The Last Detail Page #8

Synopsis: Two bawdy, tough looking navy lifers - "Bad-Ass" Buddusky, and "Mule" Mulhall - are commissioned to escort a young pilferer named Meadows to the brig in Portsmouth. Meadows is not much of a thief. Indeed, in his late teens, he is not much of a man at all. His great crime was to try to steal forty dollars from the admiral's wife's pet charity. For this, he's been sentenced to eight years behind bars. At first, Buddusky and Mulhall view the journey as a paid vacation, but their holiday spirits are quickly depressed by the prisoner, who looks prepared to break into tears at any moment. And he has the lowest self-image imaginable. Buddusky gets it into his head to give Meadows a good time and teach him a bit about getting on in the world. Lesson one: Don't take every card life deals you. Next, he teaches Meadows to drink, and, as a coup de grace, finds a nice young whore to instruct him in lovemaking. Mule, who worries aloud about his own position with military authority, seems pleased wit
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Director(s): Hal Ashby
Production: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
  Nominated for 3 Oscars. Another 6 wins & 6 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.6
Metacritic:
89
Rotten Tomatoes:
93%
R
Year:
1973
104 min
1,202 Views


or do you want to keep quiet?

All right, how'd you do?

Help me get Buddusky out.

He's betting with our travel money.

Hope this won't go in the toilet.

He's losing too.

All right, gentlemen.

It's you and me, one on one.

Easy money, eh?

What do you think?

Here's to you.

Cheers.

You want the honors?

You go ahead.

Don't worry about a thing.

I'm hustling this guy, understand?

I got him right where I want him.

Maybe he's hustling you.

Maybe he is, but this isn't the time

to argue about it...

...because if I don't win,

we don't leave New York.

Fourteen years.

Fourteen motherfucking years.

This'll make him go crazy.

The man is going to hustle me,

with glasses.

Fifty-four...

...sixty-one...

...sixty-three dollars.

That's $21...

...apiece.

Apiece?

Sure, we're partners, ain't we?

Yeah, Bad Ass.

Then take your f***ing 21 bucks and

don't give me such a hard time.

For you, back here.

Right here.

Bravo, Yankee. Bravo, Yankee.

You're damn right.

"Dead man," in Russian.

That was damn good, kid.

You ought to put in for signalman.

What's that?

I don't know. I hear it too.

What the hell is an "Indiana dog"?

Goddamn, that's the goddamnedest thing

I ever heard!

- What is that?

- Hey, let's go take a look.

I mean, what the hell?

Eight years and a D. D.

What are we going to do?

Take off your shoes.

Must be one of them Jap joints

where we got to take off our shoes.

What are they saying?

Hold it down.

I think we're in a church.

Good evening.

Good evening!

Welcome to Nichiren Shoshu meeting.

Tonight throughout the city there

are hundreds of meetings like this.

Where people learn about

Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo and Gohonzon.

What's a Gohonzon?

I'll tell you about it later.

We're going to do that

through the experiences we've had.

Who's had an experience?

Good evening!

When I first started chanting...

...I wanted to find a girl

that I could relate to...

She took me to a meeting like this.

I remember thinking,

"These people are out of their minds!"

But later we went to her apartment,

and I tried her Gohonzon.

Come on, what's a Gohonzon?

I'll tell you later.

And now I really love the clarinet...

...and I can't remember why

I wanted a flute in the first place.

There's a sun

shining in your heart

There's a song

waiting to be sung

There's a dream

longing to be free

In your life

happiness you'll see

Bring it out

Your shining light

You can change this world

of trouble and strife

Why does all of this

make me feel so f***ing bad?

Bring it out now

Bring it out now

Bring it out now,

hey!

A bunch of candy-asses.

Ever hear such happy horseshit?

That one guy was a big homo, huh?

Yeah, but you guys,

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Robert Towne

Robert Towne (born Robert Bertram Schwartz; November 23, 1934) is an American screenwriter, producer, director and actor. He was part of the New Hollywood wave of filmmaking. His most notable work was his Academy Award-winning original screenplay for Roman Polanski's Chinatown (1974), which is widely considered one of the greatest movie screenplays ever written. He also wrote its sequel The Two Jakes in 1990, and wrote the Hal Ashby comedy-dramas The Last Detail (1973), and Shampoo (1975), as well as the first two Mission Impossible films (1996, 2000). more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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    "The Last Detail" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 16 Jun 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_last_detail_12248>.

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