Monday, November 03, 2014

Magnum, P.I., The Movie



I don’t think a movie, if you mean a theatrical release, would now fly. They had their chances in the 90s. I do think a case can be made for a “special.” It can be called a TV movie, but I will stick with a special. Probably best to keep it at 90 minutes. All or almost all is to be in Hawaii, perhaps revisiting locations of days gone by. Tom Selleck, Larry Manetti, and Roger E. Mosley are to be in it. Can they act as they were then? Two levels of acting may be necessary. To be as they were and as the special’s script calls for.

I would not place it in 1989 or 2014. Put it at 1998 or close by. It would be a good idea to work into the script some 90s Hawaiian structures or events. I don’t have a script. I offer some situations, updates, and the core idea for the special. So what’s the big deal about my offering? Others can do as they wish. As far as take it or leave it, I am well aware it will be overwhelmingly left alone. Nevertheless…
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It starts with Rick ducking objects being tossed at him by his wife. He is still running a nightclub, and she wants no more of the criminal types and women at his work. As he is ducking, he is trying to come up with an alternative to the club. After a time, he stops, says “food” and gets bonked in the head.

Then to T.C., and T.C.’s son isn’t home for dinner very often recently. The son is gone most evenings and on weekends. He says it is a surprise for T.C. But T.C. thinks what the son is up to will be the wrong kind of “surprise.” It turns out the son is attending a flight school. T.C. still has a snazzy chopper for his tourist business but he tends to blackout now in the tight turns. The snazzy chopper provides limited seating for a combination of a thrill ride and scenic views. The son intends on piloting the snazzy chopper and having the business expand its “demographics” by providing a service for the more sedate and elderly with a new chopper. The new chopper is sedate, carries more than the snazzy one and travels in a slow, straight line. T.C., according to his son, is to pilot the new chopper. Also, the son wants the business to expand into providing food too. It turns out that the prime contractor for Island Hoppers will be Rick’s new catering business. T.C. is at home when his son flies in the snazzy chopper as a surprise.

I have my doubts Mr. Hellerman will want to step before the cameras. Perhaps he could be a voice on the phone, or Magnum could react to Higgins’ supposed phone conversation. His actions, as heard by Magnum, could be supplied by Magnum’s voice-overs. In any event, Magnum is on the phone talking to Higgins who is in London. Higgins lives in a cottage in the English countryside when he isn’t in London working on a book about British military history. London is expensive and Higgins’ lodgings in London are provided for him by Robin Masters.

Robin Masters no longer owns the Robins Nest. He is doing about one book every five years. He maintains his presence in Hawaii with a two-story house having three bedrooms, and an attached two-car garage on two acres.

Also in London is Magnum’s daughter who works as an intern for an investment-banking firm. She frequently travels in the course of her work. When in London, she keeps tabs on Higgins, When in London, Higgins keeps tabs on Magnum’s daughter. They both report informally to Magnum. 

Magnum is out of the Navy. He is going to Hawaii to visit Rick and T.C. as he does every few years. He usually stays a week or two but now he doesn’t know what will come after the visit.

On the flight to Hawaii, Magnum is charmed by a woman who has her hair in a mess, baggy clothes, and thick glasses. Why he is interested in her, he doesn’t know. It is what is. She is a wildlife woman (WW) – she will be in a remote part of the Hawaiian Islands to verify if a species of bird exists and in what numbers and if it is in danger of environmental hazards. After three weeks she will go to London, where her employers, a wildlife foundation, will determine her next assignment – the South Pacific or the Amazon.

Magnum, Rick, and T.C. meet and tell Magnum of their new ventures. Magnum invites WW to meet Rick and T.C. She shows up at Rick’s for dinner and Magnum doesn’t recognize her. She is dressed well, hair done expertly, contact lenses, not ugly but no raving beauty, and charming and with character. At the dinner, she invites Magnum to accompany her on her expedition. He agrees.

During this foray into remote Hawaii, there is a scene in which they woo (look it up in your Funk & Wagnalls) each other without touching one another in a small room, clothes on, using body language and their words. Magnum decides he wants to be with her. She wants him but she has a career and a PhD. He has only an ex-career.

WW goes to London. Magnum is staying at Robin Masters’ house. The Ferrari or other fine car is in the garage and at Magnum’s disposal. Mrs. Brown looks after the place. She is cook, gardener, housekeeper, and hostess. There is one large hall in the house for civic and social functions but no gala blasts are hosted at the house. If large groups come in, caterers (like Rick) provide what is needed. Two dogs (Mercury and Mars) are Mrs. Brown’s companions and provide personal security. She gets along famously with everyone. Mr. Masters visits twice a year. No art treasures are in the house. There is no  wine cellar though there is a wine closet.

Magnum decides, until he rejoins WW, he will apply himself to PI work. What else? He tells Rick and T.C. that he is on retainer with a giant insurance company. Rick and T.C. later find out there is no pay for Magnum if he doesn’t get the return of the Faversham diamonds. Rick and T.C. unexpectedly visit Magnum in the insurance company’s warehouse-like building of a thousand very small windows where in Magnum has a tiny cubicle. The insurance jerk (I J) that is Magnum’s boss tells Magnum that Rick and T.C. must leave and that Magnum has a staff meeting in 15 minutes.

The Faversham diamonds are a necklace worn by Mrs. Faversham (in her 80s) at any excuse – civic or social. Higgins, of course, knows her or of her. The diamonds are known to Higgins and he tells Magnum they are worth at most $20,000 because of numerous imperfections. Magnum’s finder fee is 10% if recovered very soon. Magnum doesn’t want Rick and T.C. to know any of this.

