Roswell Delirium (2025) Movie Script
1
[radio static]
[newscaster] Tensions between
the Soviet Union and U.S.
remain at an all-time high
after the Soviets shot down
Korean Airlines Flight 007,
killing all 269 passengers.
The Soviets claim that
Kal 007 was a spy plane
that deviated off course
and flew over
a top-secret Soviet
military installation.
And after last week's
nuclear false alarm incident,
most Americans
feel that the threat
of a Cold War erupting
is imminent.
[loud clatter and light buzzing]
[faint buzzing]
[high-pitch beeping]
[man over radio] Okay, attitude,
roll 2-5, decimal 1-0.
[tense music playing]
[radio static]
[music continues]
[high-pitched ringing]
[distant radio chatter]
...815...
Houston, how do you read?
[woman over radio] Gemini 7
repeat your transmission.
[man] Confirming multiple
unidentified on the ASA.
Heading towards the Great
Plains, potential soviet.
[woman] Is this real world
or exercise?
[man] This is real world.
[woman] Alerting WPR, Gemini 7.
We don't see any unidentified
aircraft on our system.
Go ahead
and reset your reconnoiter.
[man]
Reconnoiter is at full capacity.
Less than ten before
red birds make first impact.
[distant radio chatter]
[high-pitched screeching]
[loud bang]
All right, time for bed.
Now? You cannot be serious!
Someone just shot J.R.!
Yeah, it was probably Sue Ellen.
Grandpa can tell you
all about it in the morning.
Right, Dad?
Come on, Space Cadet.
Bedtime.
-Now!
-Right.
[newscaster] And now,
nuclear weapons in the news.
Ever since the first
atomic bomb was dropped on Japan
nearly 40 years ago,
people have been talking about
doing away with nuclear weapons
because of the massive
destruction they cause.
But since the United States
and the Soviet Union
both have nuclear weapons...
Not falling for that again.
...had to keep
building more of them
to offset
what each sees as a threat.
What's wrong, Mom?
You look like you're about
to have a cow.
Oh, it's nothing.
Just know, if anything happens,
I'm going to save you, okay?
Um, okay.
Don't get mental.
Hey, you have been
spending a lot of time
with Grandpa
since we moved him in, huh?
Yeah, he's fun.
Sometimes I can tell
he misses Grandma, though.
I just think that you
should start making friends
with kids your own age.
Grandpa is a lot of fun,
but he would make
a terrible prom date.
Ew. I know.
Trust me, I know.
And whatever you do,
do not let him
get you in trouble on that Ham.
Did you know
that your Grandpa had
0-10 classification
in World War II?
He could hack his way
into any system.
Don't worry.
He's already shown me the way.
Last week we made contact with
the astronauts on Columbia II.
Okay, no,
if NASA wanted your help
on the shuttle program...
-They'd send me to space camp.
Yes. Watch out, Firefly.
They'll put that butt of yours
right in a slammer.
That's only
if you're over 18, Wendy.
Uh-huh. Wendy?
I know it's the '80s,
but it's still cool
to call me Mom.
Yeah?
Well, it would be even cooler
if you told me
why on God's Earth
you named me
after a bug and not Grandma.
You know, I really wish I could.
I just-- I suddenly
I cannot remember.
[Firefly] Uh-huh.
Goodnight,
my Firefly in the sky.
Goodnight.
[laughter over TV]
You mind?
[girl over TV]
It's my Daddy down here.
[man over TV]
Oh? What did you tell him?
This just in,
you are looking at
a very disturbing
live shot there.
We don't know the details,
but there is one report
yet unconfirmed that a missile
has just hit
the World Trade Center.
No sign of how many more
are headed this way.
Dad, do you see this?
[newscaster]
We have learned that the U.S.
has moved
to DEFCON 1 after reports
that a 9.2 magnitude
earthquake in Los Angeles
was felt after the first impact.
The White House
has just been evacuated.
The airports have been
instructed to ground all planes.
The probability of...
[dramatic music playing]
We are under attack?
We've just been told
to evacuate.
Now?
What is happening?
[gasping, sobbing]
Dad, we gotta go!
May! May, come on. Get up.
Come on. We gotta go. Come on!
Come on. Go, go, go, go, go.
Dad?
Come on. May, get in.
Come on, over Grandpa.
Go. You got her?
[Wendy muttering in fear]
-The Aliens coming?
-I wish it was that.
[Wendy groans in frustration]
-What's happening?
-I don't know.
-What's happening?
-I don't know.
-[screaming] Come on.
-[engine rumbles]
[tense music playing]
All right, come on, then.
Come on.
Dad, I'll come back for you.
I'm coming back, okay?
We'll be back. May, go.
[Firefly] What about grandpa?
[planes whooshing]
-Where are wo going?
-Run!
Mom, mom.
[helicopter blades whirring]
[indistinct shouting]
[music stops]
[high-pitched ringing]
[eerie, distorted music]
[footsteps echoing]
[wind whooshing]
Stepping right, left.
[energetic music over TV]
[TV din]
Whoo! Come on.
[snapping in time]
[sighs]
[gasping breath]
Hey. Good morning.
Come on. Join me.
Uh, no, thanks.
Don't feel like
sweating to the oldies.
Oh, come on.
It does the body some good.
Yeah. So does milk.
[sighs] So does milk.
[woman shouting over TV]
May. Don't open that door.
May!
[ominous music playing]
[birds cawing]
-Have you seen Karate Kid?
-No, I haven't seen it.
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah, it's probably lame.
[Becky] Look who's coming.
She's so sad.
-I can't believe it.
-Hey, guys.
-What's so sad?
-Guys? As if.
We're ladies of the '80s.
Get a clue, will ya?
So tragic. Didn't you hear?
The last New Kid On The Block
died from the cough.
They've been playing their
videos all day long on MTV.
MTV? What's that?
[scoffs]
Oh, my God. Are you kidding?
Music Television?
And what are you
listening to anyway?
-Def Leppard.
-[Lynne] They're so yesterday.
No one listens
to hair bands anymore.
Prince is what's happening?
Hey, we're having
a birthday party
at the roller rink this weekend.
It's gonna be totally rad.
You have to be there.
I'll be bummed to the max
if you don't come.
Totally. I'll be there.
Is she invited?
Sure, she can come.
But she probably
can't afford it.
It's really expensive to get in.
Your parents are poor.
No offense, though.
Just being honest.
Try outs are tomorrow.
You should totally try out.
Cindy Mancini dropped out.
You could be my co-captain.
-[Lynne giggling]
-[Becky] Totally.
I've been practicing
an hour before school
every day
for the last three weeks.
[both giggling]
Well, they say
the early bird gets the worm.
-Say what?
-Wh--
Ah!
Okay, whatever.
I, uh, need to go back home.
I realized I forgot something.
Oh.
Well, the bus is,
like, right here.
You're gonna miss the bus,
freakazord.
-[Becky chuckling]
-Bye-bye.
Early bird gets the worm?
Really?
Must be take a worm
for a walk week.
[chuckling]
[Lynne huffs]
[bus engine humming]
[bell ringing]
[upbeat music playing
over radio]
-Oh, hey.
-Yeah.
I'll take one of those key lime
pies with the alien shavings.
All right, that'll be $19.85.
-Are you a believer?
-Oh, yes.
Some say the Soviets
had that spacecraft
down in the bows of Area 51
in their magnetic force fields
while keeping us alive.
Well, and some would say
if you went out to Area 51
and looked under a rock, all
you'd find is a big pile
of manure and cockroaches.
But who am I to say? Right?
Go ahead and keep it.
Thank you.
Have a good day.
[doorbell rings]
[school bell ringing]
[dynamic music playing]
You know, Becky,
if you put half as much time
into your homework
as you do boys,
you would be my star pupil.
[classmates chuckling]
Glad you could finally make it.
-Don't mention it.
-Nice pants.
Where'd you get
those pants, Homeless-R-Us?
[kids giggling]
All right, you little monsters,
it's your lucky day.
No pop quiz.
[kids exclaiming]
Oh, bravo, brava.
Thank you for being so
transparent about your feelings.
All right, who wants
to tell me what today is?
It's the two-year anniversary
of the attack.
Well, let's not call it
an attack.
[Daniel]
Well, that's what it was.
It definitely wasn't the aliens.
I think we should have dropped
the atomic bomb on them.
I would have given
that two thumbs up from me.
Thankfully,
our actor/president
didn't feel the same way.
Actually, Mr. Reagan showed
true restraint that day.
Too many lives already lost,
no need to lose any more.
Daniel, why don't you wake up
and smell what you're shoveling?
An eye for an eye only ends up
blinding the entire planet.
In the land of the blind,
the one-eyed man is king.
Well, for your information,
Garby, a king needs
a queen to have a kingdom.
And from the lips
of Sloane Peterson,
who got a glimpse of you
in the locker room,
you'll never be king
with that little--
Moving right along.
Who can tell me what the final
straw was that set off the war?
I thought it was
because the Soviets shot down
the Korean airplane
that drifted off course.
Well, that certainly started it.
Did you know
that before the attack,
90% of all airplanes drifted off
course by as much as 100 miles?
Now their paths
have to be near perfect,
within five miles.
But the final straw
that ignited the Cold War
was none other than
a military simulation.
Has anyone heard
of the Archer Able 83 drill?
The Able Archer 83 drill
is when the U.S.
went to DEFCON 1
and simulated a full-on
global thermal nuclear attack.
They even went so far
as to airlift the president
out of the country,
like in the movie War Games.
The Soviet Union thought
they were about to be hit
with a full-on nuclear invasion,
so instead of reacting,
they overreacted
and deployed six dozen warheads?
Precisely. How did you
all handle the lockdowns?
[Daniel] I was scared.
Everybody was.
No food in the supermarket,
no toilet paper.
It was scary.
-[kids snickering]
-What? It was.
Couldn't go outside.
And if you did go outside,
you had to wear a mask,
because the radiation
was so high
and everyone was so terrified
of getting the cough.
Did anything positive
come from the...
-attack?
-[Lynne] No.
It's starting to feel
normal again,
but everyone pretends
as if it never happened.
It's like we aren't allowed
to feel any animosity
towards the Russians
for what they did.
My dad said
the Russians blew up Area 51,
because when the spaceship
crashed in the '50s,
the U.S. Military wouldn't let
their scientists
come and see it.
So they told everybody
about Area 51,
so all the nutjobs
are going to try to find it.
The urban legend
and delusional world
that is known as Area 51,
now known as Space Rock.
So...
does anyone here
believe in aliens?
We are not the first creatures
to rule this Earth.
The dinosaurs roamed this land
over 65 million years ago.
We are just a microcosm
in this galactic universe.
And like every living creature,
we are born with the curiosity
to discover the unknown.
That's why
you hear these stories
of old people
wandering the desert naked,
looking for
the fountain of youth,
or some alien
to help them figure out
where their wrinkly butts
disappeared to.
[kids giggling]
Urban legend has it
that Space Rock is a place
with healing powers
that originated
from the crashed
spaceship in Roswell.
Hidden safely in a volcanic
crater miles under the Earth,
in a land that is constantly
drifting with the sands of time.
[school bell ringing]
[dynamic music playing]
800 knots, heading below
the heart of the deck.
Dead ahead, 8 miles.
Launch Maverick on alert 5.
Let's turn and burn.
[May] Hmm.
I don't know
how they ever shoot down
hostile enemies
with these things on.
I can't see shit.
Yo, wastehead, did you hear?
What? That Jester said?
Or that they opened up
another ponderosa
down the street
with an even better salad bar?
Salad bar?
What the hell is a salad bar?
Whatever, no.
Ferris Brown
hit the high level on asteroids.
So they pulled the plug.
They pulled
the freaking plug, man.
[synthetic voice] Warning.
[alarm blaring]
Here we go again.
[synthetic voice] Danger.
Danger.
[alarm keeps blaring]
[synthetic voice] Danger.
-[alarm stops]
-[school bell ringing]
Well, that was sure fun.
I gotta go. See you in class.
Shalom.
Hi, May. Do you want me
to carry your books for you?
Uh, no, Donald.
Actually, my name is Ronald,
not Donald.
I told you,
not if you were the--
Last boy on the planet?
Well, I can be.
I'll hide my face, then?
Well, can I admire you
again today?
Maybe after lunch?
Ew.
[insects chirping]
[clock ticking]
[water splashing]
[items clattering]
[emotional music playing]
Blinkity-blink.
[therapist] Can we begin?
[sighs]
Yes, now we can.
We always have to begin
under your conditions.
Where did we leave off?
I ran to the door,
and remember her
yelling at me not to open it.
But I did.
I looked back at her
one last time.
She sat on the ground
with one foot
bracing against the door
of the ship.
She had her hands
wrapped around my fingers.
She didn't have
a good hold on me.
As I opened up my hands,
they immediately ripped me away.
She looked at me
for a split second, almost...
almost asking for forgiveness
for not being able to save me.
And that was
the last day I saw her.
The day I was taken.
Was that the first and only time
you've been abducted?
I don't know exactly.
It might not even be
the first time I was taken.
It sounds like
Disorientation Impact Syndrome.
It's been this way
since your childhood?
My childhood was a dream.
What a joyful time it was.
Not perfect.
But whose is?
And I survived Wally World
and two nuclear attacks.
How many people can say that?
I think you've learned
how to dig and nest
all of your problems
into a giant hole.
I've heard this all before.
Fictitious Abduction Syndrome.
False memory.
Whatever you want to call it.
I'm not Alice.
I don't need to fall
down a rabbit hole
to find my cupcake mountain
wonderland of happy thoughts.
So if you're not Princess Lolly
and you're not Alice...
you must be the rabbit.
And even if anyone ever
figures out how to get you out,
they'll just dive
further down to the hole.
Je ne sais pas.
See, that's the constant.
The childish references
to childish games.
If only life could be a dream.
You should go.
Do you still
dream about fireflies?
What do you dream about?
Is there ever
a daydream or a thought?
And I wonder,
will the fireflies in the sky...
lead you out of the darkness?
Doubtful.
They could only blink, blink.
[sighs]
I'd have to fight my way
through the nothingness,
the darkness,
hoping there's light at the end.
Or as you once mentioned,
the rolling blackouts.
That is the origin
of the rabbit hole
that you need to fall down.
Look, I'll fall down
as far as the basement
of the Alamo will take me.
I just...
I don't know what good it will
do to talk about the blackouts.
I don't think there's anything
there I want to remember.
But there is, go back
into a world of nothingness.
In the darkness.
[sighs]
[exhales audibly]
Calgon, take me away.
Okay, let your mind go.
Your body will follow.
When I count down
from five to one...
you will go through
a doorway of time,
a world you locked away
from everyone.
Four, three,
two, one.
Now, your mind should be
in a world of nothingness.
There's no Earth below us.
Just floating, drifting,
calling home.
What do you see?
[ominous music playing]
Space Rock.
[music fades]
[groans]
[softly] Oh.
-[Wendy] What?
-That's it.
Where's the beef?
McDonald's, corner
of Broadway and Belmont.
Maybe I wouldn't
have to go there
if you voted for Mondale
instead of the Gipper.
There's your beef.
Don't be a spaz. Gosh.
[Elliot] That ain't how we talk
to grown-ups around here.
Do we teach you
better manners than that?
Yes, sir.
That's the last
bit of our water, FYI.
Oh, I-- I'll just get
more from the sink.
Hey, uh-uh,
space cadet, sit down.
Remember,
we don't drink that water.
Right. When are we getting
more water?
Heinen said that they're
going to get a drop at night,
so I will stop first
thing in the morning.
[Elliot] Well, get all you can.
The contamination level's
been so high,
who knows how long we have until
we're completely out of water.
I just see you
feeding that bear?
We can't afford to be feeding
four mouths around here.
You got to choose.
It's either you or him.
Come on. You or him?
Well, I guess it's me.
[both giggling]
So when are you heading out?
-Right after breakfast.
-Hmm.
Do we get to come
visit this time?
Oh, I don't think so.
Last time Murphy
got the cough from her family
and half the crew
got bumps, so...
-Right, yeah.
-It's just tense right now.
They've been having some
problems with the O-rings.
I know what O-rings are.
They're the boosters?
[whispers] Like these.
-[giggles]
-[Elliot] Huh.
Say, you find one in that bowl
about the size of this room,
I'll gladly take it.
[grunts and chuckles]
Do you want some coffee?
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa!
-Oh, my gosh.
-Damn it.
Oh, my gosh, I'm sorry.
Stop. You're making it worse.
-[Wendy] I'm sorry.
-[May chuckles]
Oh, is this funny?
-[thud]
-Yeah?
You still think it's funny?
-Do you think this is funny?
-Hey, stop.
-Huh?
-Stop.
[loud thudding]
Never raise your voice
at me in my house.
Are we clear?
She-- she was
just trying to play.
[ominous rumbling]
It's okay, May, it's okay.
You're not going
to change your suit?
I don't have another suit.
Daddy, are you going to the dark
side of the moon again?
Mm-hmm,
and if the schedule holds,
I'll be on the next
Challenger flight, too.
Well, you can take
my bear with you.
He can keep you company
on your way up to space,
and then you can leave him
on the moon for the aliens.
You want me to leave
that old ratty bear
on a cold and dusty
crater all alone?
There ain't no getting him back.
You okay with that?
-A-okay.
-[Elliot chuckling]
A-okay.
[sighs] Hmm.
Or you don't have to go
this time.
-You can stay.
-Yeah?
You know anyone else that can
fly that bucket of bolts?
-No.
-Didn't think so.
Hey, who's the best pilot
you ever saw?
I'm looking at him.
Who is it? Who?
-It's you, Daddy.
-Bet your butt it is.
Bye.
-[Elliot chuckling]
-What?
Why are you wearing
all that makeup?
[Wendy chuckles]
Oh, Daddy, you almost forgot.
Mooshka.
Yeah.
Take care of that bear.
[planes whooshing]
Thank you.
Eight hours of cleaning,
has to violate
the child labor laws somewhere.
Paint the fence, sand the floor.
It's called chores.
Hey, and because you asked,
there's more.
It'll be fun.
We'll set it to music.
The world's tiniest violin.
-So lame.
-Oh, gosh. Come on, let's go.
[Wendy sighs deeply]
-Ouch.
-Big baby.
This is all Grandpa's stuff?
Yeah, it is.
And, um, it's time to let it go.
Let it go? Like throw it out?
What you talking about, Wendy?
[Wendy sighs] I'm talking about
you helping me out.
I can't do this one.
I need you
to be the adult, okay?
-Hmm.
-I want you to pack up
these babies,
and if you find anything cool,
we'll box it up
and then have a yard sale.
-Hmm.
-It'll be totally rad.
-Hmm.
-Get to it.
Thank you. I love you.
Mm-hmm.
[loud clattering]
Fudge.
[blowing raspberries]
Grandpa's not legal radios.
[sighs happily]
[electrical buzzing]
[tentative music building]
I wonder if anyone's
still on the Ham.
Beam me up, Scotty.
May calling Orson.
Come in, Orson.
No? Okay.
[scattered conversation
over radio]
This is Mayday, Starkiller 51.
Does anyone
copy my transmission?
This is Mayday, Starkiller 51,
calling from Roswell, Nevada.
Anyone there?
[radio static]
[man] Luckily, I'm only
carrying half a load, but yeah.
Anyone with the big wagon
on the westbound 8090,
watch out, black ice.
That's a big 10-4. Good, buddy.
Over.
Well, all right.
And who do I have
the pleasure talking to?
This is Mayday, Starkiller 51.
Who is the man on the ham?
Taco Tony, 45.
Just crossed
the Arizona border an hour ago.
Now driving through
some light snow down in Tucson.
About to call it a night.
Driving so long,
starting to see crazy things.
Like what?
Blinding lights, mostly.
UFO lights? You think?
After 10 hours of driving,
all the lights
start looking the same.
Come to think of it,
I ain't seen a UFO since...
since that picture show
in Ogden,
called the Body Snatchers.
If you don't mind me asking,
how old are you, little lady?
Eleven. Be 12 in 15 days.
All that time to live life,
grow up, get married,
have a family,
buy a house, and hopefully
you don't come home to a note
saying your wife's moved on
to greener pastures.
That's what's happening
to my mom and dad right now.
Growing apart.
That's just part of life.
[radio screeching]
[scattered sounds over radio]
God damn it, Wendy!
Whoa, language, lady.
Don't have cow, all right,
mommy dearest.
So this is where you go
to give late-night love advice,
huh, Dr. Ruth?
I Ham what I am.
Grandpa and I used to
sit here for hours.
He would talk to all these
people from Denver to the DMZ.
And when he couldn't find
anyone to talk to,
he would tell me about
all the different ways
he killed enemy
soldiers in Korea.
Sounds like Dad. [soft chuckle]
Hey, if you're going
to talk on the ham,
be careful who you talk to.
These aren't your standard,
everyday consumer radios.
When your grandpa left the Army,
they came looking for these
a couple times.
What do you say?
It's getting late.
Just five more minutes, please.
All right, five minutes.
Why can't you be
like normal kids
and watch Baywatch
and Growing Pains?
My whole life is a growing pain.
[mockingly] Oh, my whole life
is a growing pain.
Hmm.
[bell dings]
Houston, we have a problem.
The couple
over there with the kid
who's coughing up a lung
and scaring away
all the customers...
-[kid coughing]
-...I think he's got the cough.
You're going to have to
ask them to leave.
Me?
[Wendy scoffs] Why me?
Because I don't want to get it.
I don't want to get it?
Send them on their way.
[Wendy scoffs]
God, give me strength.
[coughing softly,
breathing heavily]
That's a cute little
rabbit you got there.
It's very kind of you,
dear, but don't bother.
He can't answer you back.
We'd like to order now
uh, two shortcakes
and a coffee black,
and Walter will have the oatmeal
and a side of bacon.
Sure you can...
hear me all the way over there?
You know,
I actually think
I'd have to
ask you guys to leave.
We'll do no such thing,
not until we've eaten.
Your son, he seems sick,
like he has the...
Grandson, and he's fine.
Really.
Mickey.
His name's Mickey.
Ma'am, Mickey doesn't seem fine.
I'm sorry.
I'm not trying to--
Pass judgment?
Of course you are.
I wouldn't expect anything
less from somebody like you.
Betty.
I'm sorry.
[hopeful music playing]
It's just that it's--
been like this everywhere we go.
He's not contagious.
You can't spread it around
to everybody like they say
on the tube.
He's got cancer.
Not the cough.
I am so sorry.
Thank you.
[Walter]
We're simply passing through.
We just need to get some fuel
and eat before we drop him off.
-[Betty] Walter.
-What?
She lives here, for God's sake.
It's no secret.
Everyone here knows
about Space Rock.
[Wendy] Space Rock?
Didn't that place go sour
after the attack?
Nobody knows
if that's true or not.
It's not like anybody
ever found it.
But we're gonna try.
What choice do we have, anyways?
God has failed us and refuses
to answer our prayers, so...
Maybe they will.
They?
They will take him,
they will heal him.
They will make him new again.
-Yes.
-They will bring him back to us.
I know that in my heart.
If-- if you wouldn't mind,
please.
Of course.
Thank you.
Thank you.
[ominous music playing]
[beeping, clattering]
[humming a tune]
[faint beeping]
[faint beeping]
[faint beeping]
That's it.
Rubber Ducky, you're the one.
[faint beep]
Okay.
[radio crackling]
[radio beeping]
[suspenseful music playing]
[breathing heavily]
[door clicks open]
[door shuts closed]
[footsteps thumping]
[electric buzzing]
[distorted music playing]
[wind howling]
[toy playing music]
[footsteps thumping]
Oh, did you see
Small Wonder last night?
So good!
You mean
the show with the robot?
Man, I love that freaking show.
Vicki cracks me up. So real.
And really,
Vicki is far from real.
She's a girl who plays a robot.
Not believable at all.
Bad acting.
That voice, come on!
The show is basically
a nerd's wet dream.
The father is a robotic engineer
who made her
because his only son Jerry
drove his mother away.
And now, all his dad
has left to show
for all the disappointments
in his life is Jerry.
And Vicki,
his teenage sex robot.
No.
You really think that?
Like, they do it?
How do they do it?
If he made her a girl,
why wouldn't he
give her all the parts?
The mom left
as soon as he made her.
-See how she fills that void?
-Damn!
Vicki's a sex robot?
That just blew my freaking mind!
I don't think I'm ever gonna be
able to watch that show again.
Why you always gotta
rain on my parade?
Because I'm still coping
with the idea
of an actor for a president.
And the way things are going,
I'm never going
to find out who shot JR.
[school bell ringing]
Word.
Okay, class, get your books out.
Turn to page 35 in your book
One Day in the Life
of Ivan Denisovich.
[door clicks open]
[ominous music playing]
Okay, everyone,
just close your eyes.
This will all be over quickly.
[Geiger counter crackling]
[crackling intensifies]
No, no, wait!
No, wait! Wait, wait, wait!
No! No, no, wait!
It's not me! No!
No, you're making a mistake!
It's not me!
No way! Wait!
[Mrs. Peltzer]
Okay, let's focus up.
There's nothing we can do
about that now.
He'll be fine.
Yeah, you mean after they're
done scrubbing his skin away.
Okay, Gertie, today's the day.
You're the last student
to give your oral assignment.
You up for it?
Not quite ready
to share your vision board yet?
-Want to give it a try tomorrow?
-[kids laughing]
Okay, class, I know this news
is going to be
terribly upsetting,
but Friday's test will be
postponed till next week.
-[all exclaiming]
-Ah, simmer--
simmer down, you little rodents.
Instead, we are going
to spend the morning
watching
Challenger shuttle launch.
Now, as you know,
the high school teacher,
Christa McAuliffe,
who is the first civilian
to go into space.
What you may not know
is that May's father,
who was part of Gemini 15,
will now be joining
Mrs. McAuliffe
on the Challenger.
-Isn't that right, May?
-Wait.
I thought
your dad was a janitor. [laughs]
[Daniel] Yeah,
if your dad's an astronaut,
why can't he buy you
some better clothes?
Eat my shorts, dipstick.
You don't know anything.
[Daniel] Hey,
take a chill pill, will you?
I mean, without him,
there'd be no one
to install the satellites,
and the retards
won't be able to watch
Mr. Rogers on Saturday mornings.
You're just jealous
because your dad's in prison
for stealing
from all the old people
who had money
in the stock market.
-Guys--
-[Daniel] At least my dad
didn't get bumped off
two space missions
because they thought
he was a p--
-Penis breath.
-[Mrs. Peltzer] Enough!
Principal's office now.
Way to go, Beavis.
Butthead.
Loser.
[scoffs]
[door shuts closed]
Such a waste of yearbook space.
[alarm] Warning.
Okay, kids, under your desks.
[alarm blaring]
[alarm] Danger.
[kid clears throat]
[woman sobbing]
[somber music playing]
Ma'am,
are you okay?
Excuse me, do you need help?
[woman whining]
Did you find the boy?
What boy?
My boy.
My sweet boy.
Oh, where did you go, boy?
Where did you go?
[woman sobbing]
They-- they took him.
They said
they'd bring him back in 51 days
when he was better.
He's better now, right?
[woman sobbing]
Oh,
where did you go, boy?
Where do you think they go?
-Where does who go?
-The children.
My God,
where did the children go?
Where did you go?
Where's my boy? [sobbing]
Where is my boy?
Where are you?
[wailing] Where did you go?
Where's my boy?
[radio beeping]
[Wendy]
So you haven't been on base.
Where have you been?
Elliot.
Oh, my God. [laughs]
[ominous music playing]
Babe?
Elliot, where have you been?
Hey, Elliot. [sighs]
Elliot!
May, go back to your room.
[electric buzzing]
[toy playing music]
[distorted music playing]
[birds chirping]
[Wendy chuckles]
-What?
-[Wendy chuckles]
So I guess
my definition of quarantine
is a little bit different
than NASA's.
[Elliot] You want to stay
six feet away from me,
be my guest.
Quarantine hasn't started yet.
Then where were you
for the last seven days?
[sighs] Hey, Daddy,
if you're home on Friday,
maybe we can go see a movie
or watch a rerun of Dallas.
Yeah, because
your daughter missed you.
You don't think
that you could have called her?
No, I couldn't.
[Wendy scoffs]
[paper rustling]
There's what you missed.
[Mayday] I can't wait
to get back on the Ham.
I was talking
to my friend Ivan yesterday.
He's from Belarus.
He's always complaining about
his wife's bad cooking. [laughs]
And how one day
he's gonna die of dysentery.
[both chuckling]
He used to work
at the power plant
until the nuclear disaster.
He thinks the Americans
had something to do with it.
Missy.
I don't want to hear
another word about the Russians
at the dinner table.
-Are we clear?
-Crystal.
Gosh, it's not like I clubbed
a baby seal or something.
Fine, I'll ignore them.
Seems to work pretty good
around here these days.
Who else do you talk to
besides people at the USSR?
People in Serbia, Okinawa,
pretty much everywhere.
I even talked
to an old astronaut named Vlad.
He's from a country that rhymes
with whatcha, but isn't Russia.
[Mayday chuckles]
And he said
that they were actually
the first ones
to land on the Moon
and that they weren't authorized
to report their experience
because they had
multiple encounters
with UFO spacecrafts.
What else did they tell you?
About Laika,
the whatcha space dog
that was sent to space
and orbited Earth for a week,
and that NASA hired
Stanley somebody,
to help the US
fake the first Moon landing.
Enough!
Not another word from you.
Great men died
getting us to the Moon.
But here you are,
in my house,
spewing this garbage.
We did not fake the landing.
They did not
beat us to the Moon.
And Laika, the dog,
did not orbit for a week.
She burned up
a few hours after launch
when their capsule overheated.
She was SPAM in a can
thanks to the Russians,
who sure as shit
are not your friends.
If you haven't
recognized that yet,
why don't you show me
where New York is on a map?
I'm sorry,
I-- I didn't mean that.
[Wendy] May, it's okay.
[sighs] Hey, Daddy,
when you go
to the dark side of the Moon,
can you check on Mooshka for me?
I don't know
what happened to your bear.
So where is he then?
Where's Mooshka?
Did you even go to the Moon?
I have to go.
Wait, you didn't tell me
who the best pilot is.
