Oscar winners / 
   
 

Roth, Eric
FORREST GUMP (1994)
You'll never view the world the same way after seeing it through the eyes of Forrest Gump (Tom Hanks), a simpleminded man who finds himself in the middle of nearly every major event of the 1960s and '70s. Along the way, he makes friends, changes lives and searches for a soul mate. Winner of six Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Actor (Hanks).

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Roth, Eric. FORREST GUMP


Roth, Eric. FORREST GUMP
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Forrest Gump Script

               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
               mudsoaked 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
               pingpong 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 (V.O.)
                         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 right
                         up now, won’t we, Forrest?

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

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         Forrest!

               EXT. GREENBOW, ALABAMA

               Mrs. Gump and young Forrest walk across the street. Forrest
               walks stiffly next to his mother.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         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 (V.O.)
                         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 (V.O.)
                         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 sidewalk 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 (V.O.)
                         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 (V.O.)
                         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 (V.O.)
                         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

                                     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 (V.O.)
                         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 (V.O.)
                         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 (V.O.)
                         But we didn’t mind. Our house was
                         never empty. There was always folks
                         comin’ and goin’.

                                     MRS. GUMP (V.O.)
                         Suppa.

               INT. GUMP BOARDING HOUSE

               Mrs. Gump steps forward and speaks to all the boarders.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         It’s suppa, everyone. Forrest...

               A MAN WITH A CANE steps left across the hall.

                                     MAN WITH CANE
                         My, my. That sure looks special.

               Mrs. Gump looks into a sitting room and informs the boarders
               about dinner.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         Gentlemen, would you care to join us
                         for supper? Hurry up and get it before
                         the flies do. I prefer you don’t
                         smoke that cigar so close to mealtime.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         Sometimes we had so many people
                         stayin’ with us that every room was
                         filled with travelers. You know,
                         folks livin’ out of their suitcases,
                         and hat cases, and sample cases.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         Well, you go ahead and start. I can’t
                         find Forrest.

               Mrs. Gump walks up the stairs.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         Forrest... Forrest...

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         One time a young man was staying
                         with us, and he had him a guitar
                         case.

               Mrs. Gump looks into Forrest’s room. She hears singing coming
               from another room and walks over to a closed door. Mrs. Gump
               opens the door, revealing a young man with long sideburns as
               he plays the guitar and sings. Forrest holds onto a broom
               and dances oddly. The young man is ELVIS PRESLEY.

                                     ELVIS PRESLEY
                              (sings)
                         "Well, you ain’t never caught a
                         rabbit, and you ain’t no friend of
                         mine."

               Forrest’s legs rock back and forth to the guitar.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         Forrest! I told you not to bother
                         this nice young man.

                                     ELVIS
                         Oh, no, that’s all right, ma’am. I
                         was just showin’ him a thing or two
                         on the guitar here.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         All right, but your supper’s ready
                         if y’all want to eat.

                                     ELVIS
                         Yeah, that sounds good. Thank you,
                         ma’am.

               Mrs. Gump leaves and closes the door. Elvis sits back down.

               Forrest stands left, and looks himself in a mirror.

                                     ELVIS
                         Say, man, show me that crazy little
                         walk you just did there. Slow it
                         down some.

               Forrest begins to dance again as Elvis plays the guitar and
               sings.

                                     ELVIS
                              (sings)
                         "You ain’t nothin’ but a hound, hound
                         dog..."

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         I liked that guitar.

               Forrest dances as he watches himself in the mirror.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         It sounded good.

                                     ELVIS
                              (sings)
                         "...cryin’ all the time"

               Forrest rocks up and down on his braced legs, then begins to
               step.

                                     ELVIS
                              (sings)
                         "You ain’t nothin’ but a hound dog..."

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         I started moving around to the music,
                         swinging my hips. This one night me
                         and Momma...

               EXT. GREENBOW - NIGHT

               Mrs. Gump and Forrest walk along a sidewalk. A television
               inside a store window reveals Elvis Presley as he performs
               "Houng Dog" on a stage.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         ...was out shoppin’, and we walked
                         right by Benson’s Furniture and
                         Appliance store, and guess what.

               The television reveals Elvis as he thrusts his hips and sings.

                                     ELVIS
                              (sings)
                         You ain’t nothin’ but a hound dog...

               Mrs. Gump and Forrest watch the television. Elvis dances
               around in the same manner Forrest did. A woman in the audience
               screaming and applauding.

                                     ELVIS
                              (sings)
                         You ain’t nothin’ but a hound dog...

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         This is not children’s eyes.

               Mrs. Gump walks away, pulling Forrest with her. Forrest stops
               and takes one last look. Elvis continues to perform over the
               television.

                                     ELVIS
                              (sings)
                         "Well, you ain’t never caught a rabbit
                         and you ain’t no friend of mine."

