THE TRUMAN SHOW A Screen Play By Andrew M. Niccol Director: Peter Weir Shooting Script A FOGGED MIRROR Behind the fog we hear the sounds of a bathroom. After a long moment, a hand wipes the condensation from the glass to reveal the face of TRUMAN BURBANK. He wears a sleeveless Hanes undershirt and blue-stripes pajama bottoms, behind him a white glazed tiled bathroom wall. It is immediately apparent that we are viewing him through a two-way mirror. Truman, expressionless, studies his reflection in the mirror. For a long moment, he does nothing. He continues to look impassively into the mirror for what becomes an uncomfortably long time. Still nothing. Finally he speaks, talking to himself in the mirror as if participating in a TV interview. TRUMAN ... personally I think the unconquered south face is the only one worth scaling... of course it's a 20,000 foot sheer wall of ice but then when did that ever stop me before? Naturally, I intend to make the ascent without the benefit of oxygen but also without crampons or even an ice pick... risks? (smug, TV smiles) ... sure I'm aware of the risks -- why else do you think I would spend seven years as an adjuster in a life insurance company? MERYL (O.S.) Truman, you're gonna be late! Truman resignedly opens the door of the cabinet and replaces his shaving tackle. It partially obscures the lens of the hidden camera. He closes the door and exits. INT. KITCHEN - MORNING MERYL, wearing a stylish robe, sits at the kitchen table sipping coffee. On the table in front of her lies a parcel. TRUMAN enters and glances at the gift. TRUMAN What's that? MERYL It's a surprise. TRUMAN unwraps the parcel -- an expensive-looking set of exercise sweats. MERYL (eager for his response) Well, what do you think? TRUMAN They're... (the merest hesitation) perfect. Thank you. Truman returns Meryl's kiss. MERYL (handing him the sweat top) Try it on. Truman pulls the top over his head. As he does so, a closer shot focuses on the manufacturer's name. MERYL I thought you could wear them when you do your exercises. (afterthought) Pre-shrunk. And they breathe. EXT. TRUMAN'S HOUSE - DAY Wearing a business suit, briefcase in hand, TRUMAN emerges from his pleasant, Victorian-inspired, picket-fenced house into an idyllic suburban street of similarly picturesque homes. A neighbor, SPENCER, is taking in trashcans, whistling a tune. Spencer breaks off abruptly as Truman approaches his car. His license plate reads, "Seahaven -- A Nice Place To Live." SPENCER Morning, Truman. TRUMAN Morning, Spencer. And in case I don't see you, good afternoon, good evening and good night. Spencer's dog, PLUTO, bounds happily over to Truman. TRUMAN (petting the dog) Hey, Pluto. Truman exchanges a polite nod with the WASHINGTON's, an African-American family across the street. MR. WASHINGTON is farewelled by his WIFE and CHILD. Truman is about to climb into his car when he is distracted by a high-pitched whistling sound. Suddenly, a large spherical glass object falls from the sky and lands with a deafening crash on the street, several yards from his car. The startled Truman looks to Spencer but he has abruptly disappeared inside his house with Pluto. Mrs. Washington and Washington Junior has also made themselves scarce. Truman investigates. Amidst a sea of shattered glass are the remains of a light mechanism. He looks around him but the street is deserted. He checks that all the surrounding street lights are accounted for, even though the fallen fixture is far larger. He looks up into the sky but there is no plane in sight. With some effort, Truman picks up what's left of the crumpled light and loads it into the trunk. A label on the light fixture reads, "SIRIUS (9 Canis Major)." As he drives away, we hear the sound of his car radio. RADIO ANNOUNCER Another glorious morning in Seahaven, folks. INT/EXT. TRUMAN'S CAR - SEAHAVEN - DAY TRUMAN makes his way along the streets of Seahaven past a series of quaint, pastel-shaded cottages. EXT. SEAHAVEN ISLAND TOWNSHIP - DAY A high-angle reveals an anonymous mid-sized town built around a small, pretty bay. A cluster of high-rise buildings stand at the water's edge overlooking a marina. Surrounding the commercial center lie neatly arranged suburbs. EXT. OCEANSIDE STREET - DAY Pausing at a traffic light along a seaside road, TRUMAN looks through a curious wooden arch to the beach and ocean beyond. The sight triggers a memory in his head. PLAYBACK - EXT. LONG, WIDE BEACH - DAY Unlike a conventional flashback, the scene in his memory appears to be playing on a television screen. FOUR-YEAR-OLD TRUMAN runs towards a bluff on the beach. The boy's father, KIRK, late-thirties, beer bottle in hand, flirts with TWO TEENAGE GIRLS at the shoreline. Suddenly, the father remembers his son. He looks anxiously around. The sight of the boy at the far end of the beach causes him to drop his bottle in the sand and run to Truman. The boy is near the top of the cliff before his agitated father comes within earshot. FATHER (out of breath, clutching his side) Truman! Truman! Stop! Truman turns from his perch and waves happily down to his father. But the smile quickly vanishes when he registers the anger and distress on his father's face. FATHER Come down now! His father's unnatural anxiety makes the next bay even more tantalizing. The boy considers defying his father. He puts his hand on the rock above him to stretch up and sneak a peek at the other side. One good stretch would do it. FATHER (reading Truman's mind, enraged) No! TRUMAN Why? What's there? FATHER (unconvincing) Nothing. It's... it's dangerous. (trace of desperation) Come down, now! Please! Truman is suddenly aware that the hundreds of other BEACHGOERS have stopped their activities to stare at him. Reluctantly, he starts to retrace his steps down the rocks. When he finally jumps to the sand, his father embraces him and leads him away. FATHER I told you to stay close. Don't ever leave my sight again. (pause) You've got to know your limitations. You could've fallen. INT. TRUMAN'S CAR - DOWNTOWN SEAHAVEN - MORNING - PRESENT Through his car window, TRUMAN buys a cup of coffee from a streetside VENDOR. VENDOR How are ya, Truman? TRUMAN (placing his fingers to his pulse) Vital signs are good. He pulls into a parking space and sips on the coffee. And he drinks, he becomes aware of a school bell summoning children to class in the adjacent Elementary School. The image prompts another childhood memory. PLAYBACK - INT. SEAHAVEN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - CLASSROOM - DAY Once again, the flashback appears to be playing on a television screen. SEVEN-YEAR-OLD TRUMAN sits in the middle row of an Elementary School classroom surrounded by twenty-or-so other well- scrubbed, uniformed YOUNGSTERS. MARLON, the boy next to Truman, is on his feet under the scrutiny of a kindly Norman Rockwell- style SCHOOL MISTRESS. MISTRESS What do you want to do when you grow up, Marlon? MARLON I want to be an entrepreneur like my dad. SCHOOL MISTRESS (impressed) Tell the class what an "entrepreneur" does, Marlon. MARLON He makes a lot of money, Ma'am. SCHOOL MISTRESS A good one does, Marlon. (looking in her purse, hamming it up) Perhaps I'll be coming to you for a loan one of these days. The Class titters. Marlon sits down and winks to Truman. SCHOOL MISTRESS What about you, Truman? Truman rises to his feet, gathering his nerve. TRUMAN I want to be an explorer... (with reverence) ... like Magellan. The School Mistress smiles benevolently. SCHOOL MISTRESS (slightly condescending) I'm afraid no one's going to pay you to do that, Truman. You might have to find something a little more practical. (glancing to a pulldown wall map behind her head) Besides, you're too late. There's really nothing left to explore. The class roars with laughter as the crestfallen Truman takes his seat. EXT. PARKING LOT - DAY - PRESENT TRUMAN, briefcase in hand, crosses from the parking lot to the town square, surrounded by similarly suited, briefcase-toting OFFICE WORKERS. EXT. DOWNTOWN SEAHAVEN - DAY TRUMAN walks briskly down the bustling city street. A snarl of taxis, buses and COMMUTER traffic. A STREET VENDOR thrusts a pretzel under Truman's nose, a CAREER WOMAN tries to catch his eye. Truman stops at a kiosk and buys a newspaper -- "THE ISLAND TIMES." VENDOR Is that all for you, Truman? TRUMAN That's all. Thanks, Errol. Other CUSTOMERS also purchase the morning paper. Tucking his copy under his arm, Truman selects a glossy magazine from a rack, quickly flicking through the pages. Glancing in the direction of the NEWSPAPER VENDOR and finding him busy with another CUSTOMER, Truman deftly tears a portion of the open page and pockets the cutting. He hastily replaces the magazine and departs. As Truman hurries away, the vendor exits the kiosk and picks up the magazine, instantly turning to the torn page. It is a cosmetics advertisement with the MODEL'S NOSE missing. However, the vendor makes no effort to confront Truman, almost as if he were expecting it. EXT. SEAHAVEN LIFE AND ACCIDENT, INC. - DAY Truman passes along a row of shops and offices, finally entering a building that proudly proclaims, "Seahaven Life & Accident Inc." above the entrance. He has evidently taken his teacher's advice. INT. INSURANCE COMPANY - SEAHAVEN LIFE AND ACCIDENT, INC. - DAY In a cramped, cluttered cubicle, TRUMAN talks on the telephone. TRUMAN (into receiver) ... okay, okay, let's call it what it is... I'm not going to lie to you... life insurance is death insurance... you've just got to ask yourself two questions... one, in the event of your death, will anyone experience financial loss?... and two, do you care? A CLERK drops a large reference book on Truman's desk. Truman checks the spine -- "MARITIME ACCIDENTS." TRUMAN (into receiver) Hold on, will you? (to clerk, referring to the book) This is no good. Lumps all maritime accidents together. I need drownings as a separate category. The clerk shrugs, returns the book to his cart and continues his rounds. TRUMAN (returning to his call) ... just think about what I've been saying and let me... hello? The person on the other end has hung up. With an apathetic shrug, Truman replaces the receiver. He looks over his shoulder and places another call. TRUMAN (lowering his voice) Can you connect me with directory inquiries in Fiji? A CO-WORKER pokes his head over the neighboring cubicle. CO-WORKER What do you know, Truman? TRUMAN (embarrassed, mouthing the word) Can't talk. (waving off his neighbor, pretending to be on a business call) I'm sorry, ma'am. If he's in a coma, he's probably uninsurable. The Co-Worker disappears back into his own cubicle. TRUMAN (lowering his voice again) Hello, operator... yes, Fiji... Do you have a listing for a Lauren Garland? (pause) ... nothing listed? ... what about a Sylvia Garland, "S" for Sylvia... nothing? Okay, thanks... The disconsolate Truman replaces the receiver. Other INSURANCE AGENTS are heading to lunch. Truman puts on his jacket and follows them to the elevators. INT. LOCAL ITALIAN DELI - LUNCHTIME Behind a deli counter, TYRONE, fifties, is having his hair brushed by a YOUNG MAN. The man fusses one final time, then swiftly departs through a rear door just as TRUMAN enters the store. Tyrone has anticipated Truman's order and has already begun preparing