Shawshank Redemption, The (1994)
      by Frank Darabont.
      Based upon the story "Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption" by Stephen 
      King.
      More info about this movie on imdb.com




1 INT -- CABIN -- NIGHT (1946)

A dark, empty room.

The door bursts open. A MAN and WOMAN enter, drunk and
giggling, horny as hell. No sooner is the door shut than
they're all over each other, ripping at clothes, pawing at
flesh, mouths locked together.

He gropes for a lamp, tries to turn it on, knocks it over
instead. Hell with it. He's got more urgent things to do, like
getting her blouse open and his hands on her breasts. She
arches, moaning, fumbling with his fly. He slams her against
the wall, ripping her skirt. We hear fabric tear.

He enters her right then and there, roughly, up against the
wall. She cries out, hitting her head against the wall but not
caring, grinding against him, clawing his back, shivering with
the sensations running through her. He carries her across the
room with her legs wrapped around him. They fall onto the bed.

CAMERA PULLS BACK, exiting through the window, traveling
smoothly outside...

2 EXT -- CABIN -- NIGHT (1946) 2

...to reveal the bungalow, remote in a wooded area, the
lovers' cries spilling into the night...

...and we drift down a wooded path, the sounds of rutting
passion growing fainter, mingling now with the night sounds of
crickets and hoot owls...

...and we begin to hear FAINT MUSIC in the woods, tinny and
incongruous, and still we keep PULLING BACK until...

...a car is revealed. A 1946 Plymouth. Parked in a clearing.

3 INT -- PLYMOUTH -- NIGHT (1946) 3

ANDY DUFRESNE, mid-20's, wire rim glasses, three-piece suit.
Under normal circumstances a respectable, solid citizen; hardly
dangerous, perhaps even meek. But these circumstances are far
from normal. He is disheveled, unshaven, and very drunk. A
cigarette smolders in his mouth. His eyes, flinty and hard, are
riveted to the bungalow up the path.

He can hear them fucking from here.

He raises a bottle of bourbon and knocks it back. The radio
plays softly, painfully romantic, taunting him:

You stepped out of a dream...
You are too wonderful...
To be what you seem...

He opens the glove compartment, pulls out an object wrapped
in a rag. He lays it in his lap and unwraps it carefully --

-- revealing a .38 revolver. Oily, black, evil.

He grabs a box of bullets. Spills them everywhere, all over
the seats and floor. Clumsy. He picks bullets off his lap,
loading them into the gun, one by one, methodical and grim.
Six in the chamber. His gaze goes back to the bungalow.

He shuts off the radio. Abrupt silence, except for the distant
lovers' moans. He takes another shot of bourbon courage, then
opens the door and steps from the car.

4 EXT -- PLYMOUTH -- NIGHT (1946) 4

His wingtip shoes crunch on gravel. Loose bullets scatter to
the ground. The bourbon bottle drops and shatters.

He starts up the path, unsteady on his feet. The closer he
gets, the louder the lovemaking becomes. Louder and more
frenzied. The lovers are reaching a climax, their sounds of
passion degenerating into rhythmic gasps and grunts.

			WOMAN (O.S.)
	Oh god...oh god...oh god...

Andy lurches to a stop, listening. The woman cries out in
orgasm. The sound slams into Andy's brain like an icepick. He
shuts his eyes tightly, wishing the sound would stop.

It finally does, dying away like a siren until all that's left
is the shallow gasping and panting of post-coitus. We hear
languorous laughter, moans of satisfaction.

			WOMAN (O.S.)
	Oh god...that's sooo good...you're
	the best...the best I ever had...

Andy just stands and listens, devastated. He doesn't look like
much of a killer now; he's just a sad little man on a dirt
path in the woods, tears streaming down his face, a loaded gun
held loosely at his side. A pathetic figure, really.

FADE TO BLACK: 1ST TITLE UP

5 INT -- COURTROOM -- DAY (1946) 5

THE JURY listens like a gallery of mannequins on display,
pale-faced and stupefied.

			D.A. (O.S.)
	Mr. Dufresne, describe the
	confrontation you had with your
	wife the night she was murdered.

ANDY DUFRESNE

is on the witness stand, hands folded, suit and tie pressed,
hair meticulously combed. He speaks in soft, measured tones:

			ANDY
	It was very bitter. She said she
	was glad I knew, that she hated all
	the sneaking around. She said she
	wanted a divorce in Reno.

			D.A.
	What was your response?

			ANDY
	I told her I would not grant one.

			D.A.
	   (refers to his notes)
	"I'll see you in Hell before I see
	you in Reno." Those were the words
	you used, Mr. Dufresne, according
	to the testimony of your neighbors.

			ANDY
	If they say so. I really don't
	remember. I was upset.

FADE TO BLACK: 2ND TITLE UP

			D.A.
What happened after you and your
wife argued?

			ANDY
	She packed a bag and went to stay
	with Mr. Quentin.

			D.A.
	Glenn Quentin. The golf pro at the
	Falmouth Hills Country Club. The
	man you had recently discovered was
	her lover.
	   (Andy nods)
	Did you follow her?

			ANDY
	I went to a few bars first. Later,
	I decided to drive to Mr. Quentin's
	home and confront them. They
	weren't there...so I parked my car
	in the turnout...and waited.

			D.A.
	With what intention?

			ANDY
	I'm not sure. I was confused. Drunk.
	I think mostly I wanted to scare them.

			D.A.
	You had a gun with you?

			ANDY
	Yes. I did.

FADE TO BLACK: 3RD TITLE UP

			D.A.
	When they arrived, you went up
	to the house and murdered them?

			ANDY
	No. I was sobering up. I realized
	she wasn't worth it. I decided to
	let her have her quickie divorce.

			D.A.
	Quickie divorce indeed. A .38
	caliber divorce, wrapped in a
	handtowel to muffle the shots,
	isn't that what you mean? And then
	you shot her lover!

			ANDY
	I did not. I got back in the car
	and drove home to sleep it off.
	Along the way, I stopped and threw
	my gun into the Royal River. I feel
	I've been very clear on this point.

			D.A.
	Yes, you have. Where I get hazy,
	though, is the part where the
	cleaning woman shows up the next
	morning and finds your wife and her
	lover in bed, riddled with .38
	caliber bullets. Does that strike
	you as a fantastic coincidence, Mr.
	Dufresne, or is it just me?

			ANDY
	   (softly)
	Yes. It does.

			D.A.
	I'm sorry, Mr. Dufresne, I don't
	think the jury heard that.

			ANDY
	Yes. It does.

			D.A.
	Does what?

			ANDY
	Strike me as a fantastic coincidence.

			D.A.
	On that, sir, we are in accord...

FADE TO BLACK! 4TH TITLE UP

			D.A.
	You claim you threw your gun into
	the Royal River before the murders
	took place. That's rather convenient.

			ANDY
	It's the truth.

			D.A.
	You recall Lt. Mincher's testimony?
	He and his men dragged that river
	for three days and nary a gun was
	found. So no comparison can be made
	between your gun and the bullets
	taken from the bloodstained corpses
	of the victims. That's also rather
	convenient, isn't it, Mr. Dufresne?

			ANDY
	   (faint, bitter smile)
	Since I am innocent of this crime,
	sir, I find it decidedly inconvenient
	the gun was never found.

FADE TO BLACK: STH TITLE UP

6 INT -- COURTROOM -- DAY (1946) 6

The D.A. holds the jury spellbound with his closing summation:

			D.A.
	Ladies and gentlemen, you've heard
	all the evidence, you know all the
	facts. We have the accused at the
	scene of the crime. We have foot
	prints. Tire tracks. Bullets
	scattered on the ground which bear
	his fingerprints. A broken bourbon
	bottle, likewise with fingerprints.
	Most of all, we have a beautiful
	young woman and her lover lying
	dead in each other's arms. They had
	sinned. But was their crime so
	great as to merit a death sentence?

He gestures to Andy sitting quietly with his ATTORNEY.

			D.A.
	I suspect Mr. Dufresne's answer to
	that would be yes. I further
	suspect he carried out that
	sentence on the night of September
	21st, this year of our Lord, 1946,
	by pumping four bullets into his
	wife and another four into Glenn
	Quentin. And while you think about
	that, think about this...

He picks up a revolver, spins the cylinder before their eyes
like a carnival barker spinning a wheel of fortune.

			D.A.
	A revolver holds six bullets, not
	eight. I submit to you this was not
	a hot-blooded crime of passion!
	That could at least be understood,
	if not condoned. No, this was
	revenge of a much more brutal and
	cold-blooded nature. Consider! Four
	bullets per victim! Not six shots
	fired, but eight! That means he
	fired the gun empty...and then
	stopped to reload so he could shoot
	each of them again! An extra bullet
	per lover...right in the head.
	   (a few JURORS shiver)
	I'm done talking. You people are
	all decent, God-fearing Christian
	folk. You know what to do.

FADE TO BLACK: 6TH TITLE UP

INT -- JURY ROOM -- DAY (1946) 7

CAMERA TRACKS down a long table, moving from one JUROR to the
next. These decent, God-fearing Christians are chowing down on
a nice fried chicken dinner provided them by the county,
smacking greasy lips and gnawing cobbettes of corn.

			VOICE (O.S.)
	Guilty. Guilty. Guilty. Guilty...

We find the FOREMAN at the head of the table, sorting votes.

FADE TO BLACK: 7TH TITLE UP

8 INT -- COURTROOM -- DAY (1946) 8

Andy stands before the dias. THE JUDGE peers down, framed by a
carved frieze of blind Lady Justice on the wall.

			JUDGE
	You strike me as a particularly icy
	and remorseless man, Mr. Dufresne.
	It chills my blood just to look at
	you. By the power vested in me by
	the State of Maine, I hereby order
	you to serve two life sentences,
	back to back, one for each of your
	victims. So be it.

He raps his gavel as we

CRASH TO BLACK: LAST TITLE UP.

9 AN IRON-BARRED DOOR 9

slides open with an enormous CLANG. A stark room waits beyond.
CAMERA PUSHES through. SEVEN HUMORLESS MEN sit side by side at
a long table. An empty chair faces them. We are now in:

INT -- SHAWSHANK HEARINGS ROOM -- DAY (1947)

RED enters, removes his cap and waits by the chair.

			MAN #1
	Sit.

Red sits, tries not to slouch. The chair is uncomfortable.

			MAN #2
	We see by your file you've served
	twenty years of a life sentence.

			MAN #3
	You feel you've been rehabilitated?

			RED
	Yes, sir. Absolutely. I've learned
	my lesson. I can honestly say I'm a
	changed man. I'm no longer a danger
	to society. That's the God's honest
	truth. No doubt about it.

The men just stare at him. One stifles a yawn.

CLOSEUP -- PAROLE FORM

A big rubber stamp slams down: "REJECTED" in red ink.

10 EXT -- EXERCISE YARD -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- DUSK (1947) 10

High stone walls topped with snaky concertina wire, set off at
intervals by looming guard towers. Over a hundred CONS are
in the yard. Playing catch, shooting craps, jawing at each
other, making deals. Exercise period.

RED emerges into fading daylight, slouches low-key through the
activity, worn cap on his head, exchanging hellos and doing
minor business. He's an important man here.

			RED (V.O.)
	There's a con like me in every prison
	in America, I guess. I'm the guy who
	can get it for you. Cigarettes, a
	bag of reefer if you're partial, a
	bottle of brandy to celebrate your
	kid's high school graduation. Damn
	near anything, within reason.

He slips somebody a pack of smokes, smooth sleight-of-hand.

			RED (V.O.)
	Yes sir, I'm a regular Sears &
	Roebuck.

TWO SHORT SIREN BLASTS issue from the main tower, drawing
everybody's attention to the loading dock. The outer gate
swings open...revealing a gray prison bus outside.

			RED (V.O.)
	So when Andy Dufresne came to me in
	1949 and asked me to smuggle Rita
	Hayworth into the prison for him, I
	told him no problem. And it wasn't.

			CON
	Fresh fish! Fresh fish today!

Red is joined by HEYWOOD, SKEET, FLOYD, JIGGER, ERNIE, SNOOZE.
Most cons crowd to the fence to gawk and jeer, but Red and his
group mount the bleachers and settle in comfortably.

11 INT -- PRISON BUS -- DUSK (1947) 11

Andy sits in back, wearing steel collar and chains.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy came to Shawshank Prison in
	early 1947 for murdering his wife
	and the fella she was bangin'.

The bus lurches forward, RUMBLES through the gates. Andy gazes
around, swallowed by prison walls.

			RED (V.O.)
	On the outside, he'd been vice-
	president of a large Portland bank.
	Good work for a man as young as he
	was, when you consider how
	conservative banks were back then.

			TOWER GUARD
	All clear!

GUARDS approach the bus with carbines. The door jerks open.
The new fish disembark, chained together single-file, blinking
sourly at their surroundings. Andy stumbles against the MAN in
front of him, almost drags him down.

BYRON HADLEY, captain of the guard, slams his baton into
Andy's back. Andy goes to his knees, gasping in pain. JEERS
and SHOUTS from the spectators.

			HADLEY
	On your feet before I fuck you up
	so bad you never walk again.

13 ON THE BLEACHERS 13

			RED
	There they are, boys. The Human
	Charm Bracelet.

			HEYWOOD
	Never seen such a sorry-lookin'
	heap of maggot shit in my life.

			JIGGER
	Comin' from you, Heywood, you being
	so pretty and all...

			FLOYD
	Takin' bets today, Red?

			RED
	   (pulls notepad and pencil)
	Bear Catholic? Pope shit in the woods?
	Smokes or coin, bettor's choice.

			FLOYD
	Smokes. Put me down for two.

			RED
	High roller. Who's your horse?

			FLOYD
	That gangly sack of shit, third
	from the front. He'll be the first.

			HEYWOOD
	Bullshit. I'll take that action.

			ERNIE
	Me too.

Other hands go up. Red jots the names.

			HEYWOOD
	You're out some smokes, son. Take
	my word.

			FLOYD
	You're so smart, you call it.

			HEYWOOD
	I say that chubby fat-ass...let's
	see...fifth from the front. Put me
	down for a quarter deck.

			RED
	That's five cigarettes on Fat-Ass.
	Any takers?

More hands go up. Andy and the others are paraded along,
forced by their chains to take tiny baby steps, flinching
under the barrage of jeers and shouts. The old-timers are
shaking the fence, trying to make the newcomers shit their
pants. Some of the new fish shout back, but mostly they look
terrified. Especially Andy.

			RED (V.O.)
	I must admit I didn't think much of
	Andy first time I laid eyes on him.
	He might'a been important on the
	outside, but in here he was just a
	little turd in prison grays. Looked
	like a stiff breeze could blow him
	over. That was my first impression
	of the man.

			SKEET
	What say, Red?

			RED
	Little fella on the end. Definitely.
	I stake half a pack. Any takers?

			SNOOZE
	Rich bet.

			RED
	C'mon, boys, who's gonna prove me
	wrong?
	    (hands go up)
	Floyd, Skeet, Joe, Heywood. Four brave
	souls, ten smokes apiece. That's it,
	gentlemen, this window's closed.

Red pockets his notepad. A VOICE comes over the P.A. speakers:

			VOICE (amplified)
	Return to your cellblocks for
	evening count.

14 INT -- ADMITTING AREA -- DUSK (1947) 14

The new fish are marched in. Guards unlock the shackles. The
chains drop away, rattling to the stone floor.

			HADLEY
	Eyes front.

WARDEN SAMUEL NORTON strolls forth, a colorless man in a gray
suit and a church pin in his lapel. He looks like he could
piss ice water. He appraises the newcomers with flinty eyes.

			NORTON
	This is Mr. Hadley, captain of the
	guard. I am Mr. Norton, the warden.
	You are sinners and scum, that's
	why they sent you to me. Rule
	number one: no blaspheming. I'll
	not have the Lord's name taken in
	vain in my prison. The other rules
	you'll figure out as you go along.
	Any questions?

			CON
	When do we eat?

Cued by Norton's glance, Hadley steps up to the con and screams
right in his face:

			HADLEY
	YOU EAT WHEN WE SAY YOU EAT! YOU
	PISS WHEN WE SAY YOU PISS! YOU SHIT
	WHEN WE SAY YOU SHIT! YOU SLEEP
	WHEN WE SAY YOU SLEEP! YOU MAGGOT-
	DICK MOTHERFUCKER!

Hadley rams the tip of his club into the con's belly. The
man falls to his knees, gasping and clutching himself.
Hadley takes his place at Norton's side again. Softly:

			NORTON
	Any other questions?
	   (there are none)
	I believe in two things. Discipline
	and the Bible. Here, you'll receive
	both.
	   (holds up a Bible)
	Put your faith in the Lord. Your
	ass belongs to me. Welcome to
	Shawshank.

			HADLEY
	Off with them clothes! And I didn't
	say take all day doing it, did I?

The men shed their clothes. Within seconds, all stand naked.

			HADLEY
	First man into the shower!

Hadley shoves the FIRST CON into a steel cage open at the
front. TWO GUARDS open up with a fire hose. The con is slammed
against the back of the cage, sputtering and hollering.
Seconds later, the water is cut and the con yanked out.

			HADLEY
	Delouse that piece of shit! Next
	man in!

The con gets a huge scoop of white delousing powder thrown all
over him. Gasping and coughing, blinking powder from his eyes,
he gets shoved to a trustee's cage. The TRUSTEE slides a short
stack of items through the slot -- prison clothes and a Bible.
All the men are processed quickly -- a blast of water, powder,
clothes and a Bible...

15 INT -- INFIRMARY -- NIGHT (1947) 15

A naked CON steps before a DOCTOR and gets a cursory exam.
A penlight is shined in his eyes, ears, nose, and throat.

			DOCTOR
	Bend over.

The con does. A GUARD with a penlight in his teeth spreads his
cheeks, peers up his ass, and nods. Andy is next up. He gets
the same treatment.

16 INT -- PRISON CHAPEL -- NIGHT (1947) 16

CAMERA TRACKS the naked newcomers shivering on hard wooden
chairs, clothes on their laps, Bibles open.

			CHAPLAIN (O.S.)
	...maketh me to lie down in green
	pastures. He leadeth me beside the
	still waters. He restoreth my soul...

17 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- NIGHT (1947) 17

Three tiers to a side, concrete and steel, gray and imposing.
Andy and the others are marched in, still naked, carrying
their clothes and Bibles. The CONS in their cells greet them
with TAUNTS, JEERS, and LAUGHTER. One by one, the new men are
shown to their cells and locked in with a CLANG OF STEEL.

			RED (V.O.)
	The first night's the toughest, no
	doubt about it. They march you in
	naked as the day you're born, fresh
	from a Bible reading, skin burning
	and half-blind from that delousing
	shit they throw on you...

Red watches from his cell, arms slung over the crossbars,
cigarette dangling from his fingers.

			RED (V.O.)
	...and when they put you in that
	cell, when those bars slam home,
	that's when you know it's for real.
	Old life blown away in the blink of
	an eye...a long cold season in hell
	stretching out ahead...nothing
	left but all the time in the world
	to think about it.

Red listens to the CLANGING below. He watches Andy and a few
others being brought up to the 2nd tier.

			RED (V.O.)
	Most new fish come close to madness
	the first night. Somebody always
	breaks down crying. Happens every
	time. The only question is, who's
	it gonna be?

Andy is led past and given a cell at the end of the tier.

			RED (V.O.)
	It's as good a thing to bet on as
	any, I guess. I had my money on
	Andy Dufresne...

18 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 18

The bars slam home. Andy is alone in his cell, clutching his
clothes. He gazes around at his new surroundings, taking it
in. He slowly begins to dress himself...

19 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- NIGHT (1947) 19

A malignant stone growth on the Maine landscape. The moon
hangs low and baleful in a dead sky. The headlight of a
PASSING TRAIN cuts through the night.

20 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 20

Red lies on his bunk below us, tossing his baseball toward the
ceiling and catching it again. He pauses, listening. FOOTSTEPS
approach below, unhurried, echoing hollowly on stone.

21 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- NIGHT (1947) 21

LOW ANGLE. A CELLBLOCK GUARD strolls into frame.

			GUARD
	That's lights out! Good night, ladies.

The lights bump off in sequence. The guard exits, footsteps
echoing away. Darkness now. Silence. CAMERA CRANES UP the
tiers toward Red's cell.

			RED (V.O.)
	I remember my first night. Seems a
	long time ago now.

Red looms from the darkness, leans on the bars. Listens.
Waits. From somewhere below comes faint, ghastly tittering.
VOICES drift through the cellblock, taunting:

			VARIOUS VOICES (O.S.)
	Fishee fishee fisheeee...You're
	gonna like it here, new fish. A
	whooole lot...Make you wish your
	daddies never dicked your
	mommies...You takin' this down, new
	fish? Gonna be a quiz later.
	   (somebody LAUGHS)
	Sshhh. Keep it down. The screws'll
	hear...Fishee fishee fisheeee...

			RED (V.O.)
	The boys always go fishin' with
	first-timers...and they don't quit
	till they reel someone in.

The VOICES keep on, sly and creepy in the dark...

