Dead Hearts (2014) - full transcript

A young mortician will give his heart away to find true love.

(soft piano music)

- [Narrator] Milton Mulberry,
Jr. was going to die.

Now you're probably
thinking what a morbid way
to start a story, but it's true.

We all die.

I will die, you will die.

But in this story,

and maybe in yours,

death is just the beginning.

Death was an all too
familiar friend to Milton.

In fact, it was his only friend.

Milton Mulberry, Jr. was
going to be a mortician.
His father was a mortician.



And his father's father was a mortician.

A job that had been passed
down for generations,

like an old hand-me-down sweater,
the Mulberry's were morticians.

Milton had no choice in the matter.

It was a certainty like death itself.

(sighing)

(blood splattering)

- Hmm.

- [Narrator] Milton
Mulberry was different.

All the kids in town could easily see it.

All except one.

Lola Littleton was blind
and had been since birth.

She liked Kung Fu, books on tape, and...

(growling)



(screaming)
taxidermy.

Milton Mulberry was in love.
But so...

was Harold Henderson.

- Hey.

- [Narrator] Harold was the first kid ever

to come over Milton's house.

(sniffling)

Milton, from that day on,

would always wish it was
for a different reason.

(dramatic music)
- Oh!

(grunting)

- [Narrator] At 3:07 each day,

Harold Henderson would kick
the crap out of Milton.

This continued seven days a
week without interruption,

including holidays.

(grunting)

(electronic beeping)

(upbeat pop music)

(grunting)

(kick smacking)

(punches smacking)

(screaming)

(kick smacking)

Milton had just witnessed the fall of
the most deadly and
villainous eight-year-olds

of all time.

Wait.
It couldn't be.

It was.

(bright horn music)

This was the first time a
girl had ever touched Milton.

Her hands were soft.

Milton would remember this moment

for the rest of his short life.

Geoffrey Chaucer once said love was blind.

For Milton, this was true.

Lola liked coming to the funeral home.

She liked to touch the faces of the dead.

She told Milton that their faces told

the stories of their lives.

In their wrinkles, in their scars,

she would find tales of
adventure, outbreak and love.

She told Milton he was really
lucky to have this job.
And for the first time in his life,

he agreed with her.

(car doors slamming)
(railroad signals ringing)

On November 13th,
John and Martha Littleton died

in a car crash just
outside of du kwon dojo.

In her seven years of life,

Lola had never once
felt blind until today.

(crying)
(solemn trumpet music)

The next day Lola left to live with her

Uncle Tellyride in New York.

(solemn trumpet music)

Lola would never see Milton again

for the rest of his life.

Milton is heartbroken,
would never love again.

And so as I sadly stated
at the start of our story,

Milton Mulberry Jr. died no longer
wishing to live amongst the living.

He would return to the Mulberry mortuary

and wait for his body
to join him in death.

(thunder clapping)

At 78 years old, Milton was still waiting.

He'd left the mortuary
a total of six times

in the last 60 years.

(playful horn music)

Death remained his only friend.

(playful horn music)

(sighing)

(grunting)

His family would have been proud.

- Hmm, hmm.

- [Narrator] Well, not that proud.
- Hmm.

- [Narrator] Milton longed for death,

but his broken heart continued to beat.

He was tired of taking care of the dead.

So decided it was time to join them.

(playful music)

(screaming)
(electricity buzzing)

Milton Mulberry was dead.

But as I told you, this
was just the beginning.

Milton had awoken six
feet below the earth,

confused and terrified.

But not as shocked and
terrified as Alegis Caesar,

who up to this moment was
rather enjoying his new job.

(playful horn music)

Alegis's heart stopped at exactly the same

moment Milton realized
he was missing something.

(gasping)
This was the reason Milton had returned.

He had given his heart away.

And now he just had to find the person

who had taken it.

The expression "listen to your heart"

takes on a whole new meaning when it rests

in someone else's chest.

The road was long, but
surprisingly animated.

And soon Milton found himself
outside his heart's door.

(kids laughing)

(knocking)

- [Kids] Trick or treat!

(laughing)

- [Narrator] It had to be her.

It was always her.

Lola Littleton had a heart attack

the day Milton died.

His death saved her life.

It's not often we get a
second chance at love,

a second chance at life.

Milton wasn't going to waste it.

Harold Henderson at 81
was still an asshole.

Every day since her parent's funeral

he'd been trying to win Lola's heart.

He'd been failing for 73 years.

But Harold didn't like to lose.

And he was tired of getting rejected.

(grunting)
(punches thumping)

(pumpkin thudding)

(growling)

(electronic beeping)

(upbeat rock music)
- Ho.

(grunting)

(kicks smacking)

(punch smacking)

(grunting)

(punches smacking)

At 77, Lola's Kung Fu
was still in top form.

- Yeah.

- [Narrator] Milton's
78-year-old heart sadly was not.

(grunting)

(punches smacking)

(grunting)

- Ah!
(flesh splattering)

(screaming)
(blood squirting)

(grunting)

(soft chime music)

True love is the most
powerful force in nature,

a force that can rip flesh from bones

and tear out a man's heart.

It's the only thing worth fighting for.

The only thing worth dying for.

(horn music)

Lola Littleton, like Milton, was dead.

Now you're probably
thinking what a morbid way

to end a story, but it's true.

We all die.

I will die, you will die.

(horn music)

But in this story and maybe in yours,

death...

is just the beginning.

(horn music)

(synth music)