a meatball and mozzarella sandwich on an Italian roll. Truman gazes at the sandwich skillfully under construction, pained by his own predictability. TYRONE (nauseatingly cheerful) How's it going, Truman? TRUMAN (deadpan) Not bad. I just won the State Lottery. TYRONE (not listening to Truman's reply) Good. Good. TRUMAN Tyrone, what if I said I didn't want meatball today? TYRONE (not missing a beat, passing Truman his wrapped sandwich) I'd ask for identification. Truman forces a half-smile and exits. TYRONE See you tomorrow, Truman. TRUMAN You can count on it. EXT. SECLUDED PARK - DAY TRUMAN eats lunch alone at a small, out-of-the-way park dominated by a gazebo. From his briefcase he pulls out an old, hardcovered book, "To The Ends Of The Earth -- The Age Of Exploration." He reads to himself, his sandwich uneaten besides him. Struck by a particular passage, he reads aloud. TRUMAN "With a mutiny but half-repressed and starvation imminent, he pressed southward till he found the long- hoped-for straits..." Truman is interrupted by a TRANSIENT in a wheelchair. It is the man's sneakers Truman notices first, over the top of his book -- they are distinctively initialed, "T.S." Still under the spell of the account of Magellan, he hands the grateful man his sandwich. INT. A CONFERENCE ROOM SOMEWHERE - DAY A group of a dozen MEN and WOMEN of varying ages sit around a circular conference table in a sterile, windowless meeting room. All stare at a single telephone placed in the center of the table, anticipating a call. On cue, the phone rings and one of the men, after waiting for the second ring, picks up. MAN Hello?... I'm sorry, I've got more than enough life insurance. He hangs up. After a moment the phone rings again. INT. INSURANCE COMPANY - DAY TRUMAN sits at his desk, making a cold call. TRUMAN (into receiver) ... this isn't about insurance, this is about the great variable -- when will death occur? Could be a week, a month, a year. Could happen today... A sunbather, minding his own business, gets stabbed in the heart by the tip of a runaway beach umbrella... No way you can guard against that kind of thing, no way at all... The prospect on the other end, unimpressed with Truman's pitch, hangs up. Truman's supervisor, LAWRENCE, younger than Truman by several years, sharper suit, sharper haircut, appears around the corner of the cubicle. LAWRENCE (handing Truman some documentation) Hey, Burbank, I've got a prospect in Welles Park I need you to close. Truman's face falls. He stares out of his third floor window at the hazy skyline of a nearby island across the bay. TRUMAN (referring to the island) Welles Park on Harbor Island? LAWRENCE (sarcastic) You know another one? TRUMAN I can't do it. (searching for a plausible excuse) -- I've got an appointment, er, dentist. LAWRENCE (insistent) You'll lose a lot more than your teeth if you don't meet your quota, Burbank. (the threat in his voice is unmistakable) They're making cutbacks at the end of the month. You need this. (as he exits the cubicle) Besides, a half hour across the bay. Sea air. Do you good. Truman sinks back into his seat and stares out at the distant skyline. The buildings appear very still. Truman picks up a photo of his wife, Meryl, deposits it in his briefcase and exits. EXT. SEAHAVEN - DAY Truman's car heads out of the city on its way to the ferry. INT. SEAHAVEN FERRY TERMINAL - DAY TRUMAN exits his car. Mustering all his nerve, he marches into the Seahaven terminal and buys a token for the ferry. Out of his hearing, TWO FERRY WORKERS observe Truman's agitated behavior. FERRY WORKER 1 I got a feeling this is the day. FERRY WORKER 2 No way. I say he makes it through the turnstiles but he never gets on. The two men shake on the wager. Unaware of the scrutiny, Truman passes through the turnstiles with a herd of TOURISTS and COMMUTERS. He makes his way across the terminal, but abruptly pulls up at the gangway. As the other PASSENGERS impatiently brush past him onto the boat, Truman remains frozen to the spot, mesmerized by the scummy water rising and falling beneath the dock. It triggers a memory in his head. PLAYBACK - EXT. SEAHAVEN HARBOR - DAY As always, the flashback appears to play on a television screen. SEVEN-YEAR-OLD TRUMAN, wearing a lifejacket, sits alongside his father, KIRK, in a small sailing dinghy, sailing into a stiff breeze. A second sail boat circles them. We observe the father and son from an angle atop the mast of the neighboring vessel. TRUMAN (shouting above the wind) Let's go further, daddy! Let's go further! KIRK (shouting back) It's getting rough, Truman. TRUMAN (entreating his father) Please! Kirk shakes his head ruefully and indulges his son by heading towards the gathering storm clouds on the horizon. INT. SEAHAVEN FERRY TERMINAL - DAY - PRESENT Truman turns and begins to fight his way back against the tide of PASSENGERS boarding the ferry, emerging back onto the street, gasping for air. The FERRY WORKERS settle their wager. EXT. ROADWAY ADJACENT TO THE FERRY TERMINAL - DAY TRUMAN stands at a payphone. By stretching the payphone's receiver cord as far as it will go, he is able to reach his arm and leg into the driver's door of his car. He punctuates his conversation with blasts on the car's horn while revving the car's engine with his outstretched foot. The few passing MOTORISTS and PEDESTRIANS regard Truman curiously. TRUMAN (shouting into phone) I tell you the traffic's insane. (blasting his horn several times to imitate the sound of gridlock) ... I'll never make the ferry in time. What can I do? What?... Lawrence, I can't hear you! Truman hangs up the phone. INT. TRUMAN'S CAR - DAY On his way home, a large "DETOUR" sign forces him onto a secondary road. INT. TRUMAN'S CAR - PARKLAND, SEAHAVEN - DAY TRUMAN drives along a winding road through parkland. He pulls up at a red light -- no other traffic around. His attention is caught by an attractive YOUNG WOMAN, sitting on a park bench not far from the intersection. She is being taunted by TWO THUGS. She attempts to ignore the youths by concentrating on the book on her lap. YOUTH 1 (to woman) You wanna read to me? His companion smirks. YOUTH 1 (more insistent) You wanna read to me? The boy reaches over and snatches the novel from that grasp. YOUTH 2 (menacing) My friend asked you a question. The woman picks up her bag in a reflex and holds it to her. She looks about for assistance, briefly catching Truman's eye. The youths also look in Truman's direction, staring him down. WOMAN (reaching for the book) Please... The boy returns the book to the woman, but before doing so rips out the last page from the novel and stuffs it in his shirt pocket. YOUTH 2 Now you're gonna have to ask me how it ends. One of the youths grabs the woman, dragging her toward the surrounding woods. YOUTH 1 We're gonna tell you how it ends, baby. WOMAN Help! Please help! As they drag towards the undergrowth, Truman, horrified, half gets out of the car -- fearful of his own safety as much as the woman's. Truman shouts to the youths, his voice cracking with fear. TRUMAN Hey! Let her go! A huge truck suddenly appears behind Truman's car, its horn blasting, the DRIVER hurling abuse. Truman hesitates as the youths drag the woman into the bushes, conflicted over whether or not to help. The truck driver keeps his hand on the horn. Truman retreats back into his car and reluctantly drives on. EXT. PARKLAND - WOODS - DAY Truman's car safely out of sight, the YOUTHS promptly release the YOUNG WOMAN. She calmly brushes herself off, no longer afraid. The young men, no longer angry, retrieve her bag. WOMAN Thanks. The threesome walks back towards the roadway as if life-long friends. WOMAN (pondering the incident) He did nothing. YOUTH 1 (shrugs, suddenly more couth) Physical violence paralyzes him. Always has. EXT. TRUMAN'S HOUSE - DUSK Beyond the pretty picket fence at the end of the property flows a busy highway. TRUMAN is mowing the lawn. From his expression it would seem that he's still reflecting on his inaction in the park. He switches off the mower and leans on the handle. He is distracted by the arrival of his wife, MERYL, exiting the house. She wears a nurse's uniform and carries a curious metal device attached to a card board backing. She kisses Truman affectionately on the cheek. MERYL Hi, honey. Look at this. (proudly referring to the device) It's a "Chef's-Mate." Dicer, slicer and peeler in one. Never needs sharpening. Dishwasher safe. TRUMAN Gee, that's great. Looking over Truman's shoulder, Meryl notices a small, uncut patch of grass missed by Truman in one of his passes. MERYL (referring to the uncut grass) You missed a section. Meryl enters the house. Truman restarts the lawnmower and obediently pushes it towards the offending patch of lawn. As the mower brushes up against the unconforming blades of grass, Truman pulls back abruptly. He checks the kitchen window for Meryl and wheels the mower away, leaving the patch uncut. INT. TRUMAN'S HOUSE - LIVING ROOM - NIGHT MERYL is removing the cap of her nurse's uniform when TRUMAN enters. TRUMAN How did it go today? MERYL (matter-of-fact) A man tripped and fell on a chainsaw. (shrugs) We got three of his fingers back on. Truman retrieves a bucket of golf balls and a golf club from behind the door. MERYL (disappointed at the sight of the golf equipment) I was hoping we could have a special evening. TRUMAN I won't be late. MERYL (sensing something odd in his demeanor) Did something happen today? Truman turns to her too sharply, his guilt showing. TRUMAN What could happen? Truman exits. EXT. UNFINISHED BRIDGE - NIGHT A half-constructed bridge, paved but unmarked, ends abruptly in mid-air -- reinforcing steel protruding from the concrete. TRUMAN stands at the end of the unfinished bridge with MARLON, thirties, a well-filled physique. Marlon drinks beer from a can while Truman addresses a teed-up golf ball with a number three wood. The headlights of their two parked cars far end of the bridge proclaiming, "THE SEAHAVEN CAUSEWAY -- Linking Seahaven Island With The Rest Of The World -- Your Tax Dollars At Work" -- an upturned plastic cone at the foot of the sign is the "hole." Truman winds up and swings, making a healthy contact with the ball. The ball arches away into the night sky. From a new angle we see the ball take a huge hop on the outside lane of the abandoned freeway and continue down the asphalt beyond the sign. Marlon tosses Truman another off-white ball from a bucket of badly scarred golf balls. Truman sets the ball up on the makeshift tee area and launches himself into his second shot. With a slight fade, the second ball carries even further than the first. MARLON Whose nuts were those? Truman hands Marlon their sole golf club without comment. Marlon tees up a ball of his own He uses orange golf balls. TRUMAN I'm thinking of getting out, Marlon. MARLON (mild interest only) Yeah? Outta what? TRUMAN Outta my job, outta Seahaven, off this island... out! Marlon takes a practice swing. MARLON Outta your job? What the hell's wrong with your job? You gotta great job. You gotta desk job. I'd kill for a desk job. Marlon addresses the ball and swings -- a sweeping hook shot that bounces off the freeway and into the water hazard. MARLON (annoyed by the errant tee shot) Sonofabitch. (still looking