CHak Palanik. Scenarij fil'ma "Bojcovyj klub"(engl) http://sfy.iv.ru "Fight Club" (1999) by Jim Uhls. Based on the novel by Chuck Palahniuk. Shooting Script. April 18, 1998 More info about this movie on imdb.com SCREEN BLACK JACK (V.O.) People were always asking me, did I know Tyler Durden. FADE IN: INT. SOCIAL ROOM - TOP FLOOR OF HIGH-RISE - NIGHT TYLER has the barrel of a HANDGUN lodged in JACK'S MOUTH. They struggle intensely. They are both around 30; Tyler is blond, handsome, eyes burning with frightening intensity; and JACK, brunette, is appealing in a dry sort of way. They are both sweating and disheveled; Jack seems to be losing his will to fight. TYLER We won't really die. We'll be immortal. JACK oor -- ee-ee --uh -- aa-i -- JACK (V.O.) With a gun barrel between your teeth, you speak only in vowels. Jack tongues the barrel to the side of his mouth. JACK (still distorted) You're thinking of vampires. Jack tries to get the gun. Tyler keeps control. JACK (V.O.) With my tongue, I can feel the silencer holes drilled into the barrel of the gun. Most of the noise a gunshot makes is expanding gases. I totally forgot about Tyler's whole murder-suicide thing for a second and I wondered how clean the gun barrel was. Tyler checks his watch. TYLER Three minutes. Jack turns so that he can see down -- 71 STORIES. PG 2 JACK (V.O.) The building we're standing won't be here in three minutes. You take a 98-percent concentration of fuming nitric acid and add three times as much sulfuric in a bathtub full of ice. Then, glycerin drop-by-drop. Nitroglycerin. I know this because Tyler knows this. Jack manages to SHOVE Tyler away. Then, he leaps onto him and they fall onto a table, then roll off onto the floor. The gun falls and slides. They wrestle with each other, then dash for the gun. Tyler gets there first and grabs the gun. DURING THE ABOVE: JACK (V.O.) The Demolitions Committee of Project Mayhem wrapped the foundation columns of this building with blasting gelatin. The primary charge will blow the base charge, and this spot Tyler and I are standing on will be a point in the sky. Tyler drags Jack back to the glass wall and forces him to look out at the city skyline. TYLER This is our world now. Two minutes. JACK (V.O.) Two minutes to go and I'm wondering how I got here. MOVE IN ON JACK'S FACE. SLOWLY PULL BACK from Jack's face. It's pressed against TWO LARGE BREASTS that belong to ... BOB, a big moose of a man, around 35 years old. Jack is engulfed by Bob's arms in an embrace. Bob weeps openly. His shoulders inhale themselves up in a long draw, then drop, drop, drop in jerking sobs. Jack gives Bob some squeezes in return, but his face is stone. JACK (V.O.) Bob had bitch tits. PG 3 PULL BACK TO WIDE ON INT. HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM - NIGHT All the men are paired off, hugging each other, talking in emotional tones. Some pairs lean forward, heads pressed ear-to-ear, the way wrestlers stand, locked. Near the door a temporary sign on a stand: "REMAINING MEN TOGETHER". JACK (V.O.) This was a support group for men with testicular cancer. The big moosie slobbering all over me was Bob. BOB I owned my own gym. I did product endorsements. JACK You were a six-time champion. JACK (V.O.) Bob, the big cheesebread. Always told me his life story. BOB We're still men. JACK Yes. We're men. Men is what we are. JACK (V.O.) Bob cried. Six months ago, his testicles were removed. Then hormone therapy. He developed bitch tits because his testosterone was too high and his body upped the estrogen. That was where my head fit -- into his sweating tits that hang enormous, the way we think of God's as big. Bob hugs tighter, then looks with empathy into Jack's eyes. BOB Maybe it's just seminoma. With seminoma, you have a hundred percent survival rate. The Leader steps forward and signals everyone. LEADER Okay. Group hug. PG 4 Everyone converges into a cluster with arms thrown around shoulders, making a big mass of sobbing, smiling goodwill. JACK (V.O.) No. Wait. Back up. Let me start earlier. INT. JACK'S BEDROOM - NIGHT Jack lies in bed, staring at the ceiling. He hears VOICES from beyond the wall. A FLY buzzes over his face. He swats at it, missing. JACK (V.O.) For six months. I couldn't sleep. INT. DOCTOR'S OFFICE - DAY Jack, eyes puffy, face pale, sits before the Doctor, who studies him with bemusement. DOCTOR No, you can't die of insomnia. JACK Maybe I already died. Look at my face. DOCTOR You need to lighten up. JACK Can you give me something? JACK (V.O.) Little red-and-blue Tuinal, lipstick-red Seconals. DOCTOR (overlapping w/ above) You need healthy, natural sleep. Chew valerian root and get more exercise. The Doctor ushers Jack to the door. They step into the INT. HALLWAY Where the Doctor starts moving away from Jack, picking up a chart on a door. JACK I'm in pain. PG 5 DOCTOR (facetious) You want to see pain? Swing by Meyer High on a Tuesday night and see the guys with testicular cancer. The Doctor moves into the other room. Jack stares after him somberly. MOVE IN ON JACK'S FACE. PULL BACK TO WIDE ON: INT. HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM - NIGHT Jack stares at a group of men, including Bob, who are all listening to a group member speak at a lectern. The speaker has death-white skin and sunken eyes -- he's clearly dying. SPEAKER I ... wanted to have three kids. Two boys and a girl. Mindy wanted two girls and one boy. We never agreed on anything. The Speaker cracks a sad smile. Some men chuckle, happy to lighten the mood. SPEAKER Well ... she had her first girl a month ago ... with her new husband. Thank God, because she deserves ... The speaker breaks down and WEEPS UNCONTROLLABLY. Jack is riveted. He barely breathes. CUT TO: INT. GYM - LATER A Leader herds people into pairing-off. LEADER Find a partner. Bob starts toward Jack, shuffling his feet. Jack watches him, still moved by his experience, face full of intense empathy. JACK (V.O.) The big moosie, his eyes already shrink-wrapped in tears. Knees together, invisible steps. Bob takes Jack into an embrace. JACK (V.O.) He pancaked down on top of me. PG 6 BOB Two grown kids ... and they won't return my calls. JACK (V.O.) Strangers with this kind of honesty make me go a big rubbery one. Jack's face is rapt and sincere. Bob stops talking and breaks into sobbing, putting his head down on Jack's shoulder and completely covering Jack's face. JACK (V.O.) Then, I was lost in oblivion -- dark and silent and complete. Jack's body begins to jerk in sobs. He tightens his arms around Bob. JACK (V.O.) This was freedom. Losing all hope was freedom. Jack pulls back from Bob. On Bob's chest, there's a WET MASK of Jack's face from how he looked weeping. JACK (V.O.) Babies don't sleep this well. INT. JACKS' BEDROOM - NIGHT Jack lies sound asleep. JACK (V.O.) I became addicted. INT. SMALL PROTESTANT CHURCH - NIGHT Jack moves into a "group hug" of sickly people, men and women. In view is a sign by the door "Free and Clear". JACK (V.O.) I felt more alive than I've ever felt. INT. OFFICE BUILDING BASEMENT - NIGHT Jack pulls back from a group hug of more sickly people. They pair-off. Jack stands with a weeping middle-aged WOMAN. He gingerly takes her in his arms, pats her back. He begins to cry along with her. In view is a sign by the door: "Onward and Upward". PG 7 JACK (V.O.) If I didn't say anything, people assumed the worst. They cried harder. I cried harder. INT. CATHOLIC CATHEDRAL - NIGHT Jack is in an embrace with a YOUNG MAN. They are both weeping. JACK (V.O.) I wasn't really dying. I wasn't host to cancer or parasites; no, I was the warm little center that the life of this world crowded around. INT. PUBLIC BUILDING CONFERENCE ROOM - NIGHT Everyone settles in their seats and a Leader takes the microphone. LEADER Okay, everyone, close your eyes. Imagine your pain as a white ball of healing light. Go down your secret path to your cave and join up with your power animal. EXT. ENTRANCE OF CAVE (JACK'S IMAGINATION) Jack walks up to the entrance and out comes a PENGUIN. The penguin looks at him, smiles. PENGUIN Slide. EXT. STREET - NIGHT Jack walks out of a doorway, saying goodbye to people. He walks down the sidewalk, his face shining with peace. JACK (V.O.) Every evening I died and every evening I was born. Resurrected. CUT BACK TO: PG 8 INT. HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM - *RESUMING* Jack still hanging in an embrace with Bob. JACK (V.O.) Bob loved me because he thought my testicles were removed, too. Being there, my face against his tits, getting ready to cry -- this was my vacation. MARLA SINGER enters. She has short matte black hair and big, dark eyes like a character from Japanese animation. MARLA This is cancer, right? She raises a cigarette to her lips. The men gape at her, dumbfounded. JACK (V.O.) And *she* ruined everything. CUT TO: INT. HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM - LATER Everyone paired-off. MOVE THROUGH ROOM and catch snippets of intimate, painful CONVERSATION. FIND JACK'S FACE as it stares, over Bob's shoulder, eyes full of deep hostility. JACK (V.O.) Liar. Faker. Liar. MOVE THROUGH ROOM, hearing more CONVERSATION. FIND MARLA'S FACE, over the shoulder of a MAN she's being embraced by, SMOKING, blowing smoke rings. JACK (V.O.) This ... chick ... Marla Singer... did not have testicular cancer. She had no diseases. She was a liar. I saw her at "We Shall Overcome," my melanoma group Monday night ... INT. SMALL PROTESTANT CHURCH - NIGHT Marla sits with the group, smoking, while a member speaks. Jack glares at her. PG 9 INT. CATHOLIC CATHEDRAL - NIGHT Everyone sits with eyes closed while a speaker takes them through a meditation. Various COUGHING around the room. Jack's eyes open and he glares at Marla. Her eyes are closed and she's smoking a cigarette. JACK (V.O.) ... at "Seize The Day," my tuberculosis group Friday night. CUT BACK TO: INT. HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM - RESUMING Jack continues to glare at Marla. Her eyes briefly catch his, then roll. Another puff of the cigarette. JACK (V.O.) Marla -- the big tourist. The faker. With her there, I was a faker, too. Her lie reflected my lie. And all of a sudden, I felt nothing. With her there, I couldn't cry. INT. JACK'S BEDROOM - NIGHT Jack, fully clothed, lies on top of his bed, holding a cordless phone to his ear. He stares at the ceiling and swats at a fly. JACK (V.O.) So, once again, I couldn't sleep. Jack hears something on the phone. He sits up. JACK I've been holding for thirty minutes. Spread all over the floor by Jack's feet are INVOICES for CREDIT CARDS. JACK Yes, that's right. Yes, but I transferred part of my balance to my Visa to get the lower rate. Oh, wait. No, it wasn't your Visa. Okay, I transferred all of the MasterCard ... to ... (MORE) PG 10 JACK (CONT'D) Look, can I just come down in person? I live here -- in Wilmington. Yes, all my credit cards have main headquarters here. No? Why not? Why can't I speak to an account rep? No, wait, don't put me on -- Jack reacts to being put on hold. INT. BATHROOM - MOMENTS LATER Jack sits on the toilet. He digs through a magazine rack. IKEA catalogues, Pottery Barn catalogues and more of the kind. Jack opens an IKEA catalog and flips through it. JACK (V.O.) I had become a slave to the IKEA nesting instinct. If I saw something like the clever Njurunda coffee tables in the shape of a lime green Yin and an orange Yang -- Move in on PHOTO of the tables. CUT TO: INT. JACK'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT Completely EMPTY. JACK (V.O.) I had to have it. The Njurunda tables APPEAR. INSERT - PHOTO OF SOFAS JACK (V.O.) The Haparanda sofa group ... INT. JACK'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT The sofa group APPEARS. JACK (V.O.) ... with the orange slip covers by Erika Pekkari. The Johanneshov armchair in the Strinne green stripe pattern. The armchair APPEARS. PG 11 JACK (V.O.) The Rislampa/Har lamps from wire and environmentally-friendly unbleached paper. The lamp APPEARS. JACK (V.O.) The Vild hall clock of galvanized steel. The clock APPEARS. JACK (V.O.) The Klipsk shelving unit. The shelving unit APPEARS. INT. BATHROOM - RESUMING Jack flips the page of the catalogue to reveal a full-page photo of an entire kitchen and dining room set. JACK (V.O.) I would flip and wonder, "What kind of dining room set *defines* me as a person?" Jack drops the catalog down, open to this spread. PAN OVER to the magazine stack -- there's an old, tattered PLAYBOY. JACK (V.O.) It used to be Playboys; now -- IKEA. INT. JACK'S KITCHEN AND DINING ROOM - CONTINUOUS -- Looking exactly like the photo in the catalogue. Jack walks in with the cordless phone still glued to his ear. JACK I want to transfer my balance to get a lower interest rate. Jack looks over the whole kitchen, dining room, and the living room beyond. JACK (V.O.) The things you own, they end up owning you. Jack opens a cabinet, takes out a plate. PG 12 JACK (V.O.) My hand-blown green glass dishes with the tiny bubbles and imperfections, proof they were crafted by the honest, simple, hard-working indigenous peoples of wherever. He rummages through the refrigerator. It's practically empty. Jack takes out a jar of mustard, opens it and uses a butter knife to eat it. INT. BEDROOM - LATER Jack lies on the bed, phone still at his ear. JACK I want to talk to a live person. Jack reacts, listens, impatiently punches a single number; waits, listens, punches another single number; listens. He rolls over, looks at one of the bills on the floor and punches an entire credit card number. JACK (V.O.) Next support group, after guided meditation, the white healing ball of light, after we open our chakras, when it comes time to hug, I'm going to grab that little bitch, Marla Singer, squeeze her arms down against her sides and say ... JACK Marla, you liar, you big tourist. Get out. Jack yawns, rubs his eyes. They stay wide open. He punches another number into the phone. He sees a LEVITATING, STEAMING Starbucks paper coffee cup move from side to side in front of his face. INT. COPY ROOM - DAY Jack stands over a copy machine. The Starbucks cup sits on the lid, moving back and forth as the machine makes copies. JACK (V.O.) With insomnia, nothing is real. Everything is far away. Everything is a copy of a copy of a copy. Other people make copies, all with Starbucks cups, sipping. PG 13 INT. OFFICE AREA - DAY Floor-to-ceiling glass instead of walls. Industrial low-pile gray carpet. Walls of upholstered plywood. There are four small offices connected by a hallway to one large office. INT. JACK'S OFFICE - SAME Jack, sipping from a Starbucks cup, stares blankly at his Starbucks bag on the floor, full of newspapers. JACK (V.O.) When deep space exploitation ramps up, it will be corporations that name everything. The IBM Stellar Sphere. The Philip Morris Galaxy. Planet Starbucks. Jack looks up as a pudgy MAN in his late thirties, enters. Starbucks cup in hand, pulls up a chair, and slides a stack of reports on Jack's desk. He pats Jack's back in a superficially-friendly way. PUDGY MAN I'm going to need you out-of-town a little more this week. We've got some "red-flags" to cover. JACK (V.O.) It must've been Tuesday. My Boss was wearing his cornflower-blue tie. JACK (listless "management-speak") You want me to de-prioritize my current reports until you advise of a status upgrade? PUDGY MAN - "BOSS" You need to make these your primary "action items". JACK (V.O.) He was full of pep. Must've had his latte enema. BOSS Here's your flight coupons. Call me from the road if there's any snags. Your itinerary ... Jack hides a yawn and pretends to listen. PG 14 JACK (V.O.) When you have insomnia, you're never really awake and you're never really asleep, either. INT. SMALL PROTESTANT CHURCH - NIGHT Jack walks in and joins the crowd. LEADER Okay, everyone. Chloe. Jack catches sight of Marla, scowls at her. Taking the lectern is CHLOE, a pale, sickly girl whose skin stretches yellowish and tight around her bones. She wears a head bandage. OVER the beginning of her SPEECH: JACK (V.O.) Chloe looked the way Joni Mitchell's skeleton would look if you made it smile and walk around a party being extra nice to everyone. CHLOE My status update is ... I'm still here -- but I don't know for how long. That's as much certainty as they can give me. I'm in a pretty lonely place. No one will have sex with me. I'm so close to death and all I want is to get laid for the last time. I have pornographic movies in my apartment, and lubricants and amyl nitrate ... The LEADER hardly knows what to do. He inches his way to the lectern, and gingerly takes control of the microphone. LEADER Thank you, Chloe. Everyone, close your eyes for meditation. Go to your cave and find your power animal. EXT. ENTRANCE OF CAVE (JACK'S IMAGINATION) Jack walks up to the entrance and finds MARLA -- smoking a cigarette blowing smoke into his face, rolling her eyes in condescension. MARLA Slide. PG 15 INT. CHRUCH - RESUMING Jack's eyes snap open and turn to Marla. He glowers, watching her smoke with her eyes closed. INT. CHURCH - LATER The Leader, smiling opens his eyes and looks around the group. LEADER Good. Now. Pair off for the one-on-one. Pick someone special to you tonight. Everyone stands and mills about, slowly pairing-off. Jack sees the ghastly spectre of Chloe coming towards him. He smiles at her. She smiles back; it takes her some time to amble to him. CHLOE Hello, Cornelius. JACK (V.O.) I never gave my real name at support groups. CHLOE I'm showing signs of improvement. JACK (V.O.) Everyone was always getting better. They never said "parasite"; they said "agent". She smiles at him with a twisted, dying mouth. Her eyes eerily bright with desperation. Jack's lip trembles as he, in a sincere attempt at levity, chokes out: JACK You ... look ... like a pirate. Chloe laughs, a little too much. Jack squeezes out a laugh. Then, he sees Marla, off by herself. Someone is heading for her. Most people have paired-off. Jack gives a quick nod to Chloe and darts for Marla, grabbing her. Chloe watches in sad surprise. STAY ON JACK AND MARLA as he drags her off to the periphery. He whispers into her ear. JACK We need to talk. PG 16 MARLA O - *kay*. Sure. JACK You're a faker. You aren't dying. Okay, in the brainy brain-food philosophy way, we're all dying. But you're not dying the way Chloe is dying. LEADER Tell the other person how you feel. MARLA You're not dying, either ... (reading his nametag) ... *Cornelius*. LEADER Share yourself completely. JACK These are my groups. I found them! MARLA I saw you practicing this. JACK What? MARLA -- Telling me off. Is it going as well as you thought it would? JACK I'll expose you! MARLA Go ahead. MEDIATOR Let yourself cry. Marla puts her head down on Jack's shoulder as if she were crying. Jack pulls her head back up. She deadpans at him. JACK I've put in some serious time on these groups -- I've been coming for a year. MARLA Must've been tough to pull off. PG 17 JACK Anyone who might've noticed me in that time has either died or recovered and never come back. MARLA Why do you do it? JACK Why do you? No answer. The Leader passes right by Jack and Marla. LEADER Open up. share with each other. JACK ... If people think you're dying, they really listen, instead of just waiting for their turn to speak. Everything else about credit card debts and sad radio songs and thinning hair goes out the window. MARLA It started with a lump. I went to a breast cancer support group. The lump turned out benign. But I still needed my Monday fix. So, I went to lymphoma, just to check it out. Dying people are so *alive*. JACK It becomes an addiction. MARLA Yeah ... Jack almost smiles, then turns sullen. He pulls back from her. LEADER Now, the closing prayer. JACK Look, I can't go to a group with a faker present. Marla's mood hardens. MARLA Well, I can't either. LEADER Oh, bless us and hold us ... PG 18 JACK We'll split up the week. Marla starts out of the room. Jack follows her. LEADER ... help us and help us. EXT. CHURCH - NIGHT - CONTINUOUS Marla gets to the sidewalk, moving quickly along. JACK You can have lymphoma, tuberculosis and -- MARLA No, you take tuberculosis. My smoking doesn't go over well. JACK I think testicular cancer should be no contest. MARLA You have your balls, don't you? Technically, *I* have more of a right to be there than you. JACK You're kidding. MARLA I don't know -- am I? Jack follows Marla into INT. LAUNDROMAT - CONTINUOUS As she walks with authority up to an unwatched DRYER. She takes out all the clothes, sets them on a table and sorts through them, picking out jeans, pants and shirts. MARLA I'll take the parasites. JACK You can't have *both* parasites. You take blood parasites and -- MARLA I want brain parasites. She opens another dryer and does the same thing again. PG 19 JACK Okay. I'll take blood parasites and I'll take organic brain dementia and -- MARLA I want that. JACK You can't have the whole brain! MARLA So far, you have four and I have two! JACK Well, then, take blood parasites. Now, we each have three. Marla gathers up all the chosen garments and heads back for the door. She whooshes past Jack. EXT. SIDEWALK - CONTINUOUS Jack follows, bewildered. JACK You left half your clothes. HONK! Jack starts. Marla's led him into the street with traffic barreling down. She defiantly stomps in front of the cars, which screech to a halt and blare their horns. Jack dashes across. Marla heads into a THRIFT STORE. Jack follows. INT. THRIFT STORE - CONTINUOUS Marla drops all the clothes on a back counter. An old CLERK sifts through the clothes, marks on a pad. JACK What are you doing? You're selling those clothes? Marla steps down hard on Jack's foot. He jerks, wincing in pain. MARLA (for the Clerk to hear) Yes, I'm selling some clothes. The Clerk starts to ring up the various amounts he's assessed. PG 20 MARLA So, we each have three -- that's six. What about the seventh day? I want ascending bowel cancer. JACK (V.O.) The girl had done her homework. JACK *I* want ascending bowel cancer. The Clerk gives Marla and Jack a strange look as he hands over money to Marla. MARLA That's your favorite, too? Tried to slip it by me, huh? JACK We'll split it. You get it the first and third Sunday of the month. MARLA Deal. They shake hands. Jack starts to withdraw his; Marla holds it. MARLA I guess this is goodbye. JACK Let's not make a big deal out of this. She walks toward the door. Jack watches her go. MARLA (not looking back) How's this for not making a big deal? EXT. SIDEWALK - CONTINUOUS Jack dashes out and catches up to her. JACK Uh, Marla. Should we exchange phone numbers? MARLA Should we? JACK In case we want to switch nights. PG 21 MARLA Uh-hunh. Sure. He takes out a business card and a pen. He writes his home number on the back and hands it to her. She takes his pen, grabs his hand and writes her number on his palm. She gives him a quick grin, slaps the pen back into his palm, then saunters out into the middle of the street, causing more screeching of tires and honking. She turns back, holding up the card. MARLA It doesn't have your name on it. Who are you? Cornelius? Any of the stupid names you give at group? Jack starts to yell, but the traffic noise is too loud. Marla just shakes her head at him, turns, and keeps moving away. A bus moves into view and stops, obscuring her. JACK (V.O.) Marla's philosophy of life, I later found out, was that she could die at any moment. The tragedy of her life was that she didn't. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - DAY As the plane touches down for landing and the cabin BUMPS, Jack's eyes pop open. JACK (V.O.) You wake up at O'Hare. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - DAY Jack snaps awake again, looking around, disoriented. JACK (V.O.) You wake up at SeaTac. EXT. HIGHWAY - DUSK The rear end of a car is visible sticking up by the side of the road. Jack stands near the car, marking on a document. The SUN SETS behind him. INT. AIRPORT - NIGHT Jack walks up to a gate counter. An ATTENDANT smiles at him. ATTENDANT Check-in for that flight doesn't begin for another two hours, Sir. PG 22 Jack looks at his watch, steps away and looks at an overhanging clock. His eyes are bleary as he reads it, adjusts his watch. JACK (V.O.) Pacific, Mountain, Central. You lose an hour, you gain an hour. This is your life, and it's ending one minute at a time. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - DAY Jack's eyes snap open as the plane LANDS. JACK (V.O.) You wake up at Air Harbor International. INT. AIRPORT WALKWAY Jack stands on a conveyor belt, briefcase at his feet, moving slowly with the flow of the belt. His tired eyes watch people on the opposite conveyor belt, moving past him. JACK (V.O.) If you wake up at a different time and a different place, can you be a different person? Jack's eyes catch sight of TYLER -- who we recognize from the opening sequence -- on the opposite conveyor belt. They pass each other. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - IN FLIGHT - NIGHT Jack sits next to a BUSINESSMAN. As they have idle CONVERSATION, we MOVE IN ON Jack's fold-out tray. An ATTENDANT'S HANDS set coffee down with a small packet of sugar and a small container of cream. JACK (V.O.) The charm of traveling is: everywhere I go -- tiny life. Single-serving sugar, single-serving cream. CUT TO: The hands place a plastic dinner tray down. Jack opens the various containers. JACK (V.O.) Single-serving butter, single-serving salt. Single-serving cordon blue. PG 23 INT. HOTEL ROOM - BATHROOM - NIGHT Jack brushes his teeth. JACK (V.O.) Single-use toothbrush. Single-serving mouthwash, single serving soap. Jack picks up an individual, wrapped Q-TIP, looks at it. He moves out of the bathroom into MAIN AREA And sits on the bed. He turns on the television. It's tuned to the "Sheraton Channel" and shows WAITERS serving people in a large BANQUET ROOM. Jack stops brushing his teeth, feels something near him on the bed, finds it, lifts it. It's a small MINT. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - IN FLIGHT - NIGHT Jack sits next to a frumpy WOMAN and they chat. Jack turns to look at his food and takes a bite. He turns back and it's -- a BALD MAN sitting next to him, talking. He takes another bite, turns back and it's -- a BUSINESSMAN sitting next to him. He takes another bite, turns back, and it's -- a BUSINESS WOMAN sitting next to him. JACK (V.O.) The people I meet on each flight -- they're single-serving *friends*. Between take-off and landing, we have our time together, then we never see each other again. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - LANDING Jack's eyes snap open. JACK (V.O.) You wake up at Logan. EXT. CONCRETE LOT - DAY Surrounded by cinderblock walls. Two TECHNICIANS in uniform lead Jack to a WAREHOUSE door. They open it, revealing a BURNT-OUT SHELL of a WRECKED AUTOMOBILE. They move into the PG 24 INT. WAREHOUSE - CONTINUOUS And Jack sets down his briefcase, opens it, and starts to make notes on a FORM. JACK (V.O.) I'm a recall coordinator. My job was to apply the formula. It's simple arithmetic. TECHNICIAN #1 Here's where the baby went through the window. Three points. JACK (V.O.) It's a story problem. A new car built by my company leaves Boston traveling at 60 miles per hour. The rear differential locks up. TECHNICIAN #2 The teenager's braces locked around the backseat ashtray. Kind makes a good "anti-smoking" ad. JACK (V.O.) The car crashes and burns with everyone trapped inside. Now: do we initiate a recall? TECHNICIAN #1 The father must've been obese. See how the fat burned into the driver's seat, mixed with the dye of his shirt? Kind like modern art. JACK (V.O.) You take the number of vehicles in the field (A) and multiply it by the probable rate of failure (B), multiply the result by the average out-of-court settlement (C). A times B times C equals X. If X is less than the cost of a recall, we don't do one. INT. AIRPLANE CABIN - TAKING OFF - NIGHT Next to Jack, a chubby, middle-aged LADY gawks at him, appalled. LADY ... Which ... car company do you work for? PG 25 JACK A major one. LADY Oh. Jack turns his attention to the window as the PLANE ASCENDS. The lady's VOICE FADES. Jack sees a PELICAN get SUCKED into the TURBINE. His face remains bland during the following: The plane BUCKLES -- the cabin wobbles loosely. People begin to panic. Oxygen masks fall. JACK (V.O.) Life insurance pays off triple if you die on a business trip. A forceful IMPACT with the ground and people -- except for Jack -- LURCH FORWARD, some jerking against their seatbelts, magazines and other objects fly forward. JACK (V.O.) No more expense accounts, receipt required for over twenty-five dollars. A BALL OF FIRE swoops forward from the rear of the cabin and INCINERATES EVERYTHING AND EVERYBODY -- except Jack, who remains in his same position in his seat, with the bland expression. JACK (V.O.) No more haircuts. Nothing matters, not even bad breath. DING! -- the seatbelt light goes OUT. *EVERYTHING IS NORMAL*. JACK (V.O.) Always the same fantasy. But -- no such luck. Jack's eyes are closed. He seems asleep. From next to him, a VOICE we've heard before. VOICE There are three ways to make napalm. One, mix equal parts of gasoline and frozen orange juice. PG 26 Jack's eyes snap open and he turns to see *Tyler*, who is staring out the window. Without turning to Jack, he continues: TYLER Two, mix equal parts of gasoline and diet cola. Three, dissolve crumbled cat litter in gasoline until the mixture is thick. Jack's smile fades. Tyler turns to him and grins. He reaches down under the seat in front of him and pulls up a briefcase. Jack looks at it with trepidation. JACK (V.O.) This is how I met -- Tyler offers his hand, Jack takes it and Tyler squeezes firmly and shakes hands. TYLER Tyler Durden. You know why they have oxygen masks on planes? JACK Supply oxygen? TYLER That's a sharp answer. The oxygen gets you high. You're taking in giant, panicked breaths and, suddenly, you become euphoric and docile, and you accept your fate. Tyler grabs a safety instruction card from the seat pocket and shows Jack the passive faces on the drawn figures. Tyler imitates the face. Jack laughs; he is completely beguiled. JACK What do you do, Tyler? TYLER What do you want me to do? JACK I mean -- for a living. TYLER Why? So you can say, "Oh, *that's* what you do." -- And be a smug little shit about it? Jack laughs. He points to his own briefcase, under the seat in front of him. PG 27 JACK We have the same briefcase. Tyler pops the latches on his briefcase. A beat, while Jack's expression turns nervous again about what's inside. Tyler swings the lid up, revealing a full bounty of quaintly-wrapped bars of soap. TYLER I make and sell soap. He gives Jack one. Jack takes it, looks it over. TYLER If you add nitric acid to the soap-making process, you get nitroglycerin. With enough soap, you could blow up the world. Jack now looks at the bar of soap nervously. He looks at Tyler, slowly smiles and shakes his head. Tyler takes out a blank BOARDING PASS. He takes out a small stencil, scrapes a pencil over it, creating a seat number which looks printed. Then, he takes out a stamp and ink pad. He stamps the pass. JACK Uh ... why are you going to Wilmington? TYLER I live there. JACK Me, too. Tyler shuts his briefcase and stands. TYLER Excuse me. Jack stands, allowing Tyler to pass into the aisle. JACK So, uh ... we should hook up sometime. Jack hands Tyler a business card. Tyler snatches it, writes down a number, hands it back to Jack. JACK Tyler, you're by far the most interesting "single-serving" friend I've ever met. PG 28 A beat as Tyler stares at him, deadpan. Jack, enjoying his own chance to be witty, leans a bit closer to Tyler. JACK You see, when you travel, everything is -- TYLER I grasp the concept. You're very clever. JACK Thank you. TYLER How's that working out for you? -- Being clever. JACK (thrown off) Well, uh ... uh ... great. TYLER Keep it up, then. Keep it right up. Jack sits and watches Tyler walk up to the curtain dividing First Class. Tyler show the bogus boarding pass to an ATTENDANT, who leads him through the curtain. INT. BAGGAGE CLAIM AREA - WILMINGTON - NIGHT Utterly empty of baggage, and, except for Jack and a SECURITY TASK FORCE MAN, utterly empty of people; quiet. The Security TFM, smirking, holds a receiver to his ear from an official phone on the wall. SECURITY TFM (to Jack) Throwers don't worry about ticking. Modern bombs don't tick. JACK Throwers? SECURITY TFM Baggage handlers. But when a suitcase vibrates, the throwers have to call the police. JACK My suitcase was *vibrating*? PG 29 SECURITY TFM Nine times out of ten, it's an electric razor. One out of ten, it's a dildo. Sometimes it's even a *man*. It's airline policy not to imply ownership in the event of a dildo. We gotta use the indefinite article: "*A* dildo". Never "*Your* dildo". JACK (V.O.) I had everything in that bag. Six white shirts, two black trousers, six pair underwear, alarm clock, contact lens stuff, and ... cordless electric razor. SECURITY TFM (into phone) Yeah? Oh, fuck, now a recording. The Security TFM punches a few code numbers into the phone, waits. CUT TO: EXT. EMPTY RUNWAY - NIGHT A solitary SUITCASE sits on the concrete. KABOM! The suitcase explodes. CUT TO: INT. BAGGAGE CLAIM AREA - RESUMING The Security TFM still on hold, entertains Jack. SECURITY TFM (to Jack) You know the industry slang for "flight attendant"? "Air Mattress". (into phone) Yeah? Really? The Security TFM, turns to Jack, shakes his head, hangs up the phone; shrugs. EXT. AIRPORT DRIVE - MOMENTS LATER Jack waits by the curb as a TAXI approaches. JACK (V.O.) Things could be worse. A spider could lay eggs under the skin in your face and the larva could tunnel around and baby spiders could burst from your nostrils. PG 30 INT. TAXI - MOVING - NIGHT Along a residential street. Jack looks ahead, sees a tall grey, bland building on the corner. JACK (V.O.) Home was a condo on the fifteenth floor of a filing cabinet for widows and young professionals. The taxi approaches the intersection. JACK (V.O.) The walls were solid concrete. A foot of concrete is important when your next-door neighbor lets her hearing aid go and has to watch game shows at full blast ... The taxi turns a corner and Jack sees the front of the building. A diffuse CLOUD of SMOKE wafts away from a BLOWN-OUT SECTION on the fifteenth floor. FIRETRUCKS, POLICECARS and a MOB are all crowded around the lobby area. JACK (V.O.) -- Or when a volcanic blast of burning gas and debris that used to be your furniture and personal effects blows out your floor-to-ceiling window and sails down flaming to leave just your condo -- only yours -- a gutted, charred concrete hole in the cliffside of the building. EXT. STREET IN FRONT OF BUILDING Jack, gaping at the sight above him, absently gives the Cabbie money. The taxi pulls away. Jack stands frozen. JACK (V.O.) These things happen. Jack starts toward the building. He enters the fray of people, pushes through to the lobby. The DOORMAN sees him, gives a sad smile, shakes his head. Jack starts for the elevator. DOORMAN There's nothing up there. Jack presses the button; waits. The Doorman moves next to him. PG 31 DOORMAN You can't go into the unit. Police orders. They're investigating for arson. The elevator doors open. Jack hesitates. The doors close. DOORMAN Do you have someone you can call? Jack heads back for the lobby doors. The Doorman follows. EXT. CONDO BUILDING - CONTINUOUS Jack walks past SMOKING, CHARRED DEBRIS -- a flash of ORANGE from the Yang table, a CLOCK FACE from the hall clock, part of an arm from the GREEN ARMCHAIR. His feet CRUNCH glass. He gets to a payphone. The Doorman stays right with him, watching him. CUT TO: CLOSE SHOT - JACK'S STOVE Hissing. JACK (V.O.) Later, the police told me someone could've turned the pilot light off, turned a burner on. EXT. PAYPHONE - RESUMING Jack picks up the receiver, stares at the numbers on the phone. DOORMAN A lot of young people try to impress the world and buy too many things. CLOSE SHOT - JACK'S ENTIRE CONDO - KITCHEN AND LIVING ROOM Sound of the HISS. JACK (V.O.) The gas then could have slowly filled the condo from floor to ceiling in every room. Seventeen-hundred square feet with high ceilings for days and days. PG 32 EXT. PAYPHONE - RESUMING Jack's fingers move over the numbers lightly, as he thinks. DOORMAN A lot of young people don't know what they really want. INSERT - CLOSE ON BASE OF JACK'S REFRIGERATOR JACK (V.O.) Then, the refrigerator's compressor clicked on. Click. KABLAM! SCREEN GOES WHITE. EXT. PAYPHONE - RESUMING Jack digs into his pocket, pulls out his business card, turns it over -- sees the number Tyler wrote. He dials it. Its rings ... and rings. He waits. JACK (V.O.) Tyler Durden. Rescue me. DOORMAN Young people think they want the whole world. JACK (V.O.) Deliver me from Swedish furniture. Deliver me from clever art. DOORMAN If you don't know what you want, you end up with a lot you don't. JACK (V.O.) May I never be content. May I never be complete. May I never be perfect. Deliver me. Jack sighs and hands up the phone. He starts to push past the Doorman when the phone RINGS. Jack grabs it. JACK Hello? TYLER'S VOICE Who's this? JACK Tyler? PG 33 EXT. LOU'S TAVERN - NIGHT A small building, sitting squarely in the middle of a large concrete parking lot. A few street lamps illuminate the lot. a freeway runs nearby. INT. LOU'S TAVERN - SAME Jack and Tyler sit at a table in the very back of the room. A half-empty pitcher of beer shows dried foam scum from the previous refill. Five DRUNKEN GUYS at a table at the opposite side of the bar keep glancing over and chuckling in a potentially hostile manner. TYLER You buy furniture. You tell yourself, this is the last sofa you'll ever need in your life; no matter what else goes wrong, you've got the sofa issue handled. Then the right set of dishes. Then the right bed. The drapes. The rug. This is how you're good to yourself. This is how you fill up your life. JACK I ... guess so. TYLER And now your condo blows up and you have nothing. JACK I ... guess so. TYLER And now you find yourself, sitting here, feeling like it's the best thing that ever happened to you. JACK ... yeah. TYLER I don't know you, so maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it's a terrible fucking tragedy. JACK ... no. PG 34 TYLER I mean, you lost a lot of nice, perfect, neat little shit. JACK Fuck it all. TYLER Wow. That's pretty strong. JACK ... yeah. TYLER Do you have family you can call? JACK My mother would just go into hysterics. My Dad ... Don't know where he is. Only knew him for six years. Then, he ran off to a new city and married another woman and had more kids. Every six years -- new city, new family. He was setting up franchises. Tyler smiles, snorts, shakes his head. TYLER A generation of men raised by women. Look what it's done to you. JACK To me? TYLER We're on our third pitcher of beer and you still can't ask me. JACK Huh? TYLER Why don't you cut the shit and ask me if you can stay at my place? JACK Well ... uh ... TYLER Why don't you cut the shit and ask me if you can stay at my place? JACK Would that be a problem? PG 35 TYLER Is it a problem for you to ask me? JACK Can I stay at your place? TYLER Yeah. JACK Thanks. TYLER -- If you do me one favor. JACK What's that? TYLER I want you to hit me as hard as you can. *FREEZE PICTURE* JACK (V.O.) Let me tell you a little bit about Tyler Durden. EXTREME CLOSE-UP - FILM FRAME --And we can see it's a PENIS. INT. PROJECTIONIST ROOM - THEATRE - NIGHT Jack, in the foreground, FACES CAMERA. In the BACKGROUND, Tyler sits at a bench, looking at individual FRAMES that have been cut out of movies. Near him, the PROJECTOR rolls a film. JACK Tyler works some nights as a projectionist. A film doesn't come in one big reel ... Tyler speaks to Jack normally, not to the camera. TYLER In an old theatre, two projectors are used. I have to change projectors at the exact second so the audience never sees the break when one reel starts and one reel runs out. You can see two dots on screen at the end of a reel -- this is the warning. PG 36 JACK He splices single frames of genitalia from porno movies into family films. TYL