Departing Seniors (2023)

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Departing Seniors (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

- How's that for you, Freddie?

You f*cking p*ssy!

- Scream, ha.

This is what you get for

costing us the Championship

my senior year.

A winning record, ruined by

Freddie the f*cking Spaz!

What a f*cking loser.

Whoa, calm down!

Help!

Help me!

Help!

- Wanna make yourself useful

and help me study?

- Whoa, slow down buddy!

- Sorry, sorry, Mr. Arda!

- Oh my God, does

that mean you're done?

Please, please, God, tell me it

means that you're done.

- Oh my God, chill.

- sh*t, I almost

went four years

without ever stepping

foot in this place.

- You've never been

to the computer lab?

- No.

- Seriously?

- It's nothing,

but a f*cking library

without the whimsy.

- 'Cause books are

so whimsical.

- Yes, they are.

- Well, I'm sorry to

tarnish your perfect record,

but Dennis refuses to

cover any more sporting events

and Mr. Arda needs me to

proof these pics

from the last baseball game

for the paper.

- Refuses?

There's one dead body

and the p*ssy can't do his job.

Pathetic.

- Bianca, come on.

- Javier, come on, please.

Or I'm going to

slit my wrist, like--

- Dude, don't joke like that.

- Okay, whatever.

Do you have

what you need or not?

- Uh...

Yeah.

- Then what the f*ck

are we still doing here?

It's Friday.

School day is over.

Okay, and as a senior,

it is literally causing me like

physical pain to

still be in this building

after the final bell.

- Oh, well, you

should have said that earlier.

- Yeah.

- Come on, sweetie,

I don't want you to get hurt.

- Finally. You know, I was

getting ready to leave your ass.

- Oh, you love taking me home.

- Okay, home, sure why not.

Picking you up in the morning?

No. It's gotta stop.

Mm-mm.

- Alright, thank you.

- I mean you're welcome,

but don't get used to it.

I love you to bits,

but I refuse to miss out on

the 15 minutes of sleep it takes

to pick your ass up

before school.

- I'd hate for you to

miss out on

15 whole minutes

of beauty sleep.

- Yeah, that's why

you're my best friend.

You f*cking get it.

- Besides, walking is good

for heart health anyway.

- Plus, beats being

a senior riding the bus.

Talk about pathetic.

- Hey, look at this twat.

Hey, buy a car, h*m*!

- You can't even hit me?

You're a f*cking pitcher.

- Little fucker,

I could hit him if I wanted.

- Hey! Give that back!

- I'm sure you'd love

for me to give it to you.

Ooh! Ooh, ooh.

- Alright.

- Seriously,

what are we in middle school?

- J-- Come on, dude.

- Hey!

Oh!

Not so handsy, huh?

What are you...

Oh.

Oops.

- d*ck.

- Those guys are such assholes.

- f*cking assholes.

God, I wish.

- Wait, what do you wish?

- I don't know.

- Mm-hm, yeah you wish,

that all those f*cking assholes

would die horrifically,

gruesome deaths

via telekinetic vengeance?

- You watch too many movies.

- Oh, maybe.

Hey, but at least in Carrie,

all the high-school assholes

get what they deserve, right?

- Yeah, if only life

were more like the movies.

- Hmm. Yeah, yeah. If only.

Oh, man. Coming.

- Come on, guys!

I know it's

the last week of class,

and everyone's really excited,

but this is your final chance to

discuss your year end papers.

Due Thursday.

Worth half your grade.

Anybody?

Does anybody have anything?

Bueller? Bueller?

Yes, Ginny.

- Well, I feel

like I'm in pretty good shape,

but I suppose I--

- Of course, you do.

- Excuse me?

- Oh, sorry,

uh, I was just saying that

I'm really excited for you to

share what's sure to be

a staggeringly brilliant

literary analysis.

- Javier, please.

Ginny, go ahead?

- Well, I'm writing

on how Melville's portrayal

of an isolated,

exclusively male environment

acts as a study on the

problematic nature

of traditional patriarchal

societal structures.

- Basic.

- Okay, what was that?

- Oh, nothing just...

Basic.

Oh, I have like

a frog in my throat.

- No, he's calling you basic.

- Basic?

So what's your paper on?

- I'm analyzing

the h*m*-erotic undertones

in Melville's portrayal of

inter-male relationships.

- Well, hey,

oh man, what's the old saying?

"Write what you know."

- In that case shouldn't

your paper be on Starbuck?

- What?

- Now he's calling you basic.

- You know, Starbuck.

Like-- like the character.

From the book?

- Thank God.

Alright,

papers are due Thursday.

No extensions.

I don't care what the reason is.

Thursday. Alright?

