The Proud and Profane (1956) Movie Script
(crew member whistles)
- [Announcer] Now hear this- (voice fades)
- [Group] Bye, bye.
- [Passenger] See you later, Lee.
- [Colleague] Hurry up, Lee,
if you're gonna- (voice unintelligible)
- Lee, Lee Ashley.
Hello, I'm Kate Connors, the club director
and this is Bob Kilpatrick,
our field supervisor.
- How do you do?
- How do you do?
- Glad to have you with us.
- Thank you.
- Where are you bags?
- One of the officers said
he'd bring them down for me.
- Are they marked?
- Yes they are.
- I'll get them and put them in the Jeep.
- Thank you.
- [Crew Member] (whistles)
Hey, look what's coming.
- [Associate] Man can't
work, where'd she come from?
- [Crew Member] Don't touch
the merchandise, fellas.
(men chattering enthusiastically)
- [Associate] Hey Charlie, put
your eyes back in your head.
(men continue to chatter enthusiastically)
- Don't pay any attention
to them. How was the trip?
- A little crowded.
- Uh uh, hey excuse me,
I got a little petty larceny to attend to.
The Jeep is right on down there.
- All right.
- Hello boys.
- Hiya Kate.
- How are ya, Harry old pal?
- Now look Kate, I got no extra lumber,
no tables, no chairs, no nails-
- What's all those?
- Paint, and all of it
has to go to Camp Barnes.
- All of it?
- All of it.
- Every single little drop of it?
- Every single little drop of it.
- Oh, you know that new room
we're building on the clubhouse?
- Yeah yeah.
- You know what that's for?
So you boys can have hot
showers anytime you want.
Only showers in Noumea.
Course, if we don't paint it,
you're all gonna get
splinters on your bottom.
- Ah Kate, I'd like to help ya,
but all that stuff is in crates.
If I had a loose can,
I'd be more than happy
to let you have them.
- I know you would,
Harry, you're a good kid.
(crate clatters)
- And what's the matter with you guys?
- We couldn't help it.
- It slipped, Harry.
- Oh it slipped Harry, great.
Well you're gonna slip 'em all back
into the crate again and nail it up.
What do you think they
sent this stuff out here...
Hey wait a minute, Kate.
Hey, that stuff was
counted in San Francisco,
and in Pearl Harbor, and
once more when it got here.
- Yeah, they're all so efficient-
- And now I'm responsible for it.
- It's a wonder to me, you don't get over-
- I gotta see to it that
every can in that pile
is delivered to Camp Barnes.
- You see to that, Harry,
you see that every can in that pile
gets delivered to Camp Barnes
and tell 'em I said so.
- Besides, what good's
a paint without brushes?
Where did you get those?
- Old friend of the
family gave them to me,
goin' away present.
Isn't it pretty?
- Well, put 'em away, Kate.
- Look out, there's
three eggs in there too.
(engines rumbling)
(equipment clanking)
(people chattering)
(dog barks)
(people chattering)
(horn honks)
(dog barking)
(people chattering)
(horn honks)
(people chattering)
- Hey mate, get a load of this.
(soldier whistles)
(men cat-calling)
(soldier barks like a seal)
(soldier claps his hands)
- Hey Steve, that's for me,
let's get on the Red Cross boat!
(whistle shrieks)
(engines rumbling)
(soldiers whistle)
- They're just trying
to act like big shots.
It's the ones that don't whistle at you
you gotta be careful of.
(engines rumbling)
(people chattering)
(whistle shrieks)
(engines rumbling)
(people chattering)
(goat bleats)
(children chattering)
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
(brushes clink)
(chuckles) You're gonna
make the rest of us
look like a lot of sharecroppers
in those new uniforms.
- Well they're nothing special.
- Out here, anything that's new
and not painted is something special,
including what's inside the uniforms too.
Oh genuine coat hangers.
This is what we use out
here, in case you run short.
Glad you brought some of your own clothes.
When you're off duty or
on a Sunday, wear 'em.
Boys get awful sick of
seeing nothing but uniforms.
Here's some towels.
I'll see you down at the
club when you're finished.
No hurry.
- Kate?
- Hm?
- I heard on the ship that this unit
was due to be moved up
to Guadalcanal soon.
I was just wondering if you
knew when that would be.
- Oh that won't be for quite a while yet.
They've still got an awful
lot of mopping up to do.
Your husband was killed
on Guadalcanal, wasn't he?
- Yes.
- Whenever a new worker
gets sent out here,
I get a pretty complete
file on them beforehand.
I know an awful lot about you, Lee.
'Cept for one thing,
why did you join up?
- Well I was alone
and I thought maybe I
could help in some way.
- Could have helped in Washington
or Pittsburgh or London.
Why did you do everything
to be sent out to this area?
I want you to know, Lee,
that I tried very hard not
to have you sent out here.
I figured you were coming on
some sort of a pilgrimage.
- I'll do my job.
- I hope so.
Just remember, we've got
thousands of boys here
and each one has a problem, or will have,
and that's what we're
here for, to help them.
Our personal troubles are only secondary.
(paper rustles)
Well, I see by your file,
you play a mean piano,
speak French, and paint.
Gonna be a very busy girl.
- I want to be.
- See ya at the club.
(paper rustling)
(gentle music)
(Lee sighs)
(people chattering)
(boisterous singing)
- [Child] Hey, little match,
(voice unintelligible)
(children chattering over each other)
(people chattering)
(boisterous singing)
Come on, come on
The long and the short and the long
- [Desk Attendant] Hiya.
(people chattering)
(boisterous singing)
The long, the long
The long and the short and the long
- Hey, you seen that bella
that teaches the French class?
- Yeah, I saw her around
here a minute ago.
Yeah, there she is, she's
over there playing chess.
- Thanks.
(people chattering)
Say uh, I was a little late
in joining the French class,
so I was wondering, after
your closed up tonight,
you and I-
- I'm sorry,
we're not allowed to date enlisted men.
It's against military
regulations in this area.
They just won't let us.
- Lady, I don't want a
date, I want a lesson,
catch up with the rest of the class.
Maybe get a little ahead of them.
What do you say?
- Lover boy,
go get yourself a donut.
(people chattering)
- I'm sorry he interrupted.
You were saying that you-
- You asked about the canal
and I would say my outfit
came in on the third day and-
- You didn't happen to know a Lieutenant
by the name of Ashley, Howard Ashley?
He was with the First Parachute Battalion.
- Ashley.
Ashley.
Ashley.
- My husband.
- That's tough. I'm sorry.
No, I didn't know him.
My outfit was right next to
the first shoots on the ridge.
- Bloody ridge?
- Is that where he got it?
- 13th of September.
- It was a rough day.
- So what was it like?
- Rough.
(people chattering)
- [Lee] Well, if you do meet
anybody who knew my husband,
I'd appreciate it very much if you-
- I've got a friend who
was with the First Chutes.
He's still in the hospital on Guadal.
He's name is Eustace Press.
Sounds like a publishing firm, doesn't it?
You could write to him and-
- Lee, could I see you
for a minute, please?
- Well, writing isn't very satisfactory.
Maybe I could see him
when we move up there.
Excuse me.
(people chattering)
- That raider outfit that took Mandova
is docking here tonight
because they've got some wounded on board.
- Well I thought they flew
the wounded in days ago.
- He's a last-minute casualty,
and the Navy nurses are shorthanded
and they've asked us to help.
So you and Helen and Joanie can handle it.
- Well Kate, if you don't mind,
I'd just as soon stay here.
I won't be any good at it.
I have a revulsion to accidents
and people who've been hurt.
It sort of does something to me.
- It sort of does something to all of us.
That's why we take turns.
Jeep is outside my office.
(people chattering)
(engine rumbling)
(horn honks)
Foreman, you go over to
the hospital with him.
- I'm fine.
- Hey yeah, yes.
- Well thanks a million,
Kate, for coming down.
Without you and the girls,
we'd have been swamped.
- That's all right.
(people chattering)
- How are you doing, fella?
- Mister,
I'm sure you're a good man,
but couldn't you give me a girl
to walk along beside me or something?
- Now I know you're feeling better.
- How about me, will I do?
- You certainly will.
Just cackle for me. I wanna
hear some female cackling.
Go ahead.
- Where you from?
- [Patient] Massachusetts.
- [Crew Member] A little
more slack, a little more.
A little more slack.
- Louis,
did they take Peckenpaw ashore yet?
- He's on the hook now, Chaplain.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
- [Kate] Hello Chaplain.
- Kate, hello.
- Good to have you back.
Anything we can do for you?
- Well I need a lot of help,
but we can talk about that later.
For the moment,
would you just take care
of Sergeant Peckenpaw here?
- [Kate] Sure we will.
How you doin' fella?
- Fine, ma'am.
- [Kate] Whose the CO of this outfit?
- Colonel Black.
There he is now, just
coming up to the railing.
(people chattering)
No worries, Sergeant,
you're in mighty good hands.
I'll see you at the hospital
as soon as we get the men off the ship.
Corporal, I'll see you
at the hospital, okay?
- Hello.
- [Sergeant] Early in the
boondocks tomorrow, huh?
- Take it easy, Sergeant,
we'll give you a great coming out party,
get some more cigarettes for you.
Lee.
Lee.
Come down, Lee.
Here, stay with this man.
- Okay.
- You're not doing much
good standing around here.
- Sorry Kate, it just seems
horrible and stupid to me.
These men are suffering and
we give them small talk,
candy, and chewing gum.
- What you give them doesn't matter.
- It's just ludicrous and shocking.
- You could give them a
paperclip or an old golf ball,
or your hand to hold for a while.
- That's well, I'm afraid-
- What's important is that you're here
and you're giving them a
little bit of yourself.
Come on, get your feet wet.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
Those are the fatigue cases.
- Come on, Ray, over here.
The ambulance is over here, Ray.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
- Have you seen my family?
I talked to my father yesterday.
He said they'd be here to meet me.
- [Soldier] Come on, Ray, we have to go.
(people chattering)
- [Patient] Oh no! I don't wanna go!
I don't wanna go! (sobbing)
(people chattering)
(horns honking)
- Have a cigarette?
- No thanks, ma'am.
- What happen? You shave
too close this morning?
- Yeah, and I hit a jet bomber.
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
- [Crew Member] A little
more, come on, a little more.
- [Crew] A little more, a little more.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
- Hi.
- Hi.
- I'm sorry, I forgot to
give you some cigarettes.
- Nevermind, it's enough to just look up
and know that somebody gives a damn.
- Well, what happened?
- Well you see, I was riding my bicycle
and this drunk driver went
through this red light-
- Yes, I'm terribly sorry,
that was a stupid thing to say.
It's just that, this is the first time
I've ever done this sort of thing.
- You know something, lady?
This is the first time I've
ever done this sort of thing.
(people chattering)
- Would you like me to come out
to the hospital and see you?
- Sure would, lady.
Kinda nice to talk to a soprano again.
- Oh Colonel Black, I'm Kate Connors,
Red Cross Club director here.
Anything special we can do for your boys?
- Yes, don't call 'em
boys, and leave 'em alone.
(soldier whistles)
(engine rumbles)
- If there are no further
instructions, goodnight.
- [Colonel Black] Goodnight.
(engine rumbles)
(people chattering)
- [Soldier] Too bad.
It happened to me once
too, just the same way.
I'm in Saint Louis, see?
- Hi Joanie.
- Hello Kate.
- [Lee] Hi Kate. Mail.
- There's bacon in there.
Take it out in the kitchen and lock it up.
- [Lee] Bacon? Where'd you get it?
- Shh, quiet.
- Only one thing to do,
gotta find myself a first class sucker.
So, I goes into this
poolroom, kibitzing a game.
After a while,
this guy asks me if I don't
wanna play for a fifth.
I tell him, I don't know
nothing about the game,
so he spots me 10 points.
I get to break, run the table,
you should've seen the
look on that pigeon's face.
- Eddie!
- Kate! What are you doing here?
I heard you was in New Zealand.
- I was for a while, but oh Eddie!
- Oh Kate, it's soo good to see you.
- [Kate] I didn't know
what had become of you.
- Well, I was gonna write to-
- I was almost out of my mind.
- Why don't you let a guy know-
- Oh Eddie.
- Ah Kate it's...
(people chattering)
Oh geez Kate, lay off, will ya?
I ain't no kid no more.
- Oh, keep forgetting. Let me look at you.
Listen, who do you think
came through here last week?
Lefty Henderson.
- No kidding?
Guess who I run into in Pearl?
Scottie. He's a fly-boy.
- Oh, I saw him in New Zealand.
- Kate, I want you to meet
a couple of pals of mine.
This is Paul and Louis.
- Good to have you with us, boys.
- Hi Kate.
- Happy to meet you.
Come on Eddie, shoot.
- Remember the dame I
was telling you about,
around the settlement house
down in my neighborhood?
Well this is her, this is Kate.
Boy, the times she kept
me outta reform school.
(ball clinks)
- [Kate] Ah, didn't used
to miss 'em like that
when you played with me.
- I busted my finger.
This is liable to cost me 100
bucks a week in civilian life.
Maybe I'd better put in
for a pension or something.
Say, this is a real nice club...
(Lee and associate speaking French)
(dishes clinking)
(people chattering)
- Kate, who's the blond job?
- Name's Lee Ashley.
- Who does she remind you of, Kate?
Bergie.
Bergie would've looked just like that
if she'd have grown up.
- You wanna meet her?
- Yeah.
(people chattering)
- Oh Lee, want you to meet
an old friend of mine,
Eddie Wodcik.
- Oh, hello Eddie.
- Hi.
- Kate, Kate, it's Major Haskins.
He thinks he knows where we
can get some coat hangers.
- Okay, I'll take it in my office.
Eddie, have a cup of
coffee, I'll be right back.
I got some old snapshots to show you.
You're gonna get such a kick out of 'em.
(people chattering)
(pool ball clinks)
(people chattering)
- You like cream in your coffee?
- No thanks.
- I don't think I've seen
you in here before, Eddie.
- [Eddie] No, I didn't
get a pass 'til today.
- So you're an old friend of Kate's, hm?
- Yeah, she's known me
since I was a little punk.
- There's the sugar.
- She always kinda watched out after me.
(glass clanks)
She even wanted to adopt me once.
I was telling Kate that my sister, Bergie,
would've looked just like
you if she'd a growed up.
She got burned to death.
- [Lee] Oh I'm sorry, Eddie.
- Just make sandwiches around here?
- Oh no, (chuckles) I play the piano,
dance with the boys, teach a French class,
go out on searching trips.
- Hey Eddie,
Duke says he found a place
where we can get some butterfly
rum for a buck a bottle.
Come on.
- Look, I...
Well, I'd better blow.
Tell Kate I'll see her later.
- All right.
(people chattering)
- Eddie, here's the one
of you and me the time...
Where'd he go?
- He said he had to run,
said he'd see you later.
- Always has to run.
I only wanted to show him these pictures.
Here he is when he was 11 years
old, and here's his sister.
- He told me she was burned to death?
- About a year after that was taken.
Mother and father too,
Tenenmen house fire.
- Oh that's horrible.
- Well my spies tell me
that Lili has some extra coat hangers.
You've never been there, have you?
- No I haven't.
I'd love to go, but I've got
an awful lot of sandwiches-
- Oh, well one of the other
girls will fix it for you.
Get your suit, you can go for a swim.
Beautiful beach.
- All right. Thanks Kate.
(carefree music)
Oh it's magnificent.
- Take away the sea and the
sky and what have you got?
- Does she live here all alone?
- In a manner of speaking, no.
She's a widow, in a manner of speaking.
Lili likes company.
Company.
Lili!
Lili!
(gentle music)
- [Lili] Oh Kate, I'm so glad you came.
- Well, I see we caught
you with your hair down.
- I was just about to become dressed.
- Lili Carere, Mrs. Ashley, Lee.
- Welcome to Noumea, madame.
- Thank you, it's a beautiful
place you have here.
(bird squawks)
- Jacque, (speaks French)
- [Lee] Hi Jacque.
- Well I came down to talk
you out of some coat hangers
and Lee here would like to go
for a swim, if you don't mind.
- Certainly not, you will not swim?
- No, I'll just sit
here and enjoy your view
and get a little of this breeze.
- I'll get you some (speaks French)
Now madame, I'll show you where to change.
- [Lee] Thank you.
(bird squawks)
(carefree music)
(gentle music)
- Afternoon, I'm Colonel Black.
