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-
- From Olof Lindqvist...
-
- The Alien III script by Gibson. This is _not_ how the actual Alien3 movie
- came out, this is a script that was abandoned during the script writings.
- It is nice, though. Inconsistent in quite some ways, but nice.
-
- ! ! ! ! W A R N I N G ! ! ! !
-
- This script is supposed to be written by William Gibson. This seems not
- to be the case. It seems this script is a forgery! This script is not
- one of the four Gibson has written for Alien3!
-
- ! YOU ARE WARNED !
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- "A L I E N I I I"
-
-
- by
-
- William Gibson
-
-
- Revised first draft screenplay
-
- from a story by David Giler and Walter Hill
-
-
- ______________________________________________________________________________
-
- FADE IN:
-
- DEEP SPACE - THE FUTURE
-
- The silent field of stars -- eclipsed by the dark bulk of an approaching
- ship. CLOSER.
-
- ANGLE ON THE HULL
-
- A towering cliff of metal, Sulaco
- .
-
- INT. SULACO -- HYPERSLEEP VAULT
-
- TRACKING down the line of empty, open capsules. Frozen twilight. The final
- four capsules are sealed, lids in place.
-
- ANGLE -- INSIDE CAPSULE
-
- NEWT, then RIPLEY. HICKS next, his head and chest bandaged. Then BISHOP in
- his caul of plastic. But the lid of Bishop's capsule is misted with hothouse
- condensation.
-
- CLOSER
-
- A tear of fluid streaks the condensation.
-
- An alarm SOUNDS.
-
- A monitor begins to scroll data.
-
- TIGHT ON MONITOR
-
- TROOP TRANSPORT SULACO
- CMC 846A/BETA
- MISSION/LV-426/RETURN
- STATUS RED
- TREATY VIOLATION
- REF: #99AG558L5
- CAUSE: NAVIGATIONAL ERROR
-
- Bland feminine voice of the ship's computer, as the alarm continues to SOUND.
-
- COMPUTER
- Attention. Due to failure of navigational
- circuitry, Sulaco has entered a sector claimed
- by the Union of Progressive Peoples. Auxiliary
- systems are now on line. Course corrected.
- Hardwired protocols prevent, repeat, prevent
- arming of nuclear warheads in the absence of
- Diplomatic Override, Decryption Standard Charlie
- Nine. On present course, Sulaco will exit the
- U.P.P. sector at nineteen hundred hours fifty
- three point eight minutes.
-
- EXT. SULACO
-
- The ship slides past beneath us. A U.P.P. interceptor descends INTO FRAME,
- matching course and speed with Sulaco. The interceptor settles on Sulaco
- like a wasp.
-
- INT. INTERCEPTOR
-
- Three commandos climb into spacesuits. The Leader opens a hatch in the deck,
- revealing one of Sulaco's airlocks. FIRST COMMANDO, a young Vietnamese woman,
- scrambles down and attaches magnetic units to the airlock. SECOND COMMANDO
- studies a monitor, tapping out a sequence on a keyboard. First Commando
- gestures from hatch: no good. Second Commando tries again. A grating SOUND
- as Sulaco's airlock begins to open.
-
- INT. SULACO -- CARGO LOCK
-
- Darkness. Armed commandos climb through opening and descend a ladder.
- Reaching the deck, they fan out, weapons ready. Their leader examines the
- damaged dropship. First Commando gestures urgently. She's found something.
-
- Bishop's legs, broken, grotesquely twisted, still in fatigues, the white
- android blood clotted into powder. First and Second Commandos exchange looks
- through their faceplates.
-
- COMPUTER
- Attention. Integrity breach, Cargo Lock 3.
- Security alert. Integrity breach, B Deck...
-
- INT. HYPERSLEEP VAULT -- LEADER'S POV
-
- The chilly aisle of capsules.
-
- Commandos move down the line, guns poised. They peer in at Newt, Ripley, and
- Hicks, but the lid of Bishop's capsule is pearl-white. The Leader tries the
- controls at the foot of the capsule, where green and red indicators glow.
- Nothing happens. He opens a panel, finds an emergency lever, tries it. The
- green indicators wink off. The lid rises. A dense pale mist flows out,
- spilling over the edges of the capsule, revealing the ovoid of a gray Alien
- egg. Rooted in the center of Bishop's synthetic entrails, the egg instantly
- ejaculates a Face-hugger, which strikes the leader's faceplate in a spray of
- acid. He screams, blinded by the acid, grappling with the thing as it begins
- to force its way into his helmet, its tail lashing furiously. Clawing at it,
- he plunges blindly back down the aisle, stumbling, smashing into the empty
- capsules. He vanishes through the entranceway, his screams giving way to
- frenzied gagging SOUNDS.
-
- The First Commando scrambles after him.
-
- INT. CARGO LOCK
-
- The Leader writhes on the deck beside the main cargo lock. First Commando
- rushes in, crouches beside him, takes careful two-handed aim with her
- sidearm -- she FIRES, attempting to kill the face-hugger without hitting the
- Leader. The face-hugger EXPLODES in a gout of acid; ragged holes burn through
- the side of his helmet. First Commando frantically works the lock controls.
- As the inner lock opens, she shoves the leader over the edge with her foot.
-
- EXT. SULACO
-
- Helmetless, headless, trailing a cloud of blood and acid, the Leader tumbles
- through space.
-
- INT. CARGO LOCK
-
- Eyes of the First Commando through her faceplate. Beat. Something moves,
- behind her. She spins, bringing up her gun. Backlit in the entrance to the
- vault, a black, multi-armed figure. The beam from her lamp finds it -- the
- Second Commando, with Bishop in his arms.
-
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- IN DEEP SPACE -- VARIOUS ANGLES
-
- A station the size of a small moon, and growing; unfinished sections of hull
- are open to vacuum. A vast, irregular structure, the result of the shifting
- goals of successive administrations.
-
- MOVE IN on hundreds of windows -- most of them dark. A light comes on in one
- of the windows.
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- TULLY'S SLEEPING CUBICLE
-
- A phone is RINGING. The cubicle, terminally sloppy, resembles the nest of a
- high-tech hamster, not much larger than a berth of a train. The walls are
- plastered with a wistful collage of posters, ads, photos torn from magazines:
- beaches, desert, the Grand Canyon, redwoods, blue sky -- a hedge against
- claustrophobia and the emptiness of space.
-
- TULLY, sitting up in bed, knuckling sleep from his eyes, wincing at the light;
- he slaps the phone console and the glum face of OPERATIONS OFFICER JACKSON
- (female) appears. She wears a nylon baseball cap with a computer light-pen
- attached to the bill.
-
-
- JACKSON
- 'Morning, Tully.
-
- TULLY
- Morning? Jesus, Jackson, it's the middle of my
- downtime...
-
- CLOSE ON THE CONSOLE SCREEN
-
- ANGLE
-
- The room behind Jackson is Achorpoint's nerve-center, the Ops Room.
-
- JACKSON
- None of us up here in the Ops Room have seen
- downtime for a while, Tully. A Marine transport
- came in on automatic sixteen hours ago.
-
- She bobs her head as she speaks, using the pen on her cap to move a cursor on
- a screen in front of her.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- The Sulaco. Departed gateway four years ago
- with a compliment of fifteen. A dozen marines,
- an android, a company representative, and the
- former warrant officer of a merchant vessel...
-
- TULLY
- So?
-
-
- JACKSON
- So, the bio-readout gives us the warrant officer,
- one -- count him -- marine, and a nine-year-old
- girl. Makes you wonder what happened out there,
- doesn't it?
-
- TULLY
- So ask 'em. Wake 'em up and ask 'em. Them, not
- me.
-
- JACKSON
- But that's the good news, Tully. Three hours
- before Sulaco turned up, we docked a priority
- shuttle out of Gateway. Two passengers. Milisci,
- Tully. Weapons Division.
-
- TULLY
- That the bad news?
-
- JACKSON
- They want the ship pulled in, with full biohazard
- precautions, by oh-eight-hundred hours. BioLab
- techs are priority for the deck squad. That's
- you Tully.
-
- The phone screen goes blank.
-
-
- TULLY
- (heartfelt)
- Shit.
-
- He begins to fumble through his sleeping bag, looking for his clothes --
- disturbing SPENCE, a young technician, who sits up groggily, hugging the bag
- to her breasts.
-
- SPENCE
- What? What is it?
-
- TULLY
- It's called the military-industrial complex;
- it's called my ass out of bed; it's called
- jerking me around... Any way you wanna call
- it, it's the same bullshit...
-
- INT. CORRIDOR
-
- Tully, groggy and irritated, emerges from his cubicle, wearing a battered
- leather flight jacket, its sleeves plastered with embroidered logo-patches
- for various products. His photo, name, job description, and number are
- slotted on the door in a transparent envelope -- TULLY, CHARLES A. TECH-5,
- TISSUE CULTURE LAB.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- DRY DOCK
-
- A plain of gray steel, the size of several carrier decks, walls lost in dark
- and distance. Service vehicles lumber past in the b.g. Massive floods on
- towers of raw scaffolding backlight twenty waiting figures, the Deck Squad.
- Their spacesuits are white, clinical; over these they wear disposable
- Biohazard Envelopes of filmy translucent plastic. Some are Colonial Marines,
- armed with pulse-rifles or flame-throwers. Others are scientists and
- technicians, carrying recording and sampling gear. Their voice, over helmet-
- radio are furred with STATIC. Something CLANGS and BOOMS overhead, metal
- thunder.
-
- OFFICER (V.O.)
- Deck Squad brace for pressure drop. She's in
- the cradle. She's coming in.
-
- A sudden WIND rushes across the deck, then dies. RUMBLE overhead as a
- monstrous hanger door rolls slowly open, revealing the naked stars. The dark
- hull of Sulaco blots out the stars as it descends.
-
- OFFICER (V.O.)
-
- (continuing)
- Entry team to secondary cargo lock.
-
- A cherry-picker vehicle, with extended boom, WHINES up to Sulaco.
-
- The lock SIGHS open on darkness.
-
- BUZZ of static, indistinct RADIO exchanges, as a half-dozen lights play over
- the drop-ship, the walls of the lock. Tully enters, stares around, eyes wide
- through his faceplate. Beside his is a MARINE with a pulse-rifle -- obviously
- psyched for combat.
-
- TULLY
- Lights, how come they got no lights?
-
- MARINE
- Hey, man...
-
- He shines his light on a blackened scar on the bulkhead.
-
- MARINE
- (continuing)
- Lookit that. Been some action in here...
-
- TULLY
- Action?
-
- MARINE
- Man, what the fuck you supposed to be doing here?
-
- TULLY
- Forging a new home for mankind in the depths of
- space.
-
- The Marine isn't amused. Tully raises an instrument; it makes a SUCKING
- noise.
-
- TULLY
- (continuing)
- Collecting atmosphere samples.
-
- MARINE
- So just do it, right.
-
- He moves away.
-
- TULLY
- Sure.
-
- But he doesn't want to be alone; hustles after the Marine.
-
- OFFICER (V.O.)
- Technician Tully to the hypersleep vault,
- atmosphere sample...
-
- MARINE
- Sounds like you.
-
- TULLY
- Yeah.
-
- MARINE
- Let's not keep the man waiting.
-
- INT. ENTERANCE TO HYPERSLEEP VAULT
-
- The Marine OFFICER holds up a tracker -- one of the small motion-sensors
- familiar from the previous film. Beside him are TWO MORE MARINES. The
- Officer raises the tracker and scans the face of the door.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP
-
- of tracker screen: zero.
-
- ANGLE
-
- OFFICER
- One sample, here.
-
- SOUND of Tully's device sucking air.
-
- OFFICER
- (continuing)
- Get another on the way in. Have they patched
- line in yet?
-
- SECOND MARINE
- Yessir. Lights on in there.
-
- The Officer presses a button.
-
- The door slides open. Bright, white. The aisle. Empty. The row of
- capsules. Tully's Marine is first through the door, gun ready, slow, careful.
- Tully steps in after him, raises his instrument, takes a sample.
-
- INT. HYPERSLEEP VAULT
-
- The other two Marines move past Tully. Soft SCUFF of their boots on the deck.
- Tully doesn't know quite what to do. Lowers his sampler, hesitates. The
- first Marine reaches Newt's capsule. He lowers his rifle.
-
- MARINE
- (something startled,
- almost gentle in his
- voice)
- They're here...
-
- Eight inches of razor-sharp serrated tail plunges out through the back of his
- suit as he's lifted off his feet by something we can't see. Ugly RIPPING
- noise as the ALIEN withdraws its stinger -- blood tidily contained by the
- translucent membrane of the biohazard envelope.
-
- The stinger of a second Alien whips around the neck of one of the other two
- Marines; the Alien is clinging to the ceiling. He screams. Tully's Marine
- sags against the foot of Ripley's capsule, his arm across the controls -- the
- green indicator lights go out -- as the first Alien lunges up INTO VIEW.
-
- CLOSE
-
- On the jaws.
-
- ANGLE ON RIPLEY
-
- Her eyes snap open.
-
- RIPLEY'S POV
-
- As the beast mounts her coffin, terminal nightmare.
-
- ANGLE
-
- RIPLEY
- No-ooooooooooooooooooooo!
-
- Her hands claw frantically at the smooth curve of the plastic canopy.
-
- The remaining Marine, crazy with adrenaline and terror, unleashes his flame
- thrower. The first Alien and Ripley's capsule vanish in a napalm fireball.
- The Marine spins, screaming incoherently, and liquid fire hoses the second
- Alien, which drops its victim and falls burning into the deck.
-
- The vault is an inferno. Ripley's capsule is sagging, melting.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- A scorched hypersleep capsule is wheeled in under brilliant lamps. The
- waiting crisis team plug bio-monitor leads and a HISSING air-supply line into
- sockets on the capsule. A technician with a small hand-held power saw
- begins to cut away the heat-crazed canopy. Hands in surgical gloves lift the
- canopy away.
-
- Ripley lies curled in a tight fetal knot.
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- MEDLAB QUARANTINE
-
- A small white room, a white bed surrounded by medical gear. Hicks, in his
- underwear, is hunched on the edge of the bed, impatiently smoking a cigarette.
- The dressing on his head and shoulders have been changed. Spence enters. She
- wears a biohazard envelope over coveralls, bubble-goggles, a transparent
- filter-mask.
-
- SPENCE
- (lightly)
- You know you can't smoke in here?
-
- HICKS
- Yes, ma'am.
-
- He takes a puff.
-
- SPENCE
- I'm Spence. I'm not a medic, I'm from the tissue
- culture lab. I have to get a sample.
-
- She opens a small white case and takes out a glea
- ming cylinder.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- Uh, just stick your thumb in here.
-
- Hicks gives her a hard look, inserts his thumb; she touches a stud -- SNIK! --
- he winces, look ruefully at his thumb.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- Sorry.
- (putting the tissue-
- sampler away)
- You're the last one...
-
-
- HICKS
- (grabs her wrist)
- The others. Ripley, Newt -- they came through
- okay?
-
- SPENCE
- Who's Newt?
-
- HICKS
- The kid.
-
- SPENCE
- Rebecca. Rebecca's fine.
-
- HICKS
- Ripley?
-
- SPENCE
- (hesitates)
- Ripley's fine, Hicks.
-
- HICKS
- Bishop. Where's Bishop?
-
- SPENCE
- (puzzled)
- Bishop?
-
- HICKS
- The android.
-
- SPENCE
- (carefully, worried that
- she's gotten in over her
- head)
- There were three of you. Three that I know of,
- anyway. Maybe you should try to sleep now.
- You want the nurse? They can give you something...
-
- HICKS
- (leaning forward, still
- gripping Spence's wrists)
- Why haven't I been debriefed? Where's the brass?
-
- SPENCE
- All I know is, we've all been sleeping short
- hours since your ship came in, soldier.
-
- A CRASH from the corridor, a pained BELLOW, and Newt scuttles in, wearing a
- hospital gown. She backs into a corner as a large ORDERLY rushes in,
- clutching his right hand. Like Spence, he wears biohazard gear.
-
- ORDERLY
- Goddamn it! She bit me!
-
- He starts for Newt. Hicks comes off the bed like he's mounted on springs,
- hand cocked for a trained blow. The Orderly backs off.
-
- NEWT
- (near hysteria)
- Where's Ripley? Where is she?
-
- HICKS
- (straightens out of hand-
- to-hand crouch without
- losing any of the threat)
- She's asking you a question.
-
- ORDERLY
- You looking to get yourself sedated, Corporal?
-
- NEWT
- Where is she?
-
- HICKS
- Now I'm asking you the question...
-
- Spence yanks her mask down in a reflexive, very human gesture. Move slowly
- toward Newt, extending her hand.
-
- SPENCE
- Rebecca... Newt. Honey. It's okay. Ripley's
- going to be okay. C'mon now, I'll take you,
- you can see her...
-
- ORDERLY
- Spence, there's no way --
-
- He moves to stop them, but Hicks takes a very deliberate step forward.
-
- INT. MEDLAB -- ANOTHER ROOM
-
- Ripley lies in a coma, monitored by assorted white consoles. Her forehead is
- taped with half a dozen small electrodes. Newt, expressionless, walks slowly
- to the bedside as Hicks and Spence look on.
-
- SPENCE
- She's sleeping.
- (she and Hicks exchange glances)
- Sometimes people need to sleep... To get over
- things...
-
- Newt looks up at a monitor that display's Ripley's EEG. Watches the jitter of
- peaks and valleys.
-
-
- NEWT
- Is Ripley dreaming?
-
- SPENCE
- I don't know honey.
-
- NEWT
- It's better not to.
-
- EXT. RODINA, THE U.P.P. STATION -- VARIOUS ANGLES
-
- Smaller than Anchorpoint.
-
- INT. RODINA - CYBERNETICS LAB
-
- CLOSE on Bishop. He stares straight ahead, the corner of his mouth twitching
- mechanically. PULL BACK. Bishop's torso is mounted in the center of a large
- square platform; tubes are wires snake from his ruined lower ribcage. The
- walls of the labs are lined with monitor screens and printers.
-
- Information is being reamed out of the android at high speed, printouts of
- measurements, graphs, formulas. COLONEL-DOCTOR SUSLOV is beside the
- Vietnamese Commando, who wears a sleeveless fatigue-blouse revealing
- regimental tattoos: a yin-yang, hashmarks, an ID marker like a supermarket
- bar-code. They watch as a graphics program generates a detailed anatomical
- drawing of a face-hugger on a large monitor.
- She says something short andemphatic in Vietnamese, repeats it: yes.
-
- SUSLOV
- And this?
-
- He taps a keypad and the face-hugger vanishes. The screen begins to draft an
- Alien in side and frontal projections.
-
- FIRST COMMANDO
- (eyes fixed on the screen in
- horror and fascination)
- No...
-
- On the slab, the robotic tic still works the corner of Bishop's mouth.
