Memento
Memento
Memento
The camera SUCKS the blank picture up, then the FLASH BURSTS.
CUT TO:
LEONARD (V.O.)
So where are you?
LEONARD (cont'd)
You're in some motel room.
CUT TO:
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
2.
LEONARD
Looks like somebody's home.
TEDDY
That thing's been here for years.
LEONARD
I think you're wrong. These tracks aren't *
more than a few days old.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Let's take a look inside.
Leonard flips the photo over. On the white strip on the back,
in the same small handwriting.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
4 CONTINUED: 4
"KILL HIM"
LEONARD (V.0.) *
I've finally found him. How long have I *
been looking? *
TEDDY
Find anything? Didn't think so, let's go,
yeah?
TEDDY (cont'd)
Fuck this.
Teddy turns and heads for the door. Leonard LEAPS on him,
pistol-whipping him furiously as he shouts:
LEONARD
YOU PAY FOR WHAT YOU DID! YOU BEG
FORGIVENESS, THEN YOU PAY!
Teddy is down. Leonard DRAGS him back, deeper into the dark
house. Leonard is in a frenzy. He dumps Teddy at the end of
the hall and stands over him. Teddy SPITS BLOOD.
TEDDY
You don't have a clue, you freak.
LEONARD
Beg my forgiveness! Beg my wife's
forgiveness before I blow your brains
out!
TEDDY
Leonard, you don't have a clue what's
going on. You don't even know my name.
LEONARD
(triumphant smile)
Teddy!
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
4 CONTINUED: (2) 4
TEDDY
You read it off your fucking photo. You
don't know me, you don't even know who
you are.
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
4.
4 CONTINUED: (2) 4
LEONARD
I'm Leonard Shelby, I'm from San
Francisco and I'm -
TEDDY
(bloody grin)
That's who you were, you don't know who
you are.
LEONARD
Shut your mouth!
TEDDY
Lemme take you down in the basement and
show you what you've become.
TEDDY (cont'd)
(intimate)
C'mon, Lenny - we'll take a look down
there together. Then you'll know. You'll
know what you really are.
CUT TO:
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD (V.O.)
So you're in some motel room...
LEONARD (cont'd)
... you don't know how long you've been
there, or how you got there...
(CONTINUED)
5.
5 CONTINUED: 5
LEONARD (cont'd)
Just some anonymous motel room. Won't
tell you anything. Nothing in the
drawers, but you look anyway.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Nothing except the Gideon Bible.
CUT TO:
BURT
That guy's here already.
TEDDY
Lenny!
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
It's Leonard... like I told you before.
TEDDY
Did you? I musta forgot. I'm Teddy. *
LEONARD
(smiles)
I guess I've told you about my condition.
TEDDY
Only every time I see ya!
LEONARD
My car.
TEDDY
This is your car.
LEONARD
(shakes head)
You're in a playful mood.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Shouldn't make fun of somebody's *
handicap.
TEDDY
Just trying to have a little fun.
TEDDY
Roll your window up, will ya?
LEONARD
It's broken.
TEDDY
I can get that fixed for you.
Leonard shrugs.
TEDDY (cont'd)
So where are we going, Sherlock?
(CONTINUED)
8 CONTINUED: 8
(CONTINUED)
8 CONTINUED: (2) 8
LEONARD
I got a lead on a place.
TEDDY
(surprised at the note)
What the hell you want to go there for?
LEONARD
You know it?
TEDDY
Yeah, it's just this fucked-up building. *
Why are we going there?
LEONARD
(smiling)
I don't remember.
LEONARD (V.0.)
Nothing except the Gideon Bible.
He leafs through a couple off pages, then DROPS the Bible back
into the drawer and shuts it. He notices a MESSAGE written on
the back off his hand:
LEONARD (cont'd)
Sammy Jankis had the same problem. He *
tried writing himself notes. Lots of *
notes. But he'd get confused.
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
8.
10 CONTINUED: 10
"SHAVE"
CUT TO:
"KILL HIM"
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
12 EXT. DISCOUNT INN - DAY <> 12 *
BURT
Hiya.
LEONARD
I'm Mr. Shelby from 304.
BURT
What can I do for you, Leonard?
LEONARD
I'm sorry... um... ?
BURT
Burt.
LEONARD
Burt, I'm not sure, but I may have asked
you to hold my calls -
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Blue Revisions - 8/27/99
9.
13 CONTINUED: 13
BURT
You don't know?
LEONARD
I think I may have. I'm not good on the
phone.
BURT
(nods)
You said you like to look people in the
eye when you talk to them. Don't you
remember?
LEONARD
That's the thing. I have this condition.
BURT
Condition?
LEONARD
I have no memory.
BURT
Amnesia?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
No. It's different. I have no short-term
memory. I know who I am and all about
myself, but since my injury I can't make
any new memories. Everything fades. If we
talk for too long, I'll forget how we
started. I don't know if we've ever met
before, and the next time I see you I
won't remember this conversation. So if I
seem strange or rude, that's probably...
LEONARD (cont'd)
I've told you this before, haven't I?
BURT
(nods)
I don't mean to mess with you. It's just
so weird. You don't remember me at all,
and we talked a bunch of times.
Leonard shrugs.
BURT (cont'd)
What's the last thing you remember?
(CONTINUED)
10.
13 CONTINUED: (2) 13
LEONARD
My wife.
BURT
(fascinated)
What's it like?
LEONARD
Like waking. Like you always just woke
up. *
BURT
That must suck. All... backwards. *
BURT (cont'd) *
Well, like.. you gotta pretty good idea *
of what you're gonna do next, but no idea *
what you just did. *
(chuckles) *
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
I'm the exact opposite. *
LEONARD
(focuses on Burt)
How long have I been here?
BURT
Couple days.
LEONARD
So you're holding my calls?
BURT
As requested.
Leonard reaches into his pocket and pulls out his Polaroids
LEONARD
Okay, but this guy's an exception.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Know this guy?
BURT
Your friend, right?
(CONTINUED)
13 CONTINUED: (3) 13
LEONARD
What makes you think he's my friend?
BURT
Seen you together, that's all.
LEONARD
He's not my friend, Burt. But if he
calls, or if he turns up here, then you
give me a call in my room, okay?
(CONTINUED)
11.
13 CONTINUED: (3) 13
BURT
Sure. But nobody else, right?
LEONARD
Just this guy.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard indicates the Polaroid of Teddy.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I hope my condition won't be a problem
for you.
BURT
Not if you remember to pay your bill.
BURT (cont'd)
That guy's here already.
CUT TO:
Leonard, in boxer shorts and plaid work shirt, rips the note
from his thigh. The note says "SHAVE".
"SHAVE THIGH"
Leonard looks into the bag, then pulls out a can of SHAVING
FOAM, and a pack of DISPOSABLE RAZORS. He runs the hot water,
steps back and lifts his foot onto the sink. He is awkward
and uncomfortable. He notices an ICE BUCKET by the sink.
(CONTINUED)
12.
16 CONTINUED: 16
"THE FACTS:"
WAITER
Sir? You left these at your table.
Leonard looks down. The waiter hands him a BROWN ENVELOPE and
a MOTEL ROOM KEY (DISCOUNT INN, ROOM 304). On the envelope is
a handwritten message:
LEONARD
Thanks. Lincoln Street?
WAITER
You wanna go east on sixth.
(points)
Just keep straight, all the way out of
town, then take a right.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard, BROWN ENVELOPE in hand, finds the door to room 304.
"SHE HAS ALSO LOST SOMEONE, SHE WILL HELP YOU OUT OF PITY"
LEONARD (V.O.)
This guy told me his name was Teddy.
He turns the photo over and examines the white stop on the
back. It says only:
(CONTINUED)
21 CONTINUED: 21
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
TEDDY
Yup?
LEONARD
Mr Gammell?
TEDDY
Lenny, is that you?
LEONARD
John Gammell?
TEDDY
Lenny, it's Teddy. Look, stay there,
okay? I'm gonna be right over.
LEONARD
I'll be waiting. *
"THE FACTS:"
Leonard removes his jacket, then starts pulling off his shirt.
He has WRITING TATTOOED ALL OVER HIS CHEST, STOMACH AND ARMS.
MESSAGES in different styles of writing, some CRUDE, some
ELABORATE. The messages run in all directions, some UPSIDE-
DOWN, some BACKWARDS. Leonard examines his tattoos,
methodically. From Leonard's POV, the most striking is an
upside-down tattoo on his BELLY which says:
"THE FACTS:
FACT 1. MALE
FACT 2. WHITE"
(CONTINUED)
15.
21 CONTINUED: (2) 21
LEONARD (cont'd)
(under his breath)
White... male. First name... John. Last
name... G for Gammell. Drugs. License *
plate.
(checks document against tattoo
on thigh)
SG... 13... 7... IU. It's him. It's *
actually him.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I found you, you fuck.
Leonard turns the photo face down, takes a pen and writes:
"KILL HIM"
(CONTINUED)
22 CONTINUED: 22
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Who is this?
(listens) *
LEONARD (cont'd)
And we spoke earlier? I don't remember *
that.
(listens)
Well, yeah, but it's not amnesia. I *
remember everything from before my
injury, I just can't make any new
memories.
(listens)
LEONARD (cont'd)
So I can't remember talking to you. What
did we talk about?
(nods)
Sammy Jankis. Yeah, I guess I tell
people about Sammy to help them
understand. Sammy's story helps me
understand my own situation.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Sammy Jankis wrote himself endless
notes. But he'd get mixed up. I've got a
more graceful solution to the memory
problem. I'm disciplined and organized.
I use habit and routine to make my life
possible. Sammy had no drive. No reason
to make it work.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Me? I gotta reason.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard parks the Jaguar, gets out, stops outside the door to
a restaurant, checking its name against a NOTE, written on a *
SMALL PAPER BAG FROM A PHARMACY. The note says: *
"CITY GRILL, MAIN ST. THURSDAY, 1.OOPM MEET NATALIE FOR INFO"
He sticks the note in his pocket and pulls out his Polaroid
photographs. He flips through them until he finds Natalie's.
Leonard flips the picture over. On the back are two
handwritten messages. The first one has been completely
scribbled over, the second reads:
"SHE HAS ALSO LOST SOMEONE, SHE WILL HELP YOU OUT OF PITY"
LEONARD
Natalie.
NATALIE
You don't remember me.
LEONARD
(friendly smile)
Sorry, I should have explained. You see,
I have this condition -
NATALIE
You did explain, Lenny.
LEONARD
Please call me Leonard. My wife called me
Lenny.
NATALIE
You told me.
(CONTINUED)
18.
24 CONTINUED: 24
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
Then I probably told you how much I hated
it. Could you take off your sunglasses? *
It's just hard for me - *
NATALIE
Yeah.
LEONARD
So you have information for me?
NATALIE
Is that what your little note says?
LEONARD
Yes.
NATALIE
Must be tough living life according to a
few scraps of paper. Mix up your laundry
list and your grocery list, you'll be
eating your underwear.
Natalie smiles.
NATALIE (cont'd)
But I guess that's why you got those
freaky tattoos.
Leonard is surprised.
LEONARD
It is tough. Almost impossible. I'm sorry
I can't remember you. It's not personal.
NATALIE
I'm sorry.
NATALIE (cont'd)
I do have information for you. You gave
me a license plate number? I had my
friend at the DMV trace it. Guess what name came up.
Leonard shrugs.
(CONTINUED)
24 CONTINUED: (2) 24
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
NATALIE (cont'd)
John Edward Gamme11. John G.
(CONTINUED)
24 CONTINUED: (3) 24
LEONARD
You know him?
NATALIE
No. But the photo on his license looked
familiar. I think he's been in the bar before
NATALIE (cont'd)
This is a copy of his registration,
license, photo and all. Are you sure you
want this?
LEONARD
Have I told you what this man did? *
NATALIE
Yes.
LEONARD
Then you shouldn't have to ask.
NATALIE
But even if you get your revenge, you
won't remember it. You won't even know
it's happened.
LEONARD
(annoyed) *
So I'll take a picture, get a tattoo. *
(calms) *
The world doesn't disappear when you *
close your eyes, does it? My actions *
still have meaning, even if I can't *
remember them. My wife deserves *
vengeance, and it doesn't make any *
difference whether I know about it. *
NATALIE
Tell me about her again.
LEONARD
Why?
NATALIE
Because you like to remember her. I want
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
to see you enjoy yourself.
LEONARD
She was beautiful. Perfect to me - *
(CONTINUED)
24 CONTINUED: (3) 24
NATALIE
Don't just recite the words. Close your
eyes, remember her.
INSERT FLASHBACK:
LEONARD (V.O.)
You can only feel details. Bits and
pieces which you didn't bother to put
into words. And extreme moments you feel
even if you don't want to. Put it
together and you get the feel of the
person, enough to know how much you miss
them, and how much you hate the person
who took them away.