- I'm Kate Connors, we met on
the dock the night you landed.
- Oh yes, I remember.
As I recall, our conversation
was rather short.
- Very short, but very much to the point.
I don't know how to break
this to you, Colonel.
It's going to come as quite a blow,
but the past several days,
a lot of your boys...
I beg your pardon, a lot of your men
have been visiting us at the club.
- I'm sorry to hear that.
Talking to you ladies will spoil 'em.
- Is that right?
I suppose by the time
you get to be a colonel,
you've built up a certain
amount of immunity.
- (chuckles) Lili,
she doesn't exactly remind
me of home and mother.
That's the kind of
female I'm talking about.
During a war, women should be
relegated to two categories,
a skirt a man can make
a pass at when on leave,
or back home, a wife,
a mother or sweetheart.
One or the other.
But let your sweet little
creatures come over here
and try and provide a home away from home,
the men get all mixed up.
My raiders have one purpose
in this war, combat.
And all this sentimental slop
that you good ladies hand out
can only turn those
fighting men into lonely,
complaining boys again.
- I'm curious, Colonel,
were you ever bitten
by a Red Cross worker?
- No, but I must confess,
it sounds interesting.
- She should be back by now.
You undoubtedly have 20/20 vision.
Can you see a girl swimming down there?
- There's someone in a green bathing suit,
sunning herself.
(gentle music)
Hey, she's really something.
- Any peeping Toms in your family?
(gentle music)
- She's twinkling and twitching
like an electric sign in Times Square.
All she lacks down there is a man.
(gentle music)
(bell rings)
(gentle music)
- Well, all I can say is,
we're fortunate that Admiral Halsey
doesn't share your
opinion of the Red Cross.
- Oh not only the Admiral.
Practically every battalion commander
thinks you're the greatest
thing since gun powder.
You should hear my
chaplain go on about you.
You two could have a regular love feast.
I'll introduce you someday.
- I know Chaplain Holmes,
he came through here
on his way out to you.
I've been meaning to ask
you, what's wrong with him?
Ever since he got back,
he keeps to himself.
He's terribly low and depressed.
- His faith got quite a jolt on Rendova.
We'd just taken our main
objective, and Chaplain was green.
First taste of combat.
Got a little overzealous
and started leading the men in prayer.
They knelt in a nice, little, open spot,
in a nice, tight, little line.
There was a Jap in the bush nearby,
still had enough life in him
to roll over and toss a hand grenade.
Four of the men were killed.
Fifth has a broken back.
- [Kate] Oh no.
- Grenade landed so close
that the men's bodies
took the entire blast.
Chaplain was nearly
knocked over by concussion.
- The poor souls.
- Wasn't his fault.
I imagine it's going to make praying
a little difficult for him in the future.
(gentle music)
Who is she?
What's her name, who is she?
- Mrs. Ashley.
- Married, huh?
- Or widowed.
- Army?
- Marine.
- Good taste.
What outfit was her husband with?
- Paratroops, lieutenant, Howard Ashley.
- Guadalcanal?
- Bloody Ridge.
- Ashley.
Ashley.
- Did you know him?
- No I didn't, but I'd
certainly like to know his wife.
(gentle music)
- Oh Kate, I hope I
didn't keep you waiting.
- [Kate] No, how was the water?
- Oh, it was wonderful.
(waves swishing)
- [Colonel Black] Aren't
you going to introduce us?
- Lee Ashley, Colonel Black.
- How do you do?
- Excuse me, I have to change my things.
- Oh don't hurry away, Mrs. Ashley.
Let me get you a drink.
I thought perhaps we could discuss
a Red Cross program for my men.
- Well Colonel, right now-
- He's kidding you, Lee.
Colonel Black doesn't even approve
of having the Red Cross down here.
- Oh but I'm sure that's because I know
too little of your work.
Now down at this club in town,
what do you girls do, exactly?
- I think I'll leave the
pleasure of enlightening you
to some member of the Red
Cross you know better than me.
- Oh but Mrs. Ashley,
I feel I already know
you very well indeed.
- And I assure you,
that's as well as you're ever
likely to know me, Colonel.
(waves swishing)
(engine rumbles)
(waves swishing)
(Jacque squawks)
- Jacque, unless I miss my guess,
just about now, she should
glance over her shoulder
for that last curious look.
(woman chattering quietly)
(engine rattling)
Jacque, I think we've got it made.
(Jacque squawks)
(people chattering)
(Lee speaks French)
(student speaks French)
(Lee speaks French)
- Uh huh.
(pair speaks French)
- Okay, give me the buck.
I told you he'd bat 1000.
- The guy's a regular oo la la.
- Oh, he's been eating a lot
of French toast, that's why.
Wanna go for double or
nothing, the next round?
- [Student] Thanks a lot.
- No no no, (speaks French)
- Thanks a lot.
- No no, (speaks French)
(students speak French)
(pair speaks French)
- [Eddie] What about a game
of checkers before dinner?
- I'm sorry Eddie, I have
to go to the hospital.
And Eddie,
see that they put the chairs
back for me, would you?
- [Student] Why does
it have to be a thing?
(men chattering)
- Okay fellas, let's police up the joint
and put the chairs away, huh?
- What are you doin'? Staying up nights?
You cost me a buck
- Ah, it was worth it.
I'll pay it back.
- Who do you think his coach was?
- Some coach.
(chairs clattering)
(footsteps plodding)
(people chattering)
- How would you like to
have a two week furlough,
a case of whiskey, and that broad?
(hand claps face)
(sailor thuds)
Why you no good...
(sailor thuds)
- Don't you never say
things like that about her.
Anybody talks dirty about her,
I'll tear his tongue out, you understand?
And that goes for the rest of you too.
- Come on, come on, let's
go shoot a game of pool.
- When are you coming back, Lee?
- [Lee] Oh I'll be back later.
I've just gotta run to the hospital.
- Game of chess later?
- Fine.
- Mrs. Ashley, I understand
you're Howard Ashley's widow.
- Yes, yes I am.
- Well I didn't realize
yesterday when we...
I knew Ashley very well.
I was just on my way to the club
to tell you how much I
thought of your husband.
- You knew Howard?
- Areal Marine.
Couldn't we talk about
it over some dinner?
- Um, well no, I'm afraid not.
I'm just going to pick up a quick bite
and I promised one of
the girls at the hospital
that I'd come down-
- Well I'm going to the hospital later
to see some of my men, I'll drive you.
- Well no, I'm afraid-
- I was with your husband
the day he was killed.
(people chattering)
- Yes, I'll come with you.
- Shall we walk? Just across the park.
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
Coffee later.
I'm sorry you didn't have more time.
I know of a charming little
French place up the coast.
- [Lee] Uh, you said you were
with Howard the day he...
- Um, the day or the day
before, I can't quite remember.
- [Lee] Well he was killed
on the 13th of September.
- Oh, then it would be two days before,
on the 11th, at a briefing.
- How did he look?
- Well, you're going to
have to help me a little,
Mrs. Ashley.
There were two junior officers
that I could never keep
straight, Ashley and Barrett.
Now one was dark and-
- Well Howard had light hair,
he was tall, rather slender.
- Oh of course, now I've
got them straight, yes.
Barrett was the short, dark-
- Here, here's a picture of him.
San Diego, just before he sailed.
- Oh yes, I remember him well.
Handsome fellow, sensitive,
with an almost delicate face.
(people chattering)
- Yes.
There was nothing coarse about him.
I'm sorry, I didn't mean it that way.
- Well, but I think it's true.
Your husband and I were
probably as different
as two humans could be.
Cigarette?
- Oh yes, thank you.
(people chattering)
- My pleasures are physical,
good food, good fight.
Well, I'm sure that his gratification
came from, oh, good painting, good music.
(people chattering)
I was just venturing the opinion
that your husband enjoyed
good painting and good music.
- [Lee] Yes, we both did.
- Well now that surprises me.
You don't impress me as the
museum and concert hall type.
He did.
The men used to call him, "The Poet."
- Well that was cruel.
- (chuckles) Why? They
call me "The Beast."
It was nothing derogatory about it.
As a matter of fact, we all
found his shyness and reticence
a charming and pleasant relief.
- He was gentle and kind.
- You're so right.
You know, I often wondered why
he picked the Marine Corps.
I mean, deliberately he was seeking
the roughest possible duty.
You must have wondered about that too.
- Yes, yes I did.
- I mean, with his special
capabilities, his education-
- After all, he was an architect.
My father and I tried to convince him
to go into the engineers-
- Naturally, they needed
architects desperately.
- Well that's what we told
him. So did his family.
My father even spoke to
somebody in the Pentagon,
but before he could...
Well, Howard just came home one day
and said it was the Marines.
- I suppose, like many reserves,
he was trying to prove something.
Tell me, Mrs. Ashley,
why are you so anxious
to learn the details of that last day?
- Well Howard and I grew up together.
Except for a few school years,
we never knew what it was to be apart.
When you've spent so much
of your life together,
you've got to share that
moment of death too.
How did he die?
Was it merciful and quick?
Did he suffer?
That's why I'm out here.
And that's why I'm sitting
across the table from you now,
Colonel.
And for no other reason.
- What you really wanna
find out, Mrs. Ashley is
did he fight or did he run.
- Colonel Black, don't
you think that that's-
- Now don't be defensive about it.
After all, most soldiers wonder
about that very same thing
when they face the first crucial test.
It's only natural that
a wife whose husband
was meek and gentle have
that in the back of her mind.
That horrible sickening panic
that comes while waiting for combat
is not so much from the fear of death,
as it is the fear of
proving inadequate as a man
in front of men.
(people chattering)
Well if they don't treat
you right, let me know.
You deserve the best.
- Oh, they're treating me fine, sir.
- I'll keep in touch.
(people chattering)
How are you doing, Peckenpaw?
- Just swell, sir.
- Good evening, Colonel.
- Evening, Chaplain.
Doctors tell me you'll be
up and around in no time.
- I hope so, sir.
Colonel,
sorry I fouled it up.
- Be seeing you.
- Goodbye, sir.
(people chattering)
(door clatters)
- Colonel Black.
I uh,
I heard this afternoon that you busted
Sergeant Peckenpaw to Corporal.
- That's right.
- It wasn't his fault, it was mine.
- You're a praying man, Chaplain.
Peckenpaw's a fighting Marine.
It was his responsibility
and he should've known better
than to let the men pray with you,
lined up like canned goods on a shelf.
I wanna make sure this
never happens again.
- Don't you think a fractured
spine is reminder enough?
- For him, yes.
Pain is an excellent reminder,
but only for the person suffering from it.
This mistake was costly and inexcusable,
and I want to impress every
other sergeant with that fact.
I found the dishonor of losing a stripe
most effective for that purpose.
Is that all?
- No it's not.
Colonel, you give no
consideration whatsoever
to the spiritual life of a man.
You're sole concern seems
to be to make this battalion
the most vicious, brutal
fighting force in the Pacific.
- Because they're facing a
fanatical, ruthless enemy,
just as well-equipped and just
as well trained as we are.
- But their ruthlessness is
not confined to the enemy.
They're becoming cruel and
treacherous with each other.
They need more than flame throwers
and pride in their own superiority.
Now I am here to help
them meet that other need,
if you'd only let me.
- Wait a minute, wait a minute,
you seem to believe that it's
your job to change these men.
You're not running a mission
in the Bowery, Chaplain,
where it's a good days work
to pour a couple of jiggers
worth of religion down the throat
of some whiskey-soaked bum!
Whatever you tell these men
has to make them stronger, not weaker.
- Real strength is not brutality, sir,
it's an inner spiritual belief that-
- Ah, don't fill them with platitudes,
and religious superstitions.
I want my men to be superstitious
about only one thing,
when they com face to face
with a Jap in the bush,
I want them to consider it very bad luck
not to kill him first.
And I don't want any of
this, "Love thine enemy."
If you must quote from
the Bible, go to Samuel.
"I have pursued mine
enemies and destroyed them
and did not turn back
until I had consumed them."
You are in the middle of a war
and these men are fighting it.
- But they're men, not animals.
They've got souls.
- Those we left in San Diego.
- Don't be so sure.
You might discover that even
you brought yours along.
One day, Colonel, you will
destroy once too often.
And you'll find your own private Hell.
- In the meantime, I
think that you'll discover
that prayer is much more
likely to be answered
if the men are spread out and under cover.
(lighter clicks)
(footsteps shuffle)
(door clatters)
Oh Mrs. Ashley.
You didn't let me finish
at the dinner table.
I was about to say that
your husband didn't run.
On Bloody Ridge, nobody ran.
So you and the children can rest assured
that he died a hero.
- We had no
no children.
- Oh I didn't realize.
I could probably lay my
hands on an action report
of Bloody Ridge and-
- That won't be necessary.
- Well I thought we might talk about it
a little more calmly.
Perhaps on Sunday, that's
your day off isn't it?
- Yes.
- Good,
I'll pick you up a little before noon.
We can take a drive in the country,
have lunch at that
French place I spoke of.
- I have other plans.
- Well I'll drop by just in
case you change your mind.
(gentle music)
(inspirational music)
(bell ringing)
(gentle music)
You haven't asked, I did see
that action report I spoke of.
I think you should know that your husband
acquitted himself admirably.
He died like a regular Marine.
That's the greatest praise I can give him.
- Well there are some characteristics
of certain regular Marines
I'd like to think my
husband failed to acquire.
- Namely?
- An arrogance, disregard
for the feelings of others,
contempt for weakness, and
almost revolting pride.
- But not in himself.
A pride in the Corps, yes,
a pride that gives him an
inner well of strength,
something that he can dip
into when the pinch comes.
I'm sure it was that pride
that sustained your husband.
- You may be right.
His last few letters,
they were so different from the others.
Fury and rage in every stroke of the pen.
What is it that the
Marine Corps does to men
that takes them from us and
makes them a breed apart?
- What took men off to the Crusades?
What impels men to conquer mountain peaks?
Physical challenge of danger,
most fascinating motive in life.
- And I suppose once you've found it,
you can't be quite the same, ever again.
- And to a lesser degree,
I think that danger motivates some women
in their relationship with some men,
like leaning over a precipice.
They wanna see just how far
they can lean without falling.
Sometimes a sentimental
loyalty to the past
pulls 'em back just in time
and spoils all the fun.
- Yes, but that's the point!
I'm shutting out the past
and Howard and decency
and everything I've ever stood for.
- You're not in love with him, are you?
- Well not the way I loved Howard.
This is animal, it's nothing more.
It's just violent and cheap.
- Well at least you
recognize it for what it is.
- Yes, and I despise myself for it,
but there's nothing I can do, Kate,
I'm rolling down a hill
and I can't stop myself.
- He's just the kind to
be waiting at the bottom.
- Oh he's hard and cruel.
There's nothing tender
or gentle about him.
He never asks me to do
anything, he tells me.
Why do I stand for it?
I've never been treated
this way before in my life.
- That's why it's so fascinating.
- Oh it isn't, it's degrading.
- It's part of the fascination.
- His runner brought
this a little while ago.
It says he's taking me to dinner tonight
aboard some ship in the harbor.
Not, "Do you care to go,"
just "lI am taking you."
- Would you like to be transferred
to the club at Tontulu?
Maybe if you were to get away for a while-
- No Kate, no.
Well I can't just run away from him.
I've got to be strong enough...
(door clatters)
(gentle music)
(child speaks foreign language)
(horn honks)
(gentle music)
(pen rattles)
(gentle music)
(dramatic music)
(inspirational music)
(motor rattling)
(gentle music)
(bell rings)
(motor rattles)
(people chattering)
- [Attendant] I'm sorry to
keep you standing out there,
lady, it'll just be a minute.
- Lee.
- Why Hutch.
- What in the world
are you doing out here?
- Well I'm with the Red Cross.
I thought you were on
duty in the Atlantic.
- Oh I transferred last month.
Well for Pete's sake, the last time I...
Oh Lee, I was terribly
sorry to hear about Howard.
- Colonel Black, Lieutenant Hutchins.
- How do you do, sir.
Well this is wonderful.
Wait'll May hears about this.
- Oh how is May?
- Oh she's fine.
She's taking the kids down to her parents
in Akan for the winter.
You remember we had the hunt down there.
Let's see, we were down there a week.
- Oh, how will I ever forget that weekend?
And Gene and Charlie were there too.
You remember that?
- Yeah, and Peggy.
