The A-Team (1983–1987): Season 1, Episode 4 - A Small and Deadly War - full transcript

A police inspector hires the A-Team to shut down a group of crooked SWAT police officers who moonlight as assassins-for-hire. To eavesdrop on the group and gather as much information as possible on their targets, Face and Amy con their way into the police locker room and sew tiny microphones onto the renegade officers' uniforms. Hannibal then proceeds to rattle their cages with a series of phone calls and interruptions until the microphones are discovered. Their edge lost, the officers and the A-Team barrel head on to their final confrontation -- a showdown at a deserted amusement park!

Tonight is fight night.

How do you want him?

The warden of that
prison in Florida

is forcing the prisoners
to fight to the death.

Well, kid, it looks like
you just hired the A-Team.

Saturday night, we're gonna
have a fight to the death.

I've been commissioned by the Senate of these here
United States to write a thesis on several prisons...

I just found out you're
not really Dr Pepper.

Not Dr Pepper?

We've got a break
situation here.

Ten years ago, a crack commando unit was
sent to prison by a military court...



for a crime they didn't commit.

These men promptly escaped from a maximum-security
stockade to the Los Angeles underground.

Today, still wanted by the government,
they survive as soldiers of fortune.

If you have a problem, if no one else
can help, and if you can find them...

maybe you can hire...
the A-Team.

Get him! Get him!

Get him! Okay, get him!

Maim him! Just-Just maim him!

He's goin' down, Warden. This time old
Jase is gonna stop that boy for good.

Keep that tape rollin'.
Three grand a copy.

Okay! Okay!

How do you award it?

- Kill him!
- Kill him, Jase!

Finish him off, son.



Finish him off, boy.

I don't want to
do it, Mr. Beale.

And I don't care if you shoot me.
I won't do it.

Jase, Lieutenant Trask here's gonna
give you regulation clothes, okay?

And you got an hour start. Then I
gotta announce a prison break.

That's our bargain. I'm holding up my end.
Better get goin'.

Hold it!

This here's my watch.

You got exactly
one-hour head start.

Go!

Seem like about an hour?

Let's call it in, Red.

Sneed, this is Leo.

We got us a prison break. The
boy's headin'up Carver's Road.

- You wanna see if you can scare up a posse?
- Hey, we're mounted and ready.

Out. All right, he's
on Carver Canyon Road.

Now he'll be up in Box Canyon
in about five minutes.

Now y'all are legalized deputies of
this county, so good huntin', huh?

- Okay.
- Let's get him! Let's go!

- I'll make it. I'll make it.
- I won't make it.

I ain't got no time
to make no ashtrays.

Neither do I. But since I've been put in
charge of arts and crafts, I'll make time.

I gotta go.

Hey, Joey, what'd you and
your mother hear from Jase?

Nothin'.

There he is now.

- Where you been, Joey?
- I had to go down to the centre and check in with B.A.

B.A. Baracus in a
day care centre?

- That big, tough dude, what's he doin' down there?
- He's making ashtrays.

It beats making trouble,
don't it, Jase?

B.A., you son of a gun.
Come on in.

- How are you?
- Good, good, good, good, good, good.

He tells me you busted up a bar in Florida.
Got 30 days in Strikersville.

You don't know the
half of it, B.A.

You see, that warden, he had a
whole different plan for me.

My 30 days turned
into five years.

- I mean, they turned my whole life upside down.
- You busted out?

Don't mess in my mud, B.A.
I'm poison.

You been throwin' your life
away, that's your business.

But you're gonna get your little brother
here in trouble trying to help you.

Well, he is my brother. And I
don't have anyplace else to go.

Jase Tataro!

We got you surrounded!

They followed you, Joey. Damn
it, I told you to be careful.

B.A., you got to get
him out of here now.

We can blow you away right here
and now if you want, Jase.

Save us a lot of trouble
if we did blow him away.

Warden wants him in one piece...
you know that.