NATALIE
I wrote an address in there, too. Might
be useful. It's this abandoned place
outside of town. I guy I know used to use
it for his bigger deals.
LEONARD
Deals?
NATALIE
It's isolated.
LEONARD
Sounds perfect? What do I owe you?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
NATALIE
I wasn't helping you for money.
LEONARD
Sorry.
(CONTINUED)
21.
26 CONTINUED: 26
NATALIE
It's not your fault. See, you have this
condition...
Leonard smiles. Natalie reaches into her purse and pulls out
a MOTEL ROOM KEY.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Are you still at the Discount Inn? Room *
304? You left this at my place.
LEONARD
The Discount Inn, yeah. *
NATALIE
They treating you alright?
LEONARD
(smiling)
Don't remember.
NATALIE
You know what we have in common?
Leonard shrugs.
NATALIE (cont'd)
We're both survivors. Take care, Leonard.
Leonard flushes the urinal, then moves to the sink and starts
washing his hands. He notices a MESSAGE written on the back
of his hand:
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
27 CONTINUED: 27
"THE FACTS:"
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Blue Revisions - 8/27/99
22.
27 CONTINUED: 27
LEONARD
I met Sammy through work.
(listens)
Insurance. I was an investigator. I'd *
investigate claims to see which ones *
were phony. *
LEONARD (cont'd)
I had to see through people's bullshit.
It was useful experience, because now
it's my life. When I meet someone, I
don't even know if I've met them before.
I have to look in their eyes and just
figure them out. My job taught me that
the best way to find out what someone
knew was to let them talk.
LEONARD(V.0.)
Throw in the occasional "why?" but just
listen. And watch the eyes, the body *
language.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I was good. Sammy was my first real
challenge.
The Jaguar pulls up. Leonard gets out and heads to the
office.
LEONARD
I'm sorry, I think I'm checked in here,
But I've misplaced my key.
BURT
(looks up)
Hi, Leonard.
BURT (cont'd)
Probably in the room.
Leonard enters and SCANS the room. Burt picks his nails in
the doorway. Leonard moves to the unmade bed. There is a pile
of BLOODSTAINED TISSUES. On the bedside table is an ICE
BUCKET. Next to it is a DISPOSABLE RAZOR and a can of SHAVING
FOAM.
LEONARD
I don't see my key.
LEONARD
What?
(CONTINUED)
34 CONTINUED: 34
BURT
This isn't your room. You're in 304. I
Fucked up.
LEONARD
This isn't my room?
BURT
No, let's go.
LEONARD
Then why is this my handwriting?
"SHAVE THIGH"
LEONARD (cont'd)
Better tell me what the fuck's going on.
BURT
This was your room. You're up in 304 now.
LEONARD
When was I in here?
BURT
Last week. Then I rented you another one
On top of this.
LEONARD
Why?
BURT
Business is slow. I told my boss about
You, about your condition. He told me to
Try and rent you another room.
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Why didn't you clean it out? *
BURT
(shrugs)
You're still paying for it. It's still
Your room.
(CONTINUED)
34 CONTINUED: (2) 34
LEONARD
So how many rooms am I checked into in
this dump?
BURT
Just two. So far. *
LEONARD
Well, at least you're being honest about
cheating me.
BURT
Yeah, well you're not gonna remember,
anyway.
LEONARD
You don't have to be that honest, Burt.
BURT
Leonard.
BURT (cont'd)
Always get a receipt.
LEONARD
I'm gonna write that down.
LEONARD (cont'd)
What time is it?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
35 EXT. ROAD - DAY <> 35
CUT TO:
LEONARD
I'd just become an investigator when I
came across Sammy. Mr Samuel R. Jankis -
strangest case ever. Guy's 58, semi-
retired accountant. He and his wife had
been in this car accident... nothing too
serious, but he's acting funny - he
can't get a handle on what's going on.
LEONARD(V.O.)
The doctors find some possible damaqe to
the hippocampus, nothing conclusive. But
Sammy can't remember anything for more
than a couple minutes. He can't work,
can't do shit, medical bills pile up,
his wife calls the insurance company and
I get sent in.
LEONARD (V.0.)
My first big claims investigation - I
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
really check into it. Sammy can think
just fine, but he can't make any new
memories, he can only remember things
for a few minutes.
(CONTINUED)
40 CONTINUED: 40
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
The crazy part was that this guy who
couldn't follow the plot of "Green
Acres" could do the most complicated
things as long as he had learned them
before the accident...
Sammy INVERTS the bottle and syringe, DRAWS the insulin into
the syringe, withdraws the needle, holds it up to check for
bubbles, TAPPING it delicately.
MRS JANKIS *
Gentle. *
Sammy looks up, worried. Mrs Jankis smiles at him. Sammy pushes *
the plunger, withdraws the needle and presses the swab against *
the skin, lookinq into Mrs Jankis' eyes and smiling back. *
LEONARD (V.0.)
The doctors assure me that there's a
real condition called Korsokoff's
syndrome; short-term memory loss, rare
but legit. But every time I see him I
catch a look of recognition. Just a
slight look, but he says he can't
remember me at all.
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
41 CONTINUED: 41
LEONARD (cont'd)
I can read people and I'm thinking bad *
actor. Now I'm suspicious and I order
more tests.
LEONARD
His wife has to do everything. Sammy can
only do simple stuff. He couldn't pick
up any new skills at all, and that's how
I got him.
TEDDY
Lenny! I thought you'd gone for good.
What brings you back?
LEONARD
Unfinished business. What made you think
I wasn't coming back?
TEDDY
You said you were leaving town.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
Things change.
TEDDY
So I see. It's good to see you. My name's
Teddy.
LEONARD
Guess I've told you about my condition.
TEDDY
(grins)
Only every time I see ya! Come on, I'll
buy you lunch.
Teddy pours ketchup all over his steak. Leonard plays with
his food.
TEDDY
Not hungry?
(CONTINUED)
29.
44 CONTINUED: 44
LEONARD
(shrugs)
It's my condition. I never know if I've
already eaten, so I always just eat small
amounts.
TEDDY
You don't have to remember to be hungry.
LEONARD
It's weird, but if you don't eat for a
while then your body stops being hungry.
You get sort of shaky but you don't
realize you haven't eaten. Have I told
you about Sammy Jankis?
TEDDY
Yeah, yeah. I heard enough about him.
Tell me about John G. You still think
he's here, right?
LEONARD
Who?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
TEDDY
The guy you're looking for, Johnny G.
That's why you haven't left. Am I right?
TEDDY (cont'd)
Leonard, you need to be very careful.
LEONARD
Why?
TEDDY
Well, the other day you made it sound
like you thought somebody might be trying
to set you up. Get you to kill the wrong
guy.
LEONARD
Yeah, well I go on facts, not
recommendations, okay?
TEDDY
Lenny, you can't trust a man's life to
your little notes and pictures.
LEONARD
Why?
(CONTINUED)
30.
44 CONTINUED: (2) 44
TEDDY
Because you're relying on them alone. You
Don't remember what you've discovered or
how. Your notes might be unreliable.
LEONARD
Memory's unreliable.
Teddy snorts.
LEONARD (cont'd)
No, really. Memory's not perfect. It's
not even that good. Ask the police,
eyewitness testimony is unreliable. The
cops don't catch a killer by sitting
around remembering stuff. They collect
facts, make notes, draw conclusions.
Facts, not memories: that's how you
investigate. I know, it's what I used to
do. Memory can change the shape of a room
or the color of a car. It's an
interpretation, not a record. Memories
can be changed or distorted and they're
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
irrelevant if you have the facts.
TEDDY
You really want to find this guy?
LEONARD
He took away the woman I love and he took
away my memory. He destroyed everything;
my life and my ability to live.
TEDDY
You're living.
LEONARD
Just for revenge. That's what keeps me
going. It's all I have.
TEDDY
We'll find him. Where are you staying?
LEONARD
Discount Inn. Don't know what room;
haven't got my key.
TEDDY
Probably left it in your room.
The Jaguar pulls up. Leonard gets out and heads to the
office.
LEONARD
I'm sorry, I think I'm checked in here,
but I've misplaced my key.
BURT
(looks up)
Hi, Leonard.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
So Sammy can't learn any new skills. But
I find something in my research:
Conditioning. Sammy should still be able
to learn through repetition. It's how
you learn stuff like riding a bike,
things you don't think about, you just
get better through practice. Call it
muscle memory, whatever, but it's a
completely different part of the brain
from the short-term memory. So I have
the doctors test Sammy's response to
conditioning...
DOCTOR
Just pick up any three objects.
SAMMY
(amused)
That's a test? Where were you guys when
I did my CPA?
(CONTINUED)
SAMMY (cont'd)
Ah! What the fuck?!
DOCTOR
It's a test, Sammy.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Some of the objects were electrified,
They'd give him a small shock.
LEONARD
They kept repeating the test, always
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
with the same objects electrified. The
point was to see if he could learn to
avoid the electrified objects. Not by
memory, but by instinct.
LEONARD
Sorry. It's only me.
NATALIE
Sleep okay?
LEONARD
Yeah. You?
33.
50 CONTINUED: 50
NATALIE
I gotta be someplace.
She gets out of bed, wearing pajamas. Leonard swings his legs
out of the bed and realizes that he is wearing trousers and
socks. He looks at his tattoos, as if he has never seen them
before.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Pretty weird.
LEONARD
Useful. You never write a phone number on
your hand?
NATALIE *
(through mirror) *
I should be able to talk to my friend *
about the license plate today. *
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD *
Yeah, the license plate... *
NATALIE *
(smiles) *
John G's license plate number. You have *
it tattooed on your thigh. *
Leonard runs his finger over fact 6, then pulls his trousers *
up and looks around the room. He spots his suit jacket *
hanging over the back of a chair. He checks the pockets,
pulls out his Polaroids, flips through them: a Jaguar, the
Discount Inn, Natalie. He flips Natalie's picture over and
looks at the back. There are two messages, but the first one
has been completely scribbled over. The other one reads:
"HAS ALSO LOST SOMEONE, SHE WILL HELP YOU OUT OF PITY"
Leonard stuffs the photos back into his pocket, grabs a white
shirt of f the chair and pulls it on. Natalie comes back in
and starts to apply her makeup.
(CONTINUED)
50 CONTINUED: (2) 50
NATALIE
If it's registered in this state it'll *
just take seconds to pull up his license
and registration. I'll call when I've
spoken to him.
LEONARD *
Why don't we just arrange a meeting now? *
I'm not too good on the phone.
Natalie takes her eye pencil and writes a NOTE on a SMALL BAG *
FROM A PHARMACY. Leonard puts his jacket on. Natalie offers *
him the note. It says:
"CITY GRILL, MAIN ST. THURSDAY, 1.OOPM MEET NATALIE FOR INFO"
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
34.
50 CONTINUED: (3) 50
LEONARD (cont'd)
(leading)
It's great that you would... that you're
helping me like this...
NATALIE
(smiles)
I'm helping you because you helped me.
Leonard nods.
NATALIE (cont'd)
So will you remember me next time you seo
me?
Leonard shakes his head and reaches for the note. Natalie
grabs his lapel and pulls him down to her, kissing him gently
on the mouth.
NATALIE (cont'd)
I think you will.
LEONARD
(smiles)
I'm sorry.
NATALIE
(amused)
Lenny, before you go, can I have my shirt
back please?
She tosses him his blue shirt. Leonard looks down at the
white shirt which he has put on. It is way too small.
TEDDY
Lenny! I thought you'd gone for good.
What brings you back?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
52 CONTINUED: 52
LEONARD
They kept testing Sammy for months,
always with the same objects carrying
the electrical charge...
Sammy sits across the testing table from the Doctor. Sammy
goes for a METAL OBJECT and RECOILS in pain from a SHOCK.
SAMMY
Ah! What the fuck?!
DOCTOR
It's a test, Sammy.
SAMMY
Ah! What the fuck?!
DOCTOR
It's a test, Sammy.
SAMMY
Yeah? Test this you fucking quack.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Even with total short-term memory loss,
Sammy should've learned to instinctively
stop picking up the wrong objects. All
previous cases of short-term memory loss
had responded to conditioning in some
way. Sammy didn't respond at all.
LEONARD
It was enough to suggest his condition
was psychological not physical.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
36.
55 CONTINUED: 55
LEONARD (cont'd)
We turned down his claim on the grounds
that he wasn't covered for mental
illness. Sammy's wife got stuck with the
bills and I got a promotion for
rejecting a big claim.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Conditioning didn't work for Sammy, so
he became helpless. But it works for me.
I live the way Sammy couldn't. Habit and
Conditioning. Acting on instinct.
LEONARD
Natalie, right?
LEONARD (cont'd)
Who the fuck is Dodd?
NATALIE
Guess I don't have to worry about him
anymore.
LEONARD
(snaps)
Who is he? What have you got me into?
NATALIE
Come inside.
57 CONTINUED: 57
NATALIE
Calm down. You're not into anything. It
was my problem, you offered no help. It's
got nothing to do with your
investigation.