Uh, Javier, can you stick around

a sec after class?

- Hey.

I'm-- I'm sorry, Mr. Arda,

she just like,

she triggers me.

- Wouldn't let her get to you.

Year's almost over.

I was actually hoping the photos

from Saturday's game were ready.

- Oh, yeah, yeah, totally.

- Okay, great!

Bring them by after class.

I'll be here.

- Cool.

- Oh, and Javier?

- Yeah?

- Anybody's ever bullying you

or anything?

- Oh, I'm fine.

Really.

I'm g-- I'm all good.

- Okay, if you say so.

- Thank you.

- Okay, go off,

go long, go long, go long!

- Guys!

- I am so sorry Mr. Arda.

- Put me out of

my misery if I ever end up as

a high school English teacher.

- You got it, babe.

- Hey.

- Hey.

- Sorry for the lame

Starbucks joke back there.

- Oh, no,

no apologies necessary.

I'll take all the

support I can get.

- Your-- your paper,

it seems really

like interesting.

- Really?

- Yeah.

- Oh, thanks.

- Yeah, I mean,

if you like wanted a second

pair of eyes for--

for feedback or whatever.

- Yeah.

- We could hang sometime.

- Yeah.

- Cool.

- Cool, no,

that sounds-- that sounds cool.

- Sweet.

- Sweet.

- See you.

- Yeah, I'll-- I'll see you.

We can meet at Starbucks.

- Yeah.

- Whoa.

You'll never guess

what happened after class.

- You gave Mr. Arda a hand job.

- No, what?

- Mr. Arda gave you a hand job?

- No, gross.

- Oh, a blowie?

- Will you stop it?

- Oh, Javier,

okay, no, no, no, okay,

what's up, what's up,

what happened?

- I think William asked me out.

- Hey, no way.

William, William?

Like cute little

trumpet William?

- Yes.

- He of the ambiguous sexuality?

- Well,

slightly less ambiguous now.

- Yeah.

- But, yeah.

- Okay.

Okay, this is awesome.

I mean, you had your

eye on the dude

since he transferred here

like last semester.

- That is not true.

Okay, well, maybe just a little.

- Yeah, a little, uh-huh.

Come on, this is awesome.

This is your big chance.

Nothing more pathetic than

an 18-year-old virgin.

- Right.

- God,

Javier is such a tool.

You know, it's like he thinks

that just because

he's this gay Mexican,

he has the monopoly

on all valid perspectives

of theoretical criticism.

- About English again?

- Yes,

it's about

AP-f*cking-English, Trevor.

It's like here I am, busting

my ass to be valedictorian,

oh, and up comes Javier,

affirmative action-ing his way

to all my scholarship money.

- Dude does have a 4.0.

- And your mom is loaded,

it's not like

you need the scholarships.

- Not the f*cking point,

Trevor.

Hey, you know what?

Give me your phone, Trev.

- Why?

- I've got an idea.

- Yeah, take again,

take another hit.

Ooh, see, it's not working,

'cause you blow it like.

- Well,

I don't know how to do it.

Just I don't know how to vape.

- Big cloud, big cloud.

That was so small, but--

I f*cking hit it.

What the f*ck does he

mean by peer review?

- I don't know.

What do-- what do I respond?

- Easy, just be like,

"Ooh yeah, baby,

I want to suck that D."

- Why do I ever think

you're actually gonna help?

Okay, what about uh,

"Sure, I have to meet

Mr. Arda after school,

but right after that, library?"

- Mm-hmm, peer review.

I've never heard

these gay words.

- How's that for h*m*-erotic

undertones?

- Idiot.

- Wow, these are really great.

- Thanks.

- You've got a real eye,

you know that?

Think you're gonna stick with

photography at Northwestern?

- I think so.

Yeah, hopefully, I can

get on staff at the Daily.

- That'd be awesome.

I know you're gonna k*ll it.

So uh, you must be really glad

to be getting out of here, huh?

- Uh, I guess, yeah.

- Who we kidding?

High school can

really suck sometimes,

especially if you--

you don't quite fit in.

You know, you really remind me

of myself when I was your age.

- I do?

- Yeah.

I mean, you've got great

taste in music, for starters.

- What? You like Los Bunkers?

- You kidding me?

Vida de Perros came out when

I was in high school myself.

- Get out.

- I swear.

- I f*cking love Vida de Perros.

I-- oh, man, most English

teachers don't know their

Chilean all-rock groups.

- I'd like to think I'm not

like most English teachers.

I'm actually a cool

English teacher.

I mean, I'm-- I'm cool, right?

- Yeah, you're, yeah.

- The kids think I'm cool?

- The-- yeah.

