Erin Brockovich Script
Erin Brockovich Script
Erin Brockovich Script
a true story
by
SUSANNAH GRANT
Revisions by
RICHARD
LAGRAVENESE
Revised Draft
03/22/99
DR. JAFFE
Uh, but you have no actual medical
training?
ERIN
(off)
No. I have kids. Learned a lot right
there. I've seen nurses give my son a
throat culture. I mean what is it - you
stick a giant Q-tip down their throat and
wait. Or a urine analysis, with that
dipstick that tells you whether or not
the white count is high...
DR. JAFFE
Yes, I understand.
ERIN
(off)
And, I mean, I'm great with people. Of
course, you'd have to observe me to know
for sure, but trust me on that one. I'm
extremely fast learner. I mean, you show
me what to do in a lab once, and I've got
it down.
ERIN (CONT'D)
...for instance, at one point I wanted to
be an engineer, so I was working at
Fleuer Engineers and Constructors in
Irvine. I fell madly in love with
geology.
DR. JAFFE
Geology?
ERIN
I learned how to read maps. I love maps.
Did you know our present system for map-
making dates back to the ancient Greeks
in like the third century B.C.?
DR. JAFFE
No.
ERIN
Anyway, I was at the company and - this
is interesting, actually - I helped
Ramish Ginatra design, as an assistant,
part of the Alaskan pipeline...
DR. JAFFE
Uh-huh.
ERIN
..But I lost that job because my son came
down with the Chicken Pox and 104
temperature and my ex-husband was
useless, so..ya know...But what I want to
tell you is I, uh .. I had always wanted
to go to medical school. That was my
first interest really...but then I, you
know, got married..had a kid too young
and..that kind of blew it for me..
DR. JAFFE
Uh-huh.
ERIN
(beat, looks
around)
This is a really nice office.
DR. JAFFE
Thanks.
(looks up at
her)
Look....
ERIN
Fuck.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Shit.
ERIN (CONT'D)
God damn it.
She tends to the nail as she opens her car door and gets in.
ROSALIND (O.S.)
Morning, Mr. Masry. How you doing today?
ED
Fine. You?
ROSALIND
Did you watch it last night?
ED
No, I was out. I taped it. Don't tell me
what happens.
ROSALIND
(overlapping
him, excitedly)
It's sooo great...
(as he walks to
office)
Your nine o'clock's already in there.
ED
Remind me.
BRENDA
Erin Brockovich. Car accident. Not her
fault, she says.
(beat. they
exchange looks)
She was referred.
He nods.
ED
Erin -- hi. Sorry you had to wait.
Here, sit down, sit down.
ERIN
Thanks a lot.
(as she sits)
I tell you, I never thought just standing
would take it out of me, but ever since
that shithead hit me, it feels like my
whole body's put together wrong.
ERIN
Yeah. I'm fine.
ED
Great. Well, listen...whoever did this to
you made one hell of a mistake, and you
and me, we're gonna make him pay for it.
ED (CONT'D)
Why don't you tell me what happened?
CUT TO:
ERIN
I was pulling out real slow, and out of
nowhere, his Jaguar comes racing around
the corner like a bat outta hell ...
ERIN
They took some bone from my hip and put
it in my neck. I didn't have insurance,
so I'm about seventeen thousand in debt
right now.
STILL LATER
ERIN
...couldn't take painkillers 'cause they
made me too groggy to take care of my
kids.
STILL LATER
ERIN
...Matthew's six, Katie's four, and
Beth's just nine months.
STILL LATER
ERIN
...just wanna be a good mom, a nice
person, a decent citizen. Just wanna
take good care of my kids. You know?
ED
(oh so moved)
Yeah. I know.
DEFENDING LAWYER
Seventeen thousand in debt. Whew. Is
your ex-husband helping out?
ERIN
Which one?
DEFENDING LAWYER
(feigning shock)
There's more than one?
ERIN
Yeah. There's two. Why?
ERIN
(getting defensive)
...not like a career, 'cause I had my
babies. But I woulda worked, for sure,
if I didn't have this neck thing.
DEFENDING LAWYER
(sarcastic)
Right. No doubt.
STILL LATER
DEFENDING LAWYER
So. You must've been feeling pretty
desperate that afternoon.
ERIN
(pointed)
What's your point?
DEFENDING LAWYER
Broke, three kids, no job. A doctor in a
Jaguar must've looked like a pretty good
meal ticket.
ERIN
What? Hey -- he hit me.
DEFENDING LAWYER
So you say.
ERIN
He came tearing around the corner, out of
control --
DEFENDING LAWYER
An ER doctor who spends his days saving
lives was the one out of control --
ERIN
(erupting)
That asshole smashed in my fucking neck!
ERIN
...Open and shut? Open and fucking shut?
ED
Which is exactly the kind of language
that lost the case.
ERIN
Oh, please, it was long over by then.
God damn, he made me look like some
cheap --
ED
I told you the questions might get a
little persona-
ERIN
Bullshit. You told me I'd get half a
million dollars. You told me I'd be set.
ED
Okay -- let's try and settle down here.
You want something to eat?
ERIN
You want to feed my kids too!? Fuck
settle down! I got seventy-four dollars
to my name! I can't afford to settle
down!
Beat.
ED
I'm sorry, Erin.
ERIN
Do they actually teach lawyers how to
apologize - because you all suck at it.
Erin turns away from him and heads for the stairway.
EXT. ERIN'S HOUSE - DAY
Erin gets out, takes the mail from her mailbox, then heads
over to the equally grim house next door and rings the bell.
MRS. MORALES
Hi, Erin! You're back so soon.
She hands Erin the baby. It's BETH, Erin's 9-month old.
Erin avoids the question by focusing on her baby.
ERIN
Hi, sweetie. Were you a good girl?
Where are Matt and Katie?
MRS. MORALES
Outside with the sprinkler. So it's
good?
ERIN
It'll be fine, yeah.
(BETH COUGHS in
her arms)
Oh honey..
MRS. MORALES
She's got a little cough. I sat with her
in the steam to loosen it up. But...
ERIN
I've got enough medicine, I think..
MRS. MORALES
Ai, bueno. Listen, I didn't want to tell
you before, with your worries --
ERIN
What?
MRS. MORALES
My daughter, she's bought a big house
with a room for me. I'm going to move in
with her.
ERIN
You're moving away? When?
MRS. MORALES
Next week.
ERIN
(stunned)
Next week?
MRS. MORALES
I know. But it's good for me. Now I can
help my daughter take care of my
grandkids. And it's good for you, too.
Now you have money, you can find a good
baby-sitter, huh? Not the old lady next
door.
ERIN
Ugh.
Hand held camera follows Erin as she puts down her bag and
looks through cabinets to see what she can make for dinner,
all the while holding Beth who coughs on and off.
ERIN
Oh sweetie..that doesn't sound so good,
huh?...my baby...let me just start
dinner....
Erin finds nothing but boxes of macaroni and cheese and some
canned peaches and vegetables. She pulls out a box of
macaroni and cheese and a can of peas. She bends down and
grabs a pot, placing it under the faucet. She grabs another
pot and places it on the stove. She searches for a can
opener
to open the peas. She moves back to the sink, shuts the
faucet and sees:
ERIN (CONT'D)
Ugh! Goddamn it!
She bangs the pot onto the bug spilling the water and
upsetting Beth.
ERIN (CONT'D)
It's all right honey. Mommy's sorry. It's
all right.
Camera follows her out the kitchen, into the main room where
she heads for a window, opens it and shouts to Matthew and
Kate in the yard:
ERIN (CONT'D)
Matthew! Katie! Dry off. Put your shoes
on - we're going out to eat.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Don't go getting sick on me, baby. Okay?
ERIN
Hi, remember me? I was in yesterday.
Bought a whole mess of stuff. Round
about five?
CHECK-OUT LADY
Honey, it's a zoo here at five. I'm
lucky if I even see a face, much less
remember it.
ERIN
Oh, shoot, yeah, I guess that'd be tough.
Well, listen, I meant to buy my baby here
some medicine, and by the time I got
home, I realized I'd bought this adult
stuff by mistake. And now, wouldn't you
know, I can't find the receipt. I was
wondering -- could I maybe exchange it
anyway...
WAITRESS
Everybody ready?
KATIE
(proudly)
My mommy reads backwards.
ERIN
One of my many talents. Go ahead kids.
MATTHEW
Cheeseburger deluxe and a coke.
KATIE
(whispers across
table)
Mommy can I get the cheeseburger deluxe
with no cheese and no bread.
ERIN
(to Waitress)
You get that?
(Waitress nods
and smiles)
This one here'll have just a cup of that
chicken broth and some crackers.
WAITRESS
And for you?
ERIN
Cup of coffee.
MATTHEW
You're not eating mom?
ERIN
No, honey - my lawyer took me out to a
big fancy lunch to celebrate and I'm
stuffed!
(to Beth)
You feeling better baby.
(feels her head
with her cheek)
Cool as a cucumber.
Beat.
A waterbug crawls across the table. Erin stares at it.
Calmly, comically, she reaches off camera and grabs a can of
bug spray. She aims and sprays the bug with a consistent,
focused force until the damn thing slides off the table in a
river of bug repellent.
ED
Damn it!
(calling out)
Brenda!
BRENDA
Yeah?
ED
What the hell is this doing here?
BRENDA
It's those files you asked for.
ED
I didn't mean for you to leave them in
the middle of the floor. Jesus. Look at
me.
ED (CONT'D)
What's she doing here?
BRENDA
Who?
DONALD
She works here.
ED
Erin! How's it going?
ERIN
You never called me back. I left
messages.
ED
You did? Wow, sorry about that.
(beat)
Listen, Donald seems to think that you
said --
ERIN
There's two things that aggravate me, Mr.
Masry. Being ignored, and being lied to.
You did both.
ED
I never lied, Erin.
ERIN
You said things would be fine, and
they're not. I trusted you.
ED
I'm sorry about that. Really. But --
ERIN
I don't need pity. I need a paycheck. And
I've looked, but when you've spent
the last six years raising babies, it's
real hard to convince someone to give you
a job that pays worth a damn.
(referring to
Brenda's
staring)
You getting every word of this down,
honey, or am I talking too fast for you!?
ED
I'd love to help, Erin, but I'm sorry, I
have a full staff right now, so --
ERIN
Bullshit. If you had a full staff, this
office would return a client's damn phone
calls.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Now, I'm smart, I'm hard-working, and
I'll do anything, and I'm not leaving
here without a job.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Don't make me beg. If it doesn't work
out, fire me... But don't make me beg.
ED
No benefits.
ANNA
...what we do in here is keep track of
all the case files. That way, at any
time, we can find out a case's status --
where it is in the office, stuff like
that. We file 'em all here,
alphabetically --
ERIN
Simple enough.
JANE
Just last week, he told my sister we
weren't hiring.
BRENDA
What's your sister look like?
ERIN
Mr. Masry?
ED
Yeah?
ERIN
I was wondering -- could you tell me who
I'd talk to about maybe getting an
advance on my paycheck? Just -- for the
weekend.
ED
Jane's the office manager. She handles
payroll and petty cash. But she leaves
early on Fridays.
ERIN
Oh. Okay. That's okay.
ED
Oh, for Christ's sake...
He takes out his wallet, looks in.
ED (CONT'D)
All I have is hundreds.
ERIN
I don't wanna take your money, Mr. Masry.
ED
Where do think your paycheck comes from?
Erin and her kids are putting away bags of groceries. Beth
watches from a baby seat. The kids are trying to tell her a
story. They fight over details. Erin loves listening.
Erin comes out of the bedroom and softly closes the door.
But just as the handle clicks into place, the house is
filled
with the DEAFENING ROAR of a MOTORCYCLE, REVVING and
REVVING.
It sounds as if it's gonna drive through the wall.
Erin steps out onto her front stoop and looks over at what
used to be Mrs. Morales's house. A few MOTORCYCLES are
parked on the lawn; A FEW BIKERS are drinking beer on the
stoop; and one asshole is on his bike, REVVING HIS ENGINE.
ERIN
Hey!
ERIN
HEY!
GEORGE
Well, hello to you, darlin'.