-
- INT. SULACO -- CARGO LOCK
-
-
- Two TECHNICIANS in biohazard gear squat on either side of Bishop's legs. An
- electronic microscope has been set up on a low tripod. A small monitor
- displays magnified skin and a few dark gobules. One Technician extracts an
- ultra-fine probe from its sterile package and leans forward.
-
- TECH WITH PROBE
- You getting tape of this, Miller?
-
- SECOND TECH
- You bet your ass. Orders.
-
- TECH
- WITH PROBE
- That's good because I'd swear I just saw a
- piece of this shit move...
-
- On the monitor, the tip of the probe trembles, brushes one of the globules.
- The Second Tech takes it, inserts it in a plastic tube, seals the tube in a
- small metal canisters, and writes #17 on the side in red grease pen.
-
- SECOND TECH
- Since when do androids get diseases?
-
- TECH WITH PROBE
- I dunno. Sure looks like something got to
- this poor bastard...
-
- INT. ROSETTI'S OFFICE CUBICLE
-
- COLONEL ROSETTI, Colonial Marines, is Anchorpoint's head of military
- operations. His office is furnished in the best futuro-Pentagon style:
- imitation rosewood, division insignia plaques, a desktop model of the drop
- ships from "Aliens."
-
- Rosetti glances up from his monitor as his SECRETARY enters, a young woman
- in semi-dress Marine uniform.
-
- SECRETARY
- (hands him a stiff red plastic
- envelope)
- Welles and Fox, Colonel. Military Sciences,
- Weapons Division.
-
- Rosetti eyes the envelope with evident distaste, scrawls his signature in the
- required box before opening it, removes documents, and the empty envelope
- back.
-
- ROSETTI
- Show them in.
-
- Secretary exits.
-
- ROSETTI'S POV -- CLOSEUP
-
- on two plastic microfiche cards, each with front and side views of Fox and
- Welles, retinal I.D. images, scaled-down fingerprints, etc. Stamped "MILISCI,
- WEAPONS DIV."
-
- FOX (O.S.)
- Kevin Fox, Colonel.
-
- ROSETTI'S POV -- FOX
-
- is tanned, athletic, hyperconfident, his smile a heart-less display of state-
- of-the-art enamel-bonding techniques. WELLES is just behind him.
-
- WELLES
- Susan Welles.
-
- Same spa-tuned look, same expensive casualwear.
-
- ROSETTI
- (flatly, with no other
- effort at greeting)
- Welcome to Anchorpoint.
-
- Fox and Welles seat themselves without waiting to be asked.
-
- FOX
- We're impressed, Colonel. Susan and I are
- definitely impressed.
-
- WELLES
- The videos don't really give you an idea of the
- scale, do they?
-
- She might as well be talking about a tour of Notre Dame.
-
-
- FOX
- But we're particularly impressed with your
- handling of the situation, the situation so far.
- We're impressed with you cooperation...
-
- ROSETTI
- (flicking the cards down on
- his desktop with suppressed
- hostility)
- We call it "following orders."
-
- WELLES
- Yes. It would simplify things if everyone did,
- wouldn't it? Particularly the civilian component
- of that Deck Squad. I think we may have a
- potential problem there...
-
- FOX
- We've been going over psyche profiles, Colonel.
- Anchorpoint seems to be the kinds of project
- that attracts... idealists.
-
- ROSETTI
- (with a thin grin)
- Liberals.
-
-
- WELLES
- Let's just say we've noticed a certain antipathy
- to Military Sciences, Colonel. A certain lack
- of sympathy with the goals of the Weapons
- Division...
-
- ROSETTI
- Anchorpoint is under Colonial Administration
- authority. This isn't a military operation. If
- it were, we'd be in violation of the Strategic
- Arms Reductions treaty.
-
- FOX
- Looks great on paper, Colonel, but we want the
- civilians who boarded Sulaco sewn up. Tight.
-
- WELLES
- Forfeit of shares, for starts. Anyone talks,
- they lose their shares. We've found it reasonably
- effective, in most cases...
-
- FOX
- (taking a sheaf of
- printout from his attach_)
- But that's a simple matter. This isn't. Sulaco's
- data base indicates a boarding operation en
- route, Colonel.
-
- ROSETTI
- A boarding operation? Why wasn't I informed?
-
- WELLES
- We're informing you. You seem to have lost an
- android, Colonel. The Union of Progressive
- Peoples have Bishop...
-
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- ENTRANCE TO ANTI-BUGGING BUBBLE
-
- A MARINE ushers Hicks into a large bare chamber. Hicks wears his dress
- uniform. The room is dominated by the bubble, a mirrored sphere.
-
- MARINE
- This way, Corporal.
-
- The Marine leads Hicks up a gangway. Hicks enters the bubble. The Marine
- closes the door behind him.
-
- INT. THE BUBBLE
-
- Three members (Rosetti, TRENT, SHUMAN) of Anchorpoint's directorate are
- seated at a
- round table; with them are Fox and Welles. Hicks comes to
- attention and salutes.
-
- ROSETTI
- At ease, Hicks. Be seated. My name is Rosetti.
- Station's military attach_. From my right:
- Trent, exobiology... Shuman, Diplomatic Corps...
- From your right...
-
- FOX
- I'm Kevin Fox, Hicks. This is Susan Welles.
- We're with the Company. We'd like to congratulate
-
- you on a successful mission.
-
- HICKS
- Successful? I lost my squad in that hole...
-
- WELLES
- But you returned, Corporal. And you've rescued
- the colony's sole survivor...
-
- ROSETTI
- (picks up a sheaf of printout)
- We've all read the transcript of you debriefing,
- Hicks...
-
-
- HICKS
- Where's Bishop? Sir.
-
- ROSETTI
- (blinks)
- If you don't mind, Hicks, we'll table that
- until --
-
- TRENT
- I've read the transcript. Are you certain,
- Hicks, that you have nothing more to tell us
- about the alien's life cycle? Detail, Hicks.
- Detail is crucial...
-
- ROSETTI
- Trent, the subject is classified. Corporal
- Hicks' security rating need to be upgraded
- before we can --
-
- HICKS
- (ignoring Rosetti, he
- addresses Trent)
- I've already told you everything I know.
-
- ROSETTI
- Hick --
-
- FOX
- Let the Corporal have his say, Colonel. After
- all, he's seen these creatures in action.
-
- ROSETTI
- You ordered the subject classified Maximum
- Security, Fox.
-
- TRENT
- I seriously doubt the Corporal Hicks knows
- anything more than he's already told us.
- Which is a great pity. But the android, Bishop,
- was designed for scientific observation. A
- Hyperdyne model A/5, a walking data bank...
-
-
- WELLES
- Corporal Hick asked the right questions to
- begin with.
-
- ROSETTI
- (stiffly)
- To answer your question, Hicks: we aren't
- certain.
-
- WELLES
- (heavy sarcasm)
- But we can guess, can't we Colonel?
-
- HICKS
- (to Welles)
- Where?
-
- FOX
- Rodina station.
-
- HICKS
- The U.P.P.? What's the U.P.P. got to go with
- this?
-
- ROSETTI
- Sulaco's navigation system failed. You were
- in disputed territory for something over
- eighty-five minutes, Hicks. The U.P.P. would
- ordinarily respond to that as a violation of
- their space. So far there's been no protest.
- Nothing.
- (he hesitates)
- Sulaco's computer indicates a covert boarding
- operation...
-
- FOX
- "Indicates"...
-
- SHUMAN
- To put it in diplomatic terms, Hicks, they've
- got our ass in a sling. If they want to regard
- the Sulaco incident as a hostile act -- and let
- me assure you that they will, eventually -- they
- can compromise our position in the current round
- of arms reduction talks. We're talking serious
- ramifications here. Then we have the communications
- lag to and from Earth. A week either way. So
- we're looking at a fourteen day wait for policy
- clarification. We may have a major crisis on our
- hands.
-
- WELLES
- We arrived with a policy brief, Shuman, and you've
- seen it. We're here to implement that brief.
-
- ROSETTI
- And you orders predate knowledge of U.P.P.
- involvement.
-
- FOX
- We're here to do our job, Colonel.
-
- SHUMAN
- In this case, "doing your job" might involve the
- distinct possibility of precipitating nuclear
- war --
-
-
- ROSETTI
- (quick to break in; the
- subject's too sensitive for
- enlisted ears)
- Any further questions for the Corporal? No?
- In that case, Hicks...
-
- HICKS
- Sir.
-
- Hicks stands, salutes.
-
- INT. ACHORPOINT -- R & R ZONE, "THE MALL"
-
- Tully slopes along looking haggard and spaced. He wears his trademark
- jacket. The Mall is a cross between a Hyatt atrium and an airport shopping
- concourse: shops, vegetation, fast food outlets, a bar. He arrives at what
- are apparently elevator doors. The doors open on a miniature subway car.
- Tully steps in and the doors close.
-
- INT. TISSUE CULTURE LAB
-
- Spence is working with cultures. Her arms are up to the elbows in a pair of
- white gloves mounted in round openings on the side of a transparent plastic
- tank. She looks up as Tully enters.
-
- TULLY
- Hey.
-
-
- SPENCE
- You look like homemade shit.
- (she withdraws her hands,
- the gloves pop out)
- What happened down there, Tully? There's some
- kind of security blackout on...
-
- TULLY
- Yeah. And I'm part of it... I can't tell you
- anything. Had to sign a whole new set of papers.
- Talk to anybody and I lose my shares. All my
- shares, right?
-
- SPENCE
- You joking, Tully?
-
- TULLY
- Wish I were...
- (changes the subject)
- What's the old man got for me to dick around
- with this shift?
-
- She crosses to a lab bench and takes something from a white wire basket.
-
- SPENCE
- Here. All yours. Orders are, you use the
- manipulators for this.
-
- She hands him something wrapped in a sheet of white printout held with a
- rubber band. He removes the band, unrolls the paper. The canister. Number
- 17.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- What the hell did happen on the ship, Tully?
- How come all the biopsy work on those three?
- and his very quiet sudden backlog of autopsy
- material? How come it's all triple-classified?
- What's going on? We had these two spooks from
- Gateway in here today acted like they just
- bought the place...
-
- TULLY
- (with a nervous glance
- around the lab)
- Okay, okay... But later, okay? Not here...
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. TISSUE CULTURE LAB
-
- Tully at the controls of a pair of high-tech servo-manipulators visible
- through the tick glass of an ultra-heavy duty rectangular tank. The controls
- are gloves. A cable leads from the wrist of each glove to the face of the
- tanks. Tully move his hands, testing. The skeletal steels waldos inside the
- tank mimic each move. He uses them to open the canister. An electronic
- microscope is built into the tank, its monitor just above the window. He
- positions the probe's tip under the microscope.
-
- ANGLE OVER TOP OF MONITOR
-
- for his reaction.
-
- TULLY
- Spence... What is this? Where did it come
- from?
-
- Spence strolls up behind his with a cup of coffee, a pen tucked behind her
- ear.
-
- SPENCE
- C'mon, Charlie, don't you read the spec sheets
- anymore? It's off the shop. Off your transport.
- It's... God.
-
- SPENCE'S POV -- CLOSE ON THE MONITOR
-
- The tip of the probe is encased in a sheath of glittering back filigree.
-
- ANGLE
-
- SPENCE
-
- Up the rez...
-
- Tully taps a lapboard; magnifications increases by twenty powers.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP -- MONITOR
-
- As the screen fills with an image that might be a bizarre landscape, its lines
- and textures recalling the interior of the derelict ship in "ALIEN."
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. ECO-MODULE
-
- An experimental pocket Eden: a half-acre of artfully ragged concrete
- Disneyland into lush rainforest, sun-dappled miniature meadows, patches of
- African cactus. Newt crouches in long grass, her hand extended toward a small
- animal. A lemur. Hicks stands nearby.
-
- NEWT
- Have you been there, Hicks? Africa?
-
- HICKS
- Morocco. Four weeks of Basic. But was
- mountains. Not like this.
-
- The lemur scoots away, spooked by his voice; Newt watches as it scurries up a
- tree.
-
- NEWT
- I'd like to go there...
-
- HICKS
- No problem. You're going to Gateway station on
- Sulaco, right? Then you catch a shuttle down and
- you're in Oregon. Just a jump over a puddle, to
- Africa, once you're there.
-
- Spence walks out of the miniature jungle, carrying a white wire tray of
- samples in plastic lab bottles.
-
- NEWT
- I don't remember them...
-
- SPENCE
- Your grandparents?
-
- Newt nods.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- Well, guess they remember you. Sure.
-
- NEWT
- But what if Ripley wakes up and I'm not here?
- Can't I wait?
-
- HICKS
- Hey. She'll know where you're going, right?
- Anyway, Sulaco's the only ship back to Gateway
- for two months. But look, you want to make double
- sure, then you leave her a map, exactly where
- you're going...
-
- Spence grins at Hicks.
-
- INT. NEWT'S DORM CUBICLE
-
- Newt at a fold-down desk, at work on an elaborate multicolor feltpen starmap.
- A dotted line zigzags from Anchorpoint to Portland, Oregon. She carefully
- prints her new address:
-
- NEWT JORDEN
- c/o
- MR. & MRS. RICHARD JORDEN
- 34877 GREENLEAF AVE. #582
- NEW PORTLAND, OREGON AB994J2
-
- Ripley wan and comatose. Hicks waits awkwardly in the doorway, dangling
- Newt's knapsack, as she enters and tapes the finished starmap to the wall;
- the first thing Ripley would see, waking. Newt beside the bed, look down at
- her friend.
-
- NEWT
- Ripley? Ripley, it's Newt. I... I gotta go
- now. I'm going to stay with my grandparents,
- in Oregon. Hicks says that's a good place...
- There's a map for you, Ripley, how to get there.
- You can come there and stay with me, okay?
- You have to, okay?
-
- Tears on her cheeks as Hicks puts his hand on her shoulder and they leave the
- room.
-
- INT. DEPARTURE BAY
-
- Newt and Hicks amid a bustle of power-loaders, assorted robot vehicles. They
- approach the entrance to a narrow corridor. Sign: DEPARTURE BAY -- CREW
- ONLY BEYOND THIS POINT.
-
- HICKS
- That's you.
-
- NEWT
- I know.
-
- HICKS
- Good luck in Oregon.
-
- He holds the red knapsack as she slips into the straps.
-
- NEWT
- Hicks...
-
- HICKS
- Yeah?
-
- She look at him: ghost of a grin. She gives him the thumbs-up sign.
-
- NEWT
- Affirmative.
-
- He returns the sign
-
- HICKS
- Affirmative.
-
- She turns and makes her way up the narrow boarding corridor. It's long,
- tapers to nothing. Tiny figure, receding, bright dot of the knapsack. She
- turns, waves. He waves back. She's gone.
-
- EXT. ANCHORPOINT
-
- Sulaco pulls away, begins to accelerate, dwindles against the stars.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. RODINA -- CONFERENCE CHAMBER
-
- Cigarette-smoke drifts above a long narrow table in a narrow space. A half-
- dozen ranking TECHNOCRATS are jammed along wither side
- in folding chairs, with
- Colonel-Doctor Suslov at the head.
-
- BRAUN
- (Rodina's chief of R&D)
- Obviously, Colonel Doctor, the purpose of their
- mission was to obtain specimens of this lifeform.
- The android dissected a single specimen. One
- of the pre-larval forms -- like the thing that
- killed Lenko.
-
- AN OFFICER
- And you believe that these creature are of
- potential military importance?
-
- BRAUN
- Yes, provided it's possible to clone the alien
- spores recovered from the android's skin and
- clothing...
-
- SUSLOV
- With the goal of programming these "machines"
- for use as weapons?
-
- BRAUN
- The adult form, Colonel-Doctor, is evidently a
- killing-machine of great strength, extraordinary
- sophistication. No evidence of intelligence.
- Purely instinctual.
-
- INTELLIGENCE OFFICER
- Our sources in the corporationist infrastructure
- are aware of the existence of a special project
- with Weyland-Yutani's Weapons Division. We have
- been unable to penetrate their security...
-
- SUSLOV
- The Intelligence Officer suggests that this
- special project concerns the alien?
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- I remind you, Colonel-Doctor, that we experiment
- with the alien genetic material only if we are
- prepared to violate primary biological warfare
- limitations in the Strategic Arms Reduction
- treaty...
-
- BRAUN
- An I reminds the Diplomatic Officer that the
- Weyland Yutani corporation is obviously prepared
- to do so -- that they may already be doing so...
- As ever, our level of technology lags slightly
- behind that of the capitalist cartels... But now,
- by chance --
-
- MILITARY OFFICER
- By chance? You refer to the proven bravery and
- constant initiative of our People's Commando
- Division --
-
-
- BRAUN
- (smoothly, a seasoned
- political infighter
- covering his bases)
- Not at all, Major. Their courage is unquestioned.
- Nonetheless, consider: we are in possession of
- a potential weapon -- a whole new technology, if
- you will -- which Weyland Yutani clearly intends
- to develop. We are in, as they might put it, on
- the ground floor. But only if we choose to be, if
- we choose to hold our advantage.
-
- SUSLOV
- I agree. We have no choice but to proceed.
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- Then I go on record as strongly advising that
- the android be returned to Anchorpoint. Are our
- technicians capable of repairing the thing?
-
- BRAUN
- Repairing it? Why?
-
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- You lack a sense of the importance of gesture,
- Braun. Let us avoid their customary accusations
- of barbarism... And buy ourselves time...
-
- SUSLOV
- Our technicians will repair the thing. Return
- it to them... And we will proceed. We will clone
- the alien...
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- TISSUE CULTURE LAB
-
- TRENT, head of BioLab, Rosetti, and Fox wait, seated, as Tully wheels a
- Holographic Display Module into position. The lights dim. A faint, ghostly
- cube shimmers in front of the three men.
-
- TRENT
- Initially this was merely routine, you
- understand. We attempted to determine its
- compatibility with terrestrial DNA.
-
- FOX
- What kind of DNA exactly, Doctor?
-
- TRENT
- Human, of course.
-
- Something shivers and shakes and takes form in the cube of light: a double
- helix threaded with green and red beads of light.
-
- TRENT
- (continuing)
- Watch closely, please.
-
- The alien genetic material looks like a cubist's vision of an art deco
- staircase, its asymmetrical segments glowing Day-glo green and purple.
-
- ROSETTI
- That's a biological structure? More like
- part of a machine...
-
- The alien form makes contact with the human DNA. The transformation is
- shockingly swift, but its stages can still be followed: the thing seems to
- pull itself into and through the coils, and for an instant the two are meshed,
- locked, and then the final stage. A new shape glows, a hybrid; the green and
- red beads have been altered beyond recognition.
-
- FOX
- Like a high-speed viral takeover...! What's
- the real-time duration on this, Trent?
-
- TULLY
- (from the shadows beyond
- the glowing cube)
- That was it. What you see is what you get.
- That's how fast it is...
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- MACHINE SHOP
-
- Hicks enters the cavernous shop, dodging out of the way of an emerging power-
- loader. The place is an oily forest of steel; machines of various kinds
- await repair. WALKER is at a workbench, a big man in a grease-stained vest.