Do you know who
the best pilot I ever saw is?
Wait, I'm sorry.
I'm so sorry.
What are you sorry for?
[somber music playing]
[door shuts closed]
[Wendy] Sorry.
It's okay.
[switch clicking]
[radio humming]
Turn that thing off, will you?
Same thing every day.
The news trying
to keep us all living
in a constant state of fear?
Dang, take a chill pill.
I wanted to see
if Charles in Charge is on.
Didn't all the actors
on that show get blown up?
Everybody got zapped,
except for Scott Baio.
They had to recast
a whole new family.
Hmm.
I wonder
if they'll ever do the same
for Joanie Loves Chachi.
Yeah, they'll never
bring back Joanie Loves Chachi.
-[radio crackling]
-Whoa, what's that doing?
We gotta figure out
what's going on.
I-- I don't know
if it's a distress call or what,
but that transmission
has been repeating
for the last 51 days.
And when I type
the same series and numbers in,
someone or something sends back
the exact same message,
but always in a different order.
[sighs] And the day
I started responding,
we moved into DEFCON 2
for the first time
since the attack.
And then two days later,
a Soviet fleet of submarines
surfaced off of Alaska.
Oh.
Wait, so who's
sending the signal?
Like, secret military or--
or maybe it's a lost alien ship
trying to phone home.
I don't know where you get
your delusions, laser lips.
[man] Executing.
Aircraft heading 3-6-0.
[Jeremiah coughs]
-[woman] Roger.
-[coughing continues]
It's getting worse, isn't it?
[man] 8-5-0,
do not engage the target.
I'm hoping this is a simulation.
I-- I-- I don't think so.
That does not
sound like an exercise.
I think it's time
to buzz the tower goose.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
I can't let you do that.
There's no breaking
this force field.
Sometimes you gotta say,
"What the fuck."
[Jeremiah snorts]
Base, can I have
those coordinates again?
[man] 5-1, X-ray,
Foxtrot, Henry,
Alpha, Mary, 1-0.
Please confirm your clearance.
2-5, Bravo, Victor, 6-7, Alpha,
3-3-6, Alpha, 2-6,
8-6, Charlie, Charlie, 8-3-7-7.
Grandpa would be
so proud of me.
...47.2431 degrees north,
115.30 degrees west.
That's right on top
of Falcon Lake.
[woman] Keep the track.
Fire on target 6065.
It's gotta be aliens.
What do we do?
Enroute Alamo. Call off Alamo.
Hostile unconfirmed.
[man] Not possible.
Unidentified is down.
Down as in landed?
[man] Negative. He's down.
[woman] That sounded like a kid.
Cobra, please confirm your comm.
Uh, everything is fine here.
Situation normal.
No kids. We're fine here now.
Thank you. Uh, how are you?
[man] Base, trace
the outgoing transmission mark.
[radio beeping]
-They shut it down.
-Yeah.
And that wasn't
a Soviet interceptor.
They don't fly single mission.
That unidentified
has to be an alien spacecraft.
Look, if the coordinates
are correct, then...
the crash site is less
than five miles away from here.
[Mayday grunts]
-You want to go see a dead body?
-You bet your ass I do.
Tomorrow,
right after shuttle launch.
No, man. No time to wait.
We need to find that black box
and see what really happened.
Tell you what,
I'll go and check it out,
and if I can find something,
you'll read about me
in the next week's cover
of the National Enquirer.
Mm.
Hang on.
These little kitty toys
aren't gonna work that far away.
That's what you think.
Grandpa made these for me
with A1A military-grade
satellite parts.
Sweet!
[suspenseful music playing]
[Wilma] Conflict between
the US and the Soviet Union
reached its highest levels
since the Cold War,
when a US military plane
was instructed
to change its course mid-flight
and fly below 10,000 feet
over restricted Soviet airspace
near Falcon Lake.
The pilot was returned safely...
-Oh, now you've done it.
-Oh, shit, what?
Now what happens
if I want to make a call, huh?
Maybe today, tomorrow, 2020.
Oh, that, right.
Sorry, I thought
you meant I was responsible--
No, you're not responsible,
and you proved it once again.
Who knows how many times
your dad has tried to call?
-Do you know what today is?
-Launch day.
-Launch day, yes. Fix it.
-Sorry, I'll fix it.
[Wilma] ...the inflight
transponder's inability
to keep a proper course.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union
remains on high alert
and has moved up
a fleet of submarines
and warships
to the Gulf of Alaska.
And now we send you back
to our scheduled programming
of Small Wonder.
[ominous music playing]
[Wendy sighs]
We gotta go.
You're gonna be late for school.
[man] T-minus 15 seconds.
T-minus ten, nine,
eight, seven, six.
We have main engine start.
Four, three, two, one,
and liftoff.
Liftoff of the 25th
space shuttle mission,
and it is clear to tower.
[indistinct chatter]
[man] Challenger,
go and throttle up.
[boom of explosion]
Daddy.
Daddy.
[man] ...looking very carefully
at the situation.
Obviously a major malfunction.
[Mayday sobbing] No.
No.
[birds chirping]
[door clicks open]
[somber music playing]
[sobbing] You didn't pick me up.
Is he?
No. [crying]
[sighs]
[radio crackling]
[sobbing]
[radio beeping]
[indistinct radio chatter]
-[walkie-talkie beeps]
-Jeremiah, are you there?
I really need
to talk to you, Jeremiah.
Jeremiah, where are you?
-[helicopter blades chopping]
-[radio crackling]
Jeremiah, is that you?
Please answer.
Okay.
[upbeat music playing]
My mom said girls our age
shouldn't be wearing those kind
of jeans, but I convinced her
to buy them for me anyways.
You definitely got
the look. [chuckles]
Yeah, well, I said,
"Goodbye, Jordache,"
and from now on,
nothing will come
between me and my Calvins.
[both chuckling]
What are you gonna do?
Just watch and learn.
And don't embarrass me.
Good.
Hey, loser.
I found this in the ground,
and I thought of you. [laughs]
How nice of you.
I saw you watching us
at practice the other day.
So what?
Since they kicked you
out of the science club,
now you think you have what it
takes to be a cheerleader?
Doesn't look that hard,
but it's not my jam.
Girls who don't have
a lot going on upstairs
become cheerleaders.
[Becky] Oh,
is that what you think?
That it doesn't take
any brains, huh?
[scoffs] Like, do you even know
how hard it is
to do triple lindy?
-Seriously.
-[Mayday] Triple lindy?
[laughs] Can't even imagine.
The way I see it,
cheerleading was tailor-made
for girls like you two.
Girls with good looks
and eating disorders.
The good thing
is my brains and good teeth
will get me much farther
than your short-lived
looks ever will,
especially after
another five years
of gagging yourself
in the locker room.
All that acid will
definitely make your teeth
slide right out
of your pur-tay mouth
like a Pez dispenser.
Just being honest.
No offense, right?
I don't know
what you're talking about.
I don't do that.
Well, there was
that one time last week
where I walked
into your bathroom...
Lynne, shut your face.
Well, don't even think
about trying out.
I doubt your trailer park family
could even afford
the application fee.
Oh, and, uh, next time
they find you
wandering the desert at night...
maybe they'll find
your dad, too.
What's left of him. [laughs]
-[Lynne chuckles]
-Lynne, we're walking.
Incoming nerd alert.
This can't be happening.
I will know he has a first name.
-Oh, I--
-Donald, what did I tell you?
That you would only
give me the time of day
if I was the last boy on Earth.
And?
Pretty much all you got,
don't you think?
-Take a walk, Donald.
-[sighs] I swear, I'm worth it.
-I--
-Donald, beat it.
-[sighs] If you insist.
-I do, okay?
[Donald grunts]
Trying to--
Oh.
I am okay.
[whimsical music playing]
What a lovely house you have.
Ah, thank you.
Thank you so much.
May should be home
at any moment now.
-Okay.
-Yeah, yeah.
Hey, what are you doing?
Those are my radios.
-Hey, you, stop!
-May, come on.
Come on here, come sit down.
Take a picture.
It'll last longer.
[laughs] Is this her?
Is this the famous
Mayday Starkiller 51?
Do you want to sell me
a set of encyclopedias?
[laughs] No, no.
And you can call me Ed.
The only Ed I know
is Ed McMahon.
Clearly, I'm not here
to give you a million dollars.
[clattering]
Make them stop.
It's okay, honey.
Just talk to Mr. Brown.
-Wendy.
-Mm-hmm.
Would you mind making us
a pot of your delicious coffee?
Absolutely.
I'm 11. I don't drink coffee.
Isn't that special?
The innocence.
Then how about a popsicle?
All right,
two popsicles coming up.
Your bedside manner
could use some work.
I make the effort
to treat you like an adult.
Doesn't suit you.
I make a second attempt
to treat you like a child.
But again, you won't partake.
Fine, then.
I shall treat you
like a malicious adult
who not only engaged,
but disrupted a top-secret
military operation...
which alerted the Soviets.
It nearly cost
the lives of thousands.
-Here you go, Mr. Brown.
-Ah.
I do love these things.
Reminds me
of my childhood. [chuckles]
No.
-Here, take this. Leave.
-[Wendy] All right.
I have to say,
I am so excited
to hear how you did it.
-I don't recall.
-Neither did your president.
But we got him to talk.
I was only trying
to make contact.
I was playing.
It was just a game.
Do you know that you exposed
a top-secret military exercise?
Nearly costing the government
millions of dollars.
Sorry.
Do you take traveler checks?
[laughs] Cute.
Look now.
The government doesn't care
that you made contact
with an aircraft
that was shot down.
What concerns us is
that you somehow
sent a successful transmission
to the Area 51-15
Air Force Base.
A base that was blown up
in the Cold War.
-Capiche?
-Capiche.
Good.
Who taught you how to send code?
Was it your grandfather?
Or your father? The astronaut.
My grandfather.
So I didn't make
contact with them.
I'm sorry.
-Them?
-Aliens.
[Ed laughs]
You are so freaking adorable.
She should be working
for us, right? [laughs]
So what was it?
What device did you use
to bypass the HF
at Space Command?
I told Henry that it had
to be the Bearcat modem.
If I tell you,
will I get my radios back?
Once they do an investigation,
take away your license
to operate any Ham radios,
say, forever,
yes, of course.
I crossed the streams
using a Morse code generator
and a rubber ducky.
Rubber ducky?
I hooked up the Morse code
generator to the seven scanners
and then bypassed
a high-frequency RF transmitter
with the rubber ducky
antenna hack,
which sent a code
to the Enigma machine.
It transmitted
a series of secondary signals
that independently hopped towers
using SOS transmissions.
That piggybacked from one of
the workers inside Space Command
using a 27 millihertz
UHF two-way walkie-talkie
to move out the signal
right into the mainframe system.
Brilliant.
Brilliant.
Do you think you could show me
how you smurfed your way in?
Sure thing, Gargamel.
But on one condition.
Do you allow me
to keep at least one radio?
[laughs] Absolutely not.
Hello?
[somber music playing]
Mr. Brown?
Can anyone hear me?
Anyone?
Drifting.
Floating.
Floating.
Weightless...
Calling.
[metronome clattering]
Calling home?
Where were you just then?
The holding cell.
They kept me there 12 days.
They wouldn't let me see
or even talk to... my...
Wendy.
Did they hurt you?
Oh, yes.
Needles in my arms,
tubes down my throat.
Contamination bubble baths
every fucking hour.
Was the exposure
internal or external?
Internal. Over 26,000 millirems.
That's way more
than the lethal dose,
yet you're still here.
Is that by coincidence
or by design?
I've been like this
ten years to the day I...
I keep rambling and rambling.
Ramble back home.
Go back in the house.
Are you home
during these blackouts?
-Sometimes.
-Is anyone with you?
Somebody or something
hiding in the shadows?
I don't know.
It's so dark.
Very blurry.
Don't worry
about what you don't see.
-What do you hear?
-Broken ticking of music.
Same melody,
same song always playing.
-What song?
-Low harmony.
Mechanical.
Let's go ahead and wake you.
When I count to three,
you're gonna open your eyes...
and wake, okay?
-Okay.
-One...
[pen clicking] ...four...
three.
-[pen clicking]
-Give it a rest, will ya?
Can you stop flicking your Bic?
During these blackouts,
where was your mother?
Wasn't she your protector?
There were several incidents
where she was
nowhere to be found.
So either she couldn't
or she chose not to save you.
Yet she put you in harm's way.
And then conditioned you
to think
you were in constant danger.
Someone says she was
in a state of shell shock
after the first blast.
But to no fault of her own...
the state declared her
to be an unfit mother.
And they took you away.
She almost
regained custody of you.
But then
something else happened.
-Do you remember?
-That's in the past.
For God's sake, I was a child.
Trying to make sense
of living in a world
with a constant threat
of another nuclear holocaust.
We were all
in a state of constant fear.
And what was happening to me
during all of this?
Having to go through that...
when the world was ending...
was un-fucking-imaginable.
Unfortunately,
children end up becoming victims
to their parents'
inability to parent.
Now, Jeremiah,
was he also a victim?
Tell me again about him.
He got the cough.
He couldn't be saved.
What were his parents like?
What kind of dog did he have?
What kind of house
did he live in?
A dog.
[chuckles]
Why does it matter
what kind of dog he had?
Well, it has everything
to do with the dog.
Maybe the dog only wanted
to be walked for four blocks.
Maybe the dog was missing
a leg and couldn't go far.
I mean,
these are the kind of details
that you're
purposely leaving out.
Now, you've told me all
these stories about Jeremiah.
But you don't even know
how many spots the dog had.
He didn't even have a dog.
Okay?
He went looking
for the black box
from the second plane
that got shot down.
And he never came back.
Did he ever find the plane?
Or the black box?
And when he never returned...
did you go looking for him?
Yeah.
I did. I--
that's when... [mumbling]
[ominous music playing]
Jeremiah?
I have a bad feeling about this.
Jeremiah?
[walkie-talkie crackling, beeps]
[Mayday whining]
Jeremiah?
Please, be you.
[Mayday whining]
-[walkie-talkie crackling]
-Jeremiah?
Oh.
-[walkie-talkie beeps]
-[Mayday whimpering]
It's okay, it's okay, it's okay.
[Mayday panting]
Holy shit, Batman.
[high-pitched beeping]
[Wendy] I don't know.
I mean, she hasn't slept walked
since she was little.
Uh, like, maybe since
she was, like, seven or eight.
[door creaks open]
Oh, she's here.
All right,
I'll talk to you later.
Where have you been?
Where have-- Oh, my God,
what happened to you?
May, what happened to you?
Come on, baby, sit down.
-Sit down.
-I don't know. I don't remember.
Look at your face, May!
Who did this to you?
Tell me, who did this?
I don't know.
I-- I don't remember.
Oh, my God.
Does Geraldo have a broken nose?
[groans] Forget the TV.
Where were you?
May, Space Rock doesn't exist.
You're not leaving
this house again.
Not at all.
But, Mom, it is real.
I found it.
The coordinates
where the airplane was shot down
brought me right
to the spacecraft.
-And to Jeremiah.
-Who's Jeremiah?
Mom, it's real.
Do I sound like a liar?
No, you sound
about as believable
as Jim and Tammy Faye
on Nightline.
-[Mayday hisses]
-Oh, my God.
-Stop, stop. You're hurting me.
-I'm trying to help you, May.
Just breathe.
Why do you smell like sulfur?
[Mayday retching]
-Are you gonna be sick?
-Mm-hmm.
All right, come on, go.
Go to the bathroom. Go.
[Mayday coughing]
What kind of soup is that?
Chicken noodle. Your favorite.
Oh, right. Thanks, Mama.
You're welcome.
Looks like
Mikey doesn't like it.
-What'd I forget?
-Sour cream.
Ah, sour cream.
[May thuds on floor]
May?
May?
[phone beeping]
Hi, something's not right.
I don't know what to do.
That's why I'm calling you.
Okay, how does--
how do you explain this?
Okay, there's...
she sleeps for 16 hours a day
and then
is constantly throwing up.
And then the next
day she's completely fine.
The cough?
It is not the fucking cough.
[intriguing music plays]
[straw slurps]
[Wendy] Mmm.
[woman] Has your daughter been
exposed to radiation
in the last 30 days?
-Is she suffering from CWC?
-CWC?
The cough.
No.
When was the last time
her radiation levels
were checked?
Um, six weeks ago.
I have all the paperwork,
they're normal.
Okay.
[May retching]
Red circular growths, I...
She has three
red circular growths right here.
Can you just tell me
what is wrong with my baby,
so we can save her, please?
Wendy, our daughters
go to the same school.
And off the record,
May is showing signs
of someone
with stage four cancer.
And I don't
know what to make of it.
She came in clean,
but overnight
she started developing
alarming levels...
of radiation exposure.
And this is all so new.
There's no telling how long
the contamination of these bombs
will impact us, or how long
it'll even take to show up.
But this is
what we're seeing now.
So she's dying.
That's it.
Can you please
help me understand?
Because I don't.
Last week, she was bedridden.
But two days ago...
we were playing outside
all day long.
[chuckles bitterly]
I had to beg her
to come back inside.
So please tell me, what is that?
Terminal lucidity.
It's a cruel joke
that God plays on us.
It's what
we call the last hurrah.
It's when a patient
rallies at the end.
Sadly, it can give people
false hope.
But it's one final thing
to hold on to.
Save my baby.
Please.
[heart monitor beeping steadily]
I'm gonna save you.
Ma'am, you really should wear
a mask around her.
She's pretty weak
and you don't want to
risk anything.
I got it.
-[wrapping crumples]
-[Wendy sniffles]
[sobbing silently]
Mmm. Hi.
Hey, girl.
It's time.
Time for what?
The ship is waiting.
What ship, sweetheart?
It's okay.
I'll find it.
[Wendy sniffles]
You can go.
Okay.
You can go if you want to.
Don't be afraid.
[heart monitor beeping rapidly]
[heart monitor beeping
continuously]
[indistinct announcement
over PA]
[shakily] Baby.
Baby. May?
May?
Stay. Stay, please.
-[nurse] Ma'am.
-Stay with me, stay with me!
Stay with me, stay with me!
-No! Stay with me!
-Ma'am?
[sobbing] Stay with me,
stay with me!
-Stay with me! No!
-[nurse] Ma'am, get back.
May! May!
No, you're killing her!
Stop! Stop!
No! No!
-Leave her!
-[high pitched charging whine]
[loud electric thump]
[beeping steadily]
[Wendy screeching]
I'm going, okay?
I'm fucking going!
[random beeping]
What do i do? What do I do?
What do I do?
[beeps shift to rhythmic tones]
I know that place.
[rhythmic beeping continues]
[ominous music]
Okay, we're here.
We're here.
[chuckles]
[mumbles]
[Wendy breathing heavily]
Take her!
Take her!
[spaceship whirring
and whooshing]
Take her!
Take her!
[coughing]
[whimpers]
[gasping]
[ominous music]
[sobbing]
[police radio beeps]
[muffled radio chatter]
[officer] Okay,
that doesn't make any sense.
Now, the hospital
made two separate reports.
The last report states that
you was banned
from the premises
and that you snuck in
in the middle of the night
and stole your daughter
out of ICU.
But now you're telling me that
none of that happened...
and that she willfully
came with you
and asked you to take her
into the middle of the desert...
to meet with...
aliens.
But someone or something
caused all those wounds.
But you woke up today
with no recollection
of what happened
or who took her.
Yes.
That's exactly
what I'm telling you.
Okay.
I'm gonna ask you again.
Where is she?
I already told you.
-They took her.
-They?
Who took her?
Them.
Them.
The ones from...
I have answered your questions.
I am done.
Are you gonna
help me find her or not?
You know where she is.
[door slams shut]
Stop.
You know the drill.
-[door beeping]
-[instrument clicking]
Have a seat.
[muffled coughing]
Well, I won't
be needing that today. [laughs]
Levels are down.
You're just under
11,000 millirems.
The last time we met...
you were well over 26,000.
That's good, then.
Well, if you were over 30,
they'd send you back
to the Silkwood.
Do you care if I talk?
I get kind of
nervous when I take tests.
Oh, it's just questions.
We're testing
your response time.
Shall we begin?
You put a hamster in a cage.
Does he go to the food first
or get on the wheel and spin?
Eat or spin?
Well, if you were the hamster,
what would you do?
Is this the test?
No, we're just getting
warmed up.
My father used
that same chapstick.
I told him I'd come back
for him,
but I didn't. [chuckles]
Anyway, that chapstick
was underneath
the seat of his car,
and I found it two years later.
Why did you leave him?
To protect her.
Her?
My Firefly in the sky.
Oh, uh, the last time we met,
you told me
you didn't have any children.
Why did you tell me
you didn't have any children?
Because I don't.
What happened to Firefly?
I lost her.
I told her
to not go to that door.
And she went right to them.
I'll never forget that moment
that she turned around...
and looked me right
in the eyes that last time.
They ripped her out of my hands.
She was...
she was so scared.
Do you know what it's like
to watch your child
be ripped away from you,
and then living
the rest of your life
knowing that
you couldn't save her?
Thank you.
Thank you
for acknowledging that.
They took her.
I don't know where she is.
Where is she? Where is she?
Where is she?
Where is she?
I think about her all the time.
I still wake up screaming
for her.
Firefly. Firefly. Firefly.
Firefly. Firefly.
Scars.
A lifetime of scars.
Do I think she's dead?
No, I do not think she is dead.
I still feel her.
I feel her with me all the time.
My Firefly.
Blink, blink, blink, blink,
blink, blink, blink, blink.
I would never leave her.
I would never do that.
Would you tell her
that for me, please?
I saved her.
I told her I would save her,
and I did.
[quietly] I did.
Yeah.
[in normal voice]
Is she still waiting for mommy?
Do you know where she is?
[sobs softly]
[Wendy] Oddly enough, I do.
[chuckles]
He would never admit to it,
but he was afraid
to go to space.
And the night
before he left for space...
I was certain
I was going to go into labor.
You were fighting to get out.
There was no stopping you.
And then the shuttle took off,
and eight
and a half minutes later,
you were born.
The shuttle left the atmosphere,
and it began falling
and floating in space.
And then your dad
got a bit of cabin fever
and tried to open
the cabin door to jump out.
And all the other astronauts
had to restrain him.
So, finally,
they calmed him down
and leaned him
against a windshield,
and he grabbed a picture
that he took of me.
My stomach was, like,
here to the Pacific.
He said that he saw all
these lights around the shuttle.
He said that
they looked like little stars.
He said that the way
that they lit up the capsule...
it reminded him of whenever
he and his buddies would go
chase fireflies
down by Crater Lake.
And that's how you got
your name Firefly,
Mayday Firefly Malone.
Your school called today,
said that you were absent.
[chuckles] I said,
you haven't been there
for three years.
And I also thought
there was no other students left
after the second blast.
That's that. [chuckles]
[random beeping]
[beeps shift to rhythmic tones]
Firefly?
Is that you?
Oh, Firefly, if you're there,
I know that
you probably don't...
understand or even...
-[radio crackles]
-[electronic buzzing]
-[mouthpiece clicks]
-I tried.
And I know...
I know you're better off
not here.
That doesn't mean
I don't miss you,
because I miss you, Firefly.
Blink, blink.
[radio crackles]
Oh, did you blink?
I'm glad you told me that story.
It's my only constant.
It helped remind me
of what used to be.
But every night,
I'm so awake
in the sands of time.
[sniffles]
[wind whooshing]
[birds chirping]
I miss you, Mom.
Wherever you are.
And I know
we'll meet again one day.
I know it.
But I'll miss you every day
for the rest of my life
until then. [sobs]
[sighs]
Far away.
[radio crackles]
[rhythmic beeping tones]
[seagulls calling]
The ship is taking me far away.
[intriguing music]
[knocking on door]
[Wendy]
May, don't open the door!
May, no! May!
May!
[inaudible]
-No! Mama!
-[Wendy] May!
[ominous music]
Calling.
Calling home.
Space Rock.
I think we've come
to the end of this journey.
It's time to say goodbye
to Space Rock.
Don't you think?
Do you remember
when the second blast happened?
Two weeks before
the second attack,
there were multiple reports
of a sunburned little girl
walking along Crater Lake Trail
carrying what
was left of her teddy bear.
An old couple on the way
back from Hill Valley...
stopped and picked you up.
You were there for four days
when they found you,
without food or water.
And somehow, you still survived.
Old couple?
I don't remember.
Probably because
the aliens from the mothership
gave you one
too many lobotomies.
Jacob.
What? I mean, come on.
Again with the aliens?
She's never going to accept it.
And after everything
you've been through,
you still don't believe
aliens exist anymore?
Oh.
I don't know.
That's a tough one.
I do and I don't.
Okay, well,
your time to talk is over.
See...
that's not right.
Because every time
you talk about it,
I can't stop thinking about it.
Okay, you can either ease it up
or I can send you back, okay?
Thank you.
Daniel, what do you think?
Do aliens exist?
No. [laughs]
William, is Space Rock real?
Yeah.
No, uh...
it's probab-- probably not.
Well, that's why
we're all here today, right?
To find out what is real.
The last time
anyone saw anything
that resembled the mothership
was the day that
the Challenger was launched.
Area 51 was destroyed
way before that.
No one's ever seen
anything that comes close
to resembling Space Rock.
Firefly, you've
said multiple times
that the aliens
came and took you.
But for some reason,
they kept bringing you back,
only to take you again.
Did the aliens ever leave you
with any permanent scars?
Or markings?
Just these.
Mayday, the aliens
did not abduct you.
It was the men
in the green hazmat suits.
Child services came.
Came to your house...
and they took you away.
And your mother kept you locked
inside that house
where the highest
radiation levels
on record were reported.
You did almost die
from drinking water
that you knew was poisonous.
That was your way
of calling for help.
Mayday, she really
was trying to save you.
But her mind was so far gone.
She didn't know
what she was trying to
save you from.
Your memories of what happened,
they are a culmination
of other memories,
hallucinations, disillusions
that were all caused
by radiation exposure.
Your mind created
a false world...
to protect you
from what happened to you
as a child.
And that is
what we all now know...
as Roswell Delirium.
And these memories...
are ultimately your Space Rock.
[ominous music plays]
Take her!
[gasping]
[somber music]
[Mayday sobs]
[sniffles]
Mayday, your father
was not an astronaut.
He was a janitor
that worked for NASA.
And he was exposed to ten times
the radiation that you were.
So much, he couldn't tell you
and your mother apart.
And your friend, Jeremiah,
he was imaginary.
No.
Jeremiah got the cough.
They took him.
That was the only way
they could save him.
How can you deny that?
Are you denying that?
Shame on you.
Then how do you explain that
all of your friends...
that you said were taken
are all sitting right here...
next to Jeremiah?
Mayday, the prison
cell that your mind created,
those four walls
are caving in now.
So to finally move forward...
you have to confront her.
Now, you refused to see
your father when he was dying.
But maybe seeing her
will ultimately save you.
-Her?
-Wendy.
She hasn't seen you
since you were 11.
In her mind,
she's probably waiting
for the aliens...
to bring you back.
Mayday, if you're up for it,
I will get the board
to approve an off-site visit.
And I will go with you
and support you.
So you can make peace
with Space Rock.
Where is she?
You got this.
[gate rattling and beeping]
Just trust yourself.
Okay.
Just speak from your heart.
[synthetic voice over PA]
Warning, lights will be dimmed
until inmate has been
safely implanted.
[chiming over PA]
[electronic whirring]
[ominous music]
[synthetic voice over PA]
Your time has begun.
51 minutes remaining.
Far away from what?
Far away from the memories.
What memories?
What's waiting for us
in Space Rock?
They are. They're waiting.
It's okay, though.
It's so safe.
It's so safe,
you wouldn't believe.
Are we in danger?
No, just you.
But they'll take you
and they'll keep you safe.
They will.
They're not real, right?
Were they ever real?
Do you know who I am?
Blinkity blink.
[sobs] Mm-hmm.
[sobs] I missed you so much.
So much.
I tried to forget about you.
But then the memory
would sneak its way back in...
and throw off
all the other memories.
You've been gone so long.
So long.
The aliens didn't take me.
It was you.
You kept me from being taken
by the men in the green suits.
No.
No, no, no.
I watched you die.
You couldn't survive
on the machines.
That's why I took you to them.
I took you.
They said
they were gonna save you.
And that they were gonna
keep you until you're better.
Are you better?
My Firefly in the sky,
are you better?
Wendy, I wasn't dying.
But not from the lack of trying.
God, did I try.
That's why I drank the water
and kept sneaking off
to the desert.
I know you wanted to protect me,
but you were scared.
And rightfully so.
You were so scared
you wouldn't let them help us.
That's why you barricaded us
in that house.
I don't blame you
for anything that happened.
And they don't blame you.
Do you remember the last day
when they finally came for us?
I do.
You told me
not to open the door,
but I did it.
You probably blamed yourself
all this time.
You spent a lifetime of
blaming yourself for what I did.
I am so sorry for that.
For what they've done to you.
For what I've done to you.
I only wanted
to go to Space Rock
to get away from him.
But instead
they took me away from you.
For good.
I told myself every day
without you
that we would be together again.
And I waited a long time.
And that day never came.
And I wanted to be rescued.
Especially from him.
He would call me by your name.
And no matter how many times
I told him I wasn't you,
he couldn't see me.
Even when
he stared into my eyes.
He took away the girl I was.
And the girl I was gonna be.
And deep down I think you knew.
But I didn't know that
you needed to be saved too.
I don't blame you.
Don't ever feel
that it was your fault
because you couldn't protect me.
Okay?
I want you to know that, Wendy.
You did the best that you could.
And you're always gonna be
my mom.
Okay?
You're my mommy.
Thank you.
[Mayday sobbing]
[synthetic voice over PA]
51 seconds remaining.
Did I save you?
[Mayday sobbing]
My Firefly in the sky.
I love you, Mommy.
[chiming over PA]
[electronic whirring]
[breathing heavily]
[electronic whirring]
["In Heaven" by The Armed plays]
I will raise
Invisible houses
The world is just a stage
The everlasting gaze
Love and hate
Blurring in the middle
These holy escapades
I'm saving all the saved
My new body
Waits for me
In Heaven
Heaven
My new body
Waits for me
In Heaven
Heaven
[radio static]
[newscaster] Tensions between
the Soviet Union and U.S.
remain at an all-time high
after the Soviets shot down
Korean Airlines Flight 007,
killing all 269 passengers.
The Soviets claim that
Kal 007 was a spy plane
that deviated off course
and flew over
a top-secret Soviet
military installation.
And after last week's
nuclear false alarm incident,
most Americans
feel that the threat
of a Cold War erupting
is imminent.
[loud clatter and light buzzing]
[faint buzzing]
[high-pitch beeping]
[man over radio] Okay, attitude,
roll 2-5, decimal 1-0.
[tense music playing]
[radio static]
[music continues]
[high-pitched ringing]
[distant radio chatter]
...815...
Houston, how do you read?
[woman over radio] Gemini 7
repeat your transmission.
[man] Confirming multiple
unidentified on the ASA.
Heading towards the Great
Plains, potential soviet.
[woman] Is this real world
or exercise?
[man] This is real world.
[woman] Alerting WPR, Gemini 7.
We don't see any unidentified
aircraft on our system.
Go ahead
and reset your reconnoiter.
[man]
Reconnoiter is at full capacity.
Less than ten before
red birds make first impact.
[distant radio chatter]
[high-pitched screeching]
[loud bang]
All right, time for bed.
Now? You cannot be serious!
Someone just shot J.R.!
Yeah, it was probably Sue Ellen.
Grandpa can tell you
all about it in the morning.
Right, Dad?
Come on, Space Cadet.
Bedtime.
-Now!
-Right.
[newscaster] And now,
nuclear weapons in the news.
Ever since the first
atomic bomb was dropped on Japan
nearly 40 years ago,
people have been talking about
doing away with nuclear weapons
because of the massive
destruction they cause.
But since the United States
and the Soviet Union
both have nuclear weapons...
Not falling for that again.
...had to keep
building more of them
to offset
what each sees as a threat.
What's wrong, Mom?
You look like you're about
to have a cow.
Oh, it's nothing.
Just know, if anything happens,
I'm going to save you, okay?
Um, okay.
Don't get mental.
Hey, you have been
spending a lot of time
with Grandpa
since we moved him in, huh?
Yeah, he's fun.
Sometimes I can tell
he misses Grandma, though.
I just think that you
should start making friends
with kids your own age.
Grandpa is a lot of fun,
but he would make
a terrible prom date.
Ew. I know.
Trust me, I know.
And whatever you do,
do not let him
get you in trouble on that Ham.
Did you know
that your Grandpa had
0-10 classification
in World War II?
He could hack his way
into any system.
Don't worry.
He's already shown me the way.
Last week we made contact with
the astronauts on Columbia II.
Okay, no,
if NASA wanted your help
on the shuttle program...
-They'd send me to space camp.
Yes. Watch out, Firefly.
They'll put that butt of yours
right in a slammer.
That's only
if you're over 18, Wendy.
Uh-huh. Wendy?
I know it's the '80s,
but it's still cool
to call me Mom.
Yeah?
Well, it would be even cooler
if you told me
why on God's Earth
you named me
after a bug and not Grandma.
You know, I really wish I could.
I just-- I suddenly
I cannot remember.
[Firefly] Uh-huh.
Goodnight,
my Firefly in the sky.
Goodnight.
[laughter over TV]
You mind?
[girl over TV]
It's my Daddy down here.
[man over TV]
Oh? What did you tell him?
This just in,
you are looking at
a very disturbing
live shot there.
We don't know the details,
but there is one report
yet unconfirmed that a missile
has just hit
the World Trade Center.
No sign of how many more
are headed this way.
Dad, do you see this?
[newscaster]
We have learned that the U.S.
has moved
to DEFCON 1 after reports
that a 9.2 magnitude
earthquake in Los Angeles
was felt after the first impact.
The White House
has just been evacuated.
The airports have been
instructed to ground all planes.
The probability of...
[dramatic music playing]
We are under attack?
We've just been told
to evacuate.
Now?
What is happening?
[gasping, sobbing]
Dad, we gotta go!
May! May, come on. Get up.
Come on. We gotta go. Come on!
Come on. Go, go, go, go, go.
Dad?
Come on. May, get in.
Come on, over Grandpa.
Go. You got her?
[Wendy muttering in fear]
-The Aliens coming?
-I wish it was that.
[Wendy groans in frustration]
-What's happening?
-I don't know.
-What's happening?
-I don't know.
-[screaming] Come on.
-[engine rumbles]
[tense music playing]
All right, come on, then.
Come on.
Dad, I'll come back for you.
I'm coming back, okay?
We'll be back. May, go.
[Firefly] What about grandpa?
[planes whooshing]
-Where are wo going?
-Run!
Mom, mom.
[helicopter blades whirring]
[indistinct shouting]
[music stops]
[high-pitched ringing]
[eerie, distorted music]
[footsteps echoing]
[wind whooshing]
Stepping right, left.
[energetic music over TV]
[TV din]
Whoo! Come on.
[snapping in time]
[sighs]
[gasping breath]
Hey. Good morning.
Come on. Join me.
Uh, no, thanks.
Don't feel like
sweating to the oldies.
Oh, come on.
It does the body some good.
Yeah. So does milk.
[sighs] So does milk.
[woman shouting over TV]
May. Don't open that door.
May!
[ominous music playing]
[birds cawing]
-Have you seen Karate Kid?
-No, I haven't seen it.
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah, it's probably lame.
[Becky] Look who's coming.
She's so sad.
-I can't believe it.
-Hey, guys.
-What's so sad?
-Guys? As if.
We're ladies of the '80s.
Get a clue, will ya?
So tragic. Didn't you hear?
The last New Kid On The Block
died from the cough.
They've been playing their
videos all day long on MTV.
MTV? What's that?
[scoffs]
Oh, my God. Are you kidding?
Music Television?
And what are you
listening to anyway?
-Def Leppard.
-[Lynne] They're so yesterday.
No one listens
to hair bands anymore.
Prince is what's happening?
Hey, we're having
a birthday party
at the roller rink this weekend.
It's gonna be totally rad.
You have to be there.
I'll be bummed to the max
if you don't come.
Totally. I'll be there.
Is she invited?
Sure, she can come.
But she probably
can't afford it.
It's really expensive to get in.
Your parents are poor.
No offense, though.
Just being honest.
Try outs are tomorrow.
You should totally try out.
Cindy Mancini dropped out.
You could be my co-captain.
-[Lynne giggling]
-[Becky] Totally.
I've been practicing
an hour before school
every day
for the last three weeks.
[both giggling]
Well, they say
the early bird gets the worm.
-Say what?
-Wh--
Ah!
Okay, whatever.
I, uh, need to go back home.
I realized I forgot something.
Oh.
Well, the bus is,
like, right here.
You're gonna miss the bus,
freakazord.
-[Becky chuckling]
-Bye-bye.
Early bird gets the worm?
Really?
Must be take a worm
for a walk week.
[chuckling]
[Lynne huffs]
[bus engine humming]
[bell ringing]
[upbeat music playing
over radio]
-Oh, hey.
-Yeah.
I'll take one of those key lime
pies with the alien shavings.
All right, that'll be $19.85.
-Are you a believer?
-Oh, yes.
Some say the Soviets
had that spacecraft
down in the bows of Area 51
in their magnetic force fields
while keeping us alive.
Well, and some would say
if you went out to Area 51
and looked under a rock, all
you'd find is a big pile
of manure and cockroaches.
But who am I to say? Right?
Go ahead and keep it.
Thank you.
Have a good day.
[doorbell rings]
[school bell ringing]
[dynamic music playing]
You know, Becky,
if you put half as much time
into your homework
as you do boys,
you would be my star pupil.
[classmates chuckling]
Glad you could finally make it.
-Don't mention it.
-Nice pants.
Where'd you get
those pants, Homeless-R-Us?
[kids giggling]
All right, you little monsters,
it's your lucky day.
No pop quiz.
[kids exclaiming]
Oh, bravo, brava.
Thank you for being so
transparent about your feelings.
All right, who wants
to tell me what today is?
It's the two-year anniversary
of the attack.
Well, let's not call it
an attack.
[Daniel]
Well, that's what it was.
It definitely wasn't the aliens.
I think we should have dropped
the atomic bomb on them.
I would have given
that two thumbs up from me.
Thankfully,
our actor/president
didn't feel the same way.
Actually, Mr. Reagan showed
true restraint that day.
Too many lives already lost,
no need to lose any more.
Daniel, why don't you wake up
and smell what you're shoveling?
An eye for an eye only ends up
blinding the entire planet.
In the land of the blind,
the one-eyed man is king.
Well, for your information,
Garby, a king needs
a queen to have a kingdom.
And from the lips
of Sloane Peterson,
who got a glimpse of you
in the locker room,
you'll never be king
with that little--
Moving right along.
Who can tell me what the final
straw was that set off the war?
I thought it was
because the Soviets shot down
the Korean airplane
that drifted off course.
Well, that certainly started it.
Did you know
that before the attack,
90% of all airplanes drifted off
course by as much as 100 miles?
Now their paths
have to be near perfect,
within five miles.
But the final straw
that ignited the Cold War
was none other than
a military simulation.
Has anyone heard
of the Archer Able 83 drill?
The Able Archer 83 drill
is when the U.S.
went to DEFCON 1
and simulated a full-on
global thermal nuclear attack.
They even went so far
as to airlift the president
out of the country,
like in the movie War Games.
The Soviet Union thought
they were about to be hit
with a full-on nuclear invasion,
so instead of reacting,
they overreacted
and deployed six dozen warheads?
Precisely. How did you
all handle the lockdowns?
[Daniel] I was scared.
Everybody was.
No food in the supermarket,
no toilet paper.
It was scary.
-[kids snickering]
-What? It was.
Couldn't go outside.
And if you did go outside,
you had to wear a mask,
because the radiation
was so high
and everyone was so terrified
of getting the cough.
Did anything positive
come from the...
-attack?
-[Lynne] No.
It's starting to feel
normal again,
but everyone pretends
as if it never happened.
It's like we aren't allowed
to feel any animosity
towards the Russians
for what they did.
My dad said
the Russians blew up Area 51,
because when the spaceship
crashed in the '50s,
the U.S. Military wouldn't let
their scientists
come and see it.
So they told everybody
about Area 51,
so all the nutjobs
are going to try to find it.
The urban legend
and delusional world
that is known as Area 51,
now known as Space Rock.
So...
does anyone here
believe in aliens?
We are not the first creatures
to rule this Earth.
The dinosaurs roamed this land
over 65 million years ago.
We are just a microcosm
in this galactic universe.
And like every living creature,
we are born with the curiosity
to discover the unknown.
That's why
you hear these stories
of old people
wandering the desert naked,
looking for
the fountain of youth,
or some alien
to help them figure out
where their wrinkly butts
disappeared to.
[kids giggling]
Urban legend has it
that Space Rock is a place
with healing powers
that originated
from the crashed
spaceship in Roswell.
Hidden safely in a volcanic
crater miles under the Earth,
in a land that is constantly
drifting with the sands of time.
[school bell ringing]
[dynamic music playing]
800 knots, heading below
the heart of the deck.
Dead ahead, 8 miles.
Launch Maverick on alert 5.
Let's turn and burn.
[May] Hmm.
I don't know
how they ever shoot down
hostile enemies
with these things on.
I can't see shit.
Yo, wastehead, did you hear?
What? That Jester said?
Or that they opened up
another ponderosa
down the street
with an even better salad bar?
Salad bar?
What the hell is a salad bar?
Whatever, no.
Ferris Brown
hit the high level on asteroids.
So they pulled the plug.
They pulled
the freaking plug, man.
[synthetic voice] Warning.
[alarm blaring]
Here we go again.
[synthetic voice] Danger.
Danger.
[alarm keeps blaring]
[synthetic voice] Danger.
-[alarm stops]
-[school bell ringing]
Well, that was sure fun.
I gotta go. See you in class.
Shalom.
Hi, May. Do you want me
to carry your books for you?
Uh, no, Donald.
Actually, my name is Ronald,
not Donald.
I told you,
not if you were the--
Last boy on the planet?
Well, I can be.
I'll hide my face, then?
Well, can I admire you
again today?
Maybe after lunch?
Ew.
[insects chirping]
[clock ticking]
[water splashing]
[items clattering]
[emotional music playing]
Blinkity-blink.
[therapist] Can we begin?
[sighs]
Yes, now we can.
We always have to begin
under your conditions.
Where did we leave off?
I ran to the door,
and remember her
yelling at me not to open it.
But I did.
I looked back at her
one last time.
She sat on the ground
with one foot
bracing against the door
of the ship.
She had her hands
wrapped around my fingers.
She didn't have
a good hold on me.
As I opened up my hands,
they immediately ripped me away.
She looked at me
for a split second, almost...
almost asking for forgiveness
for not being able to save me.
And that was
the last day I saw her.
The day I was taken.
Was that the first and only time
you've been abducted?
I don't know exactly.
It might not even be
the first time I was taken.
It sounds like
Disorientation Impact Syndrome.
It's been this way
since your childhood?
My childhood was a dream.
What a joyful time it was.
Not perfect.
But whose is?
And I survived Wally World
and two nuclear attacks.
How many people can say that?
I think you've learned
how to dig and nest
all of your problems
into a giant hole.
I've heard this all before.
Fictitious Abduction Syndrome.
False memory.
Whatever you want to call it.
I'm not Alice.
I don't need to fall
down a rabbit hole
to find my cupcake mountain
wonderland of happy thoughts.
So if you're not Princess Lolly
and you're not Alice...
you must be the rabbit.
And even if anyone ever
figures out how to get you out,
they'll just dive
further down to the hole.
Je ne sais pas.
See, that's the constant.
The childish references
to childish games.
If only life could be a dream.
You should go.
Do you still
dream about fireflies?
What do you dream about?
Is there ever
a daydream or a thought?
And I wonder,
will the fireflies in the sky...
lead you out of the darkness?
Doubtful.
They could only blink, blink.
[sighs]
I'd have to fight my way
through the nothingness,
the darkness,
hoping there's light at the end.
Or as you once mentioned,
the rolling blackouts.
That is the origin
of the rabbit hole
that you need to fall down.
Look, I'll fall down
as far as the basement
of the Alamo will take me.
I just...
I don't know what good it will
do to talk about the blackouts.
I don't think there's anything
there I want to remember.
But there is, go back
into a world of nothingness.
In the darkness.
[sighs]
[exhales audibly]
Calgon, take me away.
Okay, let your mind go.
Your body will follow.
When I count down
from five to one...
you will go through
a doorway of time,
a world you locked away
from everyone.
Four, three,
two, one.
Now, your mind should be
in a world of nothingness.
There's no Earth below us.
Just floating, drifting,
calling home.
What do you see?
[ominous music playing]
Space Rock.
[music fades]
[groans]
[softly] Oh.
-[Wendy] What?
-That's it.
Where's the beef?
McDonald's, corner
of Broadway and Belmont.
Maybe I wouldn't
have to go there
if you voted for Mondale
instead of the Gipper.
There's your beef.
Don't be a spaz. Gosh.
[Elliot] That ain't how we talk
to grown-ups around here.
Do we teach you
better manners than that?
Yes, sir.
That's the last
bit of our water, FYI.
Oh, I-- I'll just get
more from the sink.
Hey, uh-uh,
space cadet, sit down.
Remember,
we don't drink that water.
Right. When are we getting
more water?
Heinen said that they're
going to get a drop at night,
so I will stop first
thing in the morning.
[Elliot] Well, get all you can.
The contamination level's
been so high,
who knows how long we have until
we're completely out of water.
I just see you
feeding that bear?
We can't afford to be feeding
four mouths around here.
You got to choose.
It's either you or him.
Come on. You or him?
Well, I guess it's me.
[both giggling]
So when are you heading out?
-Right after breakfast.
-Hmm.
Do we get to come
visit this time?
Oh, I don't think so.
Last time Murphy
got the cough from her family
and half the crew
got bumps, so...
-Right, yeah.
-It's just tense right now.
They've been having some
problems with the O-rings.
I know what O-rings are.
They're the boosters?
[whispers] Like these.
-[giggles]
-[Elliot] Huh.
Say, you find one in that bowl
about the size of this room,
I'll gladly take it.
[grunts and chuckles]
Do you want some coffee?
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa!
-Oh, my gosh.
-Damn it.
Oh, my gosh, I'm sorry.
Stop. You're making it worse.
-[Wendy] I'm sorry.
-[May chuckles]
Oh, is this funny?
-[thud]
-Yeah?
You still think it's funny?
-Do you think this is funny?
-Hey, stop.
-Huh?
-Stop.
[loud thudding]
Never raise your voice
at me in my house.
Are we clear?
She-- she was
just trying to play.
[ominous rumbling]
It's okay, May, it's okay.
You're not going
to change your suit?
I don't have another suit.
Daddy, are you going to the dark
side of the moon again?
Mm-hmm,
and if the schedule holds,
I'll be on the next
Challenger flight, too.
Well, you can take
my bear with you.
He can keep you company
on your way up to space,
and then you can leave him
on the moon for the aliens.
You want me to leave
that old ratty bear
on a cold and dusty
crater all alone?
There ain't no getting him back.
You okay with that?
-A-okay.
-[Elliot chuckling]
A-okay.
[sighs] Hmm.
Or you don't have to go
this time.
-You can stay.
-Yeah?
You know anyone else that can
fly that bucket of bolts?
-No.
-Didn't think so.
Hey, who's the best pilot
you ever saw?
I'm looking at him.
Who is it? Who?
-It's you, Daddy.
-Bet your butt it is.
Bye.
-[Elliot chuckling]
-What?
Why are you wearing
all that makeup?
[Wendy chuckles]
Oh, Daddy, you almost forgot.
Mooshka.
Yeah.
Take care of that bear.
[planes whooshing]
Thank you.
Eight hours of cleaning,
has to violate
the child labor laws somewhere.
Paint the fence, sand the floor.
It's called chores.
Hey, and because you asked,
there's more.
It'll be fun.
We'll set it to music.
The world's tiniest violin.
-So lame.
-Oh, gosh. Come on, let's go.
[Wendy sighs deeply]
-Ouch.
-Big baby.
This is all Grandpa's stuff?
Yeah, it is.
And, um, it's time to let it go.
Let it go? Like throw it out?
What you talking about, Wendy?
[Wendy sighs] I'm talking about
you helping me out.
I can't do this one.
I need you
to be the adult, okay?
-Hmm.
-I want you to pack up
these babies,
and if you find anything cool,
we'll box it up
and then have a yard sale.
-Hmm.
-It'll be totally rad.
-Hmm.
-Get to it.
Thank you. I love you.
Mm-hmm.
[loud clattering]
Fudge.
[blowing raspberries]
Grandpa's not legal radios.
[sighs happily]
[electrical buzzing]
[tentative music building]
I wonder if anyone's
still on the Ham.
Beam me up, Scotty.
May calling Orson.
Come in, Orson.
No? Okay.
[scattered conversation
over radio]
This is Mayday, Starkiller 51.
Does anyone
copy my transmission?
This is Mayday, Starkiller 51,
calling from Roswell, Nevada.
Anyone there?
[radio static]
[man] Luckily, I'm only
carrying half a load, but yeah.
Anyone with the big wagon
on the westbound 8090,
watch out, black ice.
That's a big 10-4. Good, buddy.
Over.
Well, all right.
And who do I have
the pleasure talking to?
This is Mayday, Starkiller 51.
Who is the man on the ham?
Taco Tony, 45.
Just crossed
the Arizona border an hour ago.
Now driving through
some light snow down in Tucson.
About to call it a night.
Driving so long,
starting to see crazy things.
Like what?
Blinding lights, mostly.
UFO lights? You think?
After 10 hours of driving,
all the lights
start looking the same.
Come to think of it,
I ain't seen a UFO since...
since that picture show
in Ogden,
called the Body Snatchers.
If you don't mind me asking,
how old are you, little lady?
Eleven. Be 12 in 15 days.
All that time to live life,
grow up, get married,
have a family,
buy a house, and hopefully
you don't come home to a note
saying your wife's moved on
to greener pastures.
That's what's happening
to my mom and dad right now.
Growing apart.
That's just part of life.
[radio screeching]
[scattered sounds over radio]
God damn it, Wendy!
Whoa, language, lady.
Don't have cow, all right,
mommy dearest.
So this is where you go
to give late-night love advice,
huh, Dr. Ruth?
I Ham what I am.
Grandpa and I used to
sit here for hours.
He would talk to all these
people from Denver to the DMZ.
And when he couldn't find
anyone to talk to,
he would tell me about
all the different ways
he killed enemy
soldiers in Korea.
Sounds like Dad. [soft chuckle]
Hey, if you're going
to talk on the ham,
be careful who you talk to.
These aren't your standard,
everyday consumer radios.
When your grandpa left the Army,
they came looking for these
a couple times.
What do you say?
It's getting late.
Just five more minutes, please.
All right, five minutes.
Why can't you be
like normal kids
and watch Baywatch
and Growing Pains?
My whole life is a growing pain.
[mockingly] Oh, my whole life
is a growing pain.
Hmm.
[bell dings]
Houston, we have a problem.
The couple
over there with the kid
who's coughing up a lung
and scaring away
all the customers...
-[kid coughing]
-...I think he's got the cough.
You're going to have to
ask them to leave.
Me?
[Wendy scoffs] Why me?
Because I don't want to get it.
I don't want to get it?
Send them on their way.
[Wendy scoffs]
God, give me strength.
[coughing softly,
breathing heavily]
That's a cute little
rabbit you got there.
It's very kind of you,
dear, but don't bother.
He can't answer you back.
We'd like to order now
uh, two shortcakes
and a coffee black,
and Walter will have the oatmeal
and a side of bacon.
Sure you can...
hear me all the way over there?
You know,
I actually think
I'd have to
ask you guys to leave.
We'll do no such thing,
not until we've eaten.
Your son, he seems sick,
like he has the...
Grandson, and he's fine.
Really.
Mickey.
His name's Mickey.
Ma'am, Mickey doesn't seem fine.
I'm sorry.
I'm not trying to--
Pass judgment?
Of course you are.
I wouldn't expect anything
less from somebody like you.
Betty.
I'm sorry.
[hopeful music playing]
It's just that it's--
been like this everywhere we go.
He's not contagious.
You can't spread it around
to everybody like they say
on the tube.
He's got cancer.
Not the cough.
I am so sorry.
Thank you.
[Walter]
We're simply passing through.
We just need to get some fuel
and eat before we drop him off.
-[Betty] Walter.
-What?
She lives here, for God's sake.
It's no secret.
Everyone here knows
about Space Rock.
[Wendy] Space Rock?
Didn't that place go sour
after the attack?
Nobody knows
if that's true or not.
It's not like anybody
ever found it.
But we're gonna try.
What choice do we have, anyways?
God has failed us and refuses
to answer our prayers, so...
Maybe they will.
They?
They will take him,
they will heal him.
They will make him new again.
-Yes.
-They will bring him back to us.
I know that in my heart.
If-- if you wouldn't mind,
please.
Of course.
Thank you.
Thank you.
[ominous music playing]
[beeping, clattering]
[humming a tune]
[faint beeping]
[faint beeping]
[faint beeping]
That's it.
Rubber Ducky, you're the one.
[faint beep]
Okay.
[radio crackling]
[radio beeping]
[suspenseful music playing]
[breathing heavily]
[door clicks open]
[door shuts closed]
[footsteps thumping]
[electric buzzing]
[distorted music playing]
[wind howling]
[toy playing music]
[footsteps thumping]
Oh, did you see
Small Wonder last night?
So good!
You mean
the show with the robot?
Man, I love that freaking show.
Vicki cracks me up. So real.
And really,
Vicki is far from real.
She's a girl who plays a robot.
Not believable at all.
Bad acting.
That voice, come on!
The show is basically
a nerd's wet dream.
The father is a robotic engineer
who made her
because his only son Jerry
drove his mother away.
And now, all his dad
has left to show
for all the disappointments
in his life is Jerry.
And Vicki,
his teenage sex robot.
No.
You really think that?
Like, they do it?
How do they do it?
If he made her a girl,
why wouldn't he
give her all the parts?
The mom left
as soon as he made her.
-See how she fills that void?
-Damn!
Vicki's a sex robot?
That just blew my freaking mind!
I don't think I'm ever gonna be
able to watch that show again.
Why you always gotta
rain on my parade?
Because I'm still coping
with the idea
of an actor for a president.
And the way things are going,
I'm never going
to find out who shot JR.
[school bell ringing]
Word.
Okay, class, get your books out.
Turn to page 35 in your book
One Day in the Life
of Ivan Denisovich.
[door clicks open]
[ominous music playing]
Okay, everyone,
just close your eyes.
This will all be over quickly.
[Geiger counter crackling]
[crackling intensifies]
No, no, wait!
No, wait! Wait, wait, wait!
No! No, no, wait!
It's not me! No!
No, you're making a mistake!
It's not me!
No way! Wait!
[Mrs. Peltzer]
Okay, let's focus up.
There's nothing we can do
about that now.
He'll be fine.
Yeah, you mean after they're
done scrubbing his skin away.
Okay, Gertie, today's the day.
You're the last student
to give your oral assignment.
You up for it?
Not quite ready
to share your vision board yet?
-Want to give it a try tomorrow?
-[kids laughing]
Okay, class, I know this news
is going to be
terribly upsetting,
but Friday's test will be
postponed till next week.
-[all exclaiming]
-Ah, simmer--
simmer down, you little rodents.
Instead, we are going
to spend the morning
watching
Challenger shuttle launch.
Now, as you know,
the high school teacher,
Christa McAuliffe,
who is the first civilian
to go into space.
What you may not know
is that May's father,
who was part of Gemini 15,
will now be joining
Mrs. McAuliffe
on the Challenger.
-Isn't that right, May?
-Wait.
I thought
your dad was a janitor. [laughs]
[Daniel] Yeah,
if your dad's an astronaut,
why can't he buy you
some better clothes?
Eat my shorts, dipstick.
You don't know anything.
[Daniel] Hey,
take a chill pill, will you?
I mean, without him,
there'd be no one
to install the satellites,
and the retards
won't be able to watch
Mr. Rogers on Saturday mornings.
You're just jealous
because your dad's in prison
for stealing
from all the old people
who had money
in the stock market.
-Guys--
-[Daniel] At least my dad
didn't get bumped off
two space missions
because they thought
he was a p--
-Penis breath.
-[Mrs. Peltzer] Enough!
Principal's office now.
Way to go, Beavis.
Butthead.
Loser.
[scoffs]
[door shuts closed]
Such a waste of yearbook space.
[alarm] Warning.
Okay, kids, under your desks.
[alarm blaring]
[alarm] Danger.
[kid clears throat]
[woman sobbing]
[somber music playing]
Ma'am,
are you okay?
Excuse me, do you need help?
[woman whining]
Did you find the boy?
What boy?
My boy.
My sweet boy.
Oh, where did you go, boy?
Where did you go?
[woman sobbing]
They-- they took him.
They said
they'd bring him back in 51 days
when he was better.
He's better now, right?
[woman sobbing]
Oh,
where did you go, boy?
Where do you think they go?
-Where does who go?
-The children.
My God,
where did the children go?
Where did you go?
Where's my boy? [sobbing]
Where is my boy?
Where are you?
[wailing] Where did you go?
Where's my boy?
[radio beeping]
[Wendy]
So you haven't been on base.
Where have you been?
Elliot.
Oh, my God. [laughs]
[ominous music playing]
Babe?
Elliot, where have you been?
Hey, Elliot. [sighs]
Elliot!
May, go back to your room.
[electric buzzing]
[toy playing music]
[distorted music playing]
[birds chirping]
[Wendy chuckles]
-What?
-[Wendy chuckles]
So I guess
my definition of quarantine
is a little bit different
than NASA's.
[Elliot] You want to stay
six feet away from me,
be my guest.
Quarantine hasn't started yet.
Then where were you
for the last seven days?
[sighs] Hey, Daddy,
if you're home on Friday,
maybe we can go see a movie
or watch a rerun of Dallas.
Yeah, because
your daughter missed you.
You don't think
that you could have called her?
No, I couldn't.
[Wendy scoffs]
[paper rustling]
There's what you missed.
[Mayday] I can't wait
to get back on the Ham.
I was talking
to my friend Ivan yesterday.
He's from Belarus.
He's always complaining about
his wife's bad cooking. [laughs]
And how one day
he's gonna die of dysentery.
[both chuckling]
He used to work
at the power plant
until the nuclear disaster.
He thinks the Americans
had something to do with it.
Missy.
I don't want to hear
another word about the Russians
at the dinner table.
-Are we clear?
-Crystal.
Gosh, it's not like I clubbed
a baby seal or something.
Fine, I'll ignore them.
Seems to work pretty good
around here these days.
Who else do you talk to
besides people at the USSR?
People in Serbia, Okinawa,
pretty much everywhere.
I even talked
to an old astronaut named Vlad.
He's from a country that rhymes
with whatcha, but isn't Russia.
[Mayday chuckles]
And he said
that they were actually
the first ones
to land on the Moon
and that they weren't authorized
to report their experience
because they had
multiple encounters
with UFO spacecrafts.
What else did they tell you?
About Laika,
the whatcha space dog
that was sent to space
and orbited Earth for a week,
and that NASA hired
Stanley somebody,
to help the US
fake the first Moon landing.
Enough!
Not another word from you.
Great men died
getting us to the Moon.
But here you are,
in my house,
spewing this garbage.
We did not fake the landing.
They did not
beat us to the Moon.
And Laika, the dog,
did not orbit for a week.
She burned up
a few hours after launch
when their capsule overheated.
She was SPAM in a can
thanks to the Russians,
who sure as shit
are not your friends.
If you haven't
recognized that yet,
why don't you show me
where New York is on a map?
I'm sorry,
I-- I didn't mean that.
[Wendy] May, it's okay.
[sighs] Hey, Daddy,
when you go
to the dark side of the Moon,
can you check on Mooshka for me?
I don't know
what happened to your bear.
So where is he then?
Where's Mooshka?
Did you even go to the Moon?
I have to go.
Wait, you didn't tell me
who the best pilot is.
Do you know who
the best pilot I ever saw is?
Wait, I'm sorry.
I'm so sorry.
What are you sorry for?
[somber music playing]
[door shuts closed]
[Wendy] Sorry.
It's okay.
[switch clicking]
[radio humming]
Turn that thing off, will you?
Same thing every day.
The news trying
to keep us all living
in a constant state of fear?
Dang, take a chill pill.
I wanted to see
if Charles in Charge is on.
Didn't all the actors
on that show get blown up?
Everybody got zapped,
except for Scott Baio.
They had to recast
a whole new family.
Hmm.
I wonder
if they'll ever do the same
for Joanie Loves Chachi.
Yeah, they'll never
bring back Joanie Loves Chachi.
-[radio crackling]
-Whoa, what's that doing?
We gotta figure out
what's going on.
I-- I don't know
if it's a distress call or what,
but that transmission
has been repeating
for the last 51 days.
And when I type
the same series and numbers in,
someone or something sends back
the exact same message,
but always in a different order.
[sighs] And the day
I started responding,
we moved into DEFCON 2
for the first time
since the attack.
And then two days later,
a Soviet fleet of submarines
surfaced off of Alaska.
Oh.
Wait, so who's
sending the signal?
Like, secret military or--
or maybe it's a lost alien ship
trying to phone home.
I don't know where you get
your delusions, laser lips.
[man] Executing.
Aircraft heading 3-6-0.
[Jeremiah coughs]
-[woman] Roger.
-[coughing continues]
It's getting worse, isn't it?
[man] 8-5-0,
do not engage the target.
I'm hoping this is a simulation.
I-- I-- I don't think so.
That does not
sound like an exercise.
I think it's time
to buzz the tower goose.
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
I can't let you do that.
There's no breaking
this force field.
Sometimes you gotta say,
"What the fuck."
[Jeremiah snorts]
Base, can I have
those coordinates again?
[man] 5-1, X-ray,
Foxtrot, Henry,
Alpha, Mary, 1-0.
Please confirm your clearance.
2-5, Bravo, Victor, 6-7, Alpha,
3-3-6, Alpha, 2-6,
8-6, Charlie, Charlie, 8-3-7-7.
Grandpa would be
so proud of me.
...47.2431 degrees north,
115.30 degrees west.
That's right on top
of Falcon Lake.
[woman] Keep the track.
Fire on target 6065.
It's gotta be aliens.
What do we do?
Enroute Alamo. Call off Alamo.
Hostile unconfirmed.
[man] Not possible.
Unidentified is down.
Down as in landed?
[man] Negative. He's down.
[woman] That sounded like a kid.
Cobra, please confirm your comm.
Uh, everything is fine here.
Situation normal.
No kids. We're fine here now.
Thank you. Uh, how are you?
[man] Base, trace
the outgoing transmission mark.
[radio beeping]
-They shut it down.
-Yeah.
And that wasn't
a Soviet interceptor.
They don't fly single mission.
That unidentified
has to be an alien spacecraft.
Look, if the coordinates
are correct, then...
the crash site is less
than five miles away from here.
[Mayday grunts]
-You want to go see a dead body?
-You bet your ass I do.
Tomorrow,
right after shuttle launch.
No, man. No time to wait.
We need to find that black box
and see what really happened.
Tell you what,
I'll go and check it out,
and if I can find something,
you'll read about me
in the next week's cover
of the National Enquirer.
Mm.
Hang on.
These little kitty toys
aren't gonna work that far away.
That's what you think.
Grandpa made these for me
with A1A military-grade
satellite parts.
Sweet!
[suspenseful music playing]
[Wilma] Conflict between
the US and the Soviet Union
reached its highest levels
since the Cold War,
when a US military plane
was instructed
to change its course mid-flight
and fly below 10,000 feet
over restricted Soviet airspace
near Falcon Lake.
The pilot was returned safely...
-Oh, now you've done it.
-Oh, shit, what?
Now what happens
if I want to make a call, huh?
Maybe today, tomorrow, 2020.
Oh, that, right.
Sorry, I thought
you meant I was responsible--
No, you're not responsible,
and you proved it once again.
Who knows how many times
your dad has tried to call?
-Do you know what today is?
-Launch day.
-Launch day, yes. Fix it.
-Sorry, I'll fix it.
[Wilma] ...the inflight
transponder's inability
to keep a proper course.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union
remains on high alert
and has moved up
a fleet of submarines
and warships
to the Gulf of Alaska.
And now we send you back
to our scheduled programming
of Small Wonder.
[ominous music playing]
[Wendy sighs]
We gotta go.
You're gonna be late for school.
[man] T-minus 15 seconds.
T-minus ten, nine,
eight, seven, six.
We have main engine start.
Four, three, two, one,
and liftoff.
Liftoff of the 25th
space shuttle mission,
and it is clear to tower.
[indistinct chatter]
[man] Challenger,
go and throttle up.
[boom of explosion]
Daddy.
Daddy.
[man] ...looking very carefully
at the situation.
Obviously a major malfunction.
[Mayday sobbing] No.
No.
[birds chirping]
[door clicks open]
[somber music playing]
[sobbing] You didn't pick me up.
Is he?
No. [crying]
[sighs]
[radio crackling]
[sobbing]
[radio beeping]
[indistinct radio chatter]
-[walkie-talkie beeps]
-Jeremiah, are you there?
I really need
to talk to you, Jeremiah.
Jeremiah, where are you?
-[helicopter blades chopping]
-[radio crackling]
Jeremiah, is that you?
Please answer.
Okay.
[upbeat music playing]
My mom said girls our age
shouldn't be wearing those kind
of jeans, but I convinced her
to buy them for me anyways.
You definitely got
the look. [chuckles]
Yeah, well, I said,
"Goodbye, Jordache,"
and from now on,
nothing will come
between me and my Calvins.
[both chuckling]
What are you gonna do?
Just watch and learn.
And don't embarrass me.
Good.
Hey, loser.
I found this in the ground,
and I thought of you. [laughs]
How nice of you.
I saw you watching us
at practice the other day.
So what?
Since they kicked you
out of the science club,
now you think you have what it
takes to be a cheerleader?
Doesn't look that hard,
but it's not my jam.
Girls who don't have
a lot going on upstairs
become cheerleaders.
[Becky] Oh,
is that what you think?
That it doesn't take
any brains, huh?
[scoffs] Like, do you even know
how hard it is
to do triple lindy?
-Seriously.
-[Mayday] Triple lindy?
[laughs] Can't even imagine.
The way I see it,
cheerleading was tailor-made
for girls like you two.
Girls with good looks
and eating disorders.
The good thing
is my brains and good teeth
will get me much farther
than your short-lived
looks ever will,
especially after
another five years
of gagging yourself
in the locker room.
All that acid will
definitely make your teeth
slide right out
of your pur-tay mouth
like a Pez dispenser.
Just being honest.
No offense, right?
I don't know
what you're talking about.
I don't do that.
Well, there was
that one time last week
where I walked
into your bathroom...
Lynne, shut your face.
Well, don't even think
about trying out.
I doubt your trailer park family
could even afford
the application fee.
Oh, and, uh, next time
they find you
wandering the desert at night...
maybe they'll find
your dad, too.
What's left of him. [laughs]
-[Lynne chuckles]
-Lynne, we're walking.
Incoming nerd alert.
This can't be happening.
I will know he has a first name.
-Oh, I--
-Donald, what did I tell you?
That you would only
give me the time of day
if I was the last boy on Earth.
And?
Pretty much all you got,
don't you think?
-Take a walk, Donald.
-[sighs] I swear, I'm worth it.
-I--
-Donald, beat it.
-[sighs] If you insist.
-I do, okay?
[Donald grunts]
Trying to--
Oh.
I am okay.
[whimsical music playing]
What a lovely house you have.
Ah, thank you.
Thank you so much.
May should be home
at any moment now.
-Okay.
-Yeah, yeah.
Hey, what are you doing?
Those are my radios.
-Hey, you, stop!
-May, come on.
Come on here, come sit down.
Take a picture.
It'll last longer.
[laughs] Is this her?
Is this the famous
Mayday Starkiller 51?
Do you want to sell me
a set of encyclopedias?
[laughs] No, no.
And you can call me Ed.
The only Ed I know
is Ed McMahon.
Clearly, I'm not here
to give you a million dollars.
[clattering]
Make them stop.
It's okay, honey.
Just talk to Mr. Brown.
-Wendy.
-Mm-hmm.
Would you mind making us
a pot of your delicious coffee?
Absolutely.
I'm 11. I don't drink coffee.
Isn't that special?
The innocence.
Then how about a popsicle?
All right,
two popsicles coming up.
Your bedside manner
could use some work.
I make the effort
to treat you like an adult.
Doesn't suit you.
I make a second attempt
to treat you like a child.
But again, you won't partake.
Fine, then.
I shall treat you
like a malicious adult
who not only engaged,
but disrupted a top-secret
military operation...
which alerted the Soviets.
It nearly cost
the lives of thousands.
-Here you go, Mr. Brown.
-Ah.
I do love these things.
Reminds me
of my childhood. [chuckles]
No.
-Here, take this. Leave.
-[Wendy] All right.
I have to say,
I am so excited
to hear how you did it.
-I don't recall.
-Neither did your president.
But we got him to talk.
I was only trying
to make contact.
I was playing.
It was just a game.
Do you know that you exposed
a top-secret military exercise?
Nearly costing the government
millions of dollars.
Sorry.
Do you take traveler checks?
[laughs] Cute.
Look now.
The government doesn't care
that you made contact
with an aircraft
that was shot down.
What concerns us is
that you somehow
sent a successful transmission
to the Area 51-15
Air Force Base.
A base that was blown up
in the Cold War.
-Capiche?
-Capiche.
Good.
Who taught you how to send code?
Was it your grandfather?
Or your father? The astronaut.
My grandfather.
So I didn't make
contact with them.
I'm sorry.
-Them?
-Aliens.
[Ed laughs]
You are so freaking adorable.
She should be working
for us, right? [laughs]
So what was it?
What device did you use
to bypass the HF
at Space Command?
I told Henry that it had
to be the Bearcat modem.
If I tell you,
will I get my radios back?
Once they do an investigation,
take away your license
to operate any Ham radios,
say, forever,
yes, of course.
I crossed the streams
using a Morse code generator
and a rubber ducky.
Rubber ducky?
I hooked up the Morse code
generator to the seven scanners
and then bypassed
a high-frequency RF transmitter
with the rubber ducky
antenna hack,
which sent a code
to the Enigma machine.
It transmitted
a series of secondary signals
that independently hopped towers
using SOS transmissions.
That piggybacked from one of
the workers inside Space Command
using a 27 millihertz
UHF two-way walkie-talkie
to move out the signal
right into the mainframe system.
Brilliant.
Brilliant.
Do you think you could show me
how you smurfed your way in?
Sure thing, Gargamel.
But on one condition.
Do you allow me
to keep at least one radio?
[laughs] Absolutely not.
Hello?
[somber music playing]
Mr. Brown?
Can anyone hear me?
Anyone?
Drifting.
Floating.
Floating.
Weightless...
Calling.
[metronome clattering]
Calling home?
Where were you just then?
The holding cell.
They kept me there 12 days.
They wouldn't let me see
or even talk to... my...
Wendy.
Did they hurt you?
Oh, yes.
Needles in my arms,
tubes down my throat.
Contamination bubble baths
every fucking hour.
Was the exposure
internal or external?
Internal. Over 26,000 millirems.
That's way more
than the lethal dose,
yet you're still here.
Is that by coincidence
or by design?
I've been like this
ten years to the day I...
I keep rambling and rambling.
Ramble back home.
Go back in the house.
Are you home
during these blackouts?
-Sometimes.
-Is anyone with you?
Somebody or something
hiding in the shadows?
I don't know.
It's so dark.
Very blurry.
Don't worry
about what you don't see.
-What do you hear?
-Broken ticking of music.
Same melody,
same song always playing.
-What song?
-Low harmony.
Mechanical.
Let's go ahead and wake you.
When I count to three,
you're gonna open your eyes...
and wake, okay?
-Okay.
-One...
[pen clicking] ...four...
three.
-[pen clicking]
-Give it a rest, will ya?
Can you stop flicking your Bic?
During these blackouts,
where was your mother?
Wasn't she your protector?
There were several incidents
where she was
nowhere to be found.
So either she couldn't
or she chose not to save you.
Yet she put you in harm's way.
And then conditioned you
to think
you were in constant danger.
Someone says she was
in a state of shell shock
after the first blast.
But to no fault of her own...
the state declared her
to be an unfit mother.
And they took you away.
She almost
regained custody of you.
But then
something else happened.
-Do you remember?
-That's in the past.
For God's sake, I was a child.
Trying to make sense
of living in a world
with a constant threat
of another nuclear holocaust.
We were all
in a state of constant fear.
And what was happening to me
during all of this?
Having to go through that...
when the world was ending...
was un-fucking-imaginable.
Unfortunately,
children end up becoming victims
to their parents'
inability to parent.
Now, Jeremiah,
was he also a victim?
Tell me again about him.
He got the cough.
He couldn't be saved.
What were his parents like?
What kind of dog did he have?
What kind of house
did he live in?
A dog.
[chuckles]
Why does it matter
what kind of dog he had?
Well, it has everything
to do with the dog.
Maybe the dog only wanted
to be walked for four blocks.
Maybe the dog was missing
a leg and couldn't go far.
I mean,
these are the kind of details
that you're
purposely leaving out.
Now, you've told me all
these stories about Jeremiah.
But you don't even know
how many spots the dog had.
He didn't even have a dog.
Okay?
He went looking
for the black box
from the second plane
that got shot down.
And he never came back.
Did he ever find the plane?
Or the black box?
And when he never returned...
did you go looking for him?
Yeah.
I did. I--
that's when... [mumbling]
[ominous music playing]
Jeremiah?
I have a bad feeling about this.
Jeremiah?
[walkie-talkie crackling, beeps]
[Mayday whining]
Jeremiah?
Please, be you.
[Mayday whining]
-[walkie-talkie crackling]
-Jeremiah?
Oh.
-[walkie-talkie beeps]
-[Mayday whimpering]
It's okay, it's okay, it's okay.
[Mayday panting]
Holy shit, Batman.
[high-pitched beeping]
[Wendy] I don't know.
I mean, she hasn't slept walked
since she was little.
Uh, like, maybe since
she was, like, seven or eight.
[door creaks open]
Oh, she's here.
All right,
I'll talk to you later.
Where have you been?
Where have-- Oh, my God,
what happened to you?
May, what happened to you?
Come on, baby, sit down.
-Sit down.
-I don't know. I don't remember.
Look at your face, May!
Who did this to you?
Tell me, who did this?
I don't know.
I-- I don't remember.
Oh, my God.
Does Geraldo have a broken nose?
[groans] Forget the TV.
Where were you?
May, Space Rock doesn't exist.
You're not leaving
this house again.
Not at all.
But, Mom, it is real.
I found it.
The coordinates
where the airplane was shot down
brought me right
to the spacecraft.
-And to Jeremiah.
-Who's Jeremiah?
Mom, it's real.
Do I sound like a liar?
No, you sound
about as believable
as Jim and Tammy Faye
on Nightline.
-[Mayday hisses]
-Oh, my God.
-Stop, stop. You're hurting me.
-I'm trying to help you, May.
Just breathe.
Why do you smell like sulfur?
[Mayday retching]
-Are you gonna be sick?
-Mm-hmm.
All right, come on, go.
Go to the bathroom. Go.
[Mayday coughing]
What kind of soup is that?
Chicken noodle. Your favorite.
Oh, right. Thanks, Mama.
You're welcome.
Looks like
Mikey doesn't like it.
-What'd I forget?
-Sour cream.
Ah, sour cream.
[May thuds on floor]
May?
May?
[phone beeping]
Hi, something's not right.
I don't know what to do.
That's why I'm calling you.
Okay, how does--
how do you explain this?
Okay, there's...
she sleeps for 16 hours a day
and then
is constantly throwing up.
And then the next
day she's completely fine.
The cough?
It is not the fucking cough.
[intriguing music plays]
[straw slurps]
[Wendy] Mmm.
[woman] Has your daughter been
exposed to radiation
in the last 30 days?
-Is she suffering from CWC?
-CWC?
The cough.
No.
When was the last time
her radiation levels
were checked?
Um, six weeks ago.
I have all the paperwork,
they're normal.
Okay.
[May retching]
Red circular growths, I...
She has three
red circular growths right here.
Can you just tell me
what is wrong with my baby,
so we can save her, please?
Wendy, our daughters
go to the same school.
And off the record,
May is showing signs
of someone
with stage four cancer.
And I don't
know what to make of it.
She came in clean,
but overnight
she started developing
alarming levels...
of radiation exposure.
And this is all so new.
There's no telling how long
the contamination of these bombs
will impact us, or how long
it'll even take to show up.
But this is
what we're seeing now.
So she's dying.
That's it.
Can you please
help me understand?
Because I don't.
Last week, she was bedridden.
But two days ago...
we were playing outside
all day long.
[chuckles bitterly]
I had to beg her
to come back inside.
So please tell me, what is that?
Terminal lucidity.
It's a cruel joke
that God plays on us.
It's what
we call the last hurrah.
It's when a patient
rallies at the end.
Sadly, it can give people
false hope.
But it's one final thing
to hold on to.
Save my baby.
Please.
[heart monitor beeping steadily]
I'm gonna save you.
Ma'am, you really should wear
a mask around her.
She's pretty weak
and you don't want to
risk anything.
I got it.
-[wrapping crumples]
-[Wendy sniffles]
[sobbing silently]
Mmm. Hi.
Hey, girl.
It's time.
Time for what?
The ship is waiting.
What ship, sweetheart?
It's okay.
I'll find it.
[Wendy sniffles]
You can go.
Okay.
You can go if you want to.
Don't be afraid.
[heart monitor beeping rapidly]
[heart monitor beeping
continuously]
[indistinct announcement
over PA]
[shakily] Baby.
Baby. May?
May?
Stay. Stay, please.
-[nurse] Ma'am.
-Stay with me, stay with me!
Stay with me, stay with me!
-No! Stay with me!
-Ma'am?
[sobbing] Stay with me,
stay with me!
-Stay with me! No!
-[nurse] Ma'am, get back.
May! May!
No, you're killing her!
Stop! Stop!
No! No!
-Leave her!
-[high pitched charging whine]
[loud electric thump]
[beeping steadily]
[Wendy screeching]
I'm going, okay?
I'm fucking going!
[random beeping]
What do i do? What do I do?
What do I do?
[beeps shift to rhythmic tones]
I know that place.
[rhythmic beeping continues]
[ominous music]
Okay, we're here.
We're here.
[chuckles]
[mumbles]
[Wendy breathing heavily]
Take her!
Take her!
[spaceship whirring
and whooshing]
Take her!
Take her!
[coughing]
[whimpers]
[gasping]
[ominous music]
[sobbing]
[police radio beeps]
[muffled radio chatter]
[officer] Okay,
that doesn't make any sense.
Now, the hospital
made two separate reports.
The last report states that
you was banned
from the premises
and that you snuck in
in the middle of the night
and stole your daughter
out of ICU.
But now you're telling me that
none of that happened...
and that she willfully
came with you
and asked you to take her
into the middle of the desert...
to meet with...
aliens.
But someone or something
caused all those wounds.
But you woke up today
with no recollection
of what happened
or who took her.
Yes.
That's exactly
what I'm telling you.
Okay.
I'm gonna ask you again.
Where is she?
I already told you.
-They took her.
-They?
Who took her?
Them.
Them.
The ones from...
I have answered your questions.
I am done.
Are you gonna
help me find her or not?
You know where she is.
[door slams shut]
Stop.
You know the drill.
-[door beeping]
-[instrument clicking]
Have a seat.
[muffled coughing]
Well, I won't
be needing that today. [laughs]
Levels are down.
You're just under
11,000 millirems.
The last time we met...
you were well over 26,000.
That's good, then.
Well, if you were over 30,
they'd send you back
to the Silkwood.
Do you care if I talk?
I get kind of
nervous when I take tests.
Oh, it's just questions.
We're testing
your response time.
Shall we begin?
You put a hamster in a cage.
Does he go to the food first
or get on the wheel and spin?
Eat or spin?
Well, if you were the hamster,
what would you do?
Is this the test?
No, we're just getting
warmed up.
My father used
that same chapstick.
I told him I'd come back
for him,
but I didn't. [chuckles]
Anyway, that chapstick
was underneath
the seat of his car,
and I found it two years later.
Why did you leave him?
To protect her.
Her?
My Firefly in the sky.
Oh, uh, the last time we met,
you told me
you didn't have any children.
Why did you tell me
you didn't have any children?
Because I don't.
What happened to Firefly?
I lost her.
I told her
to not go to that door.
And she went right to them.
I'll never forget that moment
that she turned around...
and looked me right
in the eyes that last time.
They ripped her out of my hands.
She was...
she was so scared.
Do you know what it's like
to watch your child
be ripped away from you,
and then living
the rest of your life
knowing that
you couldn't save her?
Thank you.
Thank you
for acknowledging that.
They took her.
I don't know where she is.
Where is she? Where is she?
Where is she?
Where is she?
I think about her all the time.
I still wake up screaming
for her.
Firefly. Firefly. Firefly.
Firefly. Firefly.
Scars.
A lifetime of scars.
Do I think she's dead?
No, I do not think she is dead.
I still feel her.
I feel her with me all the time.
My Firefly.
Blink, blink, blink, blink,
blink, blink, blink, blink.
I would never leave her.
I would never do that.
Would you tell her
that for me, please?
I saved her.
I told her I would save her,
and I did.
[quietly] I did.
Yeah.
[in normal voice]
Is she still waiting for mommy?
Do you know where she is?
[sobs softly]
[Wendy] Oddly enough, I do.
[chuckles]
He would never admit to it,
but he was afraid
to go to space.
And the night
before he left for space...
I was certain
I was going to go into labor.
You were fighting to get out.
There was no stopping you.
And then the shuttle took off,
and eight
and a half minutes later,
you were born.
The shuttle left the atmosphere,
and it began falling
and floating in space.
And then your dad
got a bit of cabin fever
and tried to open
the cabin door to jump out.
And all the other astronauts
had to restrain him.
So, finally,
they calmed him down
and leaned him
against a windshield,
and he grabbed a picture
that he took of me.
My stomach was, like,
here to the Pacific.
He said that he saw all
these lights around the shuttle.
He said that
they looked like little stars.
He said that the way
that they lit up the capsule...
it reminded him of whenever
he and his buddies would go
chase fireflies
down by Crater Lake.
And that's how you got
your name Firefly,
Mayday Firefly Malone.
Your school called today,
said that you were absent.
[chuckles] I said,
you haven't been there
for three years.
And I also thought
there was no other students left
after the second blast.
That's that. [chuckles]
[random beeping]
[beeps shift to rhythmic tones]
Firefly?
Is that you?
Oh, Firefly, if you're there,
I know that
you probably don't...
understand or even...
-[radio crackles]
-[electronic buzzing]
-[mouthpiece clicks]
-I tried.
And I know...
I know you're better off
not here.
That doesn't mean
I don't miss you,
because I miss you, Firefly.
Blink, blink.
[radio crackles]
Oh, did you blink?
I'm glad you told me that story.
It's my only constant.
It helped remind me
of what used to be.
But every night,
I'm so awake
in the sands of time.
[sniffles]
[wind whooshing]
[birds chirping]
I miss you, Mom.
Wherever you are.
And I know
we'll meet again one day.
I know it.
But I'll miss you every day
for the rest of my life
until then. [sobs]
[sighs]
Far away.
[radio crackles]
[rhythmic beeping tones]
[seagulls calling]
The ship is taking me far away.
[intriguing music]
[knocking on door]
[Wendy]
May, don't open the door!
May, no! May!
May!
[inaudible]
-No! Mama!
-[Wendy] May!
[ominous music]
Calling.
Calling home.
Space Rock.
I think we've come
to the end of this journey.
It's time to say goodbye
to Space Rock.
Don't you think?
Do you remember
when the second blast happened?
Two weeks before
the second attack,
there were multiple reports
of a sunburned little girl
walking along Crater Lake Trail
carrying what
was left of her teddy bear.
An old couple on the way
back from Hill Valley...
stopped and picked you up.
You were there for four days
when they found you,
without food or water.
And somehow, you still survived.
Old couple?
I don't remember.
Probably because
the aliens from the mothership
gave you one
too many lobotomies.
Jacob.
What? I mean, come on.
Again with the aliens?
She's never going to accept it.
And after everything
you've been through,
you still don't believe
aliens exist anymore?
Oh.
I don't know.
That's a tough one.
I do and I don't.
Okay, well,
your time to talk is over.
See...
that's not right.
Because every time
you talk about it,
I can't stop thinking about it.
Okay, you can either ease it up
or I can send you back, okay?
Thank you.
Daniel, what do you think?
Do aliens exist?
No. [laughs]
William, is Space Rock real?
Yeah.
No, uh...
it's probab-- probably not.
Well, that's why
we're all here today, right?
To find out what is real.
The last time
anyone saw anything
that resembled the mothership
was the day that
the Challenger was launched.
Area 51 was destroyed
way before that.
No one's ever seen
anything that comes close
to resembling Space Rock.
Firefly, you've
said multiple times
that the aliens
came and took you.
But for some reason,
they kept bringing you back,
only to take you again.
Did the aliens ever leave you
with any permanent scars?
Or markings?
Just these.
Mayday, the aliens
did not abduct you.
It was the men
in the green hazmat suits.
Child services came.
Came to your house...
and they took you away.
And your mother kept you locked
inside that house
where the highest
radiation levels
on record were reported.
You did almost die
from drinking water
that you knew was poisonous.
That was your way
of calling for help.
Mayday, she really
was trying to save you.
But her mind was so far gone.
She didn't know
what she was trying to
save you from.
Your memories of what happened,
they are a culmination
of other memories,
hallucinations, disillusions
that were all caused
by radiation exposure.
Your mind created
a false world...
to protect you
from what happened to you
as a child.
And that is
what we all now know...
as Roswell Delirium.
And these memories...
are ultimately your Space Rock.
[ominous music plays]
Take her!
[gasping]
[somber music]
[Mayday sobs]
[sniffles]
Mayday, your father
was not an astronaut.
He was a janitor
that worked for NASA.
And he was exposed to ten times
the radiation that you were.
So much, he couldn't tell you
and your mother apart.
And your friend, Jeremiah,
he was imaginary.
No.
Jeremiah got the cough.
They took him.
That was the only way
they could save him.
How can you deny that?
Are you denying that?
Shame on you.
Then how do you explain that
all of your friends...
that you said were taken
are all sitting right here...
next to Jeremiah?
Mayday, the prison
cell that your mind created,
those four walls
are caving in now.
So to finally move forward...
you have to confront her.
Now, you refused to see
your father when he was dying.
But maybe seeing her
will ultimately save you.
-Her?
-Wendy.
She hasn't seen you
since you were 11.
In her mind,
she's probably waiting
for the aliens...
to bring you back.
Mayday, if you're up for it,
I will get the board
to approve an off-site visit.
And I will go with you
and support you.
So you can make peace
with Space Rock.
Where is she?
You got this.
[gate rattling and beeping]
Just trust yourself.
Okay.
Just speak from your heart.
[synthetic voice over PA]
Warning, lights will be dimmed
until inmate has been
safely implanted.
[chiming over PA]
[electronic whirring]
[ominous music]
[synthetic voice over PA]
Your time has begun.
51 minutes remaining.
Far away from what?
Far away from the memories.
What memories?
What's waiting for us
in Space Rock?
They are. They're waiting.
It's okay, though.
It's so safe.
It's so safe,
you wouldn't believe.
Are we in danger?
No, just you.
But they'll take you
and they'll keep you safe.
They will.
They're not real, right?
Were they ever real?
Do you know who I am?
Blinkity blink.
[sobs] Mm-hmm.
[sobs] I missed you so much.
So much.
I tried to forget about you.
But then the memory
would sneak its way back in...
and throw off
all the other memories.
You've been gone so long.
So long.
The aliens didn't take me.
It was you.
You kept me from being taken
by the men in the green suits.
No.
No, no, no.
I watched you die.
You couldn't survive
on the machines.
That's why I took you to them.
I took you.
They said
they were gonna save you.
And that they were gonna
keep you until you're better.
Are you better?
My Firefly in the sky,
are you better?
Wendy, I wasn't dying.
But not from the lack of trying.
God, did I try.
That's why I drank the water
and kept sneaking off
to the desert.
I know you wanted to protect me,
but you were scared.
And rightfully so.
You were so scared
you wouldn't let them help us.
That's why you barricaded us
in that house.
I don't blame you
for anything that happened.
And they don't blame you.
Do you remember the last day
when they finally came for us?
I do.
You told me
not to open the door,
but I did it.
You probably blamed yourself
all this time.
You spent a lifetime of
blaming yourself for what I did.
I am so sorry for that.
For what they've done to you.
For what I've done to you.
I only wanted
to go to Space Rock
to get away from him.
But instead
they took me away from you.
For good.
I told myself every day
without you
that we would be together again.
And I waited a long time.
And that day never came.
And I wanted to be rescued.
Especially from him.
He would call me by your name.
And no matter how many times
I told him I wasn't you,
he couldn't see me.
Even when
he stared into my eyes.
He took away the girl I was.
And the girl I was gonna be.
And deep down I think you knew.
But I didn't know that
you needed to be saved too.
I don't blame you.
Don't ever feel
that it was your fault
because you couldn't protect me.
Okay?
I want you to know that, Wendy.
You did the best that you could.
And you're always gonna be
my mom.
Okay?
You're my mommy.
Thank you.
[Mayday sobbing]
[synthetic voice over PA]
51 seconds remaining.
Did I save you?
[Mayday sobbing]
My Firefly in the sky.
I love you, Mommy.
[chiming over PA]
[electronic whirring]
[breathing heavily]
[electronic whirring]
["In Heaven" by The Armed plays]
I will raise
Invisible houses
The world is just a stage
The everlasting gaze
Love and hate
Blurring in the middle
These holy escapades
I'm saving all the saved
My new body
Waits for me
In Heaven
Heaven
My new body
Waits for me
In Heaven
Heaven