오피스 시즌 8 - 8화 대본
- 오피스 대본/The Office 8
- 2012. 11. 8.
Season 8 -
Episode 08
"Gettysburg"
Written by Robert Padnick
Directed by Jeffrey Blitz
Original Air Date: November 17, 2011
Transcribed by Clockwise and R Henson
Gabe: The Sabre
Code of Conduct outlines the governing principles key to establishing and maintaining
trust with our employees, clients-
Kelly: Oh my God, kill me!
Andy: Hey! All right, obviously we all want to die but we have to
get through this. So, Gabe go ahead. It's okay.
Gabe: Oh, is it okay with you? Because if it's not, you work for me,
so... Comply with all applicable laws, regulations, policies and contracts
governing our business. Be honest, fair-
Pam: [whispers to Jim] I'm gonna do it.
Gabe: And trustworthy in all your business activities and
relationships. Treat one another-
Pam: Oh! I'm going into labor! Oh my goodness!
Jim: Oh okay, she's going into labor. Make way, everybody!
Pam: I know it's wrong to fake going into labor just to get out of things, but sometimes it's necessary.
Pam: [after Angela gives her a stack of files]: I'm going into labor!
Phyllis: Or should
I have corndogs. I mean-
Pam: I'm going into labor!
Ryan: Okay,
three reasons you are wrong about True Blood. Number one-
Pam: I'm going into labor.
Pam: Here we
go!
Andy: Hey guys, uh, can't keep saying you're going into labor.
Everyone knows you're full of it.
Kelly: Yeah.
Oscar: It's not fair, you guys.
Kelly: Pitiful.
Meredith: It's stupid.
Andy: Never cry wolf.
Jim: Okay.
Pam: Okay.
Erin: Oh. [liquid splatters]
Pam: Oh! Oh!
Everyone: Oh! Oh my goodness!
Jim: Oh my God!
Pam: I'm really in labor! This is happening!
Jim: Okay guys, here we go! We'll see you!
Pam: Oh!
Jim: How do you feel?
Erin: Drive carefully!
Oscar: Good luck!
Everyone: Goodbye! Good luck! [empty bottle falls to the ground]
Pam: False alarm.
Andy: [on the phone] What?! They took another client from us? Okay, bye. Man! Business is war! Customers, clients- it's like a war out there.
Andy: I am a leader. But you can only inspire people so much in a place like this. So today I'm turning the inspire-factor up to ten with a little help from my friend America's bloodiest battle.
Andy: Why even
read business books? We should be studying war. Going to places like
Gettysburg. Where is that?
Erin: It's right here in PA.
Andy: [gags, coughs] Well we should take a fieldtrip there. I mean,
that would be so cool. I wonder if that bus downstairs is-
Angela: Okay, Andy, we get it. It's a trip to Gettysburg.
Andy: That sounds super inspiring! I'm in!
Dwight: Gettysburg? Hmm. Could be interesting. Second-most northern
battle in the Civil War.
Oscar: Actually it is the northernmost.
Dwight: Ha!
Dwight: The Civil War history industry has conveniently forgotten about the battle of Schrute Farms. [scoffs] Whatever. I'm over it. It's just grossly irresponsible.
Andy: Charge!
Phyllis: Well, this could be fun. I-
Andy: Yeah, well, the bus has free wifi and I made special
low-sugar lunches for everyone. And is anyone kosher or halal?
Ryan: What's the halal option?
Andy: Dates, tabbouleh, and a bagel with cream cheese.
Ryan: Out.
Andy: You know, it's the same as the kosher option. There's a
lesson in there. I mean, I can't force you to go. You're not my slaves. Thanks
to Gettysburg. But... who's coming with me?
Erin: I'm in.
Phyllis: I'm in too.
Dwight: Guess I'm a sucker for historical fiction.
Andy: Anyone who's not going, you're dead to me. You're uninvited.
I don't want you to come. But, FYI, there will be leftover turkey and pesto
sammies in the fridge.
Kevin: Yes!
Andy: [passes
out hats] One for you.
Erin: Cool. Thanks.
Andy: And one for you.
Jim: Cool. Thanks. [puts his hat on Erin's head]
Andy: And- oh. You missed your head. [laughs and puts hat on Jim's
head] There you go. Phyllis, think fast!
Andy: All
right, guys, a little foreplay before we do it. Fans of Ken Burns' Jazz will
most certainly enjoy Civil War.
Darryl: You know, I just got Limitless on my iPad. I bet I could
get it on the TV.
Phyllis: Ooh. Isn't that the one where the guy becomes limitless?
Andy: It's just not appropri- I mean, if we were going to visit
Bradley Cooper's birthplace, I'd be the first one suggesting it. I'd be rooting
for it.
Everyone: Limitless! Limitless! Limitless! Limitless!
Andy: All right, all right, all right.
Kevin: Not food
and stuff.
Pam: Here. Like it?
Kevin: Oh, if you buy the picnic table then you've got to get the
fire pit.
Pam: I can't get a fire pit. I have two babies.
Kevin: The fire pit is a no-brainer.
Robert: Oh, hi there.
Pam: Plants and- hi, Robert! Hey, um, how are you doing? Good to
see you again.
Robert: Where is everyone? Where is Andy?
Kelly: Andy took some of the other people on a corporate retreat to
Gettysburg.
Robert: Well, I was hoping to talk out some ideas with Andy. But
what we have here... is perhaps better. By not going on the trip, you've shown
you're the free-thinkers of the office.
Ryan: Robert, you got your sheep and you got your black sheep, and
I'm not even a sheep. I'm on the freaking moon.
Robert: So, here what we can do. Game changers- changes to the game
such that the game can never be played the same way again. Everyone, brainstorm
some innovations. Don't be afraid to get weird with it. Meredith! [wakes her
up] Excited!
Kevin: [tries stapler/marker combo] Okay.
Andy: You
guys...
Darryl: J-j-j-ju...
Andy: Get excited!
Darryl: Shh! Movie's almost over.
Andy: All right! We're here. Limitless can wait.
Gabe: Fun fact. In France, they call Limitless 'The Man with Many
Capabilities.'
Andy: Woo-hoo! Ladies and gentlemen the eighteen hundreds await
you. We can watch Limitless on the way back.
Darryl: I got Source Code on the way back.
Everyone: Ooh! All right!
Andy: Woo!
Andy: Whoa, where you going?
Jim: Visitor center. Gonna grab a map for the memorials, right?
Andy: Yeah, we're not going to the visitor center. We're not
tourists.
Jim: No, of course we're not tourists. We're just people that
aren't from here who are taking a tour.
Phyllis: Yeah, sign says "Begin tour here."
Andy: Unless you're going on the very specially-created and
meticulously-researched Andy Bernard tour.
Andy: After
Chancellorsville, Lee brought his army up the Shenandoah Valley, right through
here! They stopped in this field for a picnic, which they called lunch.
Erin: [to Dwight] Yeah, but I'm confused...
Dwight: Total deaths belongs to Gettysburg but when you're talking
about D.P.A., that's deaths per acre...
Erin: Mm-hmm.
Dwight: ...nothing beats the battle of Schrute Farms.
Erin: Oh. D.P.A. sounds way more important that total deaths.
Dwight: Oh, it is. And you should read some of these letters that
the soldiers wrote home. I mean, it makes the battle of Gettysburg sound like a
bunch of schoolgirls wrestling over a hairbrush. [laughs] I'm telling you,
they're heartbreaking too. So beautifully written.
Oscar: Dwight, what are you telling this girl?
Dwight: The truth.
Oscar: Stop filling her head with nonsense, okay? She doesn't know
any better.
Erin: Oscar, I am so glad you just got here. I would've believed
everything he said.
Dwight: No, no, no! You're filling her head with nonsense. You and
the history books. I'm telling the truth.
