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PEARL HARBOR

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日期:2006-8-9 19:10:08
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                      PEARL HARBOR


                              by

                        Randall Wallace



                          EARLY DRAFT



Out of BLACK we hear the sound of an airplane roaring by.

EXT.  POV OF AN AIRPLANE

Flying over American heartland.  We see the earth through the
pilot's perspective as sky and ground swap positions, the
plane swooping down and storming over the ground.

THE PLANE

is a biplane, racing over a field lush with young plants.  It
releases a trail of crop spray, and climbs again...

Up into a crystalline blue sky where sunshine pours like
honey over family farms stretching to the horizon.  Maybe
it's not heaven, maybe it's just Tennessee.  But as long as
there's been an America, men have fought and died for this
place -- as volunteers.

Far off, but visible from the plane is

A BARN - DAY

The barn is unpainted except for hand lettering that says
"McCawley Crop Dusting." Another plane noise, this one made
by kids, brings us to TWO BOYS, sitting in the shell of an
old plane propped on crates, scavenged of it's engine, seats,
and wheels.

The boys sit in it's cockpit, butts crowded onto the nail keg
they've replaced the seat with.  They've even attached a 2x4
as propeller, as if their imaginations needed any help.  They
wear overalls and have bowl haircuts:  RAFE and DANNY, 10
years old.

                     RAFE
          Bandits at 2 o'clock.

                     DANNY
          Power dive!

They buzz their lips in a flying noise and work the controls,
Rafe's bare feet on one pedal, Danny's on the other.

                     RAFE
          It's Germans!

                     DANNY
          Kill the bastards!

Rafe looks at Danny in shock -- then they both laugh and go
right back into their game, manufacturing their own machine
gun and engine sounds.

                     RAFE
          Good shooting, Danny!

                     DANNY
          Good shooting, Rafe!

                     RAFE
          Land of the free...

                     DANNY
          Home of the brave!

                     RAFE
          There's another one!

Their vocal motors roar again... But a man's hand grabs Danny
by the straps of his overalls and jerks him from the cockpit.

It's Danny's FATHER and he's a fearsome sight; drunk, his
hair uncombed, his face unshaven, his teeth -- those still
left -- are rotting.  He's also missing an arm; but the one
that's left is potent, and he's shaking Danny with it.

                     DANNY'S FATHER
          You no count boy!  Johnson come lookin',
          said he'd pay a dime for you to shovel
          his pig shed, and I can't find you no
          place.

                     DANNY
          Daddy, I told you I was comin' here.

His father slaps him off his feet.  Rafe is so horrified he
can't get a sound out.  Danny isn't even surprised.  But when
his father snatches him up again, twisting the overall straps
so tight they choke him, he struggles.  It does no good; his
father starts marching across the field, dragging and
strangling Danny.

                     DANNY
          Da!... Dad...

The father's drunken anger makes him oblivious -- until
CRACK!  The 2x4 propeller slams him across the back, knocking
him to the ground and making him drop Danny.

The father rolls over to see 10-year-old Rafe, holding the
2x4 like a bat.

                     RAFE
          Let him alone!

The father's eyes bulge in rage; he struggles to his feet.

                     DANNY
          Rafe... Daddy... No!

The man looks murderous, but Rafe draws back the board.

                     RAFE
          I'll bust you open, you...German!

The words ring something deep in the man's booze-broken
brain.  He begins to cough, convulsively; it brings a blossom
of blood to his mouth.  He wipes it with his hand, but blood
clings to his teeth.  He chokes out --

                     DANNY'S FATHER
          I fought the Germans.

He looks at Danny in shame, with the realization of what he's
just done.  He turns and staggers away.

Danny looks at Rafe -- a communication between boys joined by
something deeper than blood.  Then Danny runs off after his
father.

                     DANNY
          Daddy!  Daddy!  Wait.

Danny catches him, takes his father's hand, and walks away
with him.

The crop duster we saw in the air has just landed, behind
Rafe.  The pilot, RAFE'S FATHER, shuts off the engine.

                     RAFE'S FATHER
          What's goin' on, son?

                     RAFE
          Nothing.  Danny's Dad just come to get
          him.

Rafe turns back to the ramshackle plane and replaces the 2x4
propeller.  His father looks toward Danny and his father,
walking away, then looks at his own son.

                     RAFE'S FATHER
          Hey, boy -- you wanna go up?

Rafe can't believe it; he runs to the plane and hops into his
father's lap.  As his father cranks the engine and tucks him
into the harness, Rafe says --

                     RAFE
          Daddy, sometime will you take Danny up
          too?

                     RAFE'S FATHER
          Sure will, son.

The engine races to life...and we --

                                                 DISSOLVE TO:

EXT.  NEW JERSEY AIR BASE - DAY

American P-40 fighters blast through the air, props screaming
and wind singing by their wings.

There are eight pilots in their individual seats, and we
focus on two:  RAFE MCCAWLEY has grown lean and handsome.
And DANNY WALKER is very much the same.

Their planes start swapping positions in the formation; while
the other guys are flying along in a tight line, Rafe and
Danny are playing, one of them gunning his engine to go high,
the other diving and coming back up in his place,
leapfrogging.

It scares the other guys, having their planes flashing in and
out, so close.  The TRAINING CAPTAIN, watching through
binoculars on the ground, talks into his RADIO --

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          McCawley!  Walker!  Cut that out!

                     RAFE
          I thought this was a training flight.
          I'm just trying to give Danny some
          training.

                     DANNY
          Not on your best day, boy!

Rafe grins and guns his plane low, in the opposite direction
he was moving before.  Danny reacts almost instantly...
leapfrogging in the opposite direction, scaring the piss out
of everybody else.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          That's it, get into a wedge!

The squadron responds, forming up into a tight V, Rafe and
Danny just behind and on either side of the center.

                     RAFE
          Didn't you say test the limits?

                     DANNY
          Hey, you wanna test my limits, you better
          line up a couple dozen women on the
          GROUND...cause I got NO limits in the
          air!

Rafe grins, loving the challenge.  Then he and Danny do the
leapfrogging maneuver laterally, swapping sides in the V.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          Everybody down!

EXT.  NEW JERSEY AIRFIELD - DAY

The planes land in tight order and taxi off the runway; shut
down their props, slide back the canopies and hop down.  We
see young pilots we'll get to know:  ANTHONY, BILLY, RED.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          Where are McCawley and Walker?

EXT.  RAFE AND DANNY - STILL IN THE AIR - DAY

They've circled to opposite ends of the airfield and are now
heading right at each other, like two bullets playing
chicken.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          Aw shit...

INT.  THE COCKPITS

From Rafe and Danny's POV, the rush is awesome.

THE PILOTS ON THE GROUND watch in awe as the P-40's get so
close they can't possibly get out of each other's way.
Billy, the most boyish-faced of the pilots, yells to drown
out the sound of the collision...

At the last instant, both planes snap a quarter turn so that
their wings are vertical, and they shoot past each other
belly to belly.

IN THE COCKPITS

Rafe and Danny burst out laughing.

THE PILOTS ON THE GROUND

laugh and congratulate each other.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          You know what they say... You can take the
          crop duster out of the country -- but
          don't put him in a P-40.

Rafe banks to land, and Danny tucks in behind him.  Danny has
Rafe's plane in his sights.

                     DANNY
          If I had guns I'd be chewing up your --

Rafe feints left, banks right, and appears behind Danny.

                     RAFE
          If you had guns, you'd be pissin' on 'em.

They're almost to the landing strip, Rafe behind Danny.  But
as Danny's wheels are about to touch, he guns his engine and
snaps the nose of his plane straight up.

THE OTHER PILOTS stop laughing.

                     ANTHONY
          He's doing an inside loop!

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          Aw, shit...

Danny pulls it off, just barely making a full circle to come
in behind Rafe and bounce to a stop on the runway.

                     DANNY
          Yee-hawww!!!

Danny taxis his plane over to join the others.  He's grinning
as he slides back his cockpit cover; then --

                     DANNY
          Where's Rafe?

Red, tall with flaming orange hair, tips his chin toward the
air.  Seeing Rafe's plane still in the air, Danny starts to
refasten his harness.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          You're down, Walker!  That's an order!

                     DANNY
          What about him?

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          He's not taking my orders anymore.

Danny's just about to ask what the hell that means, when he
notices Rafe climbing in a deliberate spiral.

                     DANNY
          He's gonna do it.

                     BILLY
          Do what?

                     DANNY
          It.
               (beat)
          Aw, shit.  Aw shit shit shit...

RAFE'S PLANE reaches two thousand feet, just a speck above
them, and seems to pause in the air.

                     DANNY
          I shouldn't'a done an inside loop.
          I shouldn't'a done an inside loop.

                     BILLY
          Why?

                     DANNY
          Cause now he's gonna do an outside loop.

                     TRAINING CAPTAIN
          Aw shit.  Aw shit shit shit...

Anthony and Billy join in, like an involuntary chant --

                     ANTHONY & BILLY
          Aw shit shit shit...

RAFE, IN HIS COCKPIT, is tightly controlled, yet serene.  He
noses the plane into a power dive.

The P-40 screams toward the ground, picking up speed, going
so fast it begins to shudder.

THE OTHER PILOTS are transfixed.  Red is so nervous he can't
get the words out.

                     RED
          Aw sh- sh- sh- sh-

                     BILLY
          Shit.

                     RED
          Yeah.

                     DANNY
          You can do it, Rafe.  You can do it.

The P-40, hurtling toward the ground at nauseating speed,
snaps into a half roll, streaking upside down over the
runway.  Rafe hangs inverted in his flight harness, the
asphalt of the runway shooting past, ten feet beyond his
head.

He pushes the plane into a climb, his cockpit on the outside
of the circle.  The plane reaches the top of its arc, and
almost stalls; but Rafe noses it over again, toward the
earth, only this time he has very little altitude.  The plane
hurtles down, still with it belly on the inside of the
curve...

And makes it full circle.  Rafe's head now is barely a foot
off the asphalt as the plane shoots past, still inverted.

THE OTHER PILOTS burst into cheers.

RAFE, IN HIS COCKPIT permits himself a smile.

He lands, and the guys run out to meet him...all except for
the Training Captain, who stands there shaking his head.

Danny jumps on the wing, as Rafe stops and slides back his
canopy.  Danny grabs him by the harness and shakes him.

                     DANNY
          You could've killed yourself, you stupid
          bastard!

He dives into the cockpit, hugging Rafe.

                     DANNY
          That was the most beautiful thing I ever
          saw.