I don't know, but I wouldn't

trust what they think.

I think you're the

coolest teacher I've had.

- I'm kidding with you.

- Alright.

Oh, I'm gonna go.

- Yeah, no, absolutely.

These were great.

Thank you so much for these.

- Yeah, of course.

- Yeah.

- Thank you.

- Thank you.

Absolutely, Javier.

- See you tomorrow, Mr. Arda.

- Perfect.

- What's that?

- Oh, I swung by the

coffee shop on my free period,

ordered a pumpkin spice latte.

I'll teach you to call me

"basic", dickhead.

- You're not seriously

gonna throw coffee

on the guy, are you?

- Lighten up, man.

It's not even hot anymore.

- Shh, back up. Here he comes.

Okay, go.

- Hey.

- William?

- You wish, assh*le.

- What the f*ck?

You guys can't leave

me alone for an hour?

- Who's basic now?

- Uh, still you, bitch.

- Watch it, cock breath.

- What exactly

was the point of this mess?

- Oh, I don't know.

Just expounding on your thesis.

If Melville was analyzing

the h*m*-erotic undertones

of inter-male relationships,

your pathetic excuse for

a life is-- is what?

Um, a study in

the h*m*-erotic overtones

of the sadly

solitary male singular?

Do you know how pathetic

you look leaping at the

first chance you got to fool

around with that band geek?

- You think

you're so f*cking smart?

- Mm. And you think you're

so f*cking special.

- Do you have anything to add?

- Why would he?

- Shut up, Javier.

- He didn't tell you?

I thought you guys

were best friends.

- I said shut up, Javier.

- Well, uh, let me clue you in.

While you two, best bud,

teammate, whatever the fucks,

were off having your

no-h*m* bro time,

Brad here was in fact

analyzing some undertones

himself, so to speak.

With me.

- Brad!

- No f*cking way.

- I said shut up!

- Hey, what?

No, come here.

- Get off me!

Oh my God!

Are you guys f*cking serious?

Your pathetic

excuse for a life.

- Buy a car, h*m*!

- Yeah, but at least

in Carrie all the high school

assholes get what they deserve.

- Anybody's ever bullied you?

- If only life were

more like the movies.

- Go, go, go,

let's go, let's go, let's go.

- Where am I?

- Oh sh*t.

Javier, you're awake.

- Mr. Arda?

- Okay, don't try to--

don't try to move.

The nurse will be

back here in a minute.

- What?

What? What happened?

- We were actually hoping

that you'd be able

to tell us that.

Officer Stevens just left,

but if--

- The police were here?

- Yeah, I-- I called the cops

after I found you.

You were at-- at the bottom

of the stairs unconscious.

I just left my class.

- Yeah, to meet--

- To meet who, Javier?

Okay, no, no, no, just relax.

- I'm fine.

No, no, I'm not.

- Who did this to you, Javier?

- Nobody.

I-- I just fell.

I slipped.

Seriously, I just--

I fell down the stairs

when I was rushing to leave.

Idiot, right?

- Hello, Mr. Campos.

Oh, hello.

- Oh, uh, well,

give you guys some privacy.

- Javier, um,

hope to see you back

in class tomorrow.

I'm just glad you're okay.

- Thanks, Mr. Arda.

- So, Javier,

how are we feeling tonight?

- Oh,

well, I don't know about you.

Personally, I feel--

I feel like sh*t.

You know?

Turns out, falling down the

stairs is not a great time.

- Mm, yeah, well,

you have to be careful.

Stairs can be tricky.

- Telling me.

- Now, you are

a very lucky young man.

- Lucky?

What, are you kidding me?

- Well, you did fall down

a flight of stairs

and you barely have

a scratch on you, so yeah.

I'd say you're pretty lucky.

You know,

if you'd have landed in even

a slightly different angle...

- What the f*ck?

- I'm sorry.

- The hell was that?

- Did I hurt you?

- Uh, no, I'm fine.

Uh, sorry.

- Are-- are you sure?

- Yeah, I just--

I really want to get

the f*ck out of here.

- Okay, well, your father's

filling out your paperwork,

so that he can take you home.

- Okay.

- Overall,

everything is looking fine.

You're just going to need to

keep that neck brace on

for the next day or two.

- What? For real?

- Yeah.

Look, in the meantime,

how about I make you

a little bit more comfortable?

Yeah?

Okay.

I'm not gonna bite.

- Okay.

That's pretty.

- This? Thanks.

It was a gift from

my grandfather.

He passed away not too long ago,

but I like to wear it,

'cause it keeps him close.

- Sorry for your loss.

sh*t.

I'm losing it.

- Hey, mijo. How you doing?

- I'm fine. Totally fine.

Why?

- I just wanted to make sure

you weren't in too much pain.

- Oh. Yeah.

No, I'm good.

- If you're sure.

I should head to work.

And you should get going, too.

You don't want to miss the bus.

- f*ck the bu--

Pa, come on. Not again.

- Sorry, mijo.

Doctor said walking to

school, too much exertion.

Plus, look at the time.

- You can't send me on the bus.

Pa, I-- I almost d*ed.

- You said you were fine

two seconds ago.

- Well, it's too late

for me to call Bianca.

I mean, we barely make it to

first period on time

when she knows she's

picking me up in advance.

- Hence, bus.

- Wait.

- I'm sorry, Javi.

I'd love to drive you to school.

I would.

But unlike high school students,

college professors need to

be on time to their classes.

- No, it's not that.

It's just, um...

We don't have like, um--

- Any day now, mijo.

- Do we have a history of

mental illness in the family?

- Uh, no.

Not that I can think of.

But not unless you count Ta

Lupe, she was always a little--

She used to claim

she had psychic powers.

- Psychic powers?

- Yeah, but you know

how it is with la gente?

Nobody talks about

those kinds of things.

Mental health.

It's always.

Well, have a good day, mijo.

- Oh sh*t,

what the f*ck happened to you?

- Dude, something seriously

f*cked up is going on.

- Wait, I get it.

You got a little

over excited last night just--

- I got pushed down

the f*cking stairs.

- What?

- That text wasn't from William.

- Hey.

Nice neck brace.

Ow.

- I'm gonna f*cking k*ll them.

- No.

- No?

What the f*ck do you mean no?

Aren't you furious?

- Of course, I am.

But I'm also just

freaking the f*ck out.

- Javier?

Can we talk for a minute?

- Ow. What the f*ck?

- What the f*ck?

What the f*ck?

You already know what

the f*ck is, you assh*le.

- Bianca.

- You know what, come here.

Come here, so I can punch you

in the f*cking face again.

Don't walk away from me,

you f*cking cock jock bitch.

- Bianca, B,

just--

just give us a sec, okay?

No, I-- I'll be,

just-- just a sec, okay?

- Alright.

You know what, Brad?

I'ma be right over there.

Give me an excuse, any reason.

Please, I'd love to

come back over here

and have you eat some more

of my rings, you bitch.

Got you, Javi.

- What do you want, Brad?

- I wanted to say I'm sorry.

- You're sorry?

- Yeah.

I-- I tried to,

I came to your room--

- I know. I saw you.

- I went to the bathroom,

by the time I came back,

the nurse said you were gone.

- Yeah.

Just wanted to go home.

- Listen, Javier.

I know things between us

have been complicated.

- Brad--

- It's not that I don't,

I just-- I just can't.

Javier, I'm not like you.

- You're not like me?

What? Mexican?

Yeah. Uh, I think I knew.

Gay?

Brad, I know you better than

anyone else at this school

and I'm pretty damn sure--

- I'm not brave like you.

I don't know if I'm...

what I am.

I'm still figuring things out.

- Yeah. Yeah.

No, I get that.

- And about what

happened yesterday.

Obviously, I'm so sorry--

- Are you f*cking kidding me?

- I never meant to--

- Oh, to push me down

a stairwell?

Oh, well, if he

didn't mean it, guys.

Right?

Glad to hear it, man.

- I was gonna

give this to you last night.

I am sorry, you know?

- Yo, what the f*ck, Javier?

What the f*ck?

Javier, what the f*ck?

- sh*t.

- Yo, what the f*ck, Javier?

- Hey, nice neck brace, assh*le.

- Eat my ass, Peter!

- Ow, d*ck.

- Mental health day.

Mental health day.

Like, are you sure?

Like, for sure? For sure?

- No, I don't-- I don't know.

I mean, like--

Listen, I know things that I--

I couldn't possibly know.

- Ooh. Like what?

- Well,

you paint in the nude for one.

- Oh, yeah. I do.

What, I never told

you that before?

- No!

- Hmm.

- I saw it.

- Okay, but like,

it first happened

when the nurse touched you.

- Yeah, and then when

I touched your painting.

- Ooh, which one?

- The one of us.

- Oh, I like that one.

- Focus, Basquiat.

And then when

I touched Brad's teddy bear.

- Okay, but like

is there a rhyme or a reason

to these visions?

Like is this gonna--

- Stop that.

Oh, cut that sh*t out right now.

No, not that I can tell.

I mean--

I can't control them.

That I know for sure.

- But they're

triggered by touch.

Of either like a person

or a thing.

- Yeah, they have been so far.

They're practically

random otherwise.

- I'ma get my vision.