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         Some years later, that handsome young
                         man who they called "The King," well,
                         he sung too many songs, had himself
                         a heart attack or something.

               EXT. SAVANNAH/BUS BENCH - DAY

               Forrest is still sitting on the bus bench. The black nurse
               looks at him.

                                     FORREST
                         Must be hard being a king. You know,
                         it’s funny how you remember some
                         things, but some things you can’t.

               EXT. COUNTRY ROAD/ALABAMA - MORNING (1954)

               Mrs. Gump and Forrest wait for the school bus. The bus pulls
               up as Mrs. Gump prepares Forrest for his first day of school.

                                     MRS. GUMP
                         You do your very best now, Forrest.

                                     FORREST
                         I sure will, Momma.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         I remember the bus ride on the first
                         day of school very well.

               The bus driver opens the door and looks down. Forrest walks
               to the steps of the bus and looks at the bus driver. She is
               smoking a cigarette.

                                     BUS DRIVER
                         Are you comin’ along?

                                     FORREST
                         Momma said not to be taking rides
                         from strangers.

                                     BUS DRIVER
                         This is the bus to school.

                                     FORREST
                         I’m Forrest Gump.

                                     BUS DRIVER
                         I’m Dorothy Harris.

                                     FORREST
                         Well, now we ain’t strangers anymore.

               The bus driver smiles as Forrest steps up into the bus.

               INT. BUS

               Forrest steps up onto the bus. Mrs. Gump waves to Forrest as
               the bus drives away. Forrest begins to walk down the aisle.

               TWO YOUNG BOYS look up from the seat.

                                     BOY #1
                         This seat’s taken.

                                     BOY #2
                         It’s taken!

               Forrest looks around. A larger girl slides over so Forrest
               can’t sit next to her. She shakes her head. Forrest looks to
               the other side where a boy sits alone on a larger seat. They
               boy glares up at Forrest.

                                     BOY #3
                         You can’t sit here.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         You know, it’s funny what a young
                         man recollects. ’Cause I don’t
                         remember being born.

               EXT. SAVANNAH/BUS BENCH - DAY

               Forrest continues talking as he sits on the bus bench.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         I, I... don’t recall what I got for
                         my first Christmas and I don’t know
                         when I went on my first outdoor
                         picnic. But, I do remember the first
                         time I heard the sweetiest voice...

               INT. BUS - MORNING (1954)

               Young Forrest is still standing in the aisle on the bus.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         ...in the wide world.

                                     GIRL
                         You can sit here if you want.

               Forrest looks back at JENNY CURRAN, a young girl about
               Forrest’s age.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         I had never seen anything so beautiful
                         in my life. She was like an angel.

                                     JENNY
                         Well, are you gonna sit down, or
                         aren’t ya?

               Forrest sits down next to Jenny.

                                     JENNY
                         What’s wrong with your legs?

                                     FORREST
                         Um, nothing at all, thank you. My
                         legs are just fine and dandy.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         I just sat next to her on that bus
                         and had conversation all the way to
                         school.

                                     JENNY
                         Then why do you have those shoes on?

                                     FORREST
                         My momma said my back’s crooked like
                         a question mark. These are going to
                         make me as straight as an arrow.
                         They’re my magic shoes.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         And next to Momma, no one ever talked
                         to me or asked me questions.

                                     JENNY
                         Are you stupid or something.

                                     FORREST
                         Mommy says stupid is as stupid does.

               Jenny puts her hand out toward Forrest. Forrest reaches over
               and shakes her hand.

                                     JENNY
                         I’m Jenny.

                                     FORREST
                         I’m Forrest Gump. Forrest Gump.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         From that day on, we was always
                         together. Jenny and me was like peas
                         and carrots.

               EXT. OAK TREE - DAY

               Young Jenny and Forrest run toward a large oak tree.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         She taught me how to climb...

               Jenny sits on a large branch and calls down to Forrest.

                                     JENNY
                         Come on, Forrest, you can do it.

               Forrest dangles from the branch.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         ...I showed her how to dangle.

               Jenny and Forrest sit on a tree branch and read.

                                     FORREST
                         "...a good little monkey and..."

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         She helped me to learn how to read.

               Forrest hangs upside down from a branch and swings back and
               forth. Forrest’s braces are wedged in the tree.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         And I showed her to swing.

               EXT. OAK TREE - NIGHT

               The silhouete of the oak tree, Jenny and Forrest as they sit
               on a branch.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         Sometimes we’d just sit out and wait
                         for the stars.

                                     FORREST
                         Momma’s gonna worry about me.

               Jenny puts her hand on Forrest’s hand.

                                     JENNY
                         Just stay a little longer.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         For some reason, Jenny didn’t never
                         want to go home.