-
-
- HICKS
- Hicks. Temporary duty assignment.
-
- Walker works the joystick on a handheld remote control unit. An unmanned
- power-loader comes to life and lumbers toward the bench. He brings it to a
- halt expertly, exactly where he wants it, with few casual twiddles of the
- stick.
-
- WALKER
- Walker. Know how to blow out the hydraulic
- lines on a force-feedback system?
-
- HICKS
- No.
-
- WALKER
- Never too late to learn.
-
- He offers Hicks a cigarette, lights it for him with a micro-torch from the
- bench.
-
- WALKER
- (continuing)
- You off the mystery ship, Hicks?
-
- HICKS
- Sulaco? What's the mystery?
-
- WALKER
- (lighting his own
- cigarette)
- Popular question. Whole thing's triple-classified
- now and word's getting around that two of the
- deck party never came back.
-
- HICKS
- (shrugs)
- I was iced.
-
- WALKER
- Sure...
-
- HICKS
- You ready to show me his feedback system?
-
- WALKER
- (eyes Hicks narrowly)
-
- Anytime.
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- PAN along Jackson's multi-screen array in Operations, video images of various
- Anchorpoint locales: space-suited figure and robot welders making routine
- hull repairs.
-
- HIGH ANGLE -- THE MALL
-
- A buzzer SOUNDS. Screen directly in front of Jackson displays:
-
- INCOMING TRANSMISSION
- SOURCE: U.P.P. RODINA
- DIPLOMATIC INCRYPT>>>
- >>>DIPL CORPS SHUMAN
-
- Jackson bobs her head, moving the cursor-cap to various "windows" on the
- screen.
-
- JACKSON
- (speaking into headset
- mike)
- Somebody find me Shuman -- tell his we got
- incoming Rodina coded standard diplomatic.
- His opposite number must've decided it's time
- for the weekly bullshit session...
-
- INT. ANTI-BUGGING BUBBLE
-
- Shuman is seated alone at the round table. A miniature video camera is set up
- on the table. Opposite him is a large wall screen displaying an image of the
- U.P.P. Diplomatic Officer, also alone, seated at the far end of the narrow
- table in the Rodina conference room.
-
- SHUMAN
- Androids, by law, are afforded the status of
- persons. Citizens.
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- Under your system, yes. We prefer to afford them
- the status of machines.
-
- SHUMAN
- You're holding one of our citizens captive.
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- The "citizen" in question, the synthetic, Bishop,
- has been held in regard to a treaty violation
- involving an armed vessel.
-
- SHUMAN
- Sulaco was homing on Anchorpoint. The so-called
- violation was the result of a malfunction.
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- The matter is under investigation.
-
- SHUMAN
- I repeat: you are holding one of our citizens.
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- The incident is also being investigated with
- regards to an apparent violations of the Strategic
- Arms Reductions treaty.
-
- SHUMAN
- Sulaco's weapons-systems fall entirely within
- the prescribed --
-
- DIPLO
- MATIC OFFICER
- I refer to those sections of the treaty concerned
- with biological warfare.
-
- Beat. The U.P.P. Diplomat has just scored, but Shuman maintains his poise.
-
- SHUMAN
- The allegation is false.
-
- DIPLOMATIC OFFICER
- We make no official allegations at this time.
- The matter remains under investigation. Bishop,
- however, is of no further use in the inquiry.
- We are returning him to you.
-
- EXT. ANCHORPOINT -- SHUTTLE BAY -- A U.P.P. SHUTTLE
-
- docking. They bay closes behind it. (V.O.: STATIC, VOICES of Anchorpoint
- docking crew.)
-
- INT. SHUTTLE BAY
-
- Shuman and two Marines enter the bay. They wear biohazard envelopes, masks.
- The shuttle's hatch opens and the Vietnamese Commando steps out. Bishop
- emerges. He looks at the Commando, then at Shuman and the Marines waiting at
- the bottom of the gangway. The Commando gestures: go.
-
-
- SHUMAN
- You're under quarantine orders, Bishop.
- (to the Marines)
- Escort him to MedLab.
-
- INT. THE MALL
-
- Hicks has just come off shift; the Mall's bar catches his eye. The facade
- says it all: ye olde pre-packaged genuine simulated wood-grain generic tavern
- and the only joint in town.
-
- One wall is a screen showing a stale rerun of a Brazilian soccer match. Some
- of the customers play hologram game-consoles. Tully is seated at the bar.
- Hicks takes a stool beside him.
-
- HICKS
- Beer.
-
- He fishes his dog tags out and detaches one, passes it to the bartender; the
- bartender inserts it in a terminal, rings up the beer, hands it back.
-
- TULLY
- You're Hicks. Sulaco...
-
- Tully, in his trademark jacket, is obviously drunk.
-
- HICKS
- Who're you?
-
- TULLY
- Tully. Tech Five. Tissue lab. D-fucking-NA.
- Jesus... Sulaco... Lucky.
-
- HICKS
- Lucky? Who? You lucky, man?
-
- TULLY
- You. You're one lucky sonofabitch, Hicks.
-
- Knocks back his drink.
-
- HICKS
- How's that?
-
- TULLY
- All that way. All the way back here with those...
- Those fucking things, man...
-
- Tully has just gotten his sudden, undivided attention.
-
- HICKS
- Things? What things?
-
- TULLY
- Shit... We had to sign. All of us. Lose our
- fucking shares we tell anybody, right?
-
- HICKS
- (his whole body tense)
- They were on the ship...
-
- TULLY
- Yeah. Jesus. I saw 'em...
-
- Reaches for his glass, but it's empty.
-
- HICKS
- Where? How many? When?
-
- TULLY
- (Suddenly remembering
- his shares)
- Look, I...
- (cuts a glance around the
- bar)
- Bad place to talk... I gotta go now, leave...
-
- HICKS
- (grabbing Tully before he
- can slide off the stool)
- You aren't going anywhere, buddy.
-
- Tully, sudden energy, not so much at Hicks as at his whole situation:
-
- TULLY
- I didn't come out here to work on shit like that.
- Came out here to help design ecosystems, not
- build designer for the next year... You want an
- earful? You got it. Shift after next, place
- called DP-54, Level 7 map. Can't talk here...
-
- He twists out of Hick's grip and into the crowd.
-
- Hicks sits at the bar, staring at his untouched beer.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. THE BUBBLE
-
- Rosetti, Trent, Fox, and Welles.
-
- WELLES
- And Bishop has agreed to undergo complete
- physical and chemical analysis?
-
- ROSETTI
- He requested it himself.
-
- FOX
- Results?
-
-
- TRENT
- No irregularities so far. No trace of the alien
- cellular material...
-
- WELLES
- Tampering, then? Reprogramming? Any new circuits
- in our Mr. Bishop? Any little surprises courtesy
- of the U.P.P.?
-
- TRENT
- No. Nothing.
-
- FOX
- And his data on the Aliens? All there? Intact?
-
-
- TRENT
- Yes, it seems to be. But if his memory's been
- tampered with, we'd have no way of knowing.
- Neither would he...
-
- WELLES
- In any case, we have to assume that the U.P.P.
- accessed Bishop's memory. That they have the
- data. They may also have specimens of the alien
- genetic material...
-
- ROSETTI
- In other words, you want to get on with your
- brief, don't you? You want Trent to clone the
- cultures. And you didn't want Shuman at this
- meeting.
-
- FOX
- This isn't a question of diplomacy, Colonel
- Rosetti.
-
- ROSETTI
- Isn't it? A violation of the S.A.R. treaty?
-
- FOX
- Has anyone mentioned military applications,
- Colonel? Trent?
-
- TRENT
- (smiles)
- No. I think a very nice case can be made for
- applied exobiology. We do have a standing order
- to study alien life-forms when we encounter them.
- Preliminary analysis of the material from Sulaco
- reveals a remarkable adaptive capacity. The
- potential for cancer research alone...
-
- WELLES
- Imagine, Colonel: if it can be programmed to
- only kill cancer cells...
-
- ROSETTI
- And what exactly is it you propose to do, Trent?
-
- FOX
- (before Trent can answer)
- We'll nourish the cells is stasis tubes, under
- constant observation. We'll terminate them before
- they become embryos...
-
- ROSETTI
- I see. Cancer research. And our motives are
- exclusively humanitarian. Is that it?
-
- WELLES
- Colonel, when Shuman gets his reply from Earth,
- priority will go to military development of the
- Alien. We know that because we know where our
- orders came from. The decision has already been
- made.
-
- FOX
- And potential U.P.P. research in the same direction
- only adds to the urgency, Colonel.
-
- ROSETTI
- The decision rests with me.
-
- WELLES
- Perhaps you misunderstood, Rosetti. The decision
- has been made.
-
- FOX
- They won't just break you, Colonel, they'll see
- to it that it's as though your career never
- happened. They're top people. That can do that.
- And you know it.
-
- Rosetti, with a long, cold look for both of them; he got the message:
-
- ROSETTI
- Shuman, of course, will have to be informed.
-
- FOX
- Of course. "Cancer research"...
-
- INT. MEDLAB -- SCAN UNIT
-
- Bishop patiently undergoes a scan; he lies on his back on a narrow support as
- a massive donut-shaped sensor moves down the length of his body. A life-size
- color scan-image is displayed on a large screen: his "organs."
-
- TECHNICIAN
- The knees. Looks like they do the joints in
- polycarbon...
-
- MEDIC
- How about it, Bishop? Knees okay?
-
- BISHOP
- Yes...
-
- Tentative smile.
-
- TECHNICIANS
- Polycarbon. Won't hold up worth a damn...
-
- INT. RODINA -- BIOLAB
-
- smaller than the Anchorpoint lab. Equipment look less advanced. The only
- light is the yellowish glow from a stasis tube; Braun and two assistants are
- clustered around the tube, observing the thing suspended there: thumb-sized,
- grayish-pink. An embryo.
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- A TUNNEL AT THE EDGE OF THE CONSTRUCTION ZONE
-
- Hicks jogs through the tunnel. Its brightly-lit arc of white ceramic recalls
- London tube stations, but the floor is paved smooth and black, with freshly-
- painted traffic symbols. He passes a woman jogging in the opposite direction,
- keeps going. Small video cameras are mounted at intervals overhead, panning
- slowly form side to side. As he continues, less of the tunnel is finished;
- sections of tile are missing, revealing pipes, wiring, structural steel. Past
- a certain point eh's jogging the raw steel tube, splashing through shallow
- puddles of condensation. Fewer lights, widely spaced. He reaches a junction
- and pauses, chooses a tunnel.
-
- INT. CONSTRUCTION ZONE CHAMBER -- HIGH, LONG SHOT -- HICKS
-
- comes out of the lit mouth of a tunnel. The space he enters is the size of a
- football stadium, but dark and industrially Gothic. Stacks of hull-plate and
- geodesic struts. A shower of sparks as he passes a robot welder (a la the
- machine in the opening sequence of "Aliens"). Down the aisle of material and
- heavy machinery. Spence is waiting.
-
- SPENCE
- Hicks.
-
- She's in the shadows, smoking a cigarette.
-
- HICKS
- You, huh? Why you?
-
-
- SPENCE
- I work in the lab with Tully. He couldn't
- make it.
-
- HICKS
- Hangover?
-
- SPENCE
- Sacred... That forfeit agreement he had to sign.
-
- HICKS
- Doesn't scare you?
-
- SPENCE
- I haven't signed. Not yet. They've only given
- them to the ones who saw what happened.
-
- HICKS
- Why you?
-
- SPENCE
- Tully's okay, Hicks. I know him. Believe it or
- not, he doesn't scare that easy. He told me what
- was on that ship, Hicks. What he saw. You know
- what is was.
-
- HICKS
- I don't think anybody knows what it is...
-
- SPENCE
- They've got us growing the stuff. We've been
- running recombinant DNA routines on it, using
- human genetic material...
-
- HICKS
- You've been what?
-
- SPENCE
- (stubbing out her cigarette)
- Cancer research. Tully says that's just a
- cover. Says it's like trying to cure cancer
- with a shotgun. Anyway, everybody know those
- two spooks from Gateway are MiliSci...
-
- HICKS
- Fox and Welles?
-
- SPENCE
- Weapons Division. Not even supposed to exist,
- these days. Not officially, anyway.
-
- HICKS
- (lights a cigarette
- of his own)
- I still don't see why you're telling me this.
-
- SPENCE
- Maybe I don't either. It's just... we've got
- to tell somebody... Now there's a rumor somebody
- came in on a U.P.P. ship today, somebody off
- Sulaco...
-
- HICKS
- Bishop...
-
- SPENCE
- I don't know.
-
- HICKS
- Maybe Progressive Peoples'll get their own Alien
- too. Maybe they'll grow some...
-
- SPENCE
-
- (horrified)
- Shit! You'd better hope not...
-
- HICKS
- Why's that?
-
- SPENCE
- Their lab gear's five years behind ours.
- They'd never be able to control it.
-
- HICKS
- Think you can, huh?
-
- SPENCE
- I don't know...
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- A BLEEP as Tully appears on one of Jackson's screens,
- looking up at a camera in the tissue culture lab.
-
- TULLY
- Get me some maintenance people down here, will
- ya? Run a check on the stasis system. Pressure
- differential's off and the read keep fluctuating.
- And punch it Priority One; Trent'll cover it.
-
- JACKSON
- (with a characteristic little
- jerk of her head, light-pen
- winking)
- Sure. You want a piece of the Superbowl, Tully?
-
- TULLY
- Nah.
-
- JACKSON
- Denver...
-
- TULLY
- Denver? No way. Gimme a tenth on Chicago.
-
- INT. RODINA -- BIOLAB
-
- Braun is seated at a computer, entering data. Suslov is staring into the
- stasis tube containing the developing Alien.
-
- SUSLOV
- There's an irony in this...
-
- BRAUN
- (engrossed in the data)
- Irony, Colonel-Doctor?
-
- SUSLOV
- The readiness with which it lends itself to
- genetic manipulation, Braun. The speed with which
- its cells multiply.
-
- BRAUN
- Yes. Remarkable.
-
- SUSLOV
- As though the gene-structure had been designed
- for ease of manipulation. And this apparently
- universal compatibility with other plasms...
-
- BRAUN
- (reluctantly abandoning
- his task)
- And you find this ironic?
-
- SUSLOV
- Ironic that we are attempting to program it as
- a weapon, yes.
-
- BRAUN
- How is that?
-
-
- SUSLOV
- Perhaps it is the fruit of some ancient
- experiment... A living artifact, the product of
- genetic engineering... A weapon. Perhaps we are
- looking at the end result of yet another arms
- race...
-
- BRAUN
- A defeatist attitude, Colonel-Doctor. Our
- project can only strengthen the Union of
- Progressive Peoples...
-
- CLOSE -- THE STASIS TUBE -- A CHEST-BURSTER
-
- is suspended there like an eyeless fetal dolphin.
-
- INT. MACHINE SHOP
-
- Hicks, alone in the shop, mechanically going through the motions of the
- busywork he's been assigned to keep him out of the way.
-
- BISHOP
- (from the doorway)
- That's quite a piece of machinery, Corporal
- Hicks...
-
- HICKS
- (looking up, grinning)
- That's what we used to say about you. How the
- hell are you, Bishop? Brass said you were
- snatched by the U.P.P. How're things in the
- socialist paradise?
-
- BISHOP
- I was returned. I assume they had no further
- use for me.
-
- He moves among the silent machines, touching them as he speaks.
-
- BISHOP
- (continuing)
- There are rumors, Hicks, that Weapons Division
- intends to develop the Alien.
-
- HICKS
- (with a glance at the
- video camera on the wall)
- Where'd the bastards get one, Bishop?
-
- BISHOP
- One of them managed to board Sulaco, Hicks.
- Ripley killed it...
-
- HICKS
- Good for her.
-
- BISHOP
- She called it "the queen." It was larger than
- the others. Very large. Somehow is deposited
- genetic material in the ship.
-
- HICKS
- Then they're stone cold crazy, man. I hear the
- U.P.P. might try it themselves.
-
- BISHOP
- Given the current state of the arms race, it's
- entirely possible. I'm programmed to protect
- human life, Hicks. It's my... nature. Everything
- I am, everything I know, tells me this experiment
- must be aborted.
-
- HICKS
- Yeah. I know the feeling.
-
- BISHOP
- But I can't be entirely sure you can trust me,
- Hicks.
-
- HICKS
- You can't what?
-
- BISHOP
- The U.P.P. may have reprogrammed me. I've been
- very thoroughly examined, of course, but the
- possibility does exist.
-
- HICKS
- Wouldn't you know?
-
- BISHOP
- No. I may be functioning as an enemy agent.
-
- HICKS
- (beat)
- What the hell. We have to kill it, don't we?
-
- BISHOP
- I have to try.
-
- HICKS
-
- I'm in man. And I think I know where we can find
- us a little help...
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. TISSUE LAB
-
- Spence and Tully are alone.
-
- SPENCE
- What coffee? I'm going to the machine.
-
- TULLY
- No.
-
- He peers into one of the stasis tubes; a small ovoid of tissue suspended
- there.
-
- SPENCE
- Maintenance cure your pressure differential
- problem?
-
- TULLY
- Said there wasn't any. Said it was a glitch.
-
- SPENCE
- Didn't want to get his hands dirty?
-
- TULLY
- It settled down by itself.
-
- Spence exits; Tully moves closer to the tube.
-
- CLOSE -- THE SINGLE DEVELOPING SPORE
-
- inside; it looks like a much smaller version of the alien egg.
-
- WIDER ANGLE
-
-
- TULLY
- Hey there. Hi ya. How ya doin'? Nutrient
- solution agreeing with you, hm? We're looking
- lots bigger today, aren't we? You bet.
- Terrific. Just absolutely fucking wonderful...
-
- His monologue is interrupted by Welles' entrance; he's startled, looks up
- guiltily. The heavy glass doors HISS shut behind her.
-
- WELLES
- Communing with nature, Tully?
-
- TULLY
- Your not wearing a badge.
- (taps the plastic ID
- clipped to his lab coat)
- White strap registers contamination. Turns
- red if you're accidentally exposed to something.
- Got it?
-
- WELLES
- Where's Trent?
-
- TULLY
- Lunch.
-
- WELLES
- And how's our friend?
-
- She moves to the stasis tube, looks in.
-
- TULLY
- Friends. Our little friends. Growing.
-
- WELLES
- Get me hard copy for the past six hours.
-
- TULLY
- Sorry. Ask Trent.
-
- WELLES
- I don't think you understood me, Technician
- Tully...
-
- She's following him as he nears the main computer console; in the b.g., a
- stasis tube begins to HISS. CRACKS loudly, a hairline fracture emits a
- superfine spray of fluid. An alarm SOUNDS.
-
- WELLES
- (continuing)
- What does th --
-
- TULLY
- O Jesus...
-
- Two of the tubes BLOW OUT. Nutrient fluid and plastic shards everywhere.