- I will f*cking--

- You know,

I just can't believe--

- I know, it's just crazy.

- That you didn't

tell me about Brad.

- That's what you're hung up on?

- Yeah, yeah, like visions,

questioning your sanity,

whatever.

Like blah, blah, blah.

You have been f*cking Brad--

- That's not the point, B!

I mean, when I-- when I

touched the-- I saw-- I th--

I think Brad had k*lled himself.

- Maybe.

- That's all you have to say?

- Okay,

what do you want me to say?

- I don't know.

This conversation isn't exactly

going how I expected it to go.

- Hm. No?

- No! B, I'm freaking out!

Like yesterday, I practically

bashed my brains in

fallen down the f*cking stairs.

And then I started

having hallucinations

or visions or some sh*t,

and you're just

like, you know, "whatevs."

Like, you're hung up on the fact

that Brad and I

are sleeping together.

I'm telling you,

he might k*ll himself.

- What? I don't not care

that Brad might k*ll himself.

- Meanwhile, I'm terrified

that I'm just gonna end up

like my crazy Ta Lupe.

- What happened to Ta Lupe?

- Nothing. She d*ed

of old age in like 1999,

but everyone thought

she was nuts.

- Okay, well,

first of all, you are not nuts.

Okay, this kind of sh*t

happens like all the time.

- All the time?

- Okay, maybe not all the time,

but it happens.

Haven't you ever

seen The Dead Zone?

- No.

- Okay, it's fine.

Book's better.

What about The Witching Hour?

- No.

- Charmed?

- No.

- Rose Red?

- No! B, focus!

- It's called "psychometry".

It's not an unheard of ability.

You touch people or things

and then have visions

about the past or future

of that person or--

- Wait, psychometry? What?

How do you know--

How do you know about this?

- Doesn't matter.

The point is,

the weirdest thing that's

happening with all of this

is that all this time,

you've been schtupping Brad

and didn't have the decency

to tell me, your best friend,

you f*cking d*ck.

I mean, I told you about

when I lost my V-card

to Sean Freeman at summer camp.

And then when I made out with

Katherine Ryder at that--

I don't know what--

- I know, I know. Okay.

Hey, you're--

I'm sorry, alright.

I've-- I've--

I've been tweaking.

- I get it.

I do.

Don't let that sh*t

happen again, okay?

- I won't. I promise.

- What?

- Nothing.

So will you help me?

- Right, okay.

Uh, for starters, these uh--

these visions.

If we're gonna move forward

under the assumption that

these visions are real,

which you know,

I'm inclined to do,

we've got to figure out what

exactly you're dealing with.

- So far, the Internet's

only marginally helpful.

- Well, are the visions

of the past or the future?

- Both.

The one with the nurse,

I mean, definitely

seemed to be the past, but--

The one about Brad--

- Oh, I've got nothing.

- What?!

- What, what?

Oh, did you-- did you want me

to write you a prescription?

I'm not a doctor.

Barely passed in AP Chem.

- You sure as hell

act like an expert.

- I have a natural confidence.

Don't hate on

my air of authority.

- I just feel like everything's

spiraling out of control.

- Mm. Well, the idea that there

was any control to begin with is

a f*cking illusion.

There's only one

thing in the universe

we have even the

tiniest bit of control over.

- What's that?

- Ourselves.

Our choices.

- Comforting.

- I kind of think so.

It's okay. It means

we've got a decision to make.

- What decision?

- Well, do you want to let

your down-low boy-toy pull

a dingle-dangle

in the locker room,

or are you gonna do

something about it?

- Bianca.

- What?

Like just yesterday you were

wishing gruesome deaths

on those assholes,

Brad included.

And that was before they

pushed you down the stairs.

- Nice, nice, nice, nice, nice.

- Thanks, man.

- It's good.

Dude.

- Dude.

- You're still

my best bro and all.

But is it cool if you like

just hold off for a sec?

- What--

what do you mean?

- The shower.

- You're not serious.

- I'm sorry, dude,

but now that you're a h*m*,

I can't just let you peep

at our collective junk.

- You kidding me?

- Dude, I'm captain.

I have to watch

out for the team.

- f*ck you, man!

- It doesn't matter, okay?

We have to do something.

- Agreed.

Time to make a move.

- Like?

- Oh, I don't know,

Mr. Not-So-Valedictorian.

Maybe go talk Brad out of

f*cking k*lling himself.

You're such an idiot sometimes,

you know that?

That's way harsh, B.

- All yours, man.

- Thanks for the consideration.

- Hello?

Trevor, is that you?

- Let's go.

- Coming. sh*t.

- Trevor?

- Trevor? Where's Brad?

- Why the f*ck do you care?