Erin: Interesting.
Dwight: Yes, thank you. All of history has been whitewashed.
Oscar: Really? Why don't you tell us the real history, Gore Vidal?
Dwight: Okay, I will. I don't know who that is, but I'm gonna tell
you this-
Oscar: he's a historian.
Dwight: Gettysburg was very important. Credit where credit is due,
okay? Big, mad props to Gettysburg. Was it, however, the most northern battle
of the civil war?
Oscar: Yes, yes, yes!
Dwight: Not by a long shot!
Erin: No!
Oscar: Yes!
Dwight: No, it was not!
Oscar: Argh!
Dwight: No, it was not. Was it the second-most northern?
Oscar: What?
Dwight: Sure! I will cede it was the second-most northernmost
battle!
Oscar: Erin-
Dwight: Was it the northernmost? No. Get out of here, Oscar.
Erin: Get out of here!
Robert: I am so
eager to hear your game-changers. Let's dig in, shall we?
Ryan: May I go first?
Robert: Absolutely.
Ryan: Raw fish- the disgusting food from Japan that Americans would
never want to eat. Now, we can't get enough of it. From movie stars to
construction workers, sushi is what's for dinner. Let me throw another idea at
you. Origami. What? The crazy art of paper folding from, that's right, Japan.
Don't you wish you could go back to 1980 and open the first sushi restaurant in
Manhattan? We can do that! With... origami. It's the sushi of paper.
Robert: This idea hasn't gripped me. What else did you come up
with?
Ryan: Well I had to memorize the presentation, Robert, and it took
a long time to build the swan, so-
Robert: That was bad.
Stanley: If your
woman is like mine, I bet you come home to hear the same thing all the time.
This paper is so hard. It scratches. Why can't there be a paper just for me?
Well now there is. 'Papyr.' Paper for women. It's pink, scented and silky soft.
Now, you can watch the game and she can write a letter to her sister.
Robert: The situation you described, returning home to a wife complaining
about her paper being too masculine, is not one I'm familiar with.
Stanley: In the African-American community-
Robert: No.
Stanley: [murmurs] Thought it was worth a try.
Darryl: That's
fascinating. Tell me, what's the significance of the peach orchard, thought?
Park Ranger: Oh, well, that's a great question. Actually some of
the most-
Dwight: Excuse me, I got a question for you.
Park Ranger: Sure.
Dwight: Can you tell us about the battle of Schrute Farms?
Park Ranger: Uh, I haven't heard of that one.
Dwight: Really. Okay, follow-up question. How much are they paying
you to keep your mouth shut?
Oscar: I apologize for my friend and for the Republicans who are
cutting your funding.
Andy: We don't need to bother this poor gentleman. I know exactly
where we're going. Giddy up! Tallyho!
Chelsea: [taps Gabe's shoulder] Are you Lincoln?
Gabe: No, no, I'm-
Gabe: Apparently,
I bear a passing resemblance to Abraham Lincoln. Makes it kind of hard for me
to go to places like museums, historical monuments, elementary schools... I
don't see it. Chelsea's Mom: Chelsea, give Mr. Lincoln your hat so I can take a
picture.
Gabe: Okay, Quick.
Man: Hey! Lincoln's starting. [light applause]
Gabe: Oh, uh, no. No, no, no, no. I'm, uh, I'm actually with a tour
group myself, so- [laughter] Hello! I'm Abraham Lincoln! Some people call me
the great emancipator, but, uh, you might know me from the penny. [laughter]
Pam: Okay. You
know the test booklets that they give out in all the schools. I was thinking
that we could put a coupon in the back that people would mail in to us... and
as, you know, as I tell it, I don't like it. Unless, of course, you are
responding to it.
Robert: I am not.
Pam: Um, excuse me. I'm gonna go to the bathroom.
Pam: At this point, when you're this pregnant, it's kind of like senior spring. The other day I spit my gum out on the carpet.