ERIN
What the hell do you think you're doing,
making all that goddamn noise?
GEORGE
Just introducing myself to the neighbors.
ERIN
Well, I'm the neighbors. There, now
we're introduced, so you can shut the
fuck up.
The guys on the porch chuckle. Erin turns and starts back
to
her house. George hops off his bike and follows her.
GEORGE
Ooh, now, see, if I'da known there was a
beautiful woman next door, I'da done this
different. Let's start over. My name's
George. What's yours?
ERIN
Just think of me as the person next door
who likes it quiet.
GEORGE
Now, don't be like that. Tell you what.
How about if I take you out on a date to
apologize for my rudeness?
Erin shakes her head in disbelief and keeps walking.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
Come on. Gimme your number, I'll call
you up proper and ask you out and
everything.
ERIN
You want my number?
GEORGE
I do.
ERIN
Which number do you want, George?
GEORGE
You got more than one?
ERIN
Shit, yeah. I got numbers coming out of
my ears. Like, for instance, ten.
GEORGE
Ten?
ERIN
Sure. That's one of my numbers. It's
how many months old my little girl is.
GEORGE
You got a little girl?
ERIN
Yeah. Sexy, huh? And here's another:
five. That's how old my other daughter
is. Seven is my son's age. Two is how
many times I been married and divorced.
You getting all this? 16 is the
number of dollars in my bank account.
454-3943 is my phone number. And with
all the numbers I gave you, I'm guessing
zero is the number of times you're gonna
call it.
GEORGE
How the hell do you know your bank
balance right off the top of your head
like that? See, that impresses me.
Morning. Erin walks in, wearing her usual garb. She passes
the coffee area, where Jane, Brenda, and Anna are milling.
Brenda sees her, gives Anna a nudge. They both check out
her
short hem. Anna nudges Jane, who looks as well. Erin
glances over just in time to see all three of them staring
at
her judgementally. She stops in her tracks and stares back.
ERIN
Y'all got something you wanna discuss?
ED
Damn it!
(calling out)
Brenda!
(no answer)
BRENDA!
ERIN
How long's she been crying like
that?...Well, she's got that tooth coming
in --
ERIN (CONT'D)
Give her a cold washcloth to suck on --
(sees Ed)
I gotta go -- there's a clean one in that
bag -- I'll check back in a bit.
(hangs up)
Sorry. My kid --
ED
Where's Anna?
ERIN
Out to lunch with the girls.
ED
Oh. Huh.
(beat)
Well, look, I have to open a file. Real
estate thing. Pro-bono.
He plunks the box of papers & files on her desk. She stares
at it, with no idea of how to go about that.
ERIN
Oh. Okay.
ED
You do know how to do that, don't you?
ERIN
Yeah. I got it. No problem.
ED
Good.
ED
You're a girl.
ERIN
Excuse me?
ED
How come you're not at lunch with the
girls? You're a girl.
ERIN
I guess I'm not the right kind.
ED
Look, you may want to - I mean, now that
you're working here - you may want to
rethink your..wardrobe a little.
ERIN
Why is that?
ED
Well...I think maybe..some of the girls
are a little uncomfortable because of
what you wear.
ERIN
Is that so? Well, it just so happens, I
think I look nice. And as long as I have
one ass instead of two, like most of the
"girls" you have working here, I'm gonna
wear what I like if that's alright with
you?
ERIN (CONT'D)
You may want to re-think those ties you
wear..
ERIN
Anna? With this real-estate stuff --
could you remind me, cause I'm a little
confused about how exactly we do that.
Why are there medical records and blood
samples in real estate files?
ANNA
(exasperated)
Erin, you've been here long enough. If
you don't know how to do your job by now,
I am not about to do it for you.
ERIN
Matthew! Katie!
ERIN
What the hell happened?
MATTHEW/KATIE
Hi mom..
GEORGE
Hey. You hungry?
ERIN
What are they doing here? I went to pick
them up-
GEORGE
She came by about an hour ago. Said
something came up and she had to drop the
kids off.
ERIN
Something came up! Why didn't she call me
at work?
GEORGE
(Erin is
fearsome)
I don't know. She..I..she..I don't know.
ERIN
THAT FUCKING BITCH!
MATTHEW
MOM!
ERIN
Sorry!! I can't believe she just dumps my
kids off when nobody's home!!
GEORGE
I was home.
(Erin realizes
this)
They're fine.
The kids are being fed a full meal with clean plates and
napkins and glasses of milk. Beth acts like she's known
George all her life.
KATIE
What's that stand for?
GEORGE
That's for Harley Davidson. The best
damn motorcycle ever made.
ERIN
And if I catch either of you anywhere
near one, I'll knock you silly. Go on to
bed, now -- I'll come tuck you in, in a
minute.
GEORGE
'Night.
GEORGE
Great kids.
ERIN
Yeah, well..I'm sure I'll fuck them up
eventually.
GEORGE
Why?
ERIN
I'm never here. I'm obviously not a good
judge of character or I would have never
left them with that idiot who cost a
fortune and smelled like chicken fat.
After I find her and kill her, I don't
know what I'm going to do.
GEORGE
If you need help with them, I could do
that.
ERIN
I'm not gonna leave my kids with you.
GEORGE
Why not?
ERIN
'Cause I don't even know you.
GEORGE
What do you want to know? Ask me.
ERIN
Look, thanks for today but-
GEORGE
You're welcome.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
What's the matter, you got so many
friends in this world, you can't use one
more? I'm serious. If you need someone to
keep an eye on them -- after school or
something -- I don't have a job now, so
I'm around in the afternoons.
ERIN
Oh, that's a great recommendation. You're
unemployed?
GEORGE
By choice. I work when I need to.
ERIN
Yeah? And what do you do the rest of the
time, live off your trust fund?
GEORGE
I do construction, which pays real good.
And I make it last by living cheap.
ERIN
(with a little
laugh)
I hope that's not supposed to impress me.
GEORGE
Are you this hard on everyone who tries
to help you?
ERIN
It's been a while. I'm out of practice.
GEORGE
Then lemme remind you, the polite thing
is to say, thank you, it's a real nice
offer, I don't mind taking you up on it.
ERIN
Why in the hell would you want to watch
my kids?
GEORGE
Cause I like kids. I like hanging out
with them.
ERIN
Right.
GEORGE
I do. I like how they keep it all
simple, you know? They don't get all
complicated, like grown-ups do. A
bicycle and an ice cream cone -- boom,
done, they're happy.
ERIN
You're around every afternoon?
GEORGE
Yup. Usually working on my bike.
She's tempted.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
No big deal. If it doesn't work out, you
can send 'em back to the chicken lady.
ERIN
This isn't gonna get you laid, you know.
George laughs.
Still reading, Erin gets Beth out of her crib. Beth quiets.
Erin lies down on the mattress and rests Beth on her chest.
She sets down the file she was reading and picks up another.
Toward the end of the letter there are two columns. One is
headed: "IN RANGE". The other: "OUT OF RANGE". Under that
head appear the following: "lymphocytes, T-lymphocytes,
natural killer cells, T Helpers, T8 suppressor cells"...
ED
Yeah.
ERIN
Hi. Sorry. Would you mind if I
investigated this a little further?
ED
Investigated what?
ERIN
This real estate thing with the Irvings.
The pro bono case...
ED
(overlap)
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah..
ERIN
(overlap)
See, yeah..I just want to make sure I'm
understanding what I'm reading. So you do
mind?
ED
No, go ahead.
ERIN
Great. Thanks.
The Hyundai pulls into the driveway and stops. Erin gets
out. As she heads up to the door, her spike heels sink into
the dirt. She rings the bell. It has a melody chime.
ERIN
Hi. Donna Irving?
DONNA
Yes?
ERIN
I'm Erin Brockovich, from Masry &
Vititoe?
DONNA
(a little
surprised)
You're a lawyer?
ERIN
Hell, no. I hate lawyers. I just work
for them. You got a minute?
ERIN
This is a real nice place you got here.
DONNA (O.S.)
Well it oughta be, with all the work I
put into it.
She comes out from the kitchen with a tray of iced tea.
DONNA (CONT'D)
I added air conditioning, put in the
pool, made all those pillows by hand...
ERIN
Yeah? I should learn to do stuff like
that. They make the place feel real
homey.
DONNA
Thank you. I think so too. That's why
I'm being such a stickler on this house
price thing. I don't mean to be a pain
in PG&E's backside, especially after all
they've done for Hinkley, but I look
around here and I think, if they want
this place, they're gonna have to pay for
it. And I don't just mean pay for the
house; I'd like them to pay me for the
trouble of starting over.
ERIN
So you didn't have the house up for sale -
they just came to you and wanted buy it?
DONNA
Yeah. I don't want move. Uproot the kids.
And besides the moving, there's
decorating a new place, and if the
windows aren't the same size, you know --
you're making all new curtains. Honest
to God, I don't know if I have the
energy. You know, I've been sick. Me
and Pete both have.
ERIN
Yeah, I'm real glad you brought that up.
I was going through your file here, and I
ran into these medical records. They
kinda surprised me --
ERIN
Yeah, I'm real sorry to hear that.
DONNA
Thank you. It's in remission now, thank
the Lord, but you never know. And then
while that's going on, I end up having to
have a hysterectomy. Plus a whole mess
of lumps removed from my breasts. All
benign so far, but still, no matter how
positive you stay, an operation can still
take it out of you.
(Erin nods)
So the whole idea of selling the house --
if they aren't gonna pay us properly, I
just don't see the point.
ERIN
Yeah, I can see that.
(beat)
I guess the only thing that confused me
is -- not that your medical problems
aren't important, but -- how come the
files about them are in with all the real
estate stuff?
DONNA
There's so much correspondence, I just
keep it all in one place.
ERIN
Right, but -- I'm sorry, I don't see why
you were corresponding with PG&E about it
in the first place.
DONNA
Well, they paid for the doctor's visit.
ERIN
They did?
DONNA
You bet. Paid for a check-up for the
whole family. And not like with
insurance where you pay, then wait a year
to be reimbursed, either. They just took
care of it. Just like that. We never
even saw a bill.
ERIN
Wow. Why would they do that?
DONNA
'Cause of the chromium.
ERIN
The what?
DONNA
The chromium. Well, that's what kicked
this whole thing off.
As Erin leaves Hinkley, she stops the car and takes a look
at
the power plant she passed so obliviously on her way into
town.
ERIN
Doctor Frankel?
FRANKEL
Yes?
ERIN
Hi, I'm Erin Brockovich. I was just over
in the library there, asking a mess of
questions about -- I guess they call it
toxicology? -- and the fella there told
me to find you, 'cause you know all about
it.
FRANKEL
(suspicious)
Is this a joke? Did Baxter put you up to
this?
ERIN
Who's Baxter?
FRANKEL
He did, didn't he? Baxter!
BAXTER
Yeah?
FRANKEL
Oh. Oh.
ERIN
No one put me up to anything. I was just
hoping I could ask you a couple
questions.
FRANKEL
(mortified)
Of course! Oh, Gosh, of course --
FRANKEL
What kind of chromium is it?
ERIN
There's more than one kind?
FRANKEL
Yes. There's straight-up chromium --
does all kinds of good things for the
body. There's chrom 3, which is fairly
benign, and then there's chrom 6,
hexavalent chromium, which, depending on
the amounts, can be very harmful.
ERIN
Harmful, like -- how? What would you
get?
FRANKEL
With repeated exposure to toxic levels --
God, anything, really -- from chronic
headaches and nosebleeds to respiratory
disease, liver failure, heart failure,
reproductive failure, bone or organ
deterioration -- plus, of course, any type
of cancer.
ERIN
So that stuff -- it kills people.
FRANKEL
Oh, yeah. Definitely. Highly toxic,
highly carcinogenic. Bad, bad stuff.
ERIN
What's it used for?
FRANKEL
A rust inhibitor. See, the utility plants
run these piston engines to compress the
gas, the engines get hot, you gotta run
water through them - chromium's in the
water to prevent corrosion...
ERIN
Well, how do I find out what kind of
chromium they use in Hinkley?
FRANKEL
Have you been to their water board?
ERIN
Hunh-uh. What's that?
