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发布时间:2022-07-14 10:12:37

   剧本的英文可以用movie script来解释,关于英语的剧本,朋友们想不想了解其中较为经典的作品呢?

《阿甘正传》英文剧本Forrest Gump Transcript

   EXT. A SAVANNAH STREET - DAY - 1981

   A feather floats through the air.

   The falling feather. A city, Savannah, is revealed in the background.

   The feather floats down toward the city below.

   The feather drops down toward the street below, as people walk past and

   cars drive by, and nearly lands on a man's shoulder. He walks across the

   street, causing the feather to be whisked back on its journey.

   The feather floats above a stopped car. The car drives off right as the

   feather floats down toward the street.

   The feather floats under a passing car, then is sent flying back up in

   the air.

   A MAN sits on a bus bench. The feather floats above the ground and

   finally lands on the man's mud-soaked shoe. The man reached down and

   picks up the feather.

   His name is FORREST GUMP. He looks at the feather oddly, moves aside a

   box of chocolates from an old suitcase, then opens the case. Inside the

   old suitcase are an assortment of clothes, a ping-pong paddle, toothpaste

   and other personal items. Forrest pulls out a book titled "Curious

   George," then places the feather inside the book. Forrest closes the

   suitcase. Something in his eyes reveals that Forrest may not be all

   there. Forrest looks right as the sound of an arriving bus is heard.

   A bus pulls up. Forrest remains on the bus bench as the bus continues on.

   A BLACK WOMAN in a nurse's outfit steps up and sits down at the bus bench

   next to Forrest. The nurse begins to read a magazine as Forrest looks at

   her.

   Forrest: Hello. My name's Forrest Gump.

   He opens a box of chocolates and holds it out for the nurse.

   Forrest: You want a chocolate?

   The nurse shakes her head, a bit apprehensive about this strange man next

   to her.

   Forrest: I could eat about a million and a half of these. My momma

   always said, "Life was like a box of chocolates. You never

   know what you're gonna get."

   Forrest eats a chocolate as he looks down at the nurse's shoes.

   Forrest: Those must be comfortable shoes. I'll bet you could walk

   all day in shoes like that and not feel a thing. I wish I

   had shoes like that.

   Black Woman: My feet hurt.

   Forrest: Momma always says there's an awful lot you could tell

   about a person by their shoes. Where they're going. Where

   they've been.

   The black woman stares at Forrest as he looks down at his own shoes.

   Forrest: I've worn lots of shoes. I bet if I think about it real

   hard I could remember my first pair of shoes.

   Forrest closes his eyes tightly.

   Forrest: Momma said they'd take my anywhere.

   INT. COUNTRY DOCTOR'S OFFICE - GREENBOW, ALABAMA - DAY - 1951

   A little boy closes his eyes tightly. It is young Forrest as he sits in a

   doctor's office.

   Forrest: (voice-over) She said they was my magic shoes.

   Forrest has been fitted with orthopedic shoes and metal leg braces.

   Doctor: All right, Forrest, you can open your eyes now. Let's take

   a little walk around.

   The doctor sets Forrest down on its feet. Forrest walks around stiffly.

   Forrest's mother, MRS. GUMP, watches him as he clanks around the room

   awkwardly.

   Doctor: How do those feel? His legs are strong, Mrs. Gump. As

   strong as I've ever seen. But his back is as crooked as a

   politician.

   Forrest walks foreground past the doctor and Mrs. Gump.

   Doctor: But we're gonna straighten him rihgt up now, won't we,

   Forrest?

   A loud thud is heard as, outside, Forrest falls.

   Mrs. Gump: Forest!

   EXT. GREENBOW, ALABAMA

   Mrs. Gump and young Forrest walk across the street. Forrest walks stiffly

   next to his mother.

   Forrest: Now, when I was a baby, Momma named me after the great

   Civil War hero, General Nathan Bedford Forrest...

   EXT. RURAL ALABAMA

   A black and white photo of General Nathan Bedford Forrest. The photo

   turns into live action as the General dons a hooded sheet over his head.

   The General is in full Ku Klux Klan garb, including his horse. The

   General rides off, followed by a large group of Klan members dressed in

   full uniform.

   Forrest: (voice-over) She said we was related to him in some way.

   And, what he did was, he started up this club called the

   Ku Klux Klan. They'd all dress up in their robes and their

   bedsheets and act like a bunch of ghosts or spooks or

   something. They'd even put bedsheets on their horses and

   ride around. And anyway, that's how I got my name. Forrest

   Gump.

   EXT. GREENBOW

   Mrs. Gump and Forrest walk across the street.

   Forrest: (voice-over) Momma said that the Forrest part was to

   remind me that sometimes we all do things that, well, just

   don't make no sense.

   Forrest stops suddenly as his brace gets stuck.

   Forrest's brace is caught in a gutter grate. Mrs. Gump bends down and

   tries to free Forrest. Two old cronies sit in front of a barber shop and

   watch.

   Mrs. Gump: Just wait, let me get it.

