Debbie Muses (at times not alone) best at 25°C…

June 23, 2009

“Where did all the anvils go?”

Filed under: Movie Scripts, Random Fun — Debbie Yu @ 3:47p06

LORELAI: I mean, they were extremely common until just recently — historically recently, not recently like “metrosexual is a word now” recently, but recently.

EMILY: Are we still talking about anvils?

LORELAI: Yes, where did all the anvils go?

EMILY: You’re talking about those big, heavy, metal things?

LORELAI: That blacksmiths hammered horseshoes and stuff on. Everyone had them. They were featured prominently in every movie western, so where did they all go?

RICHARD: I don’t know that they were that common.

LORELAI: Wile E. Coyote used them. That’s how common they were.

EMILY: Who?

LORELAI: The cartoon. He was always trying to drop an anvil on the Road Runner’s head or shoot it at him out of a giant slingshot or fire it at him out of a cannon. Inevitably, the cannon tilted up, shot it in the air, it fell down, and made an anvil-shaped impression on Wile E. Coyote’s head.

EMILY: This is a cartoon?

LORELAI: No, no, this just happened to me the other day. I was walking down the street, and this giant anvil — yes, mother, it’s a cartoon.

RORY: I know she sounds nuts, but it’s a very common cartoon.

RICHARD: But that doesn’t prove that anvils were so common.

LORELAI: It does. It proves that anvils were so ubiquitous at one point — is that the word, ubiquitous?

RORY: It depends on where you’re going.

LORELAI: That they knew that children would know what they were and delight in them. That’s how common they were — children watching cartoons.

RORY: That was the word.

RICHARD: I’ve forgotten your point.

LORELAI: Where are all the anvils? I mean, is there some sort of secret anvil storage facility the government is keeping from us?

RICHARD: Or they fell into disuse with the advent of other technologies, and so they melted them down and they’re gone.

LORELAI: But they’re not supposed to melt. They were made to withstand the red-hot hammer of the town blacksmith.

EMILY: This is easily the most pointless conversation we’ve ever had.

LORELAI: I don’t hear anyone chiming in with rational theories.

EMILY: Please change the subject, I beg of you, anyone.

RICHARD: Well the girls don’t know the big news about Jason and me.

LORELAI: You’re pregnant?

RICHARD: We’re acquiring another company.

LORELAI: I was close.

RORY: Already? You just started yours.

RICHARD: The insurance business is changing so rapidly, you have to adapt to keep up.

RORY: It’s a dog-eat-dog world, Grandpa.

RICHARD: Don’t get the wrong idea. It’s not a big company. It’s smaller than ours, but very powerful.

LORELAI: Wait, the company is smaller than yours? Your company is two guys — you and Jason.

RICHARD: This company is a one-man operation — Bob Sutton.

LORELAI: So, you’re acquiring Bob?

RICHARD: We’re acquiring his company, and his company is him.

LORELAI: Did he have to give himself two weeks’ notice? [Rory snickers.]

RICHARD: No.

LORELAI: Is there gonna be a sad little going-away party where he brings in his own cake and blows out his candles?

RICHARD: We are all celebrating with a dinner tomorrow — us and the wives.

EMILY: Ugh.

LORELAI: You’re not big on the Bob?

EMILY: Bob’s fine. We’ve known him for years. It’s that dolt he’s married to — classic trophy wife.

RICHARD: She is quite young.

LORELAI: How young?

EMILY: Her car looks [high, squeaky voice] just like Barbie’s.

RICHARD: Regardless, I hope you will be kind to her at dinner.

EMILY: I’ll have to bring my English-to-dumbbell dictionary.

RICHARD: Try and focus on Bob. Bob’s as sharp as they come.

EMILY: He’s very brilliant, I’ll give you that.

LORELAI: Bob’s brilliant, huh?

RICHARD: He’s a Rhodes scholar.

LORELAI: Ask him where the anvils went. …Or not.

-Gilmore Girls-

anvil

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