FRANKEL
Every county has one. They keep records
of anything water-related within their
jurisdiction. You should be able to find
something there.
ERIN
County water board. All righty, thanks.
FRANKEL
Good luck.
(beat)
Oh -- I wouldn't advertise what you're
looking for if I were you...incriminating
records have a way of disappearing when
people smell trouble.
ERIN
Whew! Goddamn, that's a heavy door.
Ross looks up. It's like the girl from the ad walked right
off the page. He jumps up, to help her with the door.
ROSS
Oh, hey -- lemme give you a hand there.
ERIN
Thank you very much. Aren't you a
gentleman? Mr....
ROSS
Ross.
ERIN
Ross. Real pleased to meet you. I'm
Erin.
ROSS
Erin. Cool. What can I do for you,
Erin?
ERIN
Well, believe it or not, I am on the
prowl for some water records.
ROSS
(with a laugh)
You come to the right place.
ERIN
(laughing along)
I guess I did.
ROSS
You just tell me what you want to look at
and I'll be glad to dig 'em out for you.
ERIN
I wish I knew. It's for my boss. He's
fighting his water bill, and he wants me
to find all manner of bills from all
kinds of places. The easiest thing would
probably be if I just squeezed back there
with you and poked around myself. Would
that be okay?
ROSS
Heck, yeah. Come on back. Just gonna
need you to sign in here --
He hands her a pen. He reads over her shoulder as she signs
her name -- Erin Pattee Brockovich.
ROSS (CONT'D)
Pattee? That your middle name?
ERIN
Nope. Maiden.
ROSS
(disappointed)
You're married.
ERIN
Not anymore.
She smiles and winks at him, then goes around the counter
with him and looks at the stacks and stacks of files.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Well. Here goes nothing.
IN THE FILE
MATT
Our mom gives us sandwiches on Fridays.
GEORGE
That's a sandwich.
KATIE
No, it's not!
GEORGE
Sure it is. Here, I'll show you.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
Most people think a sandwich's gotta have
bread on the outside. Not true. Chicken
is a perfectly good outside for a
sandwich.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
See?
They eat quietly - not watching the TV. George gets the
feeling they're not into the game. He grabs the remote and
turns on a Nickelodeon-type show. They perk up, recognizing
it. He likes pleasing them. He looks over to Beth -
ERIN (O.S.)
"...On December 7, 1987, the discharger
notified the regional board and the San
Bernardino County Environmental Health
Services of the discovery of 0.58 ppm of
hex-a-....hex-a-valent chromium in an on-
site ground water monitoring well..."
(beat)
...hexavalent...
Erin swoops in, ready to work, only to find her desk cleared
off. She turns to Anna, who's already hard at work.
ERIN
Where's my stuff?
ANNA
Where've you been?
ERIN
What the fuck did you do with my stuff?
ANNA
Don't use language with me --
But Erin's out the door before Anna can finish her sentence.
ERIN
Someone stole my stuff.
JANE
Nice to see you, Erin. We've missed you.
ERIN
I had photos of my kids, plus a mug --
Jane reaches under her desk for a box, looks through it.
JANE
-- toothbrush, toothpaste, and a pair of
hose. Here.
ERIN
What's going on?
JANE
There may be jobs where you can disappear
for days at a time, but this isn't one of
them. Here, if you don't do the work,
you don't get to stay.
ERIN
I've been working. Shit, that's all I've
been doing. Ask Mr. Masry. He knows.
Ed's at his desk, dialing the phone when Erin barrels in.
ERIN
You said to fire me?
ED
Erin, you've been gone for a week.
ERIN
I left a message. I've been dealing with
that real estate thing. I was gonna
write up a whole damn report and --
ED
That's not how we work here. You don't
just leave a message and take off.
ERIN
What am I supposed to do, check in every
two seconds?
JANE
Yes. It's called accountability.
ERIN
I am not talking to you, bitch.
JANE
Excuse me?
ED
Okay, enough --
(beat)
Now, look Erin -- this incident aside, I
don't think this is the right place for
you. So what I'm gonna do is make a few
calls on your behalf. Find you something
else, okay?
ERIN
Don't bother.
ED
Come on, I'm trying to help here.
ERIN
Bullshit. You're trying to feel less
guilty about firing someone with three
kids to feed. Fuck if I'll help you do
that.
ERIN
I don't suppose any one of you cunts
could open the door for me.
Erin enters, puts down the box and stares at the mail.
Bills, bills, and more bills. As she throws them on the
table, she sees George coming out of the kitchen.
ERIN
What are you doing here?
GEORGE
Fixing a leak under your sink.
She heads into the kitchen, weary and irritated.
ERIN
I didn't ask you to do that. Damn it,
George, I don't ask you to do things like
that.
Erin enters, sees all the cleaning stuff from under the sink
is spread around the kitchen floor. A tool box lies open.
ERIN
Great.
GEORGE
I'm gonna clean it up.
Erin gets down on her knees and starts putting things away.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
Relax, Erin, I'll do it -- I'm not --
ERIN
Ugh -- Jesus --
GEORGE
Yeah -- you had a whole family of those
things hanging out back there.
She takes off her shoe and smacks at the bug, missing it.
ERIN
Damn it --
The bug skitters away from her, along the floorboard. Erin
chases it, smacking at it repeatedly, missing it every time.
GEORGE
Don't worry about it, I'll get it later.
The bug crawls up onto the table, zipping behind the salt,
the paper, the napkin holder. Erin keeps after it, BANGING
the table harder and harder with each SMACK of her shoe.
GEORGE
Hey, whoa -- relax --
The salt and pepper skid off the table. The napkins fly
from
their holder. Just as Erin's about to nail the bug, it
slips
into a crack in the wall and disappears. Erin hurls her
shoe
at the crack. It SMASHES into the wall.
ERIN
GOD DAMN IT!
ERIN
(almost a whisper)
...God damn it.
ERIN (CONT'D)
What kind of person lives like this?
Huh? What kind of person lets her kids
run around in a house crawling with bugs
the size of housecats?
GEORGE
It's a simple thing. Everybody gets
them. All we gotta do is call an
exterminator.
ERIN
I can't call an exterminator. I can't
afford one. God, I can't even afford my
phone.
(beat)
I got fired.
GEORGE
What? But you been working so hard --
ERIN
Doesn't matter. Doesn't make one fucking
bit of difference.
Erin sits on the bed, drying her eyes. George enters. Erin
looks up at herself in the mirror above her bureau.
ERIN
I don't know what happened to me...
ERIN (CONT'D)
I mean I was Miss Wichita, for Christ
sakes. Did I tell you that? Did ya
know you were living next door to a real
live beauty queen.
(wipes her nose)
I still got the tiara. I thought it
meant I was gonna do something important
with my life, that I was gonna be
someone.
GEORGE
You are someone.
ERIN
No I'm not. Look at me.
GEORGE
You're someone to me.
ERIN
Are you going to be something else I have
to survive? Cause I'll tell you the
truth, I'm not up to it.
Erin and George are in bed, naked, curled around each other.
As Erin recites her beauty queen speech, they are both
laughing at the naive, impossible goals of her youth.
ERIN
"....and I will devote my entire reign as
Miss Wichita to bringing an end to world
hunger...and to the creation of a
peaceful earth for every man, woman and
child..."
GEORGE
How long were you going to be Miss Wichita?
ERIN
One year!
(George laughs)
Of course by the time I got through
opening new supermarkets. I had just a
few weeks left for hunger and world
peace, so..Ha, ha, ha...damn..I don't
know what the hell I was thinking.
GEORGE
I wanted to run my own antique shop.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
(laughing)
Oh that's nice..that's very nice!
ERIN
I'm sorry...I'm sorry...
GEORGE
My parents rented antiques on the side.
I'm not just some grease monkey, you
know.
ERIN
Oh, I know. You're one of those Zen gods
of motorcycle maintenance, aren't you?
GEORGE
(smiles)
Maybe. Maybe there's a reason I found
that place next door. A reason I revved
my bike that night and you came out
tearing my head off.
ERIN
Yeah, we just did the reason.
GEORGE
Don't do that to yourself. If that's all
I wanted, I don't need to go next door to
a woman with three kids...
GEORGE (CONT'D)
(laughs)
All I'm saying is, I can't believe
whatever kind of God there is, put you
here - looking the way you look, with the
brains and balls you got - just to
trip you up and watch you fall. Can't be.
ERIN
Don't be too nice to me, okay? It makes
me nervous.
ED
Brenda!
(no answer)
BRENDA!
ERIN
Come on, baby. Maybe that's Ed McMahon.
Erin carries Beth over to the front door, spies through the
peephole, and sees Ed standing there. She opens the door.
ERIN
Wrong Ed.
(Ed looks
confused)
What are you doing here?
ED
I got an interesting call this afternoon.
It was from a Doctor Frankel from UCLA.
ERIN
Oh, yeah?
ED
He wanted you to know the legal limit for
hexavalent chromium, is .05 parts per
million. And that at the rate you
mentioned, .58, it could be responsible
for the cancers in that family you asked
about. The Irvings.
ERIN
Well, that was nice of him. Isn't it
funny how some people go out of their way
to help people and others just fire 'em.
ED
Look, I'm sorry. You were gone. I just
assumed you were off having fun.
ERIN
Now, why in the hell would you assume
that?
ED
I don't know. Maybe 'cause you look like
someone who has a lot of fun.
ERIN
OH! So by that standard I should assume
you never get laid.
ED
I'm married.
(Erin suppresses
a smile)
So what's the story on this thing? This
cancer stuff?
ERIN
You wanna know, you gotta hire me back.
I got a lot of bills to pay.
ED
Fine.
ERIN
..so Donna had just put in these new
cabinets - real nice, stained the wood
and all - when she gets this call from
somebody at PG&E saying that a freeway's
gonna be built and they want to buy her
house so they can make an off ramp for
the plant...Meanwhile, the husband's sick
with Hodgkins and she's in and out of the
hospital with tumors - believing one
thing has anything to do with the other.
ED
Because PG&E told her about the chromium.
ERIN
Get this - they held a seminar. They
invited about two hundred residents from
the area. They had it at the plant in
this warehouse. They set up legal booths
to tell them what their legal rights
were. They had medical booths to tell
them what their medical rights were....
ERIN (CONT'D)
...Telling them all about Chromium 3 and
how it was good for you, when all the
time they were using Chromium 6.
ED
(impressed)
You got all this from her?
ERIN
(beat. shrugs)
She made coffee. Cupcakes. She's real
nice.
Beat.
ED
That document you found at the Water
Board, the one that says it was the bad
chromium -- you didn't happen to make a
copy did you?
ERIN
'Course I did.
ED
Lemme see it, will you?
ERIN
I want a raise. And benefits. Including
dental.
ED
Look, Erin, this is not the way I do
business.
ERIN
What way is that?
ED
Extortion.
ED
Okay. A five percent raise, and --
ERIN
Ten.
(off his look)
There's a lot other places I could work. I
could even take everything I know to
another law firm.
ED
A ten percent raise and benefits. But
that's it. I'm drawing the line.
She goes to her box of stuff from the office and digs out
the
document for him. He scans it.
ED
This is the only thing you found?
ERIN
So far. But that place is a pig sty. I
wouldn't be surprised if there's more.
ED
I know how those places are run. They're
a mess. What makes you think you can just
walk in there and find what we need?
ERIN
They're called boobs, Ed.
ED
I can't believe you just said that...
ERIN
Stay out of the road. I'll be right
back.
Below the surface, the dirt turns from brown to green. Erin
notes this, then looks back at her kids playing in the dirt.
Worry comes over her face. She heads back to them.
The kids are waiting at the car. Erin comes out of the
store
with a bottle of water and uses it to rinse off their hands.
MATTHEW (O.S.)
I'm hungry.
ERIN
We'll go eat in a minute. Settle down.
ROSS
(real friendly)
So, how we doin'?
ERIN
We're doing great?
ROSS
(off the cuff)
Good..Well, you've got quite a lot done
already..so uhh...I'm sorry but uh...we
...we have to have those records back
now. OK?
ERIN
No.
ROSS
What?
ERIN
These papers are a matter of public
record. I'm not leaving til they're
copied.
ED
Fax these to this number, okay?
BRENDA
All of 'em?
ED
All of them.
Donna has made lunch for Erin. The remnants are on the
coffee
table. A copy of those DOCUMENTS are in Donna's hands.
She's
on her couch with Erin, reading them. Outside, Donna's two
daughters are playing in the pool. She reads the last page
and looks up at Erin, bewildered.
DONNA
An on-site monitoring well? That means --
ERIN
It was right up on the PG&E property over
there.
DONNA
And you say this stuff, this hexavalent
chromium -- it's poisonous?
ERIN
Yeah.
DONNA
Well -- then it's gotta be different than
what's in our water, 'cause ours is okay.
The guys from PG&E told me. They sat
right in the kitchen and said it was
fine.
ERIN
I know. But the toxicologist I been
talking to? He gave me a list of
problems that can come from hexavalent
chromium exposure. And everything you
all have is on that list.
DONNA
No. Hunh-uh, see, that's not what the
doctor said. He said one's got
absolutely nothing to do with the other.
ERIN
Right, but -- didn't you say the doctor
was paid by PG&E?
DONNA
ASHLEY! SHANNA!
From the door, Erin watches Donna run to the edge of the
pool
in a frantic response to this news.
DONNA
OUT OF THE POOL! BOTH OF YOU, OUT OF THE
POOL, RIGHT NOW!
SHANNA
How come?
DONNA
'CAUSE I SAID SO, THAT'S WHY, NOW GET
OUT! OUT! NOW!!!
ED
I'm telling you, the minute Brenda sent
the fax -- I'm talking the second she
pressed that send button -- PG&E claims
department is on the phone to me,
scheduling a meeting.
ERIN
So you think we...let me do this, you're
driving me nuts...
ED
It's the material.
ERIN
(looks at label)
Armani?
(Ed shrugs)
You think we scared'em, don't you?
ED
Well, they're taking the time to send
someone. It sure as hell sounds like
they're sitting up and taking notice. Now
do me a favor, and let me handle this.
Lawyers have a way of talking to each
other.
ERIN
(humoring him)
Oh, I know.
Brenda pops her head in, ignores Erin - though clearly takes
notice of her tying Ed's tie.
BRENDA
David Baum from PG&E is at reception.
Erin feels the chill Brenda's sending her way. Erin decides
to tease her by speaking to Ed in a sultry voice:
ERIN
Oh Mr. Masry, we better learn how to
dress faster. People can come in so
suddenly..(giggles)
ED
Is that..
ED (CONT'D) ERIN
..necessary? Brenda's gonna Oh come on. I'm teasing. Who
open her mouth all over the gives a shit...
offi-
JANE
What's she doing here?
BRENDA
He hired her back. With a raise.
JANE
What?? Why?
BRENDA
He's a man...She's a woman.
JANE
What are we - office supplies?
ERIN
What?
Ed and Erin are seated across the table from Baum. To say
this kid lacks authority is a gross understatement. He
doesn't talk; he squeaks.
BAUM
...in the interest of putting this whole
thing to rest, PG&E is willing to offer
the Irvings 250,000 dollars for their
home.
ED
250,000?
BAUM
In terms of land value out in Hinkley,
Mr. Masry, we feel it's more than fair
price.
ED
What about in terms of medical expenses?
250,000 doesn't come close to what this
family's gonna have to spend on doctors.
BAUM
I understand they've had a bad run of
luck, health-wise, and they have my
sympathies. But that's not PG&E's fault.
ED
You're kidding, right?
ED (CONT'D)
Look at these readings for Christ's sake.
PG&E's own technicians documented toxic
levels of hexavalent chromium in those
test wells on numerous occasions.
ED (CONT'D)
Everything the Irvings have had is proven
reaction to exposure to hexavalent
chromium. They've had...
ERIN
-- breast cysts, uterine cancer,
Hodgkin's disease, immune deficiencies,
asthma, chronic nosebleeds.
BAUM
A million things could have caused those
problems. Poor diet, bad genes,
irresponsible lifestyle. Our offer is
final and more than fair.
ED
Wait a minute -- I thought we were
negotiating here.
BAUM
250,000 is all I'm authorized to offer.
ED
I will present your offer to my clients.
I doubt they'll accept it.
BAUM
Mr. Masry, before you go off on some
crusade, you might want to remember who
it is you're dealing with here. PG&E is
a twenty-eight-billion-dollar
corporation.
ED
(smiles, acting
excited/greedy)
Twenty-eight billion dollars! I didn't
know it was THAT much! WOW!
ERIN
At least they made an offer.
ED
(undoing his
tie)
That wasn't an offer. A million would've
been an offer. When they send the god
damn mail clerk down to jerk me off,
waste my time, it's a fuck you.
ERIN
I don't get why they'd do that.
ED
Because they can. You heard that kid --
they have twenty-eight billion dollars at
their disposal. They can afford to waste
all the time in the world!
ERIN
And you can't?
ED
What, you think I'm made of money?!
ERIN
What are you yelling at me for?
ED
Because I'm fucking pissed off!
ERIN
(yells back)
Good!
ED
FUCK YOU!
ED
I really hate you sometimes, ya know
that.
ERIN
You love me.
End of the day. Most everyone has left. Erin is at her new
work space near Ed's office. She's poring over a fat file
of
documents. Rosalind wanders by with her coat on.
ROSALIND
You've been reading for hours.
ERIN
I'm a slow reader.
Erin turns back to her work when her attention is then drawn
to the big glass office doors; on the other side, Rosalind
is
talking to a lost-looking COUPLE IN THEIR MID-30's. These
are MANDY and TOM BROWN. He's in a security guard uniform,
with an envelope under his arm. Rosalind points to Erin.
The Browns enter the office and approach her.
MANDY
Excuse me, are you Erin Brockovich?
ERIN
Yeah. Who are you?
TOM
I'm Tom Brown. This is my wife Mandy.
We used to live across the street from
the Irvings. PG&E bought our house last
year.
TOM
It's called wry neck. It's when they're
born without any muscles in the neck.
ERIN
Wow. How many were born like this?
TOM
Twelve, maybe thirteen.
MANDY
When Donna told us about you, and what
you told her about the chromium, we
figured that might have something to do
with this, too.
ERIN
It sure could, yeah. Thanks a lot.
MANDY
There's something else, too.
ERIN
What?
TOM
Well. Mandy here's had nine
miscarriages.
ERIN
Are you kidding? My God --
MANDY
I know. It's an awful lot.
ERIN
I'm surprised Donna didn't say anything.
TOM
She doesn't know. No one does. It's not
something you want to talk about, you
know?
MANDY
I figured it musta been something I did,
like when I smoked marijuana, maybe. Or
took birth control pills. But then Donna
told me you thought this chromium might
be to blame for her problems, so I
figured...
ERIN
I got to take a bath.
GEORGE
You should go in.
ERIN
They're not asleep?
GEORGE
Katie and Beth are.
Matt and Katie are in bed, with the light off. Erin comes
in, quietly, in clothes from work.
ERIN
Hey.
CLOSE ON MATT. He's awake and pissed. She sits on his bed.
She knows he's mad at her - she speaks softly, caringly;
ERIN
How was school?
MATTHEW
Fine.
ERIN
Did you do your homework?
MATTHEW
Yeah.
ERIN
Any problems?
ERIN (CONT'D)
Look, I know you're upset. But the way
this job is, things come up at the last
minute, real important things, and I
gotta deal with-
MATTHEW
Fine.
ERIN
Please don't be mad at me. I'm..I'm doing
this for us...I know it's hard for you to
understand but..I mean, don't you want
mommy to be good at her job?
(no answer)
And it's not like I miss dinner all the
time. We all ate together last night.
MATTHEW
(from under the
covers)
You were reading the whole time.
ERIN
O.K...O.K. I'm sorry. I'll try a whole
lot harder to be around, okay? I
promise.
She lays her hand on his body. Without turning towards her,
his little hand rises out from the covers and touches hers.
ED
Ed Masry.
(his voice
softens)
Hi, baby. Yes, I did. I did, really.
ED (CONT'D)
Of course I do. Of course I do. Okay.
ED (CONT'D)
Bye-bye...bye-bye...no, you. Okay,
together: Bye-bye.
ERIN
Um, you mind pulling over? Just for a
second?
He moves over. She gets in, turns off the Sinatra, and they
pull back out onto the freeway in silence.
PETE (O.S.)
There's something about this whole thing
I don't quite understand, Mr. Masry.
Donna and Pete Irving, and Mandy and Roy Brown are all
seated, sipping iced tea. While they talk, Erin hands them
all information packets on chromium. Ed is standing in
front
of them, a little stiff.
PETE
If PG&E messed with our water, why would
they bother saying anything about it to
us? Why not just keep quiet about it?
ED
To establish a statute of limitations.
See, in a case like this, you only have a
year from the time you first learn about
the problem to file suit. So PG&E
figures, we'll let the cat out of the bag
-- tell the people the water's not
perfect; if we can ride out the year with
no one suing, we'll be in the clear
forever.
PETE
But they're not like that. I mean,
remember Donna, they sent us bottled
water. We didn't ask for it. They just did
it.
ED
But then they stopped.
ED (CONT'D)
As soon as the statute of limitations
ended, they stopped.
DONNA
But it was more than a year ago that they
told us --
ED
It's okay. We're not suing.
ERIN
Not yet.
ED
(annoyed at that
remark)
All we're doing is using this information
to get you a real nice purchase price on
your house, and get you two --
(to the Browns)
-- a comparable retroactive bonus added
to your sale price. This way, and PG&E can
still look good to their shareholders,
'cause they're not involved in an ugly
lawsuit; all they're doing is buying a
little property.
ROY
It doesn't say here how much this whole
thing's gonna cost us.
ED
My fee's forty percent of whatever you
get awarded.
ERIN
Boy, do I know how you feel. First time
I heard that number, I said you got to be
kidding me. Forty goddamn percent?
ED
Erin --
ERIN
I'm the one who's injured, and this joker
who sits at a desk all day is gonna walk
away with almost half my reward?
ED
Erin --
ERIN
Then I asked him how much he makes if I
didn't get anything.
ED
Then I don't get anything either.
ERIN
And I realized, he's taking a chance too.
When they hear this, and realize he's in it with them, they
all reach for their pens and sign. They hand the
agreements
over to Erin, who takes them across the room to Ed. He
stuffs them in his briefcase and closes it up. That's that.
ED
All right, then.
DONNA
I made a bundt cake. I'll put on some
coffee. Who wants coffee and cake?
ED
Thank you, but we have to be getting
back.
ERIN
(whispering)
Have a fucking cup of coffee, Ed.
She gives him a stern look, then turns toward the women.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Donna, let me help you clean all this up.
She picks up a tray of iced tea and cookies and heads to the
kitchen. Donna and Mandy follow, leaving Ed alone with Pete
and Roy. He stands there, awkwardly.
Erin and Donna are putting away the cleaned glasses. Mandy
is scanning the chromium pamphlet Erin gave her.
MANDY
You know that thing it says in here about
rashes?
ERIN
Uh-huh?
MANDY
Well, this old neighbor of mine, Bob
Linwood -- he ran the dairy on Community
-- seemed like someone in his family
always had a rash somewhere or other. I
just figured it was something in the
genes. And you know how it is -- you
don't like to ask about things like
that...
ERIN (O.S.)
Excuse me. Are you Mr. Linwood?
LINWOOD
Yeah?
ERIN
I'm Erin Brockovich. I work at the law
firm that represents your former
neighbors the Browns. They suggested I
give you a call.
ERIN
Boy howdy, did I ever wear the wrong
shoes.
ERIN
...and Mr. Linwood seemed to think that
your husband had been sick as well.
MARY
Yes, Mr. DeSoto has lung cancer. Never
smoked a day in his life, neither.
ERIN
Mrs. DeSoto said she wasn't sure exactly
what it was that you had --
MIKE AMBROSINO
She's not alone on that one.
LAURA
Well, they know what it is -- it's called
fibrous dysplasia --
MIKE
The bones start growing again. Gives her
headaches like you wouldn't believe.
LAURA
-- they just don't know what caused it.
Erin stands at the front door and rings the bell. After a
moment;
ERIN
Hi. My name is Erin Brocko-
PAMELA
I know who you are. Donna called me.
ERIN
Oh... May I come in?
PAMELA
I told Donna we're not interested in
getting involved.
Beat.
ERIN
Can I ask you why?
PAMELA
What's the point?
ERIN
Donna told me you've been sick. Your kids
were sick...
PAMELA
You people don't give a shit, do you?
Anything to get what you want!
ERIN
...then Mike Ambrosino remembered seeing
you folks at the hospital from time to
time too, so I thought I'd just stop by.
(to Annabelle)
You must be Annabelle.
ANNABELLE
Uh-huh.
ERIN
Whew, are you ever a beauty. I mean, you
must drive those boys crazy.
GEORGE
What are you doing, hon?
ERIN
I just wanted to make sure they were all
right.
ERIN
I don't know what I think I'm going to do
for these people. No matter what I do, it
won't be enough.
GEORGE
You're doing everything you can. But if
it's gonna eat you up like this, maybe
you better stop.
ED
Hunh-uh. Absolutely not.
ERIN
That's crazy -- why not?
ED
Because I said no. Look -- the only
reason PG&E's even talking to us is
'cause this is a quiet little real estate
dispute. We add plaintiffs, and suddenly
we're in the middle of a toxic tort --
with a statute problem -- against a
massive utility. No, thank you.
ERIN
Okay, so here's what I'll do. I'll go on
up to Ted and Rita Daniels -- two of the
nicest people you'd ever hope to meet,
who spend every single day watching their
little girl fight like a dog against this
cancer -- I'll tell them we can't help
them cause you don't feel like working
that hard.
ED
(turns on her)
Working hard!!? Why you little...Let me
tell you something - I've worked all my
life. I built a firm and kept it alive
through lawsuits, injunctions, and
evictions. I have survived a quadruple
bypass, cancer, being born with one
kidney and having diabetes...
ED (CONT'D)
...I have personally managed to save a
few million dollars over more than thirty
years of getting some clients ten times
that. Don't tell me I haven't worked hard
enough! Don't tell me I don't have the
right to stop..to take a fucking breath
and enjoy my life.
ED
-- And what the hell do you know about
any of this anyway!? Something like this,
Erin -- it could take forever. They're a
huge corporation. They could bury us in
paperwork for the next fifteen years.
I'm just one guy with a private firm.
ERIN
-- who happens to know they poisoned
people and lied about it.
ERIN
And this shit is bad news. Look, my
dad could build one of these plants
blindfolded. I talked him through the
files. I said how much Chrom 6 in the
groundwater are we talking about over the
years and he said, "Oh, by now, probably
about three football fields long...four
miles deep! Think about it...
ED
(overlap)
Erin-
ERIN
(overlap)
..And not only does this shit attack
every organ of the body, it fucks with
your DNA, too. I mean these people's
genes, and the genes of their kids, and
the genes of their grandkids --
ED
I know how DNA works, Erin --
ERIN
We can get these people. With a little
effort, I really think we can nail their
asses to the wall.
ED
Oh, you do? With all your legal
expertise, you believe that?
ERIN
Don't you ever just know?
ERIN
We'll figure it out. Look, I admit I
don't know shit about shit. But I know
the difference --
ERIN (CONT'D)
-- BETWEEN RIGHT AND WRONG!
ED
Damn it.
He shoves the messages aside and puts his head in his hands.
He sits like that for a moment.
ERIN
Looking good Brenda. Have another bag of
Doritos!
ED
How many families we talking about here?
ERIN
Four more. Eleven people. So far.
ED
You think there's more?
ERIN
Well -- I found one document at the water
board that had a toxic test well reading
from 1967. A hell of a lot of people
have lived on that land since then.
ED
This is a whole different ball game,
Erin. A much bigger deal.
ERIN
Kinda like David and what's-his-name?
ED
Kinda like David and what's-his-name's
whole fucking family.
(heavy sigh)
Okay, here's the deal -- if, and only if,
you find me the evidence to back all this
up -- I'll do it. I'll take it on.
ERIN
You're doing the right thing, Mr. Masry.
ED
Yeah, yeah. Remind me of that when I'm
filing for bankruptcy.
ERIN
'Course, gathering evidence -- now,
that's a big job. A hell of a lot bigger
than just filing. I'm gonna be working a
lot harder now, taking on a lot more
responsibility ...
ED
(overlaps, to
himself)
I don't fucking believe this-
ERIN
(overlapping)
Another raise wouldn't hurt. And with
all the time I'm gonna be spending on the
road, I'll probably be needing my own
cell phone, won't I?
ERIN
You each can pick out four things. But
nothing huge. Look at the price.
Nothing crazy.
GEORGE
You can buy 'em all the toys you want,
but come Monday, when you split again,
they're still gonna be pissed.
ERIN
George, I am just trying to do something
nice for my kids on my one day off.
Could you please not give me a hard time
about it?
GEORGE
One toy per kid is doing something nice.
Four is... something else.
ERIN
Well, hell, I guess that's it, then, huh?
They're scarred for life. They're gonna
start holding up 7-Elevens any day now.
GEORGE
I'm just saying --
ERIN
(with intensity)
I know what you're saying, and I don't
wanna hear it. I am doing the best I
can.
Another day. This time it's RAINING. Erin minces her way
down to the deep end of the pool.
Erin spots a few dead frogs in the water. She picks one up
by the leg, and seals it in a plastic bag as well.
Brenda looks at Erin and sees her hem rising in the back.
BRENDA
For God's sake, Erin, I can see your
panties.
ERIN
Liar. I'm not wearing any.
ERIN
Hello?
ERIN
Yes. Who's this?
MALE VOICE
You should watch your step. A young lady
like yourself with three young children.
ERIN
(overlapping)
Who is this?
MALE VOICE
Do you understand what I'm saying?
ERIN
I'm not gonna quit 'cause of one creepy
phone call, George.
GEORGE
Come on, Erin. A job's supposed to pay
your bills, not put you in danger.
ERIN
I'm not in danger. I mean, the phones
might be tapped -
GEORGE
(overlaps)
What?
ERIN
(overlaps)
...but that's usual. And we have a dead
bolt. It's not a big deal.
GEORGE
Look, don't you think you might be out of
your league here?
ERIN
No, see -- that's exactly what those
arrogant PG&E fucks want me to think --
But you know what? They're wrong.
ERIN
(off-hand)
How would you know?
GEORGE
You mind telling me what that's supposed
to mean?
ERIN
Nothing. I'm sorry.
GEORGE
If you got a problem with me taking care
of your kids instead of getting some job,
just say so.
ERIN
I didn't say that.
GEORGE
'Cause I can get a job. I will. And you
can start leaving the kids with the
chicken fat lady again. Would that make
you happy?
ERIN
Keep your voice down. I said I'm sorry.
GEORGE
I know what they can sleep through, Erin.
I probably know it better than you.
ROSS
I don't know what you're talking about.
ERIN
The fuck you don't. No one calls me
Pattee. That heavy-breathing sicko that
called the other night could've only
found out about me from you.
(beat)
People are dying, Ross. You've got
document after document here, right under
your nose, that says why, and you haven't
said word one about it. I wanna know how
the hell you sleep at night.
GEORGE (O.S.)
Hello?
ERIN
I'm so tired I'm about to drive off the
road. Keep me awake, willya?
GEORGE
What do you want, a joke?
ERIN
No... Just tell me about your day. What
went on back there?
GEORGE
Well, come to think of it, we did have a
big event around here. Beth started
talking.
ERIN
What?
(beat)
Beth? My Beth?
GEORGE
Yeah. We were sitting around at lunch
and she pointed at a ball and said,
"ball."
GEORGE (CONT'D)
I'd never seen that before -- someone's
first word. Pretty intense.
ED
Is that what I think it is?
ERIN
She lived on the plume. You never
know.
ERIN
This was the community pool?
WOMAN 1
Yeah, that PG&E built. The whole time,
we thought it was algae that made it so
green.
LATER...
LATER STILL...
CHARLES
This got your phone number on it?
GEORGE
I'm bored, and so are the kids.
ERIN
Just a few more minutes, then we can go.
(as he heads
off)
Take her, will you?
LATER STILL...
Erin is heading over to George and the kids, ready to leave,
when Donna comes up to her, with A MIDDLE-AGED MAN in tow.
DONNA
Erin, this here's Frank Melendez. He
works over at the compressor station --
Erin stops in her tracks, very interested. But she can see,
out of the corner of her eye, that George and the kids are
getting impatient with her. She excuses herself for a moment
and runs over to them.
ERIN
Look, take the kids home and I'll catch a
ride with Ed.
MATTHEW
No ma!
ERIN
No, no, no..mommy has to stay. Be good.
GEORGE
Come on kids..let's go get some ice-
cream.
MATTHEW
Come on, George.
LATER STILL...
ERIN
I'm sorry. What were you saying?
ED
You wanna talk about --
ERIN
No.
Another beat. Then Erin's cell phone rings. She digs into
her bag, pulling it out as fast as she can. Answers.
ERIN
Yeah?
MIKE
She was about to take a handful of these --
MIKE
It's a morphine thing -- for pain --
Erin opens the door. Very dark, very quiet. Laura is lying
in bed. Erin goes over to her. They speak in whispers.
LAURA
I'm embarrassed.
ERIN
That's okay. I understand.
LAURA
It's just -- the pain. It's only getting
worse. I can't be a good wife. I can't
be a good mother.
ERIN
I'm real sorry, Laura.
Erin sits down on the chair next to the bed. Takes a beat.
LAURA
Know what I always thought I wanted outta
life, Erin? A Jaguar.
ERIN
Jaguar's a darn pretty car.
LAURA
I thought if I could spend that kinda
money on a car, it'd mean everything else
was fine.
(beat)
I don't even know how much they cost.
ERIN
A lot. But you hang in there, maybe
you'll get one.
LAURA
Wouldn't mean the same thing.
ED
Erin...Erin!
ED (CONT'D)
You have a nosebleed.
ERIN
Shit. You have a tissue.
ERIN
They used the hex chrom here, in these
cooling tanks, as an anti-corrosive.
Then they dumped the excess water here,
in these six ponds.
ED
I don't remember seeing any ponds up
there.
ERIN
They covered 'em over. And not too
carefully either, 'cause you dig one inch
under the surface, and the dirt is green
as a fucking shamrock.
ED
And that's what caused the contamination?
ERIN
It didn't help, but no. The real
problem's on the bottom.
ERIN
See, according to this, they were
supposed to line the ponds so this shit
couldn't seep into the ground. But guess
what --
ED
They skipped that step.
ERIN
So for fourteen years, this stuff flowed
into the groundwater.
ED
Jesus...And this guy just offered all
this information?
ERIN
Frank cares what was in those ponds
'cause he used to spend half his day
wading around them. That was his job.
ED
No shit.
(then)
You've done great work, Erin.
ED (CONT'D)
Great work. I don't think three
researchers could have done what you've
done.
ERIN
Well..stick with me...I'll have you
swimming in Armani.
Ed smiles but not enough. Erin notices.
ERIN (CONT'D)
What's the matter?
ED
I don't know if we can pull this off.
Erin knows how difficult that was for him to say...and she's
touched he felt he could say it to her.
ED (CONT'D)
This is a monster case. I have devoted
all our time and manpower to it and money
going's out and nothing's coming in. I'm
going to have take a second mortgage on
the house.
ERIN
Will that be so bad?
ED
No. If you explain to my wife while I
leave the country.
(beat)
Look, I have to tell you, I've been
making inquiries with other firms. Bigger
firms to share some of the cost. They all
said no. They say we don't have it.
ERIN
Bullshit! We've got those P & G fuckers
by the balls here.
ED
We've got the PG&E fuckers in Hinkley by
the balls. But nobody's getting rich
unless we can pin this on the corporate
PG&E fuckers in San Francisco.
ERIN
What do you mean?
ED
PG&E corporate is claiming they had no
way of knowing what was going on in
Hinkley.
ERIN
Oh, they knew. They had to know.
ED
Show me the document that proves it.
ED (CONT'D)
Then they didn't know. And if they
didn't know, we can't hit 'em for
punitive damages. And with punitive
damages, we're talking about the kind of
money that could actually have an effect
on these people's lives...
ERIN
(frustrated)
Jesus Christ...
ERIN (CONT'D)
So what do we do?
ED
We could smoke 'em out. If they offer a
settlement. If they just throw more paper
at us.
ED (CONT'D)
We file a complaint. We take our four
hundred or so plaintiffs and everything
you dug up and we file a cause of action
and present it to a judge.
ERIN
Then what?
ED
Then PG&E will submit a demur - a list
of reasons attacking each complaint,
claiming there is no cause of action for
a lawsuit. And then it goes before a
judge.
ERIN
So then it's all up to what this one
judge decides?
ED
Basically, yeah.
DONNA
I'd got so used to having 'em come up
benign, I guess I just didn't expect it.
DONNA (CONT'D)
Sure wish I had longer to get used to the
idea.
(beat)
You think if you got no uterus, and no
breasts, you're still technically a
woman?
ERIN
Sure you are. You're just a happier
woman, 'cause you don't have to deal with
maxi-pads and underwire.
DONNA
We're gonna get them, aren't we, Erin?
You gotta promise me we're gonna get
them.
INT. BARSTOW COURTROOM - DAY
JUDGE SIMMONS
All right.
ED
No, your honor.
PG&E LAWYER
No, your honor.
JUDGE SIMMONS
Very well...In the case of the claimants
of Hinkley California vs. Pacific Gas and
Electric, it is the judgement of this
court that each of the 84 demurs
submitted by Pacific Gas and Electric be
dismissed and the cause of action against
Pacific Gas and Electric be upheld...
ERIN
Think we'll hear from them now?
ED
Oh, I believe so..
ERIN
Jesus. They look like the Secret
Service.
ED
Intimidation. Let the games begin.
(then, to
Brenda)
Tell them to wait in the conference room.
The door opens and Ed enters, legal pad under his arm.
Followed by Erin, legal pad under her arm. Followed by Anna
(looking professional in Brenda's suit coat), legal pad
under
her arm. Followed by Donald (in a suit produced from who
knows where), legal pad under his arm. If you didn't know
better, you'd assume it was a team of lawyers as well.
ED
Counselors --
MR. SANCHEZ
Counselors.
Ed and Erin sit down and get to work. Mario and Anna,
clearly told to just follow along, sit down a moment later.
SANCHEZ
...Let's be honest here. Twenty million
dollars is more money than these people
have ever dreamed of.
ERIN
Oh, see, now that pisses me off. First
of all -- since the demur, we now have
more than four hundred plaintiffs...and
(mocking her)
"let's be honest", we all know there's
more out there. Now, they may not be the
most sophisticated people, but they do
know how to divide, and twenty million
dollars isn't shit when it's split
between them.
ERIN
And second of all -- these people don't
dream about being rich. They dream about
being able to watch their kids swim in a
pool without worrying they'll have to
have a hysterectomy at age 20, like Rosa
Diaz -- a client of ours -- or have their
spine deteriorate like Stan Bloom.
Another client of ours.
ERIN (CONT'D)
So before you come back here with another
lame-ass offer, I want you to think real
hard about what your spine is worth, Mr.
Buda -- or what you'd expect someone to
pay you for your uterus, Miss Sanchez --
then you take out your calculator and
multiply that number by a hundred.
Anything less than that is a waste of our
time.
SANCHEZ
I think this meeting is over.
ERIN
Damn right it is.
He sees Erin's car driving down the street, on her way home.
He rises and enters the house.
ERIN
Jesus, George, the kitchen's a hellhole.
What, did you let the kids make dinner
themselves?
ERIN
What's going on? What are you doing?
GEORGE
Thinking.
ERIN
About what?
GEORGE
About this.
ERIN
What's that?
GEORGE
It's a pair of earrings. I saw 'em in
the mall one day, and I thought damn,
those would look good on those beautiful
ears. So I bought 'em. And I said to
myself, next time Erin says something
nice, does something nice, I'll surprise
her with 'em.
(beat)
Know how long ago that was? Six months.
ERIN
I'm sorry. I'm just working so hard --
GEORGE
(stands)
And what I'm thinking is, you oughta
either find a different job or a
different boyfriend. 'Cause there may be
men who don't mind being the maid and
getting nothing in return, but I'm sure
as shit ain't one of 'em.
ERIN
I can't leave my job, George.
GEORGE
Yeah, you can. You could just quit.
People do it all the time.
ERIN
How can you ask me to do that? This job --
For the first time in my life, I got
people respecting me. Up in Hinkley, I
walk into a room and everyone shuts up
just to hear what I got to say. I never
had that. Ever. Don't ask me to give it
up.
GEORGE
And what about what your kids are giving
up?
ERIN
Look, I'm doing a lot better for those
kids than I did living with my
parents. One day they'll understand that
GEORGE
And what about me?
ERIN
What about you? You think either one of
the men who gave me those children asked
what I wanted before they walked away?!
All I've ever done is bend my life around
what men decide they need! Well not now.
I'm sorry. I won't do it.
GEORGE
I'm not them. What more do I have to do
to prove that?
Stay.
He lowers his head, then stands, to leave. He too speaks
gently;
GEORGE
What for? You got a raise. You can afford
day care......You don't need me.
Erin feels caught between two truths - what she feels for
George..and what she feels for her new life.
George walks to her, kisses her on the cheek and holds her
hands...Then exits..
Erin looks in her hands - where George has placed the velvet
jewelry box of earrings...
ERIN
...oh, he was a piece of work...
PAMELA
Him too?
ERIN
I don't know, there's something about
losers with great asses..I don't know-
(Pamela laughs)
I had to have him thrown in jail six
times for no child support. When he had
the kids, he used to tell them to call me
Erin Brockoshit..
PAMELA
(Pamela laughs)
You sure can pick'em. I've been lucky in
that area, at least. Ken is..he's good
man.
ERIN
(smiles, sips
coffee)
Well, that's half the battle, right
there.
PAMELA
Yeah. Yeah, it is...
(beat)
I...I know what you want and I appreciate
your-
ERIN
We can get them, Pamela. We can.
PAMELA
I wish I believed that. But this has been
going on for so long. Maybe in the
beginning, when I was angry. When I first
found out. But then, ya know, ya have
find a way to live everyday, to get up,
to take care of what you have to take
care of so you...you find a way to push
it down, make it go away, ya know. I
don't want to feel it all over again and
then...not have it come out right. I
don't know if I could handle that. Put my
kids through that.
ERIN
You're still angry, Pamela.
(Pamela listens)
And you don't think your kids know that.
They know more than you think, believe
me. See, the thing is... it doesn't
matter if you win lose or draw here. You
were lied to. You're sick, your kids are
sick because of those lies. If for no
other reason, you all have to come
together to stand up in a courtroom and
say that - to be heard - and you will. To
stand up and say, this wasn't right.
There's no way anybody can twist this
into something right. And it can't happen
again.
PAMELA
I'll get some more coffee.
PAMELA (CONT'D)
That was the Torriyo's house. It was
across the street.
ERIN
It burned?
PAMELA
They burned it.
ERIN
Who?
PAMELA
The Fire Department. They said it was a
practise run. They said the Torriyo's had
sold to PG&E and since it vacant they
were told they could burn it.
ERIN
Who had told them that?
PAMELA
They never said.
PAMELA (CONT'D)
I'd bring the kids into the hospital with
towels soaked from their nosebleeds. Ya
know the hospital did? They called county
services because they assumed the kids
were being abused.
The Hyundai pulls into the lot. We hear voices from within
the car, arguing;
MATTHEW ERIN
...why everything has to be ..all I'm saying is, we'll
such a big deal. All I want see. I can't talk about this
to do is play roller hockey. now. I don't care what other
Other moms give permission. moms do-
MATTHEW
(annoyed)
..So when!? When can I get a friggin
answer!?
ERIN
Don't talk to me like that!
MATTHEW
Randy's mom said yes right away!!
ERIN
(snapping)
Well, goddamn it, Matthew -- Randy's mom
doesn't work and Randy's dad didn't leave
her, so figuring out who's gonna drive
who to roller hockey every other week is
a little easier over at Randy's house.
Now get out of the car!
ERIN
Wait here. Watch your sisters.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Matthew..
MATTHEW
(snaps at her)
ALRIGHT! FINE!
ERIN
Where's my paycheck?
JANE
Have you been logging on?
ERIN
What?
JANE
I moved payroll onto the computer. It
only knows to process paychecks for
employees who log on in the morning and
off at night.
ERIN
(seething)
Now how'm I supposed to do that when I'm
not in here most mornings and nights? O
still haven't found a new baby-sitter-
JANE
You're clever. I'm sure you'll think of
something.
ERIN
Ya know..Jane...My grandmother used to
have a saying about people who were
beautiful and people who were ugly. And
it had nothing to do with how they
looked. She used to say "People get the
faces they deserve!"
ED
Erin! I was just talking about you. I
want you to meet our new partner. Kurt
Potter. He'll be handling Hinkley now.
ERIN
What?
POTTER
(to Ed)
Now I know what you meant by a secret
weapon.
(to Erin)
Nice to meet you. Great work.
(to Ed)
See you tomorrow.
ED
What?
ERIN
Our new partner? You fuck! When was I
gonna find out - in the monthly
newsletter?
ED
Hey..just listen. Did I ever tell you
about the airline case I had?
ERIN
Airline case!? What the fuck are you
talking about?
ED
(patient)
A few years back I was trying this
airline case and I got my ass kicked by
this guy - he just smothered me in paper.
Brutal. This guy was the toughest
motherfucker I'd ever been up against.
And it was Kurt Potter. When we got the
PG&E decision from the judge, I called
him and asked him to partner. He didn't
hesitate.
ERIN
Well of course NOW he wouldn't hesitate.
We did all the fucking work. Where was he
before?
ED
Doesn't matter..Erin, listen to me - it
doesn't matter. You want to win this?
(hands her the
check.)
He just gave me that. It covers all our
expenses to date. The whole thing. He's
got more toxic tort experience than
anyone in the state. This is good news.
ERIN
By the way...I got Pamela Duncan.
MESSENGER
Erin Brockovich?
ERIN
Yeah?
MESSENGER
Package from Masry & Vititoe.
A CHECK and a SET OF KEYS fall out. She looks at the check.
It's made out for $5,000. A note attached reads "HIRE A
NANNY. LOOK OUTSIDE. AND CHEER THE FUCK UP!- ED."
ED
(points to a
building)
That's it. The big one. They've got the
top three floors.
ERIN
Holy shit. Who do they represent, God?
ED
It's probably their only pro-bono client.
Look, do me a favor Erin...behave
yourself. All right?
ERIN
Ed Masry to see Kurt Potter.
ERIN
'Scuse me, sir, you got a real nice ass,
you know that?
ERIN (CONT'D)
Oh, I'm sorry. Was that not what you
meant by behaving myself?
ED
Theresa, hey -- this is Erin Brockovich.
POTTER
...PG&E have requested we go to binding
arbitration...
ERIN
What's that?
POTTER
PG&E have proposed that they are liable
from anywhere between fifty million and
four hundred million...Now, to determine
exactly what amount they will give, we
go before a judge...not a jury. They call
it a test trial. You have..how many
plaintiffs now?
ED
634.
POTTER
Well, they won't try that many at once so
we get them in groups of twenty to
thirty, the worst cases - the ones who
are clearly the sickest, most life
threatened - in the first group and so
on..and each gets go before the judge to
determine damages. If we went to trial,
PG&E could stretch this over ten years,
with appeal aft-...
ERIN
So it's not like a real trial?
ED
Yes, it is..It's-
ERIN
But these people are expecting a trial.
That's what we told them. They won't
understand this.
POTTER
I promise you, we'll be very sensitive in
proposing this. We'll make sure they
understand it's the only way to go
forward now. But we have a lot of work to
do before we even broach the subject.
THERESA
You know what? Why don't I take Erin down
the hall, so we can start on this stuff
and I'll fill her in on the rest..
ERIN
Hey -- those are my files --
THERESA
Yeah, we had them couriered over. And
listen, good work. They're a great
start. We're just going to have to spend
a little time filling in the holes in
your research.
ERIN
Excuse me - Theresa, was it? There are
no holes in my research.
THERESA
No offense. There are just some things
we need that you probably didn't know to
ask.
ERIN
Don't talk to me like I'm an idiot, okay?
I may not have a law degree, but I've
spent 18 months on this case, and I know
more about those plaintiffs than you ever
will.
THERESA
Erin. You don't even have phone numbers
for some of them.
ERIN
Whose number do you need?
THERESA
Everyone's. This is a lawsuit. We need
to be able to contact the plaintiffs.
ERIN
I said, whose number do you need?
THERESA
You don't know six hundreds plaintiffs'
numbers by heart.
THERESA
Annabelle Daniels.
ERIN
Annabelle Daniels. 714-454-9346.
ERIN
10 years old, 11 in May. Lived on the
plume since birth. Wanted to be a
synchronized swimmer, so she spent every
minute she could in the PG&E pool. She
had a tumor in her brain stem detected
last November, had an operation on
Thanksgiving, shrunk it with radiation
after that. Her parents are Rita and
Ted. Ted's got Chron's disease, and Rita
has chronic headaches and nausea and
underwent a hysterectomy last fall. Ted
grew up in Hinkley. His brother Robbie
and his wife May and their five kids,
Robbie, Jr., Martha, Ed, Rose, and Peter
lived on the plume too. Their number's
454-9445. You want their diseases?
THERESA
Okay, look -- I think we got off on the
wrong foot here --
ERIN
That's all you got, lady. Two wrong
feet. In fucking ugly shoes.
ERIN
She insulted me!
ED
Bullshit. It was a misunderstanding.
But instead of handling it politely,
instead of treating her with respect --
ERIN
Why the fuck should I respect her?
ED
Look! Just because she's not supporting
three kids with no husband and no
education, doesn't make her an idiot!
Just because she dresses like a lawyer,
doesn't mean she didn't work her ass off
in law school and shit positions to earn
her way.
ERIN
Well excuse me for not going to law
school.
ED
Law school! At this point, I'd settle for
fucking charm school!
On that, he gets in his car, slams the door, and drives off,
leaving her standing alone in the pouring rain.
ERIN
HEY! You're my ride!!
ERIN
I know she isn't real warm, but they say
she's a real good lawyer...
INTERCUT WITH:
TED
She asking the same questions you asked.
We already told you everything. I don't
want her coming to the house again.
She's kinda stuck-up, and she upsets
Annabelle.
ERIN
If you don't like Theresa, you don't have
to work with her. Me and Ed are still
here for you.
TED
I called Ed two days ago, Erin, and he
still hasn't called me back. Now, I hate
to say this, but everyone's pretty upset
about that arbitration thing...
ERIN
(stunned)
WHAT?
TED
I mean, Pamela's written a letter in the
Hinkley news telling everybody to get new
lawyers..that we've been lied to.
Erin is breathless with rage.
BRENDA
Ed Masry's office...Sorry, he can't be
interrupted.
ERIN
Don't be a pain in my ass today Brenda or
I'll put my fucking fist through the
phone! Just put him on.
BRENDA
(with finality)
I said, he can't be interrupted.
Erin hangs up. Then, with a groan, she pulls her weary body
out of bed.
ROSALIND
Hey, Erin, I thought you were taking a
sick day.
ERIN
So did I.
She heads toward Ed's office, but stops when she sees a
meeting in progress in the conference room. Ed is on the
side of the table facing her, flanked by Potter and Theresa.
ERIN (CONT'D)
What's going on in there?
ROSALIND
Meeting about the PG&E thing.
ERIN
PG& -- Are you sure?
ROSALIND
Yup. You look awful. You want some tea?
Erin feels this like a sock in the gut. She stares at the
meeting, stunned.
CORBIN
...I'm not saying it's not a strong case.
Certainly having every demur dismissed is
a good sign. What I am saying is that, if
we could get hold of any PG&E
documentation prior to 1987, officially
acknowledging that they know "something"
might be wrong with the water, I'd feel a
lot better about this statute of limi-
Erin staring at him from the other side of the glass wall,
her face cold with hurt and anger.
ED
Could I -- just take a brief break here
for a moment? I'll be right back.
ERIN
If you tell me to relax, I'm gonna choke
you with that fucking tie...
ED
Erin, it's just a meeting. Look, you said
you weren't feeling great. I thought
you should rest.
ERIN
Bullshit. You'd drag me off my deathbed
if it suited you.
(weakened)
How dare you take this away from me.
ED
No one's taking anything, will you let me-
ERIN
Bullshit. You stuck me in Siberia
dictating to some goddamn steno clerk so
you could finish this thing without me.
ED
Erin, they fucked up!
(Erin shuts-up)
Do I have your attention now? They fucked
up and they admit it.
Beat.
ERIN
The arbitration lette-...
ED
They sent a fucking letter to these
people explaining something they wouldn't
be able to explain in person with
diagrams and a floor show.
ERIN
I know. I spoke to Ted. Pamela wouldn't
even come to the phone.
ED
Pamela's got them all seeing red with
that letter she wrote to the press. She
called us thieves. This is about to all
fall apart Erin.
ERIN
Why?
ED
Because in order to even go to
arbitration - we have to get the
plaintiffs to agree...
ERIN
How many?
ED
Usually you can only manage to get about
70 percent. PG&E are demanding we get
ninety. In other words, everybody.
This is serious now Erin. Do you
understand?
ERIN
And, what Ed, I'm not serious?
ED
You're emotional. You're erratic. You
say any goddamn thing that comes into
your head. You make this personal, and it
isn't --
ERIN
Not personal? That's my work in there.
My sweat, my time... If that's not
personal, I don't know what is.
ED
Now go home. Get well. Because you're no
good to me sick.
(then, admits)
I need you. All right? This case needs
you.
ERIN
Did you tell them that?
ERIN (CONT'D)
Ya know Ed...after busting my ass, if you
think that this
(pulls out cell
phone)
and that car is all I'm looking for, is
all the respect somebody like me needs to
be shown, like a bone you throw somebody
who doesn't know the difference--
(she can't even
finish)
How can people with every degree on every
wall be so fucking stupid.
She puts the cell phone down, then stares through the glass
wall of the conference room at Potter and Theresa, who are
witnessing the scene from inside the room. She doesn't
bother
to admonish them - she's feeling too shitty. She goes home.
ED
Erin...Erin...I'll-..
Erin gets to her car. As she opens the door, the ALARM
SOUNDS. She fumbles with her keychain, trying to turn it
off, but she's too sick and upset to figure it out. With
the
siren still blaring, she kicks at the car in rage.
A wave of dizziness comes over her. She holds her head. Her
breathing grows heavy. She grabs hold of the car for
balance..as she slowly loses consciousness and passes out.
GEORGE
I'm looking for Erin Brockovich.
GEORGE
Meningitis? What the hell is meningitis?
DOCTOR
It's an inflammation of the spinal cord
and part of the brain.
GEORGE
Jesus.
DOCTOR
It's a pretty advanced case. I'd say
she's been walking around with it for a
few weeks now.
GEORGE
How does someone get meningitis?
DOCTOR
Usually, in adults, it's from exposure to
bacteria or a virus or...
Matt and Katie sit on the cheap plastic chairs outside the
room. Katie is holding Beth, who's sleeping.
ERIN
...I swear, if I wasn't feeling so
shitty, I would driven that fucking car
right into their offices.
GEORGE
That would have helped their opinion of
you.
ERIN
Who gives shit about their opinion? They
would have sold out every plaintiff for
the first offer if I wasn't there. They
don't care about them.
GEORGE
Do you?
ERIN
What? Do I care?! What the hell have I
been--
GEORGE
You think acting that way, with these
lawyers - you think that's going help any
of these families? I mean, when you get
so pissed off with Ed or these other
suits - what are you really upset about?
The families? Or what everybody thinks of
you?
ERIN
They said I can leave tomorrow. They
just wanna keep an eye on me another
night.
GEORGE
Fine. The kids can stay at my place till
you go home. I'll drop 'em off tomorrow
afternoon.
ERIN
Thank you.
GEORGE
(giving nothing)
Mm-hm.
ERIN
George....
GEORGE
I'll drop 'em by tomorrow.
And Erin watches George leave the room, then turns to Ed.
ERIN
If you're here to fire me, your timing's
lousy.
ED
I'm not gonna fire you.
(beat)
I wanted to. But then you got sick, and
that woulda made me look like a shit.
(serious)
You have to stop embarrassing me in front
of Potter and everyone else who
aggravates you, Erin.
ERIN
I know. I'm sorry.
(beat)
Do I get to hear what happened anyway?
ED
...Kurt thinks that with nothing linking
it to the corporate offices yet, we'll
probably end up on the lower end of that
fifty-to-400 million dollar offer. It's
still a lot of money.
ERIN
It's not enough. Not for over six hundred
people..What I don't understand is, if we
can't connect the corporate offices to
it, why would PG&E offer even that much?
ED
Because, they know the evidence we do
have. They know they're gonna lose a jury
trial. Maybe they wouldn't lose 400
million bucks, but once you factor in--
ERIN
Wait a minute - Are you saying, you want
to settle for the low end?
ED
(admits)
Kurt suggested it. He doesn't think we're
going to be able to get more than thirty
percent of these people to agree to
arbitration...
ERIN
And of course, Kurt knows "these people"
so well...
ED
(continues)
...Which means the low end is the best
they're going to get, Erin.
ED (CONT'D)
We're going try and get as many of them
together - sort of a town meeting, to
explai-...
ERIN
I'm coming.
ED
Erin, please-
ERIN
I'm coming - and you better tell Kurtie
and St. Theresa to stay the fuck away or
we're going to be defending some of
"these people" for murder.
She only goes as far as the firehouse front door. She steps
in. Ed is waiting by the door, before he goes up to make his
speech. He acknowledges Erin.
ED
How do you feel?
ERIN
Fine. It's hot as hell in here.
ED
That'll make this a lot easier.
ERIN
Nervous?
ED
It's anyone's guess.
ERIN
Be friendly. Cause they don't want to be
here.
ED
Why do you say that?
ERIN
They didn't bring any food.
DONNA
(passing by)
Erin?
ERIN
Donna, hi..how are you?
DONNA
I heard you were in the hospital.
ERIN
I'm fine.
DONNA
This is crazy, huh. What's going to
happen?
ERIN
Let Ed explain it. It's gonna be OK. Is
Pamela coming?
Donna shakes her head NO. Erin and Ed know that's not a good
sign.
ED
...Binding arbitration isn't all that
different from a trial. It's overseen by
a judge. Evidence is presented in much
the same way....
PLAINTIFF
And then a jury decides?
ED
No, sorry, I should have mentioned that.
There's no jury in binding arbitration.
No jury, and no appeal.
BOB LINWOOD
No appeal? So what are our options if we
don't like the result?
ED
Well -- you have none. The judge's
decision is final. But we really don't
anticipate that being a problem.
ED (CONT'D)
...As I said before, it will definitely
be somewhere between 50 and 400 million
dollars...
MANDY BROWN
Which? There's a big difference there.
ED
I wouldn't want to speculate at this
point.
MANDY BROWN
So then, what, that mystery number's
divided up at the whim of some judge --
PLAINTIFF
Yeah, who gets what? My medical bills
started two years before some other
people here.
MANDY BROWN
But my kid's been in and out of the
hospital a lot more than his. It
shouldn't matter when it started.
ED
Wait a minute, that's not-
ED (CONT'D)
...People listen, please..the point we
want to address tonight is getting
everyone to agree that going binding
arbitration is preferable to a trial that
could go on for ten years before you see
any money.
PLAINTIFF
Well, maybe some of us want to go ten
years.
OTHER PLAINTIFFS
(overlaps)
I don't..YEAH!...Speak for
yourself!..This is bullshit!..Let him
talk, for Christ sake..!!
ED
(overlaps)
We have to agree or no one has a
chance....
ED (CONT'D)
(emphatic)
...For those of you about to leave, I'd
like you to keep this date in mind: 1976.
That's the year of the Three Mile Island
disaster, and the people of Love Canal
are still waiting for their money. Think
about where you'll be when the year 2018
rolls around.
ED (CONT'D)
Look. Everyone. is this a big decision?
Absolutely. But I do not believe - and I
wouldn't say this otherwise - I do not
believe this is a sell-out. With over six
hundred clients, the most you can try is
twenty a year, so it's like a roulette
wheel. You have somebody that's real sick
and he's the six-hundredth guy, he's not
gonna make it. And that is exactly what
the PG&E lawyers want - they keep making
their fees, dragging out the case,
waiting for people to drop by the
wayside.
(beat)
This is the best shot at getting everyone
some money now. You and I both know that
some people in this room can't afford to
wait, to take that chance. Are you going
to make them wait?
DISSOLVE TO:
The last car drives away. The clock reads 12:35 PM. Erin and
Ed are counting the agreements signed by those who wish to
continue with the arbitration - talking, counting;
ED
....So how many all together..
ERIN
We got about half of them.
ED
Shit.
ERIN
We're gonna have to go door-to-door Ed.
It's the only way.
ERIN (CONT'D)
You did good, Ed.
ED
We'll see.
MATTHEW (O.S.)
I don't want to stay here. It smells.
ERIN
We got no choice. I'm not gonna make it
home tonight. Now go wash up and climb
into bed.
GEORGE (O.S.)
Hello?
ERIN
Hi. It's me.
(silence)
I've got one more favor to ask you...
It'll be the last one..I promise.
ERIN
I got you your own room.
ERIN (CONT'D)
(awkward beat)
Look, don't take any of 'em on your bike,
okay? Call a cab if you wanna go
somewhere.
GEORGE
I have money....How long's this whole
thing gonna take?
ERIN
I don't know. Few days.
(beat)
Thanks for helping me. I appreciate it.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Seems like all I do lately is apologize
to everybody...
ERIN (CONT'D)
But, I am really sorry, George...I feel
like a shit about how I treated you and
I'm...I'm sorry.
(beat. no
reaction)
I'm also scared to death...Scared I'm
gonna lose my kids. Scared I'm gonna wind
up nowhere...with no one...And I'm in
that hospital bed George, I swear,
thinking -
(nervously
laughs)
'Fuck..it can't get much worse than
this'...And the only person I can think
of to make it better is you...I've never
been with a man who made anything better.
Don't give up on me yet.
George doesn't act like he has listened, but we & Erin know
he has. He gives a look that doesn't give her much.
GEORGE
Have the kids eaten?
Erin nods. Beat. George turns and walks into the motel. Erin
gets into the truck and pulls out.
PAMELA
..and then this...this letter with these
names of people I never heard of..people
with no faces...I tell you, it was just
like all the crap we used to get in the
mail from PG&E - like there was no one
real, no..real person behind any of
this..suddenly telling us something
entirely different from what you said...
ERIN
I know. I'm sorry. I'm sorry for what I
didn't know. For what I didn't even
understand..and I'm sorry you found out
about it like that. It was a shitty way
to explain it to you but...you got to
separate that from what they're
proposing. You're gonna have enough money
to take real care of your kids and
yourself...Isn't that the most important
thing?
Beat.
PAMELA
And who's going to be accountable for
what happened? Who can I point to?
ERIN
(honestly)
No one... They won't even show up at the
arbitration.
This stings Pamela. But she looks at her kids in the yard.
PAMELA
Why are you all doing this?
ERIN
Because it would be easier not to.
Erin, Ed, Mandy, and Tom are seated on the sofas. Mandy
signs an agreement. Hands the pen to Tom, who also signs.
ED
...so she drops the entire bag of Doritos
in my lap and while I'm driving, she's
feeling me up because she has to eat all
the time, this one..constantly....
ERIN
(overlapping)
Oh shut-up! I was not! He's such a liar.
RUTH
Oh Lord!
In the wee hours. While her kids sleep, Erin sits at the
cheap motel room table, going through her forms, organizing,
alphabetizing.
ERIN
What time is it?
GEORGE
Real early. We're just gonna take your
car to get some breakfast.
ERIN
No, I need my car --
GEORGE
We'll just be a minute. Get a little
more sleep.
GEORGE (CONT'D)
C'mon, pal. Leave that alone, we gotta
go.
Erin turns to see Matthew holding one of her release forms.
ERIN
Oh, baby, please don't play with that,
okay? I got 'em all organized. Just put
it back.
MATTHEW
This girl's the same age as me.
ERIN
That's right, sweetheart.
MATTHEW
She's one of the sick people?
ERIN
Yeah. She is.
(beat)
But you know what? That's why I'm
helping her. So she can get some
medicine to make her feel better.
MATTHEW
How come her own mom isn't helping her?
ERIN
'Cause her own mom's real sick, too.
Matthew thinks real hard about this, then heads over to the
door, where George, Beth, and Katie are waiting for him.
Before he leaves, though, he turns back to Erin.
MATTHEW
Maybe we'll bring you back some
breakfast. You want eggs?
She looks at Matthew and her eyes fill with tears. She's so
proud of her son in this moment. As if his understanding is
what she needed all along.
ERIN
Eggs'd be great, baby. Eggs'd be perfect.
The signed stack has grown; the unsigned stack has shrunk.
Erin drops five more agreements into the "signed" box.
CHARLES
Hey. Don't I know you?
Erin winces...
ERIN
(to herself)
Oh no..
(to him)
Uh..no..I..I don't think so-
CHARLES
Sure. Sure..I saw you at that barbecue in
Hinkley. And the firehouse.
ERIN
Oh.
(disinterested)
Were you there?
CHARLES
Sure. Sure..I watched you. I had my eye
on you..ha, ha...
ERIN
Oh....how nice..
(swigs beer)
CHARLES
I saw ya...saw ya talking to
everybody..writing stuff down..ha, ha..I
said to myself..something about her..I
really like that girl...Can I buy you a
drink?
ERIN
I'm actually on my way out..
CHARLES
I feel like I can talk to you too. Like
you're a person I can say anything to..
ERIN
You know, I'm really not.
CHARLES
Listen..
He leans in. Erin leans back. She thinks he's going to make
an indecent proposal...
CHARLES (CONT'D)
Would it be important to you if I told
you that when I worked at the Hinkley
plant, I destroyed records?
ERIN
Uh..I don't know uh...
(doesn't know
his name)
CHARLES
Charles.
ERIN
Charles..Maybe. Would you..would you
excuse me a moment - I just have to go to
the bathroom.
CHARLES
Sure babe.
ERIN
Don't go away..
CUT TO:
ED
Yeah?..What? Kid, slow down..Who?
INTERCUT ERIN..
ERIN
This guy! Charles! He tells me he
destroyed records. He worked at Hinkley..
ERIN (CONT'D)
I thought he was picking me up. I mean
maybe he is. But why would he say that?
ED
Calm down, calm down..Shit..Look, go back
and see if he'll make a declaration.
ERIN
A declaration...
ED
But be careful. Don't care him off.
ERIN
Right...
ED
And if you have to sleep with him, that's
all right too..
ERIN
OK OK..I'll call you back..
ERIN
So..Chuck..can I call you Chuck?
CHARLES
Sure. Sure.
ERIN
Would you like another drink?
CHARLES
I'm good.
ERIN
So what happened here - you were telling
me about records...?
CHARLES
Yeah. Those fuckers...
(sips beer)
I was with that plant for thirty five
years. They made me sick and when I
retired I get a fucking watch..
DISSOLVE TO:
CHARLES
I was working in the compressor, and out
of nowhere the supervisor calls me up to
the office and says, we're gonna give you
a shredder machine, and send you on down
to the warehouse. We want you to get rid
of all the documents stored out there.
ERIN
Did he say why?
CHARLES
Nope. And I didn't ask.
ERIN
Did you get a look at the stuff you
destroyed?
CHARLES
There was a lot of dull stuff -- vacation
schedules, the like.
(beat)
But then there were a few memos about the
holding ponds. The water in them. They
had readings from test wells, stuff like
that.
ERIN
And you were told to destroy those?
CHARLES
That's right.
CHARLES (CONT'D)
Course as it turns out, I'm not a very
good employee.
ERIN
What do you mean?
CHARLES
Well. There were a few documents that I
somehow didn't get around to shredding.
(beat)
That I kept instead.
CHARLES (CONT'D)
At the time, I thought, I got six kids,
some of 'em want to go to college. I
can't afford to lose my job. I told
myself I was being honorable.
(beat)
But there's nothing honorable in what I
did.
(beat)
Maybe that's why they picked me for the
job. Maybe they knew what kind of man I
was.
Pause.
ERIN
Charles. Will make a declaration stating
all the things you've told me?
He looks at her.
Erin and Ed enter, with boxes in their arms and a whole lot
of attitude.
ERIN
Morning!
POTTER
Erin? Ed...what are you --
ERIN
(to Ed)
May I?
ED
Oh yes. Please do.
ERIN
You know what, Mr. Potter? We completely
forgot your birthday this year. And
seeing as how you've been so good to me,
I thought it was a terrible oversight.
So what Ed and I been doing over the last
few days is putting together a present
for you.
She plunks the box down on the table. Potter opens the top
of the box. Looks in.
ERIN (CONT'D)
634. They all signed. Every single
one.
THERESA
Ho - ly - shit.
ERIN
Oh, now don't get all jealous, Theresa.
We got a little something for you, too.
ERIN (CONT'D)
Internal PG&E documents, all about the
contamination. The one I like best says,
and I'm paraphrasing here, but it says
yes, the water's poisonous, but it'd be
better for all involved if this matter
wasn't discussed with the neighbors.
It's to the Hinkley station, from PG&E
Headquarters. Stamped received, March,
1966.
POTTER
Where did -- how did you do this?
ERIN
Well, what with me not having any brains
or legal expertise, and Ed starting to
lose his faith in the system and all..am
I right?...
ED
(overlaps)
Oh yes..completely..No faith...
ERIN
(overlaps)
I just went on up there and performed
sexual favors. 634 blow jobs in five
days. Boy, am I ever tired.
DISSOLVE TO:
One of those days when the bay sparkles like a glitter ball.
Erin's Chevy moves up the PCH. George's at the wheel. Erin
by his side. The kids in the back. Time has passed --
Erin's
hair's a little different.
Erin gets out of her new truck, looks, sees the Irvings in a
little cluster.
ERIN
Find a spot near the shore!
ERIN (CONT'D)
Let me give you a hand.
GEORGE
No I got it. I'll take Beth and set up
while you take care of your business.
ERIN
No...I want you to come with me...
(smiles)
I want you to see what you've helped to
do.
ERIN
Hi..This is George..George this is Donna.
GEORGE
Nice to meet you.
DONNA
Hi! And who's this little precious.
ERIN
This is Beth..Say hi..Hi...How you
you feeling today?
DONNA
It's a good day. I feel good.
ERIN
Well, then -- if you're feeling up to it,
maybe we should talk shop. The judge came
up with a number.
DONNA
A number for the whole group, or for us?
ERIN
Both.
ERIN (CONT'D)
He's making them pay the maximum.
DONNA
Oh, my God.
ERIN
And he's making them give five million of
it to you all.
DONNA
Five million dollars?
ERIN
Five million dollars.
DONNA
I don't even know how much money that is.
ERIN
It's enough -- for whatever you need, for
whatever your girls need, for whatever
your girls' girls need. It'll be enough.
Donna wipes the tears off her face, then watches the light
flickering off her girls playing in the surf.
DONNA
I can put them in a good school.
ERIN
Any school you want.
DONNA
And get someone to help around the house.
ERIN
Yup.
DONNA
Oh my God. Oh my God.
DONNA (CONT'D)
Oh, my God.
ROSALIND
Masry & Vititoe, can I -- shoot!
(she lost them)
Masry & Vititoe, can I -- damn it.
(calling out)
Does anyone know anything about these
phones?
ED
Thanks.
CUT TO:
HOUSEWIFE
Can I help you?
ERIN
Hi. My name is Erin Brockovich. I'm been
talking to some of the families in the
neighborhood about a problem you've been
having with the water supply...Jane
Whittman told me to contact you...
HOUSEWIFE
Oh yeah, Jane, sure...
BLACKOUT.
END CRAWL: