contemptible
and groundless nuisance suit,
which speaks directly to the
kind of greed and treachery that
today is threatening the very
fabric of our society.
Judge Tate looks skeptically at both lawyers.
JUDGE TATE
Lets not go off the deep end,
gentlemen. I thought we were
talking about some dust.
CUT TO:
A MAN ON CRUTCHES HOBBLES INTO A COURTHOUSE ELEVATOR AND IS
joined by Andrew and Joe, crowdi
criminals in
the usual sense. Theyve all got jobs,
they all live seemingly normal, decent
lives, but they got their problems
and theyve all got a little larceny in em.
Take my pal unger, for instance,
the guy who owns this apartment.
Hes putting up the money to operate with
and hes letting me stay here.
Hes a book-keeper. Been with
the same company for ten years.
You know, Fay, the mistake I made
work to do.
Close that door. Well lose all the cold.
He didnt like it very much, Dad.
He hated it. Positively hated it.
Absolute contempt.
But Im glad of that.
Thats what really gets me cookin.
What would have happened if he liked it?
Then I really wouldve been worried.
Then Id have gone back to bed.
What do you know?
We got a couple of minutes, okay?
All right. Here you go.
Migrant workers.
contempt of court citation.
For protecting sources.
If youre so goddamn
uncomfortable with the story...
why did you slap it
on both the domestic
and the international covers?
Look, what makes me... us...
uncomfortable is the fact
that a rapist-slash-murderer...
has asked to spend the last three days
of his life giving an interview...
his very first...
to a reporter who is now famous
for protectin
contempt for everyone but himself, whose only goal is to command a world of
inferiors. This is GENERAL ZOD.
The second man is a thin, wiry character whose face seems to be permanently contorted into a twisted, mocking grin. There is something seedy and second-rate about his appearance, even as his clothing is flashier, gaudier and, finally, more vulgar than the others. A psychopathic jokester,