in the direction of his ball) Try stocking vending machines for a living. My biggest decision of the day is whether the Almond Joys look better next to the Snickers or the Baby Ruths. Truman selects another "M" ball from the bucket and tosses it to Marlon. TRUMAN (adamant) Haven't you ever gotten itchy feet? Overcompensating with his second shot, Marlon slices the ball in the other direction. A lucky bounce keeps it on the "green." The ball rolls in the direction of the upturned cone. MARLON (skeptical, picking up his beer) Where is there to go? Truman gulps his beer as he prepares his answer. TRUMAN (unable to disguise his reverence) Fiji. Marlon considers Truman's suggestion as he sips his beer. MARLON (impressed) Fiji? Where the hell is Fiji exactly? Near Florida? You can't drive there, can you? Truman picks up a golf ball to demonstrate. He points to a dimple on his make-shift globe. TRUMAN See here, this is us. (sliding his finger around the other side of the ball) All the way round here, Fiji. You can't get any further away before you start coming back. (tossing the world in his hand, warming to his subject) Y'know, there are still islands in Fiji where no human has ever set foot. MARLON (still dubious) So when are you leaving? TRUMAN It's not that simple. Takes money, planning. You can't just up and go. (heading off Marlon's skepticism) Oh, I'm going to do it, don't worry about that. I've just got to move slow. Pick my moment. Bonus time's just around the corner. Soon as I finish the... MARLON Nursery? TRUMAN Spare room -- I can start thinking about selling up... and I'll be gone. Up and away on that big steel bird. (as if to convince himself) I'm going, don't you worry about that. Marlon nods even though the concept of taking flight is beyond his imagination. MARLON I never knew anybody who wanted to leave Seahaven. An awkward moment. Truman, once again, not so sure of himself. INT. A DIMLY-LIT ROOM SOMEWHERE - NIGHT A MAN looks up sharply. He stares into camera. CHRISTOF, late fifties -- a vitality in his eyes that belies his years. A news anchor-style earpiece disappears down the neck of his suit. EXT. BRIDGE - NIGHT TRUMAN and MARLON wander along the empty bridge, retrieving the golf balls. Marlon goes to say something to the disconsolate Truman, but is momentarily distracted. He raises his hand to his ear. Truman places another of the balls in the bucket. MARLON Truman, you know, I did think about moving away one time. TRUMAN (interest piqued) Yeah, what happened? MARLON I figured, what's the point? I knew I'd just be taking my problems with me. Once the kids came along, it made me look at Seahaven with new eyes. (gazing out at the lights of Seahaven) I realized, what the hell could be better than this? (putting a hand on Truman's shoulder) I'm telling you. What you really need is someone to carry on the "Burbank" name. TRUMAN You think so? MARLON Trust me. Marlon picks up the last ball at the mouth of the upturned cone. The ball is white. MARLON (checking the ball) You win. They approach Truman's car. Truman opens the trunk to deposit their humble golfing equipment. Inside are the remains of the fallen light fixture. TRUMAN (referring to the light) You really think it could've dropped off an airliner? MARLON (unimpressed) Sure. It's halogen. Shame it didn't hit you -- you could've sued. (quickly changing the subject) You coming for a drink? TRUMAN I can't tonight. INT. LIGHTHOUSE - NIGHT From the POV of the lighthouse's lantern room, we observe TRUMAN sitting on the beach staring out to sea. Closer on Truman. He has a portable tape recorder slung over his shoulder and points a corded microphone at the surf. We watch Truman's impassive face as he makes the recording of the lapping waves. The lamp from the lighthouse occasionally falls upon Truman. PLAYBACK - EXT. OCEAN - DAY As always, the flashback appears to play on a television screen. The sky is black with storm clouds. Gale force winds lash rain into the faces of SEVEN-YEAR-OLD TRUMAN and his father, KIRK. As Kirk stands up to get his hearings, a freak gust of wind catches the sail. The boom whips across the stern and strikes Kirk flush in the head, knocking his overboard. Truman, wearing the sole lifejacket, desperately reaches for his father. He momentarily has hold of his hold of his father's hand when Kirk is abruptly dragged beneath the surface. TRUMAN (crying out) Daddy!! Daddy!! His cries go unanswered. Seven-year-old Truman finds himself alone -- the storm abruptly passed, the wind suddenly dropped, the water stilled. The frightened Truman examines the ring he holds in his open hand -- his father's ring -- wrenched from his finger in Truman's fight to keep him afloat. EXT. BEACH - NIGHT - PRESENT A close up of TRUMAN from KIRK'S RING that Truman now wears. Then, from the lighthouse POV, we observe Truman get to his feet and walk towards the dark water. He stands at the water's edge. TRUMAN (shouting at the surf) I'm sorry, Dad! I'm sorry! As if in reply, a tongue of lightning flashes across the distant skyline, followed by a growl of thunder. INT. A LIVING ROOM SOMEWHERE - NIGHT TWO OLD WOMEN, seventies, sit beside each other on a sofa looking directly into camera as they talk. OLD WOMAN 1 (playing amateur psychiatrist) It left him with more than his obvious fear of the water. OLD WOMAN 2 He was never the same curious little boy again. OLD WOMAN 1 Half the women I know named their children after him. EXT. BEACH PARKING LOT - NIGHT TRUMAN is forced to leg it through a sudden rain shower to his car. From Truman's point-of-view, the shower appears quite normal. However, viewed from a distance, we see that the shower is extremely localized, encircling only him, as if a small cloud is directly above his head, tracking his progress. As Truman crosses the parking lot, the shower crosses with him. Sensing something amiss, Truman dances back and force across the street, intrigued by the curious phenomenon. He hums a few bars of "Singin' In The Rain." The rain becomes heavier, covering a wider area. Truman runs the remaining distance to his car. INT. TRUMAN'S HOUSE - NURSERY - NIGHT The drenched TRUMAN enters to find MERYL, in the unfinished nursery, comparing wallpaper samples. Meryl wears a robe, a glimpse of black negligee beneath. MERYL Where have you been? TRUMAN (wringing out his jacket) I've been thinking -- MERYL (rolling her eyes) Oh, God. TRUMAN (ignoring the reception) -- I figure we could scrape together eight thousand. MERYL (exasperated) Every time you and Marlon -- TRUMAN -- we could bum around the world for a year on that. MERYL And then what, Truman? We'd be back to where we were five years ago. You're talking like a teenager. TRUMAN Maybe I feel like a teenager. MERYL We're mortgaged to the eyeballs, Truman. There's the car payments. Are we just going to walk away from our financial obligations? Truman, still dripping on the floor, holds Meryl by the arms. He talks excitedly to her the way we imagine he did when they were courting. TRUMAN It'd be an adventure. MERYL I thought we were going to try for a baby. Isn't that enough of an adventure? TRUMAN That can wait. I want to get away. See some of the world. Explore. Meryl gives a derisive laugh. MERYL You want to be an explorer? You don't even have a passport, Truman. I bet you don't even know how to get one. The words sting. Truman turns away. Seeing the pain she's caused, she changes tack. MERYL This'll pass. Everybody thinks like this now and then. (making an attempt at seduction) Come to bed. TRUMAN I think I'm going to stay up for a while. INT. AN OFFICE BUILDING SOMEWHERE - RECEPTION - NIGHT In the reception area of an office building, TWO UNIFORMED GUARDS drink coffee. GUARD 1 How can they have a child? GUARD 2 It's not gonna be his, you idiot. GUARD 1 Why not? GUARD 2 You think she'd go through with it? GUARD 1 Sure she would. GUARD 2 (reassessing his own opinion) Guess I always thought they'd adopt. EXT. TRUMAN'S STREET - DAWN There is something peculiar about the way the sun rises over Seahaven Island -- the light appears in an arc that's slightly too perfect and well-defined. INT. TRUMAN'S BEDROOM - MORNING In front of his bedroom window, TRUMAN, wearing his new sweats, performs an exercise routine of his own invention. He counts off the exercises to himself -- cheating as he does so. He counts five leg-lifts for every two he completes. TRUMAN -- Five... (two leg-liftings later) Then... fifteen... two more makes twenty. INT. A BEDROOM SOMEWHERE - MORNING A middle-aged MARRIED COUPLE in identical matching sweats repeat the same eccentric exercises in perfect sync, as if they were in a class led by Truman. EXT. CAR - DAY TRUMAN climbs into the car and switches on the radio. He drives down the street. RADIO ANNOUNCER Another glorious morning in Seahaven, folks. Don't forget to buckle up -- Truman mutters to himself as is his custom. EXT. DOWNTOWN SEAHAVEN - DAY TRUMAN emerges from the parking lot and as usual stops at the newspaper stand. He picks up a glossy magazine and flips through the cosmetic ads, surreptitiously tearing a pair of EYES from one of the pages. He returns the magazine to the rack. As usual, the NEWSPAPER VENDOR fails to intervene. Truman begins his daily pilgrimage to work through the rush hour pedestrian traffic. As he enters the street leading to his office, he glimpses a HOMELESS MAN reflected in the window of a parked car. Truman, spellbound by the man, suddenly wheels around to face him. The Homeless Man, late-fifties, more well-groomed and well-fed than the average vagrant, has a serene smile on his face. The Homeless Man places his hand ever so gently on Truman's cheek. Truman makes no effort to withdraw. He is transfixed by the man's eyes. He appears to recognize him. TRUMAN (almost to himself, mouthing the word) Dad... Suddenly an ELEGANT WOMAN SHOPPER walking a small WIENER DOG and A BUSINESS EXECUTIVE carrying a briefcase, walking in opposite directions along the sidewalk, grab the Homeless Man. One under each arm, lifting the Homeless Man off the ground, they start to whisk the bewildered derelict down the street. TRUMAN (calling out) Stop! Stop!! Truman begins to give chase. However, the shopper and the businessman are surprisingly fleet-footed. Even more surprising as Truman embarks on the pursuit is the behavior of the PEDESTRIANS and COMMUTERS. They appear to part for the fleeing trio, then close ranks in front of him. Is it accidental, or are the pedestrians working together, running interference? TRUMAN (shouting at the pedestrians) Outta way! Outta way! They are escaping. Truman finally breaks through the pack, bowling over several of the pedestrians in the process. Just as he gets within reach of the shopper and the businessman, a bus suddenly screeches to a halt beside the abductors, doors already open. The Woman Shopper and the Executive bundle the Homeless Man onto the bus. Truman lurches after them, but he is met by the bus doors, closing sharply in his face. TRUMAN (to BUS DRIVER) Hey, stop! Stop the bus!! Truman thumps against the doors, but the BUS DRIVER ignores his cries and the bus roars away. The other PASSENGERS in the bus, apparently oblivious to the incident, keeps staring straight ahead. Truman continues to give chase when a taxi appears out of