Barton Fink
Screenplay by Ethan
Coen
Joel Coen
Produced by Ethan Coen
Directed by Joel Coen
Cast List:
John Turturro Barton Fink
John Goodman Charlie Meadows
Judy Davis Audrey Taylor
Michael Lerner Jack Lipnick
Johnn Mahoney W.P. Mayhew
Tony Shalhoub Ben Geisler
Jon Polito Lou Breeze
Steve Buscemi Chet
David Warrilow Garland Stanford
Richard Portnow Detective
Mastrionotti
FADE
IN:
ON BARTON FINK
He is a
bespectacled man in his thirties, hale but somewhat bookish. He stands,
tuxedoed, in the wings of a theater, looking out at the stage, listening
intently to end of a performance.
In the shadows
behind him an old stagehand leans against a flat, expressionlessly smoking a
cigarette, one hand on a thick rope that hangs from the ceiling.
The voices of
the performing actors echo in from the offscreen stage:
ACTOR
I'm
blowin' out of here, blowin' for good. I'm kissin' it all goodbye, these four
stinkin' walls, the six flights up, the el that roars by at three A.M. like a
cast-iron wind. Kiss 'em goodbye for me, Maury! I'll miss 'em – like hell I
will!
ACTRESS
Dreaming
again!
ACTOR
Not
this time, Lil! I'm awake now, awake for the first time in years. Uncle Dave
said it: Daylight is a dream if you've lived with your eyes closed. Well my
eyes are open now! I see that choir, and I know they're dressed in rags! But
we're part of that choir, both of us – yeah, and you, Maury, and Uncle Dave
too!
MAURY
The
sun's coming up, kid. They'll be hawking the fish down on Fulton Street.
ACTOR
Let
'em hawk. Let 'em sing their hearts out.
MAURY
That's
it, kid. Take that ruined choir. Make it sing!
ACTOR
So
long, Maury.
MAURY
So
long.
We hear a door
open and close, then approaching footsteps. A tall, dark sctor in a used tweed
suit and carrying a beat-up valise passes in front of Barton:
From offscreen
stage:
MAURY
We'll
hear from that kid. And I don't mean a postcard.
The actor sets
the valise down and then stands waiting int he shadows behind Barton.
An older man
in work clothes – not wardrobe – passes in front of Barton from the other
direction, pauses at the edge of the stage and cups his hands to his mouth.
OLDER
MAN
FISH!
FRESH FISH!
As the man
walks back off the screen:
LILY
Let's
spit on our hands and get to work. It's late, Maury.
MAURY
Not
any more Lil...
Barton mouths
the last line in sync with the offscreen actor:
MAURY
...
It's early.
With this the
stagehand behind Barton furiously pulls the rope hand-over- hand and we hear
thunderous applause and shouts of "Bravo!"
As the
stagehand finishes bringing the curtain down, somewhat muting the applause, the
backstage actor trots out of frame toward the stage.
The stagehand
pulls on an adjacent rope, bringing the curtain back up and unmuting the applause.
Barton Fink
seems dazed. He has been joined by two other men, both dressed in tuxedos, both
beaming toward the stage.
BARTON'S POV
Looking across
a tenement set at the backs of the cast as the curtain rises on the
enthusiastic house. The actors take their bows and the cry of "Author,
Author" goes up from the crowd.
The actors
turn to smile at Barton in the wings.
BARTON
He hesitates,
unable to take it all in.
He is gently
nudged toward the stage by the two tuxedoed gentlemen.
As he exits toward
the stage the applause is deafening.
TRACKING SHOT
Pushing a
maitre 'd who looks back over his shoulder as he leads the way through the
restaurant.
MAITRE
'D
Your
table is ready, Monsieur Fink... several members of your party have already
arrived...
REVERSE
Pulling Barton
FINK
Is
Garland Stanford here?
MAITRE
'D
He
called to say he'd be a few minutes late... Ah, here we are...
TRACKING IN
Toward a large
semi-circular booth. Three guests, two me and a woman in evening wear, are
rising and beaming at Barton. A fat middle-aged man, one of the tuxedoed
gentlemen we saw backstage, is moving out to let Barton slide in.