Robert: Kevin,
you've been quiet. I'm curious to know what your game-changer is.
Kevin: Well, you know how in the vending machine they have the
chocolate chip cookies in the A-1 spot? They do that 'cause they think A-1's
the best spot for the best cookie. But the real best spot is D-4. Right? That's
where the eyes go. So...
Robert: Cookies. Cookie placement.
Kevin: Yeah. But not just the cookies, though. That was just a 'for
instance.'
Robert: Who else agrees with Kevin, that we're wasting facilities,
manpower, on our underselling products when we should be pushing our
top-performers? [everyone raises their hand, Robert laughs] There you go.
Consensus.
Ryan: Okay, we are now on a planet where Kevin is the most creative person around, and I am just some good-looking guy.
Gabe: [as
Lincoln] I just don't understand. It's 1865, victory is ours, I've saved the
very soul of our nation, and yet... happiness eludes me. Oh, perhaps a trip to
the theater will enliven my spirits.
Audience: No!
Kevin: 'Kay, so
another thing about oatmeal cookies. Who even wants them? I mean, I've seen
Toby eat one, like, once, but other than that... [scoffs] like, forget it.
Robert: Interesting. So what is Dunder Mifflin's oatmeal cookie?
What is the product that no one wants?
Stanley: how about that two-hole-punch letter? Only the lawyers
want that punch at the top and they use legal.
Robert: That's the oatmeal cookie. Fantastic, Kevin. Fantastic.
[laughs]
Kevin: Thank you.
Jim: By the
way, did we leave all the food on the bus?
Andy: Let's talk about food for a second. Food for thought.
Jim: Yeah, that's what I had for breakfast and I think that's
probably why I'm still hungry.
Andy: Hunger! Hunger for victory! Hunger for honor. Hunger for
pride.
Darryl: Hunger for hamburger.
Erin: Hunger for chicken chimichangas. Right, Darryl?
Darryl: That's good.
Andy: Exactly. Now do you know the Civil War soldiers were hungry
for? Pride! Now, each battalion had its own flag and they guarded these flags
with their lives. Colonel Harrison Jeffords of the Fourth Michigan Infantry saw
his flag being carried away, chased it down with nothing but a sword. Fought
tooth and nail at the foot of that flag until he died. He wasn't about to let
them have that flag. Pride. Right, guys? [holds up flag] I commissioned this
flag for Dunder Mifflin. Cost me two hundred dollars.
Jim: Only two hundred dollars?
Andy: We are all branches on this tree. And from the tree comes
paper. We're all part of a business. But business is war. What's that I hear?
Uh, a rebel paper company is coming to take our flag! Wha- what's going on
here? Wee-hoo! Come and get it! Who's gonna get the flag? Who's getting it?
Whoa! Hey! Ho! Don't look where I am, look where I'm going. Juke right, juke
left.
Darryl: Andy, this is inappropriate. People died here, man.
Andy: Get the flag! Get the flag! Come on, Big Tuna. What you gonna
do about it? We got a flag right here. Wee-hoo!
Andy: Spangler
Springs is a mile this way.
Jim: Oh wow. So that’s two miles if you incorporate the walk back.
Andy: Its… I mean come on.
Phyllis: I don’t think I should walk anymore. You know all I had
for breakfast was oatmeal, yogurt, coffee, orange juice and toast. Two poached
eggs. And then half a sandwich on the bus.
Andy: Alright fine. You know what – I guess this place just hasn’t
rubbed off on you the way I hoped it would. I’m still going. And I’m not going
to ask anymore. I’m not even going to look back. I’m just going to assume that
you’re with me.
Dwight: [Andy looks back to find everyone sitting] You said you
weren’t going to look back.
Robert: And why
is Black Rock suddenly the paragon by which all hedge funds must now be
compared?
Kevin: I don’t know.
Robert: Right. I mean you’re an accountant. Those bogus
prospectuses must drive you insane.