22 INT -- VARIOUS CELLS -- NIGHT (1947) 22
thru thru 25
2g ...while the new cons go quietly crazy in their cells. One man
paces like a caged animal...another sits gnawing his cuticles
bloody...a third is weeping silently...a fourth is dry-heaving
into the toilet...

26 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 26

Red waits at the bars. Smoking. Listening. He cranes his head,
peers down toward Andy's cell. Nothing. Not a peep.

			HEYWOOD (O.S.)
	Fat-Ass...oh, Faaaat-Ass. Talk to
	me, boy. I know you're in there. I
	can hear you breathin'. Now don't
	you listen to these nitwits, hear?

27 INT -- FAT-ASS' CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 27

Fat-Ass is crying, trying not to hyperventilate.

			HEYWOOD (O.S.)
	This ain't such a bad place. I'll
	introduce you around, make you feel
	right at home. I know some big ol'
	bull queers who'd love to make your
	acquaintance...especially that big
	white mushy butt of yours...

And that's it. Fat-Ass lets out a LOUD WAIL of despair:

			FAT-ASS
	OH GOD! I DON'T BELONG HERE! I
	WANNA GO HOME!

28 INT -- HEYWOOD'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 28

			HEYWOOD
	AND IT'S FAT-ASS BY A NOSE.'

29 INT -- CELLBLOCK -- NIGHT (1947) 29

The place goes nuts. Fat-Ass throws himself screaming against
the bars. The entire block starts CHANTING:

			VOICES
	Fresh fish...fresh fish...fresh
	fish...fresh fish...

			FAT-ASS
	I WANNA GO HOME! I WANT MY MOTHER.'

			VOICE (O.S.)
	I had your mother! She wasn't that
	great!

The lights bump on. GUARDS pour in, led by Hadley himself.

			HADLEY
	What the Christ is this happy shit?

			VOICE (O.S.)
	He took the Lord's name in vain!
	I'm tellin' the warden!

			HADLEY
	   (to the unseen wit)
	You'll be tellin' him with my baton
	up your ass!

Hadley arrives at Fat-Ass' cell, bellowing through the bars:

			HADLEY
	What's your malfunction you fat
	fuckin' barrel of monkey-spunk?

			FAT-ASS
	PLEASE! THIS AIN'T RIGHT! I AIN'T
	SUPPOSED TO BE HERE! NOT ME!

			HADLEY
	I ain't gonna count to three! Not
	even to one! Now shut the fuck up
	'fore I sing you a lullabye!

Fat-Ass keeps blubbering and wailing. Total freak-out. Hadley
draws his baton, gestures to his men. Open it.

A GUARD unlocks the cell. Hadley pulls Fat-Ass out and starts
beating him with the baton, brutally raining blows. Fat-Ass
falls, tries to crawl.

The place goes dead silent. All we hear now is the dull
THWACK-THWACK-THWACK of the baton. Fat-ass passes out. Hadley
gets in a few more licks and finally stops.

			HADLEY
	Get this tub of shit down to the
	infirmary.
	      (peers around)
	If I hear so much as a mouse fart
	in here the rest of the night, by
	God and Sonny Jesus, you'll all
	visit the infirmary. Every last
	motherfucker here.

The guards wrestle Fat-Ass onto a stretcher and carry him off.
FOOTSTEPS echo away. Lights off. Darkness again. Silence.

30 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 30

Red stares through the bars at the main floor below, eyes
riveted to the small puddle of blood where Fat-Ass went down.

			RED (V.O.)
	His first night in the joint, Andy
	Dufresne cost me two packs of
	cigarettes. He never made a sound...

31 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- MORNING (1947) 31

LOUD BUZZER. The master locks are thrown -- KA-THUMP! The cons
step from their cells, lining the tiers. The GUARDS holler
their head-counts to the HEAD BULL, who jots on a clipboard.
Red peers at Andy, checking him out. Andy stands in line,
collar buttoned, hair combed.

32 INT -- MESS HALL -- MORNING (1947) 32

Andy goes through the breakfast line, gets a scoop of glop on
his tray. WE PAN ANDY through the noise and confusion...and
discover BOGS DIAMOND and ROOSTER MacBRIDE watching Andy go
by. Bogs sizes Andy up with a salacious gleam in his eye,
mutters something to Rooster. Rooster laughs.

Andy finds a table occupied by Red and his regulars, chooses
a spot at the end where nobody is sitting. Ignoring their
stares, he picks up his spoon -- and pauses, seeing something
in his food. He carefully fishes it out with his fingers.

It's a squirming maggot. Andy grimaces, unsure what to do with
it. BROOKS HATLEN is sitting closest to Andy. At age 65, he's
a senior citizen, a long-standing resident.

			BROOKS
	You gonna eat that?

			ANDY
	Hadn't planned on it.

			BROOKS
	You mind?

Andy passes the maggot to Brooks. Brooks examines it, rolling
it between his fingertips like a man checking out a fine
cigar. Andy is riveted with apprehension.

			BROOKS
	Mmm. Nice and ripe.

Andy can't bear to watch. Brooks opens up his sweater and
feeds the maggot to a baby crow nestled in an inside pocket.
Andy breathes a sigh of relief.

			BROOKS
	Jake says thanks. Fell out of his
	nest over by the plate shop. I'm
	lookin' after him till he's old
	enough to fly.

Andy nods, proceeds to eat. Carefully. Heywood approaches.

			JIGGER
	Oh, Christ, here he comes.

			HEYWOOD
	Mornin', boys. It's a fine mornin'.
	You know why it's fine?

Heywood plops his tray down, sits. The men start pulling out
cigarettes and handing them down.

			HEYWOOD
	That's right, send 'em all down. I
	wanna see 'em lined up in a row,
	pretty as a chorus line.

An impressive pile forms. Heywood bends down and inhales
deeply, smelling the aroma. Rapture.

			FLOYD
	Smell my ass...

			HEYWOOD
	Gee, Red. Terrible shame, your
	horse comin' in last and all.
	Hell, I sure do love that horse of
	mine. I believe I owe that boy a
	big sloppy kiss when I see him.

			RED
	Give him some'a your cigarettes
	instead, cheap bastard.

			HEYWOOD
	Say Tyrell, you pull infirmary duty
	this week? How's that winnin' horse
	of mine, anyway?

			TYRELL
	Dead.
	      (the men fall silent)
	Hadley busted his head pretty good.
	Doc already went home for the
	night. Poor bastard lay there till
	this morning. By then...

He shakes his head, turns back to his food. The silence
mounts. Heywood glances around. Men resume eating. Softly:

			ANDY
	What was his name?

			HEYWOOD
	What? What'd you say?

			ANDY
	I was wondering if anyone knew his
	name.

			HEYWOOD
	What the fuck you care, new fish?
	      (resumes eating)
	Doesn't matter what his fuckin'
	name was. He's dead.

33 INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY -- DAY (1947) 33

A DEAFENING NOISE of industrial washers and presses. Andy works
the laundry line. A nightmarish job. He's new at it. BOB, the
con foreman, elbows him aside and shows him how it's done.

34 INT -- SHOWERS -- DAY (1947) 34

Shower heads mounted in bare concrete. Andy showers with a
dozen or more men. No modesty here. At least the water is good
and hot, soothing his tortured muscles.

Bogs looms from the billowing steam, smiling, checking Andy up
and down. Rooster and PETE appear from the sides. The Sisters.

			BOGS
	You're some sweet punk. You been
	broke in yet?

Andy tries to step past them. He gets shoved around, nothing
serious, just some slap and tickle. Jackals sizing up prey.

			BOGS
	Hard to get. I like that.

Andy breaks free, flushed and shaking. He hurries off, leaving
the three Sisters laughing.

35 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 35

Andy lies staring at the darkness, unable to sleep.

36 EXT -- EXERCISE YARD -- DAY (1947) 36

Exercise period. Red plays catch with Heywood and Jigger,
lazily tossing a baseball around. Red notices Andy off to the
side. Nods hello. Andy takes this as a cue to amble over.
Heywood and Jigger pause, watching.

			ANDY
	      (offers his hand)
	Hello. I'm Andy Dufresne.

Red glances at the hand, ignores it. The game continues.

			RED
	The wife-killin' banker.

			ANDY
	How do you know that?

			RED
	I keep my ear to the ground. Why'd
	you do it?

			ANDY
	I didn't, since you ask.

			RED
	Hell, you'll fit right in, then.
		(off Andy's look)
	Everyone's innocent in here, don't
	you know that? Heywood! What are
	you in for, boy?

			HEYWOOD
	Didn't do it! Lawyer fucked me!

Red gives Andy a look. See?

			ANDY
	What else have you heard?

			RED
	People say you're a cold fish. They
	say you think your shit smells
	sweeter than ordinary. That true?

			ANDY
	What do you think?

			RED
	Ain't made up my mind yet.

Heywood nudges Jigger. Watch this. He winds up and throws the
ball hard -- right at Andy's head. Andy sees it coming out of
the corner of his eye, whirls and catches it. Beat. He sends
the ball right back, zinging it into Heywood's hands. Heywood
drops the ball and grimaces, wringing his stung hands.

			ANDY
	I understand you're a man who knows
	how to get things.

			RED
	I'm known to locate certain things
	from time to time. They seem to
	fall into my hands. Maybe it's
	'cause I'm Irish.

			ANDY
	I wonder if you could get me a
	rock-hammer?

			RED
	What is it and why?

			ANDY
	You make your customers' motives a
	part of your business?

			RED
	If you wanted a toothbrush, I
	wouldn't ask questions. I'd just
	quote a price. A toothbrush, see,
	is a non-lethal sort of object.

			ANDY
	Fair enough. A rock-hammer is about
	eight or nine inches long. Looks
	like a miniature pickaxe, with a
	small sharp pick on one end, and a
	blunt hammerhead on the other. It's
	for rocks.

			RED
	Rocks.

Andy squats, motions Red to join him. Andy grabs a handful of
dirt and sifts it through his hands. He finds a pebble and
rubs it clean. It has a nice milky glow. He tosses it to Red.

			RED
	Quartz?

			ANDY
	Quartz, sure. And look. Mica. Shale.
	Silted granite. There's some graded
	limestone, from when they cut this
	place out of the hill.

			RED
	So?

			ANDY
	I'm a rockhound. At least I was, in
	my old life. I'd like to be again,
	on a limited scale.

			RED
	Yeah, that or maybe plant your toy
	in somebody's skull?

			ANDY
	I have no enemies here.

			RED
	No? Just wait.

Red flicks his gaze past Andy. Bogs is watching them.

			RED
	Word gets around. The Sisters have
	taken a real shine to you, yes they
	have. Especially Bogs.

			ANDY
	Tell me something. Would it help if
	I explained to them I'm not
	homosexual?

			RED
	Neither are they. You have to be
	human first. They don't qualify.
	      (off Andy's look)
	Bull queers take by force, that's
	all they want or understand. I'd
	grow eyes in the back of my head if
	I were you.

			ANDY
	Thanks for the advice.

			RED
	That comes free. But you understand
	my concern.

			ANDY
	If there's trouble, I doubt a rock-
	hammer will do me any good.

			RED
	Then I guess you wanna escape.
	Tunnel under the wall maybe?
		(Andy laughs politely)
	I miss the joke. What's so funny?

			ANDY
	You'll know when you see the rock-
	hammer.

			RED
	What's this item usually go for?

			ANDY
	Seven dollars in any rock and gem shop.

			RED
	My standard mark-up's twenty
	percent, but we're talkin' about a
	special object. Risk goes up, price
	goes up. Call it ten bucks even.

			ANDY
	Ten it is.

			RED
	I'll see what I can do.
	      (rises, slapping dust)
	But it's a waste of money.

			ANDY
	Oh?

			RED
	Folks who run this place love
	surprise inspections. They turn a
	blind eye to some things, but not
	a gadget like that. They'll find
	it, and you'll lose it. Mention my
	name, we'll never do business
	again. Not for a pair of shoelaces
	or a stick of gum.

			ANDY
	I understand. Thank you, Mr...?

			RED
	Red. The name's Red.

			ANDY
	Red. I'm Andy. Pleasure doing
	business with you.

They shake. Andy strolls off. Red watches him go.

			RED (V.O.)
	I could see why some of the boys
	took him for snobby. He had a quiet
	way about him, a walk and a talk
	that just wasn't normal around
	here. He strolled. like a man in a
	park without a care or worry. Like
	he had on an invisible coat that
	would shield him from this place.
		(resumes playing catch)
	Yes, I think it would be fair to
	say I liked Andy from the start.

37 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1947) 37

Red gets his breakfast and heads for a table. Andy falls in
step, slips him a tightly-folded square of paper.

38 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 38

Lying on his bunk, Red unfolds the square. A ten dollar bill.

			RED (V.O.)
	He was a man who adapted fast.

39 EXT -- LOADING DOCK -- DAY (1947) 39

Under watchful supervision, CONS are off-loading bags of dirty
laundry from an "Eliot Nursing Home" truck.

			RED (V.O.)
	Years later, I found out he'd
	brought in quite a bit more than
	just ten dollars...

A certain bag hits the ground. The TRUCK DRIVER shoots a look
at a black con, LEONARD, then ambles over to a GUARD to shoot
the shit. Leonard loads the bag onto a cart...

40 INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY -- DAY (1947) 40

Bags are being unloaded. We find Leonard working the line.

			RED (V.O.)
	When they check you into this
	hotel, one of the bellhops bends
	you over and looks up your works,
	just to make sure you're not
	carrying anything. But a truly
	determined man can get an object
	quite a ways up there.

Leonard slips a small paper-wrapped package out of the laundry
bag, hides it under his apron, and keeps sorting...

4l INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY EXCHANGE -- DAY (1947) 41

Red deposits his dirty bundle and moves down the line to where
the clean sheets are being handed out.

			RED (V.O.)
	That's how Andy joined our happy
	little Shawshank family with more
	than five hundred dollars on his
	person. Determination.

Leonard catches Red's eye, turns and grabs a specific stack of
clean sheets. He hands it across to Red --

TIGHT ANGLE

-- and more than clean laundry changes hands. Two packs of
cigarettes slide out of Red's hand into Leonard's.

42 INT -- RED'S CELL -- DAY (1947) 42

Red slips the package out of his sheets, carefully checks to
make sure nobody's coming, then rips it open. He pulls out the
rock-hammer. It's just as Andy described. Red laughs softly.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy was right. I finally got the
	joke. It would take a man about six
	hundred years to tunnel under the
	wall with one of these.

43 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- 2ND TIER -- NIGHT (1947) 43

Brooks Hatlen pushes a cart of books from cell to cell. The
rolling library. He finds Red waiting for him. Red slips the
rock-hammer, wrapped in a towel, through the bars and onto the
cart. Next comes six cigarettes to pay for postage.

			RED
	Dufresne.

Brooks nods, never missing a beat. He rolls his cart to
Andy's cell, mutters through the bars:

			BROOKS
	Middle shelf, wrapped in a towel.

Andy's hand snakes through the bars and makes the object
disappear. The hand comes back and deposits a small slip of
folded paper along with more cigarettes. Brooks turns his cart
around and goes back. He pauses, sorting his books long enough
for Red to snag the slip of paper. Brooks continues on,
scooping the cigarettes off the cart and into his pocket.

44 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1947) 44

Red unfolds the slip of paper. Penciled neatly on it is a
single word: "Thanks."

45 INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY -- DAY (1947) 45

We are assaulted by the deafening noise of the laundry line.
Andy is doing his job, getting good at it.

			BOB
	DUFRESNE! WE'RE LOW ON HEXLITE!
	HEAD ON BACK AND FETCH US UP SOME!

Andy nods. He leaves the line, weaving his way through the
laundry room and into --

46 INT -- BACK ROOMS/STOCK AREA -- DAY (1947) 46

-- a dark, tangled maze of rooms and corridors, boilers and
furnaces, sump pumps, old washing machines, pallets of
cleaning supplies and detergents, you name it. Andy hefts a
cardboard drum of Hexlite off the stack, turns around --

-- and finds Bogs Diamond in the aisle. blocking his way.
Rooster looms from the shadows to his right, Pete Verness
on the left. A frozen beat. Andy slams the Hexlite to the
floor, rips off the top, and scoops out a double handful.

			ANDY
	You get this in your eyes, it
	blinds you.

			BOGS
	Honey, hush.

Andy backs up, holding them at bay, trying to maneuver through
the maze. The Sisters keep coming, tense and guarded, eyes
riveted and gauging his every move, trying to outflank him.
Andy trips on some old gaint sugglies. That's all it takes.
They're on him in an instant, kicking and stomping.

Andy gets yanked to his feet. Bogs applies a chokehold from
behind. They propel him across the room and slam him against
an old four-pocket machine, bending him over it. Rooster jams
a rag into Andy's mouth and secures it with a steel pipe, like
a horse bit. Andy kicks and struggles, but Rooster and Pete
have his arms firmly pinned. Bogs whispers in Andy's ear:

			BOGS
	That's it, fight. Better that way.

Andy starts screaming, muffled by the rag. CAMERA PULLS BACK,
SLOWLY WIDENING. The big Washex blocks our view. All we see
is Andy's screaming face and the men holding him down...

...and CAMERA DRIFTS FROM THE ROOM, leaving the dark place
and the dingy act behind...MOVING up empty corridors, past
concrete walls and steel pipes...

			RED (V.O.)
	I wish I could tell you that Andy
	fought the good fight, and the
	Sisters let him be. I wish I could
	tell you that, but prison is no
	fairy-tale world.

WE EMERGE into the prison laundry past a guard, WIDENING for
a final view of the line. The giant steel "mangler" is
slapping down in brutal rhythm. The sound is deafening.

			RED (V.O.)
	He never said who did it...but we
	all knew.

PRISON MONTAGE: (1947 through 1949)

47 Andy plods through his days. Working. Eating. Chipping and 47
shaping his rocks after lights-out...

			RED (V.O.)
	Things went on like that for a
	while. Prison life consists of
	routine, and then more routine.

48 Andy walks the yard, face swollen and bruised. 48

			RED (V.O.)
	Every so often, Andy would show up
	with fresh bruises.

49 Andy eats breakfast. A few tables over, Bogs blows him a kiss. 49

			RED (V.O.)
	The Sisters kept at him. Sometimes
	he was able to fight them off...
	sometimes not.

50 Andy backs into a corner in some dingy part of the prison,
wildly swinging a rake at his tormentors.

			RED (V.O.)
	He always fought, that's what I
	remember. He fought because he knew
	if he didn't fight, it would make
	it that much easier not to fight
	the next time.

The rake connects, snapping off over somebody's skull. They
beat the hell out of him.

			RED (V.O.)
	Half the time it landed him in the
	infirmary...

51 INT -- SOLITARY CONFINEMENT ("THE HOLE") -- NIGHT (1949) 51

A stone closet. No bed, sink, or lights. Just a toilet with no
seat. Andy sits on bare concrete, bruised face lit by a faint
ray of light falling through the tiny slit in the steel door.

			RED (V.O.)
	...the other half, it landed him in
	solitary. Warden Norton's "grain &
	drain" vacation. Bread, water, and
	all the privacy you could want.

52 INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY -- DAY (1949) 52

Andy is working the line.

			RED (V.O.)
	And that's how it went for Andy. That
	was his routine. I do believe those
	first two years were the worst for
	him. And I also believe if things
	had gone on that way, this place
	would have got the best of him.
	But then, in the spring of 1949,
	the powers-that-be decided that...

53 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1949) 53

Warden Norton addresses the assembled cons via bullhorn:

			NORTON
	...the roof of the license-plate
	factory needs resurfacing. I need a
	dozen volunteers for a week's work.
	We're gonna be taking names in this
	steel bucket here...

Red glances around at his friends. Andy also catches his eye.

			RED (V.O.)
	It was outdoor detail, and May is
	one damn fine month to be workin'
	outdoors.

54 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1949) 54

Cons shuffle past, dropping slips of paper into a bucket.

			RED (V.O.)
	More than a hundred men volunteered
	for the job.

Red saunters to a guard named TIM YOUNGBLOOD, mutters
discreetly in his ear.

55 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1949) 55

Youngblood is pulling names and reading them off. Red
exchanges grins with Andy and the others.

			RED (V.O.)
	Wouldn't you know it? Me and some
	fellas I know were among the names
	called.

56 INT -- PRISON CORRIDOR -- NIGHT (1949) 56

Red slips Youngblood six packs of cigarettes.

			RED (V.O.)
	Only cost us a pack of smokes per
	man. I made my usual twenty
	percent, of course.

57 EXT -- LICENSE PLATE FACTORY -- DAY (1949) 57

A tar-cooker bubbles and smokes. TWO CONS dip up a bucket of
tar and tie a rope to the handle. The rope goes taught. CAMERA
FOLLOWS the bucket of tar up the side of the building to --

58 THE ROOF 58

-- where it is relayed to the work detail. The men are dipping
big Padd brushes and spreading the tar. ANGLZ OVER to Byron
Hadley bitching sourly to his fellow guards:

			HADLEY
	...so this shithead lawyer calls
	long distance from Texas, and he
	says, Byron Hadley? I say, yeah. He
	says, sorry to inform you, but your
	brother just died.

			YOUNGBLOOD
	Damn, Byron. Sorry to hear that.