MAN
Barton,
Barton, so glad you could make it. You know Richard St. Claire...
Barton nods
and looks at the woman.
MAN
...
and Poppy Carnahan. We're drinking champagne, dear boy, in honor of the
occasion. Have you seen the Herald?
Barton looks
sullenly at his champagne glass as the fat man fills it.
BARTON
Not
yet.
MAN
Well,
I don't want to embarass you but Caven could hardly contain himself. But more
important, Richard and Poppy here loved the play.
POPPY
Loved
it! What power!
RICHARD
Yeah,
it was a corker.
BARTON
Thanks,
Richard, but I know for a fact the only fish you've ever seen were tacked to a
the wall of the yacht club.
RICHARD
Ouch!
MAN
Bravo!
Nevertheless, we were all devastated.
POPPY
Weeping!
Copius tears! What did the Herald say?
MAN
I
happen to have it with me.
BARTON
Please
Derek –
POPPY
Do
read it, do!
DEREK
"Bare
Ruined Choirs: Triumph of the Common Man. The star of the Bare Ruined Choirs
was not seen on the stage of the Belasco last night – though the thespians
involved all acquitted themselves admirably. The find of the evening was the
author of this drama about simple folk – fish mongers, in fact – whose brute
struggle for existence cannot quite quell their longing for something higher.
The playwright finds nobility in the most squalid corners and poetry in the
most calloused speech. A tough new voice in the American theater has arrived,
and the owner of that voice is named... Barton Fink."
BARTON
They'll
be wrapping fish in it in the morning so I guess it's not a total waste.
POPPY
Cynic!
DEREK
Well
we can enjoy your success, Barton, even if you can't.
BARTON
Don't
get me wrong – I'm glad it'll do well for you, Derek.
DEREK
Don't
worry about me, dear boy – I want you to celebrate.
BARTON
All
right, but I can't start listening to the critics, and I can't kis myself about
my own work. A writer writes from his gut, and his gut tells him what's good
and what's... merely adequate.
POPPY
Well
I don't pretend to be a critic, but Lord, I have a gut, and it tells me it was
simply marvelous.
RICHARD
And
a charming gut it is.
POPPY
You
dog!
RICHARD
(baying)
Aaa-woooooooo!
Barton turns
to look for the source of an insistent jingling. We swish pan off him to find a
busboy marching through the restaurant displaying a page sign, bell attached,
with Barton's name on it.
TRACKING IN
TOWARD A BAR
A
distinguished fifty-year-old gentleman in evening clothes is nursing a martini,
watching Barton approach.
PULLING BARTON
As he draws
near.
BARTON
I
thought you were going to join us. Jesus, Garland, you left me alone with those
people.
GARLAND
Don't
panic, I'll join you in a minute. What's you think of Richard and Poppy?
Barton scowls
BARTON
The
play was marvelous. She wept, copiously. Millions of dollars and no sense.
Garland
smiles, then draws Barton close.
GARLAND
We
have to talk a little business. I've just been on the phone to Los Angeles.
Barton, Capitol Pictures wants to put you under contract. They've offered you a
thousand dollars a week. I think I can get them to go as high as two.
BARTON
To
do what?
GARLAND
What
do you do far a living?
BARTON
I'm
not sure anymore. I guess I try to make a difference.
GARLAND
Fair
enough. No pressure here, Barton, because I respect you, but let me point out a
couple of things. One, here you make a difference to five hundred fifty people
a night – if the show sells out. Eighty-five million people go to the pictures
every week.
BARTON
To
see pap.
GARLAND
Yes,
generally, to see pap. However, point number two: A brief tenure in Hollywood
could supprt you through the writing of any number of plays.
BARTON
I
don't know, Garland; my place is here right now. I feel I'm on the brink of
success-
GARLAND
I'd
say you're already enjoying some.
Barton leans
earnestly forward.
BARTON
No,
Garland, don't you see? Not the kind of success where the critics fawn over you
or the producers like Derek make a lot of money. No, a real success – the
success we've been dreaming about – the creation of a new, living theater of,
about, and for the common man! If I ran off to Hollywood now I'd be making
money, going to parties, meeting the big shots, sure, but I'd be cutting myself
off from the wellspring of that success, from the common man.
He leans back
and chuckles ruefully.
BARTON
... I guess I'm sprouting off again. But I am certain of this, Garland: I'm capable of more good work. Maybe better work than I did in Choirs. It just doesn't seem to me that Los Angeles is the place to lead the life of mind.
GARLAND
Okay
Barton, you're the artist, I'm just the ten perceter. You decide what you want
and I'll make it happen. I'm only asking that your decision be informed by a
little realism – if I can use that word and Hollywood in the same breath.
Barton glumly
lights a cigarette and gazes out across the floor. Garland studies him.
... Look, they
love you, kid – everybody does. You see Caven's review in the Herald?
BARTON
No,
what did it say?
GARLAND
Take
my copy. You're the toast of Broadway and you have the opportunity to redeem
that for a little cash – strike that, a lot of cash.
Garland looks
at Barton for a reaction, but gets none.
GARLAND
... The common man'll still be here when you get back. What the hell, they might even have one or two of 'em out in Hollywood.
Absently:
BARTON
...
That's a rationalization, Garland.
Garland smiles
gently.
GARLAND
Barton,
it was a joke.
We hear a
distant rumble. It builds slowly and we cut to:
A GREAT WAVE
Crushing
against the Pacific shore.
The roar of
the surf slips away as we dissolve to:
HOTEL LOBBY
A high wide
shot from the front door, looking down across wilting potted palms, brass
cuspidors turning green, ratty wing chairs; the fading decor is
deco-gone-to-seed.
Amber light,
afternoon turning to evening, slopes in from behind us, washing the derelict
lobby with golden highlights.
Barton Fink
enters frame from beneath the camera and stops in the middle foreground to look
across the lobby.
We are framed
on his back, his coat and hat. The lobby is empty. There is a suspended beat as
Barton takes it in.
Barton moves
toward the front desk.
THE REVERSE
As Barton
stops at the empty desk. He hits a small silver bell next to the register. Its
ring-out goes on and on without losing volume.
After a long
beat there is a dull scuffle of shoes on stairs. Barton, puzzled, looks around
the empty lobby, then down at the floor behind the front desk.
A TRAP DOOR
It swings open
and a young man in a faded maroon uniform, holding a shoebrush and a shoe – not
one of his own – climbs up from the basement.
He closes the
trap door, steps up to the desk and sticks his finger out to touch the small
silver bell, finally muting it.
The lobby is
now silent again.
CLERK
Welcome
to the Hotel Earle. May I help you, sir?
BARTON
I'm
checking in. Barton Fink.
The clerk
flips through cards on the desk.
CLERK
F-I-N-K.
Fink, Barton. That must be you, huh?
BARTON
Must
be.
CLERK
Okay
then, everything seems to be in order. Everything seems to be in order.
He is turning
to a register around for Barton to sign.
CLERK
... Are you a tranz or a rez?
BARTON
Excuse
me?
CLERK
Transient
or resident?
BARTON
I
don't know... I mean, I'll be here, uh, indefinitely.
CLERK
Rez.
That'll be twenty-five fifty a week payable in advance. Checkout time is twelve
sharp, only you can forget that on account you're a rez. If you need anything,
anything at all, you dial zero on your personal in-room telephone and talk to
me. My name is Chet.
BARTON
Well,
I'm going to be working here, mostly at night; I'm a writer. Do you have room
service?
CLERK
Kitchen
closes at eight but I'm the night clerk. I can always ring out for sandwiches.
The clerk is
scribbling something on the back of an index card.
CLERK
... Though we provide privacy for the residential guest, we are also a full service hotel including complimentary shoe shine. My name Chet.
He pushes a
room key across the counter on top of the index card.
Barton looks
at the card.
On it:
"CHET!"
Barton looks
back up at the clerk. They regard each other for a beat.
CLERK
...
Okay
BARTON
Huh?