                                     FORREST
                         Okay, Jenny. I’ll stay.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         She was my most special friend.

               INT. SAVANNAH/BUS STOP - DAY

               Forrest nods as he remembers.

                                     FORREST
                         My only friend.

               Forrest continues talking to the black woman. She doesn’t
               seem to be listening as she reads her magazine. She looks up
               from her magazine.

                                     FORREST
                         Now, my Momma always told me that
                         miracles happen every day. Some people
                         don’t think so, but they do.

               EXT. OAK ALLEY - ANOTHER DAY (1954)

               Jenny and Forrest walk. A dirt clod hits Forrest in the back
               of the head. Jenny looks as Forrest rubs his head. THREE
               YOUNG BOYS get off their bikes and pick up more rocks.

                                     BOY #1
                         Hey... dummy!

               Forrest is hit in the eye with another dirt clod. Forrest
               falls backward onto the ground as the boys glare at him.

                                     BOY #2
                         Are you retarded, or just plain
                         stupid?

                                     BOY #3
                         Look, I’m Forrest Gump.

               Jenny helps Forrest back up. Boy #1 and Boy #2 throw more
               dirt clods at Forrest.

                                     JENNY
                         Just run away, Forrest.

               Another dirt clod hits Forrest in the arm.

                                     JENNY
                         Run, Forrest!

               Forrest tries to run along the road, but his braces makes it
               impossible. He hobbles along as Jenny yells after him.

                                     JENNY
                         Run away! Hurry!

               Boy #1 and Boy #2 turn back toward the bikes.

                                     BOY #2
                         Get the bikes!

                                     BOY #3
                         Hurry up!

               The boys pick up their bikes and ride after Forrest.

                                     BOY #3
                         Let’s get him! Come on!

                                     BOY #2
                         Look out, dummy, here we come!

               The boys ride after Forrest. Jenny stands and watches.

                                     BOY #2
                         We’re gonna get you!

                                     JENNY
                         Run, Forrest! Run!

               Forrest hobbles along the dirt road.

                                     JENNY
                         Run, Forrest!

               Forrest looks over his shoulder. The three boys race on their
               bikes.

                                     BOY #1
                         Come back here, you!

               Forrest begins to run faster with his braces on. Forrest
               continues running as the boys chase him. Blood drips down
               from a cut on his head. The boys on the bikes are gaining on
               Forrest. Forrest hobbles along. He begins to gain speed.

                                     JENNY
                         Run, Forrest! Run!

               SLOW MOTION --

               Forrest runs from the chasing room. He looks over his shoulder
               in fear.

               The boys on the bikes peddle faster as they gain on Forrest,
               running.

               Forrest tries to run even faster to get away. Suddenly his
               braces shatter, sending steel and plastic flying into the
               air.

               Forrest runs and look down at his legs in surprise.

               Forrest continues to run faster as the metal braces and straps
               fly off his legs.

               Forrest runs free of his braces and begins to pick up speed.

               The chasing boys ride over the remains of Forrest’s braces.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         Now, you wouldn’t believe it if I
                         told you.

               EXT. SAVANNAH/ BUS BENCH - DAY

                                     FORREST
                         But I can run like the wind blows.

               The black woman continues to read her magazine. Forrest smiles
               as he remembers.

                                     FORREST
                         From that day on, if I was going
                         somewhere, I was running!

               EXT. OAK ALLEY - DAY (1954)

               Forrest sprints away from the boys. The boys stop the chase
               and watch in disbelief. Forrest is already at the far end of
               the road, clear of the chasing boys.

                                     BOY #2
                         He’s gettin’ away! Stop him!

               Boy #1 throws his bike down in frustration. Forrest runs
               across a field.

               EXT. COUNTRY ROAD

               Forrest runs past a chain gang in their prison uniforms.

               They are cutting at the weeds on the side of the road.

               EXT. GREENBOW

               Forrest runs across the street. THE TWO OLD MEN sit in front
               of the barber shop.

                                     OLD CRONY
                         That boy sure is a running fool.

               EXT. JENNY’S HOUSE

               Forrest runs down a driveway toward Jenny’s small house.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         Now remember how I told you that
                         Jenny never seemed to want to go
                         home? Well, she lived in a house
                         that was as old as Alabama. Her Momma
                         had gone up to heaven when she was
                         five and her daddy was some kind of
                         a farmer.

               Forrest knocks on Jenny’s door.

                                     FORREST
                         Jenny? Jenny?

               Forrest look around the field at the left. He notices Jenny
               and runs toward her.

                                     FORREST (V.O.)
                         He was a very lovin’ man. He was
                         always kissing and touchin’ her and
                         her sisters. And then this one time,
                         Jenny wasn’t on the bus to go to
                         school.

               Forrest runs to Jenny.

                                     FORREST
                     &nbs