Now you can come
on out of there.

No! No! They'll kill him!

- They'll kill him!
- They're killing him, Andre.

They're killing a perfectly
wonderful career.

I got a big-time
feature to produce.

I've got agents like you
hawking me all day long.

Now your client
is a big riskola.

Okay, the whole Aquamaniac
disaster, we'll own that.

But we all know that John was
having emotional problems.

Your script... Sinbad
Goes To Mars...

is absolutely beautiful...

and John is perfect
casting as the Martian.

Uh... hmm.

- Let's go. I need you.
- This, uh...

One of my... Another
one of my clients.

I"ll take care of the check.
I'll phone you, Andre.

That guy produces most of the
monster pictures in Hollywood.

I was being my own agent.
It was beautiful.

- We're on a case.
- What case? Who's the client?

Oh, I see. He's got a
lot of money, has he?

He's got nothin'. His brother's about to be murdered
at a Florida prison, and we're gonna get him out.

You gotta hear this kid's story, Hannibal. He
says the warden of that prison in Florida...

is forcing the prisoners
to fight to the death.

We're gonna get him out, Hannibal.
You got a problem with that?

I didn't say I had a problem, B.A.
I'm just saying...

if we want to stay out of the federal
slammer, we gotta screen our clients.

- I'm calling for a vote. I say we take a vote on this case.
- How can we vote on it?

- We don't even know what it is.
- We vote because I say we vote.

- Could we make that a secret ballot?
- No!

I say we get Jase out of prison for Joey.
All in favor?

I said, all in favor.

Well, I, uh, uh...
You know, I...

Well, sure, I'd favor that.

Well, they don't let
crazy people vote.

They take that right away from
you when you're committed.

We are also immune to fear.

We can't hook up emotionally to
the concept of cerebral damage.

- I'm gettin' tired of this rap, Murdock.
- You're tired of it? How do you think I feel?

I have to listen to it all day.

I think it's a hell of a story. And
if we can prove it, I get front page.

You see, I got this real shot at playing
the Martian in Sinbad Goes To Mars.

Don't matter. You're out-voted anyway. Come
on, let's go. We gotta get out of here.

Well, kid, it looks like
you just hired the A-Team.

That script stunk anyway. I have
to have some creative standard.

We gotta get you a cover, Face,
to get into that slammer.

Get a book on prison reform.

- Any book?
- No. It has to be a recent one...

and by an author who's never
been published before.

- We'll get copies at the book store.
- I know the routine. Let's go.

Go on, son.

Well, Jase said this Warden Beale
picks prisoners that are tough.

Tries him out by having one of the guys
in the yard pick a fight with him.

If they do well, he separates them from
the other prisoners and trains them.

Then he makes them
fight to the death.

Like them gladiators
in Rome, man.

How did Jase get away?

Well, if they win, they let you
go free, and then they hunt you.

They try to kill you.

Jase was the first
one to get away.

Jase is real tough, Hannibal.
He grew up in my neighbourhood.

- He was the baddest cat around until I showed up.
- Still is.

He's my brother.
Everyone says, "Yeah."

Jase, he's-he's real
tough and mean."

But he's not.

He's...

That's okay, Joey. That's okay. I'm
gonna help you, me and my friends here.

It's okay. It's okay.

But what if they kill him
before you can get to him?

All we can do is our best. But
we'll give it a 100% try, son.

We found a book called The
Reformed Convict by Dwight Pepper.

Dr Pepper? Are you kidding?

It's his first book. He's a
doctor of psychology from LSU.

Face, you're the good doctor.

Let's go. We'll drop Joey at
home and get on down there.

A new record... coast
to coast in 38 hours.

The town's kinda small. Somehow
I expected a house or two.

That's the city limits sign.
The town is up the road.

Ambitious. Lay it
out for me, Face.

Now, uh, Murdock, B.A., Hannibal,
you rent the car and get arrested.

Now Amy and I, we"ll scan
the stuff we need...

and get to you guys with the
stuff you need for the escape.

We gotta break out of jail
with Jase before the fight.

If we don't, then, uh, B.A.
could be in big trouble.

Yeah, he's also in big trouble
if you and B.A. get separated.

If that happens, you aren't gonna win
the fight or see what's going on.

Don't worry. I got a plan
that will keep us together.

Let's go. Jase could
be dead already.

Let her rip, B.A.

Gettin' arrested in this
burg is the easy part.

Well, now, where you boys from?

Drop dead, sir.

I want these guys, Billy.

Now you call Judge Bell and you tell
him that I got me some Yankees...

- ploughin' through town doin' 80.
- I thought we were doin' 85.

He ain't gonna like it, Norm. You know
what he said about bustin' Yankees.

Nobody talks to us like that
when we been drinkin'...

especially no
dust-covered country cop.

All right, get 'em out there! You're
under arrest! Drunk and disorderly!

- You're resisting arrest...
- Calm... Calm down, Norm! Calm down.

We got big trouble, man. They
been screamin' all up the state.

Now you heard the judge. He's gonna
send a senate investigator down here...

and we are gonna get fired, man.

Just get in the car
and calm down.

- What's goin' on, Hannibal?
- I don't know. But I'll bet I can change his mind.

Jase could be gettin' murdered while we
stand around here trying to get arrested.

Give me the keys.

You're under arrest.
You're under arrest!

"You guys are all
goin' to jail!"

Thank you.

All right, everybody out.

Hey, you, boy, I said get out.

If you're talking to him,
you're wasting your time.

He's deaf. He's also a mute.

Oh, yeah. I remember getting a
note on that from the courthouse.

So which one of you two
is the interpreter, huh?

Sadly, that duty falls on me.

Well, tell him to stop leaving
his butt prints in my van.

Sign language requires
the entire body.

If you want him out of there,
you're going to have to uncuff me.

- Hey. Say, what's he run, about, uh, 220?
- I haven't the faintest idea.

Well, tell him to get in line and follow us
into the yard, 'cause we're gonna check in.

That boy looks like a candidate
for the fight program.

Got his file?

Deaf and mute?

Yep. That other guy, uh, John Smith, can
talk to him. He knows that sign language.

Hairdresser.

You mean to tell me that animal is
travelling around with a hairdresser?

I wonder if that mute's
as tough as he looks?

I'll tell you what, you have
Jackhammer Jackson try him out.

If he looks like he can handle himself, I'm
gonna file assault charges against him...

upgrade his sentence two
years for fighting.

Soon as they get through with the
psychiatric check-in, I'll get it done.

- Tractor.
- You don't really see a tractor, do you, Murdock?

- You're right. I was just guessing.
- Well, don't guess.

What does it look like?

Ink. It looks like ink. See, I've
been doin' these most of my life...

off and on...

and I don't see nothin',
so I just guess.

It looks like a
butterfly, don't it?

See, there's the wings
and there's the head.

Hey.

Yeah. Yeah, I see that.

- Yeah, it's a butterfly!
- Good.

Butterfly. Now what do you see?

Garbage bag.

Empty garbage bag.

I'd like a trash bag, please, if you have
one. I really could use a trash bag.

All the way from Los Angeles,
California, to Strikersville, Florida.

I'm doing a story
on prison reform.

Actually, I was supposed to
meet Dwight Pepper here.

The story relates to his
concepts on prison reform.

Unfortunately, I guess he
got hung up at the airport.

- Have a seat.
- Thank you.

Dwight Pepper? Isn't he that dude that wrote
that cream-cheese book about coddling prisoners?

Teach them how to do
needlepoint, bake biscuits?

I have his book right here.

I already read it.

Couldn't get past
the second chapter.

You, uh, don't mind...

if I confirm your credentials,
do you, Miss Allen?

Please do.

You one of the new fish, huh?