- Listen, f*ck-face,

it's an emergency.

- What are you doing?

- It's locked.

- What do you mean it's locked?

- Did everyone leave?

- When did this ever locked?

Brad! Open the door!

- Brad!

- Brad!

- Brad!

- Brad, open the door!

- Brad!

- Brad!

You don't have to do this!

Come on, let's call the police.

- No.

- I was too late.

- It's not your fault.

- I couldn't stop him.

- Javier.

- If only I'd talked to him.

If only I just

really talked to him.

If only I hadn't outed him

in front of Ginny and Trevor.

f*ck!

- I was giving him sh*t.

I shouldn't have,

'cause he was my friend.

But I was giving him sh*t for,

you know, for being gay.

I didn't mean for him...

He's my best friend.

- I gotta get out of here.

- Yeah, yeah,

I'll drop you home.

- You know, um,

as your teacher, I'm--

I'm expected to stand up here

and have all of the

answers to everything.

But-- but you're

old enough now to know

that there are certain things

for which there

really aren't any answers.

Teen su1c1de.

Death.

The loss of life.

It's always tragic.

And even more so when that--

that life was

so certain to be full of--

And the thing that we all have

to come to terms with here

is that Brad was

struggling with something that--

that-- that we had

no awareness of.

Yet I know that Brad and Phil,

who left us

earlier this year as well,

would have

wanted us to carry on.

Graduation Day is this Friday

and we have to

remember to celebrate

the legacies of guys

like Brad Warren, Phil Casey,

the impact they've left us with.

It will never be forgotten,

but their spirit

lives on with us.

As Melville writes,

"It is only when caught in the

swift, sudden turn of death,

that mortals realize

the silent, subtle,

ever-present perils of life."

- What?

- Attention, departing seniors.

After much consideration,

the faculty has decided

to proceed as planned

with this Thursday night's

Farewell Lock-In.

- Yes.

- Also, the counseling staff is

available throughout the day

for all of your emotional needs.

Thank you.

That is all.

- Well, then.

- It's bullshit.

Isn't it f*cked up?

I mean, Brad literally

just k*lled himself.

Like at least

when Phil k*lled himself,

we canceled

last week's pep rally.

- I mean, it is f*cked up.

It's also not your fault.

You know that, right?

- I do.

- Do you?

I mean, it's okay to be sad.

Your boyfriend just d*ed.

- Okay,

well, he wasn't my boyfriend.

- I know,

but saying you're a f*ck buddy

just sounds

really disrespectful.

- Yeah, it does.

- Look, I'm just saying

you can feel your feelings,

but you got other things to

worry about right now.

- Batter's out! Strike three!

- Did you hear me?

sh*t.

- He's trying to apologize.

- I said I was sorry.

- Right.

- Brad was my best friend.

- I-- I know.

I know how close you guys were.

- You guys were like--

partners or whatever?

- Well, wait. Partners?

- Maybe if I had known.

Or if I had more time.

I was such a d*ck!

- And assh*le, even.

- You're not helping.

- Things that I said to him.

- Hey.

Whoa, whoa, hey!

Come on, man.

You were just trying to

watch out for the team.

- What did you just say?

- What?

- About the team.

- I--

I don't-- I don't know.

- You couldn't. But you did.

You couldn't know, but you did.

- Let's go, Javier.

- You knew Brad

was gonna do something!

That's why you were

there after practice!

How did you know?

- Yo, weren't you just

apologizing for being a d*ck?

- Come on, Trev.

- Another one?

- Yeah.

- What'd you see?

- Brad.

I think Trevor really loved him.

- I saw a p*rn like that once.

- What the f*ck, B?

- I'm sorry,

I'm just really bad at this like

emotional sensitivity sh*t.

- No sh*t.

f*ck!

f*ck.

- Hey.

Look, I know you're like

really sad and angry right now,

but don't let your anger

get the best of you, okay.

Here comes Billy Boy.

- Hey.

- Hey.

- Hey.

Oh.

Uh, girl, what was that?

Yeah, I'll walk with you.

Over there.

Sorry, y'all, I gotta go.

I just-- I'll be over

here walking with her.

Somewhere.

You know what?

I'll just be over here.

- So, um, I--

I wanted to say sorry.

About Brad, I mean.

- You did?

- Yeah.

My condolences.

- Thanks.

I mean, we weren't--

We're--

I don't know what we were.

It was complicated.

I didn't exactly know

that our complications

were common knowledge, though.

- Right.

No, I-- I mean,

I didn't want to

assume anything,

but you definitely seem sad.

Like particularly sad about it.

- Yeah. Uh...

I guess I am.

