really unknown little
				island.

						  MARSHALL
				No tourists?

						  JOE
				I don't think so.

						  MARSHALL
				Good.

						  JOE
				Then I'll be on the island for
				a couple of weeks, then that's
				it.
					
						  MARSHALL
				And what do you got in the way
				of clothes now?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			  32.

23	CONTINUED:  (4)								   23

						  JOE
				Well, I've got the kind of
				clothes I'm wearin'.

						  MARSHALL
				So you've got no clothes.
				We'll start with basics.
				We'll start with underwear.
				We'll start with Dunhill.

	  Marshall gets out of the car and heads back for the
	  driver's seat.

	  He thinks.  Marshall puts the car in gear and pulls away
	  from the curb.


24	EXT. DUNHILL - DAY								24

	  The white limo pulls up. Two dog bars bracket the
	  entrance to Dunhill with two big matching dogs, probably
	  great Danes, drinking at each of the dog bars.  The dogs
	  are held on leashes by a man in a business suit and a
	  woman in a pretty coat.


25	INT. WHITE LIMO - DAY							  25

	  Joe's getting ready to get out.

						  JOE
				So just socks and underwear?

						  MARSHALL
				Conservative underwear is the
				only way to go.  White cotton
				broadcloth boxers.  Silk
				shorts make you feel like a
				whore, so none of that.  But
				with the tee shirts, Egyptian
				cotton, all right?


						  JOE
				Alright.

	  Joe gets out of the car and goes in.


26	INT. DUNHILL - UNDERWEAR COUNTER - DAY				26

	  A conservative UNDERGARMENT SALESMAN is helping Joe.

						  UNDERGARMENT SALESMAN
				How many pairs of boxer shorts
				would you like, sir?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			  33.

26	CONTINUED:									   26

						  JOE
				How many does a man need?

	  The Salesman pauses, thinks and replies.

						  UNDERGARMENT
				SALESMAN Eight pairs.


27	EXT. DUNHILL - DAY								27

	  Marshall's leaning against the limo, reading a copy of
	  The Scientific American.

	  A WOMAN appears dressed as the Statue of Liberty.  She
	  looks at Marshall.  He returns the glance.  She has a tin
	  can in her hand.

						  MARSHALL
				What?

						  STATUE (WOMAN)
				How about a dollar for the way
				I look?

						  MARSHALL
				Shoot.  How 'bout a dollar for
				the way I look?

	  He gives her a dollar.

						  MARSHALL
				Yeah.

	  She exits.  Joe comes out of the store with a shopping
	  bag.  Marshall opens the door for him.

						  JOE
				They've got a changing room.
				I'm wearing the underwear.
		   
						  MARSHALL
				I knew that. I could see it on
				your face.


28	INT. LIMO - STILL AT CURB BY BROOKS - DAY			  28

						  MARSHALL
				What else you need?

						  JOE
				Ah, well, some kind of
				overcoat. I don't know, maybe
				like a English trench coat.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			  34.

28	CONTINUED:									   28

						  MARSHALL
				English trench coat?  That's
				foul weather wear, man.
				You're goin' west!

						  JOE
				What would you get?

						  MARSHALL
				You're a sexual man?

						  JOE
				Yeah?

						  MARSHALL
				Not that I mean to be crude,
				but I'm trying to express
				something.  Armani.  That's
				what you want.  And how 'bout
				a haircut?

						  JOE
				What's wrong with my hair?

						  MARSHALL
				I can't express it.  It looks
				like freedom without choice.
				It looks wrong.

	  While he's talking, he has picked up the car phone and
	  punched some numbers.  He speaks into the phone.

						  MARSHALL
				Salon Salon, please.

	  He breaks the connection and dials again.

						  MARSHALL
				Hi, gimme Cassie Cimorelli,
				please. Hello, Cassie?  It's
				Marshall, how you?  Good.
				Listen, I got somebody who
				needs you today, can you help
				me out?  2:30?  Great, good,
				thanks.

	  He hangs up.

						  MARSHALL
				We gotta get moving.

	  He puts the car in gear and pulls away.


29	EXT. GIORGIO ARMANI'S - DAY						 29

	  The white limo pulls up.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 35.

30	INT. LIMO - DAY								   30

						  JOE
				So what do I ask for?

						  MARSHALL
				This is too complicated.  I
				gotta come in with you.  If I
				getta ticket it can't be
				helped.


31	EXT. LIMO OUTSIDE ARMANI'S - DAY					 31

	  Joe and Marshall get out and go in.


32	INT. ARMANI'S - DAY							    32

	  Joe is standing on a fitting stool in a beautiful suit.
	  He's being ministered to by an ITALIAN TAILOR, as
	  Marshall supervises.  Marshall murmurs to the Tailor.

						  MARSHALL
				I still think the full break
				over the shoe is the way to
				go.

						  TAILOR
				No more than half this year, I
				swear to you.
					  (to Joe)
				You can take it off now, sir.

	  Points the way to Joe and walks off.

						  MARSHALL
				Hey, Joe, how about a tux?

						  JOE
				What for?

						  MARSHALL
				Something'll come up.  There's
				nothing a man looks better in.

						  JOE
				I'll get one if you get one.

						  MARSHALL
				I can't be buying no Armani
				tux. I'm a working man.

						  JOE
				You're getting paid to drive
				the car.  Nobody's paying you
				to give me all this advice.
				Let me buy you the tux and
				we'll call it even.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			 35A.

32	CONTINUED:									   32

	  Marshall thinks it over.


33	INT. ARMANI'S - TEN MINUTES LATER - DAY			    33

	  Marshall is standing on the fitting stool in an Armani
	  tuxedo. The Tailor is doing his cuffs.

						  MARSHALL
				Gimme the full break over the
				shoe, Pietro.  It's my
				preference.

						  TAILOR
				Whatever's your pleasure, sir.


34	EXT. ARMANI AT CURB - JOE AND MARSHALL - DAY		    34

	  emerge.  Marshall opens the door to the limo for Joe and
	  urges him to speed it up.

						  MARSHALL
				Come on, kid!  We're on a
				roll!
					  (as he walks around to
					  the driver's side)
				Didn't even get a ticket.

	  Marshall gets in, starts it up, and pulls away.


35	EXT. HORN OF AFRICA - LIMO OUTSIDE - DAY			   35

	  Two Tiki heads bracket either side of the entrance.


36	INT. THE HORN OF AFRICA - DAY					    36

	  Joe is trying on a safari jacket.  Two salesmen stand by.
	  Joe nods.  Now one of the salesmen puts a particularly
	  dashing safari hat on Joe.  He looks in a mirror.  He
	  really, really likes it.


37	INT. SALON SALON - DAY							 37

	  It's a large, bustling beauty center in midtown.  There
	  must be fifteen hairdressers spread out over a spacious,
	  well-windowed area.  It's a festive place with glossy

	  magazines and coffee and water running and blow dryers
	  going.  Happy BRAZILIAN MUSIC is playing on the sound
	  system.  Now we zero in on Cassie's corner.  CASSIE is in
	  her thirties, with a short fetching up-to-the-minute
	  haircut.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			  36.

37	CONTINUED:									   37

	  She's also got a terrific personality; she's the salt of
	  the earth.  And she's cutting Joe's hair.  Marshall sits
	  on a nearby chair.  He's reading B, a trendy magazine.

						  JOE

				How you making me look?

						  CASSIE
				I'm undoing this cut from
				before. This is some piece of
				geography. Where'd you get
				this?

						  JOE
				In one of those subway barber
				shops.

						  CASSIE
				It has that reality.  Grim.
				You're a very handsome guy,
				I'm just gonna bring that out.
				Marshall, which one is that?

						  MARSHALL
				It's the in and out issue.

						  CASSIE
				That's the best!  What's in?

						  MARSHALL
				Carrie Fisher, Barcelona,
				African-Americans, happy
				endings, The New York Dally
				News, tomato salads, God,
				garlic, wristwatches you have
				to wind up, and true love.

						  CASSIE
				Did you say Carrie Fisher?

						  MARSHALL
				You don't like Carrie Fisher?

						  CASSIE
				I love Carrie Fisher!  I can't
				believe it!  So intelligent!
				So dry!  That's a totally
				great list. What's out?  Read
				it slow.

						  MARSHALL
				Kafka, C.D.'s.

						  CASSIE
				That's true.  I've had it with
				Kafka.  Those little eyes...so
				full of misery.
		   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			  37.

37	CONTINUED:  (2)								   37

						  MARSHALL
				Stand-up comedy...

						  CASSIE
				Stand-up comedy makes me
				nervous.
					
						  MARSHALL
				All restaurants that haven't
				been in existence for at least
				thirty years.

						  CASSIE
				Yes.

						  MARSHALL
				Paloma Picasso.

						  CASSIE
				No, I don't agree with that.
				I love Paloma Picasso.  Those
				lips! So red, so big!

						  MARSHALL
				New money and old money.

						  CASSIE
				Okay.
					
						  MARSHALL
				All camp, all trash, all
				trivia...
					
						  CASSIE
				Oh com'on, take a risk.

						  MARSHALL
				And The New York Times.

						  CASSIE
				Finally somebody said it!
				What rag!

	  Cassie finishes cutting Joe's hair.  It's a great cut.

						  CASSIE
				Very gratifying.  Thank you,
				Marshall.  Well, here you are.

						  JOE
				I look good.

						  MARSHALL
				You're coming into focus, kid!
				I can see you now.

	  Marshall nods approval.  Cassie and Joe exchange a smile.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			 37A.

38	OMITTED										 38


39	EXT. HAMMACHER SCHLEMMER - DAY					   39

	  The limo pulls up.  Joe goes in. Marshall stays in the
	  car.


40	INT. HAMMACHER SCHLEMMER - DAY					   40

	  ANGLE ON the indoor golfing practice green.  Joe putts a
	  golf ball into the hole.

						  JOE
				I'll take it.

						  SALESWOMAN
				Yes, sir.

	  Joe walks OUT OF FRAME. CLOSEUP PAN ACROSS the glass
	  counter top of a Swiss army knife, a world band travel
	  radio, shaving kit, lantern and a violin case that
	  doubles as a bar; until we COME TO a large light colored
	  umbrella which is pointed AT us.  The umbrella closes,
	  revealing Joe.

						  JOE
				I'll take this, too.

						  HAMMACHER SCHLEMMER SALESMAN
				Will that be all?

	  Joe walks away.

										    CUT TO:
40A    PICTURE CUT-OUT								  40A

	  of a woman demonstrating the walk on water shoes.  Joe
	  approaches.  The SALESWOMAN appears as well.  Joe is
	  really looking at the shoes.

						  SALESWOMAN
				Does that interest your

						  JOE
				You mean you can walk on
				water?

						  SALESWOMAN
				With a little help.  Yes.

						  JOE
				I'll take a pair.


										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/7/89			 37B.

40A    CONTINUED:									  40A

						  SALESWOMAN
				Alright.  Very good, sir.
				Thank you.

						  JOE
				Thank YOU.


41	INT. WHITE LIMO IN FRONT OF ARMANI - DAY			   41

	  Two uniformed attendants from Armani are handing the last
	  of the boxes to Joe, who's now sitting in front with
	  Marshall.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 38.

41	CONTINUED:									   41

	  The back of the car is completely loaded with stuff.  The
	  attendants head back to the entrance where they stand at
	  parade rest on either side of the door.  Joe calls after.

						  JOE
				Thanks!

	  Marshall pulls away from the curb.

						  MARSHALL
				You know what you need?

						  JOE
				What else could I need?

						  MARSHALL
				How you gonna carry this
				stuff? You need luggage!

						  JOE
				I didn't think of that.


42	INT. SMALL EXCLUSIVE LUGGAGE STORE (J. RUSS) - DAY	   42

	  It's as quiet as a church.  A few pieces of extremely
	  high quality leather luggage are on display.  The
	  SALESMAN, a small neat man in a quiet suit, is the
	  store's representative.  He's talking with Joe.  He's a
	  very serious, understated man.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				Have you thought much about
				luggage, Mr. Banks?

						  JOE
				No, I never really have.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				It's the central preoccupation
				of my life.  You travel the
				world, you're away from home,
				perhaps away from your family,
				all you have to depend on is
				yourself and your luggage.

						  JOE
				I guess that's true.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				Are you traveling light or heavy?

						  JOE
				Heavy.
											   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 39.

42	CONTINUED:									   42

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				Flying?

						  JOE
				Flying.  And by ship.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				An ocean voyage?

						  JOE
				Yes.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				Ah.  Yes.  So.  A real
				journey.

						  JOE
				And then I'll be staying on
				this island, I don't even
				really know if I'll be living
				in a hut or what.

						  LUGGAGE
				SALESMAN Very exciting.

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				As a luggage problem.  I
				believe I have just the thing.

	  The Luggage Salesman rolls out an absolutely gorgeous
	  steamer trunk of dark, wine-colored leather and brass
	  fittings.

						  JOE
				Wow.

	  The Luggage Salesman opens it. It has hangers, drawers, a
	  mirror, the works.

						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				This is our premier steamer
				trunk.  All handmade, only the
				finest materials.  It's even
				water-tight, tight as a drum.
				If I had the need and the
				wherewithal, Mr. Banks, this
				would be my trunk of choice. I
				could face the world with a
				trunk like this by my side.

	  Joe is moved.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  40.

42	CONTINUED:  (2)								   42

						  JOE
				I'll take four of them.

	  This is the classiest thing the Luggage Salesman's ever
	  heard.
		   
						  LUGGAGE SALESMAN
				May you live to be a thousand
				years old, sir.

	  Not normally a demonstrative man, he slowly raises hand,
	  offering it to Joe.  Joe takes it and they shake.


43	EXT. STREET OUTSIDE LUGGAGE STORE - DAY			    43

	  Marshall and Joe have just finished securing the four
	  trunks to the top of the white limo.  They get in the
	  car.


44	INT. LIMO - DAY								   44

	  Marshall starts it up.

						  JOE
				I'm through shopping.

						  MARSHALL
				Fair enough.  Where to? Back
				to Staten Island?
		   
						  JOE
				Yeah, I guess so.  No.  A
				really good hotel.  The Plaza?

						  MARSHALL
				The Plaza's nice.

						  JOE
				Where would you go?

						  MARSHALL
					  (lighting up)
				The Pierre!
		   
		   
45	EXT. THE PIERRE HOTEL - DUSK						45

	  Seven bellboys and girls are unloading the white limo and
	  carrying its contents into the hotel.  They wear classic
	  bellboy uniforms and caps.  Marshall and Joe are
	  watching.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 41.

45	CONTINUED:									   45

						  JOE
				Marshall?

						  MARSHALL
				Yeah?

						  JOE
				I wonder if you'd want to have
				dinner with me tonight?

						  MARSHALL
				Can't do it.  I got my wife
				and kids at the end of the
				day, you know?