Kevin: Yes. I am an accountant.
Oscar: Dwight –
this is one of the archivists here. I thought maybe we could consult him.
Dwight: Really?
Oscar: Yeah.
Dwight: Well. Anyone employed by the Gettysburg Industrial Complex
is certainly going to want to keep quiet about the Battle of Schrute Farms.
Archivist: Schrute Farms did you say? That is a fascinating little
chapter of the Civil War.
Oscar: You’ve heard about it?
Dwight: YES! Ha! Prepare to be refuted! Go on.
Archivist: There you
go.
Narrator: Families and sweethearts back home waited desperately for
letters from the front.
Soldier: Dearest mother I’m sorry it has been so long since my last
letter. It is three months since I arrived at Schrute Farms and I fear I may
never leave this place alive. Melvin Fifer Garris.
Dwight: Hallowed ground.
Narrator: But the Battle at Schrute Farms was no battle at all. It
was a code used by pacifists from both North and South who turned the
Pennsylvania farmhouse into an artistic community and a refuge from the war.
Amanda:[on film] You have to understand. Poets, artists, dancers – these
kind of men preferred peace to war. These delicate lovely men found a place of
refuge among the Schrutes at Schrute Farms. Amidst the macho brutality of war
this was a place where dandies and dreamers could put on plays and sing tender
ballads and dance in the moonlight. I like to think of Schrute Farms as the
Underground Railroad for the sensitive… and well… fabulous.
Oscar: Wow. This is so much better than the story you made up.
Dwight: I’ve seen enough.
Oscar: You’re right. There should be a monument to this.
Kevin: Never
trust a cookie with a woman’s name. Pecan Sandy. Lorna Doone. Madeline. They’ll
just break your heart.
Robert: [laughing] Kevin!
Ryan: Robert I hate to interrupt. But I would love to pitch you one
last idea. I call it the Big Mac idea.
Kevin: What?!? No!
Robert: Big Mac idea. That sounds encouraging.
Ryan: It’s really, really good Robert. Let me explain.
Kevin: No! This is not fair! This is my idea. He’s trying to steal
it because he’s jealous of me.
Robert: Well what is the idea?
Kevin: Every time you buy a Big Mac you set one ingredient aside.
Then at the end of the week you have a free Big Mac. And you love it even more
because you made it with your own hands.
Ryan: You know what? Now I remember. That was your idea. [patting
Kevin on the back] That is 100 percent your idea.
Robert: Oh my. It was just actually cookies the whole time?
Andy: [making
pencil imprint] Dammit.
Darryl: Hey.
Andy: You guys came. Where’s everyone else?
Darryl: Back at the bus. We were locked out. Phyllis is sitting on
the ground eating a dirty sandwich.
Andy: Yeah I asked the bus driver to lock it because our stuff was
in there. I guess he follows orders.
Jim: Yeah sorry everyone else didn’t come. I think they’re just
tired. With holes in their shoes. And they have dysentery.
Andy: Even without an audience you’re still at it.
Jim: What are you talking about?
Andy: Our office has a disease. And it goes by many names. Sarcasm.
Snark. Wisecracks. You take things people care about and you make them feel
lame about it with your jokes. That’s what you did with this trip.
Jim: Andy – this whole idea of our situation being just like war?
It’s just not true. We just work at a paper company. And you’re our regional
manager. And guess what man? You don’t have to prove anything. We like you as
regional manager. Andy if you don’t believe me take a look at what’s on my
head. I’m wearing a very pink hat. I’ve been getting weird looks all day
because I’m pretty sure “DM does GB” means something kinda sexual. But guess who’s
wearing them? All of us. Just for you man. That’s huge.
Andy: You don’t like the hats?
Jim: They’re terrible.
Darryl: I hate myself.
Andy: They just didn’t turn out how I wanted. In my head they were
cooler, but they do look weird.
Andy: [voiceover the three walking] The world will little note, nor long remember the fight Jim and I had here at Gettysburg and that’s good because I was basically wrong. I wanted my team to be, like, this army and I was their general. But I guess it’s really more like they’re just people who work in an office and I’m their manager. Yeah that’s really probably a better analogy now that I think about it.
Gabe: Abe and Mary are seated watching the show. [in Lincoln voice] Oh Mary this is wonderful… Ok Mary stop your scolding. I’ll be quiet. [aside to the audience] I need her like I need a hole in the head! [scattered chuckles from the crowd] [Gabe raises his hand with a finger pointed in the shape of a gun to his head] BANG! Ooh [Gabe falls to the ground and the crowd claps, Gabe picks up the Lincoln hat, bows, runs to the crowd and trades it back for his pink “DM does GB” hat and runs off]
Deleted Scene 1
Robert: Haha!
There he is. You mind lending a hand? I'm typing up a memo to share your ideas
with the board.
Kevin: I can do that.
Robert: Great....ok.
Kevin: Your arm feels good on my back.
Kevin: For some reason, my boss is obsessed with cookies. It's not my specialty. My specialty is pizza. But I'm flexible.
Deleted Scene 2
Andy: Charge!
Kelly: Isn't Gettysburg like three hours away?
Erin: No. It's like two hours and forty-six minutes.
Andy: It's kind of a haul, so we should probably get going. And
tuna, I made a special sandwich for you, guess which kind.
Jim: Tuna?
Andy: Yes! Tuna of the land. Turkey. With pesto.
Jim: And to drink?
Andy: Water.
Jim: Oh-ho, I am in.
Jim: I'm excited, I've actually never been to Gettysburg. Uh, my family was gonna go once, but then my brothers convinced me if was full of dead soldier zombies, so I freaked out and we turned the car around. But I'm older now, I can outrun a zombie.
Andy: Getting everyone on the bus, check. Giving everyone hats, check. Sexiest eastern European girls, uh, check.
Darryl: Hey,
Devil's Den is that way, we should check it out. That's where the snipers hid.
Andy: Please! Everyone and their mother goes to Devil's Den. It's
the Olive Garden of Gettysburg.
Phyllis: Oh, I like Olive Garden.
Andy: Well, I meant that in a bad way. Obviously it tastes good,
but it's not cool.
Jim: Where do all the cool kids go when they come to this
consecrated ground?
Andy: That is what I'm showing you.
Dwight: I know what you guys are all thinking right now: Hey, let's
go pee on the grave of some confederate soldiers, but you know what? Joke's on
you. It only makes the flowers grow back more beautifully.
Dwight: Best thing you can do for the deceased is to pee on their graves. Then you dance and work the urine into the root systems. Doesn't hurt to have a smile on your face, either.
Oscar: Guys!
Over here, we found the bus.
Phyllis: Open the door, Jim.
Jim: It's locked.
Phyllis: Are you sure? Yeah, it's locked.
Dwight: It's not locked, gimme that...
Jim: That's weird, if it's not locked, why isn't it opening?
Dwight: It's, it's latched closed.
Jim: Ok, you know what? Andy probably has the number for this guy.
I'm gonna find him.
Darryl: I'll come with you.
Phyllis: Ow! Ee! I sat on my sandwich.
Oscar: And that's how the printing press was invented.
Deleted Scene 3
Andy:[enters office
doing Michael Jackson impression] Everybody beat it. Don't beat it, stay where
you are.
Erin: There you are. Dillinger Graphics said their shipment is
late.
Andy: What did you say?
Erin: Nothing, I just-
Andy: What would you say?
Erin: That it'll be the first shipment out today.
Andy: That is exactly the right thing to say! Do it! Git-er-done!
Phyllis, you just married Joe Order, you're new name is Phyllis Order [fill
this order], get it?
Phyllis: I don't get it.
Andy: Jim, in regards to our high-five scheduled for four PM today,
it has been moved up to now. Yes.
Jim: We didn't have one scheduled.
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