LEONARD
That's the problem! How can I find John
G. when I don't know what's going on?!
How did you get me into this?!
NATALIE
Leonard, you offered to help when you saw
what this guy did to me.
LEONARD
How do I know he did that to you?
NATALIE
I came to you straight after he did it. I
showed you what he'd done and asked for
your help.
LEONARD
So I just take your word?
NATALIE
Yes.
LEONARD
(sighs)
Something feels wrong. I think someone's
fucking with me. Trying to get me to kill
the wrong guy.
NATALIE
Did you?
LEONARD
What?
NATALIE
Kill him.
LEONARD
Course not.
57 CONTINUED: (2) 57
NATALIE
This has nothing to do with you. You
helped me out, and I'm grateful.
She tries to rip the picture. Leonard watches her try. The
plastic is too strong.
LEONARD
You have to burn them.
NATALIE
You decided to help me. Trust yourself.
Trust your own judgment. You can
question everything, you can never know
anything for sure.
LEONARD
There are things you know for sure.
NATALIE
Such as?
LEONARD
I know the feel of the world.
(reaches forward)
I know how this wood will sound when I
knock.
(raps knuckles on coffee table)
I know how this glass will feel when I
pick it up.
(handles glass)
Certainties. You think it's knowledge,
but it's a kind of memory, a kind you
take for granted. I can remember so much.
(runs hands over objects)
I know the feel of the world,
(beat)
and I know her.
NATALIE
Your wife?
LEONARD
She's gone and the present is trivia,
which I can scribble down as notes.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Natalie stares at Leonard, thinking.
(CONTINUED)
39.
57 CONTINUED: (3) 57
NATALIE
Relax a little, okay? Take off your
jacket.
Leonard takes his jacket off and places it on the back of the
couch, patting the pockets as he does so.
LEONARD
It's not easy to be calm when -
NATALIE
Just relax.
She reaches for his arm and unbuttons his cuff, revealing the
end of Leonard's tattoos.
NATALIE (cont'd)
You don't seem the type.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Come on.
NATALIE (cont'd)
It's backwards. *
She pulls him up and turns him around in front of the mirror *
to read the backwards tattoo across his chest. *
NATALIE (cont'd) *
Here? *
LEONARD *
It's... it must be for when I've found him. *
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
*
She looks at Leonard. Leonard shrugs. Natalie studies *
Leonard's chest, avoiding his eyes. *
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
39A.
57 CONTINUED: (4) 57
NATALIE (cont'd)
I've lost somebody.
LEONARD
I'm sorry.
(CONTINUED)
40.
57 CONTINUED: (5) 57
NATALIE
His name was Jimmy.
LEONARD
What happened?
NATALIE
He went to meet somebody and didn't come
back.
LEONARD
Who did he go to meet?
NATALIE
A guy called Teddy.
LEONARD
What do the police think?
NATALIE
They don't look too hard for guys like
Jimmy.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Natalie puts the photo down. She reaches out to Leonard, *
spreading her fingers over the blank part of his chest. *
NATALIE (cont'd)
When you find this guy, this John G.,
what are you going to do?
LEONARD
Kill him.
NATALIE
Maybe I can help you find him. I know a *
lot of people.
(CONTINUED)
58 CONTINUED: 58
LEONARD
I don't even know how long she's been *
gone. It's like I've woken up in bed and
she's not here because she's gone to the
bathroom or something. But somehow I just *
know that she'll never come back to bed. *
I lie here, not knowing how long I've
been alone. If I could just reach out and *
touch her side of the bed I could know *
that it was cold, but I can't. I have no *
idea when she left. *
LEONARD (cont'd)
I know I can't have her back, but I want *
to be able to let her go. I don't want to
wake up every morning thinking she's
still here then realizing that she's not.
I want time to pass, but it won't. How *
can I heal if I can't feel time?
Leonard enters the dark room. He goes to the couch and picks
up his shirt and his jacket. He notices the photograph which
Natalie showed him on top of some papers on a desk in the
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
corner. He holds it in a shaft of light from the streetlamp
outside, studying the photo of Natalie and Jimmy.
Natalie, eyes open, slides her hand over to where Leonard was
lying, feeling his residual warmth.
"SHE HAS ALSO LOST SOMEONE. SHE WILL HELP YOU OUT OF PITY"
LEONARD
Sammy's wife was crippled by the cost of
supporting him and fighting the
company's decision - but it wasn't the
money that got to her.
LEONARD (V.0.)
I never said that Sammy was faking. Just
that his problem was mental, not
physical. But she... she couldn't
understand. She looks into his eyes and
sees the same person. And if it's not a
physical problem...
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Sammy's Wife starts shouting at Sammy. Sammy squirms.
Sammy's Wife THROWS her drink in Sammy's face, puts her head
in her hands, SOBBING. Sammy wipes his face on his sleeve.
(CONTINUED)
65 CONTINUED: 65
LEONARD (cont'd)
So good old Leonard Shelby from the
insurance company gives her the seed of
doubt, just like he gave it to the
doctors. But I never said that Sammy was
faking. I never said that.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard opens his eyes, frightened. He is lying on the bed in
his beige suit and blue shirt.
LEONARD (V.0.)
Awake.
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
Where am I?
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
Motel room.
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
Some anonymous motel room. Nothing in the
drawers, but you look anyway.
(CONTINUED)
67 CONTINUED: 67
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
68 INT./EXT. DODD'S MOTEL - DAY <> 68
LEONARD (cont'd)
Just a minute!
He finds the one of Teddy, then sticks them back into his
pocket. He OPENS the door to Teddy and grins.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Teddy!
TEDDY
Finished playing with yourself, Lenny?
(CONTINUED)
45.
69 CONTINUED: 69
TEDDY (cont'd)
I get it - amorous neighbors.
LEONARD
Why are you here?
TEDDY
(surprised)
You called me. You wanted my help. You
know, Lenny, I've had more rewarding
friendships than this one. Although I do
get to keep using the same jokes.
Leonard thinks, then moves to the CLOSET and OPENS the door.
Teddy looks in DISBELIEF at the Man in the closet.
TEDDY (cont'd)
Who the fuck is that?
LEONARD
You don't know him?
TEDDY
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
No! Should I?
Leonard shrugs.
TEDDY (cont'd)
Is this John G.?
LEONARD
I don't think so.
TEDDY
Think so? You don't know? Didn't you
write it down?
LEONARD
I might have fallen asleep before I did.
TEDDY
Ask him.
Leonard crouches down and RIPS the tape from the Man's mouth.
LEONARD
What's your name?
(CONTINUED)
46.
69 CONTINUED: (2) 69
LEONARD (cont'd)
Your name.
MAN
Dodd.
LEONARD
Who did this to you?
DODD
(confused)
What?
LEONARD
Who did this to you?
DODD
You did.
TEDDY
I'm not gonna help you kill this guy, if
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
that's what -
LEONARD
No. No, just let me think for a minute.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Here we go.
The Polaroid shows Dodd sitting on the bed, BOUND, GAGGED and
BLEEDING. The name Dodd is written below the picture. Leonard
flips it over. On the back it says:
TEDDY
Natalie? Natalie who?
LEONARD
Why?
(CONTINUED)
47.
69 CONTINUED: (3) 69
TEDDY
I think I know her.
LEONARD
We've got to get him out of here.
TEDDY
He's got to have a car, right? We just
take him back to his car and tell him to
get the fuck out of town before we kill
him.
LEONARD
We can't just walk him out tied up and
bleeding.
TEDDY
How'd ya get him in here in the first
place?
LEONARD
I don't know.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard looks around the room for inspiration.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Yes I do... this isn't my room.
LEONARD (cont'd)
It's his. He was already here. Let's just *
go. *
Leonard starts for the door, Teddy lays a hand on his chest. *
TEDDY *
Wait, we can't just leave him. The maid *
finds him, calls the cops. He's seen us now *
Leonard thinks. *
LEONARD *
Okay. We clean him up, untie him and *
march him out with a gun in his back. *
TEDDY
Why would I have a gun?
(CONTINUED)
69 CONTINUED: (4) 69
LEONARD
It must be his. I don't think they'd let
someone like me carry a gun.
TEDDY
Fucking hope not.
Leonard covers Dodd with the gun while Teddy pulls him out of
the closet. Dodd has trouble standing up straight.
Teddy exits the room, glances around, motions for Leonard and
Dodd to follow. Dodd is cleaned up and unbound, Leonard is
pressed up right behind him. The three of them descend to the
parking lot.
LEONARD
Which one?
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Dodd leads them to a new LANDCRUISER. Teddy whispers in
Leonard's ear.
TEDDY
We probably ought to take his car, you
know, teach him a lesson.
LEONARD
Shut it, Teddy.
TEDDY
Easy for you to say, you've got the Jag.
LEONARD
I'll ride with him. You follow.
TEDDY
Give me your keys.
LEONARD
Take your own car.
The Landcruiser PULLS OVER and stops. The grey sedan pulls up
behind. Leonard gets out of the Landcruiser and it PULLS AWAY
at speed. Leonard walks back to Teddy's car.
TEDDY
So was he scared?
LEONARD
Yeah. I think it was your sinister
mustache that got him.
(CONTINUED)
49.
72 CONTINUED: 72
TEDDY
Fuck you. We shoulda taken his car.
LEONARD
What's wrong with this one?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
TEDDY
You like it? Let's trade.
TEDDY
So what are you gonna do now?
LEONARD
I'm gonna ask Natalie what the fuck that
was all about.
TEDDY
Natalie who?
The Jaguar pulls up. Leonard checks the address against the
address written on his Polaroid of Natalie, then goes to the
door and RINGS the bell. It is opened by Natalie.
LEONARD
Natalie, right?
LEONARD (cont'd)
Who the fuck is Dodd?
CUT TO:
75 CONTINUED: 75
LEONARD
What Mrs. Jankis didn't understand was
that you can't bully someone into
remembering... the more pressure you're
under, the harder it gets.
(listens)
Then call me back.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard hangs up.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Don't feel drunk.
Leonard looks up from the VODKA BOTTLE, sighs, rubs his face,
then stands up. He SNIFFS at his armpit.
Leonard SHOWERS. He turns the water off, then hears the DOOR
BEING UNLOCKED. Leonard freezes, standing in the SHOWER
STALL, NAKED and DRIPPING. Through the distortion of the
PEBBLED PLASTIC DOOR, Leonard sees a FIGURE enter the
bathroom and start pissing into the toilet. The distorted
Figure turns and approaches the shower stall, becoming
clearer as it gets closer, then YANKS the door open. It is
Dodd (WITHOUT INJURIES). He is SHOCKED to see the naked
Leonard. Leonard BURSTS out of the shower stall, SMASHING
Dodd against the wall.
51.
Dodd lies still on the floor, bleeding, his hand still in his
inside jacket pocket. Leonard stands above him, naked,
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
dripping wet, catching his breath.
The sound of a KEY entering the lock. Leonard LEAPS for the
door and flips the privacy latch.
LEONARD
Not just now!
Leonard shoves Dodd into the closet, takes out a NOTE and
consults it, then writes "DODD" on the white strip on the
front of the photograph. He flips the picture over and writes
on the strip on the back, in smaller writing:
"PUT HIM ONTO TEDDY OR JUST GET RID OF HIM FOR NATALIE"
(CONTINUED)
77 CONTINUED: 77
TEDDY (O.S.)
You know what to do.
Then a BEEP. Leonard does not look like he knows what to do.
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LEONARD
Ah, it's a message for Teddy... *
LEONARD (cont'd)
I'm at the MOUNTCREST INN on 5th Street,
Room 6, and I need you to come over as
soon as you get this, it's important.
This is Leonard. Thanks. Bye.
CUT TO:
CUT TO:
Leonard IGNITES the lighter, then holds the needle over the flame.
LEONARD (V.0.)
I'll get the jump on you, fucker.
(CONTINUED)
80 CONTINUED: 80
Leonard gets a CREDIT CARD out and slips it into the lock
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
gently, with a practiced hand. He leaves the CARD WEDGED in
the lock, then steps back from the door and KNOCKS.
The point of light GOES OUT. Leonard KICKS the door in,
SMASHING THE ROOM'S OCCUPANT BACK INTO THE ROOM.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Is this the guy?
LEONARD (cont'd)
Fuck! Sorry.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Need a weapon.
He grabs the empty vodka bottle, switches the light off and
slips into the bathroom.
(CONTINUED)
54.
83 CONTINUED: 83
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
84 EXT. SMALL ALLEY BEHIND A ROW OF TRAILER HOMES - DAY <>
LEONARD (V.O.)
What the fuck am I doing?
Leonard CUTS down the next gap between trailers, heading FULL
SPEED for Dodd's side.
The Jaguar PEELS OUT just as Dodd emerges from the trailer
park.
CUT TO:
55.
DODD
I haven't made a strong enough
impression.
LEONARD
(amused)
Don't be too hard on yourself.