- Welles and Tully go down. A louder ALARM cuts in; red lights strobe. Locks
- in the doors THUNK shut, an automatic containment measure, as Spence, outside,
- throws down her coffee and begins to struggle with the door-controls, trying
- to reach Tully. Tully, facedown in a pool of the fluid, see that he's nine
- inches away from the gray pigeon's-egg of alien tissue. His eyes widen. Gets
- to his knees as carefully as he can. Reaches slowly -- slowly -- sideways,
- manages to snag a pair of plastic tongs and a shallow lab tray from the
- counter...
-
- Welles tries to scramble to her feet, loses her balance in the slippery goop,
-
- and snatches at his arm. He nearly falls on top of the thing, but cuffs her
- roughly away, kneels, tongs poised... Beat. A tiny orifice opens; for a
- split-second something glitters above the thing, a faint, fist-sized cloud of
- dark mist. Then it's gone and Tully's moving, swooping in with tongs and
- tray.
-
- SPENCE (V.O.)
- (intercom)
- Tully! Tully, Goddamn it! What's happening?
- Are you okay?
-
- TULLY
- De-con. Get us down to De-con!
-
- Welles is struggling to her feet.
-
- INT. DECONTAMINATION CHAMBER
-
- Drenched, naked, furious, Welles is nearly invisible behind a scalding
- downpour as techs in biohazard gear scrub her down with detergents and
- antibacterial agents. She shoots eye-daggers at Tully, who's being worked
- over by two more techs.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- Jackson at work. PAN ACROSS screens to security camer
- a view of the DNA lab,
- clean now but minus two stasis tubes -- image identified: TISSUE CULTURE /
- 25 AUGUST / 1900:15 HOURS. Jackson's attention is elsewhere.
-
- INT. A CORRIDOR
-
- Hicks keeps watch as Bishop open a panel, exposing complex wiring; no
- hesitation whatever as he strips two wires, removes a Walkman-sized VCR from
- his belt, and clips lead to the stripped wires.
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- CLOSE on monitor image of the lab. The picture fuzzes out, scrambles,
- returns -- but now reads: TISSUE CULTURE / 23 AUGU
- ST / 1200:02 HOURS and
- the missing tubes are back in place.
-
- INT. ENTRANCE -- OUTSIDE LAB
-
- BISHOP
- We have three minutes at the outside.
-
- HICKS
- Go.
-
- Bishop punches the code-sequence and the door hisses open; they're through,
- moving.
-
- INT. TISSUE CULTURE LAB
-
- They move down the row of stasis tubes. Bishop pauses when they reach the two
- units with missing tubes, then quickly moves on. He opens a wall panel,
- exposing controls and a large, very serious-looking red switch. Label above
- switch:
-
- STASIS SYSTEM MICROWAVE STERILIZATION
-
- Then, he hesitates. Turning slowly, as if under compulsion, he looks back;
- the line of glowing tubes.
-
- HICKS
- Do it!
-
- And still he doesn't move... Hicks darts his arm past Bishop, breaking the
- trance and yanking the red switch.
-
- A burst of unpleasant high-frequency SOUND as the fluid in the tubes instantly
- begins to boil.
-
- CLOSE ON ONE OF THE ALIEN CULTURES
-
- as it bursts, disintegrates into a film of slime lost behind a storm of
- bubbles. The lab's ALARM system goes off. The doors slide open as three
- MARINES cover Hicks and Bishop with handguns.
-
- MARINES
- Just don't you fucking move, Jack.
-
- Hicks stonefaces the Marines. Then cracks a grin.
-
- INT. DETENTION UNIT
-
- Hicks and Bishop, in white plastic "medical restraints" (like arm and leg-
- irons) precede the grim-faced Marines along a corridor and are thrown into
- separate cells.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. THE BUBBLE
-
- Meeting of Anchorpoint's full directorate, including Welles and Fox, Jackson,
- and a number of new faces. Welles is white-lipped with fury.
-
- JACKSON
- They knew the code, didn't they? The code for
- the door...
-
- FOX
- You got it, Ops. And they knew just where to
- go which button to push to poach our eggs for us,
- didn't they? Struggling with an idea, Ops?
- Think it may even have been an inside job?
-
- JACKSON
- You're a Grade A Company prick, aren't you,
- mister?
-
- (Her bitch truckdriver side; a tough lady, used to taking a lot of life-or-
- death responsibility in her job.)
-
- WELLES
- The Anchorpoint phase of the project is terminated,
- Rosetti. You'll keep Hicks and the android in
- solitary until they can return with us to Gateway
- to stand trial for treason.
-
- TRENT
- The Anchorpoint phase? What do you mean? We
- have no more material to work with...
-
- FOX
- You have no more material to work with, Trent.
- In any case, it's become obvious that you aren't
- quiet the man for the job. We took the precaution
- of obtaining our own samples. They're on their
- way to Gateway.
-
- WELLES
- (with cold satisfaction)
- ... and everything, every move each of you have
- made, since our arrival, is going to be gone
- over with a fine toothed c-c-c-c--
-
- As Welles begins to stammer, her eyes betray a terrible consternation. She
- rises from her chair, lurches forward, catching herself on her hands. The
- C-C-C-C-C phases into a chattering palsy as a thick strand of blood-streaked
- drool descends toward the table. Fox, seated to her left, has instinctively
- shoved his own chair back, ready to run. Everyone else is frozen with shock.
-
- As the chittering tooth-burr becomes a shrill SHRIEK of inhuman rage, the
- transformation takes place. Segmented biomechanoid tendons squirm beneath the
- skin of her arms. Her hands claw at one another, tearing redundant flesh from
- alien talons. Then the shriek dies. She straightens up.
-
- And, rips her face apart in a single movement, the glistening claws coming
- away with skin, eyes, muscle, teeth, and splinters of bone... SOUND of ripping
- cloth. The New Beast sheds its human skin in a single sinuous, bloody ripple,
- molting on fast forward.
-
- An instant of utter silence as the featureless mask moves. From side to side.
- Scanning.
-
- Trent vomits explosively. The Marine guard snatches his pistol from its
- holster and FIRES wildly across the table. Blind screaming chaos.
-
- OVERHEAD SHOT
-
- as the directorate plunges, like a single panicked organism, to the far side
- of the bubble. The thing is on Fox before he can get up from his chair.
-
- CLOSE
-
- On his scream as the sucking, fanged tongue plunges through the orbit of his
- eye.
-
- ANGLE
-
- A Marine with a flamethrower bursts through the door, torching Fox and the New
- Beast, setting fire to the bubble's acoustic foam baffles.
-
- INT. CORRIDOR OUTSIDE TULLY'S SLEEPING CUBICLE
-
- Spence is coming down the corridor, carrying a clear plastic bag of styrofoam
- food containers. Nobody else in sight. She look tired, but not particularly
- worried. She reaches the door to his cubicle. Thumps on it with the heal of
- her hand.
-
- SPENCE
- Tully! Hey! Open up.. Got you some food...
-
- No reply. She thumps again, then punches the combination (the lock look like
- a telephone key-pad). Door opens. Dark inside.
-
- SPENCE
-
- (continuing)
- Tully? You sleeping?
-
- She climbs in. Dark. Very. A red LED glows on the phone console. She
- crawls through the detritus of Tully's housekeeping and fumbles with the
- lights. Can't find the switch.
-
- SPENCE
- Tully?
-
- Lights CLICK on. Nobody there. Nothing. Looks even messier then she last
- saw it. She sighs, puts the bag of food on a ledge, scoops up a mound of
- dirty cloths off the pillow in an automatic cleanin
- g-up gesture. And sees Tully's lab badge. Picks it up.
-
- CLOSE ON THE BADGE
-
- The contamination indicator strip is red.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. DETENTION CELL
-
- Hicks sitting on the narrow bunk.
-
- Door opens. One of the Marines who arrested his in the lab; he wears combat
- armor now.
-
- HICKS
- What's your problem, bud? Got a war on?
-
- The Marine steps back, admitting a haggard Rosetti.
-
-
- ROSETTI
- Get up, Hicks. We need you in the Ops Room.
-
- HICKS
- We didn't kill it.
-
- ROSETTI
- No. It killed Fox and Welles...
-
- INT. TUNNEL, CONSTRUCTION ZONE
-
- Small vehicle WHINES TOWARD US through puddles of condensation: a skeletal
- electric motor-jeep with heavy roll bars, scratched and paint-scarred. Walker
- driving. Hick behind him in partial combat armor and communication rig,
- cradling a pulse-rifle.
-
- Walker is pushing it, driving fast; the jeep bounces and sways, skitters
- around a corner. Into the gloom of the big construction chamber. Halts.
-
- HICKS
- (into mouthpiece)
- Gimme a read.
-
- JACKSON (V.O.)
- (from headset)
- You're close. Hang a left.
-
- HICKS
- Is he moving?
-
- JACKSON
- No...
-
- Walker swing the jeep around and they roll toward a narrow gap between massive
- stacks of geodesic struts.
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- Jackson studies a simulator screen; a moving cursor, the Jeep, navigates a 3D
- grid-representation of the construction zone.
-
- JACKSON
- No left again.
-
- The cursor turns. Nears a blinking red dot.
-
- Spence, drawn and anxious, looks over Jackson's shoulder. Bishop and Rosetti
- are beside her.
-
- SPENCE
- You're sure it's him?
-
- JACKSON
- It's his locator frequency, isn't it? No two
- alike. Surgically implanted. Just like yours...
-
- SPENCE
- (gnaws at her lip)
- He's not moving...
-
- ROSETTI
- Why would he go down there?
-
- BISHOP
- The badge. He knew that he's been infected...
-
- SPENCE
- Scared. He's scared.
- (shudders)
- Tully...
-
- INT. CONSTRUCTION CHAMBER
-
- Dark. The Jeep creeps along between stacks of prefab hull units, emerges
- into a open space, junctions of several corridors. The deck is an inch deep
- in water.
-
- JACKSON (V.O.)
- He's there! You're right on top of him!
-
- Walker stops the jeep. Hicks stands up, plays the beam of a flashlight around
- the area. Presses the mute button on his headset.
-
- HICKS
- (bellows)
- Tully! Tully! Yo!
-
- ECHO. DRIP of water.
-
- Hicks clips the flashlight beneath the barrel of his gun and jumps down.
- Reflections ripple as he moves forward. Swings the beam along the surface --
- something there... The logo-patches down a sleeve of Tully's ruptured,
- blood-soaked leather jacket. Drifting shred of human tissue...
-
-
- JACKSON (V.O.)
- Can you see him?
-
- HICKS
- Yeah.
-
- And the thing that was Tully launches itself from the top of one of the stacks
- of construction material. Lands on top of the jeep, going for Walker, through
- the roll bars.
-
- CLOSEUP ON JAWS
-
- CLOSEUP
-
- as the thing's tail lashes past Walker's face, taking a nick out of a steel
- bar.
-
- on the controls, a pair of levers: he yanks one back, shoves the other
- forward, thumbs both drive buttons simultaneously.
-
- ANGLE
-
- The jeep (separate drive-trains for each wheel) pulls two three-sixties on a
- dime, hurling the thing toward Hicks. It smashes into the desk, splash of
- water, leaps for Hicks instantly. The charge from his pulse-rifle takes it
- in mid-air, hideous bile-yellow spurt of acid... And it hits the water again
- with a terrific EXPLOSION of steam. The jeep lurches out through the steam,
- engines SCREAMING, wheels losing traction through the puddle, throwing up
- fantails of water, nearly overturning. Hicks jumps, snags a roll bar, empties
- the pulse-rifle's clip into the steam on full-auto as Walker hauls ass back
- down the corridor...
-
- JACKSON (V.O.)
- Hicks! What's happening?
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- JACKSON
- Hicks? Hicks!
-
- CLOSE ON SCREEN
-
- as the jeep-cursor speeds away from Tully's blinking locator-dot.
-
- Spence's eyes fixed on the screen as she makes a serious stab at swallowing
- her own fist.
-
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. RODINA -- BIOLAB
-
- VERY SLOW PAN past monitors -- one flickering like a defective strobe, the
- other displaying a readout in Russian -- past an overturned mug on a keyboard,
- past assorted equipment, past the shattered ruin of the big stasis tube, to
- Suslov and Braun cocooned in a glittering biomech structure of alien resin.
- Braun is dead, his rib cage gaping.
-
- SCEAMS and the HAMMER of automatic weapons. Station crew fleeing in panic
- enter through one door, crash into tables, scattering trays of food, claw at
- one another to escape through another door. The Vietnamese commando and her
- partner are last into the room; they spin in unison and FIRE back through the
- door. SOUND of rending metal and loud inhuman RAGE.
-
- The commandos scramble for the far door as the alien crashes into the mess: a
- new form, the result of Suslov's genetic tinkering. Bigger. Meaner. Faster.
- Able to reproduce more quickly.
-
- The frantic crew are climbing a ladder. The commandos start up the ladder.
- They climb through a circular hatch. Like the deck they stand on, the hatch
- is made of heavy steel expansion-grid. The alien swarms up the ladder, slams
- into the hatch just as the commandos close and lock it. The alien keeps on
- slamming. The steel begins to bulge and tear...
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- OPS ROOM
-
- Hicks, Bishop, Rosetti, Shuman, and Jackson.
-
- JACKSON
- Cant's raise 'em, boss.
-
- SHUMAN
- Try the diplomatic codes...
-
- JACKSON
- Diplomatic codes? They aren't responding to
- Mayday International. Maybe they've got a
- transponder down, but -- hey, check this,
- outgoing traffic...
- (she bobs her head, taps
- her lapboard)
- It's a squirt transmission... Military decryption
- standard.
-
- ROSETTI
-
- What do they have in the area?
-
- JACKSON
- (taps up a fresh screen
- of data)
- Not much. Automated mining system working
- NC-313... Test module for a terraforming operation
- enroute MV-45... And, here we go, the battle
- cruiser Nikolai Stoiko. Nine hours from Rodina
- if they push it.
-
- HICKS
- What I wanna know is, what do we have in the
- area?
-
- JACKSON
- (another screen of data)
- Not much. How about the Kansas City, Colonel
- Admin transport? We hit her with a mayday,
- she'll get here inside twenty hours.
-
- HICKS
- Then what?
-
- ROSETTI
- We abandon the station.
-
- HICKS
- Destroy the station, man! We got nukes?
-
- ROSETTI
- Outlawed under the Strategic Arms Reduction
- treaty.
-
- JACKSON
- We can fiddle the overrides on the fusion
- package. Baby nova.
-
- BISHOP
- We're dealing with a new form, Colonel. We
- know nothing of this new mode of reproduction.
- Others may have already become hosts...
-
- ROSETTI
- What are you suggesting?
-
- BISHOP
- In order to be entirely certain, Colonel, it
- would be necessary to override the fusion
- package now.
-
- Jackson looks up at Bishop; he's suggesting mass suicide.
-
- HICKS
- I thought you were programmed to protect human
- life?
-
- BISHOP
- (with android blandness)
- I'm taking the long view.
-
- Jackson's console CHIMES, begins to display new data, ID shots of three crew
- members.
-
- JACKSON
- Missing persons.
- (she taps her way through
- windows of data)
- Two were members of the clean-up crew who did
- the lab after the blowout. Third doesn't
- check... No, wait. Lives with one of the first
- two.. But that makes a total of fifteen...
- Something's happening...
-
- HICKS
- Goddamn, Rosetti, it's catching!
-
- ROSETTI
- (ignores him)
- Mayday Kansas City, Jackson.
-
- HICKS
- What about Sulaco?
-
- SHUMAN
- It would take two days to raise her.
-
- HICKS
- (bitterly)
- With that shit on board.
-
- ROSETTI
- Gateway will have our warning before Sulaco
- arrives.
-
- SHUMAN
- Fine, Colonel. And who do you suppose will be
- willing to take it seriously? Weapons Division?
-
- JACKSON
- Hey, I'm getting something! The socialist space
- brothers speak at last...
-
- Her main screen flickers and jumps; the speakers hill with a roar of STATIC --
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- Their transmission standards get worse all the --
-
- She falls silent as the screen clear, revealing a young Slavic madwoman -- one
- of Suslov's lab assistants -- in blood-drenched coveralls. Jerky handheld
- video, grainy transmission, indistinct background. She clutches a sheet of
- paper, reads aloud from it in a foreign language.
-
- SHUMAN
- Get a translation program on line, Jackson!
-
- Jackson's already punching. An instantaneous computer translation cuts in as
- V.O.; the girl's lips move, out of sync, like a cheap dub; the transmission is
- rendered in flat synthi-voice.
-
- CLOSE UP ON SCREEN
-
- SPOKESWOMAN
- ... of Progressive Peoples. Technician First
- Class, Tatjana Malik. Please, we wish to inform
-
- you: we have undertaken an experiment with
- genetic material obtained from the military
- transport vessel... We attempted to clone the
- xenomorph in stasis. Failure of the stasis
- system occurred in the fifteenth hour... Attempted
- modification of the genetic structure has resulted
- in a variant which replicates rapidly, more
- rapidly...
- (and here, horribly,
-
- she smiles)
- It has... taken... most of us. Those of us who
- remain... We wish to warn you: you must terminate
- any experiment with the material now. It is
- impossible. It cannot be contained. There is
- no --
-
- The image flickers, vanishes.
-
- ANGLE
-
- JACKSON
- Lost 'em. That's it... Goddamnit, she was just
- a tech. Their brass didn't bother...
-
-
- HICKS
- No brass left...
-
- JACKSON
- And you better check this, Hicks.
-
- Her other screens display assorted images of nearly identical tunnels and
- passageways, but three of them are black; she gestures to the dark screens.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- This is down by the main air-scrubber. System
- says those cameras are still operational, but
- there's something in the way. Something big...
-
- EXT. ANCHORPOINT -- ECO-MODULE
-
- Huge louvers pivot smoothly, like Venetian blinds, revealing lush vegetation
- through thick plastic...
-
- INT. ECO-MODULE
-
- Spence sits cross-legged in Newt's meadow, tearfully hugging a small tame
- primate. Light crosses the meadow as the louvers open overhead, beyond the
- geodesics. Artificial dawn. BIRDS begins to sing. Quiet before the storm...
-
- EXT. RODINA
-
- No sign of movement.
-
- Dimly lit. Clutter of spacesu
- its, machinery. The Vietnamese commando seated
- on the floor, back to the wall, cradling her gun. The corpse of her partner
- is sprawled on the deck beside her, face hideously burned, his armor
- fretworked with acid. Her face is blank, eyes straight ahead.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- EXT. ANCHORPOINT
-
- The station.
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- MEDLAB -- CORRIDOR
-
- Hicks, still in his fighting gear, walking purposefully. MedLab staff in
- hospital whites dubiously note his passage.
-
- INT. MED LAB -- RIPLEY'S ROOM
-
- Ripley comatose, still hooked up to assorted biomonitors, the only movement
- in the room the restless flicker of a bank of colored diodes.
-
- Hicks enters, crosses to the bed, seems about to speak, makes a helpless
- little gesture with his hands -- then yanks the biomonitor leads from the
- bedside console. The diodes go out; a buzzer begins to SOUND. The bed is
- mounted on casters. He starts to pull it out of the room. Stops. Looks up
- at Newt's map on the wall.
-
-
- He rips the map from the wall and stuffs it into her hospital gown.
-
- INT. MEDLAB -- CORRIDOR
-
- Hicks hustles Ripley through MedLab, not about to stop for anyone; startled
- staff jump out of the way.
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- ANOTHER CORRIDOR -- ENTRANCE TO A LIFEBOAT
-
- Signs and notices detailing lifeboat launch procedures. Hicks lifts Ripley
- from the bed, carries her through hatch into lifeboat. Places her in a
- hypersleep capsule, presses a button. The lid comes down. Silent moment as
- he looks down at her through the lid, his palm on the smooth plastic in a
- gesture of farewell, resignation. Then back through the hatch, where he
- activates controls that seal the boat, setting the launch-procedure in
- motion.
-
- ANGLE on the blunt prows of the lifeboat receding around the curve of the
- station's hull.
-
- INT. LIFEBOAT BAY
-
- Hicks watching digital countdown. Muted WHUMP of explosive bolts --
-
- EXT. LIFEBOAT
-
- Flash of the bolts as Ripley's boat is launched into the sweep of night.
-
- INT. LIFEBOAT BAY
-
- Bishop enters behind Hicks.
-
- BISHOP
- But can you be certain she hasn't been infected?
-
- HICKS
- I'll take the chance.
-
- BISHOP
- Why?
-
- HICKS
- I owe her one.
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- Jackson at her screens; display as before, the tunnels near the air-
- scrubber -- with three screens dark. CLOSEUP on one tunnel-view as an open,
- six-wheeled personnel carrier rolls past the video camera, Hick looking up.
- Five Marines in full battle dress ride with him: ALSOP, GREENFIELD, BRICE,
- COSTELLO, WALLACE.
-
- JACKSON
- Next junction, hang a right...
-
- INT. TUNNEL
-
- Dim; light spaced far apart along tunnel. The carrier takes a right.
-
- JACKSON (V.O.)
- Left at the fork and you wanna take it slow.
- Fifty meters to whatever's in front of that
- camera...
-
- Hicks gestures to Wallace, the driver. The carrier halts. SOUND of the air-
- scrubbers from down the tunnel. The Marines shift their weapons, uneasily eye
- the tunnel ahead. These are young recruits, not the hard-case vets of
- "ALIENS."
-
- HICKS
- Now listen up. We don't do this by the book,
- we don't pair off. Stay together, tight.
- Greenfield up front with me; anything moves,
- you torch it. The rest of you, if it moves,
- kill it. You gotta get the fuckers before they
- get close. You know about the acid; you know
- they don't show on infrared. And you know you
- don't let them take you alive. You might have
- to do a friend a favor... Ready? Move out.
-
- He climbs down from the carrier, heavily burdened with gear. The others
- follow. Greenfield has a flamethrower. They move forward. Toward the next
- light; beyond it, the tunnel curves out of sight.
-
- JACKSON (V.O.)
- You're right up on it, Hicks. Right around the
- corner...
-
- HICKS
- Affirmative...
-
- They round the turn, weapons ready. And stop, stunned.
-
- GREENFIELD
- Wha' 'th...?
-
- The tunnel, which widens here as it approaches the massive air-scrubber, has
- been transformed; its lights are dimly visible through shrouds of resin. Vast
- ribs of the stuff sweep up from a dim and monstrous shape that covers the deck
- at the base of the scrubber; we're looking into an Alien grotto, black and
- pearlescent, and obscene fairyland. The shape's symmetry suggest function.
- Patient DRUMMING of the air-scrubber's giant fans.
-
- HICKS
- Scan it. Motion?
-
- COSTELLO
- (consulting tracker,
- adjusting knob)
- Negative.
-
- HICKS
- Alsop, gimme the flood...
-
- Alsop passes Hicks a portable halogen-flood. Hicks thumbs it on...
-
- WALLACE
- Holy Christ.
-
- The central shape is revealed as an enormous mutant queen. The thing is
- splayed on its back, mortared into the mass of resin, its vestigial head
- toward Hicks and the Marines. Its abdomen is arched like an inverted
- scorpion-tail, tipped with a swollen, semi-translucent sac that ripples and
- pulses in the glare of Hick's lamp. A biomechanical birth-factory.
-
- HICKS
- (passing the flood
- to Brice)
- Hold it... steady.
-
- He kneels, unslings one of his gear cases, open it, revealing a squat tube.
-
- HICKS
- Moving. Something's moving...
-
- Hicks is working on the tube-thing, snapping components into place.
-
- Brice suddenly swings the beam away from the queen, revealing half a dozen
- new-model Aliens twisting out of recesses in the grotto walls...
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- Jackson and Bishop hear SCREAMS and FIRING over the comm-link.
-
- HICK (V.O.)
- The light! The goddamn light! (garble)
-
- The Aliens tear into the Marines like living chainsaws. Wallace and Costello
- go down immediately; the Aliens begin to drag them away. Hicks has gotten
- hold of the light, struggles to keep it on the queen as he props the tube
- against his thigh. SCREAMS. Blue stutter of pulse-rifles. A tongue of fire
- from Greenfield's flamethrower, but an Alien jumps him; the napalm-stream arcs
- wildly, splashing the resin structure -- and the Queen wakes. The huge tail
- extends, lifts in the floodlight beam...
-
- Hicks is still trying to assemble his mortar.
-
- As the swollen, podlike tail-tip splits open with a sickly, tearing SOUND,
- releasing a puffball cloud of dark mist -- we've seen it before, in miniature,
- with Tully in the lab -- which begins to rise, drawn up toward the giant fans
- above the air-scrubber...
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- HICKS (V.O.)
- Stop the fans!
-
- Bishop is instantly on the case, leaning over Jackson's shoulder to punch the
- right button, but...
-
- INT. SCRUBBER-TUNNEL
-
- Too late. The cloud of spores is sucked into the fans -- as Hicks drop a
- shell into the mortar. It bucks against his thigh and the queen is blown to
- shred in an EXPLOSION that rips out the side of the scrubber.
-
- HICKS
- The vents! Seal the vents!
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- Bishop's fingers fly as he punches another sequence.
-
- INT. VENT
-
- Straight down the pipe, a long way, to the whirling fans. Huge hermetic
- barriers SLAM across the vent in sequence -- one, two, three.
-
- INT. SCRUBBER-TUNNEL
-
- Hicks scramble to his feet.
-
- HICKS
- Out! Out of here! Now!
-
- The Marine beside him begins to spasm and quake as the Change comes. Hicks
- SHOOTS him in the chest at close range and sprints for the carrier.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. RODINA -- HUB
-
- The Vietnamese commando nears the station's hub. The walls, in one large
- chamber, are decorated with official U.P.P. art, like a blend of Mexican
- Socialists agitprop murals and Syd Mead techo-fantasy. She passes evidence of
- brief violent struggle: a wall splashed with dried blood, a single shoe,
- smashed equipment, ragged acid-scars in the deck.
-
- She looks like a child now, moving through all this, small and alone. But not
- helpless: she still moves with a cat's wariness, her gun ready.
-
- Three face-huggers scuttle across at an intersection of corridors, tails
- thrashing...
-
- She comes to a door that opens onto Rodina's central hub, a large cylindrical
- space surrounding a core of equipment. The door is ajar; she edges through...
-
- Virtually the station's entire crew, perhaps a hundreds people, have been
- cocooned along the multi-storey column, a bas-relief of human bodies and
- glittering resin.
-
- She stares from a railing, appalled, then slips through the door.
-
- INT. ACHORPOINT -- OPS ROOM
-
- Rosetti, Jackson, Bishop
-
- JACKSON
- I don't know what they did down there, but it's
- screwed up internal comm-link for the whole
- area; I can't raise 'em...
-
- One of Jackson's consoles CHIMES; her central screen suddenly glows with a
- hi-rez simulation of Rodina.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- Rodina's got company...
-
- EXT. SPACE
-
- Silent approach of the U.P.P. cruiser Nikolai Stoiko, a vicious-looking mile-
- long slab of armament. Stoiko slows, comes to an ominous halt.
-
- INT. RODINA
-
- The commando bolts down a corridor. Total desperation. She's lost her gun.
- A CRASH behind her. The beast's shrill RAGE. She throws herself through the
- first available door -- and sees the interceptor waiting. She scrambles up a
- ladder, through the hatch, and frantically begins to activate systems. Sirens
-
- begin to SOUND in the launch bay. The interceptor's hatch closes as the twin
- gates of the bay begin to swing open -- and the beast is on her, striking at
- the view-port in the hatch, inches from her face. She flips open a safety-
- override on the interceptor's joystick and thumbs a red button.
-
- EXT. RODINA
-
- Total overdrive: the interceptor BLASTS out through the half open gates in a
- fireball of exhaust gases, the beast and the service ladder tumbling after
- it...
-
- EXT. SPACE -- STOIKO
-
- Something streak from the bow of the cruiser...
-
- INT. ANCHORPOINT -- OPS ROOM
-
- Jackson huddled over her screen.
-
- JACKSON
- Missile!
-
- EXT. SPACE -- RODINA -- INTERCEPTOR IN F.G.
-
- The U.P.P. missile takes out the station. Whiteout of nuclear EXPLOSION; the
- interceptor is a black blot tumbling toward us like a singed leaf in a
- whirlwind...
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- The simulation of Rodina on Jackson's screen is surrounded by an expanding
- blue sphere. The sphere stops expanding. The simulatio
- n blurs into digital
- static, fades as the sphere begins to contract...
-
- JACKSON
- Nuked 'em! Twenty megs! That coded
- transmission...
-
- ROSETTI
- Send Mayday.
-
- JACKSON
- I don't believe it! They send for help, their
- own people nuked 'em!
-
- HICKS
- (quietly)
- Maybe they asked for it...
-
- ROSETTI
- That's an order, Jackson!
-
- Bishop looks at Rosetti as though he's about to offer an opinion, but doesn't.
-
- JACKSON
- Maybe they'll nuke us too...
-
- BISHOP
- No. They're leaving...
-
- EXT. SPACE -- STOIKO
-
- The cruiser begins to move, accelerates, is gone.
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- ROSETTI
- Bastards!
-
- JACKSON
- Yeah. And they violated the fucking arms treaty,
- too, didn't they? Well, Colonel Rosetti, how
- about a situation update? We got, lessee, fifty-
- six missing crew members as of fifteen hundred
- hours...
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. THE MALL
-
- Deserted. The only SOUNDS are Muzak and the trickles of an artificial
- waterfall. Some signs of trouble: an overturned trash canister, someone's
- red nylon baseball cap on the polished concrete.
-
- Walker strolls around a corner beside the bar with a pulse-rifle, grenades,
- and assorted gadgetry slung across his chest. Goes to the bar entrance,
- nudges the door open with the barrel of the rifle. Nobody there. Same soccer
- game on the big screen, but the sound is off. Silent cheering crowd rising to
- its feet, the flicker of the holo-game consoles. He glances around the mall,
- enters. Crosses to the bar, checks behind it, then fishes up a big plastic
- jug of liquor. Opens it, drink from the jug.
-
- Behind him, a mug topples, CLATTERS on the floor. He slowly lowers the
- liquor to the counter; just as slowly, he turns. A beast is there, waiting,
- beyond the Glimmer of the holo-games.
-
- Walker and the beast move simultaneously. But he doesn't go for his gun -- he
- grabs the control unit hanging on his chest.
-
- An unmanned power-loader walks straight through the glass facade, plowing
- tables and chairs out of its way, big vise-grip claws extended. The Alien
- SCREAMS, leaps for it, but the steel claws close and grip.
-
- Walker twiddles the controls; the power-loader responds, pinning the Alien
- against the wall. The Alien writhes and HISSES, striking furiously at the
- hydraulic arm. Walker tightens the grip, locks the loader in place. Picks up
- the jug of liquor and has another swallow.
-
- WALLACE
- Fuck you.
-
- Beat. As his satisfied grin is replaced by something else. The Change...
-
- INT. ECO-MODULE
-
- Artificial dusk. Spence is crossing the mirco-meadow with a wire basket of
- food the module's population of small primates. Moths flutter through
- narrowing beams of sunlight as the louvers gradually close overhead. CRICKETS
- in the long grass.
-
- She enters the scaled-down forest, ducking branches, and Spanish moss. Begins
- to make Tk-tk-tk sound, calling the lemur, the monkeys...
-
- And stops. Suddenly aware of a stillness, an absolute silence. Even the
- crickets...
-
- She turns -- gasps. The primates have been cocooned in the branches of a
- tree. And screams as something pounces on her from above, the transformed
- lemur: a very small Alien. She bats the thing away with the strength of
- desperation. It hits the ground HISSING; she hurls the basket of food at it
- and bolts from the forest, sobbing.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- INT. A TUNNEL
-
- WHINE of an approaching engine. The six-wheeled carrier come INTO VIEW,
- Hicks driving, alone. His face is fixed, white. The carrier slews against
- the tunnel wall, strikes sparks, bounces off. He hardly seems to notice. He
- plows into a row of big plastic crates, tumbling them like a child's blocks,
- bringing the vehicle to a halt. Beat. He look up from the controls: the
- doors of a freight elevator.
-
- INT. A CORRIDOR OFF THE MALL
-
- Automatic CHIME as elevator doors open, revealing Hicks and his gun.
-
- INT. THE MALL
-
- Hicks warily crosses the Mall. SOUND of perpetual Muzak. He eyes the
- wreckage of the bar, but keeps moving. Into stuttering neon light from one of
- the shops. HISS and CRACKLE of bad wiring. He move toward the shop, gun
- ready.
-
- INT. SHOP
-
- Hicks enters, surveys the wreckage of display cases, scattered 21st century
- consumer toys.
-
- He finds five cocoons at the read of the shop.
-
- INT. THE MALL
-
- LONG on the shop. Beat. SOUND of five rounds from the pulse-rifle. With the
- last shot, the neon flicker dies. Muzak stops.
-
- Hicks emerges, continues across the Mall.
-
- Arrives at the elevator-like entrance to the mini-subway, punches in his
- destination ("OPS" lights up in red). Muffled SOUND of the breaking car; the
- door HISSES open -- on Spence, both hands white-knuckled on the loop of a
- hanger-strap, the car an abattoir, red with the blood of Transformation.
- Shredded clothing and rags of flesh.
-
- HICKS
- Spence...
-
- She screams.
-
- INT. OPS ROOM
-
- Rosetti and Jackson are hunched over the screens as Hicks enters with Spence
- over his shoulder, brushing past two nervous Marines at the door. Bishop is
- making calculations on a console in the b.g. Hicks eases Spence down into a
- chair.
-
- JACKSON
- Revised ETA fro the Kansas City's another
- thirteen hours...
-
- HICKS
- (yanking Rosetti around
- in his chair)
- Things don't look so shit hot out there right
- now, Rosetti. What about rigging the fusion
- package?
-
- ROSETTI
- (to Jackson; ignoring Hicks)
- Sound the general alert, routine lifeboat
- drill...
-
- HICKS
- A general fucking alert? Lifeboat drill? Who
- the hell you think's gonna be left to pick up?
- I say we do the fusion package now!
-
- JACKSON
- (wearily; without looking
- up from her screen)
- Hicks, you took out the scrubber, the main air-
- scrubber. Pretty soon there isn't going to be
- anything to breathe in here. We'd by okay for
- about five days, except you also started an
- electrical fire and we got no way to put it out.
- The crew's down to one-twenty-eight.
-
- HICKS
- (stunned)
- More than half...?
-
-
- JACKSON
- That's what I said.
-
- HICKS
- And you haven't rigged the place to blow?
-
- JACKSON
- (glances at Rosetti)
- No.
-
- ROSETTI
- (as if noticing him
- for the first time)
- You'll lead the group from this sector, Hicks.
- At the alert, they'll gather at blue assembly
- points. Proceed to the nearest lifeboat bay...
-
- BISHOP
- (approaching Rosetti with a
- single sheet of printout)
- Colonel, my analysis indicates that a minimum
- of one fifth of the one hundred and twenty-
- eight remaining crew are already incubating
- the --
-
- ROSETTI
- (on the edge of hysteria)
- Listen to me, you motherless zombie! Those are
- people! Can't you understand that? And we're
- going to get them out!
-
- BISHOP
- Yes, Colonel, I...
-
- ROSETTI
- (to Hicks)
- You have your orders!
-
- HICKS
- I don't leave here until Jackson sets it to blow,
- Rosetti. Got that? Kansas City shows up, maybe
- there's nobody left for them to pick up. Then
- what? They'll send a boarding party in here!
-
- JACKSON
- I can't. The fusion package is under the
- scrubber, Hicks. You trashed the wiring, man.
- That's where the fire is. Those lines. I can't
- link through. I can't set it.
-
- BISHOP
- I'll go; I'll get it manually.
-
-
- HICKS
- I'll go with you.
-
- BISHOP
- No. Assist with the...
- (glances down at the figures
- on the sheet of printout)
- The evacuation.
-
- JACKSON
- (to Rosetti)
- You just want to get your own ass out of here,
- don't you? They couldn't have done this without
- you approval, could they?
-
- SPENCE
- Hick!
-
- As one of the Marine guards stumbles forward, dropping his weapon, hands
- upraised in claws of agony --
-
- MARINE
- Please, I...
-
- He trips, fall across Jackson's console and the barrel of Hick's gun -- as
- half a dozen New Model Chest-bursters erupt simultaneously from his torso in
- a spray of blood. Hicks bellow, jumps back, grabbing Spence.
-
- The chest bursters tumble from the body of the dead Marine, scuttle into the
- shadows; one leaves a trail of small bloody prints across Jackson's keyboard.
-
- HICKS
- Out! Out of here!
-
- INT. CORRIDOR
-
- Hicks, Spence, Bishop, Rosetti, Jackson, and the remaining Marine guard hustle
- along, Hicks and Bishop bringing up the rear. Rosetti carries the dead
- Marine's pulse-rifle. Bishop touches Hick's shoulder as they reach the
- intersection.
-
- BISHOP
- I'll try to give you an hour. Overload at
- twenty-two hundred.
-
- HICKS
- (quietly; doesn't want
- the others to hear)
- Blow it. That's what matters.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP on Hick's watch as her set the alarm for 2200 hours.
-
- BISHOP
- Yes.
-
- Bishop splits off, down another corridor, running.
-
- INT. LIFEBOAT ASSEMBLY POINT
-
- Another intersection of corridors. A pathetic remnant of Anchorpoint's crew
- cluster beneath a flashing blue light. A dozen people, including HALLIDAY,
- a woman Spence's age; TATSUMI (male Japanese); a LAB TECH (male).
-
- ROSETTI
- Where are the others? There should be thirty
- people here...
-
- HALLIDAY
- (dazed and confused)
- I can't find Tom. What is it? What's going on?
- He was just here. I mean there. But then...
-
-
- JACKSON
- Forget it, he's probably already on the boat.
- You know him, right? C'mon, we're getting out
- of here ourselves...
-
- Hicks pulls a service automatic from his vest and slips it to Jackson.
-
- HICKS
- (under his breath)
- Keep an eye on everybody, okay, Ops?
-
- JACKSON
- (to the others)
- Okay! You all know the Goddamn drill! Done it
- often enough, right? We're taking A-52 to Blue
- Concourse. We stick together. We'll meet up
- with two others groups at Bay Five and proceed
- to board...
-
- TATSUMI
- What is happening, please?
-
- JACKSON
- What's happening is we're getting on the boats!
- Move!
-
- INT. THE MALL
-
- Dense haze of smoke from burning insulation; half the lights are out. A body
- floats face down in the pool at the foot of the waterfall; the pool is
- overflowing, splashing on polished concrete. Bishop emerges from a doorway
- and hurries along toward the freight elevator. He freezes. Hears something
- else. Moves quietly in the direction of the SOUND. The bar. He peers into
- the wreckage. Four Aliens are at work, cocooning their prey. Cocooned
- bodies -- CLOSE on the face of Shuman -- have been glued to the big screen,
- where silent images of the soccer game repeat endlessly. Bishop stares, then
- turns -- looks up.
-
- A Queen. The thing towers above him in the Mall, utterly still.
-
- Beat.
-
- He takes a step backward. Another.
-
- The Queen's head sways.
-
- Another step. He bolts for the elevator.
-
- The Queen screams her rage, scrambles after him like a famished mantis.
-
- He's reached the elevator -- stabs desperately at the controls -- as the doors
- open and he's through, punching more buttons -- as the Queen strikes, her
- first blow buckling the steel doors.
-
- INT. FREIGHT ELEVATOR
-
- Her huge stinger lashes in through the gap, whipping and slicing, Bishop
- braced up straight in a corner, hand still on the controls. The elevator
- GROANS, SHUDDERS, begins to descend, then jams in the shaft. The stinger
- whips back out. SOUND of rending metal as the Queen continues her attack.
-
- INT. A CORRIDOR AT BULKHEAD HATCH
-
- Jackson ducks through first, still wearing her Ops cap. Rosetti next, then
- Spence, helping Halliday; the others follow, Hicks bringing up the rear.
- Hicks pauses, looks back through the hatch. Hears a distant CRASH, an
- inhuman cry. Takes a small bat of plastic explosive from his vest and
- squashes it against the edge of the bulkhead. Pulls a grenade from his
- harness, twists its neck in the delay-detonate combination, sticks in into the
- plastique, closes the hatch, and runs.
-
- The smoke is getting worse.
-
- INT. BLUE CONSOURSE
-
- Another of the white-tiled traffic-tunnels, this one identified by a wide band
- of blue along either side. A small vehicle has overturned, amid blood and
- torn clothing. Jackson and her party are skirting the wreck as Hicks catches
- up with them. Jackson whirls at the SOUND of running feet, bringing up the
- pistol.
-
- HICKS
- Easy, Jackson!
-
- JACKSON
- Where y'been?
-
- A distant EXPLOSION shakes the tunnel, jarring loose several tiles.
-
- HICKS
- (low, so the others
- won't hear)
- They're following us. Left 'em something to
- slow 'em down.
-
- JACKSON
- Might as well. Just try not to put a hole in
- the hull, okay?
- (coughs)
- Remember the air-scrubber...
-
- HICKS
- Let's move.
-
- INT. FREIGHT ELEVATOR
-
- Bishop on his knees, running his hands delicately over the ribbed plastic
- flooring. The Queen HISSES, BASHES the door. He finds a seam, levers up with
- his nails, gets a grip. Pulls. Sense of his android strength as the flooring
- comes up on pale streamers of super-glue. The elevator shakes with the
- Queen's fury. He finds a section of the floor that can be removed. Forces
- the glue-caked catches. Slams down with the heel of his hand -- the panel
- falls away, tumbling through smoke toward a point of fire-glow at the shaft's
- distant foot.
-
- INT. SHAFT
-
- Bishop lowers himself through the opening, dangles. An emergency service-
- ladder is recessed in one wall. He tries to reach one of the rungs with his
- foot, but the toe of his boot slips. Too far. He begins to swing back and
- forth like a gymnast, building momentum -- and lets go. Falls six feet before
- he manages to get a grip.
-
- He begins to descend the ladder. It's a long way down.
-
- INT. BLUE CONSOURSE
-
- The lifeboat party emerges, coughing, from a wall of acrid smoke.
-
- REACTION SHOT
-
- dismay and amazement.
-
- The tunnel has been sealed with a plug of Alien resin. Human bones, weapons,
- and Marine helmets protrude from the biomech convolutions of the resin-wall.
- Another of the six-wheeled military vehicles carriers is skewed across the
- tunnel in a pool of blood.
-
- ROSETTI
- It doesn't want us to get out...
-
- HICKS
- Bugs. Just fucking bugs... C'mon.
- (he climbs into the driver's
- seat of the carrier)
- We're taking the bus. Which way, Ops?
-
- JACKSON
- (getting in beside him)
- Way we came, unless you think of something
- better.
-
- HALLIDAY
- What's he mean, "bugs"? What is that thing?
- (pointing at the resin-plug)
- Where's Tom? Where's Tom?
-
- SPENCE
- (taking her arm; leading
- her to the carrier)
- It'll be okay. Here, get up... There was an
- experiment. It got out of control. We have
- to go...
-
- TATSUMI
- What kind of experiment?
-
- HICKS
- (throwing the carrier into
- gear; cutting off their
- questions)
- Come on!
-
- INT. BLUE CONCOURSE
-
- TRACKING on carrier, CLOSE on Hicks and Jackson. She takes a flat gadget from
- her jacket and flips it open; a miniature computer-map on anchorpoint, like a
- pocket video game.
-
- As she wiggles a tiny joystick, EXTREME CLOSEUP on miniature color screen;
- she's looking for an alternate route to the lifeboats.
-
- JACKSON
- (still studying the map)
- Left at B-83. We'll cut through Aquaculture,
- up to level to Aeroponics. We can get into
- Residential from there, then it's up a service
- tunnel behind the central mainframe...
-
- HICKS
- Sounds complicated.
-
- JACKSON
- Quickest way.
-
- Flips the map shut. Spence is trying to comfort Halliday.
-
- INT. AQUACULTURE FARM
-
- An automated fish farm; factory space ranged with dozens of waist-high round
- white vats of dark green water. Low ceiling, dim light. Sweeps rotate
- slowly across the water in some vats; others are still, with floating green
- vegetation.
-
- Hicks leads the party along a narrow aisle between the vats. Jackson pauses
- to check her map and watch; Hicks light a cigarette, leans his elbow against
- the nearest vat.
-
- JACKSON
- We're doing okay...
-
- The surface of the water behind Hicks' elbow erupts as the fish go into a feed
- frenzy. He yelps and jumps back, dropping his cigarette.
-
- SPENCE
- Bass. They're just hungry... Ready to be
- harvested.
-
- HICKS
- Sure. Let's get out of here, okay?
-
- The others follow, keeping their distance from the vats.
-
- INT. ELEVATOR SHAFT
-
- Bishop jumps down, dodges a dangling power cable, squints through the smoke.
- Finds a manual emergency level that opens the shaft's door.
-
- INT. TUNNEL
-
- A blast of air fans the flames behind him as he steps out. The carrier is
- there, among the scattered crates, where Hicks left it. Bishop climbs in,
- tries the power. A feeble whine. Touches another button. The dash flashes
- "BATTERY RECHARGE." He climbs down an sets off along the tunnel at a jog.
-
- INT. AEROPONICS FARM
-
- State of the art. Epcot-style soilless cultivation. Tall A-frame structures
- of white styrofoam are studded with hundreds of precisely spaced plants, their
- roots watered by periodic bursts of high-pressure mist. Vegetables sprout
- from the sides of tapering styrofoam columns. All of the wreathed in mist
- under brilliant halogen lamps.
-
- Hicks scans the chamber, gun ready, as the party emerges from a hatch in the
- white deck behind him. Spence has to help Halliday, whose cheeks are streaked
- with tears. Rosetti's up last, clutching his pulse-rifle a bit too tightly,
- eyes darting around the chamber.
-
- HICKS
- Keep the safety on, Colonel. You could hurt
- somebody.
-
- He kneels beside the hatch, takes plastique and a grenade from his harness,
- and slaps together another bomb.
-
-
- ROSETTI
- What are you doing?
-
- HICKS
- They may be following us.
-
- He closes the hatch over the charge and locks it. Halliday starts to weep
- hysterically in Spence's arms; goes to her knees, the tries to curl into a
- fetal position on the white deck, shuddering, crying like a child. Rosetti
- rushes over as Spence is trying to get her to her feet.
-
- ROSETTI
- They'll hear you!
-
- Rosetti slaps Halliday's face, hard; eliciting a piercing scream. Spence --
- no hesitation -- punches him solidly in the face; his head snaps back and he's
- down, reaching for his rifle.
-
- Tableau: Spence furious, ready to kick ass; Halliday wide-eyed, stunned into
- silence by Spence's move; Rosetti with blood on his mouth and his hand on his
- gun.
-
- JACKSON
- (to Rosetti; cocking
- her gun)
- Try it.
-
- Hicks breaks the spell:
-
- HICKS
- (drill sergeant bellow)
- Two minute fuse! Hall ass people!
-
- The Lab Tech grabs Halliday, throws her over his shoulder, and runs. The
- others scramble after him, including Rosetti, whose drive to self-preservation
- is paramount. Hicks and Spence take up the rear.
-
- Hicks shoots her a grin as they run.
-
- LONG SHOT down the aisle of aeroponic greenery, high-tech Hanging Gardens of
- Babylon, the lifeboat party approaching. Behind them, the hatch lifts off its
- hinges with the EXPLOSION, CRASHES back in a tangle of metal. Several of the
- party are thrown to the deck.
-
- JACKSON
- (quietly; urgently; as the
- others pick themselves up)
- Hicks!
-
- HICKS
- Yeah?
-
- JACKSON
- Look...
-
- She points down another aisle of aeroponic structures.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- What the hell's that?
-
- Two of the Styrofoam structures have been overgrown with a grayish parody of
- vegetation, glistening vine-like structures and bulbous sacs the echo the
- Alien biomech motif. Patches of thick black mold spread to the styrofoam
- and the white deck.
-
- HICKS
- It was... cabbages or something...
-
- TATSUMI
- (with the others)
- Come, please, Jackson! Which way?
-
- JACKSON
- (gripping Hicks' arm;
- pulling him along)
- Spence said it did her monkeys, too...
- (raising her voice)
- Third door to the right!
-
- INT. TUNNEL NEAR FUSION PACKAGE
-
- Bishop comes loping down the tunnel, a certain effortless regularity evident
- in his run. Makes a turn into the chamber that houses the fusion package,
- Anchorpoint's power source. The chamber is spotless, well lit; the only sign
- of the current disaster is the smoke. The fusion package itself is no bigger
- than a Volkswagen bus, but it's obviously Anchorpoint's heart. Bishop climbs
- a narrow metal stairway to an overhanging control booth resembling the
- inverted turrent of a streamlined tank. A mirrored disk is mounted on the
- face of the armored hatch, above a small slot.
-
- SECURITY PROGRAM (V.O.)
- (bland feminine synthi-voice)
- Please identify yourself.
-
- Bishop removes his dogtags. As he inserts one in the slot, he presses the
- palm on his other hand against the mirrored surface.
-
- BISHOP
- Bishop, Science Officer, Hyperdyne A-slash-5,
- Mark 3, serial number PL3358172438. Permission
- to inspect software safety protocols.
-
- SECURITY PROGRAM (V.O.)
- Permission denied. Inadequate rank. Please
- refer request to your immediate supervisor.
-
- The slot tries to reject his tag. He shove it back in.
-
- BISHOP
- Emergency protocols. Code Theta Five Three.
- Authority Rosetti comma Shuman.
-
- SECURITY PROGRAM (V.O.)
- Permission denied. Inadequate rank. Please
- refer request to your immediate supervisor.
-
- It ejects his tag. He drops his hand from the disk, stares at his reflection
- in the mirrored surface. Blinks. Re-inserts dog tags, palm on disk again.
-
- BISHOP
- Emergency protocols. Code Theta Five Three.
- Authority Welles comma Fox.
-
- The door HISSES open instantly. He climbs in.
-
- INT. CONTROL BOOTH
-
- Surgically clean, unused -- Jackson ordinarily runs the show from Operations.
- Bishop settles into the operator's chair, facing three blank monitors.
-
- BISHOP
- Protocols, safety.
-
- The central screen displays an elaborate menu.
-
- BISHOP
- (continuing)
- Overload failsafes.
-
- The left screen displays a shorter menu.
-
- BISHOP
- (continuing)
- Bypass overload failsafes.
-
- A red light begins to flash.
-
- SECURITY PROGRAM (V.O.)
- Permission denied. Inadequate rank. Please
- refer --
-
- BISHOP
- Cancel request. Request display overload
- failsafe software.
-
- SECURITY PROGRAM (V.O.)
- Permission denied. Inadequate rank. Please
- refer --
-
- BISHOP
- Authority Welles comma Fox --
-
- The right screen displays an animated diagram, thousands of interweaving lines
- and symbols, moving ceaselessly, hypnotically. Bishop studies the screen with
- Zen calm, his hands poised like a pianist's above the keyboard.
-
- And makes his move, a cybernetic reprise of the knife sequence that introduced
- him in "ALIENS." His fingers blur across the board with inhuman speed and
- accuracy as he races the fusion softwares's security system.
-
- The lines on the screen squirm and shift, A "window" begins to open...
-
- Faster.
-
- Done.
-
- Bishop gazes at the screen with might be the android equivalent of postcoital
- satisfaction, eyes bright. The screen dis
- plays a message:
-
- "OVERLOAD OPTION RESET"
-
- He beings to reprogram the overload options.
-
- INT. RESIDENTAL (MARRIED CREW QUARTERS)
-
- A maze of walls, doors (most of them open). Lights are on, but the smoke is
- thicker. Coughing, choking, Jackson shoves past the others into a large
- communal kitchen. On an electric range, smoke pours from a pot. She grabs an
- extinguisher and blasts the pot's blackened contents, turns off the element.
- Smoke abates slightly.
-
- The quarters have an eerie Marie Celeste quality: food and drink on the table,
- a pack of cigarettes beside an ashtray. Spence pockets the cigarettes as she
- passes; Hicks opens a large white thermos: steam. He sloshes coffee into a
- cup and drinks.
-
- In the next room, a communal lounge, Spence leads Halliday to a couch and
- sinks down beside her, head in hands. Rosetti leans against an entertainment
- console, face blank, gingerly rubbing his split lip.
-
- SPENCE
- (head down)
- It's funny, but I had to win a contest to go
- through this. A science fair in Omaha, first in
- biology for all of Nebraska. Monoclonal
- antibodies...
- (she looks up at Rosetti)
- Then I got into Cornell. Another contest. It
- wasn't easy, getting out here. We all must've
- wanted it so bad, a whole generation, or anyway
- the ones like me.
-
- ROSETTI
-
- (looks at her wearily)
- Idealists.
-
- SPENCE
- Yeah. I guess so. Build a new world, find ways
- to live in it... But it wasn't supposed to be
- like this. And it might've worked. It almost
- did. Now look at it. Ending...
-
- She sits up and hugs Halliday, whose eyes are shut tight.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- What I want to know, mister, is why we had to
- bring you?
-
- ROSETTI
- (massages his temples, then
- looks at her levelly)
- Funding.
-
- SPENCE
- Yeah. I guess you're right. You paid for it,
- I guess you get to fuck it up.
-
- HICKS
- (tossing her an apple)
- C'mon, time to move. Get her up?
-
- SPENCE
- Sure.
-
- She gets Halliday unsteadily to her feet.
-
- They move out in a tight group, Jackson leading, Hicks taking up the rear,
- Spence biting resolutely into her apple.
-
- ANGLE THROUGH A DOORWAY -- REACTION SHOT
-
- as Halliday's eyes fill with a new and deep horror.
-
- ANGLE -- THE ROOM
-
- is a preschool, a cr_che, scattered with toys, the walls tapes with children's
- paintings.
-
- HALLIDAY
- O God...
-
- Spence and the Lab Tech hurry her on, out of the cr_che. Halliday snatches a
- ragdoll from a shelf as they pass...
-
- INT. TUNNEL AWAY FROM FUSION PACKAGE
-
- Bishop heads for the elevator shaft at his usual steady pace. Approaches the
- open doors cautiously. Listens. Nothing. He edges in. Empty. The circuit
- fire has died down; melted insulation still SPUTTERS. He looks up the shaft.
- A long climb. He can make out the bottom of the elevator. He reaches up,
- grabs a rung, sets his left boot on another, straightens up -- and drives the
- jagged and of his broken knee joint through the side of his leg and the fabric
- of his fatigues in a gout of milky android blood. Hits the floor hard, the
- broken leg splayed at the hideous angle, the white fluid a widening pool.
- Struggles to brace his shoulders against the wall. And reaches out to touch
- the ragged edge of artificial bone.
-
- BISHOP
- (a scientific observation)
- Polycarbon...
-
- INT. ENTRANCE TO FOOT OF MAIN
- FRAME SERVICE SHAFT
-
- leaving residential. Hicks and Jackson chivvy the party through a low, floor-
- level service hatch.
-
- INT. SERVICE SHAFT
-
- Party's POV, looking up: ladders, platforms, catwalks, bundles of fiberoptic
- lines linking the components of Achorpoint's computer mainframe, drifting
- smoke. The bundles loops of fiberoptics have a faint, pearlescent glow.
- Hicks, as usual is last up the ladder.
-
- INT. LADDERS IN SERVICE SHAFT -- VARIOUS ANGLES
-
- The party, climbing. Halliday still has the ragdoll. Hicks up last.
-
- INT. PLATFORM IN SERVICE SHAFT
-
- The Marine guard from Ops emerges through a narrow opening, Spence and
- Halliday follow -- and an Alien strikes from the shadows, ripping out his
- throat. Spence drives for his rifle as it skids across the platform. Screams
- from the ladder below. The gun slips through her fingers, over the edge --
- gone. Halliday cringes in a corner, cradling the ragdoll in her arms, as the
- Alien butchers the dead Marine, slashing the corpse to ribbons with its tail.
- It HISSES, turns its head. Spence freezes.
-
- INT. LADDER IN SERVICE SHAFT
-
- Hicks is desperately trying to fight his way past the others, climbing over
- them --
-
- INT. PLATFROM IN SERVICE SHAFT
-
- Spence snatches a drum of cable from a service cart and hurls it at the Alien,
- distracting it from Halliday.
-
- The beast springs toward Spence, bet she's already scrambling out along a
- fragile-looking catwalk that quakes with her passage. The Alien pursues her
- into the forest of cables with a hideous agility. Hicks clambers up through
- the opening, too late. Spence and the Alien are out of sight.
-
- INT. FIBEROPTIC FOREST
-
- Spence flattened against the mainframe, heart thumping, terrified. Takes a
- breath, look out between two glowing trunks of cable. Sees the Alien's back,
- fifteen feet away. She bites her lip and slips out, runs. It SCREECHES
- behind her. She blunders into another wall. A ladder. Up the rungs, fast.
- Into a short narrow space lit by a single blue emergency light. No way out.
- She moves forward, hands sliding over a jumble of containers. SOUND of the
- beast swarming up the ladder. She's below the blue bulb now, looks down at
- her hand on a flat plastic case stenciled "COLONIAL TRANS AP-49 FLARE SIGNAL
- OXY-ATMOSPHERIC 20MM." She tears at the catches --
-
- The beast is almost on her.
-
- She turns, bringing up the huge flare-pistol, and FIRES. The beast is blown
- backwards, off its feet, the igniting magnesium flare a white-hot chemical
- star burning in its guts as it flips back over the edge.
-
- INT. PLATFORM IN SERVICE
- SHAFT
-
- Hicks and the Lab Three see the burning Alien's fall as a weird pulse of light
- through the translucent cables.
-
- LAB TECH
- What -- ?
-
- HICKS
- (yells)
- Spence! Yo! Spence!
-
- Hicks crosses the catwalk, followed by the Lab Tech.
-
- Halliday stares after them over the head of her ragdoll.
-
- INT. PLATFORM IN SERVICE SHAFT
-
- The others have climbed up now. They watch Hicks, the Lab Tech, and Spence
- recross the catwalk. Spence has the flare-pistol around her neck on a
- lanyard.
-
- JACKSON
- (checks her watch)
- Okay, people! Gotta move it now. Start
- climbing!
-
- HICKS
- Halliday!
-
- She rushes to the spot where we last saw Halliday. The ragdoll lies on the
- deck. Spence grabs it up, flings it instantly away at the touch of slime.
-
- SPENCE
-
- (screaming)
- No! No!
-
- Hicks pulls an olive-drab aerosol unit fro his medical pack and drenches her
- hand with spray.
-
- HICKS
- Jackson's right. We gotta move.
-
- Rosetti is already starting up the ladder.
-
- INT. ELEVATOR SHAFT
-
- Bishop, climbing. He has his web belt cinched tight around his left thigh.
- The splintered bone is out of sight; the leg of his fatigues, below the belt,
- is soaked with fluid. He uses his arms and right leg to climb, the left leg
- swaying free -- grotesquely, in too many directions, like the limb of a
- broken puppet.
-
- He shows signs of stress. The right knee might break at the next rung... He
- places it carefully, taking up most of his weight on his arms.
-
- He checks his watch.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP: 2140 HOURS.
-
- BISHOP'S POV -- UP THE SHAFT
-
- It looks like forever.
-
- INT. SERVICE SHAFT
-
- Jackson uses a pistol-grip power-driver to unscrew a ventilator grill. Hicks
- shines his light into the opening, then crawls in. Jackson follows, then
- Rosetti...
-
- INT. DUCT
-
- Hands and knees, single file and barely room for that. Hicks has his
- flashlight clipped bayonet-style to his rifle. Jackson behind him, her cap
- reversed.
-
- HICKS
- How we doin'?
-
- Jackson stops crawling; flips open her map, her features visible in the glow
- of the tiny screen.
-
- JACKSON
- Looks like another ten meters. Then we're into
- K-58-A and straight to the boat bays.
-
- ROSETTI (V.O.)
- (hollow echo)
- Move! Hurry!
-
- HICKS
- Yes, sir.
-
- They move forward.
-
- INT. CORRIDOR -- DUCT EXIT
-
- Hicks and Jackson prepare to pull the others one at a time from the waist-high
- opening. It's evident that the duct, at this point, slants sharply down
- from the opening; it's round and smooth and difficult to climb.
-
- INT. DUCT
-
- >From below, members of the party wedge their way up with knees and elbows.
-
- INT. CORRIDOR -- DECT EXIT
-
- Hicks and Jackson pull Rosetti from the duct, both his hands locked around his
- pulse-rifle; then the Lab Tech; then Spence; they reach the Tatsumi...
-
- SCREAMS and frenzied BANGING from the duct. Tatsumi's eyes pop wide open and
- he screams. Hicks braces his boot against the wall and hauls him out -- with
- the jaws of a freshly-transformed new beast locked on his leg. Hicks whirls
- his rifle like an axe, the butt slamming into the thing's head. It HISSES
- and twists back into the duct.
-
- INT. DUCT -- POV OF THE TRAPPED FIVE
-
- as the beast slides toward them down smooth steel.
-
- INT. CORRIDOR -- DUCT EXIT
-
- Rosetti thrusts the barrel out of his pulse-rifle past Hicks, into the duct,
- and FIRES on full auto, emptying his magazine. Jackson drives for the gun as
- Hicks snaps him off his feet with a roundhouse punch. The back of Rosetti's
- head slams against the opposite wall and he slides to the deck.
-
- Jackson's on him before he can recover, practically jamming the muzzle of the
- pulse-rifle down his throat.
-
- JACKSON
- Y'know, always been part of me wanted to kill
- one of you motherfuckers...
-
- Rosetti looks up at her.
-
- ROSETTI
- Go ahead.
-
- Very quiet. No sound at all from the duct. Tatsumi whimpers between clenched
- teeth as a wisp of acid smoke rises from his torn trouser leg. Hicks shines
- his light down into the duct.
-
-
- HICKS
- Oh man... Forget it, Jackson. Anyway, it's
- empty.
-
- He tosses her a fresh magazine.
-
- SPENCE
- Hicks! The light!
-
- She and the Lab Tech are crouching beside Tatsumi, slitting his pantleg with a
- knife, exposing the wound.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- Watch out, it's on the cloth...
-
- The Lab Tech yelps as a droplet of acid touches his hand. Hicks unclips his
- light and passes it to Spence.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- On my God...
-
- The Alien has taken a bite the size of a small grapefruit out of Tatsumi's
- calf; flesh and muscle are blackened, charred by the acid.
-
- HICKS
- (unclipping a flat plastic
- kit from his harness)
- What's his name?
-
- JACKSON
- Tatsumi...
-
-
- HICKS
- Cocktail for ya, Tatsumi.
-
- He opens the kit, takes out a gun-shaped hypo with a pressure tank.
-
- HICKS
- (continuing)
- Can't get this on the Ginza, fella. Six times
- stronger than heroin, about eight other things
- in there to keep you up an' rockin'...
-
- He jabs the needle through Tatsumi's pantleg; the unit HISSES.
-
- HICKS
-
- (continuing)
- Get a Marine a year in the brig, playin' R&R
- with one of these...
-
- Tatsumi moan softly as the shot hits him. Very clearly, in Japanese, he asks
- if it's time to go back on duty.
-
- LAB TECH
- Wha'd he say?
-
- SPENCE
- I don't know...
-
- HICKS
- We'll have to carry him.
- (passes Spence a sterile
- dressing pack from his
- harness)
- Think you can get a dressing on that? Not
- bleeding much. Like it's cauterized.
- (to Rosetti)
- Get up, we're moving.
- (to Jackson)
- Think you better hang on to the Colonel's rifle.
-
- INT. MALL -- ENTERANCE TO FREIGHT ELEVATOR
-
- The doors look as though someone's gone after them with a giant can opener;
- they're ragged, g
- aping. Bishop's hands suddenly appear in the opening in the
- floor, grip the edge; he hauls himself up, arms quivering with strain. Last
- thing through is the useless leg; he has to pull it up with both hands.
-
- He looks anxiously out into the mall. Nothing moving, no Aliens in sight.
- The queen's attack as torn loose a strip of alloy trim. Bishop bends it
- double for strength and begins to work it beneath the belt around his thigh,
- still keeping an eye on the mall.
-
- INT. CORRIDOR TO ASSEMBLY POINT -- LIFEBOAT BAY
-
- Hicks and Jackson slogging along, dragging Tatsumi between them, Spence with
- the flare pistol, then Rosetti and the Lab Tech. Smoke hangs in strata.
- Spence coughs. They're all feeling Anchorpoint's fire-depleted oxygen-level.
- Tatsumi looks terrible: flushed, eyes glazed, but he's feeling no pain. He
- weakly attempts to sing a snatch of a Japanese pop song. CLOSEUP on his
- bandaged leg leaving a trail of yellow drops...
-
- LAB TECH
- That's right, man. Not long now.
-
- HICKS
- Hey, Jackson -- Goddamn, you were right.
-
- He's pointing his pulse-rifle at a plastic sign mounted on the corridor wall:
-
- LIFEBOAT BAY 20 METERS
-
- JACKSON
- (grins)
- Sure. Hadda map, didn't I?
-
- They round a corner. Ahead is one of the blue lights and another sign:
-
- LIFEBOAT LAUNCH ASSEMBLY POINT
- SPENCE
-
- The others groups... Where's everybody else?
-
- HICKS
- Hell, they coulda launched already...
-
- JACKSON
- No.
-
- She's looking at a wall panel with LEDs that indicate launch status of the
- lifeboats.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- The boats are all here.
-
- LAB TECH
- Then nobody else made it...
-
- Rosetti ignores them, keeps walking.
-
- JACKSON
- (looking after Rosetti)
- I shoulda greased him.
-
- HICKS
- Shit. What's the point?
-
- JACKSON
- The point? The point's he let 'em run their
- fucking experiments! He coulda stopped 'em!
- But he didn't! You tried, man, you and Bishop...
- He let 'em do it!
-
- HICKS
- Shit no. He's just brass. He's just like you
- an' me, to the people who brought this down.
- Wouldn't do any good to grease them either.
-
- JACKSON
- Bullshit! What not?
-
- HICKS
- Because what you wanna grease is the company...
-
- Rosetti breaks into a stumbling run as he nears the portal at the end of the
- corridor, the entrance to the lifeboat bays.
-
-
- CLOSEUP -- ROSETTI
-
- frantically punching a combination. Wants that door to open. Gets it:
- slides back smooth as silk, revealing a brightly lit room filled with pristine
- space gear and an indeterminate number of Aliens, their appendages tangled
- black and shiny as a fresh catch of eels.
-
- ROSETTI
- No! Goddamn it! No!
-
- ANGLE
-
- The Aliens stir as he throws himself back down the corridor toward the others.
- Hicks drops Tatsumi, who sags into Jackson's arms, and raises his rifle.
- FIRES a bolt past Rosetti, into the heart of the mass. Rosetti claws his way
- by as Spence lets loose with the flare-pistol. All the ammo she has but it's
- a big red distress flare straight through the portal; it bursts, crimson
- lightning, scattering the Aliens. Now everyone is backing down the corridor,
- the way they came, Jackson burdened with Tatsumi. Rosetti fumbles with the
- combination on another door. Hicks is SHOOTING as he retreats. Aliens come
- darting out past the dying cherry brilliance of the flare, SCREAMING down the
- corridor... The second door open for Rosetti -- he's through, the second Lab
- Tech on his heels.
-
- INT. AN OFFICE
-
- Dark -- only light from the corridor, even less are Rosetti immediately tries
- to slam and lock the door in Spence's face -- but the Lab Tech yanks him out
- of the way. The others tumble in, Jackson with Tatsumi in a fireman's carry.
- Hicks kicks the door shut and locks it -- as something SLAMS into it, hard.
- Jackson lowers Tatsumi to the carpeted floor.
-
-
- Hicks CLICKS the light on. Swings the muzzle of his gun around the room,
- circle of light jumping from one thing to the next. An office, larger than
- Rosetti's. 21st-century stylistics and a basic bureaucratic banality: fake
- teak, imitation leather. Framed portraits of beaming Weyland Yutani bigshots.
- Spence brushes a square object of a shelf -- the base of a small hologram-
- projector. A glowing DNA helix springs up.
-
- HICKS
- Don't touch anything...
-
-
- LAB TECH
- (to Jackson, pointing
- at Rosetti)
- He tried to lock the door, lock us out...
-
- JACKSON
- (pulling the automatic
- from her jacket)
- Rosetti...
-
- HICKS
- Forget it. That's what he wants. You really
- wanna do 'im the favor?
-
- JACKSON
- Waddya mean it's what he wants?
-
- HICKS
- I've seen it before. In combat.
-
- Rosetti backs away from them.
-
- SPENCE (V.O.)
- Hick, come here... I think it's Trent...
-
- He finds her around the corner of a padded partition that screens a desk-
- console from the rest of the room. His light finds the lab-coated corpse
- sprawled in the chair behind the desk, a quarter of its skull blown away,
- dried blood spattered across the bulkhead, a service automatic locked in rigid
- fingers.
-
- HICKS
- (shrugs)
- Did himself. Hey, Rosetti! C'mere!
-
- Rosetti looks around the edge of the partition, sees Trent.
-
- HICKS
- (continuing)
- That's it, man. That's what it looks like.
- You don't chill out quick, somebody'll do the
- same for you.
-
- ROSETTI
- (stares at the corpse)
- Brilliant man. Company man. Very... ambitious.
-
- Hicks takes the light off the corpse, plays it around the cubicle. A shredder,
- empty file folders, a bulging plastic sack of shredded documents.
-
- HICKS
- Yeah...
-
- Hicks swings the light across the wall behind Trent's desk.
-
- SPENCE
- The wall, Hicks!
-
- She's spooked him; the safety's off the pulse-rifle. But there's nothing on
- the wall, only framed diplomas, and between them a few stenciled letters...
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- Jesus Christ! It's a lock, Hicks! Airlock!
-
- She clambers over the desk console, shoves the corpse out the way, and tears
- the diplomas from the wall, revealing the outline of a hatch and the
- stenciled notice:
-
- EMERGENCY AIRLOCK - EXIT TO HULL-SECTOR 308
-
- A CRASH from the corridor as Alien
- hurls itself against the door.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing)
- It's a chance! The only chance we've got! We
- get out on the hull, cross to the boats. We can
- try to get into one that way, from outside...
-
- Hicks looks down at his watch. 2146 HOURS. If Bishop's managed to set the
- fusion package to blow at 2200 hours -- they don't have a hope in hell.
-
- But why spoil it for Spence?
-
- HICKS
- Let's go for it.
-
- Spence hauls on the red airline-style inset handle of the emergency airlock.
- The handle flips down and the hatch pivots smoothly open, a light inside goes
- on, and the eternal synthi-voice announces:
-
- ANNONCEMENT
- This is a five-man emergency atmosphere lock,
- exit to Hull Sector Three-oh-eight, equipped
- with five Mark Twelve emergency suits. Each
- Mark Twelve suit is charged with a two-hour
- air supply and is equipped with automatic radar
- beacon, inter-suit radio, and magnetic sole
- plates. It you should experience difficulty
- with either the O-rings of the velcro strips,
- please activate the secondary program for
- additional advice.
-
- JACKSON
- There's six of us...
-
- Space suits swings from a rack, each helmet a different color. Rosetti's
- pressed up close behind her, eyes fixed on the suits.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing)
- Fuck off, Rosetti; anybody stays, it's you
-
- LAB TECH (O.S.)
- Light, quick! Something's...
-
- The Lab Tech is backing away from Tatsumi, who lies on his back on the
- carpeted deck, mouth gaping, eyes showing whites. A tearing SOUND as Hicks
- spotlights Tatsumi's bandaged leg -- where the dressing is bulging, moving,
- seeping yellow fluid. A new-model chest-buster flails its way out of the
- wound and shuttles into the shadows beneath a chair. Twin red spots appear
- on Tatsumi's white shirt; two more of the things rip their way out through
- his stomach as he arches backwards, groaning -- the groan cut off as a fourth
- chest-burster pops from his mouth...
-
- Jackson brings her pistol up with both hands, arms locked, and SHOOTS Tatsumi
- in the head.
-
- HICKS
- Get in the lock! Suit up!
-
- INT. EMERGENCY LOCK
-
- Hicks pulls the inner door shut. The lock is white, bright, a very tight fit
- for the five of them. The Lab Tech reaches for one of the hanging suits,
- yells as a blood-slick chest-burster loses its grip and tumbles out of the
- suit's open front.
-
- LAB TECH
- Aaaaah!
-
- Hicks shoulders the door -- just a crack; it doesn't want to open -- as
- Rosetti grabs a helmet and swings it underhand, knocking the little horror out
- of the lock. Hicks gets the door shut again.
-
- Spence is shuddering. Rosetti is putting the helmet on, reaching for his
- suit.
-
- SPENCE
- J-jesus, Rosetti... How'd you do that?
-
- ROSETTI
- (beat)
- I used to be a soldier
-
- They hurriedly strip to their underwear and struggle into space suits.
- Rosetti has the yellow helmet, Hicks red, Spence blue, Jackson green, and
- Lab Tech orange.
-
- Spence is sealing up her space suit over freckles and a military-issue bra;
- Hicks sealing his over dog tags and his acid-scarred chest.
-
- ANNOUNCEMENT
- Please be seated. Fasten lapbelts.
-
- Narrow ledges on either side of the lock. The five sit, step in. Spence and
- the Lab Tech closest to the outer door. Hicks and Jackson are opposite them.
-
- ROSETTI
- (filter; suit radio; turning
- his helmet to face Spence)
- You're right, Spence. I should have tried to
- stop them. It would have done no good, of
- course, but I should have tried...
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- When we get back, there'll be a board of inquiry.
- You can tell them, Colonel, tell them what
- happened. Help them find the ones who were
- responsible...
-
- ANNOUNCEMENT
- Ten-second warning. Activating outer hatch.
-
- Rosetti's helmet turns slowly toward her. Through his faceplate bubble, the
- canceled eyes and blood-streaked drool of the Change...
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- He gone! Jeeees-us!
-
- As blood wells up into Rosetti's helmet, filling it completely, and something
- dark begins to strike the inner surface of his faceplate, violently, again and
- again. The space suit hunches through inhuman p
- ostures --
-
- As the outer hatch pivots out on hydraulics, the vacuum sucking small loose
- objects out into the void.
-
- The new beast in Rosetti's suit snaps the heavy nylon lapbelt and lunges at
- Spence.
-
- HER POV
-
- as the blood-bubble strikes her faceplate, the fanged tongue working like a
- piledriver, starting to split the tough plastic of Rosetti's faceplate -- tiny
- bubbles of blood along the first hairline crack.
-
- ANGLE
-
- The Lab Tech unfastens his lapbelt and grapples with the suited beast, pulling
- it off Spence.
-
- Hicks is wrestling with his pulse-rifle, pinned to the bench by the struggle.
-
- The suit radios are filled with the beast's thick gurgling ROAR. As it turns
- on the Lab Tech, flings him out through the open hatch, and bounds after him.