						  JOE
				Yeah.

	  The HEAD BELLMAN informs Joe.

						  HEAD BELLMAN
				Everything's at check-in when
				you're ready, sir.

	  The Bellman departs within.

						  MARSHALL
				Listen, ain't you got nobody?

						  JOE
				No.  But there are certain
				times in your life when I
				guess you're not supposed to
				have anybody, you know?  There
				are certain doors you have to
				go through alone.

						  MARSHALL
				You're gonna be Alright.

	  Joe shrugs.  He and Marshall shake hands.  They look at
	  each other.  We see Marshall get in the limo and pull
	  away.  We see Joe look after him, then turn and go into
	  the hotel.

	  MUSIC:

	  A instrumental jazz version of "Do You Know The Way To
	  San Jose" plays through the following scenes.


46	INT. SUITE IN THE PIERRE HOTEL - NIGHT				46

	  Joe has one of his trunks open.  He's hanging his tuxedo
	  up in it.  He's been taking stuff out of boxes and
	  packing it into the trunks.  He opens another box and
	  takes out his new suit.  The MUSIC CONTINUES through the
	  next.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  42.

47	INT. MAIN RESTAURANT IN THE PIERRE HOTEL - NIGHT		47

	  This is an incredibly beautiful, quiet restaurant.  Joe's
	  discovered, sitting alone at a table. The Pierre waiter
	  is just walking away.  Joe's sipping a glass of wine, his
	  entree before him.  The MUSIC CONTINUES through next.


48	EXT. CENTRAL PARK SOUTH - JOE - NIGHT				 48

	  Walking along.  As he approaches The Plaza, two cabs pull
	  up and eight theatregoers from out of town disembark.
	  They are all middle-aged, wearing their best clothes,
	  having a good time.  They cross in front of Joe on their
	  way into the hotel.  He watches them go by and disappear.
	  It makes him smile and it makes him feel alone.  He goes
	  on.  The MUSIC CONTINUES through next.


49	EXT. DEPARTMENT STORE WINDOW - NIGHT				  49

	  Joe walks by and stops, struck by the contents of the win
	  dow.  It's a female dummy, dressed as Patricia will be on
	  the yacht.  Behind the dummy is a photo mural of the
	  yacht.


50	INT. TUESDAY'S (JAZZ BAR) - NIGHT					50

	  We've arrived at the place where the music is coming
	  from.  Joe sits at a little table listening to a good
	  jazz quartet.  They are a pasty-faced English quartet.
	  Everyone in the club is black except Joe, the bartender
	  and the band, which is playing "Do You Know The Way to
	  San Jose."  Everyone is drinking martinis.  They form a
	  straight line down the bar each with a giant green olive
	  in it.  Joe finishes a martini and waves for the check.
	  The MUSIC CONTINUES through the next.


51	EXT. FIFTH AVENUE - 30 FEET FROM THE PIERRE - NIGHT		  51

	  Joe, weaving ever so slightly, walks up the street and
	  approaches the hotel.  The MUSIC CONCLUDES.


52	INT. THE PIERRE HOTEL - JOE'S SUITE - NIGHT			52

	  The lights are out.  Joe's in bed, staring at the
	  ceiling.  We look DOWN on him.  It's very, very silent.
	  Finally, he closes his eyes and turns his head.


53	EXT. AMERICAN AIRLINE IN FLIGHT - DAY				 53
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			42A.

54	INT. AMERICAN FLIGHT - FIRST CLASS CABIN - DAY		  54

	  In the flight to L.A.  Joe is sitting on the aisle.  Next
	  to him is a grey-haired, wholesome priest named FATHER
	  CONROY.  The clergyman is most way through a drink,
	  wrapped up in his own thoughts.  Joe is deeply aware that
	  he's sitting next to a priest; he's uneasy, shifting in
	  his chair.  The STEWARDESS notices Joe and approaches.

						  STEWARDESS
				Can I get you anything, sir?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			 43.

54	CONTINUED:									   54

						  JOE
				No, thank you.  No, I changed
				my mind.  Some club soda,
				please.

						  STEWARDESS
				Alright.

	  Father Conroy catches her eye and slightly raises his
	  almost empty drink.

						  FATHER CONROY
				I think I'll have one more.

						  STEWARDESS
				Alright.

	  The Stewardess heads off, down the aisle.  Joe catches
	  the priest's eye.

						  JOE
				Have you ever been to
				California before?

						  FATHER CONROY
				Oh, many times.

						  JOE
				I've never been anywhere.

						  FATHER CONROY
				I was a chaplain there, years
				ago.  For the Marines.  Camp
				Pendleton.

						  JOE
				I don't believe in God

						  FATHER CONROY
				Okay.

						  JOE
				I did when I was a kid, but I
				lost my faith in high school.

						  FATHER CONROY
				Uh-huh.

						  JOE
				And then, when I was in danger
				- I was a fireman - in the
				middle of the fire, I never
				like turned around and fell to
				my knees and started praying.

										    (CONTINUED)
												44.

54	CONTINUED:  (2)								   54

						  FATHER CONROY
				No?

						  JOE
				No.  There are atheists in
				foxholes.

						  FATHER CONVOY
				I'm sure there are.

						  JOE
				But I've come to a place in my
				life where I've come face to
				face with the facts of life
				and death. I mean, it's a
				chance happening I'm alive,
				it's a miracle, I'm so lucky!
				And it's not going to last.
				It's like a shooting star. So
				beautiful, so fleeting, make a
				wish before it's gone, you
				know? I'm so moved.  But cut
				off.  If there is a God, if
				there is some kind of music
				going through everything, I
				can't hear it.  I'm alone.  I
				really feel I'm alone. I'm
				walking down this little path
				by myself.

						  FATHER CONROY
				Yes.

						  JOE
				Can you help me?

	  The Stewardess has returned with their drinks.

						  STEWARDESS
				Hi.  I have your drinks.

						  JOE
				Oh, yeah.  Thank you.

	  She serves the priest a little bottle of bourbon and a
	  glass of ice.  He gives her his old glass.

						  FATHER CONROY
				Thank you.

	  Joe is still focussed on Father Conroy.  The good Father
	  carefully pours the little bottle of bourbon over the
	  ice.  Joe is very intense.

						  JOE
				Can you help me?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  45.

54	CONTINUED:  (3)								   54

						  FATHER CONROY
				Do you see an analyst of some
				kind?

						  JOE
				I don't need an analyst.
				That's not the kind of problem
				I have.

	  Inspirational light shines through the cabin window.

						  FATHER CONROY
				If you need a guide.  If
				you're a seeker and you need a
				guide, someone to counsel you
				so you can find your way
				forward into a spiritual
				realm.  And you're on an
				airplane.  Don't look in first
				class.

	  Father Conroy raises his glass of bourbon in a little
	  toast to Joe, and then takes a healthy swallow.


55	EXT. L.A. AIRPORT - RUNWAY - DAY					 55

	  The American flight lands.


56	INT. L.A. AIRPORT TERMINAL - DAY					 56

	  Joe and his fellow travellers are just entering the
	  terminal proper.  A commercial airplane presses its nose
	  inquisitively against a visible window.  It is surrounded
	  by orange trees.  Joe is surrounded by blond California
	  guys as he gets off the plane.  We see a homemade banner
	  "Welcome to L.A. St. Dymphna's Girls Academy."  Of the
	  six people waiting, five of them look like Brezhnev.  The
	  sixth is ANGELICA, she is holding aloft a sign which
	  reads "JOSEPH BANKS."  She looks like Dede.  Joe does a
	  take, he goes to her.  Several Catholic school girls run
	  by.

						  JOE
				Hi.

						  ANGELICA
				Hi, are you Joe Banks?

						  JOE
				Yeah.  Who are you?

						  ANGELICA
				I'm the daughter of the guy
				who hired you.  Angelica
				Graynamore.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  46.

56	CONTINUED:									   56

	  Joe shakes her hand.

						  JOE
				Nice to meet you.  Again.

						  ANGELICA
				What?

	  Joe shakes his head.

						  ANGELICA
				Daddy told me to tell you that
				I don't know what he hired you
				for, and not to tell me.  That
				I'm totally untrustworthy.
				I'm a flibberti-gibbet.
				C'mon, let's get outta here.

						  JOE
				I've got some luggage.


56A    OMITTED										56A
&													&
57												   57


58	EXT. TAXI FULL OF STEAMER TRUNKS - DAY				58

	  The taxi is going along a highway.  We LEAVE the taxi and
	  MOVE FORWARD TO a red convertible.  In the red
	  convertible are Angelica at the wheel, and Joe beside
	  her.  They are driving alongside the blue ocean.  Green
	  palm trees wave overhead.  All is beautiful and fresh.

						  JOE
				I've never been to L.A.
				before.

						  ANGELICA
				What do you think?

						  JOE
				It looks fake.  I like it.


59	EXT. SHANGRI-LA HOTEL - SUNSET					   59

	  The red convertible pulls up to the entrance and we hear
	  Angelica say:

						  ANGELICA (O.S.)
				Daddy wanted to put you up in
				Bel Air, but I said no way!
				Shangri-la, Shangri-la!
											   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			 46A.

59	CONTINUED:  (Al)								  59

	  The taxi pulls up behind them.  Angelica gets out of the
	  car and goes back to the cab.

										    (CONTINUED)

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 47.

59	CONTINUED:									   59

	  She gives the DRIVER money.

						  ANGELICA
				Thanks.  That's for you.  And
				put everything on the curb,
				please.

						  DRIVER
				Thank you.

	  Joe gets out of the convertible.  Two deco-porters emerge
	  from the hotel with luggage carriers, and assist the
	  Driver in transferring the trunks.  Angelica jumps back
	  in her car and calls to Joe.

						  ANGELICA
				Check in, fresh up, I'll be
				back for you at seven.  We'll
				have dinner.

	  Angelica drives off.  Joe looks after, then turns and
	  goes into the hotel.


60	INT. CHINOIS - NIGHT							   60

	  Fancy "fun" restaurant.  A big platter of Dungeness crabs
	  being carried through the restaurant.  It's placed on a
	  table where Joe and Angelica are sitting.  There are
	  already two other platters of exotic food on the table.
	  Now we see the waiter and waitress, a slick blond named
	  RALPH and a redheaded waitress named RITA.

						  RITA
				Black bread with sour cream
				and golden caviar.

						  RALPH
				The Dungeness crabs.

	  Joe looks at this dish with alarm. Ralph and Rita depart.

						  ANGELICA
				What's the matter?

						  JOE
				Nothing.

						  ANGELICA
				They do look like little
				monsters or something.
					  (picks one up and
					  attacks it)
				But they're good little
				monsters.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  48.

60	CONTINUED-									   60

	  Joe tentatively takes one, and small portions of the
	  other dishes.

						  ANGELICA
				What'd you do before you
				signed on with Daddy?

						  JOE
				I was an advertising librarian
				for a medical supply company.

						  ANGELICA
				Oh.  I have no response to
				that.

						  JOE
				What do you do?

						  ANGELICA
				Why do you ask?

						  JOE
				Uh, I don't know.

	  Angelica produces and takes two pills.  Suddenly, she
	  gets very defensive.

						  ANGELICA
				I'm a painter.  And a poet.

						  JOE
				Really?

						  ANGELICA
				Yes.  Does that bother you?

						  JOE
				No.

						  ANGELICA
				People from New York usually
				look down on painters.  And
				poets.

						  JOE
				I didn't know that.

						  ANGELICA
				They think if you live in
				L.A., and you say you're an
				artist, you really do nothing!

						  JOE
				Why?

						  ANGELICA
				You don't think I do nothing?
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			48A.

60	CONTINUED:  (1A)								  60

						  JOE
				No.

						  ANGELICA
				You believe me when I say I'm
				a painter?

						  JOE
				And a poet.  Sure.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			 49.

60	CONTINUED:  (2)								   60

						  ANGELICA
				Well, you're right.  There's a
				painting of mine right there.
									    CUT TO:
60A    PAINTING OF CAR								  60A

	  in a yellow pool of light overlooking a lit-up city
	  below.  And --

									    CUT BACK TO:
60B    JOE AND ANGELICA								 60B

	  looking.

						  JOE
				It's terrific.  Where you get
				your ideas?

						  ANGELICA
				I'll show you.

									    CUT BACK TO:
60C    PAINTING									    60C

									    DISSOLVES INTO:
61	EXT. HILL WITH STREETLIGHT - NIGHT				    61

	  The streetlight casts a pool of light just like in the
	  painting, and the city glitters below.  When Angelica's
	  car pulls into the pool of light and stops, the picture
	  is complete.

						  JOE
				Nice view.  It's like looking
				down at the stars.
					
	  Angelica takes two more pills.

						  ANGELICA
				Do you want to hear one of my
				poems?

						  JOE
				Sure.

						  ANGELICA
				Long ago, the delicate tangles
				of his hair, Covered the
				emptiness of my hands.
					  (to Joe)
				Do you wanna hear it again?

						  JOE
				Okay.

						  ANGELICA
				Long ago, the delicate tangles
				of his hair, Covered the
				emptiness of my hands.		 (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 50.

61	CONTINUED:									   61

	  She has tears in her eyes.  Joe looks at her, concerned.

						  JOE
				What's the matter?

						  ANGELICA
				Did you ever think about
				killing yourself?

						  JOE
				What?  Why would you do that?

						  ANGELICA
				Why shouldn't I?

						  JOE
				Some things take care of
				themselves.  They're not your
				job. Maybe they're not even
				your business.  I like your
				poem.

						  ANGELICA
				I'm a grown woman and I live
				on my father's money.  That
				restaurant that had my
				painting up, that's my
				father's restaurant.

						  JOE
				Why are you telling me?

						  ANGELICA
				I don't know.
					  (making a joke out of
					  it)
				I'll tell anybody who'll
				listen.
					  (dropping it)
				No, that's not true.  I don't
				know why I'm telling you.

						  JOE
				Listen to me.  If you have a
				choice between killing
				yourself and doing something
				you're scared of doing, why
				not take the leap and do the
				thing you're scared of doing?

						  ANGELICA
				You mean stop taking money and
				leave L.A.?

						  JOE
				You see?  You know what you're
				afraid of doing.  Why don't
				you do it?  See what happens?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  51.

61	CONTINUED:  (2)								   61

	  Inspired by him, she hesitates on the brink of courage.
	  For a moment she finds it and lifts her hands to say
	  "yes," but her courage fails her. She gets a chill.

						  ANGELICA
				You must be tired.

	  She starts up the car.

						  ANGELICA
				Thanks for listening, but I'm
				a little high, and you don't
				know me from Adam, I mean, I
				guess, Eve.  Anyway, forget
				it.

						  JOE
				I don't mind talking.

	  Suddenly, she's very angry.

						  ANGELICA
				Well, I do! This is one of
				those typical conversations
				where we're all open and
				sharing our innermost thoughts
				and it's all bullshit and a
				lie and it doesn't cost you
				anything!

						  JOE
				Look.  I don't know you.  I
				don't think I know anybody.
				You're angry.  I can see that.
					  (he quietly gets upset)
				I'm very troubled.  I'm not
				ready to... There's only so
				much time and you wanna use it
				well. So I'm here talking to
				you, I don't wanna throw that
				away. You seem...
		   
						  ANGELICA
				I seem what?

						  JOE
				You seem far away.

						  ANGELICA
				I have no response to that.

						  JOE
				Maybe you better take me back
				to the hotel.

	  His eyes are shining.  She looks at him.  She puts the
	  car in gear and pulls out.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 52.

62	EXT. SHANGRI-LA HOTEL - NIGHT					    62

	  The red convertible pulls up.  Joe gets out.

						  ANGELICA
				You want me to come in?  I
				could come up with you?

						  JOE
				No.

						  ANGELICA
				Alright.  Will you have
				breakfast with me?  I'm
				supposed to get you to the
				boat by ten, but I could meet
				you for breakfast.

						  JOE
				Okay.

						  ANGELICA
				I told you I was a
				flibbertigibbet.

	  She drives off.  Joe turns to go into the hotel, changes
	  his mind, and walks out into the street.  We FOLLOW him.
	  He dodges a lone car, and makes it to the other side
	  where the palm trees grow.


63	JOE - NIGHT									  63

	  Joe making his way through some greenery.  He parts some
	  tall grass, and we see what he sees --
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  53.

64	EXT. BEACH AND OCEAN - JOE'S POV - NIGHT			   64

	  A couple of stars vaguely twinkle overhead.  There's the
	  DULL BOOM of the SURF.


65	DOWN WHERE BEACH MEETS OCEAN - NIGHT				  65

	  Joe arrives at this spot and sits down in the sand.  He
	  looks out at the ocean, at the horizon, where the night
	  presses down on the water.  Time passes.  The sky gets
	  lighter.

	  MUSIC.

	  The VAGUE beginnings of something MAGICAL and very, very
	  big are heard.

	  A band of golden light hits Joe in the back of the head.
	  He turns around and it's in his eyes.  We see the fake
	  sun rising over a row of palm trees.  Just a touch of red
	  on the horizon.

	  The MAGICAL MUSIC CEASES.

	  But the sun continues to rise.  And rise.  Until it
	  clears the horizon and is a discreet orange-blue disk in
	  the morning sky.


66	INT. SUNNY RESTAURANT - DAY						 66

	  The sun turns into an orange-yellow yolk of a sunnyside-
	  up egg.  The CAMERA PULLS BACK.  Joe and Angelica are
	  eating breakfast.  Joe is dressed like Jungle Jim.

						  ANGELICA
				I'm so tired.  You take that
				stuff, it just ruins your
				sleep. I'm sorry I was so
				abusive, immature, hostile,
				and needy last night.

						  JOE
				You were fine.

						  ANGELICA
				I disappointed you.  So, what
				did Daddy hire you to do?

						  JOE
				It's real complicated.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  54.

66	CONTINUED:									   66

						  ANGELICA
				Okay. I don't even know where
				you're going on the boat.
				Patricia won't tell me.

						  JOE
				Who's Patricia?

						  ANGELICA
				She's my half-sister. She's
				the one who's sailing you
				wherever you're going.

						  JOE
				She is?

						  ANGELICA
				You didn't know?

						  JOE
				No.

						  ANGELICA
				Daddy loves a secret almost as
				much as he loves money.  Can I
				ask you something?

						  JOE
				What?

						  ANGELICA
				Why are you dressed like
				Jungle Jim?

						  JOE
				You think this is
				inappropriate? For the boat?

						  ANGELICA
				No, it's fine.  We'd better
				get going.  I gotta guy
				dropping your trunks off at
				the marina who may not have
				understood my travel
				directions.

	  They get up to go.


67	EXT. BIG MARINA - MANY BOATS LIKE RESTLESS HORSES - DAY	   67

	  At the end of a long narrow dock is a yacht about 7 feet
	  long.  It dwarfs all the other vessels.  We hear a CAR
	  DOOR SLAM and hear Angelica.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 55.

67	CONTINUED:  (AA1)								 67

						  ANGELICA (O.S.)
				Here we are.

	  Now we see Angelica and Joe approach the dock and start
	  walking down it.  We see them FROM the back and hear them
	  talking.

						  JOE
				Is that it?

						  ANGELICA
				Yeah.

						  JOE
				It's big.

	  They approach the yacht, which is called The Tweedle Dee.
	  It has on its hull a single arrogant eye that looks
	  haughtily at Joe.  On the dock by the yacht are the four
	  steamer trunks.  Sitting on a piling, staring balefully
	  at the trunks is a magnificent, athletic, truly feminine,
	  blonde, blue-eyed woman in her late twenties.  This is
	  PATRICIA.  On The Tweedle Dee two boat boys, MIKE and
	  TONY, ready the yacht for departure; they are young and
	  shining and strong.  Joe and Angelica arrive at the slip.
	  Patricia looks just like Dede and Angelica.  Joe does a
	  take.

						  JOE
					  (to Angelica)
				You say this is your half-
				sister?

						  ANGELICA
				Yeah.

						  PATRICIA
				What's the trunks, Felix?

						  JOE
				They're my... My name's not
				Felix, it's Joe.

						  PATRICIA
				I know.
					  (calling out)
				Mike!  Tony!  Find a place for
				these boxes.

	  Mike and Tony jump off the yacht and proceed to load the
	  trunks.

						  PATRICIA
				That outfit's wearing you,
				Felix.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. l/18/89			55A.

67	CONTINUED:  (Al)								  67

						  JOE
				Why are you calling me Felix?
				My name's Joe.

						  PATRICIA
				I'm calling you Felix because
				I do what I want.  Hello,
				Angelica.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  56.

67	CONTINUED:									   67

						  ANGELICA
				Hello, Patricia.

						  PATRICIA & ANGELICA
					  (simultaneously)
				Do you know where Daddy is?

						  PATRICIA (to Joe)
				We never know where our father
				is and we always suspect that
				the other one knows.  But it's
				all phone calls and telegrams,
				hey, Angelica?

						  ANGELICA
				Well, you're in a rotten mood.

						  PATRICIA
				It's the sunshine.  It gets me
				down.

	  The boat boys have finished bringing aboard the last
	  trunk.

						  ANGELICA
				Where are you going?

						  PATRICIA
				Can you believe it?  Dad said
				not to tell you.  Goes with my
				theory. Power makes you
				paranoid.

	  Mike calls out from the yacht.

						  MIKE
				All set.

	  Patricia hops off the piling.

						  PATRICIA
				Well, get ready to heave,
				Felix.
					
	  Joe gets angry.

						  JOE
				My name is Joseph or Joe.
		   
	  Patricia deflates a bit.

						  PATRICIA
				Alright.  Joe.  Get ready.
				We're leaving.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 57.

67	CONTINUED:  (2)								   67

	  Joe turns to Angelica and speaks to her privately.

						  JOE
				'Bye.

						  ANGELICA
				'Bye.

						  JOE
				Listen.  Don't take drugs.

						  ANGELICA
				Okay.

						  JOE
				Wish me luck.

						  ANGELICA
				Good luck.

					
	  He takes her hand and gives her a little kiss on the
	  cheek.  She notes his hand.  She's puzzled.

						  ANGELICA
				You're shaking.

	  He smiles, examining his hand.

						  JOE
				Am I?  A little.
					  (looks at the land in
					  the distance behind
					  her)
				Yeah.

	  He runs up the gangway.  Patricia has already boarded the
	  boat.  The boat boys are casting off.  Patricia takes the
	  wheel.  But we are still WITH Angelica on the dock.  She
	  stands there.  Slowly, as the yacht pulls away, she
	  waves. Joe stands at the railing, the sails still furled
	  behind him.  He waves back.

	  Now we are WITH Joe on the yacht, at the railing.  He
	  waves a little, and then his eyes rove the shore.


68	JOE'S POV - SHORE - DAY							68

	  Joe looks at the flag on the stern of The Tweedle Dee. He
	  looks up from the flag at his departing homeland.  A
	  ghost image of the flag follows his glance up so that he
	  sees the following through that image.  He sees Angelica
	  on the dock, and then the boats behind her, and then the
	  parking lot behind that.  And then the hills in the
	  distance off to his left.  And the rich people's houses
	  off to his right.
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89			 58.

68	CONTINUED:									   68

	  And cars on roads.  And a smokestack.  He sees all this
	  through the ghost image of that American flag.  He sees
	  his homeland.  Receding.  He's leaving his homeland.  He
	  will never see it again.  And now we see again:


69	JOE - AT RAIL - DAY							    69

	  Staring, moved, determined.  His clothes are a bit much,
	  but he almost fills them in this moment.  A wind comes up
	  and sweeps his safari hat off his head, into the ocean.
	  He flinches slightly at the loss.


70	HAT - DAY									    70

	  swirling away into the wake.  But now we see again:

71	JOE											71

	  And after a glance, he gives up the hat without regret.
	  He continues to look after the receding land.  Without
	  the hat he looks great.  His hair blows in the wind and
	  he stares and stares.

72	EXT. YACHT - FROM FEW HUNDRED YARDS AWAY - DAY		  72

	  The Tweedle Dee has cleared the harbor and the boat boys
	  have started unfurling the sails.  The huge, snowy sails
	  fill with a rich wind.

73	INT. YACHT - GALLEY - DAY						   73

	  The chef, a German named DAGMAR, is laying out lovely
	  nicoise salads. Tony awaits Dagmar's pleasure.

						  DAGMAR
				Have you put out the
				sunflowers, yet?

						  TONY
				Yeah.

						  DAGMAR
				Good! Go.

	  Tony picks up the salads and exits.

74	EXT. DINING TABLE - SUNSET						  74

	  Which is shaded by a canopy.  At the table sit Joe and
	  Patricia.  On the table are place settings, white wine,
	  and glasses.  Tony serves their plates and goes.

						  JOE
				Looks delicious.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		  58A/59.

74	CONTINUED:									   74

						  PATRICIA
				We eat well aboard The Tweedle
				Dee.

						  JOE
				The Tweedle Dee?

						  PATRICIA
				That's the name of this boat.

						  JOE
				Oh.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  60.

74	CONTINUED:  (2)								   74

						  PATRICIA
				So we're going to the island
				of Waponi Woo.

						  JOE
				I guess so.

						  PATRICIA
				Why?

						  JOE
				You don't know?

						  PATRICIA
				No.

						  JOE
				Have you ever been there?

						  PATRICIA
				No.  All I know about Waponi
				Woo is that the name means
				'the little island with the
				big volcano,' and that the
				people, the Waponis, like
				orange soda.

						  JOE
				They like orange soda.

						  PATRICIA
					  (produces a book called
					  History of Polynesia)
				Yeah.  But here!  I've got a
				book. 'Eighteen hundred years
				ago, a Roman galley with a
				crew of Jews and Druids, got
				caught in a huge storm off
				Carthage.  They were swept a
				thousand miles off course, and
				ended up on the wrong side of
				the horn of Africa.  Thinking

				they were returning to Rome,
				they sailed deep into the
				South Pacific, and finally
				ended by colonizing a lightly
				populated, Polynesian island

				which they named Waponi Woo.
				Thus was born the Waponi
				culture - a mixture of
				Polynesian, Celtic, Hebrew and
				Latin influences.  The Waponis
				are known throughout Polynesia
				as having a peculiar love of
				orange soda and no sense of
				direction.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 3/13/89			60A.

74	CONTINUED:  (2A)								  74

						  JOE
				Why'd you talk to me so snotty
				back on the dock?

						  PATRICIA
				Because you work for my
				father. And I'm angry with my
				father.  But he's not around
				to give him a shot.  So you
				work for him, I give you a
				shot.

						  JOE
				Why you angry with him?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 1/15/89			 61.

74	CONTINUED:  (3)								   74

						  PATRICIA
				Because he's never around.

						  JOE
				If you're angry with him, and
				he's never around, why are you
				working for him?

						  PATRICIA
				I don't work for him.  My
				transport of you is strictly a
				favor.

						  JOE
				You do favors for people
				you're mad at?

						  PATRICIA
				I don't work for him!
					
						  JOE
				Alright.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  62.

74	CONTINUED:  (4)								   74

						  PATRICIA
				He said he'd give me this boat
				if I took you.

						  JOE
				Wow.

						  PATRICIA
					  (defensive)
				He's got two of them.  This is
				The Tweedle Dee.  There's a
				Tweedle Dum, too.

	  She gets up.  She's flustered.

						  PATRICIA
				I've got the wheel tied up,
				which is not good sailing.
				Excuse me.

	  She goes toward the stern.  Joe is left alone to finish
	  his supper.


75	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - DAY						  75

	  is cutting through the blue.  The sun is setting.


76	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - NIGHT						76

	  is anchored and lit up.  It's a dark and starless night.


77	INT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - CABINS - NIGHT				 77

	  Patricia is showing Joe his berth.  The whole interior of
	  the boat is made of beautiful wood.

						  PATRICIA
				Is this okay for you?

						  JOE
				Sure.


						  PATRICIA
				The boys like to sleep in the
				hull.  Dagmar sleeps on deck
				when the weather's good.  So
				you've pretty much got things
				to yourself. I'm in the little
				stateroom.

						  JOE
				Great.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 3/23/89			 63.

77	CONTINUED:									   77

	  But Patricia lingers.

						  PATRICIA
				I'm sorry I was so rude on the
				dock.

						  JOE
				That's okay.

	  She finished, but again she lingers, awkward.  Finally,
	  she blurts out.

						  PATRICIA
				Did you sleep with my sister?

						  JOE
				No.

						  PATRICIA
				Actually, she's my half-
				sister.

						  JOE
				No, I didn't.

						  PATRICIA
				Okay.
					  (again awkward)
				Do you like to fish?

						  JOE
				Sure.

						  PATRICIA
				Maybe tomorrow we'll do some
				fishing.

	  She goes to the entranceway and fingers a switch on the
	  wall.

						  PATRICIA
				This is the light switch.  Did
				Mike show you how to work the
				bathroom?

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  PATRICIA
				Good.  Do you want me to turn
				off the light while I'm going?


						  JOE
				Okay.

										  (CONTINUED)
												64.

77	CONTINUED:  (2)								   77

	  She turns off the light.  Only the light from the
	  entranceway illuminates her now, and Joe is not visible.

						  PATRICIA
				I love my sister.  I know
				she's screwed up.  I love my
				father, even though I never
				see him and he's not so great
				when I do see him.  I'm very
				nervous about this trip.  My
				father didn't tell me anything
				and you don't seem to be
				telling me anything.  But it's
				more than that.  I've always
				kept clear of my father's
				stuff since I got out on my
				own.  Now he's pulled me back
				in.  He knew I wanted this
				boat and he used it and he got
				me working for him, which I
				swore I would never do. I feel
				ashamed because I had a price.
				He named it.  And now I know
				that about myself.  I don't
				know who you are.  I don't
				know anything about you.  But
				you're working for him, too,
				and that makes us two of a
				kind. I could treat you like I
				did back on the dock, but that
				would be me kicking myself for
				selling out.  Which isn't fair
				to you and doesn't make me
				feel any better. I don't know
				what your situation is.  But I
				wanted you to know what mine
				is.  Not just to explain some
				rude behavior.  But because
				we're on a little boat for a
				while and I'm soul sick and
				you're gonna see that.  Like
				my sister.  She's soul sick,
				too.  And if you'd slept with
				her I would've known something
				about you.  But you didn't.
				You didn't.  I believe you.

						  JOE
				I'm glad you believe me.

						  PATRICIA
				Have you ever slept on a boat
				before?

						  JOE
				No.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  65.

77	CONTINUED:  (3)								   77

						  PATRICIA
				It really affects your dreams.
				I look forward to it.  Even
				though, sometimes, the dreams
				really shake me up.  Okay.
				Good night.

						  JOE
				Good night.
					
	  She departs through the entrance way.  The light goes
	  out, and it's dark and quiet.


78	EXT. STERN OF THE TWEEDLE DEE - DAY				   78

	  It's a really beautiful sunny day.  Tony is at the wheel,
	  the sails are full and, sitting in two chairs hard by the
	  stern are Joe and Patricia.  They both are holding deep
	  sea fishing rods; they're trolling.

	  MUSIC.

	  "The Girl From Ipanema," the famous recording by Getz and
	  Gilberto, is playing now.

	  Patricia reels in her line.  A beautiful fish is flapping
	  on the end of it.  Joe reels in his line.  Nothing.  He
	  watches as Patricia unhooks her catch and tosses it in a
	  hamper.  Dagmar appears, looks in the hamper, and nods
	  approvingly.  Then she looks at Joe.  Where's Joe's fish?
	  Then he walks away again.  Joe casts again, while
	  Patricia rebates her hook.  Then Patricia casts again.
	  Mike arrives with a beer for Patricia, who accepts it.
	  Mike leaves.  Patricia gets another strike, asks Joe to
	  hold her beer, which he does.  She reels in another
	  beautiful fish.  She unhooks it and throws it in the
	  hamper.  Dagmar appears, looks in the hamper, nods
	  approvingly, and then looks at Joe.  Where's Joe's fish?
	  Joe looks at Dagmar, and then ignores her. Dagmar
	  departs.  Joe goes back to fishing.  Now Joe gets a
	  strike.  It's a big one!  The line goes burning out his
	  reel.  Patricia notices.  She offers to help him.  He
	  waves her off.  Dagmar appears.  She offers some advice.
	  But Joe's completely focused on his rod.  The rod, which
	  is substantial, starts to bend.  Mike comes back to
	  watch.  The rod is almost bent double.  Then it goes
	  madly to the left.  Offers of help are made, but Joe
	  shouts them back.  Then the rod goes madly to the right.
	  Dagmar runs OUT OF VIEW, and reappears with an enormous
	  gaff, which she brandishes excitedly.  A sudden powerful
	  tug almost pulls Joe off the back of the boat, but Mike
	  grabs him just in time.  Joe is a man possessed.  He
	  reels and pulls with superhuman determination.  Without
	  warning, a huge head, the head of a hammerhead shark,
	  appears at the stern.  Its eyes turn inboard and look at
	  Joe.  Everybody drops everything and runs away.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 66.

79	EXT. DINING TABLE - TWILIGHT						79

	  The sun has just sunk beneath the horizon's rim so
	  there's still all that sun setting light in the sky.  The
	  first evening star has appeared.  Joe and Patricia are
	  the last left at the dinner's end.  The bones of the fish
	  Patricia caught earlier are on a platter at the table's
	  center. Mike appears and removes the platter and a couple
	  of stray plates, and disappears into the galley.  There
	  are balloon glasses by Joe and Patricia's places and, by
	  Patricia, a bottle of cognac.

						  PATRICIA
				Do you like cognac?

						  JOE
				Cognac?

						  PATRICIA
				Yeah.

						  JOE
				I guess so.

						  PATRICIA
				I make a point of not knowing
				about certain things.  One of
				them's cognac. I like cognac.
				But I don't want the accepted
				wisdom about cognac, you know
				what I mean?  I mean I want
				glimpses of the myth about it.
				You see people drink it out of
				these big glasses, and
				smelling it forever.  That's
				interesting to me, that sight
				of them doing that. But I
				don't want them to talk to me
				about it, you know what I
				mean?  I want to figure it out
				based on what I've seen from
				other people, and what I
				personally get from it.

	  She opens the bottle and pours them both some.

						  PATRICIA
				So this is what I've got.  So
				far. To say about this:  Most
				cognac is French.  It's very
				volatile. Like gasoline or
				model airplane glue.  And when
				you taste it, in my opinion,
				it tastes like gasoline or
				model airplane glue. That's
				because it's for smelling
				really.  And I figure that's
				because the French,
				physically, tend to have big
				noses.  They get the pleasure
				of the cognac through the
				nose.
					    (MORE)
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 67.

79	CONTINUED:									   79

						  PATRICIA (CONT'D)
				You could really just smell it
				and pour it down the sink.
				But this isn't French cognac.
				This is Italian cognac.  It's
				probably generally considered
				inferior.  But the news is, it
				tastes good.  Maybe it doesn't
				smell as good -- it smells
				okay - but it tastes good.
				And when I came to that fork
				in the road, between the nose
				and the tongue, I chose the
				tongue.  So, here's to the
				tongue.
	  They toast.

						  JOE
				To the tongue.
	  They drink a little.

						  JOE
				It's good.  Don't the Italians
				have big noses, too?

						  PATRICIA
				Yeah.  And that really messes
				up my theory.


80	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - NIGHT (HOUR AND A HALF LATER)		 80

	  We see it bobbing gently on the sea.  Many stars are
	  coming out, some waxing quite bright.  A half moon, pale
	  and small, hangs in the western sky.


81	EXT. DINING TABLE ABOARD BOAT - NIGHT				 81

	  Joe and Patricia have been talking and sipping cognac for
	  an hour and a half.  Patricia is quite mellow, as is Joe.

						  PATRICIA
				So my understanding, as far as
				I understand it, is I'm
				leaving you on this island.

						  JOE
				That's right.

						  PATRICIA
				How long are you going to stay
				there?
											   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			67A.

81	CONTINUED:  (Al)								  81

						  JOE
				For the rest of my life.

						  PATRICIA
				Really.

										    (CONTINUED)
												68.

81	CONTINUED:									   81

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  PATRICIA
				I can't imagine that.

						  JOE
				I couldn't have imagined any
				of this.

	  He looks at the stars.

						  JOE
				Are you used to this?

						  PATRICIA
				What?

						  JOE
				The ocean, the stars.

						  PATRICIA
				You never get used to it.  Why
				do you think I want this boat?
				All I want to do is sail away.

						  JOE
				Where would you go

						  PATRICIA
				Away from the things of man.

						  JOE
				Do you believe in God?

						  PATRICIA
				I believe in myself.

						  JOE
				What's that mean?

						  PATRICIA
				I have confidence in myself.

						  JOE
				I've done a lot of soul
				searching lately.  I've been
				asking myself some tough
				questions.  You know what I've
				found out?

						  PATRICIA
				What?

										    (CONTINUED)
												69.

81	CONTINUED:  (2)								   81

						  JOE
				I have no interest in myself.
				I think about myself, I get
				bored out of my mind.

						  PATRICIA
				What does interest you?

						  JOE
				I don't know.  Courage.
				Courage interests me.

						  PATRICIA
				You're going to spend the rest
				of your life on a tiny island
				in the South Pacific?

	  She pours them both a drink.

						  JOE
				Well, up till now I've lived
				on a tiny island called Staten
				Island, and I've commuted to a
				job in a shut up room with
				pumped in air, no sunshine,
				despicable people, and now
				that I've got some distance
				from that situation, that
				seems pretty unbelievable.
				Your life seems unbelievable
				to me.  All this like life,
				seems unbelievable to me.
				Somewhat.  At this moment.

						  PATRICIA
				My father says almost the
				whole world's asleep.
				Everybody you know, everybody
				you see, everybody you talk
				to.  He says only a few people
				are awake.  And they live in a
				state of constant total
				amazement.

	  They think about that for a while.

						  JOE
				I have less than six months to
				live.  The Waponis believe
				they need a human sacrifice or
				their island's going to sink
				into the ocean.  They have a
				mineral your father wants.
				He's hired me to jump in their
				volcano.

						  PATRICIA
				What?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89			 70.

81	CONTINUED:  (3)								   81

						  JOE
				You're not going to make me
				say that again, are you?

						  PATRICIA
				No.

	  A silence falls.

						  JOE
				Aren't you going to say
				anything?

						  PATRICIA
				I don't know what to say.  You
				tell me you're dying, you tell
				me you're jumping into a
				volcano, my mind is a blank.

						  JOE
				I can understand that

						  PATRICIA
				Is this disease catching?

						  JOE
				No.

	  She gets up.  As she leaves she says:

						  PATRICIA
				Good night.  I'll see you in
				the morning.


82	INT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - SLEEPING BERTHS - NIGHT		  82

	  Joe enters, undresses to his new underwear, and climbs
	  into the berth.  Then he remembers the light, gets up,
	  turns it off, and climbs back into his berth.  It's dark.
	  We see his face.  He thinks for a moment, and then goes
	  to sleep.  And he has a dream.


82A    DREAM SEQUENCE								   82A

	  In utter darkness we hear Joe describe his dream.

						  JOE (V.O.)
				So I fell asleep and I had
				this dream.  I dreamed I was a
				cowboy in the wilderness.  I
				dreamed I was a cowboy and I
				saved this girl...

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89			 71.

82A    CONTINUED:									  82A

	  Everything goes dead black.  There is the sound of WIND.
	  Then Joe's face suddenly lifts up out of the dream into a
	  CLOSEUP.  Startled, he bangs his head.  He has awakened
	  from his dream.

	  END OF DREAM SEQUENCE


83	OMITTED										 83
&													&
84												   84


85	INT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - JOE IN HIS BERTH - DAY		   85

	  It's the morning, though you can't see that in here. The
	  boat is rocking Joe around in his berth.  He looks
	  around, bewildered.  He realizes he was dreaming.  Then
	  he realizes the boat is rocking a lot.  He starts to get
	  up.


86	INT.  GALLEY AREA - DAY							86

	  Patricia is trying to get the weather on the RADIO, but
	  there's nothing but STATIC.  She puts on a set of
	  headphones and adjusts the dial again; the radio is
	  silent now, only she can hear it.  Joe comes into the
	  galley, his hair still rumpled from sleeping on it

						  JOE
				Little weird today, huh?

	  Patricia waves for him to be quiet.  She listens at the
	  phones another moment, adjusting the dial.  She hears
	  something.  She's glad.  She listens.  Her face darkens.
	  She tears off the phones angrily.

	  Dagmar appears in the hatchway.  She greets Joe.

						  DAGMAR
				There's a typhoon warning.
				Good morning, Mister Banks.

						  JOE
				Good morning.

						  DAGMAR
				Looks like we're in for a
				blow.

	  Joe exits.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89			 72.

87	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE'S FORWARD DECK - DAY (OVERCAST)		 87

	  The ocean which until now has been blue, turns green.
	  Mike is tying up the sails, which have all been taken in.
	  Patricia comes up and starts to assist him.  A wind comes
	  up.  Patricia looks in the direction of the wind.  Joe
	  appears on the forward deck, near Patricia.

						  JOE
				Can I help?


						  PATRICIA
				Yeah.  You could tie that up.
				It feels dead, doesn't it?

						  JOE
				Yes.  It does.
	 
						  PATRICIA
					  (yells)
				Mike, get below!  Start the
				engine.  Tell Tony to head us
				into the wind and keep us into
				the wind!

						  MIKE
				Okay.

	  Mike runs off to do her bidding.

						  JOE
				There isn't any wind.

						  PATRICIA
				There will be.

						  JOE
				Are you worried?
		   

	  Patricia looks in the direction the wind is coming from.

						  PATRICIA
				I think we'll be Alright.  The
				hatches are down, the sails
				are down, we're ahead of the
				game.

88	PATRICIA'S POV - STORM COMING					    88

	  It's dark and it's big.


89	PATRICIA										89

	  still staring at the storm.  Joe looks where she is
	  looking.  The ENGINE CRANKS UP.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89			72A.

89	CONTINUED:									   89

						  JOE
				What exactly is a typhoon?

						  PATRICIA
				You know, Joe, I think you're
				going to find out.

	  The shadow of the coming storm comes down the deck from
	  forward and envelopes them.


9O	OMITTED										 90


91	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - DAY						  91

	  on the unhappy sea.  The sea has turned very dark,
	  perhaps even black.  The storm breaks with a rising wind,
	  a great BOOM of THUNDER, and a flash of lightning.  It
	  starts to rain, for a moment thinly, and then heavily.
	  White caps appear.  The Tweedle Dee begins to ride up and
	  down the high waves.  Its eye now has a frightened look.


92	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - WHEEL						92

	  In the storm.  Mike and Tony wrestle with the wheel to
	  keep the bow into the wind.  They are pummeled by the
	  rain and wind.


93	INT. GALLEY									  93

	  In the storm.  Patricia is trying to send a distress
	  signal on the radio.  Joe watches.  Dagmar is absent.

						  PATRICIA
				Mayday, Mayday, Mayday,
				latitude 10 degrees, 8 minutes
				south, longitude approximately
				150 degrees, 18 minutes west.
				We are in severe distress.
				Mayday, Mayday, latitude 10
				degrees, 8 minutes south,
				longitude approximately 150
				degrees, 18 minutes west.

						  JOE
				What should I do?

						  PATRICIA
				Don't go on deck!  Check on
				Dagmar.  She went forward to
				look at the engine.


	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89			 73.

94	INT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - HALLWAY					   94

	  In the storm.  Dagmar has just finished lifting the
	  floorboards and she's checking the gauges on the engine
	  with a flashlight.  Joe approaches.

						  JOE
				Everything okay?

						  DAGMAR
				Looks good, but I'm going to
				stay with it.


						  JOE
				Okay.

	  Joe departs.  A little water drips down on Dagmar.  She
	  looks up.


95	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - WHEEL						95

	  In the storm.  A huge wave engulfs Mike and Tony.  They
	  disappear within the wall of the water, and then re
	  appear, still hanging onto the wheel.  This happens a
	  second time.  They withstand the onslaught.  Then Mike
	  sees something forward and points it out to Tony.  He
	  leaves Tony at the wheel and starts to crawl forward.
	  Lightning flashes nearby.


96	INT. GALLEY									  96

	  In the storm.  Patricia is still trying to get through on
	  the radio.

	  Joe looks out the cabin window and sees a fish swimming.
	  He is uneasy, but says nothing.

						  PATRICIA
				Mayday, Mayday!  Latitude 10
				degrees, 8 minutes south,
				longitude approximately 150
				degrees, 18 minutes west.
				Severe distress!  Severe
				distress!

	  She drops the mike as Joe enters.

						  PATRICIA
				No way is anybody getting
				this. How's Dagmar?

						  JOE
				She's fine.


										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/21/89		  74-76A.

96	CONTINUED:									   96

						  PATRICIA
				Good.

	  The hatch bursts open, Mike falls in amidst water and the
	  ROAR of the STORM.  He and Joe struggle and close the
	  hatch.

						  MIKE
				The main boom doesn't look
				secure!
		   
						  PATRICIA
				What?

						  MIKE
				I think it's gonna bust loose.

	  Without another word, Mike goes back out the hatch again.
	  Joe shuts it behind him.  Patricia rips open a cabinet,
	  and pulls out a coil of nylon rope.

						  JOE
				What are you doing?

						  PATRICIA
				It's my boat.

	  She goes out the hatch.  Joe follows her.

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  77.

97	EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE							   97

	  In severe distress in the storm.  Patricia and Joe crawl
	  along the deck, battered by the raging typhoon. Patricia
	  looks up.


98	PATRICIA'S POV - MAIN BOOM						  98

	  There's too much play in it.  It's swinging from side to
	  side.  If it swings much longer, it's going to snap its
	  stays.


99	PATRICIA AND JOE								  99

	  continue to crawl toward it.  Patricia clutching the coil
	  of rope.  Lightning flashes.


100    EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - WHEEL					    100

	  In the storm.  Mike and Tony wrestling with the wheel and
	  being inundated with water.


101    INT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - DAGMAR AT ENGINE			   101

	  In the storm.  A little steady stream of water is
	  splashing on Dagmar, which she ignores.  She's adjusting
	  the timing of the engine with a fat screwdriver.


102    EXT. ERRANT BOOM - JOE AND PATRICIA				  102

	  In the storm.  With Joe's help, she starts to secure the
	  boom, but a sudden roll of the boat throws them back,
	  pinning them against a cabin wall.


103    ANOTHER ANGLE								    103

	  Joe and Patricia pinned against the wall.  The rain
	  pouring over their faces.  They are close, looking at
	  each other, panting, illuminated by lightning.  They
	  lunge toward each other, careless of danger, and
	  passionately kiss.  The kiss ends.  They look at each
	  other.  The boat rolls the other way, breaking the spell.
	  They are thrown toward the boom again.


104    BOOM										   104

	  At this moment, the boom breaks free.  Joe has fallen to
	  the deck, while Patricia is still standing.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 3/23/89			 78.

104    CONTINUED:									  l04

	  The boom swings over Joe and slams into Patricia,
	  knocking her unconscious and into the raging sea.  Joe
	  stands up and, still holding the coil of rope, dives into
	  the ocean after her.  A SLOW-MO stylized leap.


105    JOE										    105

	  in the raging sea looking for Patricia in the storm.  He
	  dives under the water once, twice, but he doesn't find
	  her.  He looks around desperate.  He sees something.


106    JOE'S POV - PATRICIA'S HAND						106

	  disappearing under the waves.  Illuminated in a single
	  flash of lightning.


107    JOE										    107


	  Swims and dives.  He pulls her up, so her head's above
	  the surface of the water.  She's unconscious and
	  battered.  A flash of lightning catches Joe's attention.
	  He looks.


108    EXT. THE TWEEDLE DEE - JOE'S POV					108

	  Lightning forks around the ship once, twice, and then the
	  third time it strikes.  A massive bolt that sunders the
	  yacht.  It's the same German expressionist's bolt as at
	  the beginning of the story:  ACHI's logo.


109    JOE										    109

	  Joe's stunned face illuminated by the great flash.  He is
	  holding the unconscious Patricia.


110    JOE'S POV - THE TWEEDLE DEE						110

	  sinking, in the storm.  The Tweedle Dee's eyes have
	  turned to Xs.  The yacht swamps and disappears beneath
	  the swirling waves.


111    JOE										    111

	  getting tired, holds Patricia's head above water.  He
	  accidentally swallows a gulletful of seawater, chokes,
	  splutters, and recovers himself.  But he's panting.  How
	  long can he hold on?  But then he sees something!
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 3/23/89			 79.

112    JOE'S POV - STEAMER TRUNK						  112

	  One of the steamer trunks bobbing.


113    JOE										    113

	  towing Patricia, starts swimming for the trunk.


114    ANOTHER ANGLE								    114

	  Joe reaches the trunk.  He grabs on to it gratefully,
	  recovers his breath, and then hoists Patricia as high up
	  on it as he can.  He takes the nylon rope and lashes her
	  to the trunk.  Then he gets a good grip on the trunk
	  himself, and braces against the storm.


115    JOE AND PATRICIA - DAY (LIGHTLY FOGGY)			    115

	  Joe and Patricia on the trunk.  Patricia is still
	  unconscious and Joe is asleep, exhausted.  The storm is
	  over, and the sky is overcast.  Joe blinks and wakes up.
	  He tries to wake Patricia.

						  JOE
				Patricia?  Patricia?

	  But she's out cold.  He looks around.  He sees something.


116    JOE'S POV - OTHER THREE STEAMER TRUNKS			    116

	  The sun shines through a crack in the clouds and lands,
	  sparkling, on the three other trunks which are floating
	  in the same area.  They are all that survived the
	  sinking.


117    JOE										    117

	  lights up upon seeing his trunks.  He tentatively moves a
	  little away from Patricia on her trunk and, satisfied
	  that she's not going to go under, he swims off.


118    ANOTHER ANGLE								    118

	  Joe arriving at one of the other trunks, grabs it by the
	  handle and starts towing it back towards Patricia's
	  trunk.



119    ANOTHER ANGLE								    119

	  Joe arriving at Patricia's trunk with the second.  He
	  lets it go and swims back for another.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 80.

120    ANOTHER ANGLE								    120

	  Joe towing the fourth trunk into proximity with the
	  others.  He takes out his Swiss Army knife and cuts some
	  rope from Patricia's truss.  He uses it to tie two of the
	  trunks together.


121    ANOTHER ANGLE - TWENTY MINUTES LATER				 121

	  Joe with three trunks tied together.  He is easing
	  Patricia's unconscious form on to the three ganged-
	  together trunks.  Having accomplished this, he slides the
	  fourth trunk into position with the other three and
	  begins to secure it with the remaining rope.  The four
	  trunks together make up a raft of ten feet square.  Joe
	  crawls onto the raft, totally exhausted, reaches out a
	  hand to the still form of Patricia, and passes out.  The
	  fog begins to thin.  A few shafts of sunlight dapple the
	  raft.


122    SUN										    122


	  The sun sets into the South Pacific and night begins to
	  fall.


123    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - NIGHT						   123

	  Under the stars, Joe and Patricia, he asleep and she
	  unconscious, lie unknowing under an enormous canopy of
	  stars.  The universe is great and they are small.


124    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY							124

	  The little raft in bright, fresh sunlight.  Joe stirs and
	  wakes.  He tries to wake Patricia, but to no avail.  He
	  looks in all directions.  Nothing but blue horizon. After
	  a moment's thought, he opens one of the trunks. But it's
	  the wrong one.  He secures it and opens another. He takes
	  out a violin case and opens it; it's a bar masquerading
	  as a violin case, the one he bought at Hammacher
	  Schlemmer.  It contains two bottles of Moet champagne,
	  two champagne glasses and two bottles of Pellegrino
	  water.  Joe takes out one of the bottles of water and
	  closes the case.  Then he gets his little world-band
	  radio out of the trunk and sets it down.  He opens the
	  Pellegrino water and starts to drink.  But then he
	  thinks.  He looks at Patricia.  Her lips are a little
	  parched.  He looks up at the sun.


125    JOE'S POV - SUN								  125

	  The sun looks kind of powerful.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			 81.

126    JOE										    126

	  looks again at the bottle of water.  He decides not to
	  drink any.  He pours a little into the bottle cap, and
	  presses the cap to Patricia's lips.  He repeats the
	  process and then, satisfied, screws the cap on the bottle
	  again and puts it away in the case.  Then he puts the
	  case back in the trunk and fastens the lid.  He turns ON
	  the RADIO.  STATIC.  Turns the dial.  The VOICE of a
	  GERMAN ANNOUNCER speaks confidentially.  Joe turns the
	  dial.  A JAPANESE ANNOUNCER's VOICE solemnly intones a
	  short statement in Japanese ending with "Elton John." Joe
	  immediately switches the station.  The song "Goodbye
	  Cruel World" begins to play.  Joe sits listening for what
	  seems a long time.


127    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - NIGHT						   127

	  Joe is discovered with his ukulele, looking at the sky.
	  He is staring at the millions of stars overhead.  He is
	  full of wonder.  He is singing.  He is singing "The
	  Cowboy Song."

						  JOE
				Ee he o he-o cowboy
				Ee he o he-o oooo
				Ee he o he-o cowboy, cowboy,
				cowboy
				Under the moon
		   
				I was riding my horse
				By the Rio Grand-ee
				And all the coyotes singin'
				In a prairie symphony
				I was ridin' my horse
				Down by the Rio Grand-ee
				When I seen me a cowboy,
				 cowboy, cowboy
				Ridin' towards me
		   
				Ee he o he-o cowboy
				Ee he o he-o oooo
				Ee he o he-o cowboy, cowboy,
				cowboy
				Under the moon
		   
				He was twirling his guns
				And he had a guitar
				And we sang us up a sweet old
				 song about love
				Under the stars
					    (MORE)

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		    A81A.

127    CONTINUED:									  127

						  JOE (CONT'D)
				Ee he o he-o cowboy
				Ee he o he-o oooo
				Ee he o he-o cowboy, cowboy,
				cowboy
				Under the moon
		   
				Giddyup


127A   EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY						    127A

	  Joe is chipping golf balls on his Hammacher Schlemmer
	  practice green.  Occasionally making a shot, occasionally
	  hitting one into the water.  One of the golf balls gets
	  tossed back onto the raft.  Joe looks.  There is a
	  mischievous DOLPHIN who LAUGHS and then submerges.

						  JOE
				Thank you.


127B   JOE SITTING ON RAFT - NIGHT					    127B

	  Joe is listening to the radio.  A Hawaiian disk jockey
	  comes on.  His name is PETE.


						  PETE (V.O.)
				This is K.R.U., Honolulu,
				speakin' ta ya from the shadow
				of the Koolau Mountains.  And
				here's one that was a hit when
				I was a kid. Sukiyaki.



	  The song "Sukiyaki," which became a pop hit in America,
	  even though it's sung in Japanese, begins to play.  Joe
	  is satisfied and lies back to listen.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			81A.

128    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY							128

	  Radio is off.  Joe is trying out his aquatic shoes.  Just
	  trying his first tentative steps, he accidentally
	  punctures one of his shoes so it deflates.  He topples
	  over to one side.  He swims back to the raft, abandoning
	  his shoes.  He turns the RADIO ON, but it's only giving
	  out a little STATIC now.  He checks on Patricia, but gets
	  no response.  He tries to get something on the radio, but
	  the batteries are too weak now.  He turns it OFF.  He
	  notices he's sweating.  He shifts, knocking the radio in
	  the ocean.  Irritated, he looks up.
												82.

129    JOE'S POV - SUN								  129

	  The sun looms down, hot and white and huge.


130    JOE										    130

	  looks at the sun with concern.  He gets out the violin
	  case.  He gets the water out and fills the cap and
	  ministers to Patricia.  His lips are parched, but he
	  takes none for himself.  He takes off his now well-
	  seasoned safari jacket and puts it over Patricia, to
	  protect her from the sun.  We hear a sound, like the HISS
	  of something being SEARED in a SKILLET.


131    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - NIGHT						   131

	  Again, the sky is ablaze with stars.  They're even
	  brighter than previously.  Joe is looking at them.  He's
	  shaking.  He's got a fever.  He closes his eyes and then
	  opens them again.  He looks at the stars again.  And
	  shakes his head in disbelief.


132    JOE'S FEVERED POV - STARS						  132

	  What's this?  the stars are all connected together with
	  little pale blue lines, and over that are boldly visible
	  the astrological signs:  The Flying Horse, The Archer,
	  The Twins, etc.


133    JOE										    133

	  shakes his head, bewildered and amazed.  He blinks and
	  looks again.


134    JOE'S POV - STARRY NIGHT						   134

	  All of the lines and pictures are gone.


135    JOE										    135

	  looks and looks.  But no, they are gone.  It's just a
	  starry night.  He relaxes, closes his eyes, and quakes
	  with fever.


136    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY							136

	  Joe, very ill with fever, checks the water supply.
	  There's a little less than half a bottle of water left.
	  His lips are deeply cracked.  But still he takes no water
	  for himself.  He looks up at the sun.  The sound of
	  SIZZLING.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 83.

137    SUN										    137

	  The sun burns down, bright and big.



138    JOE										    138

	  pours a capful of water and gives it to Patricia.  She is
	  still unconscious, but she looks pretty good.  It's Joe
	  that's really going down the tubes.


139    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - NIGHT						   139

	  We come in on Joe's face.  Joe quakes with fever.  Then
	  he sees something.  Joe is entranced by what he sees.


140    OMITTED										140

140A   JOE'S POV - NIGHT SKY							140A

	  The astrological signs have appeared in the sky again as
	  they did the night before.


141    JOE										    141

	  stares.  He's half mad with fever.  What is he seeing?


142    OMITTED										142

142A   JOE'S POV - NIGHT SKY							142A

	  The dome of astrological signs begins to rotate from
	  horizon to horizon so that the full panoply of the
	  ancient mythology is revealed.


143    JOE										    143

	  is frightened, moved.  His eyes fill with tears.


144    OMITTED										144

144A   SIGNS CONTINUE TO TURN						    144A


144B   JOE RUBS HIS EYES AND LOOKS AGAIN				   144B


144C   SKY - NIGHT									144C

	  The sky has returned to its ordinary self.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  84.

145    JOE										    145

	  wonders if he really saw the astrological signs.

146    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY							146

	  Another scorching day under the sun.  Joe looks very bad.
	  He's got a fever.  He's slowly dying of thirst.  He gets
	  out the bottle, gives a capful to the still unconscious
	  Patricia, and then looks at the water level.  There's a
	  quarter of a bottle left.  He puts the bottle away.  He
	  crawls to the raft's edge and plunges his head in the
	  sea.  A dolphin sticks his head out of the water and
	  looks at Joe.  Joe lifts his head out of the water and
	  finds himself looking at a dolphin who is looking at him.
	  Man and fish are just a few feet apart.  They regard each
	  other.

						  JOE
				Hello.  My name is Joe.

	    The DOLPHIN makes SOUNDS.  It could be talking.
					
						  JOE
				I'm dying.  Ahead of schedule.
					
	  The Dolphin disappears back beneath the water.  Joe
	  lowers his head and lies still.


147    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - NIGHT						   147

	  Again, it is a great starry night.  Joe, weak and sick
	  and bleary-eyed, looks up at the stars.  He closes his
	  eyes.  He opens them again.  Again, he is astonished.


148    JOE'S POV - HEAVENS							   148

	  All the lines and astrological signs are back, brilliant
	  and splendid.


149    JOE										    149

	  rouses himself, crawling to his knees to look.  He stares
	  in utter wonder.

	  The signs begin to rotate again.

	  MUSIC.

	  Earlier, in L.A. Joe stared at the horizon, just before
	  dawn, and big, magical music began to play.  But then it
	  stopped prematurely.  That MUSIC begins to play now, but
	  this time it does not stop.  It's the big, dramatic pas
	  de deux music from "The Nutcracker."

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 85.

149    CONTINUED:									  149

	  The astrological signs melt away into Disney dust as a
	  light appears at the horizon.


149A   ANOTHER ANGLE ON HORIZON						  149A

	  A light appears at the horizon's edge.


149B   ENORMOUS MOON								   149B

	  with slow majesty rises from the glittering sea, directly
	  to Joe's front.

	  Joe and his little raft are utterly dwarfed by this great
	  heavenly body.


149C   JOE ON HIS RAFT - NIGHT						   149C

	  Though he is on the verge of utter collapse he is so
	  moved by what he sees he clambers his way to his shaky
	  feet and raises his arms over his head in complete
	  reverence.  He is dwarfed.  He's a bug.  The raft is a
	  mote in the eye of God.  Joe is deeply moved, humbled,
	  awestruck.  The moon continues to ascend up and up and
	  out of view.


150    OMITTED										150
thru											    thru
151A											    151A


15lB   JOE										   151B

	  looks at the stars that are simply stars.  Sinking to his
	  knees, he presses his hands to his breast.

						  JOE
				Dear God, whose name I do not
				know, thank you for my life.
				I forgot how big... Thank you
				for my life

	  Joe slowly crumbles, physically crumbles from thirst and
	  fever and exhaustion.  His eyes dim.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 3/23/89			 86.

152    JOE'S POV - STARS								152

	  We watch the stars DISSOLVE, and BLACKNESS closes in.

	  Then the blackness starts to FADE, become rosy.  We hear
	  the sound of LABORED BREATHING.  WATER being POURED.
	  Someone COUGHING a little, CHOKING a little, and then
	  recovering.  Then we hear Patricia's voice.

						  PATRICIA (O.S.)
				Joe?  Joe?  Didn't you drink
				any water for yourself?  Joe?


153    JOE'S POV - LIGHT FOG - DAY						153

	  begins to clear. And there, above him, ministering to
	  him, is Patricia.  She has the bottle at his lips giving
	  him a little to drink at a time.


154    JOE'S HEAD - DAY (LIGHT FOG)					    154

	  is cradled in Patricia's arm. She has the bottle at his
	  lips.  He pushes it away, croaking weakly.

						  JOE
				That's for you.

						  PATRICIA
				How long have I been
				unconscious?

						  JOE
				I don't know.  Days.  You woke
				up.

						  PATRICIA
				I guess I did.

						  JOE
				Good.

	  She gives some more water over his weak resistance.  The
	  bottle has one more sip in it.

						  PATRICIA
				Finish this.
					
						  JOE
				No.  You need it.
					
						  PATRICIA
				I feel pretty good.  You look
				like shit.

						  JOE
				It's good to hear you talking.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 2/16/89			 87.

154    CONTINUED:									  154

						  PATRICIA
				C'mon, drink it.  Don't you
				wanna be in good shape for the
				Waponis?
					
						  JOE
				I'll never make it.

						  PATRICIA
				What are you talking about?
				Look.

	  She points.  Joe looks where she points.


155    EXT. TWO ISLANDS SIDE BY SIDE - FROM JOE'S POV - DAY		 155

	  One island is small and barren.  The other island sports
	  a big volcano.  A little steady stream of smoke issues
	  from the volcano's mouth.  We hear Patricia's voice.

						  PATRICIA (O.S.)
				It's a miracle.  We must've
				lucked into the right tidal
				current.


156    PATRICIA									    156

	  looks at Joe.  She makes him take the last sip of water.

						  PATRICIA
				What happened to the yacht?

						  JOE
				Struck by lightning.

						  PATRICIA

				No sign of Dagmar or the boys?

						  JOE
				Everything went under.

						  PATRICIA
				Except your trunks.

						  JOE
				Except my trunks.

	  He takes a look at the island.

						  JOE
				So that's Waponi Woo.


157    JOE'S POV - ISLAND						   l57
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 88.

158    ANOTHER ANGLE								    158

	  We FLY OVER the surface of the ocean TO the island.  TO:


159    ONE HILL ON ISLAND							    159

	  on which stands a lookout.  The lookout's name is EMO.
	  Emo is scanning the sea with an old telescope on a stand.
	  In his free hand, he holds a can of orange soda called
	  Jump.  He sips from this with great relish.  Then he
	  spots something with the telescope.  It's the raft!  He
	  carefully puts down his soda, cups his hands, and lets
	  out with a mighty formal cry.

						  EMO
				Ah bey!

    We now hear fifty voices answer from all over the island.

						  VOICES (O.S.)
				Ho!

						  EMO
				Ah bey!

						  VOICES (O.S.)
				Ho!

						  EMO
				Kimo Sabby Sah!

						  VOICES (O.S.)
				Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!


160    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY							160

	  Joe and Patricia hear the cries and look at each other.

						  JOE
				What's that?

						  PATRICIA
				I think we've been spotted.


161    EXT. ISLAND - LONG STRETCH OF BEACH - DAY			 161

	  Outrigger canoes lay along the shore.  The EXCITED CRIES
	  of running NATIVES are heard approaching.  And now we see
	  them.  It's the Waponis!  They are a motley lot, used to
	  the good life.  They sport big orange dots on their fore
	  heads.  They carry fruit, garlands of flowers, and cans
	  of Jump.  They leap into their canoes and head out toward
	  the raft.  Their eyes are enhanced with liner.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 3/23/89			88A.

162    EXT. LITTLE RAFT - DAY							162

	  as the canoes reach it.  The leader of the welcoming
	  group, BAW, calls out to Joe in a formal way.

						  BAW
				Whooa!  Are you Joe?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 89.

162    CONTINUED:									  162

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  WELCOMING GROUP
					  (impressed)
				Whooa!

						  BAW
				Are you Joe Banks?

						  JOE
				Yeah.

						  BAW
					  (to group)
				Pelica beeble bum bum!

	  The welcoming group goes crazy, showering the little raft
	  with a thousand flowers.  Joe and Patricia exchange a
	  look through the shower of flowers.

						  PATRICIA
				I guess they're glad to see
				us.

	  They're both handed cans of Jump.  Natives grab the pop
	  tops with their teeth and rip them off, smiling.  Joe and
	  Patricia drink from the cans of Jump.  All the natives
	  cheer.  Then hands reach out and pull them gently off
	  their raft and into the canoes.  Another canoe's
	  occupants get a grass rope and tie it to the raft.  Now
	  we see:


163    WHOLE FLOTILLA OF CANOES - DAY					  163

	  Joe and Patricia, and the whole welcoming group, covered
	  with flowers and drinking Jump, head for the island. With
	  the raft of trunks in tow.  The welcoming group, led by
	  Baw, sing a Polynesian "Song of Happiness."


164    EXT. SHORE OF ISLAND - DAY						 164

	  as the canoes arrive.  Upon reaching the shore, Joe and
	  Patricia are hoisted onto the shoulders of the natives
	  and carried inland.  Then we see other natives hoisting
	  the trunks onto their shoulders and following.
	  Everybody's singing.


164A   EXT. SHORE OF ISLAND - DAY						164A

	  Two guys hoisting an enormous spool of homemade red
	  carpet on a wooden yoke lead the way into the jungle
	  providing the "Red Carpet Treatment."

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			89A.

164B   EXT. STRETCH OF JUNGLE - DAY					   164B

	  The red carpet unrollers run through a stretch of Jungle.
	  Through a thin veil of greenery we see unrollers pass by
	  us on a jungle path.  After a second they are followed by
	  Joe and Patricia and the full happy entourage.


165    EXT. CENTER OF VILLAGE - DAY					    165

	  Exhausted, our carpet men, their spindle all but spent,
	  stumble into the village's center.  Their carpet reaches
	  its tail.  They drop to the ground, gasping and proud.
	  The welcoming group arrives with Patricia and Joe and the
	  whole village turns out and goes nuts.  Some of them
	  carry ducks.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 90.

165    CONTINUED:									  165

	  Then from the biggest hut emerges the CHIEF.  Instantly,
	  everything stops and all the natives are lying face down
	  on the ground, utterly silent.  Only Joe and Patricia are
	  left standing to face the Chief.  The Chief is a big,
	  impressive man with grey hair and in totally traditional
	  native costume.  Most of the other natives have some
	  element of Western dress about their person.  The Chief
	  has a sad, rich voice, a voice full of memory and
	  knowledge.  He holds a tiki teddy bear.  It has atrophied
	  little arms and legs; its hair is standing on end.

						  JOE
				What is that?  A teddy bear?

						  CHIEF
				No.  It is my soul.

						  JOE
				I hope you don't lose it.

						  CHIEF
				So do I.  I am Tobi.  Chief.

						  JOE
				This is Patricia Graynamore.
				I'm Joe Banks.  You speak
				English.

						  CHIEF
				I have learned.  You have come
				to stop the anger of the Woo?

	  The Chief points upward.  Joe looks where he points.


166    FROM JOE'S POV - VOLCANO (BIG WOO) - DAY			  166

	  Smoke issues from the mouth of the Big Woo steadily.


167    JOE										    167

	  looks away from the volcano.  He looks into the eyes of
	  the chief.


						  JOE
				Yes.

						  CHIEF
				There was worry that you would
				not come.  You were to come
				before this.

						  JOE
				Well.  I'm here now.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			90A.


167    CONTINUED:  (A1)								 167

	  The Chief nods sadly.  He looks at Patricia.

						  CHIEF
				You're with him?


						  PATRICIA
				Yes.

	  The Chief nods sadly.

										    (CONTINUED)
												91.

l67    CONTINUED									   167

						  CHIEF
				Tonight, we will have a big
				feast. And then, at the end of
				the feast, we will climb to
				the top of the Big Woo, and
				you will jump in. Okay?

						  JOE
				Okay.

						  CHIEF
				The women will take this woman
				and make her clean for the
				feast.
					  (shouts to the native
					  women)
				Pelica!  Pelica!

	  The native women rise quickly to their feet, giggling and
	  excited, and make off with Patricia.  She calls out as
	  she's taken.

						  PATRICIA
				Joe!

						  JOE
				Patricia!  Is she gonna be
				Alright?

	  The Chief nods wearily.

						  CHIEF
				And the men will take you and
				make you right for the feast.
					  (shouts to the native
					  men)
				Oliva!  Oliva!

	  The native men leap up with a shout, seize Joe, and carry
	  him off.  Other native men follow, carrying the trunks.
	  The Chief, weary, heads back inside his hut.


168    EXT. CLEARING - DAY							   168

	  which has been set up to clean Joe.  What can only be
	  described as a giant bassinet made out of beautiful, soft
	  greenery has been set up in the clearing, along with many
	  coconut bowls.  Into this a violently protesting Joe,
	  stark naked, is being pressed by the laughing native men.
	  They dump many bowls of water over him while he
	  desperately tries to hide his genitals, first with his
	  hands, and then by turning face down in the bassinet.
	  Then the men take mounds of fresh fruit that has been cut
	  up and rub it into Joe's flesh.  Then six of the native
	  men produce big shining fish.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			 92.

168    CONTINUED:									  168

	  They hold these fish by the tails.  Other men hold Joe
	  still.  Then the men rhythmically beat Joe with the fish.
	  They hum to keep time.  They are giving him a massage. At
	  first he reacts by screaming, but then he starts to
	  groan, as one does from an important massage.


168A   EXT. CLEARING - DAY							  168A

	  One of the natives holds forward a tray covered with a
	  thin blue material.  Joe looks at it with interest.  The
	  native gently, physically closes Joe's eyes, then blows
	  the contents of the tray, a thin, bright blue powder
	  directly into Joe's face.  Joe opens his eyes, a wiser
	  man.  They lick the powder off his face.


169    EXT. CLEARING - DAY (WHILE LATER)

	  They are dousing Joe with water again, only he's sitting
	  up now, eating a piece of fruit.  Emo, the lookout,
	  offers him a Jump, but Joe shakes his head.  Emo looks
	  amazed and comments to the others in a low voice, in
	  another language.  Their reply to Emo's comment is a low
	  Whoa!; they are incredulous.  Then they go back to
	  dousing Joe.  He likes this treatment by now.  Then a
	  look of concern passes over his face and he looks down.


170    FROM JOE'S POV - JOE'S BARE FEET					170

	  Two natives are chewing the toenails on his two feet.


170A   BACK TO SCENE								   170A

						  JOE
				Hey, stop that!

	  The two natives look at him blankly, and go back to what
	  they're doing.  Joe accepts it.  Another native is
	  massaging his scalp, adding a little oil to Joe's hair.
	  The native combs the hair with his fingers.  Joe's
	  starting to look like his old self.  Something on the
	  edge of the clearing catches his eye.


171    FROM JOE'S POV - FOUR STEAMER TRUNKS				 171

	  A little stained with salt, but otherwise none the worse
	  for wear.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			92A.

172    JOE										    172

	  looking at the trunks, gets an idea.


173    EXT. ANOTHER CLEARING - DAY						173

	  Patricia is near the end of a make-over by the native
	  women.  They are adorning her freshly-washed hair with
	  beautiful flowers, and wrapping her sparkling body in a
	  pretty sarong.

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89			 93.

174    EXT. SUN									    174

	  sets behind the Big Woo.


174A   EXT. BONFIRE - NIGHT							 174A

	  Going full blast in the village.  MUSIC.


175    EXT. VILLAGE									175

	  Fire plays on Patricia's face, as she's escorted by four
	  village women into the village feast.


176    PATRICIA'S POV								   176

	  Handheld, as she walks through the village.


176A   ON PATRICIA (INTERCUT)						    176A

	  As she's led through village.

						  PATRICIA
				Where's my friend?


177    PATRICIA'S POV - HANDHELD						  177

						  PATRICIA
				Where's Joe Banks?

	  a.  Men dancing on dusty drums.
	  b.  Natives criss-cross jumping over fire, with the band
	  in the b.g.
	  c.  A pig on a spit over a fire.


177A   ON PATRICIA (INTERCUT)						    177A

	  As she's led through the village.

						  PATRICIA
				Is my friend here?


178    PATRICIA'S POV - HANDHELD						  178

	  a.  Fire-eaters on either side of a small volcano.

	  The MUSIC changes to a new cue: the drum vamp.

	  b.  The Fire-God emerges from the small volcano.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89			93A.

179    PATRICIA									    179

	  She reacts and looks at:



180    EXT. VILLAGE - BAW - NIGHT						 180


	  Baw comes into the playing area, a half-moon circle of
	  natives.  He clicks the sticks of his fingers.  He looks
	  side-to-side, sternly, with his hands on his hips and
	  cries out.

						  BAW
				Oliva!

	  This is the cue for the story-telling MUSIC to begin.
	  Baw does a little Waponi dance in a tight circle, as he
	  recites.

						  BAW
				A whila way Waponi Woo
				I sangda wangda offda blue
				I sangda wangda and I aw saw
				The whorl in all a raw
				dindour!
				Meckalecka?
				Yapa
				Yapaya
				Yapa
				Yapaya
				Yapa
				Yapaya
				Sup up vulca

	  The women scream.

						  BAW
				Terra not firma.
				To take to Tobi, put the
				pants!

	  The men cheer and Baw picks up the Tiki doll to hand it
	  to the Volcano God who then goes back into the volcano.


181    INT. VILLAGE - NIGHT							  181


	  Patricia is standing.  Everyone else is BELOW FRAME and
	  there is dead silence.


182    PATRICIA'S POV - CHIEF - NIGHT					  182

	  He's decked out, and he sits in his chair.  His Tobi is
	  in another and there are empty chairs on each side.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89			 94.

182A   PATRICIA									   182A

	  is gestured to sit in the chair on the Chief's left.


182B   TWO SHOT									   182B

						  CHIEF
				You look good, now.

						  PATRICIA
				Thank you.

						  CHIEF
				Joe Banks said your name is
				Graynamore.

						  PATRICIA
				Yes, it is.

						  CHIEF
				I've had talks with Samuel
				Harvey Graynamore.

						  PATRICIA
				He's my father.

	  The Chief nods sadly.

						  CHIEF
				Your father is like the Big
				Woo. He must be fed or he will
				destroy the world.

						  PATRICIA
				Do you know where my friend,
				Joe Banks, is?

						  CHIEF
				Maybe he ran away?  Maybe he
				don't want to jump in the Big
				Woo. Maybe he's swimming to
				someplace else.  Maybe he swam
				to that no good island over
				there.

	  The Chief now calls to the natives.

						  CHIEF
				Oliva! Oliva! Bum bum bum.


183    EXT. VILLAGE - NIGHT							  183

	  Two natives swing on grass ropes, from the TOP of the
	  FRAME.  They pass each other on their way to the gongs
	  which hang at either end of the frame.  They slam into
	  the gongs and then fall into two little broken piles.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev . 8/25/89			95.

183A   THE CHIEF									  183A

	  He reacts.


183B   EXT. VILLAGE - NIGHT							 183B

	  Back to the gong scene (but under cranked) as the
	  stretcher bearers carry the men away and big drums are
	  upended and rolled away in the wake of the stretchers -
	  off to the right.


183C   EXT. VILLAGE - NIGHT							 183C

	  The natives all rise and face Woo and sing.

						  NATIVES
				Wo-o-o-o-o.


183D   EXT. VOLCANO								    183D

	  It erupts.


183E   CHIEF										 183E

						  CHIEF
				The Woo wants his flesh!


183F   EXT. VILLAGE - NIGHT							 183F

	  Natives react and scream and the screams turn to cheers,
	  as we --

								   CUT TO-


184    JOE BANKS									   184

	  He appears at the top of a grand staircase.  He descends
	  (as the MUSIC resumes).

	  The crowd faces him and cheers, as they turn with him as
	  he walks across to the Chief and stands before him.

						  CHIEF
				So.  You didn't run away.

						  JOE
				No. I made a deal and I'll
				stick by it.

	  The Chief nods sadly.  Joe sits down in the third chair.

						  JOE
				How do you like my tux?
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89			95A.

184    CONTINUED:									  184

						  PATRICIA
				Pretty great.

						  JOE
				I thought I might as well go
				out in style.

						  PATRICIA
				You're really going to do it?

						  JOE
				Yeah.

	  Joe and Patricia have been talking across the Chief,  who
	  sits between them.  Now a groaning native, holding his
	  jaw, comes forward and, after prostrating himself, speaks
	  excitedly to the Chief, addressing him as Tobi, and
	  continuing in another language.  The Chief listens and
	  then waves him away.  The groaning native departs.

						  PATRICIA
				What's wrong with that man?

						  CHIEF
				His teeth have holes in them
				from drinking orange soda.
				Jump.

	  The Chief hates Jump.

						  JOE
				What did he want you to do
				about it?

						  CHIEF
				There are those who want a man
				who will fix the holes.

						  PATRICIA
				A dentist
					
						  CHIEF
				Yes.
					
	  The Chief hates this idea.  The VOLCANO THUNDERS again.
	  This time it shakes the ground a little.  They look.


185    CHIEF AND COMPANY'S POV - BIG WOO - NIGHT			 185

	  The volcano lets out with two tongues of flame this time,
	  and a shower of sparks.

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89			 96.

186    CHIEF AND COMPANY - NIGHT						  186

	  looking at volcano.  The Chief then looks at Joe.

						  CHIEF
				Joe Banks.  We are the
				children of children and we
				live as we are shown.  Now a
				change has come. The Waponis
				like this soda, and no one
				among my people will jump into
				the Big Woo.  They trade with
				this man, your father, for a
				hero.  We have no hero-of our
				own.  So we give this man the
				right to dig holes in the
				ground under us like the Jump
				digs holes in our teeth and in
				some short time we will be
				nothing but holes.  I am the
				Tobi. I cannot be the hero.
				It is my place to hope for my
				people.  But the Woo calls and
				no one from among my people
				says, I will go to my end for
				the rest of you.  Joe Banks.
				We are not your people.  Let
				us die. Take a boat and your
				woman and go to that no good
				island over there.
					  (jerks his thumb)
				Don't jump in the Big Woo.

						  JOE
				I have no people of my own,
				Chief. I'm my only hope for a
				hero.

	  The BIG WOO THUNDERS AGAIN -  they all look.

	    The feast grows quiet and somber.

						  CHIEF
				Once more I'll call among the
				Waponis for a hero.

	  The Chief stands.  The Waponis abase themselves.  The
	  Chief speaks to them solemnly.

						  CHIEF
				Who knew woe sue-weigh?
				Who knew woe?
					  (he waits; as no one
					  moves; he calls out
					  once more)
				Drama said, said sue-weigh?
					  (he waits; as no one
					  moves; he is disgusted
					  with them; he speaks
					  with finality and
					  dismissal)
				I na box, bum, pelica.  Box.
		   
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89			 97.

186    CONTINUED:									  186

	  The Waponis slowly get up, shamefaced.  The Chief sits.
	  He speaks to Joe and Patricia.

						  CHIEF
				They are all afraid to die.
				There is no hero among them.
				They deserve to die.

	  Joe stands.

						  JOE
				Take me to the volcano.

	  Natives cheer.  They form an aisle again, leading off in
	  the direction of the Big Woo.  Flaming torches dot the
	  aisle.  The natives start the same call and response they
	  had going when Joe's raft was first sighted.  Emo calls
	  and the natives respond.  This call and response
	  continues through all the following.  Joe walks off, down
	  the aisle.  The Chief follows him.  Before Patricia can
	  follow the Chief, the crowd closes in, following Joe up
	  the mountain.  Patricia tries to reach Joe.


186B   EXT. VILLAGE - NIGHT							 186B

						  PATRICIA
				Joe!  Joe!

	  But she can't be heard above the din of the call and
	  response.  She's restrained by the women in the village.


186C   EXT. FOOT OF TRAIL - NIGHT						186C

	  A head torch man leads the way up the mountain path.  He
	  carries a heavy, lit torch that he swings from side to
	  side with a ritual motion.  With each swing he lights
	  another permanent tiki sconce along the path's upward
	  progress.  He is followed by Joe, dapper and alone.  Joe
	  in turn is followed by the Chief, who walks with a ritual
	  movement, not unlike the bent-kneed gait of a Sumo
	  wrestler, leaning first on one leg then on the other.  He
	  is assisted in this gyration by two lackeys, one to his
	  left, one to his right, who catch him as he leans to his
	  most extreme angle and gently shoves him back the other
	  way.  Behind the Chief, comes the general native
	  population all of whom carry torches.



186D   WHOLE VILLAGE - PATRICIA' S POV					186D

	  is going up the trail, with Joe and the Chief at the head
	  of the column.  Some of the natives carry ducks.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 8/25/89		  98-98A.

187    EXT. SIDE OF BIG WOO - TRAIL - NIGHT				 187

	  Flaming torches now delineate the trail up the mountain.
	  The line they describe looks very like a German
	  expressionist version of a lightning bolt.  The Big Woo
	  is RUMBLING more and more.  The whole sky over the
	  mountain is suffused with red.


187A   OMITTED									    187A


188    EXT. WITHIN COLUMN - NIGHT						 188

	  Patricia struggles.  She's slowly struggling up the
	  length of the column.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			  99.

188    CONTINUED:									  188

	  She's starting to get hysterical.

						  PATRICIA
				Joe!  Joe!  Don't do it!
				Don't do it!


189    EXT. HEAD OF COLUMN - JOE AND CHIEF - NIGHT		    189

	  They are silent and solemn and focussed.  They arrive at
	  a spot just below the rim of the volcano.  There is a
	  little well worn trail leading from they stand to where
	  the rim.

						  JOE
				Is there any ceremony or
				anything?

						  CHIEF
				No.  You just jump in.

	  Joe nods.  Patricia breaks through the crowd and throws
	  herself at Joe's feet.  She's sobbing.

						  PATRICIA
				Don't do it!  Please don't do
				it, Joe!  I love you!  I've
				fallen in love with you!  I've
				never loved anybody!  I don't
				know how it happened!  And
				I've never even slept with you
				or anything and now you're
				going to kill yourself!

	  Joe pulls her to her feet.  The Chief takes a step away,
	  to give them privacy.

						  JOE
				You love me?

						  PATRICIA
				Yes, I love you!  I can feel
				my heart!  I feel like I'm
				going crazy!  You can't die
				and leave me here on this
				stinking earth without you!

						  JOE
				I've got to do it.

						  PATRICIA
				Why?  The Chief doesn't even
				want you to do it.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev . 6 / 2 / 8 9		100.

189    CONTINUED:									  189

						  JOE
				'Cause I've wasted my whole
				life.  And now I'm going to
				die.  I've got a chance to die
				like a man and I'm going to
				take it!  I've got to take it!

						  PATRICIA
				I love you!

						  JOE
				I love you, too.  I've never
				loved anybody, either.  It's
				great. I'm glad.  But the
				timing stinks.

	  Joe kisses her, waves to the Chief, and starts to walk up
	  the little path.  The natives are silent, staring.  The
	  Chief is sad.  Patricia is rooted, staring after him,
	  stricken.  When Joe has just about reached the summit,
	  Patricia wakes from her trance, and bolts up the little
	  path after him.


189A   EXT. UNDERSIDE OF PLATFORM - NIGHT				  189A

	  Throughout the following, occasionally we CUT TO a carved
	  wooden figure of an alarmed but committed little man, who
	  is under the platform holding it up.  Of course, he's
	  actually an inanimate strut, but as his little knees
	  quake ever more violently under the platform's oppressive
	  weight, we fear for the moment when he and therefore the
	  platform on which Joe and Patricia stand will give way
	  and fall into the volcano.


190    LITTLE SHELF ON MOUTH OF WOO - PATRICIA AND JOE - NIGHT	   190

	  Behind them are flames and sparks and smoke.

						  PATRICIA
				Joe!

						  JOE
				Get out of here!  Go back
				down!

						  PATRICIA
				No.

						  JOE
				Please let me do what I've got
				to do!

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		    100A.

190    CONTINUED:  (A1)								 190

						  PATRICIA
				Marry me!

						  JOE
				What!

						  PATRICIA
				Marry me!

	  She shouts down the hill.

						  PATRICIA
				Chief!  Chief!  Could you come
				up here, please?

						  JOE
				What the hell are you doing?

										    (CONTINUED)
											    101.

190    CONTINUED:									  190

						  PATRICIA
				I want him to marry us.

						  JOE
				I'm jumping into a volcano!

						  PATRICIA
				So marry me and then jump into
				the volcano.

	  The Chief arrives.

						  CHIEF
				What?

						  PATRICIA
				Could you marry us?

						  CHIEF
				Okay.

						  JOE
				I don't want to get married!

						  PATRICIA
				What's the problem? You afraid
				of the commitment?  You'll
				have to love me and honor me
				for about thirty seconds!  You
				can't handle that?

						  JOE
					  (to the Chief)
				Alright.  Marry us.

						  PATRICIA
				Thank you!

						  JOE
				You're welcome!

						  CHIEF
				Do you want to marry her?

						  JOE
				Yes!

						  CHIEF
				Do you want to marry him?

						  PATRICIA
				Yes!

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			 102.

190    CONTINUED:  (2)								  190

						  CHIEF
				You're married.

						  PATRICIA
				Thank you, Chief.

						  CHIEF
				I'm going now.

					
	  The Chief leaves.  The volcano has been ROARING LOUDER
	  and LOUDER.  Joe stares into it.

						  PATRICIA
				Don't jump in.

						  JOE
				I want you to listen Patricia,
				because these are my last
				words.  I gotta be brave. I
				gotta jump in.

	  He braces to jump.  She lifts her hands.  She hesitates.
	  Courage floods her soul.  She completes the gesture for
	  the first time.

						  PATRICIA
				I'm jumping in with you.

						  JOE
				Oh no you're not'

						  PATRICIA
				Whither thou goest!

						  JOE
				I'll knock you out!  I'll
				throw you down!

						  PATRICIA
				And take away my freedom of
				choice?

						  JOE
				Why do you love me?

						  PATRICIA
				On the raft.  You gave me the
				water.  No one's ever put my
				life ahead of theirs.  So I
				love YOU and I'm jumping into
				this volcano with you!

						  JOE
				Did I ever tell you that the
				first time I saw you, I felt
				like I'd seen you before?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			 103.

190    CONTINUED:  (3)								  190

	  She shakes her head.  They kiss.  There's a big
	  EXPLOSION.  The ground shakes.  They lose their balance
	  and grab each other.  There's a second EXPLOSION.  He
	  loses his balance.  She catches him.

						  JOE & PATRICIA
				Whoa!  Whoa!


						  JOE
				This is it!

	  They look at each other.  They jump in. A SLOW-MO
	  stylized leap.  Right after they jump in, the platform
	  slides into the volcano.



191    WHOLE ISLAND - NIGHT							  191

	  Which looks like a face.  The face grimaces.  We hear a
	  GASTRONOMIC GROAN.  Then the volcano spits out Joe and
	  Patricia who are holding hands.


192    JOE AND PATRICIA - NIGHT						   192

	  rocketing

	  Against a background of fire and EXPLOSIONS, come
	  rocketing RIGHT AT us and BY the CAMERA.


193    CHIEF AND HIS PEOPLE - NIGHT					    193

	  They watch Joe and Patricia, out of view, go by overhead.
	  The Waponis scream and take off down the hill.  The Tobi
	  smiles and stays.  He speaks to the Woo.

						  CHIEF
				So. You did not want them.
					  (to the retreating
					  natives)
				I won't go to that no good
				island!
					  (to himself)
				For me, this is the end.
					
					
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			104.

194    JOE AND PATRICIA - NIGHT						   194

	  leaving a trail of smoke, land in the ocean.

						  JOE
				What happened?

						  PATRICIA
				It just spit us back out
				again. Joe, we're rejects!

						  JOE
				Well, I did it.  I did it.  I
				did my job.  I jumped into the
				volcano.  We jumped into the
				volcano.


195    STRETCH OF BEACH WITH BOATS - NIGHT				  195


	  The Waponis grab their ducks under their arms, grab their
	  boats and launch themselves.


195A   OMITTED									    195A


196   JOE AND PATRICIA - NIGHT


	  in the water

						  PATRICIA
				Look!


196A   OMITTED									    196A


197    JOE AND PATRICIA'S POV - NIGHT					 196A

	  We see the Waponis fleeing the exploding island, heading
	  for the lousy island.


198    EXT. VOLCANO - NIGHT							  198

	  The VOLCANO EXPLODING completely.  The whole island is on
	  fire and breaking apart.


199    JOE AND PATRICIA								 199

	  watch while paddling.


					
200    EXT. ISLAND OF WAPONI WOO - NIGHT				    200

	  The island is sinking.  The Waponis are fleeing.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89		    104A.

201    JOE. AND PATRICIA								201

	  looking at this amazing sight.

						  JOE
				So the Waponis were right.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			105.

201    CONTINUED:									  201

						  PATRICIA
				What do you mean?

						  JOE
				They said if there wasn't a
				sacrifice, their island would
				sink.  And it did.

	  Joe and Patricia exchange looks.  Then Patricia looks
	  past Joe, seeing something.

						  PATRICIA
				Oh my God, look!  Look!

	  Joe looks where she's looking.


202    EXT. YACHT - NIGHT							    202

	  A yacht just like the one they were on.  This yacht has
	  friendly eye of another color.


203    JOE AND PATRICIA								 203

	  in the water.

						  JOE
				A boat!

						  PATRICIA
				It's The Tweedle Dum!
					  (shouts)
				Ahoy!  Ahoy!
					  (to Joe)
				Come on!

	  They start to swim.
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		    105A.

204    EXT. THE TWEEDLE DUM - NIGHT					    204

	  Picking up Joe and Patricia.  Patricia's crew is on
	  board, that is Dagmar and the boat boys.

						  PATRICIA
				It's my crew!  They're alive!

						  DAGMAR
				We were saved.

						  PATRICIA
				That's wonderful!  That's
				amazing!

						  DAGMAR
				We were very lucky.

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			106.

205    EXT. STERN OF THE TWEEDLE DUM - NIGHT				205

	  Graynamore is watching the island sink through a
	  telescope.  Meanwhile, two boat boys wrap Patricia and
	  Joe in blankets.  Graynamore, oddly calm and detached,
	  given the circumstances, looks away from the eyepiece of
	  the telescope.  He says to no one in particular.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				There goes my dream of beating
				the shit out of the
				competition.

						  PATRICIA
				Daddy?

	  Graynamore ignores her.  During this scene the island is
	  slowly sinking in the b.g.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				You kept your bargain, Mr.
				Banks. To the letter.  The
				miracle of course is that you
				kept the bargain and you're
				alive.

						  JOE
				So what?  My number's about up
				one way or the other.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Yes.

	  He's a trifle uneasy.

						  PATRICIA
				Daddy?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I thought you were dead, young
				lady.  I thought you drowned.
				Both of you for that matter.
				I just got here to see what
				kind of alternate deal I could
				cut with the Chief.  But the
				Chief, I'm afraid, is history.

						  PATRICIA
				You don't show any sign of
				being glad I'm alive.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Oh, I'm glad.  I'm just
				disappointed about losing
				these mineral rights.  It
				meant a lot to me.  It was a
				real opportunity.

						  PATRICIA
				You are so... full of holes.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			 107.

205    CONTINUED:									  205

	  Graynamore looks at her, a little irritated and puzzled.
	  But then his attention shifts to Joe.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				This is a small boat, Mr.
				Banks. Too small to keep a big
				secret all the way back to
				L.A.  Come out, Kenneth!

	  Kenneth emerges from the shadows where he's been
	  skulking.  It's Dr. Ellison; the doctor who told Joe he
	  was going to die.  He's got a drink and he looks nervous.

						  JOE
				Dr. Ellison.

						  KENNETH
				Or words to that effect.
    
						  GRAYNAMORE
				His name is Kenneth Hindmick.
				Business Affairs.  He works
				for me.

						  KENNETH
				Hi.  Need your taxes done?

						  JOE
				Kenneth Hindmick.

						  KENNETH
				Need any terrible job done?
				I'm your man.

						  JOE
				Not Dr. Ellison.

						  KENNETH
				Kenneth Hindmick.  I'm not a
				bad guy, really.  I just have
				an unfortunate tendency to do
				what I'm told.

	  Joe nods numbly.

						  PATRICIA
				Joe?

						  JOE
				His name is Kenneth Hindmick.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				And he made believe he was a
				Dr. Ellison.
					    (MORE)
										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			 108.

205    CONTINUED:  (1A)								 205

						  GRAYNAMORE (CONT'D)
				And he told Joe here that he
				had something called a brain
				cloud, and that he was going
				to die. So that Joe here would
				agree to jump in the volcano.

						  PATRICIA
				Oh!  That's dastardly.  You're
				both dastards.

	  Joe, still focused on Hindmick, pushes her aside.

						  JOE
				I don't have a brain cloud?

						  KENNETH
				No, you don't have anything.
				You're just a hypochondriac.
				Sorry.  Or, looking on the
				bright side, congratulations!

	  Joe takes a step for Kenneth.

	  Kenneth takes out a gun and points it shakily at Joe.

						  JOE
				You know, I'm gonna beat you
				up!

	   
						  KENNETH
				Hold it!  Don't make me kill
				you when there's nothing wrong
				with you!  I feel bad enough
				already.  I told you he'd be
				mad.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				So we'll just take turns
				watching him till we get back
				to L.A. Nobody'll believe his
				story anyway.

						  PATRICIA
				I will.  I'll back him up.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Now, Patricia, when we get
				back, I'm going to give this
				boat to you, and you can sail
				off into the distance with it
				and be done with us all.
		   
						  PATRICIA
				No deal.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			108A.

205    CONTINUED:  (1B)								 205
						  GRAYNAMORE
					  (talking to Kenneth)
				So we'll take turns watching
				the two of them till we get
				back to L.A., and then we'll
				turn them both loose, and I'll
				keep the boat.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			109.

205    CONTINUED:  (2)								  205

						  PATRICIA
				That's fine with me.

						  JOE
				You've forgotten one thing.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				Oh, I have?  Nothing comes
				readily to mind.

	  Joe is still facing Kenneth.

						  JOE
				I've looked into the volcano,
				Mr. Graynamore.  You know what
				I mean?  After that, the hole
				in the front of a gun doesn't
				scare me at all.

						  KENNETH
				Stay back.


						  JOE
				I'm gonna take the gun away
				from you, Kenneth.

						  KENNETH
				Do you think I won't shoot?

						  JOE
				I don't know.  That's your
				part.  I can't make you shoot
				me and I can't stop you.  I
				can only do my part.  I'm
				going to take the gun away
				from you.

	  Joe, after slowly approaching, swiftly takes the gun away
	  from Kenneth.

						  KENNETH
				Just as well.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				If I'd had the gun, you'd be
				dead now.

						  JOE
				We'll never know.  Patricia,
				tell Dad the happy news.

					
						  PATRICIA
				We got married.  The Chief
				married us.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		    109A.

205    CONTINUED:  (3)								  205

						  JOE
				And I was wondering where you
				thought we should go on, you
				know, a honeymoon?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I have no idea

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 4/14/89			110.

205    CONTINUED:  (4)								  205

						  JOE
				I thought we might like to go
				on a sailing trip.  How's that
				sound?

	  Graynamore doesn't answer.

						  PATRICIA
				I think that sounds great!

						  JOE
				Does this thing have like a
				rubber raft or something?

						  PATRICIA
				It has a dinghy.

						  JOE
				Let's break it out.  I think
				your father's tired of this
				ostentatious life style.


206    EXT. SIDE THE TWEEDLE DUM - NIGHT				    206

	  As Graynamore and company are just finished getting into
	  a dinghy.  Joe and Patricia stand on the deck, Joe still
	  pointing the gun.  Patricia's crew stands by.

						  KENNETH
				What if there's a storm?

						  JOE
				Then you'll drown.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				You'll pay for this.  I'll see
				to that!

						  JOE
				You know what I think, Mr.
				Graynamore?

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89			111.

206    CONTINUED:									  206

						  GRAYNAMORE
				What?

						  JOE
				I think that you don't scare
				me at all.  Maybe you can do
				some stuff to me - if you make
				it back home. If I come back.
				And maybe you can't.  It
				remains to be seen.  But what
				I think, and I say this to you
				from the bottom of my heart,
				sir.  I don't fear you at all.
				I don't fear any man.  Because
				every day is a gift, and I'm
				just glad as hell it looks
				like I may have a few. And
				beyond that, to be scared or
				glad of anything beyond that,
				why a man's just got to be a
				fool!

	  Joe laughs a laugh, wild and free, a laugh unweighted by
	  fear, a laugh of pure joy.  Patricia goes below.  Only
	  here does the island finally go under completely.


207    EXT. THE TWEEDLE DUM - NIGHT					    207

	  starts up.  And pulls away from the dinghy.  Joe is still
	  laughing and waving, one hand on the wheel. Patricia
	  comes up from below.  He puts his arm around her.


207A   EXT. DINGHY - GRAYNAMORE AND KENNETH - NIGHT		  207A
					
	  Graynamore is thoughtful.  He starts to smile.

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I like that boy!  Good for
				her!

						  KENNETH
				Good for her?  What about us?

						  GRAYNAMORE
				I like a tight spot.  Maybe I
				have gotten a little greedy.
					  (produces a paddle and
					  hands it to Kenneth)
				Start paddling while I re-
				assess my values.
					  (as Kenneth doesn't
					  start)
				Start paddling.

						  KENNETH
				You paddle.

										    (CONTINUED)
	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89			 112.

207A   CONTINUED:									 207A

						  GRAYNAMORE
					  (lights a pipe)
				Alright.  Fair enough.  We'll
				both paddle.  'And all I ask
				is a tall ship and a star to
				steer her by!' Com'on, let's
				put our backs into it.
					  (stops rowing)
				You know, I have a good
				feeling about this.  Maybe
				we're going to become friends.


208    OMITTED										208

						  KENNETH
				I doubt that.  You're just too
				overbearing.

	  Graynamore begins to sing "Someone's in the Kitchen with
	  Dinah" as they paddle out of view.


208A   EXT. THE TWEEDLE DUM - NIGHT (COUPLE OF MINUTES LATER)  208A

	  The dinghy has gone.  The boat is passing over the spot
	  where the island went down.  A lot of bubbles and steam
	  are still coming up.  A few empty cans of Jump come up.

						  PATRICIA
				So what's the end of Waponi
				Woo.

						  JOE
				Yeah, and the Chief.

						  PATRICIA
				Where are we going?

						  JOE
				Away from the things of man! I
				gotta get away from the things
				of man for a while.

						  PATRICIA
				Look!


209    FROM JOE'S POV - BUBBLING SURFACE				    209

	  His trunks start rising to the surface, one after the
	  other.  Until three trunks are bobbing on the surface.

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 6/2/89		    A112A.

209A   BACK TO SCENE								   209A

						  JOE
				I'll tell you one thing.
				Wherever we're goin'.  We're
				taking this luggage.  Help me
				fish it out.


209B   JOE'S POV - BUBBLING TO THE SURFACE				 209B

	  The Chief comes up on the last trunk.  He is holding his
	  Tiki teddy bear.

						  JOE (O.S.)
				Chief!

						  CHIEF
					  (triumphantly gasping)
				Look!  Look, Joe Banks, I
				still have my soul!

						  JOE (O.S.)
				Me, too.  Me, too.

	  JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO - Rev. 5/16/89		    112A.

209C   BACK TO SCENE								   209C

	  Joe and Patricia smile at each other and help the Chief
	  up onto the boat.  We STAY where we are, LOOKING AT the
	  horizon OVER the railing of the boat.

	  MUSIC.

	  The big, dramatic pas de deux music from the NUTCRACKER
	  starts to play.  A moon, with its volcanic aspect
	  emphasized, a moon that's simply too big to be real,
	  starts to rise from the sea.  It rises into and up OUT OF
	  the FRAME while:

	  THE CREDITS ROLL.


210    EXT. THE TWEEDLE DUM - NIGHT (FEW MINUTES LATER)	    210

	  The moon hangs in the sky off to the right of the boat.
	  We see, FROM a distance, Joe and Patricia just getting
	  the last trunk on deck. Then Patricia goes below. The
	  ENGINE STARTS up. The boat turns and heads straight for
	  the moon.

	  MUSIC.

	  DUSTY SPRINGFIELD, singing "You Don't Have To Say You
	  Love Me" begins to play.

	  We watch them grow fainter and fainter, a smaller and
	  smaller speck in the eye of the Man in the Moon.  UP
	  CLOSE to us, the DOLPHIN sticks his head out of the water
	  again, makes his NOISE once more, and disappears forever
	  beneath the gentle waves.  One of the craters on the
	  craterous moon shakes and erupts, puffing out a bunch of
	  white smoke which forms the words: "The End."
										  FADE OUT.





					    THE END