nowhere and cuts in front of him, blocking his path. When he recovers, the bus has disappeared. The mysterious crowd of pedestrians has also dissolved as if it never existed. Retracing his steps, head reeling, wondering if the could have imagined the whole incident, Truman discovers that the Woman Shopper has left her WIENER DOG behind. The dog wanders aimlessly on the pavement, its leash trailing behind it. INT. MOTHER'S HOUSE - DAY TRUMAN paces impatiently in the living room of his Mother's cramped, fussy, doilyed little house full of Burbank family memorabilia -- a cluster of framed photographs is dominated by one of his FATHER trimmed with a black ribbon. A toilet flushes and Truman's MOTHER finally emerges from the next room. She presents something of a contradiction. Although she walks with the aid of a "walker," she is actually a well-preserved sixty. She wears a glamorous nightgown and a full head of bleached-blonde hair. TRUMAN (kissing Mother on the cheek) How are you, Mother? MOTHER Well, I made it through another night. TRUMAN How's your hip? MOTHER Oh, just so. Truman supports Mother. MOTHER You know surprises aren't good for me. You should really call before you come over, dear. TRUMAN I've got something to tell you. You'd better sit down. Truman helps her into an overstuffed armchair. MOTHER You look very pale, Truman. Are you taking your vitamin D's? TRUMAN (exasperated) I spend half my life out in the sun, Mother, why would I need vitamin D? MOTHER I feel certain my condition runs in the family. (putting the back of her hand dramatically over her forehead) Can't this wait, dear? He kneels beside her. TRUMAN No, I'm afraid it can't. Truman takes a deep breath as he prepares to give her the news. TRUMAN I know this is going to sound insane, Mother, but... I saw Dad today on Lancaster Circle. He's alive. Mother smiles condescendingly. MOTHER It doesn't sound insane, Truman. I swear I see him ten times a week -- in a hundred faces. I almost hugged a perfect stranger in the salon last Thursday. TRUMAN It was Dad, I swear, dressed like a homeless man. And you know what else was really strange? A businessman and a woman with a little dog appeared from nowhere and forced him onto a bus. MOTHER About time they started cleaning up the trash Downtown. We don't want to end up like the rest of the country. TRUMAN They never found Dad's body -- maybe somehow -- MOTHER -- Darling -- TRUMAN (already doubting himself) I'm telling you, if it wasn't him, it was his twin. Did Dad have a brother? MOTHER You know he was an only child, like you. (placing a comforting arm around him) I know how bad you feel about what happened -- sailing into that storm. But I don't blame you, Truman. I never have. Mother kisses Truman on the cheek. MOTHER (referring to her platinum blonde hair) I was thinking about going lighter. What do you think? Truman regards his Mother. Her hair is already impossibly blonde. INT. TRUMAN'S BASEMENT - DUSK The basement is cluttered with junk -- ships in bottles, a train track without trains, an oxygen mask, a stringless guitar, many abandoned projects. The basement is dimly lit by a single, naked bulb. TRUMAN looks over his shoulder before opening a large walk-in cupboard. On the cupboard door is a wall map of the Pacific Ocean -- the Fiji Islands are carefully circled. Amongst the many tools and household implements inside the cupboard is a trunk under a dusty canvas sheet. He pulls the trunk into the room, unfastens the lock and opens the lid. Inside, mementoes from his youth. A "HOW TO SAIL" book, a stack of "GREAT EXPLORERS" magazines, and beneath it all, a garment in a drycleaning bag. Truman carefully lifts up the plastic to reveal a young woman's cardigan sweater. He puts the cardigan to his nose and takes in its scent. Footsteps. Truman hastily drops the cardigan in the trunk and shuts the lid. MERYL's legs appear on the stairs. MERYL What're you doing down here? TRUMAN (turning attention to an upturned mower on the basement floor) Fixing the mower. (matter-of-fact) I saw my father today. MERYL I know. TRUMAN (suspicious) How do you know? MERYL Your mother called. You shouldn't upset her like that. Meryl's response takes the wind out of Truman's sails. TRUMAN What did you want? MERYL I made macaroni. TRUMAN I'm not hungry. Meryl nods, not at all convinced. MERYL We really ought to toss that mower out. Get one of those new Elk Rotaries. Truman does not reply. After an uncomfortable pause, she turns back up the stairs. Truman waits a moment before re-opening the trunk. He removes the cardigan and holds it up, reminiscing. INT. A KITCHEN SOMEWHERE - NIGHT A MOTHER, DAUGHTER about 12, and a BABY in a highchair stare into camera. DAUGHTER What's he doing? MOTHER They removed all physical trace of her but they couldn't erase the memory. DAUGHTER The memory of who? MOTHER (finger to lips) Shhh! PLAYBACK MONTAGE - EXT. COLLEGE CAMPUS - STEPS - DAY Once again the images appear to be playing on a television screen. On the steps of a typical college campus, TRUMAN, 21, in a college band uniform, participates in a football pep rally. MARLON, 21, a member of the football team, and MERYL, 21, a cheerleader, are nearby. Truman observes an ethereal-looking young woman walk by -- LAUREN. PLAYBACK - INT. DANCEHALL - NIGHT At a college dance, TRUMAN dances with MERYL. LAUREN dances by with a PARTNER of her own. However, Truman only has eyes for Lauren. Suddenly, she is escorted from the dance floor. PLAYBACK - EXT. COLLEGE CAMPUS - STREET - DAY TRUMAN almost trips off the curb as he waves to LAUREN, riding towards him on a bicycle. However, she rides right by with her nose in the air, not even acknowledging his presence -- Truman puzzled by her change of heart. The montage ends at a scene in a college library. PLAYBACK - INT. COLLEGE LIBRARY - NIGHT In the school library, TRUMAN, 21, sits with MARLON, 21, and wife-to-be, MERYL, 21, doing a final cram for a test. The STUDENTS begin to pack up their books. Meryl gives Truman a peck on the cheek. MERYL Come on, Truman. Haven't you studied enough? TRUMAN I still want to look over a couple of things. MARLON (punching Truman in a chummy way on the arm, referring to Truman's book) Take the "C" average. That's what I do. Truman looks up from his books. The library is almost deserted. He spies a GIRL's hand around the table divider. Truman musters the nerve to poke his head over the divider. He finds LAUREN on the other side, buried in a book. TRUMAN Konichi-wa. Lauren looks blank. TRUMAN (referring to the Japanese text in front of her) You take Japanese. LAUREN (quickly closing the book) Oh, yes. TRUMAN (glancing to the name carefully written on the front of the book) Lauren, right? LAUREN (as if unaware of her own name) That's right. Lauren. TRUMAN (extending his hand) I'm Truman, Truman Burbank -- LAUREN -- I'm not allowed to talk to you. Truman is not surprised. TRUMAN (resigned) It's okay. I probably wouldn't talk to me either. LAUREN (softening) I'm sorry. It's not up to me. TRUMAN (crestfallen) You have a boyfriend? Of course you do. Lauren looks about her, unsure. LAUREN No... I, er... TRUMAN (hopeful once again) No? Really? Good, I mean, I thought possibly a pizza. How about Friday? LAUREN No. TRUMAN Saturday? Lauren looks around the almost-deserted library. TRUMAN Actually, I'm free Sunday. LAUREN Now. TRUMAN Right now? We've got finals tomorrow. LAUREN If we don't go now, it won't happen. Truman hesitates. LAUREN (impatient, looking anxiously around) Well, what do you want to do? TRUMAN (closing his books, still a little uncertain) I think I've studied enough. PLAYBACK - EXT. VARIOUS LOCATIONS NEAR SEAHAVEN COLLEGE - NIGHT LAUREN, taking TRUMAN by the hand, runs down various streets and paths through the campus. She occasionally pauses and looks about her, often changing direction or looking up at streetlights and the towers of houses along their route, as if trying to elude an unseen pursuer. The excited and apprehensive Truman runs with her although he is unsure exactly who, or what, they are running from. The further they get from the campus, the higher, wider and less effective the coverage of the scene -- some camera angles are even partially obscured. PLAYBACK - EXT. HIGHWAY - WESTERN END OF TOWN - NIGHT TRUMAN and LAUREN eventually cross an empty highway on the edge of town. They run over the dunes onto a strangely deserted beach and down to the water's edge under a hyper-real full moon. Lauren throws off her cardigan and hitches up her skirt, wading out into the inviting water without another thought. Truman stares down, transfixed by the shimmering water. LAUREN (splashing) It's beautiful! What are you waiting for? TRUMAN (nervous) I... I can't. Lauren suddenly stops splashing. LAUREN That's right. Oh, God, I'm sorry. She wades out of the water. TRUMAN (confused) Why, Lauren? You've got nothing to be sorry about? Lauren, dripping wet, stands besides Truman at the shoreline. She meets his gaze. LAUREN My name's not Lauren. It's Sylvia. Truman looks into her eyes and believes her. Truman wipes the water from her face, then leans forward and gently kisses her lips. She kisses him back. INT. A BAR SOMEWHERE - NIGHT In a quiet bar room, a WAITRESS explains her viewpoint to the BARMAN. A PATRON on a barstool eavesdrops. WAITRESS Don't you get it? She was willing to lose him, lose everything, if it meant he could find himself. (registering the barman's blank look) Never mind. You wouldn't understand. PLAYBACK - EXT. BEACH - NIGHT As we return to Truman's reminiscence, TRUMAN and SYLVIA (as she is now called throughout the remainder of the movie) sit on the sand at the water's edge. With great delicacy, Truman traces the outline of her nose with his finger, at the same time inhaling her scent. Sylvia looks nervously around her. Truman goes to say something, but Sylvia hushes him. SYLVIA They're coming. Any minute. TRUMAN (looking around the deserted beach) Who? SYLVIA They're going to stop me talking to you. TRUMAN (confused) There's no one here. SYLVIA (looking over her shoulder nervously) Just listen. You remember when you were a little boy, you stood up in class and said you wanted to be an explorer like Magellan -- TRUMAN (incredulous) -- How do you know about that? SYLVIA -- And your teacher said, "You're too late, Truman. There's nothing left to explore." TRUMAN Were you there -- how do you know? SYLVIA -- It doesn't matter. Everybody knows about it. They know everything you do. The point is, you got scared. TRUMAN I don't understand. SYLVIA (looking over her shoulder, increasingly nervous) You must listen. Everybody's pretending, Truman. She points to the sky and scoops up the sea at their feet. SYLVIA You think this is real? It's all for you. A show. (frustrated, raving) The eyes are everywhere. They're watching you -- right now. Suddenly a car's headlights come bouncing over the dunes. The car roars across the beach towards the couple. SYLVIA (scared) I told you, Truman! The car skids to a stop and a large MAN, 40ish, with a shock of red hair, jumps from the car. The man yanks the frightened Sylvia to her feet, causing her cardigan to fall to the ground. MAN (to Sylvia, oddly sympathetic) Lauren, sweetheart, not again. Get in the car! Truman jumps in. TRUMAN Hey, who the hell are you?! MAN I'm her father! TRUMAN We weren't doing anything. SYLVIA He's not my father! He's just saying that! Does he look anything like me?! MAN Come on, Sweetheart. The Man gently, but firmly, pushes Sylvia towards his car. Sylvia resists. Truman crosses to them. TRUMAN I'll take care of her! The Man takes Truman aside and whispers in his ear. MAN (whispered, out of Sylvia's earshot) Schizophrenia. She has episodes. Doubts start crowding into Truman's head. SYLVIA (calling out from the car) Don't listen to him, Truman. I'm telling you the truth! MAN (getting into the car) Don't bother! We're moving to... Fiji -- the Fiji Islands! This place has done something to her head. INT. A DIMLY-LIT ROOM SOMEWHERE - NIGHT - PRESENT CHRISTOF stares intently into camera. Beside him is his assistant, CHLOE, an androgynous-looking young woman. She too stares into camera. CHRISTOF At least he didn't say "New York City." PLAYBACK - EXT. BEACH - NIGHT TRUMAN stares after the car as it roars away. He turns back toward the ocean where his attention is caught by an object lying on the sand -- Sylvia's cardigan. INT. TRUMAN'S BASEMENT - NIGHT - PRESENT TRUMAN carefully places the cardigan back into the trunk. INT. A KITCHEN SOMEWHERE - NIGHT MOTHER, DAUGHTER and BABY stare into camera. DAUGHTER But why didn't he just follow her to Fiji? MOTHER Because his mother got sick -- very sick. He couldn't leave her. He's a kind boy, maybe too kind. DAUGHTER I can't believe he married Meryl on the rebound. INT. BASEMENT - NIGHT TRUMAN turns his attention to the framed photograph of Meryl that he carries everywhere. Hidden behind her photo is a composite picture of Sylvia which Truman has constructed by pasting together individual facial features -- nose, mouth, ears, chin, hair -- gathered, presumably, from women's magazines. He attempts to put the jigsaw puzzle together -- although he has particular difficulty finding a pair of eyes that match. From his pocket he takes a recent collection of eyes which, like a detective working on an identikit picture, he tries to match. They are still not quite right. INT. AN APARTMENT SOMEWHERE - NIGHT The eyes of a YOUNG WOMAN -- blue-green eyes. She turns slightly, looking directly into camera. We pull back to reveal her face -- SYLVIA. EXT. TRUMAN'S STREET - EARLY MORNING Dawn breaks over Truman's street. On cue, the sound of birds. EXT. STREET OUTSIDE TRUMAN'S HOUSE - MORNING TRUMAN leaves the house, lost in thought. SPENCER is taking out the trash. SPENCER How's it going, Truman? Truman hardly acknowledges Spencer. PLUTO the dog fails to receive his usual pat. The wave from the WASHINGTON's across the street is also not returned. INT/EXT. CAR/STREET OUTSIDE TRUMAN'S HOUSE - DAY TRUMAN motors down the street, switching on the car radio as usual. RADIO ANNOUNCER -- Don't forget to buckle up out there in radioland. It's another glorious... morning... innn... Seaaa... haaaa... vennn... f... o... o... k... k... The Announcer's voice slows down -- now revealing itself to be a tape that has worn out. Truman, perplexed, looks at the radio and pushes buttons in an attempt to find another station. He finds one. FEMALE VOICE (from radio) ... west on Stewart... he's making a right on Holden... Truman glances up at the street signs along his route and finds that they correspond exactly with the streets quoted on the radio. Distracted, he almost bowls over an OLD LADY on a crosswalk. MALE VOICE (from radio) ... God, he almost hit Marilyn! He's on the move again, passing the library... Truman, readjusts the radio as it starts to fade out. Suddenly, there is a piercing blast of feedback. He looks up and, as far as the eye can see, every PEDESTRIAN, MOTORIST and SHOPKEEPER along the street suddenly winces in pain and holds their right ear at exactly the same moment. MALE VOICE (from radio, in distress himself) ... Something's wrong. Change frequencies... Truman tries to pick up the channel once again but without success. EXT. PARKING LOT - MORNING TRUMAN sits in his car, drinking his coffee, taking in the recent incident. From inside the adjacent school, he hears the familiar, excited squeals and chatter of SCHOOL CHILDREN. Truman suddenly throws aside his coffee and sprints across the parking lot and into the school. INT. SEAHAVEN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - MORNING TRUMAN slams through the front doors into the reception area. It is deserted, no one stationed at the administration desk, the corridors empty. He runs down a vacant corridor, finally standing outside a classroom. The children's voices can still be heard from inside. Truman bursts through the door. The room is empty save for a large reel-to-reel tape recorder on the teacher's desk playing a continuous tape of children's voices. The recorder is attached to speakers on tall stands facing the ventilation ducts. Truman stares at the machine in disbelief. EXT. STREET - DOWNTOWN - DAY TRUMAN, still lost in thought, exits the school. He stops at the newsstand and picks up a magazine to resume his ritual search, but his heart is not in it. He replaces the magazine without taking a cutting -- much to the surprise of the NEWS VENDOR. Truman starts his trek to work, pausing to stare at his reflection in the mirrored building, hoping that the Homeless Man will appear once again at his side. No one joins him. EXT. DOWNTOWN STREET - DAY Entering his own building with fellow OFFICE WORKERS, TRUMAN remains in the revolving door and re-emerges on the street. EXT. CITY STREET - DAY TRUMAN wanders aimlessly through a city park, observing. We sense, truly observing for the first time. A YOUNG WOMAN walks a pair of AFGHAN HOUNDS. An OLD MAN answers the incessant questions of his GRANDCHILD. Nothing appears amiss, Truman takes a seat at a small, outdoor cafe. He fidgets with his father's ring on his finger that contains one large stone, still looking for a false move. A DELIVERY MAN unloads boxes from the back of his truck and carries them into a store. Further down the street CONSTRUCTION WORKERS take their time tending to an electrical repair in an exposed manhole. A POSTAL WORKER does his rounds. An OLD WOMAN struggles with two heavy shopping bags. Everybody appears natural, places to go. INT. A DIMLY-LIT ROOM SOMEWHERE - DAY CHRISTOF and CHOLE stare into camera. Christof leans forward and speaks. CHRISTOF ... Everybody stay focussed. Remember who you are. EXT. CAFE - DAY TRUMAN turns his attention to a group of CUBAN-LOOKING MEN at the only other occupied table at the cafe. We see extreme close-ups as Truman scans the men's faces for any sign of phoniness. They are talking loudly, making suggestive comments to the WAITRESS. Their behavior passes the test -- all seems genuine. Then, Truman notices TWO JOGGERS out for a morning run, making their way down the street towards him. Truman happens to glance at the sneakers of one of the joggers. He suddenly springs to his feet. Truman blocks the joggers. TRUMAN It's you... isn't it? The Joggers attempt to sidestep Truman. JOGGER 1 Excuse me. TRUMAN Remember? Two days ago I gave you my meatball sandwich in the park. You were in a wheelchair. Same sneakers. The jogger looks down at his distinctive sneakers bearing the initials, "T.S.", and visibly blanches. JOGGER 2 (coming to his companion's aid) Get the hell out of here. The second jogger roughly shoves Truman aside. Truman calls out after the two men. TRUMAN (ironically referring to the jogger's new-found mobility) It's a miracle! Truman picks himself up, dusting dirt from his suit. He retrieves his briefcase and continues down the street with renewed purpose. EXT. DOWNTOWN STREET - DAY Wandering down the bustling street, TRUMAN suddenly bolts into a building at random. INT. OFFICE BUILDING - DAY An imposing office building clad in the kind of reflective glass that shields its occupants from the world -- a building Truman passes every day. A steady stream of EMPLOYEES and VISITORS enters and exit the building's high-ceilinged lobby past an intimidating security desk manned by TWO UNIFORMED GUARDS. Beyond security are banks of elevators, ferrying executives, clerical staff and delivery personnel to and from their floors of business. Truman abruptly enters reception and strides confidently past the security desk trying to look as if he belongs. SECURITY GUARD 1 (to Truman) Can I help? TRUMAN (sneaking a glance at the building directory) I have an appointment at, er, Gable Enterprises. SECURITY GUARD 1 They went bust. The second Security Guard is rising from his seat to block Truman's path to the elevators, but Truman reads his mind and makes a dash for it -- into one of the elevators. A YOUNG WOMAN in the elevator looks in horror at Truman -- the cause of her concern all too apparent. Looking beyond the Woman, Truman discovers that there is no back to the elevator car. The PEOPLE Truman has just witnessed entering other elevators are milling around a refreshment table, primping or sitting on folding chairs. Gradually, they all turn to gape at Truman, who in turn stares back, appalled. Truman's view is abruptly blocked as a rear panel is hastily attached to the elevator. A Security Guard pulls Truman from the car. TRUMAN What's going on? SECURITY GUARD 1 (glancing to the lights above the elevator, trying to appear innocent) Nothing. Truman observes the upward progress of the elevator via the light display above the doorway. Before he has time to make sense of it, the guards drag him away. SECURITY GUARD 2 You've got to leave. The guards frog-march Truman out of the facade towards an Emergency Exit. TRUMAN Just tell me what's going on? SECURITY GUARD 2 We're re-modeling. TRUMAN No, you're not!! What were those people doing in there? SECURITY GUARD 1 (shrugs) It's none of my business. (ushering Truman off the property) None of yours, either. TRUMAN (not going quietly) You don't tell me what's really going on, I'll report you. TRUMAN continues to struggle as he GUARDS usher him to the street. SECURITY GUARD 2 For what? You're trespassing! EXT. DOWNTOWN STREET - DAY TRUMAN continues to struggle as the GUARDS unceremoniously dump him on the pavement. He picks himself up, head reeling, and starts to run along the street. He suddenly enters another building at random. An office block with a bank on the ground floor. Truman rushes to the elevators. The lights above the doors show all the elevator on upper floors. Frantic pressing of the elevator button gets no response. A RECEPTIONIST rises from her desk. Truman heads for the stairs, but is intercepted by a BANK OFFICIAL barring his way. TRUMAN I want to... The Bank Official, the Receptionist, and a BANK TELLER back Truman towards the door. BANK OFFICIAL ... Open an account? TRUMAN Yes. Er, why not? RECEPTIONIST Savings or checking? BANK OFFICIAL Let's go up to my office. Truman hurriedly exits the bank. EXT. STREET - DAY Back on the street, TRUMAN feels the eyes of the PEDESTRIANS. Is he simply drawing attention to himself by his behavior? Truman wheels around, trying to make eye contact with passersby. They shy away. He continues to run down the street. Finally, Truman finds himself standing in front of the window of an electronics store staring at his own face on a TV set. It is taking a feed from a camcorder aimed out the store window. INT. A BATHROOM SOMEWHERE - DAY A MAN stares into camera from a bath of stale water -- a layer of soap scum on the top. MAN Don't look at me, pal. EXT. STREET - ELECTRONICS STORE - DAY TRUMAN shudders at his video reflection. Further down the street, he notices Marlon's van parked outside a supermarket. INT. SUPERMARKET - DAY The door of a vending machine is open. MARLON, half inside the machine, loads a stack of Baby Ruth candy bars into one of the dispensing slots. The paranoid TRUMAN appears at his shoulder. TRUMAN Marlon -- MARLON (startled) -- Truman, what are you doing here? Truman looks nervously around him. Even the STORE OWNER's friendly nod from behind the counter is cause for suspicion in Truman's mind. TRUMAN (whisper) I've got to talk to you. MARLON Sorry, I'm way behind. TRUMAN I'm onto something, Marlon -- something big. MARLON Are you okay? You look like shit. TRUMAN I think I'm mixed up in something. MARLON Mixed up? Mixed up in what? TRUMAN There's no point in trying to explain it, but a lot of strange things have been happening -- elevators that don't go anywhere, people talking about me on the radio, you know what I mean? MARLON (bemused) No. Truman, if this is another one of your fantasies... TRUMAN I think it's got something to do with my dad. MARLON Your Dad?! TRUMAN (looking around nervously) I think he's alive. I'll tell you about it later. I'm definitely being followed. MARLON (looking around, instantly protective) Who? TRUMAN It's hard to tell. They look just like regular people. MARLON (referring to an OLD COUPLE entering the deli) How about them? TRUMAN (seriously considering the possibility) Could be. Beard looks phony. (leaning closer to Marlon) It's when I'm unpredictable. They can't stand that. That's why we've got to get out of here. Can you come with me? MARLON (closing up the vending machine) I told you I can't. TRUMAN I've got to show you something. Truman fixes Marlon with a look of deadly seriousness. MARLON (weakening) Christ, Truman. You're gonna get both our asses fired. EXT. SEAHAVEN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL - DAY TRUMAN hurries MARLON up the school steps. The sound of children's voices continues to drift out from inside the building. Truman and Marlon storm into the school reception area -- still empty. INT. SCHOOL CORRIDOR - DAY TRUMAN and MARLON stand outside the classroom, the source of the children's voices. Truman throws his friend an "I-told- you-so" look and swings open the door with a flourish. INT. CLASSROOM - DAY The once-empty classroom is now full of SCHOOL CHILDREN in an art class. A hush falls over the students and all eyes turn to TRUMAN and MARLON. TEACHER (gesturing to two unoccupied easels) Would you care to join us? EXT. CLIFFTOP - DUSK Hand-over-hand, TRUMAN climbs the cliff he once scaled as a seven-year-old. Finally, he sits on the clifftop, staring out at the view his father had been so desperate for him not to see twenty-six years earlier. However, the deserted bay beyond is identical to its neighbor. MARLON, laboring, crests the rise and joins his friend on the clifftop. MARLON What're we doing here, Truman? TRUMAN This is where it started. MARLON What exactly? TRUMAN Things. Things that doesn't fit. (another thought occurs) Maybe I'm being set up for something. You ever feel like that, Marlon? Like your whole life has been building to something? MARLON (blank) No. TRUMAN (ignoring the remark) When you were hauling chickens for Kaiser Poultry, what was the furthest you ever went off the island? MARLON I went all over but I never found a place like this. (nodding to the setting sun) Look at that sunset, Truman. It's perfect. TRUMAN (in a daze) Yeah... MARLON (glancing heavenwards) That's the "Big Guy." Quite a paintbrush he's got. TRUMAN Just between you and me, Marlon, I'm going away for a while. MARLON Really? INT. LIVING ROOM - TRUMAN'S HOUSE - NIGHT Truman sits cramped on his sofa. Pulling wider, we discover the cause of his discomfort. He is sandwiched between MERYL on one side and MOTHER on the other. Mother, the family historian, a stack of photograph albums at her feet, turns the pages of the album on Truman's lap. TRUMAN We ought to be getting you back, Mother. MOTHER Hold on a minute, dear. (pointing out a photo in the album) Here's us at Mount Rushmore. You remember, Truman -- when Dad was still with us -- that was quite a drive. You slept all the way there. TRUMAN (taking an interest in the monument) It looks so small. MOTHER (quickly turning the page) Things always do -- when you look back. Mother skips several pages in the album, finally stopping at a spread of wedding photos. MERYL Look, Truman, there's my cousin Errol putting the bouquet down his pants -- it was the happiest day of our lives. MOTHER (referring to Meryl) Didn't she look beautiful, Truman? She still does. Mother turns to a blank page in the album. MOTHER And there's plenty of room for baby photos. I'd like to hold a grandchild in my arms -- (dabbing her eye with a handkerchief) -- before I go. Meryl rises from the sofa and helps Mother to her walker. MERYL I'll take you home, Angela. (referring to the album) Why don't you leave those with us for a while? TRUMAN (kissing his emotional mother) Good night, Mother. MERYL (a wink to Truman) See you in a minute, sweetheart. Meryl departs with Mother. Left alone in the living room, Truman slumps back down onto the sofa and switches on the television set -- an old-fashioned model with rabbit-ears. He idly studies the photograph album as an over-earnest television HOST announces the upcoming program. TV HOST -- Tonight's golden-oldies is the enduring, much-loved classic, "Show Me The Way To Go Home." A hymn of praise to small-town life where we learn that you don't have to leave home to discover what the world is all about and that no one is poor who has friends... However, when we turn our attention away from the television, we find that Truman is peering intently at a wedding photograph of Meryl and himself taking their vows in a civil ceremony in a beachside gazebo. Under the scrutiny of a magnifying glass, he discovers that Meryl has her fingers crossed. INT. A LIVING ROOM SOMEWHERE - NIGHT The TWO LADIES sit on their sofa, a rug across their knees, sipping a night cap of hot chocolate. They stare into camera. OLD LADY 1 Remember at the wedding -- that dog? OLD LADY 2 Started howling when they took their vows. OLD LADY 1 And the plastic horseshoe fell off when they cut the cake. OLD LADY 2 (shaking her head ruefully) They never had a chance. INT. KITCHEN - MORNING TRUMAN, dressed casually in weekend attire, is at the stove preparing an omelette. MERYL hurries into the kitchen in her nurse's uniform. She gulps down a cup of coffee and reaches for her nurse's cap. However, she still has time to adjust the position of a pack of "FiberCon Cereal" -- squaring it a little more to camera. TRUMAN I have to talk with you. (looking about, suspicious) But not here. Let's go for a walk. MERYL (kissing him on the cheek) I'm sorry, I'm late. TRUMAN What's the hurry? MERYL Surgery. The elevator disaster downtown on the news last night. Cable snapped, a car dropped ten floors. Non-union contractors. Monsters. We're starting with an amputation. Truman's eyes widen. Meryl adjusts her hat in the mirror. MERYL That building's near yours. Imagine if you'd been in there for some reason. It doesn't bear thinking about. Truman, lost in thought, picks up the scalding frying pan with his bare hand. Letting out a howl of pain, he drops the pan. TRUMAN Arrah! MERYL Oh, my God! TRUMAN What do I do? MERYL I don't know -- TRUMAN -- you're a nurse, aren't you? MERYL Put some butter on it -- or ice? She looks up the kitchen clock. MERYL (hurrying out the door) Oh, look at the time. Truman stares after her, the pain of his hand forgotten for the moment. He watches Meryl ride her bicycle down the driveway. Truman exits the house. EXT. SEAHAVEN STREET/HOSPITAL/PARKING LOT - DAY Riding a bicycle of his own, TRUMAN follows MERYL to work, staying a safe distance back. He watches her enter the hospital. INT. HOSPITAL - DAY TRUMAN makes his way along various corridors. All seems as it should -- DOCTORS confer with NURSING STAFF and PATIENTS, gurneys are wheeled about with their PASSENGERS looking suitably traumatized. Truman approaches a NURSING SISTER. TRUMAN I'm looking for my wife -- Nurse Burbank. It's important. NURSE (checking her clipboard) I'm afraid that's impossible -- she's in pre-op. TRUMAN Sure. Okay. Fine. Can you pass on a message? NURSE I'll try. TRUMAN Tell her, tell her... I had to go to Fiji. I'll call her when I get there. NURSE When you get to Fiji? TRUMAN You got it. NURSE Fine. I'll tell her. The nurse walks off, disappearing through a set of doors. Truman hesitates before following her. INT. VARIOUS HOSPITAL CORRIDORS - DAY The NURSE walks briskly -- fewer people about, TRUMAN discreetly following behind. The nurse breaks into a jog. Truman hurries to keep up with her -- dodging around gurneys, JANITORS mopping floors. INT. OUTSIDE OPERATING THEATRE - DAY The NURSE, hastily scrubbed and gowned, enters the theatre. TRUMAN hesitates but dares not enter. He grabs a mask of his own. Looking through the glass window in the operating theatre door, he sees the YOUNG WOMAN (seen in the hastily fixed elevator car the day before) lying on the operating table, a blood-soaked bandage covering her left leg. MERYL, wearing a surgical gown and mask, assists the SURGEON. The SISTER hovers nervously in the background. SURGEON Scalpel. Meryl very slowly selects a scalpel from a tray of instruments and awkwardly hands it to the surgeon. SURGEON I'm now making my primary incision just above the left knee. The patient's eyes blink open in horror. The ANESTHETIST steps in Truman's view before he can get a good look. Suddenly, a SECURITY GUARD appears beside Truman and takes him by the arm. SECURITY GUARD (referring to the operation) This isn't gonna be pretty. Unless you're family of the patient, I'll have to ask you to leave. TRUMAN No problem. I don't want to cause any trouble. INT. AGENCY - DAY TRUMAN takes a seat at the only desk in an empty travel agency. The travel brochures and posters that adorn the walls all feature destinations that bear a striking similarity to picturesque Seahaven. Another poster spells out the dangers of travel -- "TRAVELLERS BEWARE -- Terrorists, Disease, Wild Animals, Street Gangs." A female TRAVEL AGENT enters from a rear door. AGENT I'm sorry to keep you. How can I help? TRUMAN I want to book a flight to Fiji. AGENT Where exactly? TRUMAN (believing she is being deliberately obtuse) Fiji. AGENT (a trace of condescension) Where in Fiji? What island? TRUMAN I'm sorry, er... the biggest one. AGENT (entering the destination in her computer) Viti Levu. For how many? TRUMAN (finding the question suspicious) One. AGENT When do you want to leave, remembering, of course, you do lose a day on the way there? TRUMAN Today. AGENT (reading off her computer screen) I'm sorry. I don't have anything for at least a month. TRUMAN (suspicious) A month. AGENT (patiently explaining) It's the busy season. TRUMAN (paranoia showing) You are a travel agent, aren't you? (reading her nametag) "Doris"? Your job is to help people travel. AGENT (showing amazing restraint) I do have a fabulous rate on a cruise ship departing for Fiji tomorrow. But you wouldn't want to do that. TRUMAN Why wouldn't I? AGENT I thought you were in a hurry. TRUMAN (calming down) That's right. AGENT You want to book the flight? TRUMAN It doesn't matter. I'll make other arrangements. EXT. CITY STREET - DAY Emerging onto the street, TRUMAN looks across to the building which he entered the previous day. It is now cordoned off with police tape after the elevator disaster. Flowers have been laid at the doorway. EXT. GREYHOUND BUS STATION - DAY A Greyhound Bus, bound for "CHICAGO" according to its destination sign, sits idling at the stop. Just as a burly SUPERVISOR is about to wave the bus on its way, TRUMAN dashes into the station. BUS DRIVER Last call for Chicago. Truman jumps onto the bus behind the last boarding passenger -- a YOUNG SOLDIER. TRUMAN (to the Bus Driver, as he boards the bus) Windy City, here we come. INT. GREYHOUND BUS - DAY TRUMAN takes a seat by a window. An awkward silence descends over the bus. The other passengers -- a MOTHER with a restless CHILD, several TOURISTS, an OLD COUPLE and the YOUNG SOLDIER -- all stare stiffly straight ahead, averting their eyes from Truman. No one is more uncomfortable than the BUS DRIVER. Beads of perspiration on his head, he fumbles for the gear shift, apparently unsure how to operate it. The gears grind. The OTHER PASSENGERS try not to notice. The CHILD, tugging her MOTHER's sleeve, points to Truman. Her mother makes her face the front of the bus. Finally the SUPERVISOR enters the bus. SUPERVISOR Everybody off. We've got a problem. The relieved passengers hurriedly exit until Truman is the only one remaining on the bus. The Bus Driver looks almost sorry for Truman who sits resolutely in his seat -- the hint of a tear of frustration in his eyes. BUS DRIVER (softly) I'm sorry, son. INT. A BAR SOMEWHERE - DAY The bar seen earlier. A small group of PATRONS discuss developments. The WAITRESS seems upset, occasionally glancing to camera as she pours a beer. PATRON 1 Why would he want to go to Chicago? Who does he know from there? PATRON 2 His doctor came from Chicago, didn't he? PATRON 1 Wasn't his father from Chicago? WAITRESS (upset) He's not going to Chicago. He's not going anywhere. He has to have it out with Meryl. EXT. STREET - TRUMAN'S BICYCLE - DAY As TRUMAN rides home with his bicycle, he stares wildly about him -- the rearview mirror on his bicycle is suddenly cause for concern, so are the trees and streetlamps lining the roadway. EXT. TRUMAN'S BACKYARD - DAY TRUMAN, staring at the highway from the bottom of the garden, doesn't bother to look up as MERYL, still wearing her nurse's uniform, approaches. TRUMAN (referring to a distant car on the expressway) See that car way down there? I bet it's a Suburu station wagon. Meryl looks idly over the fence at the approaching car. Finally, a Suburu station wagon motors by. Meryl is unimpressed. Truman turns his back on the highway to continue his game. TRUMAN I predict the next four cars will be a white Honda Civic, a blue and white Dodge Dart with the front hubcap missing, a Volkswagen Beetle with a dented fender and a motorcycle. Meryl doesn't wish to participate in the game and makes for the house. Truman holds her arm, forcing her to watch. He turns to check his prediction. A convoy of cars approaches. TRUMAN There's the Honda... the Dodge... here comes that dented Beetle... Meryl's attention wavers. Truman tightens his grip. TRUMAN Look! Following the VW is a school bus. MERYL (mocking) Where's the motorcycle? Truman is momentarily disappointed. TRUMAN Don't you want to know how I did that? A motorcycle putters by. Meryl turns and walks back to the house. He hurries after her. MERYL I invited Marlon and Rita for a barbecue Sunday. I thought I'd make my potato salad. Remind me -- TRUMAN I won't be here Sunday. MERYL -- we need more charcoal. TRUMAN Are you listening to a word I'm saying? MERYL You're upset because you want to go to Fiji. Is that it? Truman is puzzled by her conciliatory tone. MERYL Okay, do it. Get it out of your system. Save for a few months and go. There. Happy now? I'm going to take a shower. She turns away. TRUMAN (catching her wrist) Let's go now. MERYL What?! Despite her protests, Truman drags Meryl towards his car. TRUMAN (as he shoves her into the car) I'm ready to go now. Why wait? INT. TRUMAN'S CAR - DAY TRUMAN holds MERYL's wrist to stop her exiting the car and accelerates out of the driveway in reverse without looking -- almost running over PLUTO the dog and SPENCER with his garbage can. Truman starts circling a gazebo at the center of a roundabout, faster and faster. TRUMAN Where shall we go? Where shall we go? Spontaneity is what it's all about. Forget Fiji. We can't very well drive to Fiji, can we? What about Atlantic City? MERYL (trying to mask her anxiety) You hate gambling. TRUMAN That's right. I do, don't I? MERYL So why do you want to go? TRUMAN Because I never have. That's why you go places, isn't it? MERYL Truman, I think I'm going to throw up. Truman roars off down the street. TRUMAN Me too. Almost immediately, Truman encounters a traffic snarl. TRUMAN (a manic edge to his voice) So much traffic, this time of day. Does that strike you as peculiar? Without warning, Truman suddenly drives down a sidestreet. But his move is anticipated. At the end of the street, a pack of cars suddenly appears. Other vehicles fill the gap behind. TRUMAN (to Meryl, marveling) Blocked at every turn. Beautifully synchronized, don't you agree? MERYL (incredulous) You blaming me for the traffic? TRUMAN Should I? Truman reverses suddenly and makes a U-turn. TRUMAN You're right. We could be stuck here for hours. Could be like this all the way to Atlantic City. Let's go back. I'm sorry. I don't know what got into me. Truman starts heading back the way they came, the roadway now relatively free of traffic. MERYL Would you please slow down, Truman? Truman floors the car. The car flies past their house. MERYL Truman, that was our house! TRUMAN I've changed my mind again. What's New Orleans like this time of year? Mardi Gras. Or let's just see where the road takes us. MERYL (pleading) Let me out, Truman. You're not right in the head. You want to destroy yourself, you do it on your own! TRUMAN (eerily calm) I think I'd like a little company. As he speeds erratically, Truman glances at the streets on either side of the main road where he discovers a distinct lack of moving traffic. TRUMAN (to the anxious Meryl at his side) Look, Meryl. No cars! I don't run into traffic. The traffic follows me around. (excited by his discovery) We're in a moving pack, don't you see? INT/EXT. TRUMAN'S CAR - BRIDGE - DAY But TRUMAN's clear path is short-lived. He is forced to slow once again behind a line of other cars at a bridge. TRUMAN (to Meryl) It's hard to go places, isn't it? MERYL (looking up ahead at an overturned car) There's been an accident, Truman. TRUMAN Uh-huh. There's no accident. It's just more stalling. Truman floors the car again and swerves into the oncoming lane. He roars along the bridge on the wrong side of the road. Near the end of the bridge, a distraught MOTORIST dashes into the middle of the road, waving his arms. Truman slams on the brakes. MOTORIST (pointing to a small BOY lying very still on the ground beside a wrecked car) -- is there a doctor, a nurse? MERYL Truman, it's a child. I've got to help -- TRUMAN (hardly glancing to the boy) He'll be fine. Truman roars on, almost bowling over the concerned motorist. MERYL Truman, I took the "hypocrite" oath! TRUMAN I bet you did. Truman roars past a sign that reads, "YOU ARE NOW LEAVING SEAHAVEN -- Are you sure that's a good idea?" Back at the accident scene, the little boy, apparently uninjured, sits up. INT/EXT. CAR - DAY They roar pass an illuminated sign -- "FOREST FIRE WARNING -- Extreme Danger." MERYL Truman, what about that sign? TRUMAN I'm sure they're just exaggerating. Suddenly, a 20-foot high wall of flame shoots across the roadway in front of them -- as if someone flicked on a gas switch. MERYL What about that -- do you believe that?! TRUMAN experiences his first moment of doubt. He looks to the terrified MERYL, then closes his eyes tightly and accelerates through the fire wall. He is startled to find that they have emerged on the other side, singed but unscathed. However, the open road in front of them now disturbs Truman for a different reason -- its sheer lack of anything unusual. Signs along the road advertise motels and give directions to other destinations -- "I-6211 -- 2 miles," "Notel Motel -- Pool, Color TV." Meryl also now appears to be resigned to the journey. MERYL So what do we do for money when we get to New Orleans? TRUMAN (not so confident now) I've got my Seahaven Bankcard. MERYL So we just eat into our savings, is that the idea? I'd better call your mother when we get there. She'll be worried sick -- I don't know how she's going to take this. Truman appears very unsure of himself. EXT. ROADWAY - DAY However, there is still a barrier between TRUMAN and Bourbon Street. The highway, leading to a cloverleaf freeway junction in the distance, is completely blocked off by Seahaven police cars. No way past. Nuclear silos in the distance spew out an ominous puff of smoke. A sign reads, "SEAHAVEN ISLAND NUCLEAR POWER STATION -- Clean, Safe, Economical -- More Power To You!" Truman is forced to slow at the police barricade. TRUMAN Now what? OFFICER (grim-faced, indicating the nearby power plant) Leak at the plant. They had to shut her down. TRUMAN Is there any way around? OFFICER The whole area's being evacuated. TRUMAN Well, thank you for your help. OFFICER You're welcome, Truman. Truman's eyes widen at the mention of his name from an apparent stranger. As the officer turns, Truman bolts from the car, leaving MERYL in the passenger seat. MERYL Truman!! Come back!! Truman flees into the forest. INT. A LIVING ROOM SOMEWHERE - DAY The TWO OLD LADIES we have observed before are almost overcome with tension. One lady reaches out for her companion's hand. EXT. FOREST NEAR SEAHAVEN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT - DAY TRUMAN bursts past the alien-looking HAZARDOUS WATER WORKERS in their protective suits carrying detection instruments. The workers give chase in their cumbersome suits, trying to cut off his path. Nearing the edge of the forest, Truman hears the sound of hammers and saws. But before he has time to see the source of the sound, he is tackled to the ground. As SEAHAVEN POLICE OFFICERS drag him away, one of the WASTE WORKERS walks the remaining few yards, pushing aside a wall of tropical foliage. We now see what Truman was prevented from seeing. A Polynesian island is under construction by dozens of RIGGERS, PAINTERS and SET DECORATORS. Large cranes are lifting palm trees into place, a fake volcano is being tested in the distance and rehearsals for a firewalking ceremony are underway complete with hot coals, DRUMMERS and FIREWALKERS in native dress. The wings and fuselage of an airliner are being constructed on a hydraulic gimbal. Leading into one side of the airliner is a covered walkway, emblazoned with a sign, "Seahaven Island -- Departures." Emerging from the opposite side of the airliner is an old-fashioned airline stairway with the sign, "Welcome to Fiji." At the foot of the steps, TWO WOMEN in Fijian dress are being shown the correct way to present a floral lei. FIJI WOMAN Did he see us? WASTE WORKER (into microphone) Negative. INT. TRUMAN'S HOUSE - KITCHEN - NIGHT MERYL shows TWO SEAHAVEN POLICEMEN out the back door. MERYL Thank you. POLICEMAN 1 You're lucky he's not glowing, Ma'am. Next time we'll have to file charges. Meryl joins TRUMAN at the kitchen table. Truman applauds ironically. MERYL Let me get you some help, Truman. You're not well. TRUMAN (ignoring her medical advice) Why do you want to have a child with me? You can't stand me. MERYL That's not true. Meryl picks up a package and holds it to camera. MERYL Why don't I make you some of this new Mococoa Drink? All natural. Cocoa beans from the upper slopes of Mount Nicaragua. No artificial sweeteners -- TRUMAN (incredulous) -- What the hell are you talking about?! MERYL I've tasted other cocoas. This is the best. Truman rises from the table and backs her around the room. TRUMAN What the hell has that got to do with anything? Tell me what's happening?! MERYL (frightened but remaining poised) You're having a nervous breakdown, that's what's happening. TRUMAN (backing her up against the kitchen bench) You're part of this, aren't you?! Meryl grabs the "Chef's-Mate" from the counter to protect herself. She points the potato peeler at him. MERYL Truman, you're scaring me! Truman looks into her eyes and, with surprising swiftness, grabs her wrist and disarms her. TRUMAN No, you're scaring me, Meryl! Truman grabs Meryl and turns the Chef's Mate on her. He stares wildly about him. TRUMAN Stop this now. I'll do it. I swear. MERYL Do something... Upon hearing her remark, Truman's eyes widen. Sensing that she too is addressing a third person, he jerks her head around to read her face. TRUMAN (wild-eyed) Who were you talking to?! MERYL (incredulous) You're the one talking to the walls! TRUMAN No. You said, "Do something." Who were you talking to? Tell me! MERYL Truman, stop it! Suddenly, the front door chimes. TRUMAN Right on time. Cops must be telephatic. Truman grabs his peeler and marches Meryl down the hallway to the front door. The doorbell chimes a second and third time, more insistently. TRUMAN (shouting through the closed door) Stay where you are! MARLON (O.C.) Truman? It's me, Marlon. I need to talk to you. Truman flinches. He was so convinced it would be the police. He takes a step back against the hallway wall. Before he can decide what to do, MARLON has opened the unlocked front door to be confronted with the sight of Truman holding the peeler to Meryl's throat. Marlon locks eyes with Truman. Sizing up the situation, he slowly but decisively removes the peeler from Truman's hand. Meryl wrenches herself free from Truman's now limp grasp and collapses into Marlon's arm, sobbing. MERYL (distraught) How can anyone expect me to carry on under these conditions? This is... unprofessional. EXT. UNFINISHED BRIDGE - NIGHT MARLON and TRUMAN, both nursing bottles of beer, sit on the end of the unfinished bridge. TRUMAN I don't know what to think, Marlon. Maybe I'm going out of my mind, but I get the feeling that the world revolves around me somehow. MARLON It's a lot of world for one man. You sure that's not wishful thinking, you wishing you'd made something more of yourself? Christ, Truman, who hasn't sat on the John and had an imaginary interview on "Seahaven Tonight"? Who hasn't wanted to be somebody? TRUMAN This is different. Everybody seems to be in on it. Marlon looks around as if drawing inspiration from somewhere in the night. MARLON Tru, we've known each other since before we were in long pants. The only way we ever made it through high school was cheating off each other's test papers. Jesus, they were identical. I always liked that, because whatever the answer was -- Truman chimes in, nodding fondly at the memory. TRUMAN & MARLON -- we were right together and we were wrong together. MARLON The only night either of us ever spent in jail, we spent together and I wet myself but you never told anyone. I was best man at your wedding and my brother was best man at my wedding and you didn't talk to me for a month over that and I didn't blame you because you've been more of a brother to me than he's ever been. Truman is slowly coming around -- Marlon's speech from the heart soothing away his pain. MARLON I know things haven't worked out for either of us like we used to sit up on Monroe Avenue all night and dream they would. We all let opportunities pass us by. None of us asks for the dance as often as we should. I know that feeling when it's like everything's slipping away look for answers someplace else. But, well, the point is, I would gladly step in front of traffic for you. INT. CONTROL ROOM - NIGHT CHRISTOF stares intently into camera, holding his distinctive earpiece to his head. Beside him, his ever-present assistant, CHLOE. CHRISTOF (hushed tones) And the last thing I'd ever do is lie to you. EXT. FREEWAY - NIGHT MARLON (staring into Truman's eyes) And the last thing I'd ever do is lie to you. (pause) Think about it, Truman, if everybody's in on it, I'd have to be in on it too. I'm not in on it, because there is no it. TRUMAN So what are you saying, Marlon, the whole thing has been in my head --? MARLON (meeting his gaze) Not the whole thing, Truman. You were right about one thing. TRUMAN What's that? MARLON The thing that started all of this. TRUMAN looks up in the direction of MARLON's gaze. A FIGURE stands at the end of the freeway -- a homeless man. It is his father, KIRK. MARLON Yes, he survived somehow. He's got quite a story to tell. Marlon helps Truman to his feet -- Truman still transfixed by the figure. MARLON Go to him. INT. CONTROL ROOM - NIGHT CHRISTOF continues to direct the action from what is now revealed to be the control room of a television studio. CHRISTOF Go wide, LightCam Eight... In a wide shot, from one of the streetlights lining the empty freeway, we see TRUMAN walking towards his long-lost FATHER. CHRISTOF ... CarCam Twelve... and... cue music... Beethoven, Third Symphony, Second Movement. Music swells. Kirk and Truman embrace in the middle of the freeway. Truman takes his father's ring from his own finger. CHRISTOF ... RingCam... We see a close up of Kirk from the ring's POV. Truman places the ring in the palm of his father's hand. CHRISTOF ... ButtonCam Three... We see a close up of Truman from a camera on Kirk's coat. TRUMAN I never stopped believing. KIRK (gazing at the ring, then up to Truman's face) Thank you... my son. CHRISTOF And wide... SIMEON looks to his director. SIMEON Close up? CHRISTOF (staring intently at his monitor) No, hold back... The CREW watches Kirk and Truman embrace. KIRK All those years, wasted. TRUMAN We have a lot of years ahead. INT. CONTROL ROOM - NIGHT CHRISTOF allows himself a smile of satisfaction. CHRISTOF And fade up music... now go in close... As a tight two-shot of father and son fills the screen, the orchestra swells with triumphant music. EXT. FREEWAY - NIGHT FATHER and SON remain in the embrace. Over Truman's shoulder, we see a flash of guilt flicker across MARLON's face. INT. CONTROL ROOM - NIGHT CHRISTOF, emotionally drained by the events, slumps in his chair. CHOLE rests a supportive hand on his shoulder. The head of the network, MOSES, a man in his seventies, enters with his young assistant, ROMAN -- their faces full of admiration. MOSES Well done. Well done, everyone. INT. A BEDROOM SOMEWHERE - NIGHT A YOUNG WOMAN reclines on a bed, her back against the wall. Propped up on her knees is a book. However, she's not reading but staring straight into camera -- a look of profound sadness on her face. It is SYLVIA. From her point-of-view, we see a portable television set on a table at the foot of the bed. On the television is a live picture of TRUMAN -- the first time we have seen him on a television screen. He is sitting at his kitchen table, unaware of the camera recording him. The shot is static. He just sits there in silence, a steaming cup of cocoa in front of him and a plate of untouched cookies. At one point, a sponsor's border, appears on the screen, tastefully framing the "action," with the message, "MOCOCOA -- Cocoa beans from the upper slopes of Mount Nicaragua." After several seconds the border disappears. Suddenly, the live picture of Truman shrinks into a window on the screen to accommodate a title sequence that begins to play around the edge of the image. "The Truman Show" theme music begins. The camera cranes up and over the Hollywood sign, the flatlands of Burbank stretching into the distance. ANNOUNCER (V.O.) From the network that never sleeps -- broadcasting live and unedited 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, around the globe... During this continuous aerial shot, overlapping scenes from Truman's life appear in chronological order, from infancy to adolescence and finally adulthood. Photographs of leading CAST MEMBERS also appear in individual frames. ANNOUNCER (V.O.) ... with Hannah Gill as Meryl Burbank, Louis Coltrane as Marlon, Alanis Montclair as Mother, re-introducing Walter Moore as her husband, Kirk... The music swells as the camera approaches a mammoth structure at the base of the mountains -- a dome so vast it dwarfs everything around it. At the top of the dome is a huge painting of Truman's face encircled by satellite dishes -- inside each dish is a single letter spelling out, T-H-E T-R-U- M-A-N S-H-O-W -- a banner proclaims, "30th Great Year." ANNOUNCER (V.O.) ... and Truman Burbank as Himself, taped in the world's largest studio, one of only two man-made structures visible from space, comes the longest running documentary soap opera in story, now in its 30th great year -- "The Truman Show"! The camera rushes towards the outside wall of the gigantic dome bathed in sunlight. When we emerge on the other side, it is night. The camera cranes up from a calm, moonlit ocean to the night sky above. As we near the crescent-shaped moon, we discover that it is actually a window overlooking Seahaven. Standing in the "crater" window is the suited CHRISTOF. INT. LUNAR STUDIO - NIGHT Pulling back from the window we reveal an INTERVIEWER, mid- forties, conservative suit and hair. A large television shows a live picture of Truman. Immersed in his book. INTERVIEWER I'm your host, Mike Michaelson, coming to you live from the Lunar Room on the 121st story of the OmniCam Ecosphere, 2800 feet above Seahaven Island. Tonight, a special edition of "Tru Talk," the forum where we discuss and analyze recent events on the show. We are honored to bring you a rare and exclusive interview with the show's conceiver, creator, televisionary, the Man-In-The-Moon himself -- Christof. (referring to the image of Truman between them) I remind viewers that as "The Truman Show" is a living history, it is our practice to keep the image of Truman on screen at all times. A TITLE APPEARS: Due to the Live and Unedited nature of the program, viewer discretion is advised. The Interviewer turns to Christof. INTERVIEWER Welcome. CHRISTOF Thank you. INTERVIEWER The catalyst for the recent dramatic events was, of course, Truman's father, Kirk, and his infiltration onto the show. Before we discuss that, it's w