- No two ways about it,
and I told George that
last time I saw him.
- It's good to see you, Colin.
- Thanks Gene.
When you're on the beach, look me up.
- 1 will.
Oh Hutch, I'll be with the skipper.
Will you see that the Colonel
gets the gig when he wants it?
- Right.
- And you'll never guess who she married.
Chiply Hors.
- No.
- Mmhmm.
- The one who owns Romney Bay?
- That's right, well they
were both down in Charleston
for the Saint Cecilia and
it just suddenly happened.
- Say, whatever happened
to that little bay
gelding you were training?
- Oh, I sold him to the Finleys.
- Oh he was a beaut.
- Wasn't he sweet?
- [Hutch] Mm.
You know, if this thing ever ends,
I might take Bright Folly to England.
- [Lee] Grand National, oh Hutch.
- [Hutch] I think he might make it.
- [Lee] Mm.
- [Hutch] (laughs) You know,
I miss the horses more than anything.
- [Lee] Oh well I'm sure
May would like that.
- [Hutch] Oh she understands.
- You should see the
horses we have out here.
- Say, do they have four legs?
- Just about.
- Look, I'm off on Sunday.
Why don't we ride a
little in the afternoon-
- Mrs. Ashley is going
to be with me on Sunday.
(gentle dramatic music)
- Gee, I've gotta get
ready for the 8:00 report.
It's been grand seeing you, Lee.
Goodnight, Colonel, nice to have met you.
Just let me know when you want
the gig to take you ashore.
- Right now.
- Yes sir.
(gentle dramatic music)
(engine rumbling)
(brakes squeak)
(gentle dramatic music)
(waves swishing)
- What do you know about me?
- [Lee] Well what do you mean?
- I mean, after listening to
that idiotic friend of yours,
got a pretty good idea of
what your life has been.
Now just exactly what
do you know about me?
- Well I,
I know that your men are convinced
you're some sort of god in uniform.
Some of the nurses down at the hospital
think you're the most glamorous
thing that ever walked.
And some people say you're part Indian.
- Hm, that always interests them.
I'll never know why.
But it's true.
My mother was a halfbreed, Blackfoot.
My old man worked in a mine
in a little town in Montana.
I was born there.
We lived in a tar paper shack
that looked like a
pigpen most of the time.
- Why are you telling me these things?
- Because I want you to know.
You've seen these little native
kids that beg on the street.
Hey fella Mac, give me a nickel.
I was like that.
Trains used to make a 10 minute stop
in the town where we lived.
My mother used to send
me down to the station
to beg from the passengers.
She knew they couldn't resist
the hungry looking little Redskin.
Hated every nickel I got.
I hated the people that tossed them at me.
(waves swishing)
Occasionally there'd
be a little blond girl,
all pink and starched,
the way you once looked, I'm sure.
Parents used to say, "Just
drop the money, dear.
Don't get too close to him, he's dirty."
When I was old enough,
I ran away from home and
joined the Marine Corps.
They fed me, clothed me, and trained me.
Nobody ever worked or
studied harder than I did.
I was an enlisted Marine for 12 years.
When they commissioned me,
I found out that I still had
that odor of tarpaper shack.
I had a lot more to learn,
what fork to use at dinner parties,
how to make polite talk to
somebody's fat slob of a wife,
to take the finger bowl and the
doily off the dessert plate.
Maybe I didn't learn
those things too well.
Maybe in a drawing room,
your friend, Hutch,
feels superior to me, even contemptuous.
But out here, or anywhere
during time of war,
where it really counts,
I'll make him look like a puny schoolboy.
- So you joined the Marines
too, to prove something.
(waves swishing)
- I thought I'd gotten over it.
You see this?
The average man is scared stiff
of being different from the next fellow.
I was different to start with.
Only thing to do was to
accentuate that difference.
I started carrying this stick
as a trademark of my arrogance.
- [Lee] Come and sit down.
(gentle music)
- Well,
got a pretty good line on me now.
I guess I'm not like the
gentle people you've known.
Does it make any difference?
- Of course it doesn't. You know that.
- That's what I told myself,
but you had me a little snowed.
There's a remoteness about you,
a kind of untouchable quality.
I've never known anyone like you.
- And I have never known anyone like you.
(gentle music)
- Maybe that's why we're both here.
We'll be pulling out shortly.
- Oh no.
- Not combat.
Tactical maneuvers with the taskforce.
Be back in a couple of months.
Leaving you is gonna be an awful beating.
- Two months?
- Seen a lot of each other lately.
I've kept my distance like
I've never kept it before.
(gentle music)
But I don't intend to continue.
(gentle music)
You wanna make sure that
it's you and only you.
Is that it?
(gentle music)
Make any difference if
I ask you to marry me?
(joyful music)
(people chattering)
(engine rattling)
(people chattering)
- Morley, Luigi F., Sergeant.
(engine rattles)
(people chattering)
Peckenpaw, Chester H., Corporal.
(people chattering)
Hexon, John B., Private First Class.
(inspirational music)
(explosion blasts)
(inspirational music)
(pair laughs)
(inspirational music)
(rain pattering)
(gentle dramatic music)
(people chattering)
(gentle music)
(maid speaks French)
- We came for dinner, but
(chuckles) we've got to change.
Is there any chance of
getting some dry clothes?
(speaks French)
- Uh, (speaks French)
(maid speaks French)
(footsteps plod)
(gentle music)
(Colin knocks at the door)
- [Colonel Black] It's me.
- Come in.
(door clatters)
(Lee laughs)
Oh no. (chuckles)
Oh I don't believe it.
- I thought I looked rather handsome.
- (laughs) Tell me, when does
the boat arrive at Le Havre?
- And may I ask, who designed that?
- Oh, it's just a little
something mama ran up to the door
when she was in an ugly mood.
- I went out to the
Jeep and got the flask.
Keep you from catching cold.
- You know, I've always heard
that before a woman considers
marrying a man in uniform,
she should see him first
in civilian clothes.
Usually a big disappointment.
Not to me.
Now I'm doubly sure, darling.
- The acid test of a man's
love is to see the woman
the way she's going to
look in the mornings.
I must say, you're beyond belief.
Even in that wrapper.
- Oh darling, not wrapper,
that's a horrible word.
Housecoat, lounging robe, or
peignoir, but never wrapper.
- [Colonel Black] Trying
to change me already, huh?
(gentle music)
- Why you vain, ostentatious, C-B, C-B.
Don't you think once would
have been sufficient?
- It was given to me by an admirer
who found me twice as
intoxicating as others.
- I hate her.
What was she like?
Tell me about her.
- You really want me to?
- Yes.
No.
Yes.
- If I do you will become
female petty and angry and
this moment will be lost.
- Yes, then don't.
I finally feel alive.
And sort of recklessly happy.
I want to stay that way.
- Good.
I think an excellent rule would be
that neither of us bring up the past.
Let's say, this is the
first time for both of us.
(gentle music)
- Woo. (exhales)
(gentle music)
- I feel the same way,
although it's not from the drink.
(gentle music)
Something breathless about you.
Every time I look at you,
it's like hearing music,
or seeing the ocean for the first time.
- Why, I keep thinking about tomorrow.
(gentle music)
- Don't.
When we say goodbye on that pier,
we're going to have to be circumspect,
normal and distant.
When we nod politely, remember,
I'm aching to hold you
just like this.
(gentle music)
- Oh Colin.
(inspirational music)
(dramatic music)
(playful music)
- You want something?
- No, just browsing.
(engines rumbling)
Course, it's none of my business,
but when's the last time
you had a night's sleep?
- I'm all right, Kate.
- Oh yeah, you're in great shape,
working night and day at the hospital,
helping us at the club,
doing the work of a hack.
What are you trying to prove?
Why don't you turn yourself
in? You belong in sickbay.
- It's just where he'd like me to be.
No Kate, I'm gonna get on
that ship if I have to crawl.
- Okay, okay, but you'll find
it's not a very pleasant way to travel.
- [Crew Member] Hey Kate.
Junior forgot a letter again.
(engines rumbling)
- Kate, would you mail this for me?
I didn't get a chance to.
- Sure kid.
- What have you got in
that scrounge bag, Kate?
- Ah, you're a wiseguy, huh?
- Hey Kate, you got any
boon dockers in there?
- I wouldn't be a bit surprised.
- I hear the Navy lost an
aircraft carrier, Kate.
Come on, take it outta there, will ya?
- Ah, your mother wears zombie shoes.
Okay, I tended to the last one out here.
- Here, I'll take those.
(cups clink)
- Hey Kate, you got a but?
- You're talkin' about
cigarette? I guess so.
- Always cigarettes. I smoke cigars.
Havanas, Kate, where'd you get 'em?
- A general had twins.
Hey Eddie, be careful, you promise?
- Oh stop worrying, will you, Kate?
It's only maneuvers.
- I know it's only
maneuvers, but be careful.
If anything was to happen to you-
- Kate, if you start crying,
so help me, I'm gonna kick
you right in the shins.
- Oh, you try it and I'll
tell the kids about the time
you played little buttercup
in the school play.
- Now wait a minute-
- Oh, they'd love to hear about that one.
- But you wouldn't do that, would you?
- I'd yell it from the boat deck
if you get fresh with
me, little buttercup.
- All right, why don't you guys move on?
- You and your big maneuvers, ya...
Bye Eddie.
- So long, Louis.
(cups clink)
- [Eddie] Take 'em home.
Well so long, blond job.
- So long, Eddie.
- Oh say, uh, while I'm gone,
if any guy gets fresh with you,
you just remember who he
is and when I get back,
I'll take care of it, okay?
- Thanks, Eddie.
Good luck.
- [Officer] Come on, move it up, Wodcik,
here comes the old man.
(footsteps plodding)
(people chattering)
- Goodbye Colonel.
- So long, Red Cross.
(footsteps plod)
- [Soldier] So long, Chaplain,
see you when you get back.
- [Soldier] Goodbye, Chaplain.
- Coming, Chaplain?
(engine rumbles)
(tools clanking)
- Hey, somebody get a corpsman.
- See if there's a corpsman
in the aid station.
- I think he's had it.
Put him in the hospital.
- Aye aye, sir.
(footsteps patter)
(people chattering)
- [Kate] Get a stretcher
from the aid station.
I told him-
- Give him some air.
- [Crew Member] Gang way, gang way.
(people chattering)
(foghorn honks)
(playful jazzy music)
(hands clapping)
(people chattering)
- [Joan] Hey Pat, look what I've got.
- [Pat] Where'd you get that?
- I scrounged it.
(Pat laughs)
(choir singing carols)
Evie, prepare for (unintelligible)
- Wonderful Joan, thanks.
Noel, noel
Noel, noel
- Helen, can you use this?
- Oh Joanie, I sure can,
put it right over there.
- Oh the starfish of Bethlehem.
- It looks good, doesn't it?
- Great.
Of Israel
- Lee, Lee!
- I'll be right with you, Kate.
- Kate, how do you spell Caledonia?
- You can't say where you
are, that's a military secret.
- How do you spell secret?
- S-E-C-R-E-T.
Forever in Israel
Oh my feet are killing me.
- Oh sorry.
- Jeanette phoned and the
hospital girls are swamped.
They need help with the Christmas letters.
So when you get through with the trees,
will you and Helen go out and help?
- Yes, of course.
- Oh here's something
that might interest you.
This came.
That was so new
Noel, noel
APO 709 is Guadalcanal.
Born is the king-
- Kate, I don't think you'd
better figure on my going along.
- But you've been chomping
at the bit for months.
- Yes I know, but the scuttlebutt is
that the fifths will get back
either tomorrow or the next day.
- Tomorrow I think.
- Colonel Black and I
are going to be married.
- 1 didn't know it had gone that far.
- Oh I'm terribly in love with him, Kate.
- But if you get married now,
I'm gonna have to ship you right home.
- Yes, I know.
- You know it's against regulations
for husband and wife to be
in the same theater of war.
If I were you, I'd wait.
- No you wouldn't, Kate.
We can't wait.
(people chattering)
- You know I'd give anything to be with
you and the kids on Christmas Eve.
The reason I am not writing this myself
is because I sprained my
wrist, playing baseball,
and I never was much of a left hander.
Uh.
I can't tell you where I've been,
but as usual,
our outfit made monkeys
out of the rest of them.
Um,
I know I've talked a
lot about Colonel Black-
- Are you with the Fifth Raiders?
- That's right.
- I didn't know they
were going into combat.
- We didn't. I got this on maneuvers.
They flew me back.
Don't tell anybody, they're
treating me like a hero,
but you know what hit me?
- No.
- A crate full of Spam.
Fell out of a cargo net.
Where was I?
- I know I've talked a lot
about Colonel Black, but...
- But this time, the crazy
Indian outdid even himself.
- Hm. (chuckles)
- You know Black?
- I've met him.
- Incidentally, the
Colonel's been swell to me,
so I'd like you to do me a favor.
The next time you drive over to Washington
to see your mother,
I wish you'd drop in on Black's wife
and pay your respects.
Her name is Clara.
Although Black doesn't
talk much about her...
(clipboard clatters)
(dramatic music)
(door clatters)
(somber music)
(Lee begins to cry)
(somber music)
(birds chirping)
- [Colleague] When ]
came out of the hospital,
I looked around for Lee, but she'd gone.
With the Jeep. I had to bum a ride back.
- [Colleague] You had dinner
with her, didn't you, Kate?
- [Kate] Right afterwards,
I saw her on the street.
She walked right by me like
she was walking in her sleep.
- [Colleague] Shh, quiet.
Here she comes.
(clock ticking)
- [Colleague] Well what was he?
Air Force, Army, Navy, Marine?
- Come clean girl, where have you been?
- Put out that light.
Anybody who doesn't come in on time
can get undressed in the dark.
(clock ticking)
- Thanks Kate.
(clock ticking)
- Come on, Sam.
(cheerful Christmas music)
(dog barks)
(cheerful Christmas music)
(people chattering)
(cheerful music)
- There you are, honey.
- Oh ho ho ho ho ho ho,
a rockin' out Christmas to you, son.
Kate, y'all got something
for this little fella?
- Bet we have.
- I guess he's no more than
fellow high to a possum.
There you are son, oh
ho ho ho ho ho ho ho.
(people chattering)
- Watch your step.
(phone rings)
- [Santa] We're gonna find something
for this nice little girl-
- I'll get it, Kate.
- [Santa] Oh ho ho ho ho ho ho ho.
(phone ringing)
(cheerful Christmas music)
- (sighs) Red Cross Service Club.
(people chattering)
- Merry Christmas.
We got in late last
night. How have you been?
Yes?
I won't be able to get off for a while.
I've got to check in to
Regimental Headquarters.
And I've got some paperwork
to clean up first.
Suppose I pick you up around 4:00?
- Yes, I'll be ready, about 4:00.
(engine rumbling)
(brakes squeak)
(waves swishing)
- I forgot the flask.
(waves swishing)
(can clinks)
(can rattling)
(waves swishing)
Look at this place.
(can clinks)
Certainly seemed different that night.
- Daylight has a habit of revealing things
as they actually are.
- What'd you wanna come back here for?
- I thought it would be appropriate.
- Well, let's have a quick
drink and get out of here.
I heard of a new French restaurant,
about 30 miles up the coast.
(glass crashes)
- You shouldn't be so violent about it.
They say that people who
make a fetish of cleanliness
are very often inwardly dirty.
So a sort of compensation.
(waves swishing)
- What's the matter with you?
Ever since I picked you up,
you've been snapping at me.
(waves swishing)
Here, drink this, you'll feel better.
(waves swishing)
- How's Clara?
(waves swishing)
(Colin sighs)
- I'm glad you found out.
I knew exactly what I was
doing, but I couldn't stop it.
- When did you intend to tell me?
- Many times, when I was alone.
But every time I faced you,
I couldn't force myself to say it.
I knew if I had, I would've lost you.
I couldn't let that happen,
no matter what the price.
- Even if I had to pay it.
- That's right.
I think it's the only cowardly thing
I've ever done in my life.
- How long have you been married?
- Two months.
The wedding took place 10 years ago,
but I'd say we've been
married about two months.
- [Lee] You're not in love with her?
- No, that died a pretty quick death.
She wanted me to leave the Marine Corps.
That was like asking
me to cut off my arms.
So when I did a hitch in Central America,
she stayed behind in San Diego.
Lot of bars in San Diego.
She got to know every one of them.
She's been in a hospital in
Washington for over a year now.
Nobody seems to know what keeps her alive.
- Well why didn't you tell me this before?
- You'd have felt sorry for me.
I didn't want sympathy, I wanted you.
- Yes, but only for an
hour or so, now and then.
- Maybe in the beginning,
but not afterwards.
I wanted to get a divorce,
but I couldn't do that to Clara.
Perhaps if I had quit
the Corps as she wanted,
she wouldn't be where she is now.
- I must say, your sense of loyalty
is a little deeper than
your sense of decency.
- During a war, it's amazing
what a man will resort to
to satisfy a desire of the moment.
I suppose it's 'cause
he's not quite certain
of how many moments he has left.
- I'm sure there were many men
who took decency with
them, even to the grave.
- I suppose.
- Oh.
- Now look, it's not-
- Oh don't touch me.
(waves swishing)
- Yes, I'm glad you found out.
This thing had gone on any longer,
we might really have been
put through the ringer.
You'll get over it.
I know at the moment it seems
shocking and tragic but,
believe me, in a few years,
you'll look back and laugh at it.
Take my advice-
- And what advice to you have
for your son or daughter?
I'm sorry I can't tell you
which it'll be at the moment.
What shall I say to him or her?
You'll get over it, dear.
You were only the desire of a moment,
don't take it seriously, your
father says to laugh about it.
- [Colonel Black] Why didn't you tell me?
- Because I have some pride
left, not much, but some.
I didn't want your sympathy
any more than you wanted mine.
And I wanted to be a wife to you
and not a drunken joke
around the officer's club
when you're all sitting around
boasting of your conquests.
And I'm not going to be that funny story
about the little blond in Noumea.
You're not gonna have
that chance, you dirty...
(hand claps face)
Oh, let me go! I want to die!
Let me go! Get away from me!
(screams)
(dramatic music)
- Lee.
Lee.
Lee, Lee.
(somber music)
- Come on, just one hand, Dottie.
- Oh get lost, will ya? I'm busy.
- Come on, just one hand.
Is it gonna hurt you to play one hand?
- The doctor says she'll be all right.
She lost the child.
(somber music)
(door rattles)
(somber music)
Well Bob, what do I tell her?
- Have to send her home.
- You do, she'll never get over it.
Staying here with us and
working things out gradually,
that's the only chance she's got.
- But there's nothing we
can do about it, Kate.
It's regulations, and you know that.
- I joined the Red Cross because
they were in the business of
helping people in trouble.
This girl has loved two men in her life,
one of them's dead and the
other one almost destroyed her.
That's trouble, Bob, real trouble.
(somber music)
- All right Kate, we'll find someone.
(somber music)
- And three threes.
(claps hands) Come on, one
more game will get you even.
- I told you just one
hand, play solitaire.
- [Patient] It'll only take a second.
- Look, I've gotta take
these reports over to x-ray.
- Hey, I've been all over
the joint. Is this 72C?
- Eddie, how are ya?
- Hi, how you doing? Is this 72C?
- Yeah, who do you wanna see?
- Mrs. Lee Ashley.
- No visitors now.
- I was down at the Red Cross.
They said she an
accident. Is she hurt bad?
- Eddie,
wasn't no accident.
- No? What's wrong with her?
- I was sitting over here...
(chair creaks)
(phone rings)
- [Miss Mathews] Hello,
72C, Miss Mathews speaking.
No he's not here, sir.
I have no idea, sir.
Well I could look it up for you.
No trouble, the chart's right here.
(dramatic music)
(gentle dramatic music)
(gentle dramatic music continues)
(Eddie grunts)
- Tell me what you did to her!
- Sentry, sentry!
(insects singing)
Lock him up.
- Aye aye sir.
Come on, let's go.
(insects singing)
(gentle dramatic music)
(door clatters)
(gentle dramatic music)
- Colonel, she won't see you.
(gentle dramatic music)
- Eddie Wodcik's a friend
of yours, isn't he?
Just now, when I was leaving Canopy,
tried to kill me.
- What are you gonna do to him?
- It's hard to punish
a man for being right.
(gentle somber music)
(insects singing)
(mirror crashes)
(insects singing)
- Hello, may I come in, sir?
- Yes.
- We've got Wodcik locked up, but uh,
what are you charging him with, sir?
(insects singing)
- Failure to salute an officer,
I'll give him two days restriction.
- Yes sir. Goodnight, sir.
(people chattering)
- It's kind of you Eddie, but-
- No, just like the Chaplain told me,
I was lookin' at you like you
was a statue or something.
Anything that walks and talks and eats
is bound to make a mistake, he said.
- And when I make a mistake,
it's a whopper. (chuckles)
I'm sorry I wasn't worthy
of your trust in me, Eddie.
Goodbye.
Good luck.
- In case you were wondering,
nobody but the Chaplain and the Colonel
know why I jumped him that night.
I didn't tell nobody
else and I never will.
- Thanks Eddie.
Bye.
(people chattering)
(engine rumbling)
- Well what's the matter with you?
- I'll tell you what's the matter with me,
I've been waiting in line for five minutes
to say goodbye to you.
- Too bad, too bad.
All right, if you wanna kiss me,
go ahead and get it over with.
- Big deal. Well no thank you.
I can get along without it.
- It's what you've been
hanging around for, ain't it?
Goodbye, Kate.
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
(people chattering)
- Yeah, let's go!
(men whistle)
(men bantering)
- Yeah, let's go fellas!
- All right men. Woo hoo!
(people chattering)
- Now wait a minute, I wanted
to get your (unintelligible)
- Oh no!
- Oh no!
- Nevermind.
- Oh!
- This is for you, lady,
compliments of Fifth Raider Battalion.
Good luck.
(people chattering)
Kate, this is for you, compliments
Fifth Raider Battalion.
- (laughs) Just what I
needed. Oh thank you.
You're a doll.
- All hands, let's go!
(men shout)
(engine rattles)
(brakes squeak)
- [Officer] Company, 10 hut!
Hand salute!
(enthusiastic band music)
- If that sergeant turns up
with the generator for the donut machine,
remember it's mine.
- I'll get it on a ATC plane.
Don't worry.
- Goodbye.
- Goodbye ladies.
- Goodbye.
- I know we've said our goodbyes,
but the Colonel just received word,
we're going back into
combat in a few days.
- Good luck to you, Chaplain.
- It won't be an easy campaign.
The Colonel will need
all the physical strength
and mental peace he can find.
He doesn't know I've come out here, Lee.
I thought perhaps, through me,
you could give him something
that might bring him comfort
and maybe help us to get through.
- What have you in mind? A
flask with my initials on it?
- Your forgiveness.
- Oh no.
He wants me to be his conscience
and give him absolution,
wipe the slate clean for him.
Oh no, Chaplain. (chuckles)
- [Chaplain] You hate him, don't you?
- No, I don't hate him.
He was trained to destroy
and he does it magnificently,
and oh so completely.
He's left me with nothing,
not even the desire to hate or forgive.
- Lee, I've been with him quite
a bit these last six weeks.
He's a different person.
The arrogance, the cruelty is gone
because of what he did to you.
Then when his wife died, naturally-
- Yes, I'm terribly sorry. I
only heard about it yesterday.
- He's been expecting it, of course,
but still, it was a deep hurt.
He felt responsible in a way.
Now he feels that
everything he touches dies.
He needs your help, Lee.
- He'll have to find his
forgiveness somewhere else.
It'll never come from me.
- It must be wonderful to feel
that one has lived such a perfect life
that forgiveness has never been necessary.
(rain hissing)
(thunder crashes)
(gentle music)
- You just put the wire through here.
I've already made two.
- Hey Kate, this is the
only bow we could find.
Is it too big?
- No.
We'll only need a very
large cupid, that's all.
Maybe you'd like to play the part.
Where's Lee?
- She's in the kitchen.
(gentle piano music)
(rain hissing)
- I've been looking for you.
After your birthday party,
I wrote to your folks.
I get a letter back today.
They're worried sick.
They haven't heard from
you in three months.
- I know Kate, but what's there to say?
- Well since it's to
your mother and father,
I suggest you start, "Dear Folks."
Now come over to this desk and sit down
and start writing and you're
not going to leave here
until it's finished.
Oh Lee, these came in the mail,
forwarded from Headquarters.
Requests asking us to put
flowers on some graves.
Names are in the letters,
so when it stops raining-
- Kate, I hate to keep asking
to beg off on so many things,
but I just can't.
- Do you mean you haven't
been to the cemetery
since we got here?
- No.
I'v
e,
look, can't you just see me,
standing beside his grave now?
- What's wrong with you?
- Nothing, I...
Oh, I don't know. I just
don't feel very well.
Maybe I'm getting a fever
or something. I don't know.
- You've been drinking.
(distant piano music)
(rain pattering)
I'm shipping you home.
- No!
Don't, please Kate, no
I couldn't go back now.
I couldn't face his
parents, or mine like this.
Please, please Kate. (crying)
(distant piano music)
(rain pattering)
- All right.
If this ever happens
again, you're on your way.
(footsteps patter)
Now drink this, get some sleep,
and go on down to the cemetery.
- Don't ask me to do it, Kate!
Can't you see what it
means to me? (crying)
- I'm getting nearsighted,
seeing what things mean to you.
If you only knew that you're lucky,
you can have other children.
A lot of woman can't and
some women never could.
So stop this self-centered,
self-pity and go,
go and change your clothes, or
pack them, one or the other.
And I don't care which.
(footsteps patter)
(Lee sobs)
(birds chirping)
(engine rumbles)
(birds chirping)
- Just the two of 'em huh?
- Yeah.
(birds chirping)
No, that's right, there is another.
Lieutenant Howard Ashley.
- [Guard] Ashley.
(paper rustles)
- First Parachute Battalion.
- Oh they're all on the side over there.
Look, rather than give you a number,
you go talk to useless. (laughs)
That's what we call him,
his name is Eustace.
Eh, there he is out there, see him?
He was with the First Chutes.
Patient at the hospital still.
Nice guy though. Comes here
every day, pulls the weeds.
He'll show you.
- Thanks.
May 1?
- Why not?
You people supply 'em. Help yourself.
(birds chirping)
- Thank you.
(birds chirping)
- Hello.
Funny day, isn't it?
Sun popping in and out.
- [Lee] The guard said
you were with the First
Parachute Battalion,
that you could point out a grave for me.
Lieutenant Howard Ashley.
- The Skipper? Sure,
he's down here a ways.
I was his runner.
Great guy.
You know, this is all my
outfit in through here.
Say, I hear you fixed up
a nice club down there.
I haven't been in yet, but I'd like to.
- Oh please do, we'd love to have you.
- I'm glad you girls got here.
It's awful good just to yak with a female.
(laughs) I'll probably talk your arm off.
And it's nice to have someone
decorating the graves now and then.
Well what do people do, just
write in and ask you to do it?
- Yes, that's right.
- You answer the letters, don't you?
- Oh yes.
- That's good.
This is Fuller. He was my buddy.
And that's Mancini.
This is Goldberg. They
didn't like each other much.
They're getting along fine now.
You know, I got more friends
here than anyplace else.
They're all wondering why they're there,
I keep wondering why I'm here.
Only a handful of us got out.
- How was it?
- Rough.
- Well that's all any of you say.
Rough, what does that mean?
- Well lady, when things
are too rugged for words,
that's rough.
- How did Lieutenant Ashley die?
- Like an amateur.
Squirming and squealing.
You know, they teach you
how to throw a grenade
and fire a mortar, but nobody
ever teaches you how to die.
I guess 'cause that's the
one thing in this world
there are no professionals at.
You know, nobody comes back
to tell you how to do it.
You're on your own.
When it's time for those last few gasps,
everybody's an amateur.
Here's the Skipper.
(birds chirping)
Who are the flowers from?
- His wife.
- Oh, the blood sucker.
When you answer her letter,
tell her she's just great,
a wonderful and courageous woman.
She'll like that, but
just between you and me,
she's a real blood sucker.
He deserved a lot better.
- What makes you say that?
- [Eustace] Well you know the kind,
she threw her arms around him
at the alter and never let go.
Just squeezed and squeezed
until there wasn't much left of him.
- He told you that?
- (laughs) No, the Skipper?
He never had a bad word for anybody.
But that last day or two,
we were huddled so close together
that if one of us started
shaking with malaria,
(laughs) we all shook.
But when you're that close,
you get to gabbing about the
things you shouldn't have done
and the things you wish you had done.
You know what kept eatin' him?
That he didn't take a job once.
He was an architect and he had this chance
with some company in New York,
but she didn't wanna live in New York,
so she talked him out of it.
She was the horsey kind.
After all, how many foxes
can you chase on Park Avenue?
Well so for a consolation prize,
you know what she let him do?
She let him build their honeymoon house.
He built.
I want the stables here, honey,
the bedroom should be this way, honey.
Of course, I would've
clobbered a dame like that,
but he was kinda quiet and shy.
You think she'd a helped
him, build him up,
give him confidence, but no,
she just kept squeezing it out of him.
What makes a dame like that?
- I don't know.
- You know something, I bet all
the time she called it love.
He didn't die here, she
killed him years ago.
- Do you think he ever forgave her?
- Well sure, he was that kind.
I remember once, I really fouled it up.
He could've taken my stripes
away for it, but he didn't.
He told me there was no
excuse for what I did,
but "What you can't excuse,
you forgive," he said.
He believed in giving
people a second chance.
I never let him down.
You know something, when
you get a second chance,
you're awful lucky.
Don't I know it.
(birds chirping)
Say, I hear you're having a
Valentine's party tonight.
If I drop by, would you give me a dance?
Who will I ask for?
- Mrs. Howard Ashley.
(birds chirping)
Thank you.
(gentle music)
(door clatters)
(gentle music)
- [Colleague] Lee? Is that you Lee?
- [Lee] Well where is everybody?
- They called from the hospital,
they need all the help they can get.
They're setting up emergency
tents by the river.
It's that new push,
the casualties are pouring
in by the hundreds.
Kate wants you to stay
here and watch the place
and I'll go on out.
- Well can't I go too?
- No, you'd better not, Lee.
This one's gonna be awfully rough.
(gentle dramatic music)
(dramatic music)
(somber music)
(dramatic music)
(engine rumbling)
(dramatic music)
- Chaplain, will you
have that attended to?
- Oh I'm all right, Kate.
- Take care of yourself.
- Don't worry.
(people chattering)
- Thanks Red Cross.
(gentle music)
(dramatic music)
(people chattering)
- Colin.
Can you hear me?
(people chattering)
- Forgive me.
- Can I get something for you?
- [Colonel Black] Forgive me.
- [Chaplain] Hello Lee.
Got much pain?
- Forgive me.
- Why does he keep saying that?
- 'Cause he can't say anything else.
Brain injury.
- But why just-
- Forgive me?
Cause it's been on his
mind almost constantly
the last two months.
And it was the last thing he said
just before we got hit last night.
Oh thank you.
We were sitting in the command post
when out of the blue, he
turned to me and said,
"lI hope someday she can find
it possible to forgive me."
Just then a mortar
crunched along side of us.
When he came to, all he
could say was, "Forgive me."
- Will he recover?
- Yes.
Just a temporary thing the doctor says.
He'll be all right in a couple of months.
Or if you want to know
what it is technically,
I had the doctor write it down for me.
He's a victim of motor expressive aphasia.
That's a blood clot brain.
Now that's the medical explanation,
but mine's much simpler.
I think God is making him
write it on the blackboard
500 times.
- [Nurse] Colonel Black he's right there.
- Excuse me, Chaplain.
- Mmhmm.
See you later.
(people chattering)
- How's the Indian?
- They just gave him his
shot. He'll be goin' to sleep.
How you feeling?
- Kate, I never felt better in my life.
You know, even with all
the noise and the shooting,
I've been sleeping nights lately.
I made a discovery.
In a way, the Colonel was right.
I came out here full of psalms and hymns,
all set to change everybody.
- I know.
- And then I realized that
my job was not to change men,
but to find them, and
then to help them believe
in something more than just themselves.
- It's a big discovery.
How's Eddie, is he all right?
- I uh,
went through his belongings, I found this.
It's a picture of you, Kate.
And his medals.
- Thank you.
- Can I do anything for you?
- Forgive me.
(gentle music)
- Why don't you get some rest?
You've been on your feet
ever since yesterday.
He won't come to for five or six hours.
- I can wait.
(gentle music)
I can wait.