- That's right.
- Turn out your pockets, boy.

What you got is mine.

- What's your name, friend?
- Deke, and I ain't your friend. I'm your boss, boy.

I'll tell you what
you are, Deke.

- You're a guy travelling Mach one to a pine box.
- Tough guy, huh?

He's a tough guy.

Got a cigarette, Deke?

I'll just take the pack.

What have you seen of
Jase Tataro, Deke?

It don't pay to ask questions
on this cell block.

See ya, Deke.

- Turn out our pockets, man.
- What is this, an opening ritual?

I wasn't talkin' to you, punk.
I was talkin' to him.

Turn out your pockets, man.

Oh, he doesn't have anything
in his pockets you want.

I wasn't talkin to you.
I was talkin' to him.

If you're talking to him, you are
talking to me, because he's deaf.

He's also a mute. He
can't even read lips.

But if you'd like me to translate
for you, I'll be happy to.

You want him to turn
out his pockets?

- What did he say?
- You don't want to hear it. It wasn't very nice.

Okay, okay.

He said, "Your mother works street corners and
you're so ugly, flies wouldn't land on you."

I told you it wasn't very nice.

He also said that you're a chicken-hearted lowlife
who sleeps in pig slop, and your sister...

Okay, okay. I get the point.

- Three-minute rounds?
- No.

Damn! I never saw such quick combinations in
my life. That boy may be better than Jase.

The only trouble is you can't talk
to him without the other guy, Smith.

Tell you what... you,
uh, keep 'em together.

Put 'em in the fight program.

Get on the phone,
spread the word.

Saturday night, we're gonna
have a fight to the death.

Tell 'em a thousand
dollars buys one seat.

Mr. Pepper, I don't have
no time for you today.

That's Dr Pepper, like
in the "sody" pop.

Hey, look, Warden, I done a little
research on Strikersville Prison...

and, uh, quite frankly the incidence of
violent deaths that abound here about...

suggest to me that you have severe
shortcomings in your rehabilitation program.

I ain't about to discuss my prison with
some, uh, university, uh, "peniologist"...

who don't know anything about
problems we face here.

Warden Beale, I'm gonna lay this
out for you once and only once.

I've been commissioned by the Senate of these here
United States to write a thesis on several prisons...

Strikersville bein' one of them,
and, uh, I must tell you, sir...

that I am, uh, mighty appalled by what
I've discovered is goin' on down here.

In the past 18 months, there
have been seven prisoners...

who have died from what we might
euphemistically call "mysterious causes"...

- beatings and the like.
- Not to mention...

the number of prison breaks that have resulted
in the deaths of the escaping prisoners.

Miss Allen, if y'all don't mind.

I would like to handle
this in my own way.

I appreciate that you're down here to
chronicle my efforts in the national press.

I appreciate that your findings will be
published in 70 syndicated papers...

including the Washington Post, and I am not unmindful
of the public attention y'all can put on my study.

But as an academician, I'm not
here for personal glory...

but to try and effect
meaningful prison reform.

Seventy papers?

Look, uh, I don't wanna make
enemies of you people...

but, uh, you gotta understand
I got my problems here.

Warden Beale, I'm not down here
to try and make trouble for you.

As a matter of fact, I'd be willing to take a look
at your operation in a very favourable light...

if I was to become convinced your rehab
programs were movin' in the right direction.

We have rehab programs
here in Strikersville.

What you got, Warden,
is a laundry...

and y'all punch out license
plates for the state of Florida.

What do ya want from me?

Well, I'd... I'd like to suggest the implementation
of what we call "sensitivity rehabilitation."

It's all in my book.

You mean, uh, cooking,
junk like that?

Cooking is excellent. It's
a creative endeavour.

Now at Leavenworth, they've had tremendous success
with the hair-styling concept. Absolutely incredible.

It's in my book under "Decreased Inmate
Violence Through Personal Grooming."

You... You gotta
be putting me on.

You mean to tell me you want me to start
a hairdressing "saloon" here in prison?

How about ballet class?
You want one of those?

As a matter of fact, dance class and
painting class have been quite effective...

I have heard enough.

That tears it. I ain't gonna
listen to no more of this.

All right. All right.

You, uh, you do what you like and
I'll do what I have to. Miss Allen?

I can't believe you are willing to
jeopardize your entire career...

because you are unwilling to
experiment with new prison techniques.

That's simply fascinating.

Hold it. That thing
been on all the time?

Dr Pepper? Uh, come on in
here a minute, will you?

You know, I was just thinking. We had a prisoner
check in today that had hair-styling experience.

Thought maybe we'd give it a shot. You come on
over here, and you tell me what y'all need.

Trash bags! I want trash bags!

I want 'em! I want 'em!

- I want trash bags!
- The guy hasn't shut up!

I want trash bags!

Don't you have any trash bags? Maybe
he'll put his head inside and suffocate.

Trash bags!

Oh. Trash bags?

Gimme a trash bag.

- I want a trash bag.
- Where do these morons come from?

Hannibal, that's Jase Tataro.

He's alive.

Nice.

But this shampoo has
no protein base.

We'll have more split ends
than a football team. Ha, ha.

Oh, no! Did you buy
all Harrisons?

Can't do a decent blow-dry with a Harrison
Hair Pro. There's no temperature control.

Mr. Smith, the warden is doing the best he can. I
think Warden Beale is being extremely cooperative.

I need reclining salon chairs. Where
are my reclining salon chairs?

Strikersville, Florida don't have no
Montgomery Wards. We did the best we could.

Okay, okay. Then I'll take, uh,
pool chairs or lawn chairs.

The attitude of the head is
the essence of a good cut.

Sneed, uh, go over and pick up
three or four of my pool chairs.

Thank you, Warden.

Warden Beale, I'm most
surely impressed...

with the way you've gone and embraced
these new concepts in penology.

I don't think there's gonna be one con
comin' here and gettin' no haircut.

- Uh, you people got me over a barrel, but, uh, I think you're nuts.
- That's what they said in Leavenworth.

Now, Warden, everybody
wants to look nice.

It strikes to the central
core of the human condition.

When, uh, people, uh,
look nice, they act nice.

And prisoner violence
will be reduced.

Now if it's all right, I'd like
to see the hospital facilities.

Bye-bye.

How'd you like a little Mohawk trim,
B.A., just to keep me in practice?

How'd you like a little right hook, Hannibal,
just to sorta keep me in practice?

Some more! I want some more!
I want trash bags!

- What on earth is that?
- We have a new prisoner. He wants trash bags.

- Trash bags? Why?
- I don't know. I never saw anything like it before.

You give him a trash bag, and he's quiet for a
couple of hours, and then it starts all over again.

Aberrant behaviour is fascinating,
medically and clinically, isn't it?

How would you know? I just found
out you're not really Dr Pepper.

Not Dr Pepper? Are you kidding?

Of course he's Dr Pepper.

Except I just got his book from the
warden's office not more than an hour ago.

I was just getting set to
read it, and I noticed this.

So the next question is, if you're not
Dr Pepper, who the hell are you, honey?

That's the last time I'll be
humiliated by that damn publisher!

Five years of research,
five years of writing...

and Dunn and Mitchell put the
wrong picture on the dust jacket!

I thought they recalled all the
wrong dust covers, Dr Pepper.

They were supposed to
have been recalled.

- Of course, with a New York publisher, they'll tell you anything.
- Wrong dust cover?

Yes. Of course. Clean out your ears.
Here, show her the right one.

Oh, well, this one has
your picture on it.

So who's this other guy?

That other guy, as you so quaintly
put it, is Dr Lloyd Leedoms.

He's a marine biologist
or some damn thing.

Published a minor little work entitled,
Love Calls of the Pacific Grey Whales.

About six people ever read it.

My book, on the other hand, is the
current bible of penologists...

and the publishers mixed
his photo with mine...

distributed the first printing
with the wrong picture on it!

- Your question is, "How could this happen?"
- Well, no. I...

My question exactly.

I screamed bloody murder, and they told me... they
promised... that all the books had been recalled!

Oh, it's just devastating.
Really.

Writers get almost no respect.
Almost none.

Would you mind if I-I took...
if I took this jacket?

- No.
- I'm gonna shove it down my editor's throat.

Promised. He promised me.

- Oh, well, what's a Yankee's promise worth anyway?
- Nothin'.

Let's take a look at that
trash bag fixation, shall we?

Trash bag! New trash bag!

- Trash bag! Trash bag!
- Sneed, trash bag.

Trash bag? Tra...

What do you make
of that, Doctor?

Well, I'd like to spend about
an hour with him later on.

I, uh, I got my doctorate at
LSU in neurotic fixations.

I think in about, oh, 20 or 30 minutes I could
tell you whether this boy is really fixated...

or just trying to, uh, Section Eight into
the soft walls of a hospital facility.

I sure would like to
have you try, Doctor.

He's been keeping everybody
on this wing up all night.

Well, I'll take a shot at it
before I leave this evening.

Tell him to take his gloves off and
hold out his wrist. He's leaving.

Leaving? Why are we leaving?

Not you, just him.

Tonight is fight night.

He's gonna get his chance
to fight Jase Tataro.

Is the van ready, Sneed?

Van? Are you kidding? I thought we were
gonna fight right here in the prison.

You tell him to hold his hand out
and you shut your hole, okay?

Or I'll have Sneed deck you with
his billy right here, right now.

I think I should go along to
tell him what's happening.

I think, uh, once he gets hit,
he'll know what's happening.

Now you tell him.

Let's hurry up. We gotta
be there in 20 minutes.

Oh, damn.

What's the matter? Did
you lose your playmate?

No, I-I hate violence.

I just hate it.

What's going on, man?
Where we going?

Well, one of us is gonna
wind up a dead man...

and then the other one is gonna
be sporting game for the crowd.

We gonna bust loose. You
gonna do what I say.

No way out of this.

I got some help. Joey hired me
and some friends to get you out.

We ain't gonna get out of this
one, B.A., neither one of us.

What are you doing here?
This is a restricted area.

Well, do you think I like it?

Doing a cut and blow-dry on a crazy man.
Warden Beale sent me up here.

Well, you'll have to leave. I have
no permission for you to be here.

It's all right. I set it up
with the warden this afternoon.

I thought we'd start by getting
Mr. Murdock here a better self-image.

My self-image is real bad.

A haircut is just what I need in this
time of severe emotional crisis.

There, you see how it works? Now y"all wanna
open the door and let that fellow come on in?

Well, if you're sure, Doctor.

Thank you.

- Hey, what...
- Bring the trash bags, Murdock.

Hey, what's going on?

You feel free to yell and scream,
but there's nobody around to hear.

- It's going down. We made a little error.
- What?

They're not gonna fight in the gym. They
just took Jase and B.A. outta here in a van.

That is not a little error, Hannibal.
That is a giant screwup.

Well, in either case, we gotta get outta here.
Murdock, you and I are gonna go over the wall.

- Face, you better get outta here.
- Amy is outside in B.A.'s van.

Hopefully, she had the
instinct to follow them.

If she didn't, we're dead.

- Hi.
- Hi.

You know, I have to admit y'all run a
much better prison here than I expected.

Well, I guess I'll just
head on outta here.

Uh, just have to check with the
admitting desk. One moment.

Guard! Get me outta here!
Come on!

Come on, now. They're trying an escape.
Dr Pepper is in on it. Come on.

Okay.

- Bye.
- So long.

This is Psychiatric Ward. We've
got a break situation here.

Give us a lockdown and
sound the alarms.