   Mrs. Gump struggles to pull the stuck brace from the grate.

   Mrs. Gump: Let me get it. Wait, get it this way. Hold on.

   Forrest pulls his foot out of the grate.

   Mrs. Gump: All right.

   Mrs. Gump helps Forrest up onto the sidewalk. She looks up and notices

   the two old man.

   Mrs. Gump: Oooh. All right. What are you all staring at? Haven't you

   ever seen a little boy with braces on his legs before?

   Mrs. Gump and Forrest walk along the sidwalk past the two old men. Mrs.

   Gump holds tightly onto Forrest's hand.

   Mrs. Gump: Don't ever let anybody tell you they're better than you,

   Forrest. If God intended everybody to be the same, he'd

   have given us all braces on our legs.

   Forrest: (voice-over) Momma always had a way of explaining things

   so I could understand them.

   EXT. OAK ALLEY/THE GUMP BOARDING HOUSE

   Mrs. Gump and Forrest walk along a dirt road. A row of mailboxes stands

   left.

   Forrest: (voice-over) We lived about a quarter mile of Route 17,

   about a half mile from the town of Greenbow, Alabama.

   That's in the county of Greenbow. Our house had been in

   Momma's family since her grandpa's grandpa's grandpa had

   come across the ocean about a thousand years ago.

   Something like that.

   Mrs. Gump and Forrest walk along the Gump Boarding House driveway.

   Forrest: (voice-over) Since it was just me and Momma and we had all

   these empty rooms, Momma decided to let those rooms out.

   Mostly to people passing through. Like from, oh, Mobile,

   Montgomery, place like that. That's how me and Mommy got

   money. Mommy was a real smart lady.

   Mrs. Gump: Remember what I told you, Forrest. You're no different

   than anybody else is.

   Mrs. Gump heads Forrest to the porch. She bends down to look Forrest in

   the eye.

   Mrs. Gump: Did you hear what I said, Forrest? You're the same as

   everybody else. You are no different.

   INT. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL / PRINCIPAL'S OFFICE - DAY - 1954

   Principal: Your boy's... different, Mrs. Gump. Now, his I.Q. is

   seventy-five.

   Mrs. Gump: Well, we're all different, Mr. Hancock.

   The principal sighs, then stands up.

   INT. HALLWAY

   Forrest sits outside the principal's office and waits.

   Forrest: (voice-over) She wanted me to have the finest education,

   so she took me to the Greenbow County Central School. I

   met the principal and all.

   The principal stands in front of Mrs. Gump. Forrest, sitting left,

   listens.

   Principal: I want to show you something, Mrs. Gump. Now, this is

   normal.

   The principal holds up a chart with a designations according to I.Q. and

   points to the center of the graph, labeled "Normal." A red line below the

   normal area is labeled "State Acceptance." The principal points to the

   section below the acceptance line labeled "Below."

   Principal: Forrest is right here. The state requires a minimum I.Q.

   of eighty to attend public school, Mrs. Gump. He's gonna

   have to go to a special school. Now, he'll be just fine.

   Mrs. Gump: What does normal mean, anyway? He might be a bit on the

   slow side, but my boy Forrest is going to get the same

   opportunities as everyone else. He's not going to some

   special school to learn to how to re-tread tires. We're

   talking about five little points here. There must be

   something can be done.

   INT. HALLWAY

   Forrest sits outside the principal's office.

   Principal: We're a progressive school system. We don't want to see

   anybody left behind.

   INT. PRINCIPAL'S OFFICE

   Principal: Is there a Mr. Gump, Mrs. Gump?

   Mrs. Gump: He's on vacation.

   EXT. GUMP BOARDING HOUSE - NIGHT

   Forrest sits on a swing outside the house. Loud organic male grunts are

   heard coming from inside the house.

   Forrest sits on the swing as the grunts continue.

   The principal steps out of the Gump House and wipes the sweat from his

   face. Forrest is sitting on the porch.

   Principal: Well, your momma sure does care about your schooling, son.

   Mm-mm-mm.

   The principal wipes the sweat from his neck, then looks back at Forrest.

   Principal: You don't say much, do you?

   Forrest grunts, imitating him. The principal, embarrassed, turns and

   walks away.

   INT. GUMP BOARDING HOUSE/FORREST'S BEDROOM

   Mrs. Gump reads from the book "Curious George" as Forrest sits on the bed

   and listens.

   Mrs. Gump: "Finally, he had to try it. It looked easy, but, oh, what

   happened. First there..."

   Forrest: Momma, what's vacation mean?

   Mrs. Gump: Vacation?

   Forrest: Where Daddy went?

   Mrs. Gump: Vacation's when you go somewhere, and you don't ever come

   back.

   Forrest lies down on his bed and looks up.

   Forrest: (voice-over) Anyway, I guess you could say me and Momma

   was on our own.

   EXT. GUMP BOARDING HOUSE - DAY

   A cab driver closes the trunk of the car as two women walk toward the

   house. A milkman steps down from the porch.

   Forrest: (voice-over) But we didn't mind. Our house was never

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