INT.  COLONEL DOOLITTLE'S OFFICE - DAY

COLONEL JIMMY DOOLITTLE, mid-forties, is commander of the
base.  He's as tough as he is good in the air.  And right now
he's frowning at Rafe McCawley, standing at attention before
him.

                     DOOLITTLE
          There are some people who think the
          outside loop is reckless and
          irresponsible.

                     RAFE
          How could it be irresponsible, Sir, if
          you were the first man in the world to do
          it?

                     DOOLITTLE
          Don't get smart with me, son.

                     RAFE
          Never, Sir.  I just meant it's dangerous
          only for the kind of pilot who wants to
          show off, rather than inspire the other
          pilots in his unit.  And all you've done
          for me, Sir, working out the transfer, I
          did it to say thanks.  To honor you, Sir.
          What the French call a "homage."

                     DOOLITTLE
          That's bullshit, son.  But it's really
          good bullshit.

                     RAFE
          Thank you, Sir.

Doolittle stands, moves around his desk, and shakes Rafe's
hand.

                     DOOLITTLE
          Good luck over there McCawley.  I admire
          your decision.

                     RAFE
          Thank you, Sir.

INT.  NEW JERSEY AIRFIELD - BARRACKS - NIGHT

The pilots are getting slicked up for a night on the town.
Danny's at the mirrors with the others; he's putting on
cologne, and looks terrific in his uniform.

Anthony and Billy are combing their hair at the sinks.  Billy
declares to his image in the mirror --

                     BILLY
          You good-lookin' sumbitch...don't you
          EVER die!

                     ANTHONY
          That's your line for tonight, ya know.

                     BILLY
          What, good-lookin' sumbitch?

                     ANTHONY
          No, numbnuts, die.  You get your nurse
          alone, you look her in the eye, and say,
          "Baby, they're training me for war, and I
          don't know what'll happen.  But if I die
          tomorrow, I wanna know that we lived all
          we could tonight."  I've never known it
          to fail.

Red finishes brushing his teeth at the sink beside them.

                     RED
          He's n-never known it to work, either.

The guys head out laughing, running into Rafe coming in.

                     DANNY
          Doolittle didn't kill you?  Attaboy!

Rafe catches Danny's arm.

                     RAFE
          Danny, there's something I gotta tell
          you...

EXT.  NEW JERSEY BARRACKS - NIGHT

Rafe and Danny are walking on the parade ground; the other
guys are already on the bus that will take them into town.
Danny's upset by what Rafe just told him.

                     DANNY
          How could you do this?

                     RAFE
          The Colonel helped me work it out.

                     DANNY
          I don't mean how'd you do the paperwork,
          I mean how the hell did you do it without
          letting me in on it?

                     RAFE
          I'm sorry, Danny, but they're only
          accepting the best pilots.

                     DANNY
          Don't make this a joke, Rafe.  You're
          talking about war, and I know what war
          does to people.

                     RAFE
          Danny, you know how many times I saw you
          come to school with a black eye or a
          busted nose, and couldn't do a thing
          about it -- for you, or for your mother...
          or your father, with his lungs scorched
          out with mustard gas, and more left of
          his lungs than there was of his spirit?
          You've made your sacrifice, Danny.  It's
          time I made mine.

                     BILLY
               (from the bus)
          The nurses are waiting!

                     RAFE
          Let's go.

                     DANNY
          Nah, you go on.

                     RAFE
          I have to talk to Evelyn.  And I want you
          to meet her.

                     DANNY
          Some other time.  I don't feel like a
          party.

Danny walks away.  The bus driver's ready to leave, and Red
is honking the horn for Rafe to come.  Rafe reluctantly lets
Danny go, and heads for the bus, where the pilots are
chanting --

                     PILOTS VOICE
          Nurses!  Nurses!  Nurses!

INT.  A MOVING TRAIN - DAY

The trains of 1942 have their own beauty, with felt seats,
shaded lamps, and paneled compartments even in the economy
section.  But the glow of the train is outshone by EVELYN
STEWART.  She's one of ten young women, Army nurses, gathered
at one end of the car as it rattles along the track.

The other nurses are pretty and ripe -- maybe a bit too
ripe.  Their lips painted bright red, their faces powdered,
their spirits high.

Evelyn listens in amusement to BETTY, a cute blonde with
unmissable boobs, and BARBARA, a burnette equally endowed.

                     BETTY
          Do you have trouble with your boobs in
          the uniform?

                     BARBARA
          You mean hiding them?

                     BETTY
          Hide them?  On a date with pilots?  I'm
          talking about how you make them show!

SANDRA, another nurse, speaks up.

                     SANDRA
          Loan 'em to me, I'll make 'em show.

                     BETTY
          The boobs or the pilots?

The girls laugh and shove each others' knees; it's a party
wherever they go.  But Evelyn can't keep her mind on the
frivolity.  She looks out the window and her thoughts drift
away.

                     BARBARA
          We'll ask Evelyn.  Evelyn?  Evelyn!

                     BETTY
          Ooo, she's thinking of her date!  Come
          on, you've been dating a pilot.  We want
          to know what we can expect.

Suddenly all the girlish faces are looking at Evelyn.

                     EVELYN
          I've been dating one pilot.  And only for
          a few weeks.  But I know he's different
          from all the others.

Sandra throws up her arms and swoons onto her friends.

                     SANDRA
          True love!...

                     BETTY
          Morphine, give her morphine!

                     BARBARA
          Give her an enema.

                     EVELYN
          But I do have a warning for you.  There's
          one line you all need to know, and you're
          likely to hear it from any man in a
          uniform.  It goes like this:  "Honey,
          Baby... We never know what's gonna happen,
          and I may die tomorrow...so, let's live
          all we can tonight."

A silence among the nurses.

                     BARBARA
          I tell you.  Any one of those arrogant,
          leather-jacketed, slick-lookin' flyboys
          tries that line on me...he's gonna get
          anything he wants.

As the nurses laugh --

EXT.  NEW YORK TRAIN STATION - NIGHT

Our pilots -- indeed leather-jacketed and handsome -- are
waiting on the platform.  Among then is Rafe, holding
something behind his back, as the train pulls in and shudders
to a stop, clouds of steam jetting onto the platform and
giving the moment a dream-like haze.

INT./ EXT.  TRAIN - NEW YORK TRAIN STATION - NIGHT

The nurses start stepping out; both pilots and nurses pretend
surprise to see each.  At the door of the train, Evelyn
whispers to Betty --

                     EVELYN
          Stick with me, I'll find you somebody
          good.

Betty spot's Rafe.

                     BETTY
          I'll take that one.

                     EVELYN
          He's taken.  But come on, I'll introduce
          you.

They move to Rafe; he crosses the platform to meet them, his
eyes holding Evelyn.

                     RAFE
          Hello, Lieutenant.  Good to see you.

                     EVELYN
          You too, Lieutenant.

Betty clears her throat.

                     EVELYN
          Oh, this is Betty.

                     RAFE
          Nice to meet you, Betty.

He draws his hand from behind his back; he's holding two
roses.  He hands one to Evelyn and the second to Betty.

                     RAFE
          Danny would'a brought this.

He escorts them along the platform.

                     EVELYN
          Danny's not coming?

                     RAFE
          No, he...got some news today.  He'll be
          okay, he just didn't feel like coming
          tonight.

                     EVELYN
          I was hoping to meet him.

                     BETTY
          I was hoping to meet him.

                     RAFE
          We'll just have to find a substitute,
          won't we?

Betty stops, and faces Rafe.

                     BETTY
          I just want to tell you one thing.  If
          you're thinking this might be your last
          night on earth?... I'm prepared to make
          it meaningful.
               (leaning close)
          Very meaningful.

                     EVELYN
          At ease, Betty!

INT.  CITY NIGHT CLUB - NIGHT

It's a party in full swing; swing music, jitterbugging,
beautiful young men and women in high spirits.

Rafe and Evelyn are sitting at a big table with the other
pilots and nurses.  Anthony's paired up with Sandra, Billy
with Barbara, and Red, shyest of the group, finds himself
next to Betty.  Betty's already found a companion in Red
Strange.

                     RED
          He, I'm R-Red.  Red S-Strange.

                     BETTY
          Red...Strange?

                     RED
          You know the football player, Red G-
          Grange?  Well the guys called me R-Red,
          cause you know, I'm red...and they
          thought I was strange, so, you know, Red
          G-Grange, Red Str-Strange.

                     BETTY
          But...they called you Strange?  Because
          of Red Grange?  I don't get it.  Was Red
          Grange strange?

                     RED
          How would I know.

Beside her beer is an open ketchup bottle; he picks it up and
swigs from that.  Rafe and Evelyn see this, and try to keep
from laughing.

                     BETTY
          Do you always stutter?

                     RED
          Only when I'm n-n-n-

                     BETTY
          Nervous?

                     RED
          Yeah.  But if I have to get something
          out, I c-can always s-s-s-
               (he sings)
          SIIING!

She covers his hand with hers.

                     BETTY
          Don't be nervous.

Red looks at Betty with love in his eyes.  Under the table,
Rafe and Evelyn join hands too.

                     EVELYN
          There shipping us out.  Hawaii.  The
          Germans are overrunning Europe, and we're
          sent to paradise.  How about you?  Have
          you heard anything?

He hesitates; then Evelyn is distracted by the conversation
beside them, between Barbara and Billy.

                     BILLY
          You're a very special woman, and...well
          baby, they're training me for war, and we
          don't know what happens tomorrow.  So we
          gotta make tonight special.

Barbara shoots a look at Evelyn, before she answers.

                     BARBARA
          I hope you can back that up, flyboy.
          Cause you're not ever gonna forget
          tonight.

She takes him by the hand and pulls him to his feet... They
start dancing, sexy movements that won't stop till they've
been in bed.

Rafe pulls Evelyn to her feet, and leads her through the
dancers, outside.

EXT.  THE NIGHT CLUB - NIGHT

They find a quiet place on a balcony that overlooks the
river, and Manhattan beyond.  Evelyn takes in the view,
breathes in the air; she still holds the rose.

                     EVELYN
          Whatever you're trying to tell me isn't
          good, is it.  Or it wouldn't be so hard
          to say.

                     RAFE
          The only reason it's hard to say is that
          I keep thinking I don't have the right to
          say it.  But I've got to because it's
          true.  I love you.
               (beat)
          That must surprise you.

                     EVELYN
          It surprises me that I'm not the only one
          on this balcony who feels that way.

The power of hearing this from each other grips them both.

                     RAFE
          There's one thing I have to say.  I'm
          going away.

                     EVELYN
          We're all going away.

                     RAFE
          I'm going to the war.  The real war.
          Hitler's taken Europe.  The Brits are
          hanging on by their fingernails, and If
          they lose, there'll be more people killed
          than anybody can imagine.  And not just
          there, but here.

                     EVELYN
          But you're in the U.S. Army, how could
          you --

                     RAFE
          Colonel Doolittle pulled the strings, and
          put me on loan to the R.A.F.  They need
          pilots, and we need experience.  I leave
          tomorrow.

                     EVELYN
          You waited til tonight to tell me?

                     RAFE
          I had to tell you in person.  Because
          there's something else I need to say.

He studies her face, burning it into his memory.

                     RAFE
          Evelyn...you know the line -- let's make
          tonight memorable.  What I feel about you
          makes it impossible for me to say
          something like that.  If I don't come
          back, I don't want to saddle you with
          regret and sadness you'll carry the rest
          of your life.

                     EVELYN
          I don't know if you can choose that,
          Rafe.

                     RAFE
          Maybe not.  But I need you to know.  I
          love you.  And I will come back.  I'll
          find a way.  And then we'll get a chance
          to know if what I felt the first moment I
          saw you, and every minute since then, is
          real.

                     EVELYN
          Do one thing for me, before you go.

She takes his hand and leads him inside.

INT.  NIGHT CLUB - NIGHT

She leads him onto the dance floor, and they dance, among the
others, yet in a world apart from everyone else.  And then
they stop while all the others move around them, and kiss the
kind of kiss that lasts a lifetime.

EXT.  HOTEL - NIGHT

The nurses are entering the hotel.  Pilots are going in with
them.  But Rafe and Evelyn stop on the street.

A last kiss.  Their hands touch a final time, and then part.
She moves inside the lobby, and looks out the glass doors as
he walks away.

EXT.  TRAIN STATION - DAWN

Rafe and Danny stand on the platform.  Rafe's got his gear
packed in a bag slung over his shoulder.

                     CONDUCTOR'S VOICE
          All aboard!

Rafe glances once more toward the revolving doors from the
station that lead onto the platform.

                     DANNY
          Didn't you say you told her not to come?

                     RAFE
          Yeah.

                     DANNY
          Then why are you looking for her?

                     RAFE
          It's a test.  If I asked her to come and
          she came, it wouldn't tell me anything.
          If I tell her not to come, and she
          comes...then I know she loves me.

                     VOICE
          ALL ABOARD!

                     DANNY
          You're still a kid, ya know that?  Take
          care of yourself.

                     RAFE
          You too.

Rafe sticks his hand out to Danny.  Danny knocks it away, and
hugs him.

Rafe steps onto the train, and it pulls away.  Rafe waves.
Danny waves back and smiles, but he whispers like a prayer...

                     DANNY
          Give 'em hell, Rafe.

INT.  TRAIN - DAWN

Rafe finds a seat and sits down.  He's the only one in the
car, and he's deeply alone.

EXT.  TRAIN STATION - DAWN

Danny walks to one of the three revolving doors back into the
station.  He takes the one on the far right.  As he passes
through it, he doesn't see Evelyn rushing through the door on
the left side.  She's told herself she wouldn't come, but
couldn't help it, and now as she sees the last car of the
train disappearing around the corner the pain of it all hits
her.

She stands on the empty platform, as lonely as Rafe.

MONTAGE - THE JOURNEYS

Rafe and Evelyn travel in opposite directions, toward
opposite ends of the earth...

EXT.  A GRAY, COLD, CANADIAN SEAPORT - DAY

as Rafe boards a Canadian naval vessel headed into the North
Atlantic.

EXT.  TRAIN - TRAVELING THROUGH THE AMERICAN WEST - DAY

Evelyn and her fellow nurses ride the train through the
American southwest.  The scenery outside the window is
beautiful, but her thoughts are far away...

EXT.  NORTH ATLANTIC - DAY

Rafe's ship is in a convoy through the rough gray waters.
The deck is loaded with military supplies bound for Britain.
Rafe stands among the drab crates and seems oblivious to the
rain, his thoughts on Evelyn.

He looks toward the eastern horizon, where his ship is
heading.  A deep, dark storm is brewing before them...

EXT.  PACIFIC - DAY

Evelyn stands on the deck of a ship headed in the opposite
direction, on another ocean, the sky is clear, the breeze is
warm, the light of a glowing sunset bathes her face.  The
MONTAGE ENDS, with them heading to different ends of the
earth.

EXT.  BASSINGBORNE AIRFIELD - BRITAIN - DUSK

In the eternal dusk of England, everything is cold and gray.
British fighter planes -- Spitfires and Hurricanes -- are
surrounded by mechanics hurriedly ripping off bullet riddled
fuselage panels and digging into overworked aircraft engines.
Rafe walks across the tarmac, still carrying his duffel bag.
He moves up behind a slim, pale BRITISH AIR COMMANDER who is
surveying engine damage on one of the Spitfires.

                     RAFE
          Rafe McCawley, Sir.

Rafe salutes as the Air Commander turns and then returns the
salute, with his left arm -- his right arm is gone.  Rafe
freezes at the sight, reminded of Danny's father.

                     BRITISH AIR COMMANDER
          On loan from Colonel Doolittle, is it?

                     RAFE
          That's me, Sir.

                     BRITISH AIR COMMANDER
          Good on you, then, Rafe McCawley.  We'll
          get you situated in some quarters, and
          then introduce you to the equipment
          you'll be flying.

                     RAFE
          If you're patching up bullet holes right
          here on the runway, maybe we should skip
          the housekeeping and get right to the
          planes.

                     BRITISH AIR COMMANDER
          Are all the Yanks as anxious as you are
          to get yourself killed, Lieutenant?

                     RAFE
          Not anxious to die, Sir, anxious to
          matter.

EXT.  BASSINGBORNE AIRFIELD - BRITAIN - DAY

A Spitfire sits on the runway, and it's badly mangled -- a
string of bullet holes punched through at mid-fuselage; a
shot-off chunk of wingtip; but most striking is the blood
still splattered over the inside of the cockpit.

                     BRITISH AIR COMMANDER
          Good lad.  Didn't die till he'd landed
          and shut down his engine.  Welcome to the
          war.

He walks away, leaving Rafe to stare at the bloody cockpit.

EXT.  PEARL HARBOR - MILITARY BASE - DAY

Evelyn and the nurses enter the base, riding in two jeeps.
As they stop at the gate, the guards look at them, especially
Evelyn in the lead jeep; one guard mumbles to the other --

                     GUARD
          I've died and gone to heaven.

The guards lift the bar and smile at the nurses.  The jeeps
drive through.  The nurses are loving this island paradise
already.

                     BARBARA
          You know the ratio of men to women on
          this island?  Four-thousand...to one.

Barbara slides on a new pair of sunglasses with plastic palm
trees glued on the sides, and calls back to the guards as the
jeeps pull away --

                     BARBARA
          See ya on the beach, boys!

EXT.  MILITARY BASE - NURSES' QUARTERS - OAHU - DAY

As the other nurses happily unpack, Evelyn leaves and crosses
the grass in the drenching sunshine.  We follow her into --

INT.  BASE HOSPITAL - DAY

She finds a small, immaculately clean hospital, twenty beds
with luminous white sheets, all empty.

Then she notices the view.  It's of Pearl Harbor, with the
entire American Pacific fleet riding at anchor.  Battleships
all in a row.  Aircraft carriers too, in perfect stillness on
the aqua blue water with a white sand bottom.  The view is
expansive and beautiful.

The sound of an approaching fighter plane with wing guns
firing as we --

                                                      CUT TO:

EXT.  THE DARK SKIES OVER THE ENGLISH CHANNEL - DAY

Rafe, in the middle of an aerial dogfight, throws his
Spitfire into a tight turn, swinging around to fire again
into a squadron of Messerschmidts; they outnumber the British
planes, and they're tougher and faster.  Rafe darts through
their line, machine guns blazing.

One of the Spitfires in Rafe's squadron has taken hits in the
engine compartment and is sputtering, losing power, its
pilot, NIGEL, frantic as the German planes swarm into finish
him.

                     BRITISH PILOT (NIGEL)
          I need help!  Someone get them off me!

Rafe slams his control stick hard right and goes into a power
dive at one of the Messerschmidts.  Rafe's bullets chew up
its cockpit and the plane goes into a fast corkscrew spiral,
down into the water.

Rafe instantly climbs again.  Nigel, in the moment of safety
Rafe has bought him, bails out, his chute blossoming and
carrying him toward the water.  The OTHER BRITISH PILOTS are
impressed.

                     OTHER BRITISH PILOT
               (into radio)
          Nigel's out!  I'll call in the position!
               (to himself)
          That Yank is bloody good.

Rafe swings his plane right back at the Germans; he attacks
them head on, just like he went at Danny, only this time he's
firing his machine guns.

And OVER THIS ferocious dogfight, we hear his letter to
Evelyn...

                     RAFE'S VOICE (LETTER)
          Dear Evelyn... It is cold here.  So cold,
          in a way that goes deep into your bones.

The Messerschmidt in Rafe's sights breaks apart with the
stream of precise fire he pours into it, its prop flying into
pieces, its disintegration accelerated by its airspeed.
Before it completely comes apart, it explodes.

Rafe goes into another tight turn, to get at them again.

                     RAFE'S VOICE (LETTER)
          It's not easy making friends.  Two nights
          ago I drank a beer with a couple of the
          R.A.F. pilots -- beer's the only thing
          here that isn't cold -- and yesterday both
          of them got killed...

As Rafe starts another attack we see him in the cockpit, in
the trance of battle, as other Spitfires around him are
getting shot out of the sky...as we --

                                                 DISSOLVE TO:

EXT.  HOSPITAL - PEARL HARBOR - DAY

Evelyn, receiving the letter at mail call.

She sits on the grass under a palm tree, in paradise, reading
his letter.

                     RAFE'S VOICE (LETTER)
          There is one place I can go to find
          warmth, and that is to think of you.

EXT.  OUTDOOR RESTAURANT - OAHU - DAY

Evelyn is off duty, and wears a light cotton dress.  She's
let her hair down, and her skin has the sheen of light sweat
in the tropical heat.

The restaurant is barely more than a shelter of palm wood
posts with a frond roof, and it looks out over the harbor.
Evelyn sits alone.  She's brought writing paper.  As the
Hawaiian waiter serves her an icy tropical ambrosia with
chunks of pineapple and a fresh plumeria flower floating at
the rim of the glass, she lifts her pen.

But before she can start to write, three naval officers move
over to her table from the bar.  They're out of uniform too,
wearing garish tropical shirts.

                     NAVY GUY 1
          A woman beautiful as you shouldn't be
          sitting alone.  Buy you a drink?

                     EVELYN
          Thank you...Ensign.

The guys look at each other, impressed that she could tell.

                     NAVY GUY 1
          Ensign!  Smart too!

                     NAVY GUY 2
          So how about that drink?  Or dinner?

                     EVELYN
          Thank you, but...I really want to be
          alone right now.

                     NAVY GUY 3
          Want to see something long and hard?

He shows her the tattoo of an anchor on his forearm.  Evelyn
looks away from them, toward the harbor.

                     EVELYN
          I'm sorry.  I've got a letter to write.

                     NAVY GUY 3
          Cold bitch.

His friends start to pull him away, but Evelyn's eyes flare.

                     EVELYN
          What did you say?

                     NAVY GUY 3
          I said you're cold.

                     EVELYN
          Cold?  No, I'm just thinking about a war.
          And maybe you should be too.

They leave, shaking their heads.  Evelyn picks up her pen,
and writes.

                     EVELYN'S VOICE (LETTER)
          Dear Rafe... It's strange to be so far
          from you in body, and so close to you in
          spirit.  But if our spirits really give
          our bodies life, then you should know
          this:  Every night I look at the sunset,
          and try to draw the last ounce of heat
          from its long day...

She looks toward the sunset now; then she writes again...

EXT.  BASSINGBORNE AIRFIELD - BRITAIN - NIGHT

Rafe brings his battered plane in for a landing...

INT.  BRITISH AIRFIELD BARRACKS - NIGHT

Rafe sits on his cot, reading her letter.

                     EVELYN'S VOICE (LETTER)
          ...and send it from my heart to yours.

Rafe is startled as the Air Commander appears beside his
bunk.

                     BRITISH AIR COMMANDER
          Air-Sea Rescue picked up Nigel.  He'll be
          back with us tomorrow.

Rafe nods, glad to hear the news.  The Commander starts to
walk away, then turns back.

                     BRITISH AIR COMMANDER
          Some of us look down on the Yanks for not
          yet joining this war.  I'd just like to
          say that if there are many more back home
          like you, God help anyone who goes to war
          with America.

The Commander salutes, with his left hand.  And Rafe salutes
too -- with his left hand.

EXT.  ESTABLISHING THE WHITE HOUSE - WASHINGTON D.C. - DAY

The White House looks somehow whiter and purer in the glow of
1941.

INT.  PRESIDENTIAL CONFERENCE ROOM - DAY

GENERALS, ADMIRALS, and other advisors sit around the
polished table -- all males, in suits and in uniforms.  The
door opens, and the men all stand.

PRESIDENT FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT appears, in a wheelchair, pushed
by a huge black valet, GEORGE.  The President's legs are
shriveled, braced with the iron supports that attach to his
shoes and are apparent beneath the cloth of his pin-striped
pants.  From the waist up Roosevelt is heavily muscled,
powerful, and handsome even in his little spectacles.  The
valet rolls him to the head of the table; he's speaking even
before he settles in.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          Please be seated, gentlemen.

They sit, as one.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          Churchill and Stalin are asking me what
          I'm asking you:  How long is America
          going to pretend the world is not at war?

                     GENERAL MARSHALL
          We've increased supply shipments to them,
          Mr. President, and we're losing merchant
          vessels every day.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          Shift in every destroyer and anti-
          aircraft weapon you can find.

                     ADMIRAL
          Sir, our Pacific Fleet is already down
          to almost nothing.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          Gentlemen, at this moment the nation of
          Hungry has a larger military then the
          United States.  We have no choice but to
          draw from whatever we can.

EXT.  ESTABLISHING TOKYO - JAPAN - NIGHT

INT.  JAPANESE HIGH COMMAND - NIGHT

The Conference Room is similar to that of the White House.
But this table is low and all the men sit on the floor.  And
there are no civilians here; Japan is now a nation ruled by
its warriors.

The last man to enter the room and take his place is ADMIRAL
YAMAMOTO.  Harvard educated, Yamamoto is an object of
veneration and suspicion among the men of the war council.
Yamamoto bows, sits, and looks across the table at his friend
Genda, who can't hide his fear.  Yamamoto glances to the far
end of the table where NISHIKURA, chief of the War Council,
sits glowering.  (Their discussion is in Japanese, with
subtitles.)

                     NISHIKURA
          So you join us, Admiral.  Some of us
          thought your education at an American
          university would make you too weak to
          fight the Americans.

                     YAMAMOTO
          If knowledge of opponents and careful
          calculation of danger is taken as
          weakness then I have misunderstood what
          it means to be Japanese.

                     NISHIKURA
          The time has come to strike!  Or to sit
          and let the Americans cut off our oil and
          our future.  I know what you whisper to
          the others, Yamamoto -- that the Americans
          are strong.  Yet look at their leader.

He motions to OYAMA, an intelligence analyst, who opens a
file and lays out pictures of Roosevelt.

                     OYAMA
          Franklin Roosevelt.  Born into great
          wealth.  Fifteen years ago, he was
          stricken with polio.  Now he cannot walk,
          or even stand without help.
          Photographers will not take pictures of
          him in his chair; Americans do not wish
          to know how weak their President is.

Yamamoto makes a low grunt.

                     NISHIKURA
          You have something to say, Yamamoto?

                     YAMAMOTO
          The Council knows I have opposed fighting
          the Americans.  No matter how great our
          resolve, they have resources beyond ours.
          If we must go to war, there is only one
          way -- deal them a blow from which it will
          take them years to recover.  In that time
          we can conquer all of the Pacific, and
          they will have no choice but to ask for
          peace.

                     NISHIKURA
          You see us as capable of such a blow?

                     YAMAMOTO
          The Americans themselves have made it
          possible.  We will annihilate them in a
          single attack -- at Pearl Harbor.

The members of the war council are so pleased with Yamamoto
that they bow to him.  Only Genda keeps his eyes raised long
enough to see the sadness in Yamamoto's face.

EXT.  PEARL HARBOR - AIR BASE - BARRACKS - DAY

Danny Walker and his pilot buddies have just arrived; they
enter the barracks, talking happily.

                     RED
          If I ain't n-never on a b-boat again,
          it'll be too s-soon.

                     BILLY
          Where are the women on this --

Danny has stopped before the others; now all of them see that
the other pilots who inhabit this air base are still in their
beds, sleeping off hangovers.  They wear Hawaiian shirts;
they haven't shaved.

                     RED
          They're s-still asleep!

Danny pauses for a moment, then shouts --

                     DANNY
          Drop your cocks and grab your socks,
          boys!  The terror of the skies are here!

The sleeping pilots groan, and cover their heads with their
pillows.

                     ANTHONY
          They're all drunk.

One guy sits up in bed, his hair pointing every direction of
the compass, his tongue working as if to wipe a terrible
taste from his mouth.  As his feet dangle over the side of
the bunk and one of them touches the floor, a sensation
reaches his sotted brain; he raises that foot to look at its
bottom, and finds a new tattoo, on the sole of his foot; he
blinks as if trying to remember how it got there.

Danny moves over to him, and dubs him with a name, COMA.

                     DANNY
          Hey.  You.  Mr. Coma.

                     COMA
          Where's that lizard?

                     DANNY
          What lizard?

                     COMA
          The one that slept in my mouth last
          night.

                     DANNY
          What the hell happened to you guys?

Coma is one of those drunks who speak as if he's always about
to burp.

                     COMA
          Ever hear of mai-tai's?  Comes in a
          big...pot.  Like...like...

                     RED
          A m-missionary?

                     COMA
          No, like...

Coma emits a pukey, toxic burp that has Danny and his buddies
wincing back from the fumes.

                     DANNY
          This is an Air Base?  Where's your squad
          commander?

The question soaks through to Coma's brain.  His right hand
points...and his left hand points...in different directions.
His hands float around in the air until finally both of them
are indicating the same direction, behind his back.  In the
bunk beyond Coma's is another drunk pilot in a Hawaiian
shirt...and to judge by the shapely bronzed leg that
protrudes from under his damp sheet, there's a woman with him
too.

Danny and his buddies are speechless -- except for Red
Strange.

                     RED
          I th-think I'm gonna like it here.

                     COMA
          You guys are new?

                     DANNY
          Yeah.

                     COMA
          Mai-tai's.  I got this to tell ya, about
          mai-tai's.

Coma's head drifts forward slowly; they think for a moment
he's looking for something under the bed.  Then he pukes.
Danny leaps back from the splatter, and marches out of the
barracks; his friends follow.

EXT.  PEARL HARBOR - AIRFIELD - DAY

Danny and his buddies stride up to the airfield.  It's full
of fighter planes -- and they're all bunched together in
clusters on the field.  Danny grabs a MECHANIC.

                     DANNY
          Hey!  What is this, the planes all
          bunched up like that?

                     MECHANIC
          The brass is afraid of sabotage.  This
          makes 'em easier to protect -- and easier
          to service.

                     DANNY
          What about easier to hit in an air raid?

                     MECHANIC
          Who's gonna to that?  Japan is four
          thousand miles away.  So you guys just
          arrived, huh?

                     DANNY
          Yeah.

                     MECHANIC
          We got a saying here.  A-low-HA!

The mechanic walks off.  Danny and the guys are left standing
on the tarmac.

                     DANNY
          Well guys...I reckon there's just one
          thing to do...

INT.  OAHU BAR - DAY

Danny and the pilots are in Hawaiian shirts, their party in
full swing.  A bucket-sized hollowed-out volcano sits in the
middle of the table, with twelve straws emerging from the
crater.  It's full of booze -- or was; Danny and the other
guys are pulling heartily at the straws, and they gurgle as
the last liquid is sucked dry.

                     RED
          More m-mai-tai's!

Coma is sitting there with them, beside Red.

                     COMA
          Absolutely right.

Everybody's having a ball, the new arrivals fitting right in
with the others.  Danny's a bit off to himself, lost in his
own thoughts.  Billy and Anthony are doing the hula to the
Hawaiian music playing.

                     COMA
          No, you guys aren't doing it right.  It's
          in the hands.  They talk story.

Coma stands and starts demonstrating, explaining the gestures
of his hula.

                     COMA
          Fish swim in ocean... Happy in the Mother
          Sea... Girl, beautiful girl, with big
          jugs, walks into water...waves lapping at
          her thighs...

                     ANTHONY
          I never knew those dances were so
          sophisticated.

                     COMA
          ...Fish nibble at her breasts...

Coma's really into his dance, his hands over enormous
imaginary breasts; but as he turns toward the windows --

                     COMA
          A more beautiful girl walks by...

The guys see Evelyn passing on the other side of the street,
gorgeous in the sunshine.  Coma's hands start squeezing the
imaginary breasts of his hula.

                     BILLY
          Hey, isn't that Evelyn?

Danny moves up to look.

                     DANNY
          Rafe's girl, Evelyn?

                     COMA
          You guys know her?!  I gotta have an
          intro!  Man, I'd like to --

Danny's hand is suddenly around Coma's larynx.

                     DANNY
          A friend of mine's in love with her.  So
          you don't even look -- not ever.

Danny releases him and Coma staggers back to the table to
nuzzle up to one of the straws of the mai-tai volcano.

Danny looks out the window again and sees Evelyn's beautiful
form disappear around the corner, on her way back to the base
hospital.  Danny moves back to the table, and as two burly
Hawaiian waiters set another full loaded mai-tai volcano onto
the center of the table, he picks up a glass and dips it full
of the potent liquid.  He shouts to the whole room --

                     DANNY
          I'm a better pilot than any son-of-a-
          bitch on this island!  So I'm the one to
          say this!  Here's to Rafe McCawley!  A
          better pilot...and a better man...than
          me.

The other pilots drink up -- from glasses or from straws.

                     OTHER PILOTS
          To Rafe.

Danny drains the whole glass at one chug, and slams it down
onto the table.  Then he blinks, puts a hand on his stomach,
and frowns.  Coma recognizes the look.

                     COMA
          Uh oh.  Volcanic eruption!

Danny bends at the waist; his head obscured by the table.

                     COMA
          Shit, he's puking on my feet!

                     RED
          Well, you p-puked on his feet.

                     COMA
          Yeah, but he was wearing shoes!

INT.  ADMIRAL KIMMEL'S OFFICE - OAHU - DAY

ADMIRAL KIMMEL is Commander of the American Pacific Fleet.

Two members of his staff are standing uncomfortably in front
of him, having delivered a message from the Joint Chiefs of
Staff.

                     ADMIRAL KIMMEL
          ...transfer twelve more destroyers to
          Atlantic Fleet, and all the available
          anti-aircraft weaponry?!  Washington has
          gone insane!

Kimmel's STRATEGIC ANALYST speaks up.

                     STRATEGIC ANALYST
          We've done what you ordered, Admiral, and
          war gamed the likely outcome of a
          Japanese attack against each of our major
          bases in the Pacific.  Wake, Guam,
          Midway, the Philippines.  In each case,
          we lose.

                     ADMIRAL KIMMEL
          You left out Hawaii.

                     STRATEGIC ANALYST
          Pearl Harbor can't be attacked
          effectively from the air.  It's too
          shallow for an aerial torpedo attack.
          Pearl Harbor's safe.  It's everywhere
          else that we're vulnerable.

                     ADMIRAL KIMMEL
          Step up surveillance of Japanese
          communications.  They're gonna do
          something somewhere.  I can feel it.

EXT.  THE SKIES ABOVE OAHU - DAY

A seaplane takes tourists on an excursion above Pearl Harbor
and around the island of Oahu.  One Japanese tourist shoots
pictures rapidly...first of the ships as seen from overhead;
then he leans to the other side of the plane and shoots
pictures of the airfield below them.

EXT.  PEARL HARBOR - DAY

Another Japanese tourist hikes through the hills above Pearl
Harbor.  He takes an excellent camera from his picnic basket,
and shoots pictures.

CLOSE - THE PICTURES, being carried down a hallway, into --

INT.  JAPANESE PLANNERS OFFICE - DAY

The courier places the pictures onto the table in front of
Yamamoto, Genda, and the other JAPANESE OFFICERS.

                     GENDA
          Look at the ships -- all grouped.  Perfect
          targets!

                     JAPANESE OFFICER
          And the planes!  They are -- what is that
          American expression?  Sitting geese?

                     YAMAMOTO
          Sitting ducks.

                     JAPANESE OFFICER
          How can they be so foolish?

                     YAMAMOTO
          They think no one would be stupid enough
          to attack them at Pearl Harbor.

                     GENDA
          Or perhaps they think no one is capable.
          Look at this...

He moves to a diagram displayed on the wall -- a simple
display showing water depth and ship displacement.

                     GENDA
          Pearl Harbor's depth of only forty feet
          makes them feel safe.  A torpedo dropped
          from an airplane plunges to one hundred
          feet before it can level off.  That is a
          conventional torpedo.  But we have been
          experimenting.

From a stand beside his diagram he takes a set of wooden
fins, attached to a circular metallic band.

                     GENDA
          Wooden fins.  We are testing them
          tomorrow.

EXT.  JAPANESE ISLAND - DAY

Yamamoto and his planners have flown to a quiet Japanese
island, sunlit and pleasant.  They are gathered on the shore
of the island's natural harbor.  Wooden targets -- basically
huge plank barriers -- are sunk into the water like ships at
anchor.  A squadron of Japanese planes zooms overhead, taking
up attack positions.

                     GENDA
          We have chosen this place because its
          depth is exactly the same as Pearl
          Harbor's.

Genda speaks into a field radio.  A lone plane drops out of
formation and goes into a low-level approach, speeding up and
dropping its torpedo.

BELOW THE SURFACE we see the torpedo as it plunges at two
hundred miles an hour into the sunlit sea.  With the wooden
fins the torpedo makes a sharp dip and levels off above the
sea floor.

ABOVE THE SURFACE the planners see the path of the torpedo;
it hits the wooden barrier with a satisfying THUNK.  The
planners are impressed -- but Yamamoto is not satisfied.

                     YAMAMOTO
          Uncharged torpedoes have different
          balance.

                     GENDA
          I have arranged a live fire drill -- with
          your permission.

Yamamoto nods; Genda speaks again into his radio, and another
plane swoops down and drops a torpedo.  Genda holds his hands
to his ears, causing the others to do the same; even though
they wonder at the need.

The torpedo hits the barrier, and the explosion is deafening,
and of shocking force; the entire barrier is blown to
toothpicks.

                     GENDA
          Of course against a ship the explosion
          will not be dissipated, and will have
          more force.

The planners, nearly blown off their feet, nod as if they
knew that all the time.

INT.  MILITARY BASE - PILOTS' BARRACKS - NIGHT

The pilots are getting slicked up.

                     BILLY
          Are you sure they're here?

                     ANTHONY
          If Evelyn's here, the rest are here!

Red moves up beside him to frown at the mirror.  His hair is
plastered down and parted, his uniform's immaculate.

                     ANTHONY
          Looking good, Red.

                     RED
          Shut up.

Red moves away, to polish his shoes.

                     ANTHONY
          What is it with Red?  I've never seen him
          this way.

                     BILLY
          He's been like that all day.  Hey Danny,
          you coming?

                     DANNY
          Nah, I'm gonna stay here.  Read.

Anthony and Billy look at each other; Danny's in his bunk,
and he's not reading, just staring at the ceiling.

INT.  NURSES' BARRACKS - PEARL HARBOR - NIGHT

The nurses are primping to go out; Evelyn is in her uniform
getting ready to go back to work.

                     BARBARA
          Now listen, it's hands off Billy.  I
          mean, you can put your hands on him if
          you want to, but then my hands will break
          yours.

                     BETTY
          He was that good?

                     BARBARA
          No, I was.

EXT.  NURSES' QUARTERS - OAHU - NIGHT

Creeping through the vegetation, Red leads Anthony and Billy
to a spot outside the nurses' barracks; they can see the
girls through the barracks window.

                     BILLY
          Red, Peeping Tom stuff can get us court-
          marshaled.

                     RED
          Shhh!

Anthony and Billy are baffled, even more so when Red strides
into the open, right outside the nurses' window.

And then, Red begins to sing.

                     RED
               (singing)
          Oh...Betty, Betty, Betty, you're the one
          for me, Betty, Betty, Betty, Betty, can't
          you see...

Anthony and Billy look at each other, dumbfounded.  The
nurses move to the open windows.  Red's singing is pretty
good -- though not that good.  But he doesn't stutter when he
sings.

                     RED
               (singing)
          I'll be yours for eternity, Betty, Betty,
          Betty, Betty, Betty!

Anthony and Billy are hysterical, trying to keep their
laughter hidden.  But then they see the effect this is having
on the women -- especially on Betty.  She's smitten.

Red repeats the verse, really getting into it; when he
finishes, Betty runs out and hugs him, as all the nurses
applaud.  They move off into the darkness, arm and arm.

The nurses go back to their primping.

Anthony and Billy are changed men.  Anthony stands up;
Billy's baffled.  Anthony moves out and starts singing.

                     ANTHONY
               (singing)
          Oh Sandra...I like you...love you...

He's terrible.  The nurses pelt him with hairbrushes,
curlers, shoes...

EXT.  BASSINGBORNE AIRFIELD - BRITAIN - DAY

Coming out of the blustery skies at the end of another deadly
day, a squadron of Spitfires chirps in for landings.  The
planes are shot up and battered.

Rafe is one of the pilots; the fuselage below his cockpit is
marked with four swastikas, symbols of his victories.  He
taxis to a stop, and is met by IAN, a Scottish mechanic, who
is dismayed at the state of the plane.

                     IAN
          Leapin' Jesus!

                     RAFE
               (climbing down)
          The struts are loose, the hydraulics are
          leaking, and the electrical system's
          shorting out in the cockpit.

                     IAN
          Well which of those three ya want fixed?

                     RAFE
          All of 'em.

Rafe starts away, and Ian calls to his back --

                     IAN
          If ye'd wanted a bloody Cadillac ya
          should'a stayed in the bloody States!

                     RAFE
          And if you don't give me a plane that can
          handle combat, you better start learning
          to speak German.

                     IAN
          Fook ya!

                     RAFE
          Learn English, then!

                     IAN
          Fook ya dooble!

Rafe moves to the barracks; Ian keeps the fueling hose going,
and moves to help the armorers reload the guns.

INT.  BRITISH AIRFIELD BARRACKS - NIGHT

Rafe falls down onto his cot, exhausted.  The other pilots do
the same, everybody spent from the day's combat.  Then they
hear the SIREN.  Rafe's out of his bunk, with the others,
everybody running.

                     BRITISH PILOT
          Bloody Krauts!  Night raid!

EXT.  BASSINGBORNE AIRFIELD - BRITAIN - NIGHT

They race across the runway.  Rafe reaches his Spitfire, just
as Ian is removing the fueling hose.

                     IAN
          I have'na been able ta --

                     RAFE
          Crank her!

Ian gives the prop a spin, and the engine roars to life.

                     IAN
          God speed ya, laddie.

EXT.  SKIES OVER THE ENGLISH CHANNEL - NIGHT

It's dark, but there are breaks in the clouds, giving way to
patches of light from a full moon.  The squadron of Spitfires
tightens up for battle.

Rafe is positioned just right of the squad leader; he sees
planes breaking out of the dark clouds ahead.

                     RAFE
          Here they come.

The clouds break, revealing a huge attack formation.

                     BRITISH SQUAD LEADER
          Alpha group, on the bombers!  Beta group,
          take the fighters!

They peel off, into action.

EXT.  THE AIR BATTLE OVER THE CHANNEL - NIGHT

We stay with Rafe as he and the Squad Leader rush side by
side at the lead bomber, blasting away with their guns.

INT.  GERMAN BOMBER - IN THE AIR - NIGHT

The Spitfires' bullets rip into the pilot and also kill the
nose gunner; the bomber dips as the copilot struggles to take
control.

INT.  RAFE, IN HIS SPITFIRE - NIGHT

As he streaks past, Rafe sees the bomber wobble in the air.

                     RAFE
          We've got him hurt, stay on him!

Rafe throws his plane into an ultra-tight, high speed turn,
right between the tails of the leader German group and the
noses of the second.  His turn is so tight that the plane
flexes with the g-force.

Rafe comes out of his turn ahead of the Squad Leader, and
races back up through the formation of German bombers, moving
above them where their weapons and armaments are the weakest.
He stitches a trail of bullets from tail to nose of the
wounded lead bomber; it begins to smoke.

The second Spitfire, the Squad Leader's, takes fire from the
other German bombers, and shears off, heading through the
smoke of the plane Rafe has on the ropes.

                     RAFE
          We've got him going!

Rafe does a half-loop and half-spin, to bring him around to
face the bombers again.  This time the g-force of the turn
pops an oil line inside Rafe's cockpit; hot, pressurized oil
begins to spray everywhere -- all over Rafe, his controls,
and worst of all, over the inside of his cockpit glass.

He wipes at the oil with his hands and that just smears it
and makes it worse.

His wingman sees him veering away from the bombers...and sees
the German fighters moving up to meet him.

                     SQUAD LEADER
          McCawley!  Get to the clouds!  Get into
          the clouds!

RAFE, IN HIS PLANE, is flying blind.

                     RAFE
          I can't see the clouds!

His problems are just beginning; the fluid is dripping down
onto his cockpit's corroded electrical wiring; the fluid
causes an arc...a spark...and suddenly a fire is spreading
through Rafe's plane.

He grabs his fire extinguisher and triggers a cloud that
snuffs the fire but fills the entire cockpit with choking
smoke; between that and the smeared fluid on his glass, he
can't see a thing.

And the Messerschmidts are swarming over him.

Rafe's wingman dives in, raking the German planes as he
passes.

Rafe tries to open his cockpit cover to clear the smoke, but
it's jammed; he pulls out his .45 pistol and BLAM!  BLAM!
BLAM!  He blows out the glass; the smoke clears enough for
him to take a breath and try to see.  He fights the stick,
but the plane won't respond.

The Messerschmidts rake him again, bullets riddling his
engine.

                     SQUAD LEADER
          Get out of there, McCawley!  Get out of
          there!

Rafe's plane descends, ever faster, passing through clouds,
then clear air again.  The Squad Leader tries to chase and
cover him, but Rafe's dropping fast, and still isn't out of
the plane as the Germans dive on him again, firing.

Rafe's Spitfire hits the broken fog over the water -- the
Squad Leader loses sight of it for a moment -- and then the
plane hits, splashing and exploding all at once.

The Squad Leader winces, and ducks into the clouds as he
reports on his radio...

                     SQUAD LEADER
          McCawley down.  No 'chute.

EXT.  BATTLESHIP WEST VIRGINIA - PEARL HARBOR - DAY

The sailors have assembled on deck for the ship's heavyweight
championship fight, a contest made more interesting to the
sailors because one of the combatants is white and the other
is black.

The battle is more toughness than technique.  The guys
throwing haymakers and shoving each other around the roped
area, as their shipmates cheer and make wild bets.  The white
guy digs a punch deep into the black guy's ribs, and the
black guy slams a double left hook into the white guy's
belly, making him back up and say --

                     WHITE BOXER
          You hit hard -- for a cook.

The black guy rushes the white guy, only to catch a right
cross that wobbles his knees and makes him stagger, with a
fresh cut over his right eye.  The white guy now rushes in,
and the black guy (his name is DORIE MILLER) throws an upper
cut that drops his opponent like a sack of rocks.

The sailors cheer wildly.  Dorie steps back, and rubs his
glove across his brow.  It's really bleeding now.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE - DAY

Evelyn is returning from church with six of her nurse
friends.  It's very quiet on a Sunday morning, almost nobody
at the base; they walk along the path.

                     BARBARA
          Let's get into civvies and find a bar.

                     MARTHA
          Right after church?

                     BARBARA
          You've gotta sin some, to get
          forgiveness.  Come with us, Evelyn.  You
          need some sin.

                     EVELYN
          I've got to write some requisitions.
          We're undersupplied with morphine.

                     BETTY
          Morphine?  We've been here a month and
          nobody's had worse than a sunburn.

Evelyn smiles softly and walks toward the base hospital.

                     BETTY
          I wish she could forget him.

                     BARBARA
          You don't forget love, Honey.  Not ever.

EXT.  HOSPITAL - PEARL HARBOR - DAY

Evelyn approaches the hospital and finds the black boxer
peering in the window.  He's in a T-shirt and navy pants.

                     EVELYN
          Can I help you, sailor?

As Dorie turns, she sees the cut on his head, closed only
with a band-aid; it's dripping blood down his T-shirt.

                     DORIE
          'Scuse me, 'Mam.  All the ship's doctors
          is golfing, and I couldn't find nobody to
          look at this.

                     EVELYN
          Our doctor's gone too.

                     DORIE
          Sorry to trouble you.

                     EVELYN
          Wait, let me look at that... You better
          come in here.

INT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - DAY

Miller is sitting on a stool; Evelyn bathes the wound.

                     EVELYN
          How'd you get this?

                     DORIE
          Boxin'.

                     EVELYN
          Win?

                     DORIE
          Yes'm.

He says it without pride.  She puts down the basin.

                     EVELYN
          What's your name?

                     DORIE
          Dorie Miller, 'Mam.

                     EVELYN
          I'm Evelyn.  And I'm just a nurse.  But
          I'm not playing golf, and that cut needs
          sewing, or else it's gonna make a big
          lumpy scar.  Whatta ya say?

INT.  HOSPITAL - PEARL HARBOR - LATER

Evelyn clips the ends of her carefully applied stitches;
Dorie's eyes are rolled up as if he could watch from inside
his skull.

                     EVELYN
          How often you fight like this?

                     DORIE
          Every other Sunday.  I'm heavyweight
          champion of the West Virginia.

                     EVELYN
          What do you get for winning?

                     DORIE
          Respect.

She hands him a mirror.  He studies her work.

                     DORIE
          No doctor would'a give me that good.

She walks him to the door.

                     DORIE
          Thank you, 'Mam.

                     EVELYN
          Tell me something, Dorie.  A man as big
          as you -- and smart too, you knew where
          to come when your ship couldn't help --
          do you still have to fight with your
          fists to get respect?

                     DORIE
          I left my Mama and joined the Navy to be
          a man.  They made me a cook -- and not
          even that, really -- I clean up after the
          other sailors eat.  I shine the officer's
          shoes.  In two years, they've never even
          let me fire a gun.

Now Evelyn understands.

                     EVELYN
          You take care, Dorie.

                     DORIE
          You too, 'Mam.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - SUNSET

Dorie walks away, down the path between the palm trees.  She
watches him go, and then is transfixed by someone else
coming, silhouetted by the light of the setting sun.  She
can't make out his face, but he's wearing a pilot's dress
uniform, and coming to her right out of the warm orange
sunset that she has stared at so many times.  Her heart slams
against her ribs; she takes a few steps forward.

                     EVELYN
          ...Rafe...

She moves toward him, and he draws near her, walking slowly.
And then she sees his face...

It's Danny.  His face as sad as death itself.

And even before he tells her, she knows.

                     DANNY
          Lieutenant... I'm Danny Walker.  I'm Rafe
          McCawley's best friend.

                     EVELYN
          Were.  Isn't that what you mean?  Were.
          Because he's dead, isn't he?  And that's
          why you've come.

EXT.  A BENCH - OVERLOOKING PEARL HARBOR - SUNSET

Evelyn and Danny sit on the bench, with a sweeping view of
the harbor and the lights winking on all around it as the sun
settles beyond the horizon.  Evelyn is stoic, numb; Danny is
the one who is struggling.

                     DANNY
          Before Rafe left, he asked me to be the
          one to tell you, if it happened.

                     EVELYN
          He told me about you.  That he had no
          other friend like you.

                     DANNY
          Rafe's folks had a crop dusting business,
          owned their own planes.  Real straight,
          frugal.  My father was the town drunk.
          Went to sleep one night on the railroad
          tracks and was still there when the Dawn
          Express came along.  Rafe and I were the
          only ones at the funeral.  He took me
          back to his house, and I never left.

                     EVELYN
          You were more like brothers.

                     DANNY
          I taught him to drink beer.  He taught me
          how to fly.

                     EVELYN
          He said you're the only one he ever saw
          who was better in the air than him.

                     DANNY
          ...He said that?

Evelyn nods, still staring away from Danny.  This pierces
Danny; he looks away, struggling not to let the emotions pull
him completely under.

                     DANNY
          Look, uh...Rafe's dad...he wrote me with
          the news, and it took me a couple of days
          to work up the guts to come here and tell
          you.  I'm not as brave as Rafe, or as
          noble.  But if there's anything I can
          ever do to help -- you let me know, okay?

She stares into the distance.  He stands and puts his hand on
top of hers, as much for his comfort as for hers.

                     DANNY
          I understand why Rafe loved you.  You're
          as strong as he was.

Since she's still not looking at him, he starts to move away.
When he reaches the turn in the path, he looks back, and sees
her figure in the gathering darkness.  She's begun to break
down; and as he watches, her whole body starts convulsing,
and she doubles up in shattering grief.

Danny can't just stand there; he moves back to her, and puts
a hand on her shoulder.  He sits beside her again, and
suddenly she turns to him and sobs upon him.  Danny wraps her
gently in his arms, and then he breaks down, having found the
first place he can truly grieve.

EXT.  JAPANESE BOMBING PRACTICE - JAPANESE ISLAND - DAY

The Japanese have constructed a replica of Pearl Harbor on
their practice island; erecting new target barriers and
silhouettes of the various ships anchored at Pearl.  Streams
of Japanese planes skim overhead in practice bombing runs,
dropping dummy torpedoes and bombs.  From a control platform
erected on the beach, Yamamoto and Genda oversee it all.

                     YAMAMOTO
          Everything real except the fact that no
          one is shooting back at us.

                     GENDA
          If we achieve surprise, they will offer
          little resistance.

                     YAMAMOTO
          Set up teams of radio operators to send
          out messages the Americans will
          intercept, concerning every potential
          American target in the Pacific.  Include
          Hawaii -- the clutter will be more
          confusing that way.

                     GENDA
          Brilliant, Admiral.

                     YAMAMOTO
          A brilliant man would find a way not to
          fight a war.

He looks out at the planes roaring into his practice harbor
at top speed...

INT.  PRESIDENTIAL BEDROOM - NIGHT

Roosevelt's valet leans over him.

Roosevelt wakes; beside the valet is a Presidential AIDE.

                     AIDE
          Mr. President, we've received a message
          from the Argentinian ambassador to Japan.
          His sources tell him the Japanese are
          assembling their fleet to attack us.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          We're picking up warnings for every
          American base in the Pacific.  Does this
          ambassador know the target?

                     AIDE
          Not for sure.  But he thinks it's Pearl
          Harbor.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          Tell the Pentagon.

The Aide leaves quickly and Roosevelt starts to get out of
bed; his valet comes to help him.

                     PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
          No, George, I need the practice, in case
          there's a fire.

Roosevelt drags himself out of bed, crawling toward the
bathroom, his powerful arms dragging his lifeless legs.

INT.  PENTAGON - DAY

ADMIRALS and other OFFICERS are gathered around a giant map
of the Pacific.

                     ADMIRAL
          The attack seems inevitable.  The
          question is where?  The way to answer
          that question is to ask:  if we were the
          Japanese, how would we do it?

He nods to a VICE ADMIRAL, who stands over the map.

                     VICE ADMIRAL
          Between America and the Far East are the
          sea lanes where the winds and the
          currents make the best route for
          shipping.  Far above is the northern
          route, between Canada and Russia.
          Between these two is something they call
          the Vacant Sea.  If I were the Japs, I'd
          send a task force there.  You could hide
          the entire land mass of Asia in the
          Vacant Sea, and nobody would know.

                     ADMIRAL
          So they pop out and attack where?

                     VICE ADMIRAL
          That's the problem, Admiral.  They could
          hit anywhere they want.

Nobody has any solution.

EXT.  PACIFIC OCEAN - DAY

A huge Japanese fleet steams toward Hawaii.  It is an awesome
sight.  Carriers, battleships, destroyers, and entire battle
group, traveling under complete radio silence, their hulls
power through the waves.  On the lower decks of the carriers
are hundreds of planes -- fighters and bombers.

EXT.  PEARL HARBOR - DAY

The American ships are lined up at anchor, calm, placid.

EXT.  BEACH - DAY

The sailors and soldiers bask in the sun, play volleyball.

The aircraft carrier Lexington steams past toward the harbor
entrance.

                     VOLLEYBALL PLAYER 1
          Where's the Lexington going?

                     VOLLEYBALL PLAYER 2
          Out on maneuvers, like the Enterprise.

EXT.  GOLF COURSES - OAHU - DAY

Men in military haircuts -- officers -- stroll the golf
courses, enjoying themselves.

INT.  DENTIST'S OFFICE - DAY

The DENTIST, an ethnic Japanese, is working on a patient with
his mouth agape.  The DENTIST ASSISTANT intrudes.

                     DENTAL ASSISTANT
          Dr. Takanawa, you have a call from Tokyo.

                     DENTIST
          Please excuse me.  Just relax.

Leaving his patient with a mouth full of instruments, the
Dentist moves to his outer office, which looks directly out
over Pearl Harbor.  He speaks in Japanese.

                     DENTIST
          Takanawa... Yes?...

He seems confused by the call, but he responds by looking out
over the harbor, then saying into the receiver --

                     DENTIST
          Yes, they are all...no wait, I see the
          big one moving.  The one that's flat on
          top, what do they call it?...

INT.  SURVEILLANCE BASE - DAY

Some tired Army Intelligence types -- A LISTENER, a TRACKER,
and an INTELLIGENCE SUPERVISOR, are sitting at a bank of
phones.  The LISTENER is a Japanese-American.

                     LISTENER
          Here's something, over the line from
          Tokyo.

He switches on the recording equipment and looks to the
TRACER, sitting at a battery of equipment.

                     TRACER
          It's connected to a local dentist.  His
          office is beside Pearl Harbor.

                     INTELLIGENCE SUPERVISOR
          This dentist, is he a spy?

                     LISTENER
          Sounds too innocent.  His accent is from
          the old country.  Somebody official-
          sounding calls, he thinks it's
          discourteous not to respond.

INT.  BARBER SHOP - DAY

Admiral Kimmel is settling into the barber chair when his
AIDE enters and nods for the barber to move a few paces away,
so that he can speak privately.

                     AIDE
          Sir, we just had an intelligence
          intercept.  Someone from Tokyo called a
          local dentist whose office looks over
          Pearl.  They wanted to know the exact
          location of the ships.

                     ADMIRAL KIMMEL
          Someone from Tokyo asks a dentist how the
          ships are sitting... What are we supposed
          to do about that?

                     AIDE
          I...don't know, Sir.  But it just seemed
          significant.

                     ADMIRAL KIMMEL
          Have intelligence keep monitoring him.

The Admiral sinks back into the chair.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - DAY

A young amateur PHOTOGRAPHER, about 16, wearing a hat with
"PICTURES OF PARADISE" printed on it's crown is ready to snap
a shot of Evelyn and her nurse friends having a picnic lunch
on the lawn outside the hospital.

                     PHOTOGRAPHER
          Closer, ladies!  Closer!  Now smile!...
          Great!  Next week I'll show you a print
          and you can order your Pictures of
          Paradise!

He hustles off.  Betty hands out picnic baskets.

                     BETTY
          Barbara, here's yours...and Evelyn, here
          you are.

Evelyn opens her basket, and finds a lei of Hawaiian flowers
stuffed in the top.  Betty scoots over and puts the flowers
around Evelyn's neck.

                     BETTY
          It's been a month and you haven't smiled.
          We just want you to know we love you.

Evelyn's touched -- but before she can react two P-40's zoom
out of the skies, wings clipping the tops of the palm trees
as they blast over head.

INT.  COCKPIT'S OF THE P-40'S - DAY

Danny and Anthony are the pilots; as they pull up and away,
they pass over some officers on the golf course, scaring the
shit out of them as they putt.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - DAY

The nurses have sprawled to the ground; now even Evelyn is
smiling.

                     BARBARA
          What is it with nurses and pilots?

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - PEARL HARBOR - EVENING

Evelyn walks out of the hospital.  She's still wearing her
lei.  The sun is going down in a spectacular sunset.

She stares at the orange glow at the edge of the world.  She
breathes in the sea air, and tries to breathe out the
sadness.  The water of the harbor laps close to where she
stands, the sunset polishing its surface.

She takes the lei from her neck, plucks a single flower, and
holds it like the rose Rafe once gave her.  Then she tosses
the rest of the lei into the ocean and watches it float away,
as the sun sinks behind the horizon.

INT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

Evelyn finds her purse, and tucks the flower into it.  She's
alone in the hospital, everyone else has gone; she turns her
mind toward work, something to lose herself in.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE - NEAR THE PILOTS' BARRACKS - DAY

Danny is walking toward the barracks when a COLONEL hopping
mad, confronts him.

                     COLONEL
          You're Walker, right?

                     DANNY
          Yes Sir.

                     COLONEL
          That was a nice little stunt you pulled,
          buzzing the base.

                     DANNY
          You liked that?

                     COLONEL
          Oh yeah.  I liked it so much I'm cutting
          you out of the squadron.

                     DANNY
          Sir?

                     COLONEL
          I don't buy that hot dog shit.  So you
          and your buddies are gonna transfer your
          planes up to Haleiwa.

                     DANNY
          Hale-what?

                     COLONEL
          You'll love it.  No base, no bars, just
          lots of sun and aircraft maintenance.

                     DANNY
          Sir, I --

                     COLONEL
          Too late for apologies, Walker.

                     DANNY
          I wasn't gonna apologize, Sir.  I was
          just gonna say it was worth it to feel
          like a real pilot again, even if it was
          only for five seconds.

The Colonel glares at him and stalks away.

INT.  BASE CANTEEN - NIGHT

Danny and Evelyn are having coffee at the base canteen.

                     DANNY
          How's everything?

                     EVELYN
          We got some soldiers in traction from a
          jeep accident, but it's quiet.  Except
          for the occasional fighter plane buzzing
          us.

                     DANNY
          That might not have been such a good
          idea.  They're making us fly out of a
          half-paved airfield.  The real punishment
          is that I won't be back to the barracks
          till it's too late for dinner or coffee.
          So I guess it's goodbye for awhile.

                     EVELYN
          I was just thinking that war is a series
          of goodbyes.  Do you think that's why
          we're meeting.  To help us say goodbye to
          Rafe?

                     DANNY
          I swore not to talk about him tonight,
          but there's all this stuff I think I
          ought to tell you, that he didn't get a
          chance to.  Rafe was...he was lonely.  He
          had such high expectations of himself
          that he always felt empty.  The week he
          met you he told me he felt his heart had
          always lived in winter, and for the first
          time in his life he has seen the spring.

He's been lost in his own thoughts of Rafe; now he notices
the tears welling up in her eyes.

                     DANNY
          Sorry.

                     EVELYN
          He told me he didn't want to leave me
          with regret.  Now that's all I have.

                     DANNY
          Hey, have you seen Pearl Harbor at night?

                     EVELYN
          Well...sure.

                     DANNY
          From the air?

EXT.  HALEIWA AIR FIELD - NIGHT

A P-40 takes off from the remote airfield, lit only by the
full moon.

INT.  P-40 - NIGHT

Evelyn sits on Danny's lap, like Rafe sat in his Daddy's lap
years before.  Danny flies easily, the cockpit open, his arms
slipped under hers.