Murdock, how did I let
you talk me into this?

I don't know. I have
intermittent memory loss.

Whoa! Ya-hooo!

Hey, great, Murdock, great!

Whoa! Ya-hooo!

Ya-hooo!

To all a merry Christmas
and to all a good night.

Nothing to it. This is Smith.
How you doing, kid?

I'm in a field north of the prison.
There's about 50 cars in front of a barn.

They just took B.A. in a few minutes ago.
Hannibal, it's starting.

Go right on the dirt road just
past Strikersville Junction.

We got ourselves a
challenger, name of Baracus.

Deaf-mute. Just checked in this week.
It's gonna be an interesting fight.

He's got the fastest hands
I've seen in 20 years.

Now I don't know how
to talk to you, boy.

Lessen you get your hands up,
this man is gonna kill you. Go!

Do it, man. My people
ain't gonna fail me.

- There's about 50 or 60 of 'em in there and some of 'em got guns.
- Well, we got a surprise for them.

Get him! I said get him, Jase!
Get him!

- Kill him!
- Live or die?

I can't breathe.

Get those legs up, sweetheart.
Put your hands in the air.

You, over here.

Nice little shindig, Warden.
But it's over.

I c-can't breathe.

Uh, uh, uh.

Thanks, fellows. I knew
you wouldn't let us down.

He... He ain't a mute any more.

Just like you ain't
a warden any more.

That's for a little
boy named Joey.

B.A., bring him out.

Murdock, grab that TV camera.

Okay, everybody on their feet.

It's showtime.

Stand up now and toss your
weapons out into the centre.

As in nice and easy.
There you go.

All you boys in the front row... you
wanna sit down, face the camera?

That's right. Wanna give
everybody a chance here.

Murdock, bring that TV
tape and collect Sneed.

Come on, Chips, time to go.

Now you all are gonna
be on the 10:00 news.

It's a tough break,
but that's showbiz.

Okay.

Go!

All right, I owe
you guys my life.

You know, why'd you do it? Why did
you take a chance like that for me?

You had to be there. Thank you.

I wanna tell you something. You
see, the state of Florida...

they dropped the rest of
the time I owe 'em...

'cause that warden, he faked up those
additional charges he had against me.

Great. All we ask is that you
don't ever say a word about us.

We're kinda hot ourselves. There's a guy
named Colonel Lynch who's after us...

- and we don't like to leave a trail.
- That's a promise.

I gotta get down to the paper and proof
my story. I got front page tomorrow.

- Congratulations.
- I gotta get going. I got things to do myself.

I got bed check at the
hospital in an hour.

I'll drop ya. There's a new night nurse
there with definite possibilities.

Night nurses at that joint all have third-degree black
belts, Face. You touch her, she'll break your caps.

Right. So, uh,
Hannibal can drop you.

Uh, sorry, Murdock, can't. If I hurry, I can catch
Andre at the bar. I still want that part in Sinbad.

Thanks. I'll wait in the car.

Thanks, B.A. I owe you.
Anything you want.

Tomorrow, you're gonna learn
to make ashtrays, okay?

Okay.

- All right. All right, man.
- Thanks, man.

- John is a reformed man.
- This news is just in from Strikersville, Florida.

I mean, when we talk
about John Smith...

we're talking about
a devoted actor...

- who cares desperately about the animals and the monsters he plays.
- Boy, listen to that.

Warden Beale has confessed to the crimes after
being turned over to Florida state officials...

along with videotapes of the fights
he engineered between prisoners.

Already 40 identifications and arrests have
been made of the men who watched the contests.

And what of the mystery men who engineered
the capture of the warden and the film?

No clues exist as
to their identity.

I'd love to have the
rights to that story.

Oh, what I wouldn't give to be sitting across the
table from one of the guys who pulled off that caper.

- Yes, yes? What is it?
- Uh, nothing.

Uh, forget it. Bad idea.