- I mean, people seem to have

really liked him and all,

but, hell,

you look around,

people seem more

concerned with graduation

and the lock-in and the fact

that two guys d*ed this year.

- Yes! It's f*cked up!

With Phil,

the whole school shut down!

Like we had a four-day weekend.

- They canceled

the pep rally and everything.

- Exactly! And Brad

doesn't even get a half-day?

What the f*ck?

It's like we used up

all our grief points.

What?

- Sorry.

I-- I didn't mean to laugh.

- No, it's-- it's cool.

- I know you're probably

going through a lot.

- You have no idea.

- Huh?

- Nothing.

- I was just gonna say,

I'd like to be there for you.

If like you needed to

talk or whatever.

- Yeah?

- Yeah,

I've been watching you.

- What?

- I mean, just that like,

I've seen you around.

You seem like a really cool guy.

I'd really like to

get to know you better.

- Oh, uh.

- Idiot!

- I'm so sorry.

- Oh, of course.

Sorry.

You must still be hurting.

- My neck, the neck brace.

My neck.

- Yeah.

- Yeah, yeah, I am.

I'm still hurting.

It's just,

it's all tender up in here.

Right there.

- Anyway, I'm officially

super late for physics.

I spent all night

studying simple machines.

Talk soon?

- Definitely.

What a weird f*cking day.

- Wait.

- What?

- I can't.

- Can't what? Go to Trig?

- Yeah.

- Seriously?

- I just have to

get out of here.

I'm gonna cut the

rest of the day.

- Are you sure?

What about your attendance?

- We're seniors.

It's our last week of classes

and my best friend just d*ed.

I'm sure they'll understand.

- Where are you going?

- Come on, Ginny.

It's the farthest

thing from my mind.

- Here.

Take my car.

See you after.

- Thanks, babe.

Yeah, I just need to

not be here right now.

- I get it.

- What about Ginny?

- What about who?

- Oh.

- How much class do you think

we've actually attended

these past four years?

- Enough.

- You think?

- You're practically

valedictorian whether

Ginny Macher likes it or not

and I am doing more than fine.

Thank you very much.

Who gives a f*ck

if we miss a few classes?

- Reduce, reuse,

recycle, assh*le.

- Another one?

What is it?

- Trevor.

- m*rder?

- What I said.

- f*ck, dude!

- Yeah.

- I mean, if anyone's gonna die,

though like--

- Bianca!

- What? Trevor is such

an assh*le.

- Yeah.

- No, he made your life

in high school a living hell.

- We can't just let him die.

- Actually, we could.

- Bianca!

- I'm sorry,

I'm driving, aren't I?

I'm just saying.

- Come on, come on.

Where is this guy?

- Wait, I remember something.

- Well?

- I--

I've seen the place before.

- Details, bitch.

- In-- in--

in my vision,

Trevor, Brad, and Ginny were

parked overlooking the sunset.

It's the same place.

It's gotta be.

- You've reached

Brad Warren,

but I can't answer

the phone right now.

Uh, please leave a message

and I'll get back to you

whenever I can.

- Hey, man.

I know you'll never get this.

But I guess I just wanted

to hear your voice.

And I wanted to tell you,

I'm sorry.

I'm really sorry.

And I can't believe you're gone.

And I'm really gonna

miss you, Brad.

I'm really gonna miss you.

- Where you going?

- If there's only

one place in town

high up enough to

see everything,

one place where

all the dipshits go

after their pep rallies

and sh*t.

- The parking structure

by the old library!

Let's go!

Floor it! Floor it!

- sh*t!

- Keep driving.

- Roger that.

You okay, buddy?

That's gross.

- Someone's doing this, Bianca.

Someone's k*lling our friends.

- Do we really

call those guys our friends?

- Bianca!

- sh*t, sorry.

- I mean,

we're talking about m*rder.

Like, we're actually really

talking about m*rder.

- The news outlets are

already reporting it as--

- A su1c1de? As if!

Who the hell just walks off the

edge of a parking structure?

- People who want to

commit su1c1de.

Hey, are you sure you saw

what you think you did?

- Positive.

- sh*t.

- What the hell

are we gonna do?

- Okay, well,

we can't go to the cops.

- Obviously.

- At least, not without

any like hard evidence.

- Which would consist of what?

- I have no f*cking clue!

- Great.

- Hey, but we do have

a sh*t ton of soft evidence.

- What the hell

is soft evidence?

- Dude, okay,

thanks to the universe or God

or the statistics

of brain damage.

f*ck it, thanks to

your crazy Ta Lupe,

you're having these visions,

right?

We can use them to

figure out who's f*cking

playing Billy Loomis here.

We can--

we can backtrack from there,

gather any actual

evidence we need,

and then, wham-o, stick the cops

on this sick fucker!

sh*t, that hurt, bro.