The sky above them is startlingly clear; a billion stars
dancing around a full moon.

                     EVELYN
          So beautiful!

                     DANNY
          Hang on.

He spins the plane in an easy half turn, inverting their
heads above Pearl Harbor, gorgeous in the moonlight, the
battleships aglow, the moon reflected in the peaceful water,
embraced by the island of Oahu.

EXT.  HALEIWA AIR FIELD - NIGHT

The P-40 soars easily in and settles to earth.  Danny shuts
down the engine.  Danny carefully removes the harness around
her.  She looks overhead.  The stars are still bright above
them.

                     EVELYN
          I didn't realize until tonight that I've
          stopped wanting to live.

She turns in his lap, and looks at him.  Their eyes connect.
Tentatively, almost reluctantly, they kiss.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

The POV of someone moving through the gathering darkness
approaches the hospital.

The lights from within the hospital, and the pristine white
beds beneath those lights, give the place a kind of glow,
where Evelyn moves alone and beautiful, like a ballerina in a
giant's jewel box.

Now we see the shoulders of the figure, from behind, and can
tell that it is a man in uniform, but at first we can't tell
who.  He's standing dead still, transfixed in watching Evelyn
through the windows.

INT.  BASE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

Evelyn moves to her desk, and sits down.  She looks at the
calender turning back to October, where she wrote on the
square of October 22, "Order supplies" -- she counts the
weeks from then to today, December 6.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

We see the full figure of the man watching her.  And now we
see his face.  It is Rafe.

His left hand is bandaged, but he is very much alive --
though seeing Evelyn has taken his breath, and even seems to
have robbed him of the power to move.  His eyes pick up every
detail of her -- her face...her hands.

And as Rafe watches Evelyn, he has the SUDDEN JOLTS OF
SUBLIMINAL FLASHBACKS...punctuated by fragments of the letter
she wrote to him, and INTERCUT with Rafe in the present,
watching Evelyn.

                     EVELYN'S VOICE
          Dearest Rafe --

IN SUBLIMINAL FLASHBACK, RAFE'S SPITFIRE, crippled and
trailing smoke, passing through a patch of cloud as Rafe
hurls himself from the cockpit and jerks the ripcord of his
chute.

IN THE PRESENT...Rafe's face winces with the memory, and he
rivets his eyes on Evelyn, as if to force himself to know
that this moment is real.

SUBLIMINAL FLASHBACK...RAFE LANDS IN THE WATER, and the shock
of its coldness travels up his body faster than his body
sinks into the water.  He's cloaked in the fog; his
parachute, pushed by the wind, is pulling him along face
down.  He fights with the straps, flips himself over, and
pulls the release...

But he's still in desperate trouble; in his flying clothes,
his heavy leather jacket soaking with sea-water, he's going
down; his body sinks beneath the surface...

                     EVELYN'S VOICE
          ...Every sunset...

IN THE PRESENT, Rafe's chest trembles... Is it from the
memory of the frozen water, from the emotion of seeing Evelyn
again -- or both?

SUBLIMINAL FLASHBACKS -- Below the surface of the North Sea,
Rafe's body drifts, but he fights his way back up...he kicks
off his shoes, sheds the jacket, strips off his pants and
starts tying the cuffs into knots.

Then, in a CUT, he is floating in the water, his pants turned
into a makeshift life preserver, his body shaking
convulsively from the cold.

Then in another CUT we see him after he's been in the water
for so long that his body no longer trembles; he's lost
consciousness.  He has no strength, no will to live... His
face settles into the water...his body slips from his
preserver, and drifts beneath the surface...

                     EVELYN'S VOICE
          ...gather it's heat into my heart, and
          send it to you...

IN FLASHBACK, Rafe beneath the surface... His eyes come open.
From his POV beneath the water, he sees something above the
surface.  It's only in his mind, but that makes it no less
real...an orange glow, the warmth of the sunset, and her face
above the surface... His limbs come to life, and he fights
his way up, breaking the surface.  The whole sea around him
is dark and empty, but he grabs his makeshift preserver and
holds on for dear life...and for Evelyn.

IN THE PRESENT Rafe stares through the window, at Evelyn, but
he can't go in.  He backs away from the window.

INT.  PILOT'S BARRACKS - NIGHT

A Japanese-American MESSAGE BOY parks his motorbike outside
and enters the barracks.

                     MESSAGE BOY
          Daniel Walker?...

Danny rises from his bunk and accepts the telegram.  As the
message boy leaves, Danny reads... The news he learns stuns
him...

EXT.  BENCH - OUTSIDE THE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

Rafe is still lost in thought.  He hears steps running up --
and sees Danny -- who spots him at the same moment.

                     DANNY
          Rafe!

INT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

Evelyn puts away the calender.

EXT.  MILITARY BASE HOSPITAL - NIGHT

Rafe is sitting at the bench, his head down.

ANGLE - Evelyn on the path; she sees someone on the bench,
his form hauntingly familiar.  He hears her, and looks up.
It's Rafe.

From Evelyn's POV, the whole world spins.  She faints.

Rafe jumps to catch her before she slams to the ground.  He
gathers her into his arms, and she looks up into his face.
He's real, very real.

                     RAFE
          Evelyn.

She's trembling, shaking.  He lifts her to her feet, and
moves her to the bench.

                     RAFE
          I sent telegrams, I guess the military
          traffic held them up.

                     EVELYN
          Why were you sitting here, instead of...

                     RAFE
          I saw you, I couldn't go in, I...just
          stood there wondering if you knew.  You
          looked...sad, and I had to sit down a
          minute.

                     EVELYN
          How did you?...

                     RAFE
          ...Survive?  I jumped in a patch of fog,
          and nobody could see me.  I hit the water
          hard.  And it was so...cold.

He looks toward the horizon, when the last light of day fades
to black.  There's something he thinks about saying, and
doesn't.  Then...

                     RAFE
          I don't know how long I was in the water.
          A Norwegian freighter picked me up.  They
          were headed to Spain.  They docked in La
          Rota, right beside a German ship, and
          told me to stay hidden below.  I was
          afraid they'd turn me in, so I stole some
          clothes, jumped ship, and found a church,
          where the priest contacted the
          resistance, and got me on a freighter to
          New York.

He looks at her, then looks down again.

                     RAFE
          I called my folks, then Colonel
          Doolittle.  The Colonel sent a man to
          pick me up.  They wanted to debrief me.
          I told the Colonel I needed to see
          somebody first, and he had a supply
          flight heading out in an hour.
               (beat)
          I've done a lot of talking.  You haven't
          said anything.

                     EVELYN
          I'm just...so amazed, so glad to know
          that you're okay.  You are okay, aren't
          you?

                     RAFE
          Nothing that won't heal.  I guess.

At these words, she looks at him for a long, long moment.

                     EVELYN
          It's been...so different, being so sure
          you were dead.

                     RAFE
          I'm so sorry for what you must've gone
          through, but I'm back.

He sees the troubled look on her face.

                     RAFE
          Maybe I've assumed too much.  Has
          something changed?
               (beat)
          I'm afraid to ask what.  And I'm afraid
          not to.
               (beat)
          Have you fallen in love?

She nods; she can't even say it.  Rafe's dying inside.

                     RAFE
          It's all right.  Danny always said I see
          things with my emotions instead of my
          eyes.

                     EVELYN
          It's not your fault, Rafe.  The letter I
          wrote you, they --

                     RAFE
          Don't worry about that.  Guys away from
          home, lonely, good-hearted women try to
          cheer them up.

                     EVELYN
          It's not that I didn't mean everything I
          wrote.  It's just that -- I thought you
          were dead.  And now --

Danny runs up, through the darkness.

                     DANNY
          You're alive!

Rafe and Danny stare at each other; Danny hesitates, looking
from Rafe to Evelyn, wondering what they've said.  Then Rafe
looks at Evelyn, and picks up the look on her face.  In that
moment he puts it all together.

                     RAFE
          Aw, God.  Oh my God.

Danny's speechless, and for a moment Evelyn is too.

                     EVELYN
          Rafe --

He puts up a hand, to silence her, and walks away suddenly.
Evelyn and Danny are left frozen.

EXT.  SHORE OF PEARL HARBOR - NIGHT

Rafe stares out at the harbor, seeing nothing.  As he stands
there alone and shattered, he has one more

SUBLIMINAL FLASHBACK

Rafe is in the water of the North Sea; he seems dead, but his
makeshift preserver is keeping his face above the surface.
Something slides through the water and stops beside him; it's
a dinghy, and behind it is a trawler.

Hands grab Rafe and drag him onto the dinghy...

In a QUICK CUT, Rafe's body is laid out on the deck of the
trawler.  The crewmen think he's dead.  His body is stiff,
his lips white; and they say so, in Norwegian...

But one of the other crewmen notices a quiver in his eyelid,
then quickly covers Rafe with his on wool peacoat and presses
back an eyelid to see his pupils.  Rafe's white lips move.
The crewmen realize he's trying to say something.

And Rafe does utter something, barely audible; something the
Norwegian crewmen don't understand.

                     RAFE
          Evelyn...

IN THE PRESENT Rafe struggles to bury that memory so far that
he'll never feel it again.

EXT.  NURSES' QUARTERS - NIGHT

Danny escorts Evelyn back to her quarters.

                     DANNY
          Don't worry.  I'll find him.

He hugs her; their embrace earnest yet tingled with guilt,
and Danny leave quickly.  Betty steps out of the nurses'
quarters and hands Evelyn a telegram.

                     BETTY
          This came while you were gone.

Evelyn knows it's the telegram from Rafe, to tell her he's
alive.  Without opening it, she begins to cry, and hurries
away from the barracks so the other nurses won't see.

EXT.  HICKAM FIELD - NIGHT

Danny crosses the tarmac toward the clustered P-40's.  He
spots what he's looking for.  Sitting in the cockpit of one
of the P-40's is Rafe.  Rafe won't look at him.  Danny climbs
up on the wing, and sits down there.

                     DANNY
          You'd always go sit in a plane whenever
          you were upset.

                     RAFE
          Upset?  Why should I be upset?

                     DANNY
          Let's go get a drink.  Unless you're
          scared to talk about it.

CLOSE - A Mai-Tai volcano clunks onto a table.

INT.  FUNKY OAHU BAR - DAY

                     DANNY
          Drink up.  Then we'll talk.

Rafe takes the challenge, and takes a long pull on one of the
straws.  Red, Anthony, Billy, and several others enter the
bar.

                     ANTHONY
          Rafe?!

They rush the table...

INT.  FUNKY OAHU BAR - LATER

They're al