Higgins also informs Magnum that the Romorantin-Lanthenay diamonds, also a necklace, a private pleasure of Madame Dizier, have gone missing. They are priceless. They have not been seen in public for 8 years. Madame Dizier has been known to be quite embarrassed by the little known fact that the “R-L’s” look remarkably like the Favershams, but one can quickly spot the most glaring flaw in the Favershams (Fs) if the light is right and one uses a magnifying glass.
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The heart of the special is comedic. Magnum soon realizes that the same thieves have stolen both the F and the R-L necklaces. The thieves are French and don’t “fit” well in Hawaii (they have their own “imperfections”) which helps Magnum find out who they are and where they are. They intend on “recovering the Fs “ but really returning the R-Ls to Mrs. Faversham as if they were the Fs. Thus, the R-Ls will be hidden in plain sight until such time as they need to be reclaimed by the thieves to complete a deal. The thieves will then return the true Fs to Mrs. Faversham and retake the R-Ls.

But Magnum steals, from the thieves, the Fs. Then the thieves break into Magnum’s safe but do not take the Fs. Magnum, in turn, breaks into the thieves’ safe but does not take the RLs. Later, Magnum knows where the RLs are. The thieves don’t know where the Fs are. The Magnum has a fake F necklace made. The thieves counter with a fake R-L. At one point, four necklaces are in circulation. Rick has one, T.C. has one, Magnum has one, and the thieves have the fourth one. Magnum knows quickly enough which ones are his fakes and has the quick check for the Fs. The thieves aren’t sure if they have the R-Ls because the necklaces switch owners at a rapid pace since Magnum, or Rick, or T.C. place theirs in different pawnshops or with different fences, do car tosses and football-like handoffs (see below) and this prevents the thieves from getting a positive ID fast enough. 

Time, for Magnum, is running out. The I J who is short, balding in the center of the head, with pencil mustache, and owl glasses says time is almost up. Magnum isn’t sure, but guesses he has grabbed the R-Ls. He knows he has the Fs. He started with 50-50 certainty with the two necklaces. Then with one fake, he is 2/3 sure. Then with 2 fakes, he is 3/4 sure. Enough fakes and it would be a certainty, but too many fakes means too much time checking them out and the switcheroos must be in rapid succession. [For example, (1) Magnum is driving the Ferrari down a busy street with the thieves in pursuit and he tosses a necklace to a person, in disguise, on the sidewalk. (2) Magnum is driving the Ferrari, top down, eastward along a narrow street and meets T.C. in a convertible driving westward on same street, and as they come alongside each other, at speed, they toss the necklace they had to the other car. (3) Magnum, pursued by the thieves, drives into a parking lot and pulls up alongside the cars Rick and T.C. have already parked in the lot. They get out of the cars, each one having a necklace and crouch low and do football-like handoffs of the necklaces except one of them is a fake handoff and that person retains the necklace he had. Then they “reverse field” and do handoffs again and again one of them does a fake handoff. Then one of them jumps into the car he brought and the other two switch cars and peel out of the lot.] 

M makes a guess that he has the R-Ls. He has the Fs. 

Second to last scene – he enters I J’s office (“Can’t you see I am busy?”) and deposits a black velvet bag on I J’s desk and says – The Romorantin-Lanthenays. He also places a brown velvet bag on the desk and says – The Favershams. The I J looks up. Magnum is gone.

Last scene – Rick, T.C., and Magnum are in a restaurant or club (maybe with Rick’s wife and T.C.’s son) and talking about key cases of Magnum PI from 1980 to 1988 and how, by the by, Rick is having trouble affording the better chefs and how T.C. is really straining the family budget to get the “sedate” chopper. Talk is also about 1990s Hawaii.

Then they hear someone shouting “You’re right!” It is I J.
 He gets half way to their table and shouts again – “You’re right!” 
At their table, he whispers to them while looking at Magnum that he is right.
Magnum – They are the Romorantin-Lanthenays?
I J – Yes.
Magnum – The Favershams too?
I J – Yes.
10%?
Yes, says I J resignedly.
Magnum – Finder’s fee?
I J- Yes, said with exasperation and awe. It is over $3 million.
Rick’s jaw drops, as does T.C’s. They swivel their heads to look at Magnum.
The finale is a head shot of Magnum. He looks directly at the camera.
He smiles.
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I should have posted this sooner because now I have an opening and a closing suggestion. No more delays in posting or a script will erupt.

The special starts with a giant sun rising out of the ocean. Magnum’s voice-over says – “I know what you’re thinking and you’re right, this is Paradise.” Then cut to Rick dodging objects.

The special ends, after Magnum smiles, with a shot done very late in the day. All are seen in the near dark, but recognizable, though in reality they may be cardboard cutouts. Everyone is facing away from the camera and toward a very small, very distant sunset in the ocean. Far right the Ferrari is implied or all there, next on the left is Magnum seated in a lawn chair. On his left is Higgins (even if he didn’t appear in the special) in a lawn chair, to his left are two sitting dogs, and to their left is Rick in a lawn chair, to his left is T.C. in a lawn chair, and finally the presence of a chopper to T.C.’s left. Magnum’s voice-over says – “I know what you’re thinking and you’re right, this is Paradise.” 

Go to a screen containing a mosaic of Magnum throughout Magnum PI and then put credits on it. Now Higgins’ mosaic, credits. Then Rick, credits. Then T.C., credits. Then guest stars, credits. Now a screen(s) of different sets or parts of locations where they filmed in Hawaii, then credits on it or them.  END

[Mention is made of the Magnum movie on “Magnum Mania!”, a website maintained first by J.J. Walters and now by Steve Paruszkiewicz. This is not the only place where a desire to see the movie come about is expressed. It is, however, a site where very, very much about what was seen on “Magnum, P. I.” is enjoyably recorded and elaborated on in fascinating detail.]