			HADLEY
	I ain't. He was an asshole. Run off
	years ago, family ain't heard of him
	since. Figured him for dead anyway.
	So this lawyer prick says, your
	brother died a rich man. Oil wells
	and shit, close to a million bucks.
	Jesus, it's frigging incredible how
	lucky some assholes can get.

			TROUT
	A million bucks? Jeez-Louise! You
	get any of that?

			HADLEY
	Thirty five thousand. That's what
	he left me.

			TROUT
	Dollars? Holy shit, that's great!
	Like winnin' a lottery...
		(off Hadley's shitty look)
	...ain't it?

			HADLEY
	Dumbshit. What do you figger the
	government's gonna do to me? Take a
	big wet bite out of my ass, is what.

			TROUT
	Oh. Hadn't thought of that.

			HADLEY
	Maybe leave me enough to buy a new
	car with. Then what happens? You
	pay tax on the car. Repairs and
	maintenance. Goddamn kids pesterin'
	you to take 'em for a ride...

			MERT
	And drive it, if they're old enough.

			HADLEY
	That's right, wanting to drive it,
	wanting to learn on it, f'Chrissake!
	Then at the end of the year, if you
	figured the tax wrong, they make
	you pay out of your own pocket.
	Uncle Sam puts his hand in your
	shirt and squeezes your tit till
	it's purple. Always get the short
	end. That's a fact.
		(spits over the side)
	Some brother. Shit.

The prisoners keep spreading tar, eyes on their work.

			HEYWOOD
	Poor Byron. What terrible fuckin'
	luck. Imagine inheriting thirty
	five thousand dollars.

			RED
	Crying shame. Some folks got it
	awful bad.

Red glances over -- and is shocked to see Andy standing up,
listening to the guards talk.

			RED
	Hey, you nuts? Keep your eyes on
	your pail!

Andy tosses his Padd in the bucket and strolls toward Hadley.

			RED
	Andy! Come back! Shit!

			SNOOZE
	What's he doing?

			FLOYD
	Gettin' himself killed.

			RED
	God damn it...

			HEYWOOD
	Just keep spreadin' tar...

The guards stiffen at Andy's approach. Youngblood's hand goes
to his holster. The tower guards CLICK-CLACK their rifle
bolts. Hadley turns, stupefied to find Andy there.

			ANDY
	Mr. Hadley. Do you trust your wife?

			HADLEY
	That's funny. You're gonna look
	funnier suckin' my dick with no
	fuckin' teeth.

			ANDY
	What I mean is, do you think she'd
	go behind your back? Try to
	hamstring you?

			HADLEY
	That's it! Step aside, Mert. This
	fucker's havin' hisself an accident.

Hadley grabs Andy's collar and propels him violently toward
the edge of the roof. The cons furiously keep spreading tar.

			HEYWOOD
	Oh God, he's gonna do it, he's
	gonna throw him off the roof...

			SNOOZE
	Oh shit, oh fuck, oh Jesus...

			ANDY
	Because if you do trust her, there's
	no reason in the world you can't
	keep every cent of that money.

Hadley abruptly jerks Andy to a stop right at the edge. In
fact, Andy's past the edge, beyond his balance, shoetips
scraping the roof. The only thing between him and an ugly drop
to the concrete is Hadley's grip on the front of his shirt.

			HADLEY
	You better start making sense.

			ANDY
	If you want to keep that money, all
	of it, just give it to your wife.
	See, the IRS allows you a one-time-
	only gift to your spouse. It's good
	up to sixty thousand dollars.

			HADLEY
	Naw, that ain't right! Tax free?

			ANDY
	Tax free. IRS can't touch one cent.

The cons are pausing work, stunned by this business discussion.

			HADLEY
	You're the smart banker what shot
	his wife. Why should I believe a
	smart banker like you? So's I can
	wind up in here with you?

			ANDY
	It's perfectly legal. Go ask the
	IRS, they'll say the same thing.
	Actually, I feel silly telling you
	all this. I'm sure you would have
	investigated the matter yourself.

			HADLEY
	Fuckin'-A. I don't need no smart
	wife-killin' banker to show me where
	the bear shit in the buckwheat.

			ANDY
	Of course not. But you will need
	somebody to set up the tax-free
	gift, and that'll cost you. A
	lawyer, for example...

			HADLEY
	Ambulance-chaaing, highway-robbing
	cocksuckers!

			ANDY
	...or come to think of it, I
	suppose I could set it up for you.
	That would save you some money.
	I'll write down the forms you need,
	you can pick them up, and I'll
	prepare them for your signature...
	nearly free of charge.
		(off Hadley's look)
	I'd only ask three beers apiece for
	my co-workers, if that seems fair.

			TROUT
		(guffawing)
	Co-workers! Get him! That's rich,
	ain't it? Co-workers...

Hadley freezes him with a look. Andy presses on:

			ANDY
	I think a nan working outdoors
	feels more like a man if he can
	have a bottle of suds. That's only
	my opinion.

The convicts stand gaping, all pretense of work gone. They
look like they've been pole-axed. Hadley shoots them a look.

			HADLEY
	What are you jimmies starin' at?
	Back to work, goddamn it!

59 EXT -- LICENSE PLATE FACTORY -- DAY (1949) 59

As before, an object is hauled up the side of the building by
rope -- only this time, it's a cooler of beer and ice.

			RED (V.O.)
	And that's how it came to pass,
	that on the second-to-last day of
	the job, the convict crew that
	tarred the plate factory roof in
	the spring of '49...

60 EXT -- ROOF -- SHORTLY LATER (1949) 60

The cons are taking the sun and drinking beer.

			RED (V.O.)
	...wound up sitting in a row at ten
	o'clock in the morning, drinking icy
	cold Black Label beer courtesy of
	the hardest screw that ever walked
	a turn at Shawshank State Prison.

			HADLEY
	Drink up, boys. While it's cold.

			RED (V.O.)
	The colossal prick even managed to
	sound magnanimous.

Red knocks back another sip, enjoying the bitter cold on his
tongue and the warm sun on face.

			RED (V.O.)
	We sat and drank with the sun on
	our shoulders, and felt like free
	men. We could'a been tarring the
	roof of one of our own houses. We
	were the Lords of all Creation.

He glances over to Andy squatting apart from the others.

			RED (V.O.)
	As for Andy, he spent that break
	hunkered in the shade, a strange
	little smile on his face, watching
	us drink his beer.

			HEYWOOD
		(approaches with a beer)
	Here's a cold one, Andy.

			ANDY
	No thanks. I gave up drinking.

Heywood drifts back to others, giving them a look.

			RED (V.O.)
	You could argue he'd done it to
	curry favor with the guards. Or
	maybe make a few friends among us
	cons. Me, I think he did it just to
	feel normal again...if only for a
	short while.

61 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- THE BLEACHERS -- DAY (1949) 61

Andy and Red play checkers. Red makes his move.

			RED
	King me.

			ANDY
	Chess. Now there's a game of kings.
	Civilized...strategic...

			RED
	...and totally fuckin'
	inexplicable. Hate that game.

			ANDY
	Maybe you'll let me teach you
	someday. I've been thinking of
	getting a board together.

			RED
	You come to the right place. I'm
	the man who can get things.

			ANDY
	We might do business on a board. But
	the pieces, I'd like to carve those
	myself. One side done in quartz...
	the opposing side in limestone.

			RED
	That'd take you years.

			ANDY
	Years I've got. What I don't have
	are the rocks. Pickings here in the
	exercise yard are pretty slim.

			RED
	How's that rock-hammer workin' out
	anyway? Scratch your name on your
	wall yet?

			ANDY
		(smiles)
	Not yet. I suppose I should.

			RED
	Andy? I guess we're gettin' to be
	friends, ain't we?

			ANDY
	I suppose we are.

			RED
	I ask a question? Why'd you do it?

			ANDY
	I'm innocent, remember? Just like
	everybody else here.

Red takes this as a gentle rebuff, keeps playing.

			ANDY
	What are you in for, Red?

			RED
	Murder. Same as you.

			ANDY
	Innocent?

			RED
	The only guilty man in Shawshank.

62 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1949) 62

Andy lies in his bunk after lights out, polishing a fragment
of quartz by the light of the moon. He pauses, glancing at
all the names scratched in the wall. He rises, makes sure
the coast is clear, and starts scratching his name into the
cement with his rock-hammer, adding to the record.

63 RAY MILLAND 63

fills the screen in glorious (and scratchy) black & white,
suffering a bad case of DT's...

64 INT -- PRISON AUDITORIUM -- NIGHT (1949) 64

...while a CONVICT AUDIENCE hoots and catcalls, talking back
to the screen. We find Red slouched in a folding chair,
watching the movie. Andy enters, backlit by the flickering
glare of the projector, and takes a seat next to him.

			RED
	Here's the good part. Bugs come out
	of the walls to get his ass.

			ANDY
	I know. I've seen it three times
	this month already.

Ray Milland starts SCREAMING. The entire audience SCREAMS with
him, high-pitched and hysterical. Andy fidgets.

			ANDY
	Can we talk business?

			RED
	Sure. What do you want?

			ANDY
	Rita Hayworth. Can you get her?

			RED
	No problem. Take a few weeks.

			ANDY
	Weeks?

			RED
	Don't have her stuffed down my
	pants this very moment, sorry to
	say. Relax. What are you so nervous
	about? She's just a woman.

Andy nods, embarrassed. He gets up and hurries out. Red grins,
turns back to the movie.

65 INT -- AUDITORIUM CORRIDOR -- NIGHT (1949) 65

Andy exits the theater and freezes in his tracks. Two dark
figures loom in the corridor, blocking his path. Rooster and
Pete. Andy turns back -- and runs right into Bogs. Instant
bear hug. The Sisters are on him like a flash. They kick a
door open and drag him into --

66 THE PROJECTION BOOTH 66

-- where they confront the startled PROJECTIONIST, an old con
blinking at them through thick bifocals.

			BOGS
	Take a walk.

			PROJECTIONIST
	I have to change reels.

			BOGS
	I said fuck off.

Terrified, the old man darts past and out the door. Pete slams
and locks it. Bogs shoves Andy to the center of the room.

			BOGS
	Ain't you gonna scream?

Andy sighs, cocks his head at the projector.

			ANDY
	They'd never hear me over that.
	Let's get this over with.

Seemingly resigned, Andy turns around, leans on the rewind
bench -- and curls his fingers around a full 1.000 foot reel
of 35mm film. Rooster licks his lips, pushes past the others.

			ROOSTER
 	Me first.

			ANDY
 	Okay.

Andy whips the reel of film around in a vicious arc, smashing
it into Rooster's face and bouncing him off the wall.

			ROOSTER
	Fuck! Shit! He broke my nose!

Andy fights like hell, but is soon overpowered and forced to his
knees. Bogs steps to Andy, pulls out an awl with a vicious
eight-inch spike, gives him a good long look at it.

			BOGS
	Now I'm gonna open my fly, and
	you're gonna swallow what I give
	you to swallow. And when you
	do mine, you gonna swallow
	Rooster's. You done broke his nose,
	so he ought to have somethin' to
	show for it.

			ANDY
	Anything you put in my mouth,
	you're going to lose.

			BOGS
	You don't understand. You do that,
	I'll put all eight inches of this
	steel ii your ear.

			ANDY
	Okay. But you should know that
	sudden serious brain injury causes
	the victim to bite down. Hard.
		(faint smile)
	In fact, I understand the bite-reflex
	is so strong the victim's jaws have
	to be pried open with a crowbar.

The Sisters consider this carefully. The film runs out of the
projector, flapping on the reel. The screen goes white.

			BOGS
	You little fuck.

Andy gets a bootheel in the face. The Sisters start kicking
and beating the living shit out of him with anything they can
get their hands on. In the theater, the convicts are CHANTING
AND CLAPPING for the movie to come back on.

			RED (V.O.)
	Bogs didn't put anything in Andy's
	mouth, and neither did his friends.
	What they did do is beat him within
	an inch of his life...

67 INT -- INFIRMARY -- DAY (1949) 67

Andy lies wrapped in bandages.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy spent a month in traction.

68 INT -- SOLITARY CONFINEMENT -- DAY (1949) 68

			RED (V.O.)
	Bogs spent a week in the hole.

Bogs sits on bare concrete. The steel door slides open.

			GUARD
	Time's up, Bogs.

69 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- 3RD TIER -- DUSK (1949) 69

Bogs comes up the stairs, smoking a cigarette. Not many
cons around; the place is virtually deserted. A VOICE
echoes dimly over the P.A. system:

			VOICE (O.S.)
	Return to your cellblocks for
	evening count.

Bogs enters his cell. Dark in here. He fumbles for the light
cord, yanks it. The sudden light reveals Captain Hadley six
inches from his face, waiting for him. Mert steps in behind
Bogs. hemming him.

Before Bogs can even open his mouth to say "what the fuck,"
Hadley rams the tip of his baton brutally into his solar
plexus. Bogs doubles over, gagging his wind out.

70 GROUND FLOOR 70

Ernie comes slowly around the corner, rolling a steel mop
cart loaded with supplies.

71 2ND TIER 71

Red is darning a sock in his open cell. He pauses, frowning,
hearing strange THUMPING sounds. What the hell is that?

72 3RD TIER 72

It's Hadley and Mert methodically and brutally pulping Bogs
with their batons, and kicking the shit out of him for good
measure. He feebly tries to ward them off.

73 2ND TIER 73

Puzzled, Red steps from his cell, following the sound. It
dawns on him that it's coming from above. He moves to the
railing and leans out, craning around to look up --

74 RED'S POV 74

-- just as Bogs flips over the railing and comes sailing

directly toward us, eyes bugging out, SCREAMING as he falls.

75 RED (SLOW MOTION) 75

jumps back as Bogs plummets past, missing him by inches, arms
swimming and trying to grab the railing (but missing that
too), SCREAMING aaaaalll the way down --

76 GROUND FLOOR 76

-- and impacting on Ernie's gassing mop cart in an enormous
eruption of solvents and cleansers. The cart is squashed flat,
shooting out from under Bogs and skidding across the cellblock
floor like a tiddly wink, kicking up sparks for thirty yards.
Ernie is left gaping in shock at Bogs and all the Bogs-related
wreckage at his feet.

77 2ND TIER 77

Red is stunned. He very tentatively leans out and looks up.
Above him, Hadley and Mert lean on the 3rd tier railing.
Hadley tilts the cap back on his head, shakes his head.

			MERT
	Damn, Byron. Look'a that.

			HADLEY
	Poor fella must'a tripped.

A tiny drop of blood drips off the toe of Hadley's shoe and

splashes across Red's upturned cheek. He wipes it off, then
looks down at Bogs. Cons and guards are racing to the scene.

			RED (V.O.)
	Two things never happened again
	after that. The Sisters never laid
	a finger on Andy again...

7B EXT -- PRISON YARD/LOADING DOCK -- DAY (1949) 78

Bogs, wheelchair-bound and wearing a neck brace, is loaded
onto an ambulance for transport. Behind the fence stand Red
and his friends, watching.

		   RED (V.O.)
	...and Bogs never walked again. They
	transferred him to a minimum security
	hospital upstate. To my knowledge,
	he lived out the rest of his days
	drinking his food through a straw.

			RED
	I'm thinkin' Andy could use a nice
	welcome back when he gets out of
	the infirmary.

			HEYWOOD
	Sounds good to us. Figure we owe
	him for the beer.

			RED
	Man likes to play chess. Let's get
	him some rocks.

79 EXT -- FIELD -- DAY (1949) 79

A HUNDRED CONS at work. Hoes rise and fall in long waves.
GUARDS patrol on horseback. Heywood turns up a rocky chunk,
quickly shoves it down his pants. He maneuvers to Red and the
others, pulls out the chunk and shows it to them.

			FLOYD
	That ain't quartz. Nor limestone.

			HEYWOOD
	What are you, fuckin' geologist?

			SNOOZE
	He's right, it ain't.

			HEYWOOD
	What the hell is it then?

			RED
	Horse apple.

			HEYWOOD
	Bullshit.

			RED
	No, horse shit. Petrified.

Cackling, the men go back to work. Heywood stares at the rock.
He crumbles it in his hands.

			RED (V.O.)
	Despite a few hitches, the boys
	came through in fine style...

80 INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY -- BACK ROOM -- DAY (1949) 80

A huge detergent box is filled with rocks, hidden in the
shadows behind a boiler furnace.

			RED (V.O.)
	...and by the week Andy was due
	back, we had enough rocks saved up
	to keep him busy till Rapture.

ANGLE SHIFTS to Red as he plops a bag of "laundry" on the
floor. Leonard and Bob toss a few more down. Red starts
pulling out contraband, giving them their commissions.

			RED (V.O.)
	Also got a big shipment in that
	week. Cigarettes, chewing gum,
	shoelaces, playing cards with naked
	ladies on 'em, you name it...
		(pulls a cardboard tube)
	...and, of course, the most
	important item.

81 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- NIGHT (1949) 81

Andy, limping a bit, returns from the infirmary. Red watches
from his cell as Andy is brought up and locked away.

82 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1949) 82

Andy finds the cardboard tube lying on his bunk.

			GUARD (O.S.)
	Lights out!

The lights go off. Andy opens the tube and pulls out a large
rolled poster. He lets it uncurl to the floor. A small scrap
of paper flutters out, landing at his feet. The poster is the
famous Rita Hayworth pin-up -- one hand behind her head, eyes
half closed, sulky lips parted. Andy picks up the scrap of
paper. It reads: "No charge. Welcome back." Alone in the dark,
Andy smiles.

83 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- MORNING (1949) 83

The BUZZER SOUNDS, the cells SLAM OPEN. Cons step from their
cells. Andy catches Red's eye, nods his thanks. As the men
shuffle down to breakfast, Red glances into Andy's cell --

84 RED'S POV -- DOLLYING PAST 84

-- and sees Rita in her new place of honor on Andy's wall.
Sunlight casts a harsh barred shadow across her lovely face.

85 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- NIGHT (1949) 85

Ernie is mopping the floor. He glances back and sees Warden
Norton approach the cellblock with an entourage of a DOZEN
GUARDS. Still mopping, Ernie mutters to the nearest cell:

			ERNIE
	Heads up. They're tossin' cells.

Word travels fast from cell to cell. Cons scramble to tidy up
and hide things. Norton enters, nods to his men. The guards
pair off in all directions, making their choices at random.

			GUARD
	What kind'a contraband you hiding
	in there, boy?

Cells are opened, occupants displaced, items scattered,
mattresses overturned. Whatever contraband is found gets
tossed out onto the cellblock floor. Mostly harmless stuff.

A GUARD pulls a sharpened screwdriver out of a mattress,
shoots a nasty look at the CON responsible.

			NORTON
	Solitary. A week. Make sure he
	takes his Bible.

			CON
	Too goddamn dark to read down there.

			NORTON
	Add another week for blasphemy.

The man is taken away. Norton's gaze goes up.

			NORTON
	Let's try the second tier.

86 2ND TIER 86

Norton arrives, makes a thin show of picking a cell at random.
He motions at Andy on his bunk, reading his Bible. The door is
unlocked. Norton enters, trailed by his men. Andy rises.

			ANDY
	Good evening.

Norton gives a curt nod. Hadley and Trout start tossing the
cell in a thorough search. Norton keeps his eyes on Andy,
looking for a wrong glance or nervous blink. He takes the
Bible out of Andy's hand.

			NORTON
	I'm pleased to see you reading
	this. Any favorite passages?

			ANDY
	"Watch ye therefore, for ye know not
	when the master of the house cometh."

			NORTON
		(smiles)
	Luke. Chapter 13, verse 35. I've
	always liked that one.
		(strolls the cell)
	But I prefer: "I am the light of
	the world. He that followeth me
	shall not walk in darkness, but
	shall have the light of life."

			ANDY
	John. Chapter 8, verse 12.

			NORTON
	I hear you're good with numbers.
	How nice. A man should have a skill.

			HADLEY
	You wanna explain this?

Andy glances over. Hadley is holding up a rock blanket, a
polishing cloth roughly the size of an oven mitt.

			ANDY
	It's called a rock blanket. It's
	for shaping and polishing rocks.
	Little hobby of mine.

Hadley glances at the rocks lining the window sill, turns to
Norton.

			HADLEY
	Looks pretty clean. Some contraband
	here, nothing to get in a twist over.

Norton nods, strolls to the poster of Rita.

			NORTON
	I can't say I approve of this...
		(turns to Andy)
	...but I suppose exceptions can
	always be made.

Norton exits, the guards follow. The cell door is slammed and
locked. Norton pauses, turns back.

			NORTON
	I almost forgot.

He reaches through the bars and returns the Bible to Andy.

			NORTON
	I'd hate to deprive you of this.
	Salvation lies within.

Norton and his men walk away.

			RED (V.O.)
	Tossin' cells was just an excuse.
	Truth is, Norton wanted to size
	Andy up.

87 INT -- PRISON LAUNDRY -- DAY (1949) 87

Andy is working the line. Hadley enters and confers briefly
with Bob. Bob nods, crosses to Andy, taps him. Andy turns,
removes an earplug. Bob shouts over the machine noise:

			BOB
	DUFRESNE! YOU'RE OFF THE LINE!

88 INT -- WARDEN NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1949) 88

Andy is led in. Norton is at his desk doing paperwork. Andy's
eyes go to a framed needle-point sampler on the wall behind
him that reads: "HIS JUDGMENT COMETH AND THAT RIGHT SOON."

			NORTON
	My wife made that in church group.

			ANDY
	It's very pretty, sir.

			NORTON
	You like working in the laundry?

			ANDY
	No, sir. Not especially.

			NORTON
	Perhaps we can find something more
	befitting a man of your education.

89 INT -- MAIN BUILDING -- STORAGE ROOMS -- DAY (1949) 89

A series of bleak rooms stacked high with unused filing
cabinets, desks, paint supplies, etc. Andy enters. He hears a
FLUTTER OF WINGS. An adult crow lands on a filing cabinet and
struts back and forth, checking him out. Andy smiles.

			ANDY
	Hey, Jake. Where's Brooks?

Brooks Hatlen pokes his head out of the back room.

			BROOKS
	Andy! Thought I heard you out here!

			ANDY
	I've been reassigned to you.

			BROOKS
	I know, they told me. Ain't that a
	kick in the ass? Come on in, I'll
	give you the dime tour.

90 INT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON LIBRARY -- DAY (1949) 90

Brooks leads Andy into the bleakest back room of all. Rough
plank shelves are lined with books. Brooks' private domain.

			BROOKS
	Here she is, the Shawshank Prison
	Library. Along this side, we got
	the National Geographics. That
	side, the Reader's Digest Condensed
	books. Bottom shelf there, some
	Louis L'Amours and Erle Stanley
	Gardners. Every night I pile the
	cart and make my rounds. I write
	down the names on this clipboard
	here. Well, that's it. Easy, peasy,
	Japanesey. Any questions?

Andy pauses. Something about this doesn't make any sense.

			ANDY
	Brooks? How long have you been
	librarian?

			BROOKS
	Since 1912. Yuh, over 37 years.

			ANDY
	In all that time, have you ever had
	an assistant?

			BROOKS
	Never needed one. Not much to it,
	is there?

			ANDY
	So why now? Why me?

			BROOKS
	I dunno. Be nice to have some
	comp'ny down here for a change.

			HADLEY (O.S.)
	Dufresne!

91 Andy steps back into the outer rooms and finds Hadley with 91
another GUARD, a huge fellow named DEKINS.

			HADLEY
	That's him. That's the one.

Hadley exits. Dekins approaches Andy ominously. Andy stands
his ground, waiting for whatever comes next. Finally:

			DEKINS
	I'm Dekins. I been, uh, thinkin'
	'bout maybe settin' up some kinda
	trust fund for my kids' educations.

Andy covers his surprise. Glances at Brooks. Brooks smiles.

			ANDY
	I see. Well. Why don't we have a
	seat and talk it over?

			BROOKS
	Pull down one'a them desks there.

Andy and Dekins grab a desk standing on end and tilt it to the
floor. They find chairs and settle in. Brooks returns with a
tablet of paper and a pen, slides them before Andy.

			ANDY
	What did you have in mind? A weekly
	draw on your pay?

			DEKINS
Yuh. I figured just stick it in the
bank, but Captain Hadley said check
with you first.

			ANDY
	He was right. You don't want your
	money in a bank.

			DEKINS
	I don't?

			ANDY
	What's that gonna earn you? Two and
	a half, three percent a year? We
	can do a lot better than that.
		(wets his pen)
	So tell me, Mr. Dekins. Where do
	you want to send your kids?
	Harvard? Yale?

92 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1949) 92

			FLOYD
	He didn't say that!

			BROOKS
	God is my witness. And Dekins, he
	just blinks for a second, then
	laughs his ass off. Afterward, he
	actually shook Andy's hand.

			HEYWOOD
	My ass!

			BROOKS
	Shook his fuckin' hand. Just about
	shit myself. All Andy needed was a
	suit and tie, a jiggly little hula
	girl on his desk, he would'a been
	Mister Dufresne, if you please.

			RED
	Makin' yourself some friends, Andy.

			ANDY
	I wouldn't say "friends." I'm a
	convicted murderer who provides
	sound financial planning. That's a
	wonderful pet to have.

			RED
	Got you out of the laundry, didn't
	it?

			ANDY
	Maybe it can do more than that.
		(off their looks)
	How about expanding the library?
	Get some new books in there.

			HEYWOOD
	How you 'spect to do that, "Mr.
	Dufresne-if-you-please?"

			ANDY
	Ask the warden for funds.

LAUGHTER all around. Andy blinks at them.

			BROOKS
	Son, I've had six wardens through
	here during my tenure, and I have
	learned one great immutable truth
	of the universe: ain't one of 'em
	been born whose asshole don't
	pucker up tight as a snare drum
	when you ask for funds.

93 INT -- MAIN BUILDING HALLWAY -- DAY (1949) 93

DOLLYING Norton and Andy up the hall:

			NORTON
	Not a dime. My budget's stretched
	thin as it is.

			ANDY
	I see. Perhaps I could write to the
	State Senate and request funds
	directly from them.

			NORTON
	Far as them Republican boys in
	Augusta are concerned, there's only
	three ways to spend the taxpayer's
	hard-earned when it come to prisons.
	More walls. More bars. More guards.

			ANDY
	Still, I'd like to try, with your
	permission. I'll send a letter a
	week. They can't ignore me forever.

			NORTON
	They sure can, but you write your
	letters if it makes you happy. I'll
	even mail 'em for you, how's that?

94 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1949) 94

Andy is on his bunk, writing a letter.

			RED (V.O.)
	So Andy started writing a letter a
	week, just like he said.

95 INT -- GUARD DESK/NORTON'S OUTER OFFICE -- DAY (1949) 95

Andy pops his head in. The GUARD shakes his head.

			RED (V.O.)
	And just like Norton said, Andy got
	no answers. But still he kept on.

96 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY/ANDY'S OFFICE -- DAY (1950) 96

Andy is doing taxes. Mert Entwhistle is seated across from
him. Other off-duty guards are waiting their turn.

			RED (V.O.)
	The following April, Andy did tax
	returns for half the guards at
	Shawshank.

97 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY -- ONE YEAR LATER (1951) 97

Tax time again. Even more guards are waiting.

			RED (V.O.)
	Year after that, he did them all...
	including the warden's.

98 EXT -- BASEBALL DIAMOND -- DAY (1952) 98

A BATTER in a "Noresby Marauders" baseball uniform WHACKS the
ball high into left field and races for first.

			RED (V.O.)
	Year after that, they rescheduled
	the start of the intramural season
	to coincide with tax season...

99 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY/ANDY'S OFFICE -- DAY (1952) 99

The Batter sits across from Andy. The line winds out the door.

			RED (V.O.)
	The guards on the opposing teams
	all remembered to bring their W-2's.

			ANDY
	Moresby Prison issued you that gun,
	but you actually had to pay for it?

			THE BATTER
	Damn right, and the holster too.

			ANDY
	See, that's all deductible. You get
	to write that off.

			RED (V.O.)
	Yes sir, Andy was a regular H&R
	Block. In fact, he got so busy at
	tax time, he was allowed a staff.

ANGLE SHIFTS to reveal Red and Brooks doing filing chores.

			ANDY
	Say Red, could you hand me a stack
	of those 1040s?

			RED (V.O.)
	Got me out of the wood shop a month
	out of the year, and that was fine
	by me.

100 INT -- GUARD DESK/NORTON'S OUTER OFFICE -- DAY (1953) 100

Andy enters and drops a letter on the outgoing stack.

			RED (V.O.)
	And still he kept sending those
	letters...

101 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1953) 101

Dark. Andy's in his bunk, polishing a four-inch length of
quartz. It's a beautifully-crafted chess piece in the shape of
a horse's head, poise and nobility captured in gleaming stone.

He puts the knight on a chess board by his bed, adding it to
four pieces already there: a king, a queen, and two bishops.
He turns to Rita. Moonlight casts bars across her face.

102 EXT -- EXERCISE YARD -- DAY (1954) 102

Floyd runs into the yard, scared and winded. He finds Andy and
Red on the bleachers.

			FLOYD
	Red? Andy? It's Brooks.

103 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY/ANDY'S OFFICE -- DAY (1954) 103

Floyd rushes in with Andy and Red at his heels. They find
Jigger and Snooze trying to calm Brooks, who has Heywood in a
chokehold and a knife to his throat. Heywood is terrified.

			JIGGER
	C'mon, Brooksie, why don't you just
	calm the fuck down, okay?

			BROOKS
	Goddamn miserable puke-eatin' sons
	of whores!

He kicks a table over. Tax files explode through the air.

			RED
	What the hell's going on?

			SNOOZE
	You tell me, man. One second he was
	fine, then out came the knife. I
	better get the guards.

			RED
	No. We'll handle this. Ain't that
	right, Brooks? Just settle down and
	we'll talk about it, okay?

			BROOKS
	Nothing left to talk about! It's all
	talked out! Nothing left now but to
	cut his fuckin' throat!

			RED
	Why? What's Heywood done to you?

			BROOKS
	That's what they want! It's the
	price I gotta pay!

Andy steps forward, rivets Brooks with a gaze. Softly:

			ANDY
	Brooks, you're not going to hurt
	Heywood, we all know that. Even
	Heywood knows it, right Heywood?

			HEYWOOD
		(nods, terrified)
	Sure. I know that. Sure.

			ANDY
	Why? Ask anyone, they'll tell you.
	Brooks Hatlen is a reasonable man.

			RED
		(cuing nods all around)
	Yeah, that's right. That's what
	everybody says.

			ANDY
	You're not fooling anybody, so just
	put the damn knife down and stop
	scaring the shit out of people.

			BROOKS
	But it's the only way they'll let
	me stay.

Brooks bursts into tears. The storm is over. Heywood staggers
free, gasping for air. Andy takes the knife, passes it to Red.
Brooks dissolves into Andy's arms with great heaving sobs.

			ANDY
	Take it easy. You'll be all right.

			HEYWOOD
	Him? What about me? Crazy old
	fool! Goddamn near slit my throat!

			RED
	You've had worse from shaving.
	What'd you do to set him off?

			HEYWOOD
	Nothin'! Just came in to say
	fare-thee-well.
		(off their looks)
	Ain't you heard? His parole came
	through!

Red and Andy exchange a surprised look. Andy wants to
understand. Red just motions to let it be for now. He puts his
arm around Brooks, who sobs inconsolably. Softly:

			RED
	Ain't that bad, old hoss. Won't be
	long till you're squiring pretty
	young girls on your arm and telling
	'em lies.

104 EXT -- PRISON YARD BLEACHERS -- DUSK (1954) 104

			ANDY
	I just don't understand what
	happened in there, that's all.

			HEYWOOD
	Old man's crazy as a rat in a tin
	shithouse, is what.

			RED
	Heywood, enough. Ain't nothing
	wrong with Brooksie. He's just
	institutionalized, that's all.

			HEYWOOD
	Institutionalized, my ass.

			RED
	Man's been here fifty years. This
	place is all he knows. In here,
	he's an important man, an educated
	man. A librarian. Out there, he's
	nothing but a used-up old con with
	arthritis in both hands. Couldn't
	even get a library card if he
	applied. You see what I'm saying?

			FLOYD
	Red, I do believe you're talking
	out of your ass.

			RED
	Believe what you want. These walls
	are funny. First you hate 'em, then
	you get used to 'em. After long
	enough, you get so you depend on
	'em. That's "institutionalized."

			JIGGER
	Shit. I could never get that way.

			ERNIE
		(softly)
	Say that when you been inside as
	long as Brooks has.

			RED
	Goddamn right. They send you here
	for life, and that's just what they
	take. Part that counts, anyway.

105 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- DAWN (1954) 105

The sun rises over gray stone.

106 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- DAWN (1954) 106

ANGLE ON RITA POSTER. Sexy as ever. The rising sun sends
fingers of rosy light creeping across her face.

107 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAWN (1954) 107

Brooks stands on a chair, poised at the bars of a window,
cradling Jake in his hands.

			BROOKS
	I can't take care of you no more.
	You go on now. You're free.

He tosses Jake through the bars. The crow flaps away.

108 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- MAIN GATE -- DAY (1954) 108

TWO SHORT SIREN BLASTS herald the opening of the gate. It
swings hugely open, revealing Brooks standing in his cheap
suit, carrying a cheap bag, wearing a cheap hat.

Brooks walks out, tears streaming down his face. He looks
back. Red, Andy, and others stand at the inner fence, seeing
him off. The massive gate closes, wiping them from view.

109 INT -- BUS -- DAY (1954) 109

Brooks is riding the bus, clutching the seat before him,
gripped by terror of speed and motion.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	Dear Fellas. I can't believe how
	fast things move on the outside.

110 EXT -- STREET -- PORTLAND, MAINE -- DAY (1954) 110

Brooks looks like a kid trying to cross the street without his
parents. People and traffic a blur.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	I saw an automobile once when I was
	young. Now they're everywhere.

111 EXT -- BREWSTER HOTEL -- DAY (1954) 111

Brooks comes trudging up the sidewalk. He glances up as a
prop-driven airliner streaks in low overhead.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	The world went and got itself in a
	big damn hurry.

He arrives at the Brewster. It ain't much to look at.

112 INT -- BREWSTER HOTEL -- DAY (1954) 112

A WOMAN leads Brooks up the stairs toward the top floor. He
has trouble climbing so many stairs.

			WOMAN
	No music in your room after eight
	p.m. No guests after nine. No
	cooking except on the hotplate...

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	People even talk faster. And louder.

113 INT -- BROOKS' ROOM -- DAY (1954) 113

Brooks enters. The room is small, old, dingy. Heavy wooden
beams cross the ceiling. An arched window affords a view of
Congress Street. Traffic noise drifts in. Brooks sets his bag
down. He doesn't quite know what to do. He just stands there,
like a man waiting for a bus.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	The parole board got me into this
	halfway house called the Brewster,
	and a job bagging groceries at the
	Foodway...

114 INT -- FOODWAY MARKET -- DAY (1954) 114

Loud. Jangling with PEOPLE and NOISE. Brooks is bagging
groceries. Registers are humming, kids are shrieking.

			WOMAN
	Make sure he double-bags. Last time
	your man didn't double-bag and the
	bottom near came out.

			MANAGER
	You double-bag like the lady says,
	understand?

			BROOKS
	Yes sir, double-bag, surely will.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	It's hard work. I try to keep up,
	but my hands hurt most of the time.
	I don't think the store manager
	likes me very much.

115 EXT -- PARK -- DAY (1954) 115

Brooks sits alone on a bench, feeding pigeons.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	Sometimes after work I go to the
	park and feed the birds. I keep
	thinking Jake might show up and say
	hello, but he never does. I hope
	wherever he is, he's doing okay and
	making new friends.

116 INT -- BROOKS' ROOM -- NIGHT (1954) 116

Dark. Traffic outside. Brooks wakes up. Disoriented. Afraid.
Somewhere in the night, a LOUD ARGUMENT is taking place.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	I have trouble sleeping at night.
	The bed is too big. I have bad
	dreams, like I'm falling. I wake
	up scared. Sometimes it takes me a
	while to remember where I am.

117 INT -- FOODWAY -- DAY (1954) 117

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	Maybe I should get me a gun and rob
	the Foodway, so they'd send me home.
	I could shoot the manager while I
	was at it, sort of like a bonus.

118 INT -- BROOKS' ROOM -- DAY (1954) 118

Brooks is packing his worldly possessions into the carry bag.
Undershirts, socks, etc.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	But I guess I'm too old for that
	sort of nonsense anymore.

119 INT -- BROOKS' ROOM -- SHORTLY LATER (1954) 119

Brooks is dressed in his suit. He finishes knotting his tie,
puts his hat on his head. The letter lies on the desk, stampe3
and ready for mailing. His bag is by the door.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	I don't like it here. I'm tired of
	being afraid all the time. I've
	decided not to stay.

He takes one last look around. Only one thing left to do. He
steps to a wooden chair in the center of the room, pulls out s
pocketknife, and glances up at the ceiling beam.

He steps up onto the chair. It wobbles queasily. Now facing
the beam, he carves a message into the wood: "Brooks Hatlen
was here." He smiles with a sort of inner peace.

			BROOKS (V.O.)
	I doubt they'll kick up any fuss.
	Not for an old crook like me.

120 TIGHT ON CHAIR 120

His weight shifts on the wobbly chair -- and it goes out
from under him. His feet remain where they are, kicking feebly
in mid-air. His hat falls to the floor.

ANGLE WIDENS. Brooks has hanged himself. He swings gently,
facing the open window. Traffic noise floats up from below.

121 EXT -- EXERCISE YARD -- SHAWSHANK -- DAY (1954) 121

Andy reads the letter to Red and the others:

			ANDY
	P.S. Tell Heywood I'm sorry I put a
	knife to his throat. No hard feelings.

A long silence. Andy folds the letter, puts it away. Softly:

			RED
	He should'a died in here, goddamn it.

122 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY -- DAY (1954) 122

Andy is sorting books on the cart. He replaces a stack on the
shelf -- and pauses, noticing a line of ants crawling up the
wood. He glances up. The ants disappear over the top. He pulls
a chair over and stands on it, peers cautiously over.

			ANDY
	Red!

Red steps in with an armload of files. Andy gingerly reaches
in, grabs a black feathered wing, and pulls out a dead crow.

			RED
		(softly)
	Is that Jake?

123 INT -- WOOD SHOP -- DAY (1954) 123

Red is making something at his bench, sanding and planing.

			RED (V.O.)
	It never would have occurred to us,
	if not for Andy. It was his idea.
	We all agreed it was the right
	thing to do...

124 EXT -- FIELDS -- DAY (1954) 124

Low hilly terrain all around. A HUNDRED CONS are at work in
the fields. GUARDS patrol with carbines, keeping a sharp eye.
We find Andy, Red, and the boys working with picks and
shovels. They glance over to the pickup truck. Hadley's
chewing the fat with Mert and Youngblood. A WHISTLE BLOWS.

			GUARD
	Water break! Five minutes!

The work stops. Cons head for the pickup truck, where water is
dispensed with dipper and pail. Red and the boys look to Andy.
Andy nods. Now's the time. The group moves off through the
confusion, using it as cover. They head up the slope of a
nearby hill and quickly decide on a suitable spot. The
guards haven't noticed.

Jigger and Floyd start swinging picks into the soft earth,
quickly ripping out a hole. Red reaches into his jacket and
pulls out a beautiful wooden box, carefully stained and
varnished. He shows it around to nods of approval.

			ANDY
	That's real pretty, Red. Nice work.

			HEYWOOD
	Shovel man in. Watch the dirt.

124 CONTINUED 124

Heywood jumps in and starts spading out the hole.

125 BY THE TRUCK 125

Youngblood glances up and sees the men on the slope.

			YOUNGBLOOD
	What the fuck.

			HADLEY
		(follows his gaze)
	HEY. 'YOU MEN UP THERE.' GET YOUR
	ASSES OFF THAT SLOPE!
		(works his rifle bolt)
	YOU HAPPY ASSHOLES GONE DEAF? YOU
	GOT FIVE SECONDS 'FORE I SHOOT
	SOMEBODY!

Suddenly, other cons start breaking away in groups, dozens of
them heading toward the slope. The guards look around.

			HADLEY
	What am I, talkin' to myself?

126 ON THE SLOPE 126

Andy pulls a towel-wrapped bundle from his jacket and unfolds
it. Jake. Andy lays him in the box, followed by Brook's
letter. Red places the casket in the hole. A moment of
silence. Andy gives Red with an encouraging nod.

			RED
	Lord. Brooks was a sinner. Jake was
	just a crow. Neither was much to
	look at. Both got institutionalized.
	See what you can do for 'em. Amen.

Muttered "amens" all around. The boys shovel dirt onto the
small grave and tamp it down.

127 INT -- SHAWSHANK CORRIDORS -- DAY (1955) 127

RAPID DOLLY with Hadley. He's striding, pissed-off, a man on a
mission. He straight-arms a door and emerges onto --

128 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON WALL -- DAY (1955) 128

-- the wall overlooking the exercise yard. He leans on the
railing, scans the yard, sees Andy chatting with Red.

			HADLEY
	Dufresne! What the fuck did you do?
		(Andy looks up)
	Your ass, warden's office, now!

Andy shoots a worried look at Red, then heads off.

129 INT -- GUARD DESK/WARDEN'S OUTER OFFICE -- DAY (1955) 129

Dozens of parcel boxes litter the floor. WILEY, the duty
guard, picks through them. Hadley enters, trailed by Andy.

			ANDY
	What is all this?

			HADLEY
	You tell me, fuck-stick! They're
	addressed to you, every damn one!

Wiley thrusts an envelope at Andy. Andy just stares at it.

			WILEY
	Well, take it.

Andy takes the envelope, pulls out a letter, reads:

			ANDY
	"Dear Mr. Dufresne. In response to
	your repeated inquiries, the State
	Senate has allocated the enclosed
	funds for your library project..."
		(stunned, examines check)
	This is two hundred dollars.

Wiley grins. Hadley glares at him. The grin vanishes.