LEONARD
Seat belt.
Leonard starts to reach over his left shoulder with his right
hand as if for the seat belt. Dodd watches Leonard's right
hand.
With his left hand, Leonard opens the door. He rolls out,
SLAMMING the door in Dodd's face, and hitting the central
locking on his car keys.
Leonard TAKES OFF across the asphalt. Dodd tries the doors,
then SHOOTS at Leonard, SHATTERING the driver's side window,
triggering the CAR ALARM.
Dodd climbs through the window and takes off after him.
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
What the fuck am I doing?
(CONTINUED)
87 CONTINUED: 87
Leonard cuts down the next gap between trailers, heading FULL
SPEED for Dodd's side.
CUT TO:
CUT TO:
Leonard gets in, gently places the bag on the passenger seat.
Leonard has built a small FIRE. He reaches into the bag and
removes a small STUFFED TOY. He douses it with lighter fluid
and places it on the fire. He watches the fur blacken and the
plastic eyes melt.
LEONARD
How can you read that again?
LEONARD'S WIFE
(without looking up)
It's good.
LEONARD
You've read it a hundred times.
LEONARD'S WIFE
I enjoy it.
LEONARD
Yeah, but the pleasure of a book is in
wanting to know what happens next -
LEONARD'S WIFE
(looks up, annoyed)
Don't be a prick. I'm not reading it to
annoy you, I enjoy it. Just let me read,
please.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Probably tried this before. Probably
burned truckloads of your stuff. Can't
remember to forget you.
He DROPS the brush onto the fire, pulls a GREEN ALARM CLOCK
out of the bag and adds it to the fire. Once the bag is
EMPTY, Leonard places it on the fire. He sits looking at the
flames.
DISSOLVE TO:
The sky has brightened. Leonard KICKS the dying embers apart.
58.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard looks into his rearview mirror to see a LANDCRUISER
following him. Leonard SPEEDS UP, turns right. The
Landcruiser sticks behind.
LEONARD (V.O.)
Do I know this guy?
LEONARD (V.O.)
He seems to know me.
LEONARD (V.O.)
What the fuck!
DODD
I like your car.
LEONARD
Thanks.
DODD
Where'd you get it?
LEONARD
Interested in buying one?
DODD
I just want you to tell me how you came
by that car.
LEONARD
I forget.
(CONTINUED)
59.
98 CONTINUED: 98
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
DODD
I haven't made a strong enough impression
on you.
LEONARD
(amused)
I wouldn't be too hard on yourself.
LEONARD
Who is this?
CUT TO:
LEONARD
(about to tell her something)
Honey?
The sound of the SHOWER being run. Leonard opens his eyes and
looks over to the bathroom door.
LEONARD (cont'd)
(relaxed)
Honey? It's late.
Leonard swings his legs over and sits on the edge of the bed.
Move in on Leonard's face.
(CONTINUED)
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100 CONTINUED: 100
LEONARD (cont'd)
Everything okay?
LEONARD (cont'd)
Are you okay in there?!
BLONDE
Was it good for you?
(CONTINUED)
61.
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107 CONTINUED: 107
BLONDE (cont'd)
Shit. Was I supposed to lock the door?
LEONARD
No. That would have been worse.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I'd like you to leave now.
CUT TO:
110 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - NIGHT ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 110
Leonard (boxers, bandaged arm) dips the NEEDLE into the ink *
reservoir and PUNCTURES the skin of his thigh, talking on the
phone.
LEONARD
Well, sir, that would certainly be in
keeping with some of my own discoveries.
Yeah, I was hoping to get more on the
drugs angle. Hang on a second.
LEONARD (cont'd)
The police report mentioned the drugs
found in the car outside my house. The
car was stolen, but his prints were all
over it, along with some of his stuff.
And I think there's something...
(flips through pages)
Something about a syringe...
(flips pages, confused)
I've got a copy of the police report.
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
110 CONTINUED: 110
LEONARD (cont'd)
It has lots of information, but with my
condition, it's tough. I can't really
keep it all in mind at once.
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD (cont'd) *
I have to keep summarizing the different *
sections... *
LEONARD (cont'd)
Yeah, and there's pages missing... I
guess I've been trying to log them all.
(listens, smiles)
The police gave me the report
themselves. I dealt with them a lot in
my insurance job, and I had friends in
the department. They must have figured
that if I saw the facts of the case,
then I would stop believing that we
needed to find John G.
LEONARD (cont'd)
They weren't even looking for John G.
The stuff they found in the car just fit
in with what they believed had happened,
so they didn't chase any of it up.
Leonard comes out of the office, gets a sports bag from the
Jaguar, then takes a Polaroid of the entrance and heads for
Room 304.
LATER:
(CONTINUED)
LATER:
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
None? Okay, blonde. Yeah, blonde is fine.
Discount Inn, 304. Leonard. *
LATER:
LATER:
BLONDE
Well, what then?
LEONARD
It's simple, you just go to the bathroom.
LEONARD (cont'd)
No, you just go into the bathroom. We go
to bed, you wait till I fall asleep, then
you go into the bathroom and slam the door.
BLONDE
Slam it?
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Just loud enough to wake me up.
BLONDE
That's it?
LEONARD
That's it.
Leonard gets up, pulls a paper shopping bag out of the closet
and hands it to the Blonde.
LEONARD (cont'd)
But, first I need you to put these things
around.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Just pretend these things are yours, and
this is your bedroom.
(CONTINUED)
BLONDE
Should I wear it?
LEONARD
No. Just leave the stuff lying around as
if it were yours. Like you just took it
off or something.
BLONDE
Whatever gets you off.
The Blonde pulls the hairbrush out of the bag. She moves to
brush her hair with it, but Leonard stops her.
LEONARD
No! No, don't use it, you, I mean it's...
you just have to put it where you would
if it were yours.
The lights are off. The Blonde and Leonard are lying side by
side in bed.
114 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQCTENCE## 114
"FACT 5."
LEONARD
The drugs stashed in the car doesn't
ring true for me.
LEONARD (cont'd)
The police figure the guy was an addict
needing money to score, but I'm not
convinced. He's not gonna be breaking in
when he's still got a stash that big.
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD (cont'd)
(listens)
I think John G. left it or planted it.
(listens)
Well, it was a lot for one guy's
personal use.
(listens)
How do you know that?
(listens, checks report)
Right, that's true. It fits.
(listens)
Too much for personal use, so he deals.
Leonard takes his pen and alters his FILE CARD to read:
Leonard exits, walks to the car and gets in, switching off
the alarm.
TEDDY (O.S.)
You should lock a car as nice as this.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Teddy is in the passenger seat. Leonard, startled, GRABS him
by the throat.
LEONARD
Who the fuck are you?
TEDDY
(gasping)
Teddy. Your buddy.
LEONARD
Prove it.
TEDDY
(gasping)
Sammy. Remember Sammy. You told me about
Sammy.
LEONARD
What are you doing in my car?
(CONTINUED)
66.
TEDDY
Sense of humour went with the memory,
huh? You know why you're still here,
don't you?
LEONARD
Unfinished business.
TEDDY
Lenny, as a buddy, let me inform you.
Your business here is very much finished.
You're still here because of Natalie.
LEONARD
Who's she?
Teddy chuckles.
TEDDY
Whose house do you think you just walked
out of?
TEDDY (cont'd)
Take a look at your pictures, I bet you
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
got one of her.
TEDDY (cont'd)
Great shot, Lenny.
TEDDY (cont'd)
You wanna make a note that you can't
trust her.
LEONARD
Why's that?
TEDDY
Because she'll have taken one look at
your clothes and your car and started
thinking of ways to turn the situation to
her advantage. She's already got you
staying with her, for fuck's sake.
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
67.
115 CONTINUED: (2) 115
TEDDY (cont'd)
You can't stay with her. Let me give you
the name of a motel.
TEDDY (cont'd)
Good thing I found you. She's bad news.
LEONARD
What do you mean "bad news"?
TEDDY
She's involved with these drug dealers.
TEDDY (cont'd)
See these? That's the bar where she
works. Her boyfriend's a drug dealer.
She'd take orders for him, arrange meets.
He'd write messages on these, then leave
it on the bar. She'd drop replies when
she served him drinks.
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Why should I care?
TEDDY
She's gonna use you. To protect herself.
LEONARD
From who?
TEDDY
Guys who'll come after her. Guys who'll
want to know what happened to her
boyfriend. They'll want to make somebody
pay. Maybe she'll try and make it you.
LEONARD
Yeah, well maybe she'll make it you. Is
that it? You worried she'll use me
against you?
TEDDY
She couldn't.
LEONARD
Why not?
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Blue Revisions - 8/27/99
68.
TEDDY
(grins)
She has no idea who I am.
LEONARD
Why are you following me?
TEDDY
I'm trying to help you. I knew she'd get
her claws into you. She doesn't know
anything about your investigation, so
when she offers to help you, it'll be for
her own reasons. Why would I lie? Do not
go back to her. Take out a pen, write
yourself a note, do not trust her.
Leonard takes out his pen, places the picture of Natalie face
down on the dash and writes on the white strip on the back:
LEONARD
Happy now?
TEDDY
I won't be happy until you leave town.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
Why?
TEDDY
How long do you think you can hang around
here before people start asking
questions?
LEONARD
What sort of questions?
TEDDY
The sort of questions you should be
asking yourself.
LEONARD
Like what?
TEDDY
Like how'd you get this car? That suit?
LEONARD
I have money.
(CONTINUED)
69.
TEDDY
From what?
LEONARD
My wife's death. I used to work in
Insurance, we were well covered.
TEDDY
So in your grief you wandered into a
Jaguar dealership?
TEDDY (cont'd)
You haven't got a clue, have you? You
don't even know who you are?
LEONARD
Yes, I do. I don't have amnesia. I
remember everything about myself up until
the incident. I'm Leonard Shelby, I'm
from San Fran -
TEDDY
That's who you were, Lenny. You don't
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
know who you are, who you've become since
the incident. You're wandering around,
playing detective... and you don't even
know how long ago it was.
TEDDY (cont'd)
Put it this way. Were you wearing
designer suits when you sold insurance? *
LEONARD
I didn't sell -
TEDDY
I know, you investigated. Maybe you need
to apply some of your investigative
skills to yourself.
LEONARD
Yeah, well, thanks for the advice.
TEDDY
Don't go back in there. There's a motel
out of town.
(CONTINUED)
Teddy hands Leonard the BEER MAT and gets out of the car.
TEDDY (cont'd)
It's been fun, Lenny.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
He flips Natalie's picture over and considers her blurred
image. He looks up at her house, then picks up the BEER MAT,
reading the address Teddy has given him.
LEONARD
Fuck it. I need my own place.
117 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 117
LEONARD
I can't blame the cops for not taking me
seriously. This is a difficult condition
for people to understand. I mean look at
Sammy Jankis. His own wife couldn't deal
with it.
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
71.
LEONARD (cont'd)
(listens)
I told you about how she tried to get
him to snap out of it?
(listens)
It got much worse than that. Eventually
Sammy's wife came to see me at the
office, and I found out all kinds of
shit.
(listens)
She knew that I was the one who had
built he case for Sammy faking it.
118 INT. LEONARD'S OFFICE - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 118
LEONARD (V.O.)
She told me about life with Sammy, how
she'd treated him. It had got to the
point where she'd get Sammy to hide food
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
all around the house, then stop feeding
him to see if his hunger would make him
remember where he'd hidden the stuff.
She wasn't a cruel person, she just
wanted her old Sammy back.
MRS. JANKIS
Mr. Shelby, you know all about Sammy and
you decided that he was faking -
LEONARD
Mrs. Jankis, the company's position
isn't that Sammy is "faking" anything,
just that his condition can't be shown -
MRS. JANKIS
I'm not interested in the company
position, Mr. Shelby. I want to know
your honest opinion about Sammy.
LEONARD
We shouldn't even be talking this way
while the case is still open to appeal.
MRS. JANKIS
I'm not appealing the decision.
LEONARD
Then why are you here?
(CONTINUED)
72.
MRS. JANKIS
Mr. Shelby, try and understand. When I
look into Sammy's eyes, I don't see some
vegetable, I see the same old Sammy.
What do you think it's like for me to
suspect that he's imagining this whole *
problem? That if I could just say the
right thing he'd snap out of it and be
back to normal? If I knew that my old
Sammy was truly gone, then I could say
goodbye and start loving this new Sammy. *
As long as I have doubt, I can't say
goodbye and move on.
LEONARD
Mrs. Jankis, what do you want from me?
MRS. JANKIS
I want you to forget the company you
work for for thirty seconds, and tell me
if you really think that Sammy is faking
his condition.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard plays with his letter opener, thinking.
LEONARD
(looks at Mrs. Jankis)
I believe that Sammy should be
physically capable of making new
memories.
MRS. JANKIS
Thank you.
119 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 119
LEONARD
She seemed to leave happy. I thought I'd
helped her.
