What I'd Say to the Martians

What I'd Say to the Martians Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: What I'd Say to the Martians Read Online Free PDF
Author: Jack Handey
Tags: Humor, General, Essay/s, Form
have been separated.”
    Show monkey wandering around, injured, lost, and alone. Make him trip, using fishing line attached to his leg. (Try to get shot on first take, because after that, monkey will probably try to bite off fishing line.)
    Show giraffe being chased by a lion. If not too expensive, use full-sized, realistic, robotic lion, able to run at full speed. Or a man in a lion suit.
    The oppressive sun beats down on monkey (heat lamp). Monkey looks up with an expression that says, “Why, oh sun, do you torment me so?” (Get good director.)
    We see lion eating a giraffe. At first we think it is our giraffe, but then we are relieved to see it is a baby giraffe.
    Rock slide covers monkey (fake monkey). Show monkey crawling out (real monkey with a few heavy rocks laid on top of him). Narrator: “Can the monkey and the giraffe survive? Will they ever be reunited?”
    Show monkey trying to join group of monkeys (children in monkey suits). Our monkey is driven away by the leader of the monkey pack, a vicious, snarling brute (papier-mâché marionette). Subtitle translates snarls as: “You thought you were so great when you were riding on that giraffe’s neck, but you aren’t so high and mighty now.”
    Show giraffe, alone in the darkness, shivering from fear (ice packs on legs). Finally, he falls asleep. (Sleeping pills?) We see his dream. In it, the giraffe fearfully approaches a gravestone. At first he can’t make out the name on it, but when he finally does, he is shocked. The name on the gravestone reads “The Monkey.” The giraffe wakes up in a cold sweat (heat lamp).
    Show two female explorers swimming in a crystal-clear lagoon, so you can see they’re nude. Narrator: “Meanwhile, nearby, are two explorers, Laci and Brandy.” Show the explorers swimming for quite a while. Then show them getting dressed and leaving. We notice they have left a pair of binoculars behind.
    The monkey is starving now. We know this because when he looks at a parrot on a branch, it turns into a roasted, steaming parrot on a branch.
    Narrator: “The monkey is now at the end of his rope. So he puts his faith in the Almighty.” Monkey prays. (Glue monkey’s hands together.) Show monkey walking along later. (Be sure to unglue hands first.) He sees a glowing treasure chest, and opens it—it’s filled with bananas. (Have choir singing in background, so you know it’s from God.)
    Refreshed by that good banana nutrition, the monkey heads off. For comic relief, show monkey approaching a skunk and getting sprayed. If monkey will not approach skunk, feed monkey whiskey so he will relax and go up to skunk. However, do not let him drink too much or he may kill skunk.
    Show monkey finding binoculars. Monkey learns how to use binoculars. (Have plenty of film, because this may take a long time.) Monkey climbs up tree and scans horizon. We see his point of view, which finally focuses on yes, the giraffe! He screams (BB pellet) with joy.
    Just then the giraffe is shot by a tranquilizer dart. We show the shooters, two trappers from a zoo. We know they are evil because we saw a part earlier where they were shooting each other with tranquilizer darts, to get high.
    Cut to a truck traveling across the savanna. In a cage in the back is the giraffe, looking sad (half a sleeping pill). But then we reveal that it’s not the two trappers driving the truck, but the monkey! (Note: Use cheap truck because monkey will probably wreck it.)
    Show the two trappers sitting on ground, tied up. No need to show how the monkey captured them; just have one of the trappers say, “That damned monkey!”
    Show monkey releasing giraffe from cage and monkey leaping onto neck of giraffe. (Note: monkey may not do this, so put monkey on giraffe neck and jerk back with harness; then show film in reverse.)
    Narrator: “The monkey and the giraffe are reunited at last, as nature intended.” Show giraffe trying to reach a piece of fruit high on a tree branch, but he can’t.
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