.:: SCRIPTS LIST ::.


  • A Weekend With Worley
  • Adrian And The Vampires
  • Ambassador Service Episode 1: Welcome
  • American Love
  • America'S Team
  • Bands On The Run
  • Bill & Ted'S Shagadelic Halloween Adventure The Excellent Menace
  • Chameleons
  • Extras
  • Freeloadersz
  • Harry Detective
  • Humorous Debut
  • Jewboyii
  • My Own Private High Fidelity
  • On Our Own
  • Red Carpet
  • Sniper Target
  • The 42nd Day Of Summer (Final Draft
  • The Angora Conundrum
  • The Best Revenge
  • The Fall Of Western Civilization
  • The Lunchroom Episode 1.07 "Politically Incorrect"
  • The Lunchroom Episode 2x12 "Fooling Myself"
  • The Time Is Finally Here
  • Trip
  • Work Sucks

  • Minority Report Movie

  • "AMERICA'S TEAM"


    FADE IN:


    EXT. WASHINGTON, D.C. - DAY (1933) - (STOCK)

    A "March of Time" clip from 1933, including shots of the White House, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Albert Einstein.


    NEWSREEL ANNOUNCER (V.O.)

    Washington, D.C., the Nation's Capital, and first-term President Franklin Delano Roosevelt welcomes the greatest genius of the twentieth century to the White House -- it's "Mr. Relativity" himself, Professor Albert Einstein, recently arrived on these shores from his native Germany -- and what the two of them discussed is anybody's guess.


    DISSOLVE TO:


    INT. OVAL OFFICE - PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT

    is sitting behind his desk, smoking a cigarette in the familiar cigarette holder.


    AIDE (O.S.)

    Mr. President?

    ROOSEVELT

    Yes?

    AIDE (O.S.)

    Professor Einstein is here to see you.

    ROOSEVELT

    Oh, good, send him in.

    Roosevelt smiles as ALBERT EINSTEIN is ushered in by an AIDE.


    ROOSEVELT
    (continuing)

    Come in, come in, so good to see you.

    Einstein leans over and shakes Roosevelt's hand and sits down.


    EINSTEIN

    Mr. President, it is a great relief to be able to walk in here a free man.

    ROOSEVELT

    I understand, Professor, that you had a little difficulty getting out of Germany.

    EINSTEIN

    Yes. It's quite a story, Mr. President, one that I can tell you only in the strictest of confidence.

    ROOSEVELT

    Of course, of course.

    He nods to the aide, who exits quickly.


    ROOSEVELT

    (continuing)

    I'm all ears.

    Einstein looks around, making sure they're alone.


    EINSTEIN

    Well, the story begins sixty-two years from now, in the year nineteen ninety-five.

    ROOSEVELT

    What? Nineteen ninety-five?

    EINSTEIN

    Yes. The future. In fact, that desk you're sitting behind?

    ROOSEVELT

    Yes? I've had it since my days as Assistant Secretary of the Navy.

    EINSTEIN

    Well, that desk is the same desk that President Bill Clinton will be sitting behind in the year nineteen ninety-five. But I'm getting ahead of myself.

    ROOSEVELT

    I should say so, Professor. Go on. This is fascinating.

    EINSTEIN

    It will be in nineteen ninety-five when, for the first time in man's history, time travel will be achieved.

    ROOSEVELT

    Time travel?

    EINSTEIN

    Yes. It will confirm my theory of relativity, but more importantly it will enable me to be here today to tell you about what's going to happen sixty-two years from now. You see...