Leonard puts the NEEDLE/PEN down, and wipes blood from his new,
homemade TATTOO, which says:
LEONARD (cont'd)
I thought she just needed some kind of
answer.
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD (cont'd)
I didn't think it was important to her
what the answer was, just that she had
one to believe.
CUT TO:
She turns and comes towards the front door. Her face is SWOLLEN
and BLEEDING.
Leonard OPENS the door for her. She RUSHES past him. *
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
What happened?
NATALIE
What does it look like?!
NATALIE (cont'd)
He beat the shit out of me.
LEONARD
Who?
NATALIE
Who?! Fuck, Leonard! Dodd! Dodd beat the
shit out of me.
LEONARD
Why?
NATALIE
Because of you, you fucking idiot!
Because I did what you told me!
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
74.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Go to him, reason with him, tell him
about Teddy! Great fucking ideal
LEONARD
Calm down.
LEONARD (cont'd)
(softly)
Take it easy. You're safe now. You're
safe.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Let's get some ice on your face.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LATER:
NATALIE
I did exactly what you told me. I went to *
Dodd and I said that I didn't have *
Jimmy's money, or any drugs, that this
Teddy must have taken everything.
LEONARD
And what did he say?
NATALIE
He didn't believe me. He said that if I
don't get him the money tomorrow he's
gonna kill me. Then he started hitting
me.
LEONARD
Where is he?
NATALIE
What are you gonna do?
LEONARD
I'll go see him.
NATALIE
And?
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
Give him some bruises of his own and tell
him to look for a guy called Teddy.
NATALIE
He'll kill you, Lenny.
LEONARD
(smiling)
My wife used to call me Lenny.
NATALIE
Yeah?
LEONARD
Yeah, I hated it.
NATALIE
This guy's dangerous, let's think of
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
something else.
LEONARD
I'll take care of it. Just tell me what
he looks like, and where I can find him.
Do you have a pen?
NATALIE
LEONARD
Me? Why would he be interested in me?
NATALIE
I told him about your car.
LEONARD
Why would you do that?
NATALIE
He was beating the crap out of me! I had
to tell him something!
LEONARD
Just write it all down. What he looks *
like, where I find him. *
(CONTINUED)
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY (O.S.)
You should lock a car as nice as this.
CUT TO:
122 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 122
LEONARD
No, she shouldn't have given me that
responsibility. Shit, I'm not a doctor,
I'm a claims investigator.
Leonard crooks his neck to hold the receiver between ear and
shoulder and FIDDLES with the BANDAGE ON HIS LEFT ARM, *
starting to peel back the tape, t.zying to look under the
cotton pad.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I suppose, but I've got all sorts of
other considerations.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Legal responsibility, and large
financial...
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD (cont'd)
Who is this?
He takes the receiver away from his ear as if the caller has
just hung up.
CUT TO:
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
123 INT. NATALIE'S LIVING ROOM - DAY <> 123
LEONARD
What's wrong?
NATALIE
Somebody's come. Already.
LEONARD
Who?
NATALIE
Calls himself Dodd.
LEONARD
What does he want?
NATALIE
Wants to know what happened to Jimmy. And
his money. He thinks I have it. He thinks
I took it.
LEONARD
Did you?
NATALIE
No!
LEONARD
What's this all about?
NATALIE
You don't know, do you? You're blissfully
ignorant, aren't you?
LEONARD
I have this condition -
(CONTINUED)
78.
NATALIE
I know about your fucking condition,
Leonard! I probably know more about it
than you do! You don't have a fucking
clue about anything else!
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
What happened?
NATALIE
What happened is that Jimmy went to meet
a guy called Teddy. He took a lot of
money with him and he didn't come back.
Jimmy's partners think I set him up. I
don't know whether you know this Teddy or
how well -
LEONARD
Neither do I.
NATALIE
Don't protect him.
LEONARD
I'm not.
NATALIE
Help me.
LEONARD
How?
NATALIE
Get rid of Dodd for me.
LEONARD
What?
NATALIE
Kill him. I'll pay you.
LEONARD
What do you think I am?! I'm not gonna
kill someone for money.
NATALIE
What then? Love? What would you kill for?
For your wife, right?
LEONARD
That's different.
(CONTINUED)
79.
NATALIE
Not to me! I wasn't fucking married to
her!
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Don't talk about my wife.
NATALIE
I can talk about whoever the fuck I want!
You won't even remember what I say! I can
tell you that your wife was a fucking
whore and we can still be friends!
LEONARD
Calm down.
NATALIE
That's easy for you to say! You can't get
scared, you don't remember how, you
fucking idiot!
LEONARD
Just take it easy, this isn't my fault.
NATALIE
Maybe it is! How the fuck would you
know?! You don't know a fucking thing!
You can't get scared, can you get angry?!
LEONARD
Yes.
NATALIE
You pathetic piece of shit. I can say
whatever the fuck I want and you won't
have a clue, you fucking retard.
LEONARD
Shut the fuck up!
NATALIE
I'm gonna use you, you stupid fuck. I'm
telling you now because I'll enjoy it
more if I know that you could stop me if
you weren't a freak.
(CONTINUED)
80.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Lost your pen? That's too bad, freak.
Otherwise you could've written yourself
a little note about how much Natalie
hates your retarded guts.
NATALIE (cont'd)
No pens here, I'm afraid. You're never
going to know that I called you a retard,
and your wife a whore.
LEONARD
Don't say another fucking word!
NATALIE
About your whore of a wife?
NATALIE (cont'd)
I read about your problem. You know what
one of the causes of short term memory
loss is?
Leonard fumes.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Venereal disease. Maybe your cunt of a
wife sucked one too many diseased cocks
and turned you into a retard.
NATALIE (cont'd)
You sad freak, you won't remember any of
what I've said, and we'll be best
friends, or even lovers.
(CONTINUED)
81.
Natalie gets to her feet, and goes to the door. She turns to
Leonard. Her face is bloody but she smiles.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
NATALIE (cont'd)
See you soon.
Natalie exits. Leonard watches her walk out to her car and
get in. She just sits there.
Leonard turns from the window and looks around the room. He
grabs at drawers, searching for a pen. He looks back out the *
window. Natalie is still sitting in her car. Leonard is *
sifting through the papers on the desk when he hears a car *
door SLAM. He looks out of the window to see Natalie getting *
out of her car. She turns to walk toward the house. Her face
is swollen and bloody.
LEONARD
What happened?
NATALIE
What does it look like?
LEONARD
Front desk? Burt, right. Well, this is
Mr. Shelby in Room 21. I don't want any *
calls, none at all, got it? Thanks. *
CUT TO:
NATALIE
You can just crash out on the couch.
You'll be comfortable.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Uh, take a seat.
NATALIE (cont'd)
So how long you think it's gonna take
you?
NATALIE (cont'd)
You told me you were looking for the guy
who killed your wife.
LEONARD
(consulting file) *
Depends on if he's here in town. Or if
he's moved on. See, I've got all this - *
NATALIE
Can I ask you something?
Leonard nods.
NATALIE (cont'd)
If you've got all this information, how
come the police haven't found him for
you?
LEONARD
They're not looking for him.
NATALIE
Why not?
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
They don't think he exists.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I told them what I remembered. I was
asleep, something woke me up...
Leonard opens his eyes. He slides his hand over to the empty
space on the bed beside him, feeling the sheet.
LEONARD (V.0.)
Her side of the bed was cold. She'd been *
out of bed for a while.
128 INT. LEONARD'S HALLWAY WITH WOODEN FLOORS AND HIGH CEILINGS 128
NIGHT <>
Leonard takes a gun down from the top of the bedroom closet,
then quietly makes his way into the corridor.
(CONTINUED)
(CONTINUED)
A SHOT rings out and the white cotton mask is BLOWN into RED,
the Masked Man falling of f the struggling woman. Leonard
stands in the doorway, smoking gun in hand. He is HIT HARD
from behind by an UNSEEN ASSAILANT who GRABS Leonard by the
HAIR and THROWS his HEAD into the MIRROR, SHATTERING IT.
Leonard DROPS to the floor.
LEONARD (cont'd)
There had to be a second man. I was
struck from behind, I remember. It's
about the last thing I do remember. But *
the police didn't believe me.
NATALIE
How did they explain what you remembered?
The gun and stuff?
LEONARD
(points at conclusions on back *
of file) *
John G. was clever. He took the dead
man's gun and replaced it with the sap
that he'd hit me with. He left my gun and
left the getaway car. He gave the police
a complete package. They found a sap with
my blood on it in the dead man's hand,
and they only found my gun. They didn't
need to look for anyone else. I was the
only guy who disagreed with the facts,
and I had brain damage. *
NATALIE
You can stay here for a couple of days if
it'll help.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
Thank you.
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
85.
NATALIE
I've got to get back for the evening
shift, so make yourself at home, watch
T.V., whatever. Just grab a blanket and
pillow off the bed. I never need them all
anyway.
LEONARD
Oh, one thing.
LEONARD (cont'd)
Something to remember you by.
LATER:
LEONARD (cont'd)
What's wrong?
NATALIE
Somebody's come. Already.
CUT TO:
131 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 131 *
BURT
Leonard, it's Burt from the front desk.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
Yeah?
(CONTINUED)
BURT
I know you said you didn't want any
calls...
LEONARD
That's right I did, didn't I?
BURT
Yeah, but there's a call for you from
this guy. He's a cop.
LEONARD
A cop?
BURT
And he says you're gonna wanna hear what
he's got to say. *
LEONARD
(shakes head) *
I'm not too good on the phone. I need to *
look people in the eye when I talk to *
them. *
CUT TO:
NATALIE
On the house.
LEONARD
Thanks.
NATALIE
(fascinated)
You really do have a problem. Just like
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
that cop said.
(CONTINUED)
NATALIE (cont'd)
Your condition, I mean.
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
(shrugs)
Nobody's perfect.
NATALIE
What's the last thing you remember?
Leonard looks at her.
CUT TO FLASHBACK:
LEONARD
My wife.
NATALIE
Sweet.
LEONARD
Dying.
NATALIE
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
What?
LEONARD
I remember my wife dying.
NATALIE
Let me get you a fresh glass. I think
this one was dusty.
135 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 135
(CONTINUED)
"TAKE MY CALL" *
CUT TO:
(CONTINUED)
137 INT. JAGUAR PARKED IN FERDY'S BAR PARKING LOT - DAY <>
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
139 INT. FERDY'S BAR ON MAIN STREET - DAY <> 139
LEONARD
Beer, please.
NATALIE
(apprehensive)
What do you want?
LEONARD
A BEER, please.
NATALIE
Don't just waltz in here dressed like *
that and order a beer. *
LEONARD
There's a dress code?
NATALIE
What are you here for?
LEONARD
I'm meeting someone called Natalie.
NATALIE
Well, that's me.
LEONARD
Oh. But haven't we met before?
LEONARD (cont'd)
So why am I here?
NATALIE
You tell me.
LEONARD
I don't remember. See, I have no short- *
term memory. It's not amnesia - *
(CONTINUED)
NATALIE
You're the memory guy?
LEONARD
How do you know about me?
NATALIE
My boyfriend told me about you.
LEONARD
Who's your boyfriend?
NATALIE
(beat)
Jimmy Grantz. Know him?
Leonard shrugs.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Well, it seems like Jimmy knows you. He
told me about you. Said you were staying
over at the Discount. Then, just this *
evening, this cop comes in here looking *
for you. Looking for a guy who couldn't
remember stuff, who'd forget how he got
here or where he was going. I told him we
get a lot of guys like that in here.
LEONARD
Chronic alcoholism ~ one cause of short
term memory loss.
NATALIE
Are you Teddy?
LEONARD
My name's Leonard. *
NATALIE
Did Teddy send you?
LEONARD
I don't know.
NATALIE
What's happened to Jimmy?
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
I don't know. I'm sorry.
NATALIE
You have no idea where you've just come
from? What you've just done?
LEONARD
I can't make new memories. Everything *
fades, nothing sticks. By the time we
finish this conversation I won't remember
how it started, and the next time I see
you I won't know that I've ever met you
before.
NATALIE
So why did you come here?
Leonard pulls the beer mat out of his pocket and hands it to
Natalie.
LEONARD
Found it in my pocket.
NATALIE
(quiet)
Your pocket.
LATER:
NATALIE (cont'd)
Bar bet.
Leonard shakes his head and looks down. He hears a snort and
glances over again. The Drunk is pushing his finger against
one nostril, whilst blowing snot out the other into the
tankard. Natalie smiles again.
NATALIE (cont'd)
For a lot of money.
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
92.
NATALIE (cont'd)
Care to contribute?
NATALIE (cont'd)
Come on, proceeds are going to charity.
Leonard drops a tidy blob of spit into the beer, shakes his
head, revolted. Natalie places the mug on the bar in front of
the stool next to Leonard's. She takes a long-handled spoon
and stirs it vigorously. Leonard grabs his Polaroids and
moves over to a booth.
NATALIE (cont'd)
On the house.
LEONARD
Thank-you.
CUT TO:
140 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 140
LEONARD *
(anxious) *
What do you want? *
(listens) *
I know you're a cop, but what do you *
want? Did I do something wrong? *
(frightened) *
No, but I can't remember things I do. I *
don't know what I just did. Maybe I did *
something wrong, did I do something *
wrong? *
Leonard paces. *
LEONARD *
I dunno - something bad. Maybe I did *
something bad. *
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
93.
Leonard reaches into his jacket pocket and pulls out a round *
piece of cardboard. It is a BEER MAT with the name of a local *
bar: "FERDY'S". There is a message written on it: *
NATALIE *
(casual) *
Hey, Jimmy - *
NATALIE (cont'd) *
I'm sorry, I... I thought you were *
someone else. *
Natalie backs away from the car, perturbed. Just before she *
disappears around the corner, she tips the lid of the *
dumpster, letting it fall with a metallic howl and a BANG. *
C140 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## C140
LEONARD *
No, Officer, but with my condition, you *
don't know anything... you feel angry, *
guilty, you don't know why. You could do *
something terrible and not have the *
faintest idea ten minutes later. Like *
Sammy. What if I've done something like *
Sammy?! *
(listens) *
I didn't tell you? Didn't I tell you *
what happened to Sammy and his wife?! *
(listens) *
(MORE)
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
93A.
LEONARD (contd)
Mrs. Jankis came to my off ice and asked *
my honest opinion about Sammy's *
condition. *
141 INT. LEONARD'S OFFICE - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 141
Mrs. Jankis is seated across the desk from Leonard. She gets
up to leave. Leonard just sits there.
LEONARD (V.0.)
I never said he was faking. Just that
his condition was mental, not physical.
She seemed satisfied, she just said
"thanks" and got up to leave. I found
out later that she went home and gave
Sammy his final exam.
142 INT. THE JANKIS HOUSE LIVING ROOM - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE 142
SEQUENCE##
MRS. JANKIS
Sammy, it's time for my shot.
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
94.
LEONARD (V.O.)
She knew beyond doubt that he loved her,
so she found a way to test him.
MRS. JANKIS
Sammy, it's time for my shot.
Sammy watches T.V. Mrs. Jankis sets her watch back by fifteen
minutes.
Mrs. Jankis offers Sammy her leg, and he gives her another
shot of insulin, smiling.
LEONARD (V.O.)
She really thought she would call his
bluff...
DISSOLVE TO:
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
Sammy couldn't understand or explain
what had happened.
143 INT. CROWDED DAY ROOM OF A NURSING HOME - DAY ##BLACK AND 143
WHITE SEQUENCE##
Sammy sits watching other patients and nursing staff pass by.
(LEONARD TO SUBSTITUTE) He looks at each one with a fresh
look of expectant recognition.
LEONARD (V.0.)
He's been in a home ever since. He
doesn't even know his wife is dead.
144 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 144*
LEONARD (cont'd) *
Sammy's brain didn't respond to *
conditioning, but he was no con man. *
When his wife looked into his eyes she *
thought he could be the same as he ever *
was. When I looked into Sammy's eyes, I *
thought I saw recognition. We were both *
wrong.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD (cont'd)
Now I know. You take it. If you think
you're supposed to recognize someone,
you pretend to. You bluff it to get a
pat on the head from the doctors. You
bluff it to seem less of a freak. *
LEONARD
Didn't know this town had a parlor.
TATTOOIST
Every town's got a parlor.
LEONARD
I'd like this on my thigh please.
Leonard hands her a FILE CARD. She reads the card, then looks
at him. He shrugs.
LEONARD
Promise you won't call me an idiot.
TATTOOIST
(shaking her head)
Idiot.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
97.
The curtain is thrust open and Teddy pokes his head in.
TEDDY
Hi, Lenny.
TATTOOIST *
It's private back here.
TEDDY
It's alright, we know each other, right,
Lenny?
LEONARD
How'd you know I was in here?
TEDDY
The Jaguar's out front. You didn't even
Bother to put it around back.
Teddy cranes his neck to see what the tattoo says, but only
"6. LI" is visible.
TEDDY (cont'd)
You should have just left town, Lenny.
There's Tattoo parlors up North.
LEONARD
Guess I wanted to get something down
before it slipped my mind.
TEDDY
Gimme the keys, I'll move the car.
LEONARD
It'll be alright for a minute.
TATTOOIST
Wait out there.
Teddy goes back through the curtain. Teddy pops his head back
through the curtain.
TEDDY
Lenny, I'll be back in a minute. I've got
to get you some stuff.
TEDDY
Give us a minute, will ya?
She shrugs and heads into the back. Teddy watches her go,
then turns to Leonard, conspiratorial.
TEDDY (cont'd)
We've got to get you out of here. *
LEONARD
Why?
TEDDY
Why? Come on, Leonard, we talked about
this. It's not safe f or you to be walking
around like this.
LEONARD
Why not?
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY
Because that cop's looking for you. We *
need to get you a change of identity.
Some new clothes and a different car
should do for now. Put these on. *
LEONARD *
What cop?
TEDDY
This bad cop. He checked you into the *
Discount Inn. Then he's been calling you *
for days, sticking envelopes under your *
door, telling you shit. *
LEONARD
Envelopes? *
TEDDY
He knows you're no good on the phone, so *
he calls you up to bullshit you. *
Sometimes you stop taking his calls, so *
he slips something under your door to *
frighten you into answering your phone *
again. He's been pretending to help you. *
Feeding you a line of crap about John G. *
being some local drug dealer. *
LEONARD
How do you know this?
TEDDY
'Cos he fucking told me. He thinks it's
funny. He's laughing at you.
LEONARD
How do you know him?
TEDDY
(glances around)
I'm a snitch. He's a cop from out of town
looking for information. The local boys
put us in touch.
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
100.
LEONARD *
What did he want to know from you? *
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY *
He wanted to know all, about Jimmy Grantz.
LEONARD
Who?
TEDDY
Jimmy's a drug dealer. This cop wanted to
know all about how he sets up deals, shit
like that. He's got some score in mind *
and you're involved. Come on, there's no *
time to argue - if he knew I was helping *
you he'd find a way to kill me. Just get *
these clothes on. You're gonna take my *
car and get the fuck out of here. *
Leonard drops the plastic bag and takes his jacket off. He
feels something in the pocket, sticks his hand in and pulls *
out a charred Polaroid photograph. *
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(under his breath)
Sneaky fuck. "Bad Cop". Had me going.
Leonard puts his jacket back on, checks the other pockets. He
finds a BEER MAT for a local bar named FERDY'S. There is a
message written on it:
CUT TO:
153 INT. MOTEL ROOM 21 - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 153
LEONARD
So this Jimmy Grantz deals drugs out of *
the bar where his girlfriend works. But *
he'll come to the meet alone. *
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD (cont'd) *
I always figured the drugs angle would *
be the best way to get him. No, officer, *
I'm ready. Ready as I'll ever be.
(listens)
You're downstairs now? What do you look
like?
(listens)
I'll be right down.
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
103.
154 EXT. DISCOUNT INN - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 154
155 INT. DISCOUNT INN OFFICE - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 155
TEDDY
Lenny!
LEONARD
Officer Gammell.
156 EXT. DISCOUNT INN - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 156
LEONARD
Something to remember you by.
Leonard lowers the camera and takes out a pen, resting the
picture against the truck, about to write on the white strip
beneath the developing picture.
LEONARD (cont'd)
I'm sorry - is it Officer, or Lieutenant
Gammell?
TEDDY
Just Teddy. Don't write Gammell please.
TEDDY (cont'd)
I'm undercover. Here's directions. He'll
be heading there now.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
You're not coming?
TEDDY
Wouldn't be appropriate. *
TEDDY (cont'd)
Leonard?
TEDDY (cont'd)
Make him beg.
157 INT./EXT. PICKUP TRUCK ON STREET - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE 157
SEQUENCE##
The pickup truck speeds along, past strip malls and gas
stations, heading into more desolate industrialization.
158 EXT. THE DERELICT BUILDING - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE##158
The pickup truck bumps across the railroad tracks, then pulls
up in front of the LARGE DERELICT BUILDING. Leonard gets out
of the pickup, looking around.
159 INT. DERELICT BUILDING - DAY - ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 159
160 EXT. DERELICT BUILDING - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 160
161 INT. DERELICT BUILDING - DAY ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 161
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Pink Revisions - 9/7/99
105.
JIMMY
Teddy?!
LEONARD
Jimmy?
JIMMY
What the fuck are you doing here?
LEONARD
Do you remember me?
JIMMY
(laughs)
Yeah, I remember you.
LEONARD
You Jimmy Grantz? *
JIMMY
Expecting any other Jimmy's out here,
Memory Man? Where the fuck's Teddy?
JIMMY (cont'd)
Well?
FLASHBACK TO:
162 INT. LEONARD'S APARTMENT BATHROOM - NIGHT ##BLACK AND WHITE 162
SEQUENCE##
163 INT. DERELICT BUILDING - DAY - ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 163
Leonard HITS Jimmy around the head with the jack handle.
Jimmy goes down, but STRUGGLES as Leonard drags him deeper
into the dark hallway. Leonard bends over the groaning Jimmy,
frisking him, finding nothing.
JIMMY (cont'd)
You fucking retard, you can't get away
with this -
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard holds the jack handle above him.
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO Blue Revisions - 8/27/99
106.
LEONARD
Strip!
JIMMY
You're making a big fucking mistake. My
associates are not people you want -
LEONARD
Don't say anything else.
JIMMY
I knew I couldn't trust that fuck -
LEONARD
Quiet!
LEONARD (cont'd)
Pants, too.
JIMMY
Why?
LEONARD
I don't want blood on them.
JIMMY
(sudden fear)
Wait! Did he tell you what I was
bringing?
LEONARD
Strip!
JIMMY
Look, there's two hundred grand stashed
in the car. Just take it!
LEONARD
You think you can bargain with me?!
JIMMY
Take the money and walk away!
LEONARD
I don't want your fucking money!
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
107.
JIMMY
What?! What do you want from me?!
165 INT. DERELICT BUILDING - DAY - ##BLACK AND WHITE SEQUENCE## 165
LEONARD
I want my fucking life back!
BACK TO SCENE:
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard stands above Jimmy's body, examining the picture he
has just taken, nodding to himself, catching his breath.
(CONTINUED)
108.
JIMMY
(barely and audible rasp)
Sammy... remember Sammy...
Leonard looks out to see Teddy getting out of his GREY SEDAN.
Leonard leafs through his Polaroids finding the one of Teddy.
There is nothing on the back. He sticks his Polaroids back in
his pocket, pausing at the one of the STRANGLED JIMMY.
LEONARD (V.0.) *
What have I done? *
LEONARD
(distraught)
Hey! Mister! I need help!
TEDDY
What's wrong?
LEONARD
There's a guy in here, hurt bad! We gotta
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
get him to a doctor!
LEONARD
(panicked)
He might have fallen down the stairs, I
don't know, I don't know what's going on,
I'm confused. I have this memory thing -
do I know you?
TEDDY
No. Don't worry, I'm a cop. Everything'll
be okay. Is he still breathing?
LEONARD
Maybe. Maybe just.
TEDDY
So what were you doing here?
LEONARD
I don't know. See, I have this condition.
TEDDY
Well, I hope it's not as serious as his,
'cos this guy's dead.
TEDDY (cont'd) *
FUCK, Lenny! That fucking kills!
LEONARD
Remember me again, huh?
LEONARD (cont'd) *
You're a cop. A fucking cop. *
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY *
Yeah, and I helped you find the guy you *
were looking for - *
LEONARD *
Get up. *
TEDDY
I think you've got the wrong idea -
LEONARD
Who was that? He's not the guy. He knew *
me. *
TEDDY *
Sure he did. He raped your wife and *
fucked up your brain. *
LEONARD *
Bullshit. *
TEDDY
His name's James F. Grantz, John G. Check *
your tattoos. *
LEONARD
So what was he bringing the two hundred *
grand for? *
TEDDY *
What - *
LEONARD *
What was it for? *
TEDDY
A load of amphetamine I told him I had.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
LEONARD
This is a drug deal?!
TEDDY
That, and your thing. *
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY (cont'd) *
Jimmy's your guy, Leonard. I just figured *
we'd make some money on the side. *
LEONARD *
But how did he know me? *
TEDDY *
The Discount Inn, he deals out of there. *
The guy at the front desk lets him know
if anybody comes snooping around. He
called Jimmy as soon as you took a
picture of that dump. *
LEONARD
You're using me!
TEDDY
No!
(beat)
You get half. *
LEONARD
He knew about Sammy. Why would I tell him
about Sammy? *
TEDDY
(chuckles)
You tell everyone about Sammy. Everyone
who'll listen. "Remember Sammy Jankis,
remember Sammy Jankis". Great story. Gets
better every time you tell it. So you
lie to yourself to be happy. Nothing
wrong with that - we all do. Who cares if
there's a few little things you'd rather
not remember?