- So, who can get to him

before it's too late?

- Him.

Or her.

- What about Ginny?

- What about who?

- Dude!

- I'm busy, man.

- Dude!

Ginny's out of her

student council meeting.

Tish said they finished early.

- sh*t. You gotta go.

- What?

- Get out of here!

- assh*le.

- Thanks for the heads up.

- Hey, sweetheart.

How are you holding up?

- About as well

as can be expected.

- Listen,

I've been thinking about it

and I think

you should stay home.

For the rest of the week.

I can write you a note.

- I can't, Mom.

- Sure, you can.

- No, I can't.

I have responsibilities.

- I'm sure your

classmates will understand.

- It doesn't matter

if they understand or not.

I'm class president.

I'm valedictorian.

I'm in charge of

the Senior Lock-In.

- Ginny, calm down.

- You calm down, Deborah.

- Excuse me?

- Sorry, Mom.

I'm sorry.

- Listen, I know

this must be hard for you.

- I'd prefer

not to talk about it.

- Death is--

- I said, I don't want to

talk about it.

- Fine.

You can talk about

it on your own time.

With Dr. Rosenberg.

- Add it to the list.

- What?

- Nothing.

- I wish you would reconsider.

- I can't.

Nothing is turning out

like it was supposed to.

You know, this is the

end of our senior year.

It was supposed to be perfect.

- I know, baby.

- Happy Thursday,

Springhurst Barons!

- Happy Thursday?

- Over the past few days,

our school has faced

a series of tragic suicides.

The impact of which no one

feels more acutely than I do.

- Oh, acutely?

Putting that SAT vocab

to practice, I hear.

- But more than anything,

I know that Trevor Strode,

and Brad Warren

would want us to strive on.

To celebrate our achievements.

So, as is tradition here

at Springhurst High,

the night before graduation

is our Senior Lock-In!

And as your class president

and valedictorian,

it is my honor to

officially invite

all departing seniors to

join me this evening

to spend the night

in these hallowed halls

and bid farewell to what is

soon-to-be our alma mater.

- Wow.

- Seriously,

can you say heartless?

- She's not entirely heartless.

- Her boyfriend was just

m*rder*d

and she's out here wishing

everybody a happy Thursday.

- I feel like it'd be weirder

if she was a weep-fest.

This is exactly how I'd expect

Miss Perfection to handle

anything more emotionally

trying than a statistics exam.

- I guess, totally in character,

but like too much in character.

Like she's trying way

too hard to be morbid.

Business as usual, carrying on.

Like she's covering

something up.

Her murderous sociopathy,

for instance.

- Ginny's a lot of things,

but do you really think that--

Do you really think

she's a m*rder*r?

- I just--

I really don't see why not.

Everybody knows

Trevor was a dog.

Dude had half the cheerleading

team on a tight rotation

and who helped him keep it

under wraps for so long? Hmm?

Oh yes, that would be

his closeted bestie.

- Brad, I know,

I just--

I don't know,

I just really don't think--

- Don't think what?

- I don't--

I don't think that, um--

- That we're gonna go

to the Lock-In.

You know,

out of respect for the dead,

the dead who we've respected

so-- so much in this life.

- No?

It's a bummer.

It's gonna be fun.

- You're going?

- Yeah.

I was actually

hoping you were, too.

- Yeah.

- Yeah?

- Yeah.

- Okay, that's enough of that.

- Well, I mean

that I guess there's no reason

that we can't respect the dead

and go to the Senior Lock-In.

- Multitasking.

- Yeah.

- Sure, I like it.

- Cool.

I mean, I guess I'll

see you tonight then.

- Tonight?

Tonight.

- You guys are so gross.

- At least, I have options.

Oh, wait,

William, you dropped your--

- All departing seniors,

please remember to bring

your permission slip

to the gymnasium

- sh*t.

to report to

this year's Lock-In.

- Yo, Javi, are you okay?

I had somehow convinced

Nurse Hernandez

not to contact your dad.

- Where are you?

- In the gym,

herding all the seniors in here

for like pizza and sh*t.

- It's William.

- What is?

- The k*ller. I saw it.

Bianca.

I thought he liked me.

- No, I'm sorry, Javi.

- He's after Ginny

and she's next.

- Are you sure?

- Yes, yes,

I saw it when I picked up

his copy of Moby d*ck.

Okay, we have to find him

before he gets to her.

- I'm on it.

Meet me in the band room.

- The band room?

- The band room.

- Okay, I'm on my way.

And Bianca.

Just be careful.

- Where the f*ck is he?

- Are you sure Javier

will actually be into

a trumpet serenade?

- