Authors: Tom Grimes
AL
It’s familiar. Everyone knows what a virus
is, so there’s no lack of audience identification.
This is what makes it universal. We start
with a common cold. Do a real Spielbergian
domestic Cuisinart blender household number,
open up with a lot of real Americana
tracking shots, establish the scene. Now. The
parents leave pretty seventeen-year-old Sally
home for the weekend. You want to get the
parents out of the way immediately. Parents
are death at the box office. Kill the parents.Mike begins to take notes.MIKE
Parents dead.AL
OK. Good. Now. Sally calls her friends the
instant her parents leave in the Saab. They invite
some boys over. This is where we throw in the
sex angle.MIKE
They all start jumping into bed.AL
Right. OK. Now, little Joey, Sally’s little
brother, suddenly comes down with a fever.
He comes home from school . . . he looks like . . .MIKE
Casper the Ghost.AL
Great! Terrific! Write that down.MIKE
He picked up the virus in school. Like, we’ll
see him at the water fountain with some
lower-middle-class kids—AL
No. School is out. You gotta get a building, fill
it full of kids, the whole thing costs too much
time and money. I want to keep it simple. I
want a virus to appear, wreak havoc, then get
wiped out by some new brand of mega-
antibiotic. The virus can run rampant, but
only on one block. Remember: horror movies
are microcosms of society. So: Think small.
Think microcosm.Short pause.AL
Help me. I’m totally lost.MIKE
Joey.AL
Right. Joey. Joey comes in, his stomach hurts.
Sally, like a good sister, tucks him in, etc. In
spite of this, his temperature climbs. Sally calls
the doctor, a good-looking intern named . . .
Matt, who Sally has a crush on.MIKE
And he wants to get into Sally’s pants.AL
No. Sally’s the heroine, therefore her pants
never come off. Pants come off secondary girl-
friend characters who are slaughtered by this
raging out-of-control virus ten seconds after
they have sex with their boyfriends. Got it?MIKE
Got it. Secondary characters fuck and die.
Keep lust to a minimum.AL
Good. Now, Matt leaves, the other kids
come over, they’re jumping into bed, etc.
What happens? Little Joey’s temperature
SKYROCKETS! He starts changing, getting
more hideous. He’s turning into this, this,
this . . .MIKE
Thing?AL
Thing! Exactly! You know, the red spots in the
eyes, the vomit spewing across the room.MIKE
Sounds like
The Exorcist
.AL
The Exorcist
. Nobody’s made an
Exorcist
rip-
off for years. It could be viable.MIKE
Are Sally’s parents religious people?AL
When confronted by grief and death, yes.MIKE
So this couldn’t be a speaking-in-tongues,
gospel-type experience then, could it?AL
Definitely not. (Beat.) Although, if you could
imply that without stating it, so that we have
this straightforward virus thing, and then tie
in on a subliminal level this cultlike Black
Mass religioso mumbo jumbo-type theme, we
could double our audience.MIKELike, “ Was it a virus . . . or was it . . . God?”
MIKESo you want me to throw in a little more
character.AL
Character is a wonderful thing. But we don’t
have the money to buy actors who can act like
characters.MIKE
Well, what do we have?AL
Basically . . . ? Some girls who’ll take off their
clothes.
SCENE FOURAl’s office. Lights up. Mike paces, eyeing Al. Al, seated, reads Mike’s script intently. When he turns the last page, Al flips the binder closed and launches into his speech.ALI have to tell you something. This is a script
I could love. (Beat.) If there could be physi-
cal bonding between a man and a screenplay,
Virus
, for me, would be that screenplay.MIKE
The gasoline . . . ?AL
On the hair—MIKE
The beach, the night—AL
The terror, the bondage—MIKE
The whole sexual subtext—AL
The gunpowder in the mouth—MIKE
The exploding head!Beat.AL
I cried. (Beat.) I’m a man, I cried. (Beat.)
Sweet little Sally dead? This was the death of
innocence.
TED
You want a script.BROWNER
That’s right.TED
Of this idea.Ted indicates the envelope Browner has set beside him.BROWNER
Right.Short pause.TED
What is this idea, Petey? As you see it.BROWNER
In a nutshell? An exiled leader, a hero of the
people, puts together an army of freedom
fighters. He trains them in a country adjacent
to his homeland that is sympathetic to his
plight. The freedom fighters go in, depose the
brutal, non-Westernized dictatorship, democ-
racy and free trade are restored, and our hero
rides off into the sunset with pledges of U.S.
economic aid and contracts for billions in
military hardware. So get us a script, Ted. And
a crew. A film crew.