LEONARD
What the fuck are you talking about?
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO - Green Revisions 10-4-99
112.
TEDDY
(theatrical shrug)
I dunno... your wife surviving the
assault... her not believing about your
condition... the doubt tearing her up
inside.., the insulin -
LEONARD
That's Sammy, not me! I told you about
Sammy -
TEDDY
Like you've told yourself. Over and over.
Conditioning yourself to believe.
"learning through repetition" -
LEONARD
Sammy let his wife kill herself! Sammy
ended up in an institution - ! *
TEDDY
Sammy was a con man. A faker.
LEONARD
I never said he was faking! I never said
that!
TEDDY
You exposed him for what he was: a fraud.
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
I was wrong! That's the whole point!
Sammy's wife came to me and -
TEDDY
Sammy didn't have a wife.
TEDDY (cont'd)
It was your wife who had diabetes.
Leonard thinks.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard's Wife sitting on the edge of the bed. She feels a
sharp pain, and turns to Leonard (just as we have seen
before).
LEONARD'S WIFE
Gentle.
LEONARD
My wife wasn't diabetic.
TEDDY
Are you sure?
LEONARD'S WIFE
Gentle.
(CONTINUED)
LEONARD
She wasn't diabetic. You think I don't *
know my own wife? What the fuck is wrong *
with you? *
TEDDY
(shrugs)
I guess I can only make you believe the
things you want to be true, huh? Like ol' *
Jimmy down there.
LEONARD
But he's not the right guy! *
TEDDY *
He was to you. Come on, Lenny, you got *
your revenge - just enjoy it while you *
still remember. *
(CONTINUED)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
MEMENTO - Green Revisions 10-4-99
115.
TEDDY
(chuckles)
What difference does it make whether he *
was your guy or not? *
LEONARD
It makes all the difference. *
TEDDY
Why? You're never going to know. *
LEONARD
Yes, I will.
TEDDY
No, you won't.
LEONARD
Somehow, I'll know!
TEDDY
You won't remember!
LEONARD
When it's done, I'll know! It'll be
different!
TEDDY
I thought so too! I was sure you'd *
remember. But you didn't. *
TEDDY
(off look)
You know, when we found your guy and *
killed him.
(off look)
That's right, the real John G. Over a *
year ago. I helped you find him. He's *
already dead. *
LEONARD
Why do you keep lying to me? *
TEDDY
I'm not. I was the cop assigned to your *
wife's death. I believed you, I thought *
you deserved the chance for revenge. I
helped you find the other guy who was in
your bathroom that night. The guy who
cracked your skull and fucked your wife. *
We found him and you killed him. *
(MORE)
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
(CONTINUED)
MEMENTO - Green Revisions 10-4-99
115A.
TEDDY (cont'd)
You didn't remember, so I helped you *
start looking again, looking for the guy *
you already killed.
LEONARD
So who are you saying he was? *
TEDDY
Just some guy. Does it even matter who? I
stopped asking myself why a long time
ago. No reason, no conspiracy; just bad
fucking luck. A couple of junkies, too *
strung out to realize that your wife
didn't live alone. When you killed him, *
I've never seen you so happy - I was
convinced you'd remember. But it didn't
stick, like nothing ever sticks. Like
this won't stick.
TEDDY (cont'd)
That's the picture, right? I took that,
right when you did it. Look how happy you *
are. Before you forgot. I wanted to see *
that face again.
LEONARD *
(sarcastic) *
Thank you. *
TEDDY
Fuck you; I gave you a reason to live and *
you were more than happy to help. You lie *
to yourself! You don't want the truth, *
the truth is a fucking coward. So you *
make up your own truth. *
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY (cont'd) *
Look at your police file. It was complete *
when I gave it to you. Who took the 12 *
pages out? *
LEONARD
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
You probably. *
TEDDY
No. You took them out. *
LEONARD
Why would I do that? *
TEDDY
To set yourself a puzzle you won't ever
solve. You know how many towns, how many *
guys called James G? Or John G? Shit,
Leonard, I'm a John G.
LEONARD
Your name's Teddy.
TEDDY
(chuckles)
My mother calls me Teddy. I'm John Edward
Gammell. Cheer up, there's a lot of John *
G's for us to find. All you do is moan. *
I'm the one that has to live with what *
you've done. I'm the one that has to put *
it all together. You just wander around *
playing detective. You're living a dream, *
kid. A dead wife to pine for and a sense *
of purpose to your life. A romantic quest *
which you wouldn't end even if I wasn't *
in the picture. *
LEONARD
I should kill you. *
TEDDY
Quit it! *
(brushes the gun away) *
You're not a killer, Lenny. That's why *
you're so good at it. *
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY (cont'd)
Hey, where are you going? You know what *
time it is? *
Leonard, in BEIGE SUIT and BLUE SHIRT, comes out into the
daylight, THROWS Teddy's CAR KEYS into some bushes then heads
to his PICKUP TRUCK and climbs in. Teddy goes to look for his
keys in the bushes.
(CONTINUED)
Leonard opens the revolver and empties the bullets onto the
passenger seat. He flips through the photos until he finds
the one of the STRANGLED JIMMY.
LEONARD (V.0.)
I'm not a killer...
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
Maybe I'm not finished yet. Maybe I need
to be sure that you won't ever use me
again.
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
Leonard writes on the file card:
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
Do I lie to myself to be happy?
LEONARD (V.O.)(cont'd)
In your case, Teddy... yes, I will.
(CONTINUED)
Leonard grabs the sports bag and GETS OUT of the PICKUP
TRUCK. He goes to THE JAGUAR and OPENS the passenger door,
DUMPING his sports bag onto the seat. Teddy SEES this and
RUNS over. Leonard walks to the back of the Jaguar and holds
up his camera.
TEDDY
Hey! Hey, that's not your car!
LEONARD
It is now.
TEDDY
You can't just take it!
LEONARD
Why not?
(CONTINUED)
TEDDY
You just killed the guy who owned it!
Somebody'll recognize it!
LEONARD
I'd rather be mistaken for a dead guy
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
than a murderer. I'm gonna hang on to
this.
182 INT./EXT. THE ROAD BACK INTO TOWN - DAY <> 182
LEONARD (V.O.)
I have to believe in the world outside my
own mind. I have to believe that my
actions still have meaning, even if I
can't remember them. I have to believe
that when my eyes are closed, the world's
still there.
(CONTINUED)
119.
CUT TO BLACK.
ROLL CREDITS
END.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
MEMENTO MORI
by
Jonathan Nolan
Your wife always used to say you'd be late for your own funeral.
Remember that? Her little joke because you were such a slob-always
late, always forgetting stuff, even before the incident.
Right about now you're probably wondering if you were late for hers.
You were there, you can be sure of that. That's what the picture's
for-the one tacked to the wall by the door. It's not customary to take
pictures at a funeral, but somebody, your doctors, I guess, knew you
wouldn't remember. They had it blown up nice and big and stuck it
right there, next to the door, so you couldn't help but see it every
time you got up to find out where she was.
The guy in the picture, the one with the flowers? That's you. And what
are you doing? You're reading the headstone, trying to figure out
who's funeral you're at, same as you're reading it now, trying to
figure why someone stuck that picture next to your door. But why
bother reading something that you won't remember?
She's gone, gone for good, and you must be hurting right now, hearing
the news. Believe me, I know how you feel. You're probably a wreck.
But give it five minutes, maybe ten. Maybe you can even go a whole
Script provided for educational purposes. More scripts can be found here: http://www.sellingyourscreenplay.com/library
half hour before you forget.
But you will forget-I guarantee it. A few more minutes and you'll be
heading for the door, looking for her all over again, breaking down
when you find the picture. How many times do you have to hear the news
before some other part of your body, other than that busted brain of
yours, starts to remember?
Maybe you can't understand what happened to you. But you do remember
what happened to HER, don't you? The doctors don't want to talk about
it. They won't answer my questions. They don't think it's right for a
man in your condition to hear about those things. But you remember
enough, don't you? You remember his face.
This is why I'm writing to you. Futile, maybe. I don't know how many
times you'll have to read this before you listen to me. I don't even
know how long you've been locked up in this room already. Neither do
you. But your advantage in forgetting is that you'll forget to write
yourself off as a lost cause.
Sooner or later you'll want to do something about it. And when you do,
you'll just have to trust me, because I'm the only one who can help
you.
***
EARL OPENS ONE EYE after another to a stretch of white ceiling tiles
interrupted by a hand-printed sign taped right above his head, large
enough for him to read from the bed. An alarm clock is ringing
somewhere. He reads the sign, blinks,reads it again, then takes a look
at the room.
It's a white room, overwhelmingly white, from the walls and the
curtains to the institutional furniture and the bedspread. The alarm
clock is ringing from the white desk under the window with the white
curtains. At this point Earl probably notices that he is lying on top
of his white comforter. He is already wearing a dressing gown and
slippers.
He lies back and reads the sign taped to the ceiling again. It says,
in crude block capitals, THIS IS YOUR ROOM. THIS IS A ROOM IN A
HOSPITAL. THIS IS WHERE YOU LIVE NOW.
Earl rises and takes a look around. The room is large for a
hospital-empty linoleum stretches out from the bed in three
directions. Two doors and a window. The view isn't very helpful,
either-a close of trees in the center of a carefully manicured piece
of turf that terminates in a sliver of two-lane blacktop. The trees,
except for the evergreens, are bare-early spring or late fall, one or
the other.
Every inch of the desk is covered with Post-it notes, legal pads,
neatly printed lists, psychological textbooks, framed pictures. On top
of the mess is a half-completed crossword puzzle. The alarm clock is
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riding a pile of folded newspapers. Earl slaps the snooze button and
takes a cigarette from the pack taped to the sleeve of his dressing
gown. He pats the empty pockets of his pajamas for a light. He rifles
the papers on the desk, looks quickly through the drawers. Eventually
he finds a box of kitchen matches taped to the wall next to the
window. Another sign is taped just above the box. It says in loud
yellow letters, CIGARETTE? CHECK FOR LIT ONES FIRST, STUPID.
Earl laughs at the sign, lights his cigarette, and takes a long draw.
Taped to the window in front of him is another piece of looseleaf
paper headed YOUR SCHEDULE.
It charts off the hours, every hour, in blocks: 10:00 p.m. to 8:00
a.m. is labeled go BACK TO SLEEP. Earl consults the alarm clock: 8:15.
Given the light outside, it must be morning. He checks his watch:
10:30. He presses the watch to his ear and listens. He gives the watch
a wind or two and sets it to match the alarm clock.
According to the schedule, the entire block from 8:00 to 8:30 has been
labeled BRUSH YOUR TEETH. Earl laughs again and walks over to the
bathroom.
The paper has been folded down to a minuscule size with all the
precision of a sixth-grader's love note. Earl unfolds it and smooths
it against the mirror. It reads-
Earl reads both sides again, then folds the note back down to its
original size and tucks it underneath the toothpaste.
Maybe then he notices the scar. It begins just beneath the ear, jagged
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and thick, and disappears abruptly into his hairline. Earl turns his
head and stares out of the corner of his eye to follow the scar's
progress. He traces it with a fingertip, then looks back down at the
cigarette burning in the ashtray. A thought seizes him and he spins
out of the bathroom.
He is caught at the door to his room, one hand on the knob. Two
pictures are taped to the wall by the door. Earl's attention is caught
first by the MRI, a shiny black frame for four windows into someone's
skull. In marker, the picture is labeled YOUR BRAIN. Earl stares at
it. Concentric circles in different colors. He can make out the big
orbs of his eyes and, behind these, the twin lobes of his brain.
Smooth wrinkles, circles, semicircles. But right there in the middle
of his head, circled in marker, tunneled in from the back of his neck
like a maggot into an apricot, is something different. Deformed,
broken, but unmistakable. A dark smudge, the shape of a flower, right
there in the middle of his brain.
Earl opens one eye after another to a stretch of white ceiling tiles,
interrupted by a hand-printed sign taped right above his head, large
enough for him to read from the bed.
***
You can't have a normal life anymore. You must know that. How can you
have a girlfriend if you can't remember her name? Can't have kids, not
unless you want them to grow up with a dad who doesn't recognize them.
Sure as hell can't hold down a job. Not too many professions out there
that value forgetfulness. Prostitution, maybe. Politics, of course.
No. Your life is over. You're a dead man.The only thing the doctors
are hoping to do is teach you to be less of a burden to the orderlies.
And they'll probably never let you go home, wherever that would be.
So the question is not "to be or not to be," because you aren't. The
question is whether you want to do something about it. Whether revenge
matters to you.
It does to most people. For a few weeks, they plot, they scheme, they
take measures to get even. But the passage of time is all it takes to
erode that initial impulse. Time is theft, isn't that what they say?