- [Announcer] Now hear this- (voice fades)
- [Group] Bye, bye.
- [Passenger] See you later, Lee.
- [Colleague] Hurry up, Lee,
if you're gonna- (voice unintelligible)
- Lee, Lee Ashley.
Hello, I'm Kate Connors, the club director
and this is Bob Kilpatrick,
our field supervisor.
- How do you do?
- How do you do?
- Glad to have you with us.
- Thank you.
- Where are you bags?
- One of the officers said
he'd bring them down for me.
- Are they marked?
- Yes they are.
- I'll get them and put them in the Jeep.
- Thank you.
- [Crew Member] (whistles)
Hey, look what's coming.
- [Associate] Man can't
work, where'd she come from?
- [Crew Member] Don't touch
the merchandise, fellas.
(men chattering enthusiastically)
- [Associate] Hey Charlie, put
your eyes back in your head.
(men continue to chatter enthusiastically)
- Don't pay any attention
to them. How was the trip?
- A little crowded.
- Uh uh, hey excuse me,
I got a little petty larceny to attend to.
The Jeep is right on down there.
- All right.
- Hello boys.
- Hiya Kate.
- How are ya, Harry old pal?
- Now look Kate, I got no extra lumber,
no tables, no chairs, no nails-
- What's all those?
- Paint, and all of it
has to go to Camp Barnes.
- All of it?
- All of it.
- Every single little drop of it?
- Every single little drop of it.
- Oh, you know that new room
we're building on the clubhouse?
- Yeah yeah.
- You know what that's for?
So you boys can have hot
showers anytime you want.
Only showers in Noumea.
Course, if we don't paint it,
you're all gonna get
splinters on your bottom.
- Ah Kate, I'd like to help ya,
but all that stuff is in crates.
If I had a loose can,
I'd be more than happy
to let you have them.
- I know you would,
Harry, you're a good kid.
(crate clatters)
- And what's the matter with you guys?
- We couldn't help it.
- It slipped, Harry.
- Oh it slipped Harry, great.
Well you're gonna slip 'em all back
into the crate again and nail it up.
What do you think they
sent this stuff out here...
Hey wait a minute, Kate.
Hey, that stuff was
counted in San Francisco,
and in Pearl Harbor, and
once more when it got here.
- Yeah, they're all so efficient-
- And now I'm responsible for it.
- It's a wonder to me, you don't get over-
- I gotta see to it that
every can in that pile
is delivered to Camp Barnes.
- You see to that, Harry,
you see that every can in that pile
gets delivered to Camp Barnes
and tell 'em I said so.
- Besides, what good's
a paint without brushes?
Where did you get those?
- Old friend of the
family gave them to me,
goin' away present.
Isn't it pretty?
- Well, put 'em away, Kate.
- Look out, there's
three eggs in there too.
(engines rumbling)
(equipment clanking)
(people chattering)
(dog barks)
(people chattering)
(horn honks)
(dog barking)
(people chattering)
(horn honks)
(people chattering)
- Hey mate, get a load of this.
(soldier whistles)
(men cat-calling)
(soldier barks like a seal)
(soldier claps his hands)
- Hey Steve, that's for me,
let's get on the Red Cross boat!
(whistle shrieks)
(engines rumbling)
(soldiers whistle)
- They're just trying
to act like big shots.
It's the ones that don't whistle at you
you gotta be careful of.
(engines rumbling)
(people chattering)
(whistle shrieks)
(engines rumbling)
(people chattering)
(goat bleats)
(children chattering)
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
(brushes clink)
(chuckles) You're gonna
make the rest of us
look like a lot of sharecroppers
in those new uniforms.
- Well they're nothing special.
- Out here, anything that's new
and not painted is something special,
including what's inside the uniforms too.
Oh genuine coat hangers.
This is what we use out
here, in case you run short.
Glad you brought some of your own clothes.
When you're off duty or
on a Sunday, wear 'em.
Boys get awful sick of
seeing nothing but uniforms.
Here's some towels.
I'll see you down at the
club when you're finished.
No hurry.
- Kate?
- Hm?
- I heard on the ship that this unit
was due to be moved up
to Guadalcanal soon.
I was just wondering if you
knew when that would be.
- Oh that won't be for quite a while yet.
They've still got an awful
lot of mopping up to do.
Your husband was killed
on Guadalcanal, wasn't he?
- Yes.
- Whenever a new worker
gets sent out here,
I get a pretty complete
file on them beforehand.
I know an awful lot about you, Lee.
'Cept for one thing,
why did you join up?
- Well I was alone
and I thought maybe I
could help in some way.
- Could have helped in Washington
or Pittsburgh or London.
Why did you do everything
to be sent out to this area?
I want you to know, Lee,
that I tried very hard not
to have you sent out here.
I figured you were coming on
some sort of a pilgrimage.
- I'll do my job.
- I hope so.
Just remember, we've got
thousands of boys here
and each one has a problem, or will have,
and that's what we're
here for, to help them.
Our personal troubles are only secondary.
(paper rustles)
Well, I see by your file,
you play a mean piano,
speak French, and paint.
Gonna be a very busy girl.
- I want to be.
- See ya at the club.
(paper rustling)
(gentle music)
(Lee sighs)
(people chattering)
(boisterous singing)
- [Child] Hey, little match,
(voice unintelligible)
(children chattering over each other)
(people chattering)
(boisterous singing)
Come on, come on
The long and the short and the long
- [Desk Attendant] Hiya.
(people chattering)
(boisterous singing)
The long, the long
The long and the short and the long
- Hey, you seen that bella
that teaches the French class?
- Yeah, I saw her around
here a minute ago.
Yeah, there she is, she's
over there playing chess.
- Thanks.
(people chattering)
Say uh, I was a little late
in joining the French class,
so I was wondering, after
your closed up tonight,
you and I-
- I'm sorry,
we're not allowed to date enlisted men.
It's against military
regulations in this area.
They just won't let us.
- Lady, I don't want a
date, I want a lesson,
catch up with the rest of the class.
Maybe get a little ahead of them.
What do you say?
- Lover boy,
go get yourself a donut.
(people chattering)
- I'm sorry he interrupted.
You were saying that you-
- You asked about the canal
and I would say my outfit
came in on the third day and-
- You didn't happen to know a Lieutenant
by the name of Ashley, Howard Ashley?
He was with the First Parachute Battalion.
- Ashley.
Ashley.
Ashley.
- My husband.
- That's tough. I'm sorry.
No, I didn't know him.
My outfit was right next to
the first shoots on the ridge.
- Bloody ridge?
- Is that where he got it?
- 13th of September.
- It was a rough day.
- So what was it like?
- Rough.
(people chattering)
- [Lee] Well, if you do meet
anybody who knew my husband,
I'd appreciate it very much if you-
- I've got a friend who
was with the First Chutes.
He's still in the hospital on Guadal.
He's name is Eustace Press.
Sounds like a publishing firm, doesn't it?
You could write to him and-
- Lee, could I see you
for a minute, please?
- Well, writing isn't very satisfactory.
Maybe I could see him
when we move up there.
Excuse me.
(people chattering)
- That raider outfit that took Mandova
is docking here tonight
because they've got some wounded on board.
- Well I thought they flew
the wounded in days ago.
- He's a last-minute casualty,
and the Navy nurses are shorthanded
and they've asked us to help.
So you and Helen and Joanie can handle it.
- Well Kate, if you don't mind,
I'd just as soon stay here.
I won't be any good at it.
I have a revulsion to accidents
and people who've been hurt.
It sort of does something to me.
- It sort of does something to all of us.
That's why we take turns.
Jeep is outside my office.
(people chattering)
(engine rumbling)
(horn honks)
Foreman, you go over to
the hospital with him.
- I'm fine.
- Hey yeah, yes.
- Well thanks a million,
Kate, for coming down.
Without you and the girls,
we'd have been swamped.
- That's all right.
(people chattering)
- How are you doing, fella?
- Mister,
I'm sure you're a good man,
but couldn't you give me a girl
to walk along beside me or something?
- Now I know you're feeling better.
- How about me, will I do?
- You certainly will.
Just cackle for me. I wanna
hear some female cackling.
Go ahead.
- Where you from?
- [Patient] Massachusetts.
- [Crew Member] A little
more slack, a little more.
A little more slack.
- Louis,
did they take Peckenpaw ashore yet?
- He's on the hook now, Chaplain.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
- [Kate] Hello Chaplain.
- Kate, hello.
- Good to have you back.
Anything we can do for you?
- Well I need a lot of help,
but we can talk about that later.
For the moment,
would you just take care
of Sergeant Peckenpaw here?
- [Kate] Sure we will.
How you doin' fella?
- Fine, ma'am.
- [Kate] Whose the CO of this outfit?
- Colonel Black.
There he is now, just
coming up to the railing.
(people chattering)
No worries, Sergeant,
you're in mighty good hands.
I'll see you at the hospital
as soon as we get the men off the ship.
Corporal, I'll see you
at the hospital, okay?
- Hello.
- [Sergeant] Early in the
boondocks tomorrow, huh?
- Take it easy, Sergeant,
we'll give you a great coming out party,
get some more cigarettes for you.
Lee.
Lee.
Come down, Lee.
Here, stay with this man.
- Okay.
- You're not doing much
good standing around here.
- Sorry Kate, it just seems
horrible and stupid to me.
These men are suffering and
we give them small talk,
candy, and chewing gum.
- What you give them doesn't matter.
- It's just ludicrous and shocking.
- You could give them a
paperclip or an old golf ball,
or your hand to hold for a while.
- That's well, I'm afraid-
- What's important is that you're here
and you're giving them a
little bit of yourself.
Come on, get your feet wet.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
Those are the fatigue cases.
- Come on, Ray, over here.
The ambulance is over here, Ray.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
- Have you seen my family?
I talked to my father yesterday.
He said they'd be here to meet me.
- [Soldier] Come on, Ray, we have to go.
(people chattering)
- [Patient] Oh no! I don't wanna go!
I don't wanna go! (sobbing)
(people chattering)
(horns honking)
- Have a cigarette?
- No thanks, ma'am.
- What happen? You shave
too close this morning?
- Yeah, and I hit a jet bomber.
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
- [Crew Member] A little
more, come on, a little more.
- [Crew] A little more, a little more.
(people chattering)
(engines humming)
- Hi.
- Hi.
- I'm sorry, I forgot to
give you some cigarettes.
- Nevermind, it's enough to just look up
and know that somebody gives a damn.
- Well, what happened?
- Well you see, I was riding my bicycle
and this drunk driver went
through this red light-
- Yes, I'm terribly sorry,
that was a stupid thing to say.
It's just that, this is the first time
I've ever done this sort of thing.
- You know something, lady?
This is the first time I've
ever done this sort of thing.
(people chattering)
- Would you like me to come out
to the hospital and see you?
- Sure would, lady.
Kinda nice to talk to a soprano again.
- Oh Colonel Black, I'm Kate Connors,
Red Cross Club director here.
Anything special we can do for your boys?
- Yes, don't call 'em
boys, and leave 'em alone.
(soldier whistles)
(engine rumbles)
- If there are no further
instructions, goodnight.
- [Colonel Black] Goodnight.
(engine rumbles)
(people chattering)
- [Soldier] Too bad.
It happened to me once
too, just the same way.
I'm in Saint Louis, see?
- Hi Joanie.
- Hello Kate.
- [Lee] Hi Kate. Mail.
- There's bacon in there.
Take it out in the kitchen and lock it up.
- [Lee] Bacon? Where'd you get it?
- Shh, quiet.
- Only one thing to do,
gotta find myself a first class sucker.
So, I goes into this
poolroom, kibitzing a game.
After a while,
this guy asks me if I don't
wanna play for a fifth.
I tell him, I don't know
nothing about the game,
so he spots me 10 points.
I get to break, run the table,
you should've seen the
look on that pigeon's face.
- Eddie!
- Kate! What are you doing here?
I heard you was in New Zealand.
- I was for a while, but oh Eddie!
- Oh Kate, it's soo good to see you.
- [Kate] I didn't know
what had become of you.
- Well, I was gonna write to-
- I was almost out of my mind.
- Why don't you let a guy know-
- Oh Eddie.
- Ah Kate it's...
(people chattering)
Oh geez Kate, lay off, will ya?
I ain't no kid no more.
- Oh, keep forgetting. Let me look at you.
Listen, who do you think
came through here last week?
Lefty Henderson.
- No kidding?
Guess who I run into in Pearl?
Scottie. He's a fly-boy.
- Oh, I saw him in New Zealand.
- Kate, I want you to meet
a couple of pals of mine.
This is Paul and Louis.
- Good to have you with us, boys.
- Hi Kate.
- Happy to meet you.
Come on Eddie, shoot.
- Remember the dame I
was telling you about,
around the settlement house
down in my neighborhood?
Well this is her, this is Kate.
Boy, the times she kept
me outta reform school.
(ball clinks)
- [Kate] Ah, didn't used
to miss 'em like that
when you played with me.
- I busted my finger.
This is liable to cost me 100
bucks a week in civilian life.
Maybe I'd better put in
for a pension or something.
Say, this is a real nice club...
(Lee and associate speaking French)
(dishes clinking)
(people chattering)
- Kate, who's the blond job?
- Name's Lee Ashley.
- Who does she remind you of, Kate?
Bergie.
Bergie would've looked just like that
if she'd have grown up.
- You wanna meet her?
- Yeah.
(people chattering)
- Oh Lee, want you to meet
an old friend of mine,
Eddie Wodcik.
- Oh, hello Eddie.
- Hi.
- Kate, Kate, it's Major Haskins.
He thinks he knows where we
can get some coat hangers.
- Okay, I'll take it in my office.
Eddie, have a cup of
coffee, I'll be right back.
I got some old snapshots to show you.
You're gonna get such a kick out of 'em.
(people chattering)
(pool ball clinks)
(people chattering)
- You like cream in your coffee?
- No thanks.
- I don't think I've seen
you in here before, Eddie.
- [Eddie] No, I didn't
get a pass 'til today.
- So you're an old friend of Kate's, hm?
- Yeah, she's known me
since I was a little punk.
- There's the sugar.
- She always kinda watched out after me.
(glass clanks)
She even wanted to adopt me once.
I was telling Kate that my sister, Bergie,
would've looked just like
you if she'd a growed up.
She got burned to death.
- [Lee] Oh I'm sorry, Eddie.
- Just make sandwiches around here?
- Oh no, (chuckles) I play the piano,
dance with the boys, teach a French class,
go out on searching trips.
- Hey Eddie,
Duke says he found a place
where we can get some butterfly
rum for a buck a bottle.
Come on.
- Look, I...
Well, I'd better blow.
Tell Kate I'll see her later.
- All right.
(people chattering)
- Eddie, here's the one
of you and me the time...
Where'd he go?
- He said he had to run,
said he'd see you later.
- Always has to run.
I only wanted to show him these pictures.
Here he is when he was 11 years
old, and here's his sister.
- He told me she was burned to death?
- About a year after that was taken.
Mother and father too,
Tenenmen house fire.
- Oh that's horrible.
- Well my spies tell me
that Lili has some extra coat hangers.
You've never been there, have you?
- No I haven't.
I'd love to go, but I've got
an awful lot of sandwiches-
- Oh, well one of the other
girls will fix it for you.
Get your suit, you can go for a swim.
Beautiful beach.
- All right. Thanks Kate.
(carefree music)
Oh it's magnificent.
- Take away the sea and the
sky and what have you got?
- Does she live here all alone?
- In a manner of speaking, no.
She's a widow, in a manner of speaking.
Lili likes company.
Company.
Lili!
Lili!
(gentle music)
- [Lili] Oh Kate, I'm so glad you came.
- Well, I see we caught
you with your hair down.
- I was just about to become dressed.
- Lili Carere, Mrs. Ashley, Lee.
- Welcome to Noumea, madame.
- Thank you, it's a beautiful
place you have here.
(bird squawks)
- Jacque, (speaks French)
- [Lee] Hi Jacque.
- Well I came down to talk
you out of some coat hangers
and Lee here would like to go
for a swim, if you don't mind.
- Certainly not, you will not swim?
- No, I'll just sit
here and enjoy your view
and get a little of this breeze.
- I'll get you some (speaks French)
Now madame, I'll show you where to change.
- [Lee] Thank you.
(bird squawks)
(carefree music)
(gentle music)
- Afternoon, I'm Colonel Black.
- I'm Kate Connors, we met on
the dock the night you landed.
- Oh yes, I remember.
As I recall, our conversation
was rather short.
- Very short, but very much to the point.
I don't know how to break
this to you, Colonel.
It's going to come as quite a blow,
but the past several days,
a lot of your boys...
I beg your pardon, a lot of your men
have been visiting us at the club.
- I'm sorry to hear that.
Talking to you ladies will spoil 'em.
- Is that right?
I suppose by the time
you get to be a colonel,
you've built up a certain
amount of immunity.
- (chuckles) Lili,
she doesn't exactly remind
me of home and mother.
That's the kind of
female I'm talking about.
During a war, women should be
relegated to two categories,
a skirt a man can make
a pass at when on leave,
or back home, a wife,
a mother or sweetheart.
One or the other.
But let your sweet little
creatures come over here
and try and provide a home away from home,
the men get all mixed up.
My raiders have one purpose
in this war, combat.
And all this sentimental slop
that you good ladies hand out
can only turn those
fighting men into lonely,
complaining boys again.
- I'm curious, Colonel,
were you ever bitten
by a Red Cross worker?
- No, but I must confess,
it sounds interesting.
- She should be back by now.
You undoubtedly have 20/20 vision.
Can you see a girl swimming down there?
- There's someone in a green bathing suit,
sunning herself.
(gentle music)
Hey, she's really something.
- Any peeping Toms in your family?
(gentle music)
- She's twinkling and twitching
like an electric sign in Times Square.
All she lacks down there is a man.
(gentle music)
(bell rings)
(gentle music)
- Well, all I can say is,
we're fortunate that Admiral Halsey
doesn't share your
opinion of the Red Cross.
- Oh not only the Admiral.
Practically every battalion commander
thinks you're the greatest
thing since gun powder.
You should hear my
chaplain go on about you.
You two could have a regular love feast.
I'll introduce you someday.
- I know Chaplain Holmes,
he came through here
on his way out to you.
I've been meaning to ask
you, what's wrong with him?
Ever since he got back,
he keeps to himself.
He's terribly low and depressed.
- His faith got quite a jolt on Rendova.
We'd just taken our main
objective, and Chaplain was green.
First taste of combat.
Got a little overzealous
and started leading the men in prayer.
They knelt in a nice, little, open spot,
in a nice, tight, little line.
There was a Jap in the bush nearby,
still had enough life in him
to roll over and toss a hand grenade.
Four of the men were killed.
Fifth has a broken back.
- [Kate] Oh no.
- Grenade landed so close
that the men's bodies
took the entire blast.
Chaplain was nearly
knocked over by concussion.
- The poor souls.
- Wasn't his fault.
I imagine it's going to make praying
a little difficult for him in the future.
(gentle music)
Who is she?
What's her name, who is she?
- Mrs. Ashley.
- Married, huh?
- Or widowed.
- Army?
- Marine.
- Good taste.
What outfit was her husband with?
- Paratroops, lieutenant, Howard Ashley.
- Guadalcanal?
- Bloody Ridge.
- Ashley.
Ashley.
- Did you know him?
- No I didn't, but I'd
certainly like to know his wife.
(gentle music)
- Oh Kate, I hope I
didn't keep you waiting.
- [Kate] No, how was the water?
- Oh, it was wonderful.
(waves swishing)
- [Colonel Black] Aren't
you going to introduce us?
- Lee Ashley, Colonel Black.
- How do you do?
- Excuse me, I have to change my things.
- Oh don't hurry away, Mrs. Ashley.
Let me get you a drink.
I thought perhaps we could discuss
a Red Cross program for my men.
- Well Colonel, right now-
- He's kidding you, Lee.
Colonel Black doesn't even approve
of having the Red Cross down here.
- Oh but I'm sure that's because I know
too little of your work.
Now down at this club in town,
what do you girls do, exactly?
- I think I'll leave the
pleasure of enlightening you
to some member of the Red
Cross you know better than me.
- Oh but Mrs. Ashley,
I feel I already know
you very well indeed.
- And I assure you,
that's as well as you're ever
likely to know me, Colonel.
(waves swishing)
(engine rumbles)
(waves swishing)
(Jacque squawks)
- Jacque, unless I miss my guess,
just about now, she should
glance over her shoulder
for that last curious look.
(woman chattering quietly)
(engine rattling)
Jacque, I think we've got it made.
(Jacque squawks)
(people chattering)
(Lee speaks French)
(student speaks French)
(Lee speaks French)
- Uh huh.
(pair speaks French)
- Okay, give me the buck.
I told you he'd bat 1000.
- The guy's a regular oo la la.
- Oh, he's been eating a lot
of French toast, that's why.
Wanna go for double or
nothing, the next round?
- [Student] Thanks a lot.
- No no no, (speaks French)
- Thanks a lot.
- No no, (speaks French)
(students speak French)
(pair speaks French)
- [Eddie] What about a game
of checkers before dinner?
- I'm sorry Eddie, I have
to go to the hospital.
And Eddie,
see that they put the chairs
back for me, would you?
- [Student] Why does
it have to be a thing?
(men chattering)
- Okay fellas, let's police up the joint
and put the chairs away, huh?
- What are you doin'? Staying up nights?
You cost me a buck
- Ah, it was worth it.
I'll pay it back.
- Who do you think his coach was?
- Some coach.
(chairs clattering)
(footsteps plodding)
(people chattering)
- How would you like to
have a two week furlough,
a case of whiskey, and that broad?
(hand claps face)
(sailor thuds)
Why you no good...
(sailor thuds)
- Don't you never say
things like that about her.
Anybody talks dirty about her,
I'll tear his tongue out, you understand?
And that goes for the rest of you too.
- Come on, come on, let's
go shoot a game of pool.
- When are you coming back, Lee?
- [Lee] Oh I'll be back later.
I've just gotta run to the hospital.
- Game of chess later?
- Fine.
- Mrs. Ashley, I understand
you're Howard Ashley's widow.
- Yes, yes I am.
- Well I didn't realize
yesterday when we...
I knew Ashley very well.
I was just on my way to the club
to tell you how much I
thought of your husband.
- You knew Howard?
- Areal Marine.
Couldn't we talk about
it over some dinner?
- Um, well no, I'm afraid not.
I'm just going to pick up a quick bite
and I promised one of
the girls at the hospital
that I'd come down-
- Well I'm going to the hospital later
to see some of my men, I'll drive you.
- Well no, I'm afraid-
- I was with your husband
the day he was killed.
(people chattering)
- Yes, I'll come with you.
- Shall we walk? Just across the park.
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
Coffee later.
I'm sorry you didn't have more time.
I know of a charming little
French place up the coast.
- [Lee] Uh, you said you were
with Howard the day he...
- Um, the day or the day
before, I can't quite remember.
- [Lee] Well he was killed
on the 13th of September.
- Oh, then it would be two days before,
on the 11th, at a briefing.
- How did he look?
- Well, you're going to
have to help me a little,
Mrs. Ashley.
There were two junior officers
that I could never keep
straight, Ashley and Barrett.
Now one was dark and-
- Well Howard had light hair,
he was tall, rather slender.
- Oh of course, now I've
got them straight, yes.
Barrett was the short, dark-
- Here, here's a picture of him.
San Diego, just before he sailed.
- Oh yes, I remember him well.
Handsome fellow, sensitive,
with an almost delicate face.
(people chattering)
- Yes.
There was nothing coarse about him.
I'm sorry, I didn't mean it that way.
- Well, but I think it's true.
Your husband and I were
probably as different
as two humans could be.
Cigarette?
- Oh yes, thank you.
(people chattering)
- My pleasures are physical,
good food, good fight.
Well, I'm sure that his gratification
came from, oh, good painting, good music.
(people chattering)
I was just venturing the opinion
that your husband enjoyed
good painting and good music.
- [Lee] Yes, we both did.
- Well now that surprises me.
You don't impress me as the
museum and concert hall type.
He did.
The men used to call him, "The Poet."
- Well that was cruel.
- (chuckles) Why? They
call me "The Beast."
It was nothing derogatory about it.
As a matter of fact, we all
found his shyness and reticence
a charming and pleasant relief.
- He was gentle and kind.
- You're so right.
You know, I often wondered why
he picked the Marine Corps.
I mean, deliberately he was seeking
the roughest possible duty.
You must have wondered about that too.
- Yes, yes I did.
- I mean, with his special
capabilities, his education-
- After all, he was an architect.
My father and I tried to convince him
to go into the engineers-
- Naturally, they needed
architects desperately.
- Well that's what we told
him. So did his family.
My father even spoke to
somebody in the Pentagon,
but before he could...
Well, Howard just came home one day
and said it was the Marines.
- I suppose, like many reserves,
he was trying to prove something.
Tell me, Mrs. Ashley,
why are you so anxious
to learn the details of that last day?
- Well Howard and I grew up together.
Except for a few school years,
we never knew what it was to be apart.
When you've spent so much
of your life together,
you've got to share that
moment of death too.
How did he die?
Was it merciful and quick?
Did he suffer?
That's why I'm out here.
And that's why I'm sitting
across the table from you now,
Colonel.
And for no other reason.
- What you really wanna
find out, Mrs. Ashley is
did he fight or did he run.
- Colonel Black, don't
you think that that's-
- Now don't be defensive about it.
After all, most soldiers wonder
about that very same thing
when they face the first crucial test.
It's only natural that
a wife whose husband
was meek and gentle have
that in the back of her mind.
That horrible sickening panic
that comes while waiting for combat
is not so much from the fear of death,
as it is the fear of
proving inadequate as a man
in front of men.
(people chattering)
Well if they don't treat
you right, let me know.
You deserve the best.
- Oh, they're treating me fine, sir.
- I'll keep in touch.
(people chattering)
How are you doing, Peckenpaw?
- Just swell, sir.
- Good evening, Colonel.
- Evening, Chaplain.
Doctors tell me you'll be
up and around in no time.
- I hope so, sir.
Colonel,
sorry I fouled it up.
- Be seeing you.
- Goodbye, sir.
(people chattering)
(door clatters)
- Colonel Black.
I uh,
I heard this afternoon that you busted
Sergeant Peckenpaw to Corporal.
- That's right.
- It wasn't his fault, it was mine.
- You're a praying man, Chaplain.
Peckenpaw's a fighting Marine.
It was his responsibility
and he should've known better
than to let the men pray with you,
lined up like canned goods on a shelf.
I wanna make sure this
never happens again.
- Don't you think a fractured
spine is reminder enough?
- For him, yes.
Pain is an excellent reminder,
but only for the person suffering from it.
This mistake was costly and inexcusable,
and I want to impress every
other sergeant with that fact.
I found the dishonor of losing a stripe
most effective for that purpose.
Is that all?
- No it's not.
Colonel, you give no
consideration whatsoever
to the spiritual life of a man.
You're sole concern seems
to be to make this battalion
the most vicious, brutal
fighting force in the Pacific.
- Because they're facing a
fanatical, ruthless enemy,
just as well-equipped and just
as well trained as we are.
- But their ruthlessness is
not confined to the enemy.
They're becoming cruel and
treacherous with each other.
They need more than flame throwers
and pride in their own superiority.
Now I am here to help
them meet that other need,
if you'd only let me.
- Wait a minute, wait a minute,
you seem to believe that it's
your job to change these men.
You're not running a mission
in the Bowery, Chaplain,
where it's a good days work
to pour a couple of jiggers
worth of religion down the throat
of some whiskey-soaked bum!
Whatever you tell these men
has to make them stronger, not weaker.
- Real strength is not brutality, sir,
it's an inner spiritual belief that-
- Ah, don't fill them with platitudes,
and religious superstitions.
I want my men to be superstitious
about only one thing,
when they com face to face
with a Jap in the bush,
I want them to consider it very bad luck
not to kill him first.
And I don't want any of
this, "Love thine enemy."
If you must quote from
the Bible, go to Samuel.
"I have pursued mine
enemies and destroyed them
and did not turn back
until I had consumed them."
You are in the middle of a war
and these men are fighting it.
- But they're men, not animals.
They've got souls.
- Those we left in San Diego.
- Don't be so sure.
You might discover that even
you brought yours along.
One day, Colonel, you will
destroy once too often.
And you'll find your own private Hell.
- In the meantime, I
think that you'll discover
that prayer is much more
likely to be answered
if the men are spread out and under cover.
(lighter clicks)
(footsteps shuffle)
(door clatters)
Oh Mrs. Ashley.
You didn't let me finish
at the dinner table.
I was about to say that
your husband didn't run.
On Bloody Ridge, nobody ran.
So you and the children can rest assured
that he died a hero.
- We had no
no children.
- Oh I didn't realize.
I could probably lay my
hands on an action report
of Bloody Ridge and-
- That won't be necessary.
- Well I thought we might talk about it
a little more calmly.
Perhaps on Sunday, that's
your day off isn't it?
- Yes.
- Good,
I'll pick you up a little before noon.
We can take a drive in the country,
have lunch at that
French place I spoke of.
- I have other plans.
- Well I'll drop by just in
case you change your mind.
(gentle music)
(inspirational music)
(bell ringing)
(gentle music)
You haven't asked, I did see
that action report I spoke of.
I think you should know that your husband
acquitted himself admirably.
He died like a regular Marine.
That's the greatest praise I can give him.
- Well there are some characteristics
of certain regular Marines
I'd like to think my
husband failed to acquire.
- Namely?
- An arrogance, disregard
for the feelings of others,
contempt for weakness, and
almost revolting pride.
- But not in himself.
A pride in the Corps, yes,
a pride that gives him an
inner well of strength,
something that he can dip
into when the pinch comes.
I'm sure it was that pride
that sustained your husband.
- You may be right.
His last few letters,
they were so different from the others.
Fury and rage in every stroke of the pen.
What is it that the
Marine Corps does to men
that takes them from us and
makes them a breed apart?
- What took men off to the Crusades?
What impels men to conquer mountain peaks?
Physical challenge of danger,
most fascinating motive in life.
- And I suppose once you've found it,
you can't be quite the same, ever again.
- And to a lesser degree,
I think that danger motivates some women
in their relationship with some men,
like leaning over a precipice.
They wanna see just how far
they can lean without falling.
Sometimes a sentimental
loyalty to the past
pulls 'em back just in time
and spoils all the fun.
- Yes, but that's the point!
I'm shutting out the past
and Howard and decency
and everything I've ever stood for.
- You're not in love with him, are you?
- Well not the way I loved Howard.
This is animal, it's nothing more.
It's just violent and cheap.
- Well at least you
recognize it for what it is.
- Yes, and I despise myself for it,
but there's nothing I can do, Kate,
I'm rolling down a hill
and I can't stop myself.
- He's just the kind to
be waiting at the bottom.
- Oh he's hard and cruel.
There's nothing tender
or gentle about him.
He never asks me to do
anything, he tells me.
Why do I stand for it?
I've never been treated
this way before in my life.
- That's why it's so fascinating.
- Oh it isn't, it's degrading.
- It's part of the fascination.
- His runner brought
this a little while ago.
It says he's taking me to dinner tonight
aboard some ship in the harbor.
Not, "Do you care to go,"
just "lI am taking you."
- Would you like to be transferred
to the club at Tontulu?
Maybe if you were to get away for a while-
- No Kate, no.
Well I can't just run away from him.
I've got to be strong enough...
(door clatters)
(gentle music)
(child speaks foreign language)
(horn honks)
(gentle music)
(pen rattles)
(gentle music)
(dramatic music)
(inspirational music)
(motor rattling)
(gentle music)
(bell rings)
(motor rattles)
(people chattering)
- [Attendant] I'm sorry to
keep you standing out there,
lady, it'll just be a minute.
- Lee.
- Why Hutch.
- What in the world
are you doing out here?
- Well I'm with the Red Cross.
I thought you were on
duty in the Atlantic.
- Oh I transferred last month.
Well for Pete's sake, the last time I...
Oh Lee, I was terribly
sorry to hear about Howard.
- Colonel Black, Lieutenant Hutchins.
- How do you do, sir.
Well this is wonderful.
Wait'll May hears about this.
- Oh how is May?
- Oh she's fine.
She's taking the kids down to her parents
in Akan for the winter.
You remember we had the hunt down there.
Let's see, we were down there a week.
- Oh, how will I ever forget that weekend?
And Gene and Charlie were there too.
You remember that?
- Yeah, and Peggy.
- No two ways about it,
and I told George that
last time I saw him.
- It's good to see you, Colin.
- Thanks Gene.
When you're on the beach, look me up.
- 1 will.
Oh Hutch, I'll be with the skipper.
Will you see that the Colonel
gets the gig when he wants it?
- Right.
- And you'll never guess who she married.
Chiply Hors.
- No.
- Mmhmm.
- The one who owns Romney Bay?
- That's right, well they
were both down in Charleston
for the Saint Cecilia and
it just suddenly happened.
- Say, whatever happened
to that little bay
gelding you were training?
- Oh, I sold him to the Finleys.
- Oh he was a beaut.
- Wasn't he sweet?
- [Hutch] Mm.
You know, if this thing ever ends,
I might take Bright Folly to England.
- [Lee] Grand National, oh Hutch.
- [Hutch] I think he might make it.
- [Lee] Mm.
- [Hutch] (laughs) You know,
I miss the horses more than anything.
- [Lee] Oh well I'm sure
May would like that.
- [Hutch] Oh she understands.
- You should see the
horses we have out here.
- Say, do they have four legs?
- Just about.
- Look, I'm off on Sunday.
Why don't we ride a
little in the afternoon-
- Mrs. Ashley is going
to be with me on Sunday.
(gentle dramatic music)
- Gee, I've gotta get
ready for the 8:00 report.
It's been grand seeing you, Lee.
Goodnight, Colonel, nice to have met you.
Just let me know when you want
the gig to take you ashore.
- Right now.
- Yes sir.
(gentle dramatic music)
(engine rumbling)
(brakes squeak)
(gentle dramatic music)
(waves swishing)
- What do you know about me?
- [Lee] Well what do you mean?
- I mean, after listening to
that idiotic friend of yours,
got a pretty good idea of
what your life has been.
Now just exactly what
do you know about me?
- Well I,
I know that your men are convinced
you're some sort of god in uniform.
Some of the nurses down at the hospital
think you're the most glamorous
thing that ever walked.
And some people say you're part Indian.
- Hm, that always interests them.
I'll never know why.
But it's true.
My mother was a halfbreed, Blackfoot.
My old man worked in a mine
in a little town in Montana.
I was born there.
We lived in a tar paper shack
that looked like a
pigpen most of the time.
- Why are you telling me these things?
- Because I want you to know.
You've seen these little native
kids that beg on the street.
Hey fella Mac, give me a nickel.
I was like that.
Trains used to make a 10 minute stop
in the town where we lived.
My mother used to send
me down to the station
to beg from the passengers.
She knew they couldn't resist
the hungry looking little Redskin.
Hated every nickel I got.
I hated the people that tossed them at me.
(waves swishing)
Occasionally there'd
be a little blond girl,
all pink and starched,
the way you once looked, I'm sure.
Parents used to say, "Just
drop the money, dear.
Don't get too close to him, he's dirty."
When I was old enough,
I ran away from home and
joined the Marine Corps.
They fed me, clothed me, and trained me.
Nobody ever worked or
studied harder than I did.
I was an enlisted Marine for 12 years.
When they commissioned me,
I found out that I still had
that odor of tarpaper shack.
I had a lot more to learn,
what fork to use at dinner parties,
how to make polite talk to
somebody's fat slob of a wife,
to take the finger bowl and the
doily off the dessert plate.
Maybe I didn't learn
those things too well.
Maybe in a drawing room,
your friend, Hutch,
feels superior to me, even contemptuous.
But out here, or anywhere
during time of war,
where it really counts,
I'll make him look like a puny schoolboy.
- So you joined the Marines
too, to prove something.
(waves swishing)
- I thought I'd gotten over it.
You see this?
The average man is scared stiff
of being different from the next fellow.
I was different to start with.
Only thing to do was to
accentuate that difference.
I started carrying this stick
as a trademark of my arrogance.
- [Lee] Come and sit down.
(gentle music)
- Well,
got a pretty good line on me now.
I guess I'm not like the
gentle people you've known.
Does it make any difference?
- Of course it doesn't. You know that.
- That's what I told myself,
but you had me a little snowed.
There's a remoteness about you,
a kind of untouchable quality.
I've never known anyone like you.
- And I have never known anyone like you.
(gentle music)
- Maybe that's why we're both here.
We'll be pulling out shortly.
- Oh no.
- Not combat.
Tactical maneuvers with the taskforce.
Be back in a couple of months.
Leaving you is gonna be an awful beating.
- Two months?
- Seen a lot of each other lately.
I've kept my distance like
I've never kept it before.
(gentle music)
But I don't intend to continue.
(gentle music)
You wanna make sure that
it's you and only you.
Is that it?
(gentle music)
Make any difference if
I ask you to marry me?
(joyful music)
(people chattering)
(engine rattling)
(people chattering)
- Morley, Luigi F., Sergeant.
(engine rattles)
(people chattering)
Peckenpaw, Chester H., Corporal.
(people chattering)
Hexon, John B., Private First Class.
(inspirational music)
(explosion blasts)
(inspirational music)
(pair laughs)
(inspirational music)
(rain pattering)
(gentle dramatic music)
(people chattering)
(gentle music)
(maid speaks French)
- We came for dinner, but
(chuckles) we've got to change.
Is there any chance of
getting some dry clothes?
(speaks French)
- Uh, (speaks French)
(maid speaks French)
(footsteps plod)
(gentle music)
(Colin knocks at the door)
- [Colonel Black] It's me.
- Come in.
(door clatters)
(Lee laughs)
Oh no. (chuckles)
Oh I don't believe it.
- I thought I looked rather handsome.
- (laughs) Tell me, when does
the boat arrive at Le Havre?
- And may I ask, who designed that?
- Oh, it's just a little
something mama ran up to the door
when she was in an ugly mood.
- I went out to the
Jeep and got the flask.
Keep you from catching cold.
- You know, I've always heard
that before a woman considers
marrying a man in uniform,
she should see him first
in civilian clothes.
Usually a big disappointment.
Not to me.
Now I'm doubly sure, darling.
- The acid test of a man's
love is to see the woman
the way she's going to
look in the mornings.
I must say, you're beyond belief.
Even in that wrapper.
- Oh darling, not wrapper,
that's a horrible word.
Housecoat, lounging robe, or
peignoir, but never wrapper.
- [Colonel Black] Trying
to change me already, huh?
(gentle music)
- Why you vain, ostentatious, C-B, C-B.
Don't you think once would
have been sufficient?
- It was given to me by an admirer
who found me twice as
intoxicating as others.
- I hate her.
What was she like?
Tell me about her.
- You really want me to?
- Yes.
No.
Yes.
- If I do you will become
female petty and angry and
this moment will be lost.
- Yes, then don't.
I finally feel alive.
And sort of recklessly happy.
I want to stay that way.
- Good.
I think an excellent rule would be
that neither of us bring up the past.
Let's say, this is the
first time for both of us.
(gentle music)
- Woo. (exhales)
(gentle music)
- I feel the same way,
although it's not from the drink.
(gentle music)
Something breathless about you.
Every time I look at you,
it's like hearing music,
or seeing the ocean for the first time.
- Why, I keep thinking about tomorrow.
(gentle music)
- Don't.
When we say goodbye on that pier,
we're going to have to be circumspect,
normal and distant.
When we nod politely, remember,
I'm aching to hold you
just like this.
(gentle music)
- Oh Colin.
(inspirational music)
(dramatic music)
(playful music)
- You want something?
- No, just browsing.
(engines rumbling)
Course, it's none of my business,
but when's the last time
you had a night's sleep?
- I'm all right, Kate.
- Oh yeah, you're in great shape,
working night and day at the hospital,
helping us at the club,
doing the work of a hack.
What are you trying to prove?
Why don't you turn yourself
in? You belong in sickbay.
- It's just where he'd like me to be.
No Kate, I'm gonna get on
that ship if I have to crawl.
- Okay, okay, but you'll find
it's not a very pleasant way to travel.
- [Crew Member] Hey Kate.
Junior forgot a letter again.
(engines rumbling)
- Kate, would you mail this for me?
I didn't get a chance to.
- Sure kid.
- What have you got in
that scrounge bag, Kate?
- Ah, you're a wiseguy, huh?
- Hey Kate, you got any
boon dockers in there?
- I wouldn't be a bit surprised.
- I hear the Navy lost an
aircraft carrier, Kate.
Come on, take it outta there, will ya?
- Ah, your mother wears zombie shoes.
Okay, I tended to the last one out here.
- Here, I'll take those.
(cups clink)
- Hey Kate, you got a but?
- You're talkin' about
cigarette? I guess so.
- Always cigarettes. I smoke cigars.
Havanas, Kate, where'd you get 'em?
- A general had twins.
Hey Eddie, be careful, you promise?
- Oh stop worrying, will you, Kate?
It's only maneuvers.
- I know it's only
maneuvers, but be careful.
If anything was to happen to you-
- Kate, if you start crying,
so help me, I'm gonna kick
you right in the shins.
- Oh, you try it and I'll
tell the kids about the time
you played little buttercup
in the school play.
- Now wait a minute-
- Oh, they'd love to hear about that one.
- But you wouldn't do that, would you?
- I'd yell it from the boat deck
if you get fresh with
me, little buttercup.
- All right, why don't you guys move on?
- You and your big maneuvers, ya...
Bye Eddie.
- So long, Louis.
(cups clink)
- [Eddie] Take 'em home.
Well so long, blond job.
- So long, Eddie.
- Oh say, uh, while I'm gone,
if any guy gets fresh with you,
you just remember who he
is and when I get back,
I'll take care of it, okay?
- Thanks, Eddie.
Good luck.
- [Officer] Come on, move it up, Wodcik,
here comes the old man.
(footsteps plodding)
(people chattering)
- Goodbye Colonel.
- So long, Red Cross.
(footsteps plod)
- [Soldier] So long, Chaplain,
see you when you get back.
- [Soldier] Goodbye, Chaplain.
- Coming, Chaplain?
(engine rumbles)
(tools clanking)
- Hey, somebody get a corpsman.
- See if there's a corpsman
in the aid station.
- I think he's had it.
Put him in the hospital.
- Aye aye, sir.
(footsteps patter)
(people chattering)
- [Kate] Get a stretcher
from the aid station.
I told him-
- Give him some air.
- [Crew Member] Gang way, gang way.
(people chattering)
(foghorn honks)
(playful jazzy music)
(hands clapping)
(people chattering)
- [Joan] Hey Pat, look what I've got.
- [Pat] Where'd you get that?
- I scrounged it.
(Pat laughs)
(choir singing carols)
Evie, prepare for (unintelligible)
- Wonderful Joan, thanks.
Noel, noel
Noel, noel
- Helen, can you use this?
- Oh Joanie, I sure can,
put it right over there.
- Oh the starfish of Bethlehem.
- It looks good, doesn't it?
- Great.
Of Israel
- Lee, Lee!
- I'll be right with you, Kate.
- Kate, how do you spell Caledonia?
- You can't say where you
are, that's a military secret.
- How do you spell secret?
- S-E-C-R-E-T.
Forever in Israel
Oh my feet are killing me.
- Oh sorry.
- Jeanette phoned and the
hospital girls are swamped.
They need help with the Christmas letters.
So when you get through with the trees,
will you and Helen go out and help?
- Yes, of course.
- Oh here's something
that might interest you.
This came.
That was so new
Noel, noel
APO 709 is Guadalcanal.
Born is the king-
- Kate, I don't think you'd
better figure on my going along.
- But you've been chomping
at the bit for months.
- Yes I know, but the scuttlebutt is
that the fifths will get back
either tomorrow or the next day.
- Tomorrow I think.
- Colonel Black and I
are going to be married.
- 1 didn't know it had gone that far.
- Oh I'm terribly in love with him, Kate.
- But if you get married now,
I'm gonna have to ship you right home.
- Yes, I know.
- You know it's against regulations
for husband and wife to be
in the same theater of war.
If I were you, I'd wait.
- No you wouldn't, Kate.
We can't wait.
(people chattering)
- You know I'd give anything to be with
you and the kids on Christmas Eve.
The reason I am not writing this myself
is because I sprained my
wrist, playing baseball,
and I never was much of a left hander.
Uh.
I can't tell you where I've been,
but as usual,
our outfit made monkeys
out of the rest of them.
Um,
I know I've talked a
lot about Colonel Black-
- Are you with the Fifth Raiders?
- That's right.
- I didn't know they
were going into combat.
- We didn't. I got this on maneuvers.
They flew me back.
Don't tell anybody, they're
treating me like a hero,
but you know what hit me?
- No.
- A crate full of Spam.
Fell out of a cargo net.
Where was I?
- I know I've talked a lot
about Colonel Black, but...
- But this time, the crazy
Indian outdid even himself.
- Hm. (chuckles)
- You know Black?
- I've met him.
- Incidentally, the
Colonel's been swell to me,
so I'd like you to do me a favor.
The next time you drive over to Washington
to see your mother,
I wish you'd drop in on Black's wife
and pay your respects.
Her name is Clara.
Although Black doesn't
talk much about her...
(clipboard clatters)
(dramatic music)
(door clatters)
(somber music)
(Lee begins to cry)
(somber music)
(birds chirping)
- [Colleague] When ]
came out of the hospital,
I looked around for Lee, but she'd gone.
With the Jeep. I had to bum a ride back.
- [Colleague] You had dinner
with her, didn't you, Kate?
- [Kate] Right afterwards,
I saw her on the street.
She walked right by me like
she was walking in her sleep.
- [Colleague] Shh, quiet.
Here she comes.
(clock ticking)
- [Colleague] Well what was he?
Air Force, Army, Navy, Marine?
- Come clean girl, where have you been?
- Put out that light.
Anybody who doesn't come in on time
can get undressed in the dark.
(clock ticking)
- Thanks Kate.
(clock ticking)
- Come on, Sam.
(cheerful Christmas music)
(dog barks)
(cheerful Christmas music)
(people chattering)
(cheerful music)
- There you are, honey.
- Oh ho ho ho ho ho ho,
a rockin' out Christmas to you, son.
Kate, y'all got something
for this little fella?
- Bet we have.
- I guess he's no more than
fellow high to a possum.
There you are son, oh
ho ho ho ho ho ho ho.
(people chattering)
- Watch your step.
(phone rings)
- [Santa] We're gonna find something
for this nice little girl-
- I'll get it, Kate.
- [Santa] Oh ho ho ho ho ho ho ho.
(phone ringing)
(cheerful Christmas music)
- (sighs) Red Cross Service Club.
(people chattering)
- Merry Christmas.
We got in late last
night. How have you been?
Yes?
I won't be able to get off for a while.
I've got to check in to
Regimental Headquarters.
And I've got some paperwork
to clean up first.
Suppose I pick you up around 4:00?
- Yes, I'll be ready, about 4:00.
(engine rumbling)
(brakes squeak)
(waves swishing)
- I forgot the flask.
(waves swishing)
(can clinks)
(can rattling)
(waves swishing)
Look at this place.
(can clinks)
Certainly seemed different that night.
- Daylight has a habit of revealing things
as they actually are.
- What'd you wanna come back here for?
- I thought it would be appropriate.
- Well, let's have a quick
drink and get out of here.
I heard of a new French restaurant,
about 30 miles up the coast.
(glass crashes)
- You shouldn't be so violent about it.
They say that people who
make a fetish of cleanliness
are very often inwardly dirty.
So a sort of compensation.
(waves swishing)
- What's the matter with you?
Ever since I picked you up,
you've been snapping at me.
(waves swishing)
Here, drink this, you'll feel better.
(waves swishing)
- How's Clara?
(waves swishing)
(Colin sighs)
- I'm glad you found out.
I knew exactly what I was
doing, but I couldn't stop it.
- When did you intend to tell me?
- Many times, when I was alone.
But every time I faced you,
I couldn't force myself to say it.
I knew if I had, I would've lost you.
I couldn't let that happen,
no matter what the price.
- Even if I had to pay it.
- That's right.
I think it's the only cowardly thing
I've ever done in my life.
- How long have you been married?
- Two months.
The wedding took place 10 years ago,
but I'd say we've been
married about two months.
- [Lee] You're not in love with her?
- No, that died a pretty quick death.
She wanted me to leave the Marine Corps.
That was like asking
me to cut off my arms.
So when I did a hitch in Central America,
she stayed behind in San Diego.
Lot of bars in San Diego.
She got to know every one of them.
She's been in a hospital in
Washington for over a year now.
Nobody seems to know what keeps her alive.
- Well why didn't you tell me this before?
- You'd have felt sorry for me.
I didn't want sympathy, I wanted you.
- Yes, but only for an
hour or so, now and then.
- Maybe in the beginning,
but not afterwards.
I wanted to get a divorce,
but I couldn't do that to Clara.
Perhaps if I had quit
the Corps as she wanted,
she wouldn't be where she is now.
- I must say, your sense of loyalty
is a little deeper than
your sense of decency.
- During a war, it's amazing
what a man will resort to
to satisfy a desire of the moment.
I suppose it's 'cause
he's not quite certain
of how many moments he has left.
- I'm sure there were many men
who took decency with
them, even to the grave.
- I suppose.
- Oh.
- Now look, it's not-
- Oh don't touch me.
(waves swishing)
- Yes, I'm glad you found out.
This thing had gone on any longer,
we might really have been
put through the ringer.
You'll get over it.
I know at the moment it seems
shocking and tragic but,
believe me, in a few years,
you'll look back and laugh at it.
Take my advice-
- And what advice to you have
for your son or daughter?
I'm sorry I can't tell you
which it'll be at the moment.
What shall I say to him or her?
You'll get over it, dear.
You were only the desire of a moment,
don't take it seriously, your
father says to laugh about it.
- [Colonel Black] Why didn't you tell me?
- Because I have some pride
left, not much, but some.
I didn't want your sympathy
any more than you wanted mine.
And I wanted to be a wife to you
and not a drunken joke
around the officer's club
when you're all sitting around
boasting of your conquests.
And I'm not going to be that funny story
about the little blond in Noumea.
You're not gonna have
that chance, you dirty...
(hand claps face)
Oh, let me go! I want to die!
Let me go! Get away from me!
(screams)
(dramatic music)
- Lee.
Lee.
Lee, Lee.
(somber music)
- Come on, just one hand, Dottie.
- Oh get lost, will ya? I'm busy.
- Come on, just one hand.
Is it gonna hurt you to play one hand?
- The doctor says she'll be all right.
She lost the child.
(somber music)
(door rattles)
(somber music)
Well Bob, what do I tell her?
- Have to send her home.
- You do, she'll never get over it.
Staying here with us and
working things out gradually,
that's the only chance she's got.
- But there's nothing we
can do about it, Kate.
It's regulations, and you know that.
- I joined the Red Cross because
they were in the business of
helping people in trouble.
This girl has loved two men in her life,
one of them's dead and the
other one almost destroyed her.
That's trouble, Bob, real trouble.
(somber music)
- All right Kate, we'll find someone.
(somber music)
- And three threes.
(claps hands) Come on, one
more game will get you even.
- I told you just one
hand, play solitaire.
- [Patient] It'll only take a second.
- Look, I've gotta take
these reports over to x-ray.
- Hey, I've been all over
the joint. Is this 72C?
- Eddie, how are ya?
- Hi, how you doing? Is this 72C?
- Yeah, who do you wanna see?
- Mrs. Lee Ashley.
- No visitors now.
- I was down at the Red Cross.
They said she an
accident. Is she hurt bad?
- Eddie,
wasn't no accident.
- No? What's wrong with her?
- I was sitting over here...
(chair creaks)
(phone rings)
- [Miss Mathews] Hello,
72C, Miss Mathews speaking.
No he's not here, sir.
I have no idea, sir.
Well I could look it up for you.
No trouble, the chart's right here.
(dramatic music)
(gentle dramatic music)
(gentle dramatic music continues)
(Eddie grunts)
- Tell me what you did to her!
- Sentry, sentry!
(insects singing)
Lock him up.
- Aye aye sir.
Come on, let's go.
(insects singing)
(gentle dramatic music)
(door clatters)
(gentle dramatic music)
- Colonel, she won't see you.
(gentle dramatic music)
- Eddie Wodcik's a friend
of yours, isn't he?
Just now, when I was leaving Canopy,
tried to kill me.
- What are you gonna do to him?
- It's hard to punish
a man for being right.
(gentle somber music)
(insects singing)
(mirror crashes)
(insects singing)
- Hello, may I come in, sir?
- Yes.
- We've got Wodcik locked up, but uh,
what are you charging him with, sir?
(insects singing)
- Failure to salute an officer,
I'll give him two days restriction.
- Yes sir. Goodnight, sir.
(people chattering)
- It's kind of you Eddie, but-
- No, just like the Chaplain told me,
I was lookin' at you like you
was a statue or something.
Anything that walks and talks and eats
is bound to make a mistake, he said.
- And when I make a mistake,
it's a whopper. (chuckles)
I'm sorry I wasn't worthy
of your trust in me, Eddie.
Goodbye.
Good luck.
- In case you were wondering,
nobody but the Chaplain and the Colonel
know why I jumped him that night.
I didn't tell nobody
else and I never will.
- Thanks Eddie.
Bye.
(people chattering)
(engine rumbling)
- Well what's the matter with you?
- I'll tell you what's the matter with me,
I've been waiting in line for five minutes
to say goodbye to you.
- Too bad, too bad.
All right, if you wanna kiss me,
go ahead and get it over with.
- Big deal. Well no thank you.
I can get along without it.
- It's what you've been
hanging around for, ain't it?
Goodbye, Kate.
(people chattering)
(engines rumbling)
(people chattering)
- Yeah, let's go!
(men whistle)
(men bantering)
- Yeah, let's go fellas!
- All right men. Woo hoo!
(people chattering)
- Now wait a minute, I wanted
to get your (unintelligible)
- Oh no!
- Oh no!
- Nevermind.
- Oh!
- This is for you, lady,
compliments of Fifth Raider Battalion.
Good luck.
(people chattering)
Kate, this is for you, compliments
Fifth Raider Battalion.
- (laughs) Just what I
needed. Oh thank you.
You're a doll.
- All hands, let's go!
(men shout)
(engine rattles)
(brakes squeak)
- [Officer] Company, 10 hut!
Hand salute!
(enthusiastic band music)
- If that sergeant turns up
with the generator for the donut machine,
remember it's mine.
- I'll get it on a ATC plane.
Don't worry.
- Goodbye.
- Goodbye ladies.
- Goodbye.
- I know we've said our goodbyes,
but the Colonel just received word,
we're going back into
combat in a few days.
- Good luck to you, Chaplain.
- It won't be an easy campaign.
The Colonel will need
all the physical strength
and mental peace he can find.
He doesn't know I've come out here, Lee.
I thought perhaps, through me,
you could give him something
that might bring him comfort
and maybe help us to get through.
- What have you in mind? A
flask with my initials on it?
- Your forgiveness.
- Oh no.
He wants me to be his conscience
and give him absolution,
wipe the slate clean for him.
Oh no, Chaplain. (chuckles)
- [Chaplain] You hate him, don't you?
- No, I don't hate him.
He was trained to destroy
and he does it magnificently,
and oh so completely.
He's left me with nothing,
not even the desire to hate or forgive.
- Lee, I've been with him quite
a bit these last six weeks.
He's a different person.
The arrogance, the cruelty is gone
because of what he did to you.
Then when his wife died, naturally-
- Yes, I'm terribly sorry. I
only heard about it yesterday.
- He's been expecting it, of course,
but still, it was a deep hurt.
He felt responsible in a way.
Now he feels that
everything he touches dies.
He needs your help, Lee.
- He'll have to find his
forgiveness somewhere else.
It'll never come from me.
- It must be wonderful to feel
that one has lived such a perfect life
that forgiveness has never been necessary.
(rain hissing)
(thunder crashes)
(gentle music)
- You just put the wire through here.
I've already made two.
- Hey Kate, this is the
only bow we could find.
Is it too big?
- No.
We'll only need a very
large cupid, that's all.
Maybe you'd like to play the part.
Where's Lee?
- She's in the kitchen.
(gentle piano music)
(rain hissing)
- I've been looking for you.
After your birthday party,
I wrote to your folks.
I get a letter back today.
They're worried sick.
They haven't heard from
you in three months.
- I know Kate, but what's there to say?
- Well since it's to
your mother and father,
I suggest you start, "Dear Folks."
Now come over to this desk and sit down
and start writing and you're
not going to leave here
until it's finished.
Oh Lee, these came in the mail,
forwarded from Headquarters.
Requests asking us to put
flowers on some graves.
Names are in the letters,
so when it stops raining-
- Kate, I hate to keep asking
to beg off on so many things,
but I just can't.
- Do you mean you haven't
been to the cemetery
since we got here?
- No.
I'v
e,
look, can't you just see me,
standing beside his grave now?
- What's wrong with you?
- Nothing, I...
Oh, I don't know. I just
don't feel very well.
Maybe I'm getting a fever
or something. I don't know.
- You've been drinking.
(distant piano music)
(rain pattering)
I'm shipping you home.
- No!
Don't, please Kate, no
I couldn't go back now.
I couldn't face his
parents, or mine like this.
Please, please Kate. (crying)
(distant piano music)
(rain pattering)
- All right.
If this ever happens
again, you're on your way.
(footsteps patter)
Now drink this, get some sleep,
and go on down to the cemetery.
- Don't ask me to do it, Kate!
Can't you see what it
means to me? (crying)
- I'm getting nearsighted,
seeing what things mean to you.
If you only knew that you're lucky,
you can have other children.
A lot of woman can't and
some women never could.
So stop this self-centered,
self-pity and go,
go and change your clothes, or
pack them, one or the other.
And I don't care which.
(footsteps patter)
(Lee sobs)
(birds chirping)
(engine rumbles)
(birds chirping)
- Just the two of 'em huh?
- Yeah.
(birds chirping)
No, that's right, there is another.
Lieutenant Howard Ashley.
- [Guard] Ashley.
(paper rustles)
- First Parachute Battalion.
- Oh they're all on the side over there.
Look, rather than give you a number,
you go talk to useless. (laughs)
That's what we call him,
his name is Eustace.
Eh, there he is out there, see him?
He was with the First Chutes.
Patient at the hospital still.
Nice guy though. Comes here
every day, pulls the weeds.
He'll show you.
- Thanks.
May 1?
- Why not?
You people supply 'em. Help yourself.
(birds chirping)
- Thank you.
(birds chirping)
- Hello.
Funny day, isn't it?
Sun popping in and out.
- [Lee] The guard said
you were with the First
Parachute Battalion,
that you could point out a grave for me.
Lieutenant Howard Ashley.
- The Skipper? Sure,
he's down here a ways.
I was his runner.
Great guy.
You know, this is all my
outfit in through here.
Say, I hear you fixed up
a nice club down there.
I haven't been in yet, but I'd like to.
- Oh please do, we'd love to have you.
- I'm glad you girls got here.
It's awful good just to yak with a female.
(laughs) I'll probably talk your arm off.
And it's nice to have someone
decorating the graves now and then.
Well what do people do, just
write in and ask you to do it?
- Yes, that's right.
- You answer the letters, don't you?
- Oh yes.
- That's good.
This is Fuller. He was my buddy.
And that's Mancini.
This is Goldberg. They
didn't like each other much.
They're getting along fine now.
You know, I got more friends
here than anyplace else.
They're all wondering why they're there,
I keep wondering why I'm here.
Only a handful of us got out.
- How was it?
- Rough.
- Well that's all any of you say.
Rough, what does that mean?
- Well lady, when things
are too rugged for words,
that's rough.
- How did Lieutenant Ashley die?
- Like an amateur.
Squirming and squealing.
You know, they teach you
how to throw a grenade
and fire a mortar, but nobody
ever teaches you how to die.
I guess 'cause that's the
one thing in this world
there are no professionals at.
You know, nobody comes back
to tell you how to do it.
You're on your own.
When it's time for those last few gasps,
everybody's an amateur.
Here's the Skipper.
(birds chirping)
Who are the flowers from?
- His wife.
- Oh, the blood sucker.
When you answer her letter,
tell her she's just great,
a wonderful and courageous woman.
She'll like that, but
just between you and me,
she's a real blood sucker.
He deserved a lot better.
- What makes you say that?
- [Eustace] Well you know the kind,
she threw her arms around him
at the alter and never let go.
Just squeezed and squeezed
until there wasn't much left of him.
- He told you that?
- (laughs) No, the Skipper?
He never had a bad word for anybody.
But that last day or two,
we were huddled so close together
that if one of us started
shaking with malaria,
(laughs) we all shook.
But when you're that close,
you get to gabbing about the
things you shouldn't have done
and the things you wish you had done.
You know what kept eatin' him?
That he didn't take a job once.
He was an architect and he had this chance
with some company in New York,
but she didn't wanna live in New York,
so she talked him out of it.
She was the horsey kind.
After all, how many foxes
can you chase on Park Avenue?
Well so for a consolation prize,
you know what she let him do?
She let him build their honeymoon house.
He built.
I want the stables here, honey,
the bedroom should be this way, honey.
Of course, I would've
clobbered a dame like that,
but he was kinda quiet and shy.
You think she'd a helped
him, build him up,
give him confidence, but no,
she just kept squeezing it out of him.
What makes a dame like that?
- I don't know.
- You know something, I bet all
the time she called it love.
He didn't die here, she
killed him years ago.
- Do you think he ever forgave her?
- Well sure, he was that kind.
I remember once, I really fouled it up.
He could've taken my stripes
away for it, but he didn't.
He told me there was no
excuse for what I did,
but "What you can't excuse,
you forgive," he said.
He believed in giving
people a second chance.
I never let him down.
You know something, when
you get a second chance,
you're awful lucky.
Don't I know it.
(birds chirping)
Say, I hear you're having a
Valentine's party tonight.
If I drop by, would you give me a dance?
Who will I ask for?
- Mrs. Howard Ashley.
(birds chirping)
Thank you.
(gentle music)
(door clatters)
(gentle music)
- [Colleague] Lee? Is that you Lee?
- [Lee] Well where is everybody?
- They called from the hospital,
they need all the help they can get.
They're setting up emergency
tents by the river.
It's that new push,
the casualties are pouring
in by the hundreds.
Kate wants you to stay
here and watch the place
and I'll go on out.
- Well can't I go too?
- No, you'd better not, Lee.
This one's gonna be awfully rough.
(gentle dramatic music)
(dramatic music)
(somber music)
(dramatic music)
(engine rumbling)
(dramatic music)
- Chaplain, will you
have that attended to?
- Oh I'm all right, Kate.
- Take care of yourself.
- Don't worry.
(people chattering)
- Thanks Red Cross.
(gentle music)
(dramatic music)
(people chattering)
- Colin.
Can you hear me?
(people chattering)
- Forgive me.
- Can I get something for you?
- [Colonel Black] Forgive me.
- [Chaplain] Hello Lee.
Got much pain?
- Forgive me.
- Why does he keep saying that?
- 'Cause he can't say anything else.
Brain injury.
- But why just-
- Forgive me?
Cause it's been on his
mind almost constantly
the last two months.
And it was the last thing he said
just before we got hit last night.
Oh thank you.
We were sitting in the command post
when out of the blue, he
turned to me and said,
"lI hope someday she can find
it possible to forgive me."
Just then a mortar
crunched along side of us.
When he came to, all he
could say was, "Forgive me."
- Will he recover?
- Yes.
Just a temporary thing the doctor says.
He'll be all right in a couple of months.
Or if you want to know
what it is technically,
I had the doctor write it down for me.
He's a victim of motor expressive aphasia.
That's a blood clot brain.
Now that's the medical explanation,
but mine's much simpler.
I think God is making him
write it on the blackboard
500 times.
- [Nurse] Colonel Black he's right there.
- Excuse me, Chaplain.
- Mmhmm.
See you later.
(people chattering)
- How's the Indian?
- They just gave him his
shot. He'll be goin' to sleep.
How you feeling?
- Kate, I never felt better in my life.
You know, even with all
the noise and the shooting,
I've been sleeping nights lately.
I made a discovery.
In a way, the Colonel was right.
I came out here full of psalms and hymns,
all set to change everybody.
- I know.
- And then I realized that
my job was not to change men,
but to find them, and
then to help them believe
in something more than just themselves.
- It's a big discovery.
How's Eddie, is he all right?
- I uh,
went through his belongings, I found this.
It's a picture of you, Kate.
And his medals.
- Thank you.
- Can I do anything for you?
- Forgive me.
(gentle music)
- Why don't you get some rest?
You've been on your feet
ever since yesterday.
He won't come to for five or six hours.
- I can wait.
(gentle music)
I can wait.