			ANDY
	"In addition, the Library District
	has generously responded with a
	charitable donation of used books
	and sundries. We trust this will
	fill your needs. We now consider
	the matter closed. Please stop
	sending us letters. Yours truly,
	the State Comptroller's Office."

Andy gazes around at the boxes. The riches of the world lay at
his feet. His eyes mist with emotion at the sight.

			HADLEY
	I want all this cleared out before
	the warden gets back, I shit you not.

Hadley exits. Andy touches the boxes like a love-struck man
touching a beautiful woman. Wiley grins.

			WILEY
	Good for you, Andy.

			ANDY
	Only took six years.
		(beat)
	From now on, I send two letters a
	week instead of one.

			WILEY
		(laughs, shakes his head)
	I believe you're crazy enough. You
	better get this stuff downstairs
	like the Captain said. I'm gonna go
	pinch a loaf. When I get back, this
	is all gone, right?

Andy nods. Wiley disappears into the toilet, Jughead Comix in
hand. Alone now, Andy starts going through the boxes like a
starving man exploring packages of food. He doesn't know where
to turn first. He gets giddy, ripping boxes open and pulling
out books, touching them, smelling them.

He rips open another box. This one contains an old phonograph
player, industrial gray and green, the words "Portland Public
School District" stenciled on the side. The box also contains
stacks and stacks of used record albums.

Andy reverently slips a stack from the box and starts flipping
through them. Used Nat King Coles, Bing Crosbys, etc.
He comes across a certain album -- Mozart's "Le Nozze de
Figaro." He pulls it from the stack, gazing upon it as a man
transfixed. It is a thing of beauty. It is the Grail.

130 INT -- BATHROOM -- DAY (1955) 130

Wiley sits in one of the stalls, Jughead comic on his knees.

131 INT -- GUARD STATION/OUTER OFFICE -- DAY (1955) 131

Andy wrestles the phonograph player onto the guards' desk,
sweeping things onto the floor in his haste. He plugs the
machine in. A red light warms up. The platter starts spinning.

He slides the Mozart album from its sleeve, lays it on the
platter, and lowers the tone arm to his favorite cut. The
needle HISSES in the groove...and the MUSIC begins, lilting
and gorgeous. Andy sinks into Wiley's chair, overcome by its
beauty. It is "Deutino: Che soave zeffiretto," a duet sung by

Susanna and the Contessa.

132 INT -- BATHROOM -- DAY (1955) 132

Wiley pauses reading, puzzled. He thinks he hears music.

			WILEY
	Andy? You hear that?

133 INT -- GUARD STATION/OUTER OFFICE -- DAY (1955) 133

Andy shoots a look at the bathroom...and smiles. Go for broke.
He lunges to his feet and barricades the front door, then the
bathroom. He returns to the desk and positions the P.A.
microphone. He works up his courage, then flicks all the
toggles to "on." A SQUEAL OF FEEDBACK echoes briefly...

134 INT/EXT -- VARIOUS P.A. SPEAKERS -- DAY (1955) 134

...and the Mozart is suddenly broadcast all over the prison.

135 INT -- BATHROOM -- DAY (1955) 135

Wiley lunges to his feet, pants tangling around his ankles.

136 INT/EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- VARIOUS LOCATIONS -- DAY (1955) 136

Cons all over the prison stop whatever they're doing, freezing
in mid-step to listen, gazing up at the speakers.

137 The stamping machines in the plate shop are shut down... 137

138 The laundry line goes silent, grinding to a halt... 138

139 The wood shop machines are turned off, buzzing to a stop... 139

140  The motor pool...the kitchen...the loading dock...the exercise 140
thru yard...the numbing routine of prison life itself...all grinds  thru
143  to a stuttering halt. Nobody moves, nobody speaks. Everybody   143
     just stands in place, listening to the MUSIC, hypnotized.

144 INT -- GUARD STATION -- DAY (1955) 144

Andy is reclined in the chair, transported, arms fluidly
conducting the music. Ecstasy and rapture. Shawshank no
longer exists. It has been banished from the mind of men.

145 EXT -- EXERCISE YARD -- DAY (1955) 145

CAMERA TRACKS along groups of men, all riveted.

			RED (V.O.)
	I have no idea to this day what
	them two Italian ladies were
	singin' about. Truth is, I don't
	want to know. Some things are best
	left unsaid. I like to think they
	were singin' about something so
	beautiful it can't be expressed in
	words, and makes your heart ache
	because of it.

CAMERA brings us to Red.

			RED (V.O.)
	I tell you, those voices soared.
	Higher and farther than anybody in
	a gray place dares to dream. It was
	like some beautiful bird flapped
	into our drab little cage and made
	these walls dissolve away...and for
	the briefest of moments -- every
	last man at Shawshank felt free.

146 INT -- PRISON CORRIDOR -- DAY (1955) 146

FAST DOLLY with Norton striding up the hallway with Hadley.

			RED (V.O.)
	It pissed the warden off something
	terrible.

147 INT -- GUARD STATION/OUTER OFFICE -- DAY (1955) 147

Norton and Hadley break the door in. Andy looks up with a
sublime smile. We hear Wiley POUNDING on the bathroom door:

			WILEY (O.S.)
	LET ME OUUUUT!

148 INT -- SOLITARY WING -- DAY (1955) 148

LOW ANGLE SLOW PUSH IN on the massive, rust-streaked steel
door. God, this is a terrible place to be.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy got two weeks in the hole for
	that little stunt.

149 INT -- SOLITARY CONFINEMENT -- DAY (1955) 149

Andy doesn't seem to mind. His arms sweep to the music still
playing in his head. We hear a FAINT ECHO of the soaring duet.

150 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1955) 1 50

			HEYWOOD
	Couldn't play somethin' good, huh?
	Hank Williams?

			ANDY
	They broke the door down before I
	could take requests.

			FLOYD
	Was it worth two weeks in the hole?

			ANDY
	Easiest time I ever did.

			HEYWOOD
	Shit. No such thing as easy time in
the hole. A week seems like a year.

			ANDY
	I had Mr. Mozart to keep me company.
	Hardly felt the time at all.

			RED
	Oh, they let you tote that record
	player down there, huh? I could'a
	swore they confiscated that stuff.

			ANDY
		(taps his heart, his head)
	The music was here...and here.
	That's the one thing they can't
	confiscate, not ever. That's the
	beauty of it. Haven't you ever felt
	that way about music, Red?

			RED
	Played a mean harmonica as a younger
	man. Lost my taste for it. Didn't
	make much sense on the inside.

			ANDY
	Here's where it makes most sense.
	We need it so we don't forget.

			RED
	Forget?

			ANDY
	That there are things in this world
	not carved out of gray stone. That
	there's a small place inside of us
	they can never lock away, and that
	place is called hope.

			RED
	Hope is a dangerous thing. Drive a
	man insane. It's got no place here.
	Better get used to the idea.

			ANDY
		(softly)
	Like Brooks did?

FADE TO BLACK

151 AN IRON-BARRED DOOR 151

slides open with an enormous CLANG. A stark room beyond.
CAMERA PUSHES through. SEVEN HUMORLESS MEN sit at a long

table. An empty chair faces them. We are again in:

INT -- SHAWSHANK HEARINGS ROOM -- DAY (1957)

Red enters, ten years older than when we first saw him at a
parole hearing. He removes his cap and sits.

			MAN #l
	It says here you've served thirty
	years of a life sentence.

			MAN #2
	You feel you've been rehabilitated?

			RED
	Yes sir, without a doubt. I can say
	I'm a changed man. No danger to
	society, that's the God's honest
	truth. Absolutely rehabilitated.

CLOSEUP -- PAROLE FORM

A big rubber stamp slams down: "REJECTED."

152 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DUSK (1957) 152

Red emerges into fading daylight. Andy's waiting for him.

			RED
	Same old, same old. Thirty years.
	Jesus. When you say it like that...

			ANDY
	You wonder where it went. I wonder
	where ten years went.

Red nods, solemn. They settle in on the bleachers. Andy pulls
a small box from his sweater, hands it to Red.

			ANDY
	Anniversary gift. Open it.

Red does. Inside the box, on a thin layer of cotton, is a
shiny new harmonica, bright aluminum and circus-red.

			ANDY
	Had to go through one of your
	competitors. Hope you don't mind.
	Wanted it to be a surprise.

			RED
	It's very pretty, Andy. Thank you.

			ANDY
	You gonna play something?

Red considers it, shakes his head. Softly:

			RED
	Not today.

153 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE/ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1957) 153

Men line the tiers as the evening count is completed. The
convicts step into their cells. The master switch is thrown
and all the doors slam shut -- KA-THUMP! Andy finds a
cardboard tube on his bunk. The note reads: "A new girl for
your 10 year anniversary. From your pal. Red."

154 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- LATER (1957) 154

Marilyn Monroe's face fills the screen. SLOW PULL BACK reveals
the new poster: the famous shot from "The Seven Year Itch,"
on the subway grate with skirt billowing up. Andy sits gazing
at her as lights-out commences...

INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1957) 155

...and we find Red gazing blankly as darkness takes the
cellblock. Adding up the months, weeks, days...

He regards the harmonica like a man confronted with a Martian
artifact. He considers trying it out -- even holds it briefly
to his lips, almost embarrassed -- but puts it back in its box
untested. And there the harmonica will stay...

FADE TO BLACK

156 WE HOLD IN BLACKNESS as THUMPING SOUNDS grow louder... 156

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy was as good as his word. He
	kept writing to the State Senate.
	Two letters a week instead of one.

...and the BLACKNESS disintegrates as a wall tumbles before
our eyes, revealing a WORK CREW with picks and sledgehammers,
faces obscured outlaw-style with kerchiefs against the dust.
Behind them are GUARDS overseeing the work.

Andy yanks his kerchief down, grinning in exhilaration. Red
and the others follow suit. They step through the hole in the
wall, exploring what used to be a sealed-off storage room.

			RED (V.O.)
	In 1959, the folks up Augusta way
	finally clued in to the fact they
	couldn't buy him off with just a
	200 dollar check. Appropriations
	Committee voted an annual payment of
	500 dollars, just to shut him up.

157 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY -- DAY (1960) 157

TRACKING the construction. Walls have been knocked down. Men
are painting, plastering, hammering. Lots of shelves going up.
Red is head carpenter. We find him discussing plans with Andy.

			RED (V.O.)
	Those checks came once a year like
	clockwork.

158 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY -- DAY (1960) 158

Red and the boys are opening boxes, pulling out books.

			RED (V.O.)
	You'd be amazed how far Andy could
	stretch it. He made deals with book
	clubs, charity groups...he bought
	remaindered books by the pound...

			HEYWOOD
	Treasure Island. Robert Louis...

			ANDY
		(jotting)
	...Stevenson. Next?

			RED
	I got here an auto repair manual,
	and a book on soap carving.

			ANDY
	Trade skills and hobbies, those go
	under educational. Stack right
	behind you.

			HEYWOOD
	The Count of Monte Crisco...

			FLOYD
	Cristo, you dumbshit.

			HEYWOOD
	...by Alexandree Dumb-ass.

			ANDY
	Dumas. You boys'll like that one.
	It's about a prison break.

Floyd tries to take the book. Heywood yanks it back. I saw it
first. Red shoots Andy a look.

			RED
	Maybe that should go under
	educational too.


159 INT -- WOOD SHOP -- DAY (1961) 159

Red is making a sign, carefully routing letters into a long
plank of wood. It turns out to be --

160 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY -- DAY (1963) 160

-- the varnished wood sign over the archway: "Brooks Hatlen
Memorial Library." TILT DOWN to reveal the library in all its
completed glory: shelves lined with books, tables and chairs,
even a few potted plants. Heywood is wearing headphones,
listening to Hank Williams on the record player.

			RED (V.O.)
	By the year Kennedy was shot, Andy
	had transformed a broom closet
	smelling of turpentine into the
	best prison library in New England.

161 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- DAY (1963) 161

FLASHBULBS POP as Norton addresses MEMBERS OF THE PRESS:

			RED (V.O.)
	That was also the year Warden Norton
	instituted his famous "Inside-Out"
	program. You may remember reading
	about it. It made all the papers
	and got his picture in LIFE magazine.

			NORTON
	...a genuine, progressive advance
	in corrections and rehabilitation.
	Our inmates, properly supervised,
	will be put to work outside these
	walls performing all manner of
	public service. Cutting pulpwood,
	repairing bridges and causeways,
	digging storm drains...

ANGLE TO Red and the boys listening from behind the fence.

			NORTON
	These men can learn the value of an
	honest day's labor while providing
	a valuable service to the community
	-- and at a bare minimum of expense
	to Mr. and Mrs. John Q. Taxpayer!

			HEYWOOD
	Sounds like road-gangin', you ask me.

			RED
	Nobody asked you.

162 EXT -- HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION SITE -- DAY (1963) 162

A ROAD-GANG is grading a culvert with picks. There's dust and
the smell of sweat in the air. GUARDS patrol with sniper rifles,
A pushy WOMAN REPORTER in an ugly hat bustles up the grade,
trailed by a PHOTOGRAPHER.

			WOMAN REPORTER
	You there! You men! We're gonna
	take your picture now!

			HEYWOOD
	Give us a break, lady.

			WOMAN REPORTER
	Don't you know who I am? I'm from
	LIFE magazine! I was told I'd get
	some co-operation out here! You
	want me to report you to your
	warden? Is that what you want?

			HEYWOOD
		(sighs)
	No, ma'am.

			WOMAN REPORTER
	That's more like it! Now I want you
	all in a row with big bright smiles
	on your faces! Grab hold of your
	tools and show 'em to me!

She turns, motioning her photographer up the grade. Heywood
glances around at the other men.

			HEYWOOD
	You heard the lady.

Heywood unzips his pants, reaches inside. The others do
likewise. The woman turns back and is greeted by the sight of
a dozen men displaying their penises and smiling brightly. Her
legs go wobbly and she sits heavily down on the dirt grade.

			HEYWOOD
	C'mon! We're showin' our tools and
	grinnin' like fools! Take the damn
	picture!

163 INT -- SOLITARY CONFINEMENT -- NIGHT (1963) 163

Heywood sits alone in the dark. He sighs.

			RED (V.O.)
	None of the inmates were invited to
	express their views...

164 EXT -- WOODED FIELDS -- DAY (1965) 164

A ROAD-GANG is pulling stumps, bogged down in mud.

			RED (V.O.)
	'Course, Norton failed to mention
	to the press that "bare minimum of
	expense" is a fairly loose term.
	There are a hundred different ways
	to skim off the top. Men,
	materials, you name it. And, oh my
	Lord, how the money rolled in...

Norton strolls into view with NED GRIMES at his heels.

			NED
	This keeps up, you're gonna put me
	out of business! With this pool of
	slave labor you got, you can
	underbid any contractor in town.

			NORTON
	Ned, we're providing a valuable
	community service.

			NED
	That's fine for the papers, but I
	got a family to feed. The State
	don't pay my salary. Sam, we go
	back a long way. I need this new
	highway contract. I don't get it, I
	go under. That's a fact.
		(hands him a box)
	Now you just have some'a this fine
	pie my missus baked specially for
	you, and you think about that.

Norton opens the box. Alongside the pie is an envelope. He
runs his thumb across the thick stack of cash it contains.

IN THE BACKGROUND, a winch cable SNAPS and whips through the
air, damn near severing a man's leg. He goes down, screaming
in mud and blood, pinned by a fallen tree stump. Men rush over
to help him. Norton barely takes notice.

			NORTON
	Ned, I wouldn't worry too much over
	this contract. Seems to me I've
	already got my boys committed
	elsewhere. You be sure and thank
	Maisie for this fine pie.

165 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- NIGHT (1965) 165

ANGLE on Maisie's pie. Several pieces gone.

			RED (V.O.)
	And behind every shady deal, behind
	every dollar earned...

TILT UP to Andy at the desk, munching thoughtfully as he
totals up figures on an adding machine.

			RED (V.O.)
	...there was Andy, keeping the books.

Andy finishes preparing two bank deposits. Norton hovers near
the desk, keeping a watchful eye.

			ANDY
	Two deposits, Casco Bank and New
	England First. Night drop, like
	always.

Norton pockets the envelopes. Andy crosses to the wall safe
and shoves the ledger and sundry files inside. Norton locks
the safe, swings his wife's framed sampler back into place. He
cocks his thumb at some laundry and two suits in the corner.

			NORTON
	Get my stuff down t'laundry. Two
	suits for dry-clean and a bag of
	whatnot. Tell 'em if they over-
	starch my shirts again, they're
	gonna hear about it from me.
		(adjusts his tie)
	How do I look?

			ANDY
	Very nice.

			NORTON
	Big charity to-do up Portland
	way. Governor's gonna be there.
		(indicates pie)
	Want the rest of that? Woman can't
	bake worth shit.

166 INT -- PRISON CORRIDOR -- NIGHT (1965) 166

Andy trudges down the corridor with Norton's laundry, the pie
box under his arm.

167 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 167

TILT UP FROM PIE to find Red munching away as he helps Andy
sort books on the shelves.

			RED
	Got his fingers in a lot of pies,
	from what I hear.

			ANDY
	What you hear isn't half of it.
	He's got scams you haven't dreamed
	of. Kickbacks on his kickbacks.
	There's a river of dirty money
	flowing through this place.

			RED
	Money like that can be a problem.
	Sooner or later you gotta explain
	where it came from.

			ANDY
	That's where I come in. I channel
	it, funnel it, filter it...stocks,
	securities, tax free municipals...
	I send that money out into the big
	world. And when it comes back...

			RED
	It's clean as a virgin's whistle?

			ANDY
	Cleaner. By the time Norton retires,
	I will have made him a millionaire.

			RED
	Jesus. They ever catch on, he's
	gonna wind up wearing a number
	himself.

			ANDY
		(smiles)
	I thought you had more faith in me
	than that.

			RED
	I'm sure you're good, but all that
	paper leaves a trail. Anybody gets
	too curious -- FBI, IRS, whatever --
	that trail's gonna lead to somebody.

			ANDY
	Sure it will. But not to me, and
	certainly not to the warden.

			RED
	Who then?

			ANDY
	Peter Stevens.

			RED
	Who?

			ANDY
	The silent, silent partner. He's
	the guilty one, your Honor. The man
	with the bank accounts. That's
	where the filtering process starts.
	They trace it back, all they're
	gonna find is him.

			RED
	Yeah, okay, but who the hell is he?

			ANDY
	A phantom. An apparition. Second
	cousin to Harvey the Rabbit.
		(off Red's look)
	I conjured him out of thin air. He
	doesn't exist...except on paper.

			RED
	You can't just make a person up.

			ANDY
	Sure you can, if you know how the
	system works, and where the cracks
	are. It's amazing what you can
	accomplish by mail. Mr. Stevens has
	a birth certificate, social
	security card, driver's license.
	They ever track those accounts,
	they'll wind up chasing a figment
	of my imagination.

			RED
	Jesus. Did I say you were good?
	You're Rembrandt.

			ANDY
	It's funny. On the outside, I was
	an honest man. Straight as an
	arrow. I had to come to prison to
	be a crook.

168 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DUSK (1965)

			RED
	Does it ever bother you?

			ANDY
	I don't run the scams, Red, I just
	process the profits. That's a fine
	line, maybe. But I've also built
	that library, and used it to help a
	dozen guys get their high school
	diplomas. Why do you think the
	warden lets me do all that?

			RED
	To keep you happy and doing the
	laundry. Money instead of sheets.

			ANDY
	I work cheap. That's the trade-off.

TWO SIREN BLASTS draw their attention to the main gate. It
swings open, revealing a prison bus waiting outside.

169 INT -- PRISON BUS -- DUSK (1965) 169

Among those on board is TOMMY WILLIAMS, a damn good-looking
kid in his mid-20's. The bus RUMBLES through the gate.

170 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DUSK (1965) 170

The new fish disembark, chained together single-file. The old-
timers holler and shake the fence. A deafening gauntlet.

171 INT -- CELLBLOCK EIGHT -- NIGHT (1965) 171

Tommy and the others are marched in naked and shivering,
covered with delousing powder, greeted by TAUNTS and JEERS.

172 INT -- TOMMY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1965) 172

The bars slam with a STEEL CLANG. Tommy and his new CELLMATE
take in their new surroundings.

			TOMMY
	Well. Ain't this for shit?

173 INT -- PRISON CORRIDOR -- DAY (1965) 173

DOLLYING Tommy as he struts along, combing his ducktail,
cigarette behind his ear. (We definitely need The Coasters or
Del Vikings on the soundtrack here. Maybe Jerry Lee Lewis.)

			RED (V.O.)
	Tommy Williams came to Shawshank in
	1965 on a two year stretch for B&E.
	Cops caught him sneakin' TV sets
	out the back door of a JC Penney.

174 INT -- WOOD SHOP -- DAY (1965) 174

A SHRIEKING BUZZSAW slices ten-foot lengths of wood. Red runs
the machine while some other OLD-TIMERS feed the wood.

			RED (V.O.)
	Young punk, Mr. Rock n' Roll, cocky
	as hell...

Tommy is hauling the cut wood off the conveyor and stacking it,
It's a ball-busting job, but the kid's a blur.

			TOMMY
		(slapping his gloves)
	C'mon there, old boys! Movin' like
	molasses! Makin' me look bad!

The old guys just grin and shake their heads.

			RED (V.O.)
	We liked him immediately.

175 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1965) 175

Tommy regales the old boys with his exploits:

			TOMMY
	...so I'm backin' out the door,
	right? Had the TV like this...
		(mimes his grip)
	Big ol' thing. Couldn't see shit.
	Suddenly, here's this voice:
	"Freeze kid! Hands in the air!"
	Well I just stand there holdin' on
	to that TV, so the voice says: "You
	hear what I said, boy?" And I say,
	"Yes sir, I sure did! But if I drop
	this fuckin' thing, you got me on
	destruction of property too!"

The whole table falls about laughing.

176 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 176

Poker game in progress. Tommy, Andy, Red and the boys.

			HEYWOOD
	You did a stretch in Cashman too?

			TOMMY
	Yeah. That was an easy ride, let me
	tell you. Work programs, weekend
	furloughs. Not like here.

			SNOOZE
	Sounds like you done time all over
	New England.

			TOMNY
	Been in and out since I was 13. Name
	the place, chances are I been there.

			ANDY
	Perhaps it's time you considered a
	new profession.
		(the game stalls)
	What I mean is, you don't seem to
	be a very good thief. Maybe you
	should try something else.

			TOMMY
	What the hell you know about it,
	Capone? What are you in for?

			ANDY
		(wry glance to Red)
	Everyone's innocent in here. Don't
	you know that?

The tension breaks. Everyone laughs.

177 INT -- VISITOR'S ROOM -- DAY (1965) 177

CAMERA TRAVELS the room. Chaotic. CONS are waiting their turn
or talking to visitors through a thick plexi shield.

			RED (V.O.)
	As it turns out, Tommy had himself
	a young wife and new baby girl...

Tommy's at the end of the row, phone to his ear. Other side of
the glass is BETH, near tears, fussing with a BABY on her lap.

			BETH
	...said we can stay with them, but
	Joey's gettin' out of the service
	next month, and they barely got
	enough room as it is. Plus they got
	Poppa workin' double shifts and the
	baby cries half the night. I just
	don't know where we're gonna go...

PUSH IN on Tommy's face as he listens.

			RED (V.O.)
	Maybe it was the thought of them on
	the streets...or his child growing
	up not knowing her daddy...

178 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 178

Tommy enters, the strut gone from his step. A little scared.
He finds Andy filing library cards.

			RED (V.O.)
	Whatever it was, something lit a
	fire under that boy's ass.

			TOMMY
	I'm thinkin' maybe I should try for
	high school equivalency. Hear you
	helped some fellas with that.

			ANDY
	I don't waste time on losers, Tommy.

			TOMMY
		(tight)
	I ain't no goddamn loser.

			ANDY
	That's a good start. If we do this,
	we do it all the way. One hundred
	percent. Nothing half-assed.

Tommy thinks about it, nods.

			TOMMY
	Thing is, see...
		(leans in, mutters)
	...I don't read all that good.

			ANDY
		(smiles)
	Well. You've come to the right
	place then.

179 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 179

We find Andy giving an impassioned reading:

			ANDY
	"...and the lamplight o'er him
	streaming throws his shadow on the
	floor...and my soul from out that
	shadow that lies floating on the
	floor, shall be lifted nevermore!"

Andy slaps the book shut, immensely pleased with himself.

			TOMMY
	So this raven just sits there and
	won't go away?

			ANDY
	That's right.

			TOMMY
		(beat)
	Why don't that fella get hisself a
	12-gauge and dust the fucker?

180 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 180

Tommy tries to read as Andy looks on:

			TOMMY
	"The cat sh--The cat shh..."
		(glances up)
	The cat shat on the welcome mat?

Andy shakes his head. Not exactly.

181 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 181

Andy chalks the alphabet on a blackboard.

			RED (V.O.)
	So Andy took Tommy under his wing.
	Started walking him through his
	ABCs...

182 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1965) 182

TRACK the table to Tommy and Andy. Discussing a book.

			RED (V.O.)
	Tommy took to it pretty well, too.
	Boy found brains he never knew he
	had.

183 EXT -- EXERCISE YARD BLEACHERS -- DAY (1965) 183

			TOMNY
	The cat sh--shh--shimmied up the
	tree and crept st--stel--stealthily
	out on the limb...

184 INT -- WOOD SHOP -- DAY (1965) 184

Tommy intent on a paperback, mouthing the words. Behind him,
wood is piling up on the conveyor belt.

			RED (V.O.)
	After a while, you couldn't pry
	those books out of hands.

			RED
	Ass in gear, son! You're putting us
	behind!

Tommy shoves the book in his back pocket and hurries over.

185 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1965) 185

Tommy writes a sentence on the blackboard. Andy steps in,
shows him how to reconstruct it.

			RED (V.O.)
	Before long, Andy started him on
	his course requirements. He really
	liked the kid, that was part of it.
	Gave him a thrill to help a
	youngster crawl off the shitheap.
	But that wasn't the only reason...

186 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 186

TIGHT ANGLE on chessboard. Most of the pieces complete. PAN TO
Andy lying in his bunk, carefully polishing...

			RED (V.O.)
	Prison time is slow time. Sometimes
	it feels like stop-time. So you do
	what you can to keep going...

...and we keep going past Andy in a SLOW PAN of the cell.
Sink. Toilet. Books. Outside the window bars, we hear another
TRAIN passing in the night...

			RED (V.O.)
	Some fellas collect stamps. Others
	build matchstick houses. Andy built
	a library. Now he needed a new project.
	Tommy was it. It was the same reason
	he spent years shaping and polishing
	those rocks. The same reason he hung
	his fantasy girlies on the wall...

...STILL PANNING, past a chair, a sweater on a hook...and
finally to the place of honor on the wall...

			RED (V.O.)
	In prison, a man'll do most
	anything to keep his mind occupied.

...where the latest poster turns out to be Racquel Welch ins
fur bikini. Gorgeous. "One Million Years, B. C. " SLOW PUSH IN,

			RED (V.O.)
	By 1966...right about the time
	Tommy was getting ready to take his
	exams...it was lovely Racquel.

187 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1966) 187

Tommy's taking the big test. Andy's monitoring the time. Deep
silence, save for Tommy's pencil-scribbling. A few old-timers
are browsing the shelves, sneaking looks their way. Tommy
tries to ignore them. Concentrate.

Andy clears his throat. Time's up. Tommy puts his pencil down,

			ANDY
	Well?

			TOMMY
	Well. It's for shit.
		(gets up in disgust)
	Wasted a whole fuckin' year of my
	time with this bullshit!

			ANDY
	May not be as bad as you think.

			TOMMY
	It's worse! I didn't get a fuckin'
	thing right! Might as well be in
	Chinese!

			ANDY
	We'll see how the score comes out.

			TOMMY
	I'll tell you how the goddamn
	score comes out...

Tommy grabs the test, wads it, slam-dunks it into the trash.

			TOMMY
	Two points! Right there! There's
	your goddamn score!
		(storms out)
	Goddamn cats crawlin' up trees, 5
	times 5 is 25, fuck this place,
	fuck it!

Tommy is gone. Red and others stare. Andy gets up, pulls the
test from the trash, smoothes it out on the desk.

188 INT -- WOOD SHOP -- DAY (1966) 188

Rest break. Tommy and Red sipping Cokes.

			TOMMY
	I feel bad. I let him down.

			RED
	That's crap, son. He's proud of
	you. Proud as a hen.
		(off Tommy's look)
	We been friends a long time. I know
	him as good as anybody.

			TOMMY
	Smart fella, ain't he?

			RED
	Smart as they come. Used to be a
	banker on the outside.

			TOMMY
	What's he in for anyway?

			RED
	Murder.

			TOMMY
	The hell you say.

			RED
	You wouldn't think, lookin' at him.
	Caught his wife in bed with some
	golf pro. Greased 'em both. C'mon,
	boy, back to work...

SMASH! Red turns back. Tommy's Coke has slipped from his hand
and shattered on the floor. The kid's gone white as a sheet.

			TOMMY
		(bare whisper)
	Oh my God...

189 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1966) 189

Tommy sits before Andy and Red:

			TOMMY
	'Bout four years ago, I was in
	Thomaston on a 2 to 3 stretch.
	Stole a car. Dumbfuck thing to do.
		(beat)
	Few months left to go, I get a new
	cellmate in. Elmo Blatch. Big
	twitchy fucker. Crazy eyes. Kind of
	roomie you pray you don't get, know
	what I'm sayin'? 6 to 12 for armed
	burglary. Said he done hundreds of
	jobs. Hard to believe, high-strung
	as he was. Cut a loud fart, he'd go
	three feet in the air. Talked all
	the time, too, that's the other
	thing. Never shut up. Places he'd
	been, jobs he pulled, women he
	fucked. Even people he killed.
	People that gave him shit, that's
	how he put it. One night, like a
	joke, I say: "Yeah? Who'd you
	kill?" So he says...

			BLATCH
	...I got me this job one time
	bussin' tables at a country club.
	So I could case all the big rich
	pricks that come in. I pick out
	this guy, go in one night and do
	his place. He wakes up and gives
	me shit. So I killed him. Him and
	the tasty bitch he was with.
		(starts laughing)
	That's the best part! She's fuckin'
	this prick, see, this golf pro, but
	she's married to some other guy!
	Some hotshot banker. He's the one
	they pinned it on! They got him
	down-Maine somewhere doin' time for
	the crime! Ain't that choice?

He throws his head back and ROARS with laughter.

191 INT -- PRISON LIBRARY -- DAY (1966) 191

Silence. Tommy has finished his story. Red is stunned...but
Andy looks like he's been smacked with a two by four.

			RED
	Andy?

Andy says nothing. Walks stiffly away. Doesn't look back.

192 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 192

			NORTON
	Well. I have to say, that's the
	most amazing story I ever heard.
	What amazes me most is you were
	taken in by it.

			ANDY
	Sir?

			NORTON
	It's obvious this fellow Williams
	is impressed with you. He hears
	your tale of woe and quite
	naturally wants to cheer you up.
	He's young, not terribly bright.
	Not surprising he didn't know what
	a state he'd put you in.

			ANDY
	I think he's telling the truth.

			NORTON
	Let's say for a moment Blatch does
	exist. You think he'd just fall to
	his knees and cry, "Yes, I did it!
	I confess! By all means, please add
	a life term to my sentence!"

			ANDY
	It wouldn't matter. With Tommy's
	testimony, I can get a new trial.

			NORTON
	That's assuming Blatch is even
	still there. Chances are excellent
	he'd be released by now. Excellent.

			ANDY
	They'd have his last known address.
	Names of relatives...
		(Norton shakes his head)
	Well it's a chance. isn't it? How
	can you be so obtuse?

			NORTON
	What? What did you call me?

			ANDY
	Obtuse! Is it deliberate? The
	country club will have his old time
	cards! W-2s with his name on them!

			NORTON
		(rises)
	Dufresne, if you want to indulge
	this fantasy, that's your business.
	Don't make it mine. This meeting's
	over.

			ANDY
	Look, if it's the squeeze, don't
	worry. I'd never say what goes on
	in here. I'd be just as indictable
	as you for laundering the money!

			NORTON
	Don't you ever mention money to me
	again, you sorry son of a bitch!
	Not in this office, not anywhere!
		(slaps intercom)
	Get in here! Now!

			ANDY
	I was just trying to rest your mind
	at ease, that's all.

			NORTON
		(as GUARDS enter)
	Solitary! A month!

Andy gets dragged away, kicking and screaming:

			ANDY
	What's the matter with you? It's my
	chance to get out, don't you see
	that? It's my life! Don't you
	understand it's my life?

193 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1966) 193

Mail call. Men crowd around as names are called out. Red and
the boys are parked on the bleachers.

			FLOYD
	A month in the hole. Longest damn
	stretch I ever heard of.

			TOMMY
	It's my fault.

			RED
	Like hell. You didn't pull the
	trigger, and you didn't convict him.

			HEYWOOD
	Red? You saying Andy's innocent? I
	mean for real innocent?
		(Red nods)
	Sweet Jesus. How long's he been in
	here?

			RED
	Since '47. Going on nineteen years.

			MAIL CALLER
	Thomas Williams!

Tommy raises his hand. The envelope gets tossed to him. He
stares at it. Red peers over his shoulder.

			RED
	Board of Education.

			TOMMY
	The son of a bitch mailed it.

			RED
	Looks that way. You gonna open it
	or stick your thumb up your butt?

			TOMMY
	Thumb up my butt sounds better.

He gets hemmed in by the older men. Red snatches the letter.

			TOMMY
	C'mon, just throw it away. Will you
	please? Just throw it away?

Red rips it open, scans the letter. Expressionless.

			RED
	Well, shit.

194 INT -- VISITOR'S ROOM -- DAY (1966) 194

Tommy makes his way through the chaos, finds Beth and the baby
waiting behind the thick plexi shield. He sits, doesn't pick
up the phone. Just stares at Beth. She doesn't know what to
make of it.

He presses a piece of paper against the glass. A high school
diploma. Her face lights up, blinking back tears.

195 INT -- SOLITARY WING -- NIGHT (1966) 195

LOW ANGLE on steel door. Somewhere behind it, unseen, is Andy,
A rat scurries along the wall. FOOTSTEPS approach slowly.

196 INT -- SOLITARY -- NIGHT (1966) 196

Andy listens in darkness. The FOOTSTEPS pause outside his
door. The slot opens. An ELDERLY GUARD peers in.

			ELDERLY GUARD
	Kid passed. C-plus average. Thought
	you'd like to know.

The slot closes. The FOOTSTEPS recede. Andy smiles.

197 INT -- PRISON CORRIDOR -- NIGHT (1966) 197

We find Tommy on evening work detail, mopping the floors with
bucket and pail. Mert Entwhistle comes into view.

			MERT
	Warden wants to talk.

198 EXT -- PRISON -- NIGHT (1966) 198

A steel door rattles open. Mert leads Tommy outside to a gate,
unlocks it. Tommy looks around.

			TOMMY
	Out here?

			MERT
	That's what the man said.

Mert swings the gate open, sends Tommy through, turns and
heads back inside. Tommy proceeds out across a loading-dock
access for the shops and mills. Some vehicles parked. The
place is deserted. He stops, sensing a presence.

			TOMMY
	Warden?

Norton steps into the light.

			NORTON
	Tommy, we've got a situation here.
	I think you can appreciate that.

			TOMMY
	Yes sir, I sure can.

			NORTON
	I tell you, son, this really came
	along and knocked my wind out. It's
	got me up nights, that's the truth.

Norton pulls a pack of cigarettes, offers Tommy a smoke. Tommy
takes one. Norton lights both cigarettes, pockets his lighter.

			NORTON
	The right decision. Sometimes it's
	hard to figure out what that is.
	You understand?
		(Tommy nods)
	Think hard, Tommy. If I'm gonna
	move on this, there can't be the
	least little shred of doubt. I have
	to know if you what you told
	Dufresne was the truth.

			TOMMY
	Yes sir. Absolutely.

			NORTON
	Would you be willing to swear before
	a judge and jury...having placed
	your hand on the Good Book and taken
	an oath before Almighty God Himself?

			TOMMY
	Just gimme that chance.

			NORTON
	That's what I thought.

Norton drops his cigarette. Crushes it out with the toe of his
shoe. Glances up toward the plate shop roof as --

199 HIGH ANGLE FROM PLATE SHOP ROOF (SNIPER POV) 199

-- a rifle scope pops up into frame, jumping Tommy's image
into startling magnification, framed in the crosshairs.

200 THE SNIPER 200

rapid-fires a carbine -- BLAM!BLAM!BLAM!BLAM! -- his face lit
up by the muzzle flashes. Captain Hadley.

201 TOMMY 201

gets chewed to pieces by the gunfire. He smacks the ground in
a twitching, thrashing heap. Eyes wide and staring. Dead.
Surprise still stamped on his face. Silence now. Norton
turns, strolls into darkness.

202 INT -- SOLITARY WING -- DAY (1966) 202

GUARDS approach Andy's cell. The door is unlocked. Andy
emerges slowly, blinking painfully at the light.

203 INT/EXT -- PRISON -- DAY (1966) 203

Andy is marched along. Convicts stop to stare.

204 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 204

Andy is led in. The door is closed. Alone with Norton. Softly,

			NORTON
	Terrible thing. Man that young,
	less than a year to go, trying to
	escape. Broke Captain Hadley's
	heart to shoot him, truly it did.

			ANDY
	I'm done. It stops right now. Get
	H&R Block to declare your income.

Norton lunges to his feet, eyes sparkling with rage.

			NORTON
	Nothing stops! NOTHING!
		(tight)
	Or you will do the hardest time
	there is. No more protection from
	the guards. I'll pull you out of
	that one-bunk Hilton and put you in
	with the biggest bull queer I can
	find. You'll think you got fucked
	by a train! And the library? Gone!
	Sealed off brick by brick! We'll
	have us a little book-barbecue in
	the yard! They'll see the flames
	for miles! We'll dance around it
	like wild Indians! Do you understand
	me? Are you catching my drift?

SLOW PUSH IN on Andy's face. Eyes hollow. His beaten
expression says it all...

205 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1966) 205

Red finds Andy sitting in the shadow of the high stone wall,
poking listlessly through the dust for small pebbles. Red
waits for some acknowledgment. Andy doesn't even look up.
Red hunkers down and joins him. Nothing is said for the
longest time. And then, softly:

			ANDY
	My wife used to say I'm a hard man
	to know. Like a closed book.
	Complained about it all the time.
		(pause)
	She was beautiful. I loved her. But
	I guess I couldn't show it enough.
		(softly)
	I killed her, Red.

Andy finally glances to Red, seeking a reaction. Silence.

			ANDY
	I didn't pull the trigger. But I
	drove her away. That's why she
	died. Because of me, the way I am.

			RED
	That don't make you a murderer. Bad
	husband, maybe.

Andy smiles faintly in spite of himself. Red gives his
shoulder a squeeze.

			RED
	Feel bad about it if you want. But
	you didn't pull the trigger.

			ANDY
	No. I didn't. Someone else did, and
	I wound up here. Bad luck, I guess.

			RED
	Bad luck? Jesus.

			ANDY
	It floats around. Has to land on
	somebody. Say a storm comes
	through. Some folks sit in their
	living rooms and enjoy the rain.
	The house next door gets torn out
	of the ground and smashed flat. It
	was my turn, that's all. I was in
	the path of the tornado.
		(softly)
	I just had no idea the storm would
	go on as long as it has.
		(glances to him)
	Think you'll ever get out of here?

			RED
	Sure. When I got a long white beard
	and about three marbles left
	rolling around upstairs.

			ANDY
	Tell you where I'd go. Zihuatanejo.

			RED
	Zihuatanejo?

			ANDY
	Mexico. Little place right on the
	Pacific. You know what the Mexicans
	say about the Pacific? They say it
	has no memory. That's where I'd
	like to finish out my life, Red. A
	warm place with no memory. Open a
	little hotel right on the beach.
	Buy some worthless old boat and fix
	it up like new. Take my guests out
	charter fishing.
		(beat)
	You know, a place like that, I'd
	need a man who can get things.

Red stares at Andy, laughs.

			RED
	Jesus, Andy. I couldn't hack it on
	the outside. Been in here too long.
	I'm an institutional man now. Like
	old Brooks Hatlen was.

			ANDY
	You underestimate yourself.

			RED
	Bullshit. In here I'm the guy who
	can get it for you. Out there, all
	you need are Yellow Pages. I
	wouldn't know where to begin.
		(derisive snort)
	Pacific Ocean? Hell. Like to scare
	me to death, somethin' that big.

			ANDY
	Not me. I didn't shoot my wife and
	I didn't shoot her lover, and
	whatever mistakes I made I've paid
	for and then some. That hotel and
	that boat...I don't think it's too
	much to want. To look at the stars
	just after sunset. Touch the sand.
	Wade in the water. Feel free.

			RED
	Goddamn it, Andy, stop! Don't do
	that to yourself! Talking shitty
	pipedreams! Mexico's down there,
	and you're in here, and that's the
	way it is!

			ANDY
	You're right. It's down there, and
	I'm in here. I guess it comes down
	to a simple choice, really. Get
	busy living or get busy dying.

Red snaps a look. What the hell does that mean? Andy rises and
walks away. Red lunges to his feet.

			RED
	Andy?

			ANDY
		(turns back)
	Red, if you ever get out of here,
	do me a favor. There's this big
	hayfield up near Buxton. You know
	where Buxton is?

			RED
		(nods)
	Lots of hayfields there.

			ANDY
	One in particular. Got a long rock
	wall with a big oak at the north
	end. Like something out of a Robert
	Frost poem. It's where I asked my
	wife to marry me. We'd gone for a
	picnic. We made love under that
	tree. I asked and she said yes.
		(beat)
	Promise me, Red. If you ever get
	out, find that spot. In the base of
	that wall you'll find a rock that
	has no earthly business in a Maine
	hayfield. A piece of black volcanic
	glass. You'll find something buried
	under it I want you to have.

			RED
	What? What's buried there?

			ANDY
	You'll just have to pry up that
	rock and see.

Andy turns and walks away.

206 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1966)

			RED
	I tell you, the man was talkin'
	crazy. I'm worried, I truly am.

			SKEET
	We ought to keep an eye on him.

			ZIGGER
	That's fine, during the day. But
	at night he's got that cell all to
	himself.

			HEYWOOD
	Oh Lord. Andy come down to the
	loading dock today. Asked me for a
	length of rope. Six foot long.

			SNOOZE
	Shit! You gave it to him?

			HEYWOOD
	Sure I did. I mean why wouldn't I?

			FLOYD
	Christ! Remember Brooks Hatlen?

			HEYWOOD
	How the hell was I s'pose to know?

			ZIGGER
	Andy'd never do that. Never.

They all look to Red.

			RED
	Every man's got a breaking point.

207 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- ANGLE ON P.A. -- DUSK (1966) 207

			VOICE (over P.A.)
	Report to your cellblocks for
	evening count.

BOOM DOWN to Red and the boys. Convicts drift past them.

			FLOYD
	Where the hell is he?

			HEYWOOD
	Probably still up in the warden's.

			TOWER GUARD
		(via bullhorn)
	YOU MEN! YOU HEAR THAT ANNOUNCEMENT
	OR ZUST TOO STUPID TO UNDERSTAND?

			SKEET
	Christ. What do we do?

			FLOYD
Nothing we can do. Not tonight.

			HEYWOOD
	Let's pull him aside tomorrow, all
	of us. Have a word with him. Ain't
	that right, Red?

			RED
		(unconvinced)
	Yeah. Sure. That's right.

20B INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- NIGHT (1966) 208

Andy's working away. Norton pokes his head in.

			NORTON
	Lickety-split. I wanna get home.

			ANDY
	Just about done, sir.

We follow Norton to his wife's sampler. He swings it aside,
works the combination dial, opens the wall safe. Andy moves up,
shoves in the black ledger and files. Norton shuts the safe.

			ANDY
	Three deposits tonight.

Andy hands him the envelopes. Norton heads for the door.

			NORTON
	Get my stuff down t'laundry. And
	shine my shoes. I want 'em lookin'
	like mirrors.
		(pauses at door)
	Nice havin' you back, Andy. Place
	just wasn't the same without you.

Norton exits. Andy turns to the laundry. He opens the shoebox.
Nice pair of dress shoes inside. He sighs, glances down at the
old ragged pair of work shoes on his own feet.

209 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- NIGHT (1966) 209

Andy is diligently shining Norton's shoes.

210 INT -- PRISON CORRIDOR -- NIGHT (1966) 210

Andy trudges down the hallway, laundry slung over his shoulder,

211 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- NIGHT (1966) 211

Andy nods to the GUARD. The guard BUZZES him through.

212 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 212

Red hears Andy coming, moves to the bars. He watches Andy come
up to the second tier and pause before his cell.

			GUARD (O.S.)
	Open number twelve!

Andy gazes directly at Red. A beat of eye contact. Red shakes
his head. Don't do it. Andy smiles, eerily calm...and enters
his cell. The door closes. KA-THUMP! We hold on Red's face.

213 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 213

Andy is polishing a chess piece.

			VOICE (O.S.)
	Lights out!

The lights bump off. He finishes polishing, holds up the piece
to admire. A pawn. He sets it down with the others -- and we
realize it's the final glance for the board. A full set.

He gazes up at Racquel and smiles. Pulls a six foot length of
rope from under his pillow. Lets it uncoil to the floor.

214 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 214

Red sits in the dark, a bundle of nerves, trying to hold

himself still. He feels like he might scream or shake to
pieces. The seconds tick by, each an eternity.

			RED (V.O.)
	I have had some long nights in
	stir. Alone in the dark with
	nothing but your thoughts, time can
	draw out like a blade...

A FLASH OF LIGHTNING outside his window sends harsh barred
shadows jittering across the cell. A storm breaking.

			RED (V.O.)
	That was the longest night of my
	life...

215 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- MORNING (1966) 215

KA-THUMP! The master lock is thrown. The cons emerge from
their cells and the headcount begins. Red looks back to see if
Andy's in line. He's not. Suddenly the count stalls:

			GUARD
	Man missing on tier two! Cell 12!

The head bull, HAIG, checks his list:

			HAIG
	Dufresne? Get your ass out here,
	boy! You're holding up the show!
		(no answer)
	Don't make me come down there now!
	I'll thump your skull for you!

Still no answer. Glaring, Haig stalks down the tier, clipboard
in hand. His men fall in behind.

			HAIG
	Dufresne, dammit, you're putting me
	behind! You better be sick or dead
	in there, I shit you not!

They arrive at bars. Their faces go slack. Stunned. Softly:

			HAIG
	Oh my Holy God.

216 REVERSE ANGLE 216

reveals the cell is empty. Everything neat and tidy. Even the
bunk is stowed. They wrench the door open and rush in, tossing
the cell in a panic as if Andy might be lurking under the
Kleenex or the toothpaste. CAMERA ROCKETS IN on Haig as he
spins toward us, bellowing at the top of his lungs:

			HAIG
	WHAT THE FUCK!

217 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- MORNING (1966) 217

Norton is kicking back with the morning paper. He notices ha
dingy his shoes are. He glances at the shoebox on the desk.
kicks his shoes off, opens the box -- and gulls out Andy's o
grimy work shoes. He stares blankly. What the fuck indeed.

An ALARM STARTS BLARING throughout the prison. He looks up.

218 EXT -- PRISON -- DAY (1966) 218

Norton and Hadley stride across the grounds, ALARM BLARING.

			NORTON
	I want every man on that cellblock
	questioned! Start with that friend
	of his!

			HADLEY
	Who?

219 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- RED'S CELL -- DAY (1966) 219

Red watches as Norton storms up with an entourage of guards.

			NORTON
	Him.

Red's eyes widen. Guards yank him from his cell.

220 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- DAY (1966) 220

Norton steps to the center of the room, working himself up
into a fine rage:

			NORTON
	What do you mean "he just wasn't
	here?" Don't say that to me, Haig!
	Don't say that to me again!

			HAIG
	But sir! He wasn't! He isn't!

			NORTON
	I can see that, Haig! You think I'm
	blind? Is that what you're saying?
	Am I blind, Haig?

			HAIG
	No sir!

Norton grabs the clipboard and thrusts it at Hadley.

			NORTON
	What about you? You blind? Tell me
	what this is!

			HADLEY
	Last night's count.

			NORTON
	You see Dufresne's name? I sure do!
	Right there, see? "Dufresne." He
	was in his cell at lights out!
	Stands to reason he'd still be here
	this morning! I want him found! Not
	tomorrow, not after breakfast! Now!

Haig scurries out, gathering men. Norton spins to Red.

			NORTON
	Well?

			RED
	Well what?

			NORTON
	I see you two all the time, you're
	thick as thieves, you are! He
	must'a said something!

			RED
	No sir, he didn't!

Norton spreads his arms evangelist-style, spins slowly around.

			NORTON
	Lord! It's a miracle! Man up and
	vanished like a fart in the wind!
	Nothin' left but some damn rocks on
	the windowsill and that cupcake on
	the wall! Let's ask her! Maybe she
	knows! What say there, Fuzzy-
	Britches? Feel like talking? Guess
	not. Why should you be different?

Red exchanges looks with the guards. Even they're nervous.
Norton scoops a handful rocks off the sill. He hurls them at
the wall one at a time, shattering them, punctuating his words:

			NORTON
	It's a conspiracy! (SMASH) That's
	what this is! (SMASH) It's one big
	damn conspiracy! (SMASH) And
	everyone's in on it! (SMASH)
	Including her!

He sends the last rock whizzing right at Racquel.
No smash.

It takes a moment for this to sink in. All eyes go to her. The
rock went through her. There's a small hole in the poster
where her navel used to be.

You could hear a pin drop. Norton reaches up, sinks his finger
into the hole. He keeps pushing...and his entire hand
disappears into the wall.

221 ANGLE FROM BEHIND POSTER 221

as Norton rips the poster from before our eyes. Stunned faces
peer in. CAMERA PULLS SLOWLY BACK...to reveal the long
crumbling tunnel in the wall.

222 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- MINUTES LATER (1966) 222

RORY TREMONT, a guard barely out of his teens, tries not to
look nervous as they lash a rope around his chest. He's
getting instructions from six different people at once.

			RED (V.O.)
	They got this skinny kid named Rory
	Tremont to go in the hole. He wasn't
	much in the brains department, but
	he possessed the one most important
	qualification for the job...
		(they slap a flashlight
		in his hands)
	...he was willing to go.

223 INT -- TUNNEL -- DAY (1966) 223

Rory squeezes down the tunnel on his belly.

			RED (V.O.)
	Probably thought he'd win a Bronze
	Star or something.

224 INT -- VERTICAL SHAFT -- DAY (1966) 224

Dark as midnight. Concrete walls rise on both sides. If you
imagine them as two huge slices of bread, the meat of this
particular sandwich is about three feet of airspace and a dark
tangle of pipes between the cellblocks. Rory's appears, shining
his flashlight down the shaft. Somewhere, a rat SQUEAKS.

			RED (V.O.)
	It was his third day on the job.

			RORY
	Warden? There's a space here
	between the walls 'bout three feet
	across! Smells pretty damn bad!

			NORTON (O.S.)
	I don't care what it smells like!

			HADLEY (O.S.)
	Go on, boy! We got a hold of you!

Looking none too happy about it, Rory squeezes from the tunnel
and dangles into the shaft. He gets lowered, shining his
light, smothered by darkness. Not having a good time.

			RORY
	Hoo-whee! Smell's gettin' worse!

			NORTON (O.S.)
	Never mind, I said! Just keep going!

			RORY
	Smells pretty damn bad, Warden! In
	fact, it smells just like shit.

His feet touch the ground -- or what he assumed was the
ground. It's not. In fact, it's just what it smells like. He
sinks in past his ankles. He slips and sits heavily in it.

			RORY
	Oh God, that's what it is, it's
	shit. Oh my God it's shit. pull me
	out 'fore I blow my groceries, oh
	shit it's shit, oh my Gawwwwwwd!

225 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- DAY (1966) 225

Red and others listen to violent barfing from below.

			RED (V.O.)
	And then came the unmistakable
	sound of Rory Tremont losing his
	last few meals. The whole cellblock
	heard it. I mean, it echoed.

That's it for Red. He starts laughing. Laughing, hell, he's
bellowing laughter, laughing so hard he has to hold himself,
laughing so hard tears are pouring down his cheeks. The look
of rage on Norton's face makes him laugh all the harder.

226 INT -- SOLITARY WING -- NIGHT (1966) 226

Abrupt silence. LOW ANGLE on steel door.

			RED (V.O.)
	I laughed myself right into
	solitary. Two week stretch.

227 INT -- SOLITARY -- NIGHT (1966) 227

			RED
	It's shit, it's shit, oh my God
	it's shit...

He starts laughing all over again, fit to split.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy once talked about doing easy
	time in the hole. Now I knew what
	he meant.

228 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- WIDE SHOT -- DAY (1966) 228

Virgin landscape. Charming rural road. Suddenly, State Police
cruisers rocket up the road with SIRENS AND LIGHTS.

			RED (V.O.)
	In 1966, Andy Dufresne escaped from
	Shawshank Prison.

229 EXT -- FIELD -- DAY (1966) 229

Shawshank is half a mile distant. WE TRACK ALONG a muddy creel
as STATE TROOPERS and PRISON GUARDS scour the brush. A TROOPEE
fishes a prison uniform out of the creek with a long stick.

			RED (V.O.)
	All they found of him was a muddy
	set of prison clothes, a bar of
	soap, and an old rock-hammer damn
	near worn down to the nub.

TROOPER #2 pulls the rock-hammer from the weeds. SWISH PAN
to a POLICE PHOTOGRAPHER. His FLASHBULB GLARE produces:

230 A BLACK AND WHITE STILL PHOTO 230

of the hapless cops posing with Andy's reeking uniform and the
worn rock-hammer. PUSH IN on the hammer.

			RED (V.O.)
	I remember thinking it would take a
	man six hundred years to tunnel
	through the wall with it. Andy did
	it in less than twenty.

231 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1949) 231

Once again, we see Andy using the rock-hammer to scratch his

name into the cement. Suddenly, a palm-sized chunk of cement
pops free and hits the floor. He stares down at it.

232 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1949) 232

Andy lies in the dark, studying the chunk of concrete in his
hands. Considering the possibilities. Wrestling with hope.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy loved geology. I imagine it
	appealed to his meticulous nature.
	An ice age here, a million years of
	mountain-building there, plates of
	bedrock grinding against each other
	over a span of millennia...

233 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1949) 233

Andy stands peering at the small hole left by the fallen
chunk. Carefully runs his fingertip over it.

			RED (V.O.)
	Geology is the study of pressure
	and time. That's all it takes,
	really. Pressure and time.

234 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1951) 234

Rita is now on the wall, hanging down over Andy's back.

			RED (V.O.)
	That and a big damn poster.

TRACK IN to reveal Andy scraping patiently at the concrete.

			RED (V.O.)
	Like I said. In prison, a man'll do
	most anything to keep his mind
	occupied.

He hears FOOTSTEPS approaching. He smoothes the poster down and
dives into bed. A GUARD strolls by a moment later, shining his
flashlight into the cell.

235 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1953) 235

Andy strolls along, whistling softly, hands in both pockets.
TILT DOWN to his pantleg. Concrete grit trickles out.

			RED (V.O.)
	It turns out Andy's favorite hobby
	was totin' his wall out into the
	exercise yard a handful at a time...

236 INT -- 2ND TIER -- NIGHT (1962) 236

A GUARD strolls the tier, shining his flashlight into the
cells. He pauses at Andy's bars, playing the beam over the
sleeping form huddled under the blankets.

237 REVERSE ANGLE (FROM INSIDE ANDY'S CELL) 237

We see what the guard doesn't: instead of Andy's head under
the blanket, it's a wadded-up pillow. The flashlight plays
across the cell, pinning Marilyn Monroe in a circle of light.

238 ANGLE FROM BEHIND POSTER 238

The light illuminates her face through the paper. WIDEN to
reveal Andy lying in his tunnel, holding his breath. The
light clicks off. The FOOTSTEPS move on. He gets back to work.

			RED (V.O.)
	While the rest of us slept, Andy
	spent years workin' the nightshift...

239 INT -- SHAFT -- NIGHT (1965) 239

BOOMING SLOWLY UP the shaft. Rats scurry the pipes. Suddenly, r
piece of concrete the size of a quarter jumps free and plummets
down the shaft as the rock-hammer pushes through. The pick
withdraws, replaced by Andy's peering eye.

240 A SERIES OF DISSOLVES (1965 through 1966) 240

takes us through the widening of the hole. First as big as a
tea cup. Then a saucer. Then a dinner plate.

			RED (V.O.)
	Probably took him most of a year
	just to get his head through.

Andy finally gets his head through, scraping his ears. He's
got a penlight clenched in his teeth. He peers down into the
shaft. At the very bottom, maybe 20 feet down, a big ceramic
pipe runs the length of the cellblock. Beneath its coat of
grime and dust, the word "SEWER" is stenciled.

241 EXT -- LOADING DOCK ACCESS -- NIGHT (1966) 241

ANGLE LOOKING STRAIGHT DOWN. Below us, Tommy Williams lies
facedown at Norton's feet. Blood is spreading, fanning out oa
the pavement. Norton turns, strolls out of frame.

			RED (V.O.)
	I guess after Tommy was killed,
	Andy decided he'd been here just
	about long enough.

Again we see: Andy working. Norton pokes his head in.

			NORTON
	Lickety-split. I wanna get home.

			ANDY
	Just about done, sir.

Norton crosses to the wall safe and works the dial, his back
turned. This time, though, we stay on Andy:

He pulls up his sweater, yanks out a large black book and a
stack of files, lays them on the desk. He then grabs the real
ledger and files, jams them down his pants and smoothes his
sweater down. He picks up the bogus stack, crosses to Norton,
and shoves everything in.

243 INT -- HALLWAY -- NIGHT (1966) 243

Norton exits his office and strolls off whistling. PUSH IN on
the open door. We see Andy at the guard's desk, pulling
Norton's dress shoes from their box.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy did like he was told. Buffed
	those shoes to a high mirror shine.

244 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- MINUTES LATER (1966) 244

Andy sorts through Norton's three suits. He pauses, checking
the gray pinstripe. Nice.

245 INT -- CELLBLOCK FIVE -- NIGHT (1966) 245

The guard BUZZES Andy through. Andy walks toward us.

			RED (V.O.)
	The guard simply didn't notice.
	Neither did I. I mean, seriously,
	how often do you really look at a
	man's shoes?

TILT DOWN as he passes by. Yep, he's wearing Norton's shoes.

246 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 246

The lights go out. Andy places the last chess piece. Gazes up
at Racquel. Smiles. Pulls the rope from under his pillow.
He stands and unbuttons his prison shirt, revealing Norton's
gray pinstripe suit underneath. A FLASH OF LIGHTNING floods the
cell, throwing wild shadows.

247 INT -- ANDY'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 247

The storm rages. Andy, naked, carefully slips Norton's folded
suit into a large industrial Zip-Lock bag. Next to go in are the
shoes, chess pieces (already in a smaller bag), black ledger en
files. Last but not least, a bar of soap wrapped in a towel.

248 INT -- TUNNEL -- NIGHT (1966) 248

Andy, again wearing prison clothes, inches down the tunnel.

249 INT -- SHAFT -- NIGHT (1966) 249

Andy squeezes through the hole head-first, emerges to the waist,
He reaches for the opposite wall, manages to snag a steel
conduit with his fingers.

Suddenly, a huge rat darts for his hand. Andy yanks away and
almost plummets head-first down the shaft. He dangles wildly
upside-down for a moment, arms windmilling, then gets his
hands pressed firmly against the opposite wall. The rat
scurries off, pissed.

Andy snags the conduit again. He contorts out of the hole and
dangles into the shaft. We now see the purpose for the rope: the
plastic bag hangs from his ankle with about two feet of slack,

He kicks his legs across the shaft, gets his feet braced. Wit3
his back against one wall and feet against the other, he
starts down the shaft. Sliding dangerously. Using pipes for
handholds. Flinching as rats dart this way and that, scurrying
in the shadows. He drops the last few feet to the bottom.

He approaches the ceramic sewer pipe and kneels before it.
Pulls out the rock-hammer and says a quick silent prayer.
Raises the rock-hammer high and swings it down with all his
might. Once, twice -- third time lucky. An enormous eruption
of sewage cascades into the air as if rocket-propelled, the
Mount St. Helens of shit. Andy is instantly coated black. He
turns away and heaves his guts out. The shit keeps coming.

250 INT -- SEWER PIPE -- NIGHT (1966) 250

Andy peers down through the hole, playing his penlight aroun5,
The inside diameter is no more than two feet. Tight squeeze.
Coated with crud. It seems to go on for miles.

No turning back. He wriggles into the pipe and starts
crawling, plastic bag dragging behind.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy crawled to freedom through
	five hundred yards of shit-smelling
	foulness I can't even imagine. Or
	maybe I just don't want to.

251 EXT -- FIELD -- NIGHT (1966) 251

Rain is falling in solid sheets. Shawshank is half a mile
distant. BOOM DOWN to reveal the creek...and PUSH IN toward the
mouth of the sewer pipe that feeds into it.

			RED (V.O.)
	Five hundred yards. The length of
	five football fields. Just shy of
	half a mile.

Fingers appear, thrusting through the heavy-gauge wire mesh
covering the mouth of the pipe. Andy's face looms from the
darkness, peering out at freedom. He wrenches the mesh loose,
pushes himself out, and plunges head-first into the creek. He
comes up sputtering for breath. The water is waist-deep.

He wades upstream, ripping his clothes from his body. He gets
his shirt off, spins it through the air over his head, flings
the shirt away. He raises his arms to the sky, turning slowly,
feeling the rain washing him clean. Exultant. Triumphant. A
FLASH OF LIGHTNING arcs from horizon to horizon.

252 INT -- ANDY'S TUNNEL -- DAY (1966) 252

Once again, we see stunned faces as CAMERA PULLS BACK.

			RED (V.O.)
	The next morning, right about the
	time Racquel was spilling her
	little secret...

253 INT -- CASCO BANK OF PORTLAND -- MORNING (1966) 253

The door opens. Spit-shined shoes enter. DOLLY the shoes to
the counter.

			RED (V.O.)
	...a man nobody ever laid eyes on
	before strolled into the Casco Bank
	of Portland. Until that moment, he
	didn't exist -- except on paper.

FEMALE TELLER (O.S.)
May I help you?

TILT UP to Andy. Smiling in Norton's gray pinstripe suit.

			ANDY
	My name is Peter Stevens. I've come
	to close out some accounts.

254 INT -- BANK -- SHORTLY LATER (1966) 254

The teller is cutting a cashier's check while the MANAGER

carefully examines Mr. Stevens' various I.D.s.

			RED (V.O.)
	He had all the proper I.D. Driver's
	license, birth certificate, social
	security card. The signature was a
	spot-on match.

			MANAGER
	I must say I'm sorry to be losing
	your business. I hope you'll enjoy
	living abroad.

			ANDY
	Thank you. I'm sure I will.

			TELLER
	Here's your cashier's check, sir.
	Will there be anything else?

			ANDY
	Please. Would you add this to your
	outgoing mail?

He hands her a package, stamped and addressed. Gives them a
pleasant smile. Turns and strolls from the bank.

			RED (V.O.)
	Mr. Stevens visited nearly a dozen
	banks in the Portland area that
	morning. All told, he blew town
	with better than 370 thousand
	dollars of Warden Norton's money.
	Severance pay for nineteen years.

255 INT -- OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 255

A MAN in shirtsleeves is going through the mail on his desk.
He finds Andy's package, rips it open. Pulls out the black
ledger and files. Scans a cover letter. Holy shit. He dashes
to his door and yanks it open, revealing the words on the
glass: "PORTLAND DAILY BUGLE -- Editor In Chief."

			MAN
	Hal! Dave! Get your butts in here!

256 INT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- DAY (1966) 256

Norton walks slowly toward his office. Dazed. The morning
paper in his hand. He goes wordlessly past the DUTY GUARD into
his office. Shuts the door. Lays the paper on his desk.

The headline reads: "CORRUPTION AND MURDER AT SHAWSHANK."
Below that, the sub-headline: "D.A. Has Ledger. Indictments
Expected." Norton looks up as SIRENS SWELL in the distance.

257 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- WIDE SHOT -- DAY (1966) 257

For the second time, State Police cruisers go rocketing up the
road with SIRENS AND LIGHTS.

258 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 258

Norton opens his safe and pulls out the "ledger" -- it's
Andy's Bible. The title page is inscribed by hand: "Dear
Warden. You were right. Salvation lay within." Norton flips to
the center of the book -- and finds the pages hollowed out in
the shape of a rock-hammer.

259 EXT -- PRISON -- DAY (1966) 259

Police cruisers everywhere. A media circus. REPORTERS jostle
for position. A colorless DISTRICT ATTORNEY steps forward into
CLOSEUP, flanked by a contingent of S.ATE TROOPERS.

			D.A.
	Byron Hadley?

ANGLE SHIFTS to reveal Captain Hadley. Staring. Waiting.

			D.A.
	You have the right to remain
	silent. If you give up that
	right, anything you say will be
	used against you in court...

TROOPERS move in, cuffing Hadley's hands behind his back. The
D.A. drones on. FLASHBULBS POP. Hadley says nothing. His face
scrunches up. He begins to cry.

			RED (V.O.)
	I wasn't there to see it, but I hear
	Byron Hadley was sobbing like a
	little girl when they took him away.

Hadley sobs all the way to the car. The D.A. snaps a gaze up
toward Norton's window, motions his men to follow.

260 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 260

Norton is staring out the window as they approach the
building. He goes to his desk, opens a drawer. Inside lies a
revolver and a box of shells.

			RED (V.O.)
	Norton had no intention of goin'
	that quietly.

261 INT -- PRISON CORRIDORS -- DAY (1966) 261

The D.A. marches along amidst a phalanx of TROOPERS.

262 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 262

Norton sits blankly at his desk, revolver before him. The
doorknob rattles, a VOICE is heard:

			D.A. (O.S.)
	Samuel Norton? We have a warrant
	for your arrest! Open up!

The POUNDING starts. Norton dumps the box of bullets out on thr
desk. He starts sorting them to see which ones he likes.

263 OUTSIDE HIS OFFICE 263

Troopers hustle the hapless duty guard to Norton's door as he
fumbles nervously with a huge key ring.

			DUTY GUARD
	I'm not sure which one it is...

He starts trying keys in the lock. And as the keys go sliding
in one after another...

264 INT -- NORTON'S OFFICE -- DAY (1966) 264

...so do the bullets. Norton is riveted to the door. For every
key, he loads another bullet. Methodical and grim. He gets the
final bullet in just as the right key slams home. The door
bursts open. Men muscle in. Somebody SHOUTS. Troopers dive in
all directions as Norton raises the gun --

-- and jams it under his chin. His head snaps back as the wall
goes red. His swivel chair does a slow half-turn and creaks to
a final stop. Troopers rise slowly, gazing in horror.

			RED (V.O.)
	I like to think the last thing that
	went through his head...other than
	that bullet...was to wonder how the
	hell Andy Dufresne ever got the
	best of him.

PUSH SLOWLY to the wall to reveal Mrs. Norton's framed sampler
trickling blood and brains...and we get our final Bible lesson
for today: "HIS JUDGMENT COMETH AND THAT RIGHT SOON."

265 EXT -- PRISON YARD -- DAY (1966) 265

Mail call. Red hears his name. They pass him a postcard.

			RED (V.O.)
	Not long after the warden deprived
	us of his company, I got a postcard
	in the mail. It was blank. But the
	postmark said, "McNary, Texas."

266 INT -- LIBRARY -- DAY (1966) 266

Red sits with an atlas, tracing his finger down the page.

			RED (V.O.)
	McNary. Right on the border. That's
	where Andy crossed.
		(shuts the book)
	When I picture him heading south in
	his own car with the top down, it
	makes me laugh all over again...

267 EXT -- MEXICO -- HIGHWAY -- DAY (1966) 267

A red convertible rips along with Andy at the wheel, cigar
jutting from his grin, warm wind fluttering his tie.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy Dufresne, who crawled through
	a river of shit and came out clean
	on the other side. Andy Dufresne,
	headed for the Pacific.

268 INT -- MESS HALL -- DAY (1966) 268

Heywood is regaling the table with some anecdote about Andy.

			RED (V.O.)
	Those of us who knew him best talk
	about him often. I swear, the stuff
	he pulled. It always makes us laugh.

A wild burst of laughter. PUSH IN on Red. Feeling melancholy.

			RED (V.O.)
	Sometimes it makes me sad, though,
	Andy being gone. I have to remind
	myself that some birds aren't meant
	to be caged, that's all. Their
	feathers are just too bright...

269 EXT -- FIELDS -- LATE DAY (1966) 269

Convicts hoe the fields. Guards patrol on horseback.

			RED (V.O.)
	...and when they fly away, the part
	of you that knows it was a sin to
	lock them up does rejoice...but still,
	the place you live is that much more
	drab and empty that they're gone.

A DISTANT RUMBLE OF THUNDER. Red pauses, gazes off. Storm
clouds coming in, backlit by the sun. A light drizzle begins.

			RED (V.O.)
	I guess I just miss my friend.

270 INT -- PRISON CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 270

Red is sleeping. He wakes with a start.

			RED (V.O.)
	But there are times I curse him for
	the dreams he left behind...

He senses a presence, looks over his shoulder. There's a Rita
Hayworth poster on his wall. He gets out of bed. Rita just
keeps smiling, inscrutable. As Red watches, a brilliant
round glow builds behind the poster, shining from the
tunnel. The poster rips free, charred to ash in the blink
of an eye as a shaft of holy white light stabs into the
cell. Sunlight. Red staggers back against the glare.

A whirlwind kicks up, whipping everything into the air. The
hole in the wall is like a giant vacuum cleaner -- papers,
book, toiletries, bedding -- if it ain't nailed down, it gets
sucked down the hole toward the light. Red fights it, but the
suction drags him closer and closer...

271 RED'S POV 271

...and CAMERA rockets into the hole, getting sucked down an
endless tunnel at impossible speed, the ROAR of air mixing
with his drawn-out SCREAM, closer and closer to the light...

...and erupting out the other side into total silence and a
beautiful white beach. The Pacific Ocean before us. Enormous.
Mind-blowing. Beautiful beyond description. All we hear now
are the gentle sound of waves.

			RED (V.O.)
	...dreams where I am lost in a warm
	place with no memory.

A lone figure stands at water's edge. CAMERA KEEPS MOVING,
coming up behind him and TRACKING AROUND to reveal -- Red.

			RED (V.O.)
	An ocean so big it strikes me dumb.
	Waves so quiet they strike me deaf.
	Sunshine so bright it strikes me
	blind. It is a place that is blue
	beyond reason. Bluer than can
	possibly exist. Bluer than my mind
	can possibly grasp.

272 AERIAL SHOT 272

Nothing for a million miles but beach, sky, and water. Red is
a tiny speck at water's edge. Just another grain of sand.

			RED (V.O.)
	I am terrified. There is no way home.

273 INT -- RED'S CELL -- NIGHT (1966) 273

Red wakes from the nightmare. He gets out of bed. Moves to the
barred window of his cell. Peers up at the stars.

			RED (V.O.)
	Andy. I know you're in that place.
	Look at the stars for me just after
	sunset. Touch the sand...wade in
	the water...and feel free.

FADE TO BLACK

274 AN IRON-BARRED DOOR 274

slides open with an enormous CLANG. A stark room beyond.
CAMERA PUSHES through. SIX MEN AND ONE WOMAN sit at a long
table. An empty chair faces them. We are again in:

INT -- SHAWSHANK HEARINGS ROOM -- DAY (1967)

Red enters, sits. 20 years older than when we first saw him.

			MAN #1
	Your file says you've served forty
	years of a life sentence. You feel
	you've been rehabilitated?

Red doesn't answer. Just stares off. Seconds tick by. The
parole board exchanges glances. Somebody clears his throat.

			MAN #1
	Shall I repeat the question?

			RED
	I heard you. Rehabilitated. Let's
	see now. You know, come to think of
	it, I have no idea what that means.

			MAN #2
	Well, it means you're ready to
	rejoin society as a--

			RED
	I know what you think it means. Me,
	I think it's a made-up word, a poli-
	tician's word. A word so young fellas
	like you can wear a suit and tie and
	have a job. What do you really want
	to know? Am I sorry for what I did?

			MAN #2
	Well...are you?

			RED
	Not a day goes by I don't feel
	regret, and not because I'm in here
	or because you think I should. I
	look back on myself the way I
	was...stupid kid who did that
	terrible crime...wish I could talk
	sense to him. Tell him how things
	are. But I can't. That kid's long
	gone, this old man is all that's
	left, and I have to live with that.
		(beat)
	"Rehabilitated?" That's a bullshit
	word, so you just go on ahead and
	stamp that form there, sonny, and
	stop wasting my damn time. Truth
	is, I don't give a shit.

The parole board just stares. Red sits drumming his fingers.

CLOSEUP -- PAROLE FORM

A big rubber stamp SLAMS down -- and lifts away to reveal the
word "APPROVED" in red ink.

275 EXT -- SHAWSHANK PRISON -- DAY 275

TWO SHORT SIREN BLASTS herald the opening of the main gate. It
swings hugely open, revealing Red standing in his cheap suit,
carrying a cheap bag, wearing a cheap hat. He walks out, still
looking stunned.

276 INT -- BUS -- DAY 276

Red rides the bus, clutching the seat before him, gripped by
terror of speed and motion.

277 EXT -- BREWSTER HOTEL -- LATE AFTERNOON 277

Red arrives at the Brewster, three stories high and even less
to look at than it used to be.

27B INT -- BREWSTER -- LATE DAY 278

A BLACK WOMAN leads Red up the stairs toward the top floor.

279 INT -- RED'S ROOM -- LATE DAY 279

Small, old, dingy. An arched window with a view of Congress
Street. Traffic noise floats up. Red enters and pauses,
staring up at the ceiling beam. Carved into the wood are the
words: "Brooks Hatlen was here."

280 INT -- FOODWAY MARKET -- DAY 280

Loud. Jangling with PEOPLE and NOISE. We find Red bagging
groceries. Registers are humming, kids are shrieking. Red
calls to the STORE MANAGER:

			RED
	Sir? Restroom break sir?

			MANAGER
		(motions him over)
	You don't need to ask me every
	time you go take a piss. Just go.
	Understand?


28l INT -- EMPLOYEE RESTROOM -- DAY 281

Red steps to the urinal, stares at himself in the wall mirror.

			RED (V.O.)
	Thirty years I've been asking
	permission to piss. I can't squeeze
	a drop without say-so.

A strange east Indian guitar-whine begins. The Beatles. George
Harrison's "Within You Without You..."

282 EXT -- STREET -- DAY 282

...which carries through as Red walks. People and traffic. He
keeps looking at the women. An alien species.

			RED (V.O.)
	Women, too, that's the other thing.
	I forgot they were half the human
	race. There's women everywhere,
	every shape and size. I find myself
	semi-hard most of the time, cursing
	myself for a dirty old man.

TWO YOUNG WOMEN stroll by in cut-offs and t-shirts.

			RED (V.O.)
	Not a brassiere to be seen, nipples
	poking out at the world. Jeezus,
	pleeze-us. Back in my day, a woman
	out in public like that would have
	been arrested and given a sanity
	hearing.

283 EXT -- PARK -- DUSK 283

Red finds the park filled with HIPPIES. Hanging out.
Happening. Here's the source of the music: a radio. A HIPPIE
GIRL gyrates to the Beatles, stoned, in her own world.

			RED (V.O.)
	They're calling this the Summer of
	Love. Summer of Loonies, you ask me.

284 INT -- PAROLE OFFICE -- DAY 284

Red sits across from his PAROLE OFFICER. The P.O. is filling
out his report.

			P.O.
	You staying out of the bars, Red?

			RED
	Yes sir. That I am.

			P.O.
	How you doing otherwise? Adjusting
	okay?

			RED
	Things got different out here.

			P.O.
	Tell me about it. Young punks
	protesting the war. You imagine?
	Even my own kid. Oughtta bust his
	fuckin' skull.

			RED
	Guess the world moved on.

285 INT -- FOODWAY -- DAY 285

Bagging groceries. CHILDREN underfoot. One points a toy gun at
Red, pumping the trigger. Red focuses on the gun, listening to
it CLICKETY-CLACK. Sparky wheel grinding.

The kids get swept off by MOM. Red starts bagging the next
customer. SLOW PUSH IN on Red. Surrounded by MOTION and NOISE.
Feeling like the eye of a hurricane. People everywhere,
whipping around him like a gale. Strange. Loud. Dizzying. It
gets distorted and weird, slow and thick, pressing in on him
from all sides. The noise level intensifies. The hollering of
children deepens and distends into LOW EERIE HOWLS.

He's in the grip of a major anxiety attack. Tries to shake
himself out of it. Can't. Fumbles the final items into the
bag. Walks away. Trying not to panic. Trying not to run.

He makes his way through the store. Blinking sweat. He bumps
into a lady's cart, mumbles an apology, keeps going. Breaks
into a trot. Down the aisle, cut to the left, through the door
into the back rooms, faster and faster, running now, slamming
through a door marked "Employees Only" into --

286 INT -- EMPLOYEE RESTROOM -- DAY 286

-- where he slams the door and leans heavily against it,
shutting everything out, breathing heavily. Alone now.

He goes to the sink, splashes his face, tries to calm down.
He can still hear them out there. They won't go away. He
glances around the restroom. Small. Not small enough.

He enters a stall. Locks the door. Puts the toilet lid down
and sits on the john. Better. He can actually reach out and
touch the walls now. They're close. Safe. Almost small enough.
He draws his feet up so he can't be seen if somebody walks in.

He'll just sit here for a while. Until he calms down.

287 EXT -- STREET -- DUSK 287

Red is walking home.

			RED (V.O.)
	There is a harsh truth to face.
	No way I'm gonna make it on the
	outside.

He pauses at a pawnshop window. An array of handguns.

			RED (V.O.)
	All I do anymore is think of ways
	to break my parole.

The SHOPKEEPER appears at the glass, locking the door and
flipping the sign: CLOSED.

288 INT -- RED'S ROOM -- NIGHT 288

Red lies smoking in bed. Unable to sleep.

			RED (V.O.)
	Terrible thing, to live in fear.
	Brooks Hatlen knew it. Knew it all
	too well. All I want is to be back
	where things make sense. Where I
	won't have to be afraid all the time.

He glances up at the ceiling beam. "Brooks Hatlen was here."

		   RED (V.O.)
	Only one thing stops me. A promise
	I made to Andy.

289 EXT -- COUNTRY ROAD -- MORNING 289

A pickup truck rattles up the road trailing dust and pulls to
a stop. Red hops off the back, waves his thanks. The truck

drives on. Red starts walking. PAN TO a roadside sign: BUXTON.

290 EXT -- MAINE COUNTRYSIDE -- DAY 290

High white clouds in a blazing blue sky. The trees fiery with
autumn color. Red walks the fields and back-roads, cheap
compass in hand. Looking for a certain hayfield.

291 EXT -- COUNTRYSIDE -- DAY 291

Walking. Searching. The day turning late. Red finds himself
staring at a distant field. There's a long rock wall, like
something out o f a Robert Frost poem. Big oak tree. Red checks
his compass. North end. He crosses a dirt road into the field.

292 EXT -- HAYFIELD -- DAY 292

Red walks the long rock wall, nearing the tree. A squirrel
scolds him from a low branch, scurries up higher. Red studies
the base of the wall. Nothing unusual here. Just a bunch of
rocks set in stone. He sighs. Fool's errand. Turns to go.

Something catches his eye. He walks back, squats, peering
closer. Wets a fingertip and rubs a stone. A layer of dust comes
off. Volcanic glass. Gleaming black. He tries to get the rock
out, anticipation growing. It won't come; it's too smooth. He
pulls a pocketknife and levers the rock free. It tumbles at his
feet, leaving a ragged hole.

Red leans down and solves the mystery at last, staring at the
object buried under the rock. Stunned. It's an envelope wrapped
in plastic. Written on it is a single word: "Red."

Red pulls the envelope out and rises. He just stares at it for
a while, almost afraid to open it. But open it he does. Inside
is a smaller envelope and a letter. Red begins to read:

			ANDY (V.O.)
	Dear Red. If you're reading this,
	you've gotten out. And if you've
	come this far, maybe you're willing
	to come a little further. You
	remember the name of the town,
	don't you? I could use a good man
	to help me get my project on
	wheels. I'll keep an eye out for
	you and the chessboard ready.
		(beat)
	Remember, Red. Hope is a good
	thing, maybe the best of things,
	and no good thing ever dies. I will
	be hoping that this letter finds
	you, and finds you well. Your
	friend. Andy.

By now, tears are spilling silently down Red's cheeks. He
opens the other envelope and fans out a stack of new fifty-
dollar bills. Twenty of them. A thousand dollars.

293 INT -- RED'S ROOM -- DAY (1967) 293

Red is dressed in his suit. He finishes knotting his tie, puts
his hat on. His bag is by the door. He takes one last look
around. Only one thing left to do. He pulls a wooden chair to
the center of the room and gazes up at the ceiling beam.

			RED (V.O.)
	Get busy living or get busy dying.
	That is goddamn right.

He steps up on the chair. It wobbles under his weight.

294 INT -- BREWSTER -- RED'S DOOR -- DAY (1967) 294

The door opens. Red exits with his bag and heads down the
stairs, leaving the door open. CAMERA PUSHES through, BOOMING
UP to the ceiling beam which reads: "Brooks Hatlen was here."

A new message has been carved alongside the old: "So was Red."

295 INT -- GREYHOUND BUS STATION -- DAY (1967) 295

TRACKING SHOT reveals a long line of people at the counter.

			RED (V.O.)
	For the second time in my life, I
	am guilty of committing a crime.

CAMERA brings us to Red, next in line, bag by his feet.

			RED (V.O.)
	Parole violation. I doubt they'll
	toss up any roadblocks for that.
	Not for an old crook like me.

			RED
		(steps up)
	McNary, Texas?

296 EXT -- TRAVELING SHOT -- DAY (1967) 296

A gorgeous New England landscape whizzes by, fields and trees
a blur of motion. ANGLE SHIFTS to reveal a Greyhound Sceni-
Cruiser barreling up the road, pulling abreast of us. CAMERA
TRAVELS from window to window, passing faces. We finally come
to Red gazing out at the passing landscape.

			RED (V.O.)
	I find I am so excited I can barely
	sit still or hold a thought in my
	head. I think it is the excitement
	only a free man can feel, a free
	man at the start of a long journey
	whose conclusion is uncertain...

297 THE BUS 297

ROARS past camera, dwindling to a mere speck on the horizon.

			RED (V.O.)
	I hope I can make it across the
	border. I hope to see my friend
	and shake his hand. I hope the
	Pacific is as blue as it has been
	in my dreams.
		(beat)
	I hope.

298 EXT -- BEACH -- WIDE PANORAMIC SHOT -- DAY (1967) 298

A distant boat lies on its side in the sand like an old wreck
that's been left to rot in the sun. There's someone out there.

299 CLOSER ON BOAT 299

A MAN is meticulously stripping the old paint and varnish by
hand, face hidden with goggles and kerchief mask.

Red appears b.g., a distant figure walking out across the
sand, wearing his cheap suit and carrying his cheap bag.

The man on the boat pauses. Turns slowly around. Red arrives
with a smile as wide as the horizon. The other man raises his
goggles and pulls down his mask. Andy, of course.

			ANDY
	You look like a man who knows how
	to get things.

			RED
	I'm known to locate certain things
	from time to time.

Red shrugs off his jacket and picks up a sander. Together,
they start sanding the hull as we

                                               FADE OUT



      All movie scripts and screenplays on this site are intended for 
      educational purposes only.

   


Back to Simon J. Michael's homepage