And time eventually convinces most of us that forgiveness is a virtue.
Conveniently, cowardice and forgiveness look identical at a certain
distance. Time steals your nerve.
If time and fear aren't enough to dissuade people from their revenge,
then there's always authority, softly shaking its head and saying, We
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understand, but you're the better man for letting it go. For rising
above it. For not sinking to their level. And besides, says authority,
if you try anything stupid, we'll lock you up in a little room.
But they already put you in a little room, didn't they? Only they
don't really lock it or even guard it too carefully because you're a
cripple. A corpse. A vegetable who probably wouldn't remember to eat
or take a shit if someone wasn't there to remind you.
And as for the passage of time, well, that doesn't really apply to you
anymore, does it? Just the same ten minutes, over and over again. So
how can you forgive if you can't remember to forget?
You probably were the type to let it go, weren't you? Before. But
you're not the man you used to be. Not even half. You're a fraction;
you're the ten-minute man.
You'd like to but you can't, can you? You can't because of the last
addition to your collection. The last thing you remember. His face.
His face and your wife, looking to you for help.
And maybe this is where you can retire to when it's over. Your little
collection. They can lock you back up in another little room and you
can live the rest of your life in the past. But only if you've got a
little piece of paper in your hand that says you got him.
You know I'm right. You know there's a lot of work to do. It may seem
impossible, but I'm sure if we all do our part, we'll figure something
out. But you don't have much time. You've only got about ten minutes,
in fact. Then it starts all over again. So do something with the time
you've got.
***
EARL OPENS HIS EYES and blinks into the darkness. The alarm clock is
ringing. It says 3:20, and the moonlight streaming through the window
means it must be he early morning. Earl fumbles for the lamp, almost
knocking it over in the process. Incandescent light fills the room,
painting the metal furniture yellow, the walls yellow, the bedspread,
too. He lies back and looks up at the stretch of yellow ceiling tiles
above him, interrupted by a handwritten sign taped to the ceiling. He
reads the sign two, maybe three times, then blinks at the room around
him.
Earl absentmindedly plays with the lump of scar tissue on his neck and
moves back toward the bed. He lies back down and stares up at the
ceiling and the sign taped to it. The sign reads, GET UP, GET OUT
RIGHT NOW. THESE PEOPLE ARE TRYING TO KILL YOU.
***
They tried to teach you to make lists in grade school, remember? Back
when your day planner was the back of your hand. And if your
assignments came off in the shower, well, then they didn't get done.
No direction, they said. No discipline. So they tried to get you to
write it all down somewhere more permanent.
They were right. Lists are the only way out of this mess.
Here's the truth: People, even regular people, are never just any one
person with one set of attributes. It's not that simple. We're all at
the mercy of the limbic system, clouds of electricity drifting through
the brain. Every man is broken into twenty-four-hour fractions, and
then again within those twenty-four hours. It's a daily pantomime, one
man yielding control to the next: a backstage crowded with old hacks
clamoring for their turn in the spotlight. Every week, every day. The
angry man hands the baton over to the sulking man, and in turn to the
sex addict, the introvert, the conversationalist. Every man is a mob,
a chain gang of idiots.
This is the tragedy of life. Because for a few minutes of every day,
every man becomes a genius. Moments of clarity, insight, whatever you
want to call them. The clouds part, the planets get in a neat little
line, and everything becomes obvious. I should quit smoking, maybe, or
here's how I could make a fast million, or such and such is the key to
eternal happiness. That's the miserable truth. For a few moments, the
secrets of the universe are opened to us. Life is a cheap parlor
trick.
But then the genius, the savant, has to hand over the controls to the
next guy down the pike, most likely the guy who just wants to eat
potato chips, and insight and brilliance and salvation are all
entrusted to a moron or a hedonist or a narcoleptic.
The only way out of this mess, of course, is to take steps to ensure
that you control the idiots that you become. To take your chain gang,
hand in hand, and lead them. The best way to do this is with a list.
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It's like a letter you write to yourself. A master plan, drafted by
the guy who can see the light, made with steps simple enough for the
rest of the idiots to understand. Follow steps one through one
hundred. Repeat as necessary.
Your problem is a little more acute, maybe, but fundamentally the same
thing.
It's like that computer thing, the Chinese room. You remember that?
One guy sits in a little room, laying down cards with letters written
on them in a language he doesn't understand, laying them down one
letter at a time in a sequence according to someone else's
instructions. The cards are supposed to spell out a joke in Chinese.
The guy doesn't speak Chinese, of course. He just follows his
instructions.
***
HE CAN HEAR THE BUZZING through his eyelids. Insistent. He reaches out
for the alarm clock, but he can't move his arm.
Earl opens his eyes to see a large man bent double over him. The man
looks up at him, annoyed, then resumes his work. Earl looks around
him. Too dark for a doctor's office.
Then the pain floods his brain, blocking out the other questions. He
squirms gain, trying to yank his forearm away, the one that feels
like it's burning. The arm doesn't move, but the man shoots him
another scowl. Earl adjusts himself in the chair to see over the top
of the man's head.
The noise and the pain are both coming from a gun in the man's hand-a
gun with a needle where the barrel should be. The needle is digging
into the fleshy underside of Earl's forearm, leaving a trail of puffy
letters behind it.
Eventually the tattoo artist turns off the noise, wipes Earl's forearm
with a piece of gauze, and wanders over to the back to dig up a
pamphlet describing how to deal with a possible infection. Maybe later
he'll tell his wife about this guy and his little note. Maybe his wife
will convince him to call the police.
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Earl looks down at the arm. The letters are rising up from the skin,
weeping a little. They run from just behind the strap of Earl's watch
all the way to the inside of his elbow. Earl blinks at the message and
reads it again. It says, in careful little capitals, I RAPED AND
KILLED YOUR WIFE.
***
It's your birthday today, so I got you a little present. I would have
just bought you a beer, but who knows where that would have ended?
So instead, I got you a bell. I think I may have had to pawn your
watch to buy it, but what the hell did you need a watch for, anyway?
It's a joke, actually. A practical joke. But think of it this way: I'm
not really laughing at you so much as with you.
I'd like to think that every time you take it out of your pocket and
wonder, Why do I have this bell? a little part of you, a little piece
of your broken brain, will remember and laugh, like I'm laughing now.
Besides, you do know the answer. It was something you learned before.
So if you think about it, you'll know.
Back in the old days, people were obsessed with the fear of being
buried alive. You remember now? Medical science not being quite what
it is today, it wasn't uncommon for people to suddenly wake up in a
casket. So rich folks had their coffins outfitted with breathing
tubes. Little tubes running up to the mud above so that if someone
woke up when they weren't supposed to, they wouldn't run out of
oxygen. Now, they must have tested this out and realized that you
could shout yourself hoarse through the tube, but it was too narrow to
carry much noise. Not enough to attract attention, at least. So a
string was run up the tube to a little bell attached to the headstone.
If a dead person came back to life, all he had to do was ring his
little bell till someone came and dug him up again.
I don't know who figured out the solution to our mutual problem, so I
don't know whether to congratulate you or me. A bit of a lifestyle
change, admittedly, but an elegant solution, nonetheless.
That sounds like something out of a Hallmark card. I don't know when
you thought it up, but my hat's off to you. Not that you know what the
hell I'm talking about. But, honestly, a real brainstorm. After all,
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everybody else needs mirrors to remind themselves who they are. You're
no different.
***
THE LITTLE MECHANICAL VOICE PAUSES, then repeats itself. It says, "The
time is 8:00 a.m. This is a courtesy call." Earl opens his eyes and
replaces the receiver. The phone is perched on a cheap veneer
headboard that stretches behind the bed, curves to meet the corner,
and ends at the minibar. The TV is still on, blobs of flesh color
nattering away at each other. Earl lies back down and is surprised to
see himself, older now, tanned, the hair pulling away from his head
like solar flares. The mirror on the ceiling is cracked, the silver
fading increases. Earl continues to stare at himself, astonished by
what he sees. He is fully dressed, but the clothes are old, threadbare
in places.
Earl feels the familiar spot on his left wrist for his watch, but it's
gone. He looks down from the mirror to his arm. It is bare and the
skin has changed to an even tan, as if he never owned a watch in the
first place. The skin is even in color except for the solid black
arrow on the inside of Earl's wrist, pointing up his shirtsleeve. He
stares at the arrow for a moment. Perhaps he doesn't try to rub it off
anymore. He rolls up his sleeve.
The arrow points to a sentence tattooed along Earl's inner arm. Earl
reads the sentence once, maybe twice. Another arrow picks up at the
beginning of the sentence, points farther up Earl's arm, disappearing
under the rolled-up shirtsleeve. He unbuttons his shirt.
Looking down on his chest, he can make out the shapes but cannot bring
them into focus, so he looks up at the mirror above him.
The arrow leads up Earl's arm, crosses at the shoulder, and descends
onto his upper torso, terminating at a picture of a man's face that
occupies most of his chest. The face is that of a large man, balding,
with a mustache and a goatee. It is a particular face, but like a
police sketch it has a certain unreal quality.
EventuallyEarl sits up, buttons his shirt, and crosses to the desk. He takes out
a pen and a piece of notepaper from the desk drawer, sits, and begins
to write.
***
I don't know where you'll be when you read this. I'm not even sure if
you'll bother to read this. I guess you don't need to.
It's a shame, really, that you and I will never meet. But, like the
song says, "By the time you read this note, I'll be gone."
We're so close now. That's the way it feels. So many pieces put
together, spelled out. I guess it's just a matter of time until you
find him.
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Who knows what we've done to get here? Must be a hell of a story, if
only you could remember any of it. I guess it's better that you can't.
That's what I'm thinking about right now, in this scrappy little room.
Framed pictures of ships on the wall. I don't know, obviously, but if
I had to guess, I'd say we're somewhere up the coast. If you're
wondering why your left arm is five shades browner than your right, I
don't know what to tell you. I guess we must have been driving for a
while. And, no, I don't know what happened to your watch.
And all these keys: I have no idea. Not a one that I recognize. Car
keys and house keys and the little fiddly keys for padlocks. What have
we been up to?
I wonder if he'll feel stupid when you find him. Tracked down by the
ten-minute man. Assassinated by a vegetable.
I'll be gone in a moment. I'll put down the pen, close my eyes, and
then you can read this through if you want.
I just wanted you to know that I'm proud of you. No one who matters is
left to say it. No one left is going to want to.
EARL'S EYES ARE WIDE OPEN, staring through the window of the car.
Smiling eyes. Smiling through the window at the crowd gathering across
the street. The crowd gathering around the body in the doorway. The
body emptying slowly across the sidewalk and into the storm drain.
***
Earl is still smiling at the body as the car pulls away from the curb.
The car? Who's to say? Maybe it's a police cruiser. Maybe it's just a
taxi.
A round metal lump rolls out of his pocket and slides across the vinyl
seat. Earl is frantic now. He hammers at the plastic divider between
him and the driver, begging the man for a pen. Perhaps the cabbie
doesn't speak much English. Perhaps the cop isn't in the habit of
talking to suspects. Either way, the divider between the man in front
and the man behind remains closed. A pen is not forthcoming.
The car hits a pothole, and Earl blinks at his reflection in the
rearview mirror. He is calm now. The driver makes another corner, and
the metal lump slides back over to rest against Earl's leg with a
little jingle. He picks it up and looks at it, curious now. It is a
little bell. A little metal bell. Inscribed on it are his name and a
set of dates. He recognizes the first one: the year in which he was
born. But the second date means nothing to him. Nothing at all.
As he turns the bell over in his hands, he notices the empty space on
his wrist where his watch used to sit. There is a little arrow there,
pointing up his arm. Earl looks at the arrow, then begins to roll up
his sleeve.
***
"You'd be late for your own funeral," she'd say. Remember? The more I
think about it, the more trite that seems. What kind of idiot, after
all, is in any kind of rush to get to the end of his own story?
And how would I know if I were late, anyway? I don't have a watch
anymore. I don't know what we did with it.
What the hell do you need a watch for, anyway? It was an antique.
Deadweight tugging at your wrist. Symbol of the old you. The you that
believed in time.
No. Scratch that. It's not so much that you've lost your faith in time
as that time has lost its faith in you. And who needs it, anyway? Who
wants to be one of those saps living in the safety of the future, in
the safety of the moment after the moment in which they felt something
powerful? Living in the next moment, in which they feel nothing.
Crawling down the hands of the clock, away from the people who did
unspeakable things to them. Believing the lie that time will heal all
wounds-which is just a nice way of saying that time deadens us.
But you're different. You're more perfect. Time is three things for
most people, but for you, for us, just one. A singularity. One moment.
This moment. Like you're the center of the clock, the axis on which
the hands turn. Time moves about you but never moves you. It has lost
its ability to affect you. What is it they say? That time is theft?
But not for you. Close your eyes and you can start all over again.
Conjure up that necessary emotion, fresh as roses.
End.
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