-
- EXT. HULL -- AIRLOCK
-
- Vacuum. Zero gravity.
-
- The thing in Rosetti's suit catches the Lab Tech in mid-tumble, its gloved
- hands spread like talons, grips the Lab Tech's helmet and collar-joint in
- either hand, and rips his helmet off. Air explodes from the neck of his suit,
- lifting his air in a three-second gale that freezes instantly, becoming a
- small cloud of ice crystal. The Lab Tech's eyes are frozen marbles. He goes
- cartwheeling slowly across the hull as the beast grabs a protruding strut and
- spins to dace the airlock with a terrible balletic grace.
-
- Hicks is in the hatchway. He raises. the pulse-rifle, pulls the trigger. The
- ammo-counter flashes 00, empty. Jackson reaches past him with a fresh
- magazine. Hicks slaps it into the gun as the beast launches itself to
- wardhim from the strut. He FIRES. The space suit EXPLODES in a cloud of blood
- and acid.
-
- Hicks bounces awkwardly out over the rim of the hatch, followed by Jackson and
- Spence.
-
- Beat. Anchorpoint's hull stretches away to its own horizon, al flat gray
- expanse of broken by various structures. The body of the Lab Tech is
- tumbling slowly out into space.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio; looking
- after the vanishing Lab Tech)
- I never even knew his name... Hicks... Hicks,
- are we gonna make it?
-
- Hick's gloved hands is closed around something small. He open it, looks down.
- His watch. 2159 HOURS.
-
- Hicks looks into her eyes as if he sees her for the first time.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Make it? Yeah... Sure we make it.
-
- He gives her a desperate grin.
-
- His gloved hand, still holding the watch, takes her.
-
- SOUND of the watch's alarm:
- 2200 HOURS.
-
- Hicks' eyes are shut tight.
-
- Nothing happens.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- Hicks? Hicks, are you okay? What is it?
-
- He opens his eyes. Looks at her. Releases her hand.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP ON WATCH
-
- 2201 HOURS
-
- ANGLE
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- You okay?
-
- Hicks flings with watch away. It tumbles out slowly, level with the deck,
- keeps tumbling...
-
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Okay, Ops, which way to the boats?
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- Got me, man. The map was just for the inside...
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- See that radio mast? Let's try that way.
-
- They set out in single-file across the hull, Hicks leading, Jackson bringing
- up the rear. The radio mast, visible above the horizon, is the tallest
- structure in sight, a steel thorn slanted toward the stars.
-
- Behind them, the airlock remain open, spilling light...
-
- EXT. HULL -- LONG SHOT
-
- Three tiny figures, their helmets bright dots of color against the monotone
- hull-plain: red, blue, green.
-
- VOICE OVER: Steady rasp of human breath.
-
- EXT. HULL -- ANOTHER ANGLE -- LONG
-
- Shadows tangle in the light from the lock. Moving. Black talons slip over
- the hatch rim, followed by an eyeless Alien mask. Then another. The
- creatures are entirely unaffected by cold, by vacuum...
-
- EXT. HULL -- APPROACH TO LIFEBOAT BAYS
-
- Hicks, Spence, Jackson. Hicks gestures with his rifle: the prows of the
- boats.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- There you go, Ops.
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- Good navigating...
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Good guessing. Still have to get into one of
- the damn things...
-
- Spence loses her footing as she climbs down a ledge, goes into a slow-motion,
- zero-g roll; Jackson grabs her.
-
- EXT. HULL -- SHOT FROM UNLIT LIFEBOAT INTERIOR THROUGH A PORTHOLE
-
- Hicks is approaching. Closer. His gloves on the porthole. His helmet-bubble
- CLICKS against it. The beam of his light stabs in, swings from side to side,
- blinks out.
-
- EXT. HULL -- LIFEBOAT BAYS
-
- Hicks straightens up from the porthole.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Looks good. Good as it gets. How the hell we
- get in?
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- I can run a bypass on the hatch latches, but I
- need a hotwire...
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio; starting
- to climb up the side of the boat)
- I can strip some cable off the solar cells...
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Open it that way and we lose the air.
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- We'll have to draw the backup off the tanks.
- Won't matter once we're in hypersleep. No
- other way...
-
- EXT. TOP OF LIFEBOAT
-
- Spence's POV for helmet as the crouches over a flat, rectangular solar cells
- and tugs with her gloves tips at a small access port. She keeps losing her
- grip; the space suit's gloves aren't designed for fine work.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio; talking to
- keep her head together)
- Like the science fair. I had to scrounge
- everything... Spent a month desoldering a TV I
- got out of my uncle's basement...
-
- She manages to get the cover off -- it tumbles backward -- upward -- with the
- momentum on its removal. Spence peers at a densely packed mass of color-coded
- wiring.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing; filter;
- suit radio)
- Hey, Jackson, you want anything in particular?
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- How about twenty centimeters of the red and
- green stuff?
-
- Spence begins to fumble with the wiring.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- Right. Want anything else while I'm here?
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- Coffee and a danish. Black, one sugar.
-
- EXT. HULL -- LIFEBOAT
-
- Hicks and Jackson are trying to open the larger accessport, this one beside a
- porthole set into a rectangular hatch in the bow of the lifeboat. It isn't
- easy. Hicks manages to hook the pulse-rifle's buttplate under the edge of the
- cover. He uses the barrel as a lever. The buttplate slips.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Shit.
-
- He tries again. The cover pops open: move wiring, hydraulics. Jackson
- begins to paw at the wiring.
-
- EXT. TOP OF LIFEBOAT
-
- Spence's POV as she looks down at her prize, a length of red and green wire.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- They're out of coffee, but I got you hotwire...
-
- Spence's POV as she glances up, across the hull -- and sees a dozen advancing
- Aliens.
-
- SPENCE
- (continuing; filter;
- suit radio)
- Hicks! They're coming! They don't need suits!
-
- EXT. HULL -- LIFEBOAT
-
- Hicks whirls around with the rifle, too quick a move for zero-g; momentum
- spins him around and he rolls, out past the prow, but manages to come up
-
- SHOOTING. Take out the two foremost Aliens at about twenty yards. The rest
- scuttle for cover.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP
-
- on ammo readout: 09.
-
- ANGLE
-
- Hicks gets to his feet, take a step back, and nearly tumbles again; he's
- bumped into another emergency airlock, this one still sealed. He climbs back
- across it and crouches against the raised housing, using it to steady his aim.
- The Aliens charge again. Five SHOTS, five Aliens blown apart. The rest get
- out of sight.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP
-
- on ammo readout: 04.
-
- ANGLE
-
-
- Six inches from Hick's faceplate, on the airlock hatch, a red light blinks on.
- The lock starts to open. Hicks scrambles back, the rifle ready at his hip, as
- the hatch opens -- and a space-suited figure straightens up, a yellow
- helmet...
-
- CLOSEUP -- HICKS -- REACTION SHOT
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio; an
- instant of profound confusion)
- Rosett...?
-
- ANGLE
-
- The Aliens charge. The figure turns, bringing up a pulse-rifle.
-
- CLOSEUP ON BISHOP -- THROUGH FACEPLATE
-
- as he hoses a full clip in to the Aliens, killing them all.
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- Hicks, help me out of the lock...
-
- ANGLE
-
- Hicks takes Bishop's arm and hauls him over the rim; the android's left leg is
- braced with the length of metal from the elevator, strapped to the space suit
- with heavy silver tape.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- What happened? You didn't blow the fusion back
- at twenty-two hundred,
-
- Bishop passes him a fresh clip of ammunition.
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- Two overload is scheduled for twenty-two-
- thirty.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Why?
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- I thought you might need the time.
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- Bishop? Hick! Come on, we gotta get his
- happening!
-
- Hicks help Bishop across the hull.
-
- EXT. HULL -- LIFEBOAT
-
- CLOSEUP on Spence and Jackson crouching by the open service port. They've
- made a rainbow spaghetti out of the port's wiring, but Jackson holds one raw
- end of the hotwire. Spence looks up as Hicks and Bishop arrive.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- What happened to you leg?
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- Molecular fatigue.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Bishop says we gotta go now.
-
- JACKSON
- (filter; suit radio)
- No shit... Well...
-
- She thrusts the hotwire against a contact, producing a burst of sparks.
-
- Nothing happens.
-
- Tries again.
-
- Nothing.
-
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing; filter;
- suit radio)
- Third time's a charm.
-
- A bigger burst of sparks. The hatch suddenly pops open with a rush of
- escaping AIR.
-
- JACKSON
- (continuing; filter;
- suit radio)
- How damn! Okay!
-
- Jackson ducks, wedges helmet and shoulder through the opening -- and a queen-
- sized stinger erupts through the back of her neck, slicing the suit's alloy
- collar ring like butter. Brief but horrible SOUND on radio.
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- Jackson!
-
- Jackson's being drawn into the opening by the unseen queen. Spence clutches
- furiously at Jackson's suit, trying to pull her back...
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Forget it! She's gone!
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- Hicks!
-
- Hicks and Spence turn. REACTION SHOT. What they see makes her forget trying
- to save Jackson's body.
-
- The boots of Jackson's space suit vanishes through the lifeboat hatch.
-
- A queen, her crest rising against the stars, leads the swarm against them in
- a solid wave...
-
- Hicks pumps the pulse-rifle's grenade launcher, sheer reflex, no consideration
- for the effect of recoil in zero-g (pulse-charges have been assumed to be
- recoilless). The recoil kick him back against the lifeboat as the BLAST takes
- out five of the charging Aliens; sharp CLANG of his helmet against the boat's
- hull.
-
- CLOSE THROUGH FACEPLACE
-
- Hicks losing consciousness.
-
- ANGLE
-
- Bishop stands alone against the advancing swarm, the boot of his locked
- suitleg wedge into a narrow channel in the hull. He FIRES with a robotic
- accuracy, the rifle pivoting like the barrel of an automated gun turret.
-
-
- CLOSE ON BISHOP'S EXPRESSION
-
- No anger, no fear -- just total absorption in the task at hand.
-
- ANGLE
-
- Spence had Hicks' gun, is dragging him to his feet.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP
-
- on Bishop's ammo readout: working down to 01, steady as seconds on a
- stopwatch --
-
- ANGLE
-
- His last round is for the towering queen -- Android's don't miss. Straight
- into the jaws. Her head explodes.
-
- But the headless body doesn't stop. It stumbles, tumbling forward, flips
- over, the vast abdomen with its lashing stinger outlined agas
- int the stars...
-
- As Bishop tugs his wedged foot free and rolls, as the stinger whips down to
- gouge a chunk of bright steel from the hull. The carcass smashed into the
- lifeboat.
-
- The swarm twitches, hesitates. With the loss of the queen's unifying
- intelligence, the Aliens are reduced to their usual level of instinctual
- action.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Bishop! Come on!
-
- Hicks, with Spence, is fleeing across the hull, taking long zero-g leaps --
- one more worries about drifting away!
-
- SPENCE
- (filter; suit radio)
- The mast, Bishop! The Radio mast!
-
- Bishop starts after them, abandoning his empty pulse-rifle, trying to bound
- along on his good leg, the stiff one obviously in his way, three Aliens
- rapidly gaining on him. He loses his balance...
-
- Hicks and Spence have almost reached the foot of the radio mast. Handholds
- lead out to the tip.
-
- Hicks sees Bishop struggling to right himself, the Aliens closing in.
- Snatches the rifle from Spence.
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio;
- to Spence)
- Go on! Get out there!
-
- Hicks recrosses the hull to Bishop. SHOOTS the nearest Alien, gets a grip on
- Bishop's suit, pulls him up, tries for the second Alien but misses. They
- start for the mast, Hicks FIRING back at the swarm.
-
- Spence is a third of the way out on the mast, body drifting in space, clinging
- to a handhold.
-
- Hick and Bishop haul themselves hand-over-hand along the mast.
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- The fusion package, Hicks... Overload...
-
- HICKS
- (filter; suit radio)
- Yeah... But it means we win... Come on.
-
- The swarm closes around the foot of the mast in a single writhing mass. One
- spring onto the handholds and scuttles out along the mast like a s
- pider.
-
- Hicks BLOWS it off.
-
- EXTREME CLOSEUP
-
- on ammo readout: 04.
-
- BISHOP
- (filter; suit radio)
- Four minutes to overload.
-
- ANGLE
-
- Hicks blasts another Alien -- as a deafening SQUAWK of feedback rattles the
- suit radios, followed by a waves of STATIC.
-
- EXT. SPACE
-
- The U.P.P. interceptor, pitted and scorched by the nuking of Rodina, settles
- toward Anchorpoint on steering jets.
-
- CLOSEUP ON A GUNPORT
-
- sliding smoothly open, reveal the vicious-looking snout of a Gatling-style
- pulse-cannon.
-
- EXT. MAST -- FROM HICKS' POV
-
- as a stream of withering fire cuts a swathe thorough the swarming Aliens.
-
- VIETNAMESE COMMANDO (V.O.)
- (filter; over static and
- screaming harmonics)
- Come! You come!
-
- Followed by a frantic burst in her own language.
-
- EXT. SPACE -- FROM MAST
-
- Spence's POV as the interceptor nears the mast tip, the cannon still pumping.
- The airlock in the interceptor's lower surface slides open. Light from
- inside.
-
- Spence kicks off from the mast, manages to grab the rim of the interceptor's
- airlock.
-
- Hicks FIRES his last round into an Alien on the mast.
-
- The interceptor still coming down, crumpling the tip of the mast in a burst
- of sparks as Hicks and Bishop kick off. Hicks grabs Spence's free hand;
- Bishop grabs Hick's ankle. Spence hauls them all into the cramped space of
- the airlock. The lock closes as an Alien launches itself from the mast...
-
- INT. INTERCEPTOR AIRLOCK
-
- SOUND of the Alien as it slams into the lock. Hicks, Bishop, Spence are
- crammed in like sardines.
-
- EXT. INTERCEPTOR LOCK
-
- The Alien scrabbling furiously for a hold...
-
- INT. INTERCEPTOR
-
- As the inner lock opens and the commando plunges her tattooed arms in to
- yank Spence free. Spence fumbles with her helmet and snaps it off. Bishop
- pulls himself from the lock; in spite of his leg, he dives for the ship's
- controls. His hands dart from one switchboard to the next. Nothing happens.
- He look up through his faceplate at the commando.
-
- BISHOP
- (voice muffled by his helmet)
- Go!
-
- She looks at him impassively. Beat. Then reaches past to press a sequence of
- three buttons.
-
- EXT. SPACE
-
- The interceptor. The Aliens cluster like aphids along the mast. The
- interceptor's ENGINES erupt in a gout of flame.
-
- EXT. SPACE -- ANOTHER ANGLE
-
- The Alien on the airlock loses its grip, tumbles into the rocket blast.
-
- EXT. ANCHORPOINT -- INTERCEPTOR'S POV
-
- The station is receding
-
- The fusion package goes overload.
-
- WHITEOUT. Beat.
-
- FADE TO BLACK.
-
- FADE IN:
-
- A SINGLE STAR
-
- Then another star. Then the interceptor, adrift, showing no lights.
-
- EXT. INTERCEPTOR -- ANOTHER ANGLE
-
- Additional damage visible from the Anchorpoint blast.
-
- INT. INTERCEPTOR
-
- Dim light. The commando is slumped against a wall of dead switches, watching
- Bishop. Hick, Spence, and Bishop wear their space suits, minus helmets and
- air tanks. Bishop is bending over a panel of exposed circuitry, working with
- a delicate probe. His suit is open to the waist; he wears a miniature
- worklight on a band across his forehead. Spence is asleep, her head on Hicks'
- lap.
-
- HICKS
- Bishop...
-
- Bishop looks up, the beam of the worklight glaring in Hicks' eyes.
-
- BISHOP
- Yes?
-
- HICKS
- Bishop, are Spence and I... I mean... Are we
- infected, man?
-
- A small steady tone SOUNDS, muffled inside Bishop's suit. He puts the probe
- down and reaches into his suit, bringing out his wristwatch.
-
- He looks at the time. The tone stops. He puts the watch down an looks at
- Hicks. Beat.
-
- BISHOP
- No, you aren't. I obtained solid parameters
- on the incubation period... Neither of you
- is a carrier. Neither is she.
-
- (glancing toward
- the commando)
- Although I couldn't be certain until...
-
- HICKS
- Your watch? Until you watch went off?
-
- BISHOP
- Yes.
-
- Bishop reaches into his suit again and brings out a service automatic.
-
- The commando says something angrily, wearily, in her own language.
-
- Bishop hands her the gun. She tosses it aside with evident disgust, curls
- up, eyes closed.
-
- HICKS
- That was for us? If we were...
-
- BISHOP
- Yes.
- (he looks at the
- commando again)
- She's dying, Hicks. Radiation poisoning...
-
- HICKS
- Can we do anything?
-
- BISHOP
- No.
-
- Spence groans in her sleep. Hicks absently smoothes her hair back from her
- eyes.
-
-
- BISHOP
- You're a species again, Hicks. United against
- a common enemy...
-
- Hicks moves Spence's head, pillows her on a folded jacket, swings his way over
- to the commando, offers her water from a plastic bottle. She refuses it.
-
- HICKS
- Yeah?
-
- BISHOP
- The source, Hicks. You'll have to trace them
- back, find the point of origin. The first
- source. And destroy it.
-
- HICKS
- I dunno, Bishop. Maybe we just oughta stay
- out of their way...
-
- BISHOP
- You can't, Hicks. This goes far beyond mere
- interspecies competition. These creatures are
- to biological life what antimatter is to matter.
-
- HICKS
- How do you mean?
-
- BISHOP
- There isn't room for the both of you, Hicks,
- not in this universe.
-
- HICKS
- That's crazy, Bishop...
-
- BISHOP
- No. You're already at war, Hicks. War to
- extermination. The alien knows no other mode.
-
- HICKS
- Hell, man, we been at war all my life. Near
- enough, anyway. With her.
- (he looks down at
- the commando)
- With all her brothers and sisters. That's what
- got us into this shit in the first place!
-
- BISHOP
- But now you've seen the enemy, Hicks. So has
- she. She's not it. Neither are you. This is
- a Darwinian universe, Hicks. Will the alien
- be the ultimate survivor?
-
- Hicks doesn't answer. He just looks at Bishop. Bishop goes back to his
- circuitry.
-
- CLOSE on Spence's sleeping face, and the face of the dying commando.
-
- DISSOLVE TO:
-
- EXT. SPACE
-
- Approach of a large ship.
-
- The PING of homing radar.
-
- ANGLE ON THE HULL
-
- As it slides past, enormous letters: KANSAS CITY.
-
- EXT. SPACE - ANGLE UP
-
- >From below Kansas City as a wide bay opens.
-
- The interceptor comes INTO FRAME and is drawn up into the brightly-lit hold.
-
- The bay closes.
-
- EXT. SPACE
-
- Kansas City. Receding. Gone.
-
- The stars.
- FADE OUT.
-
-
-
-
- THE END
-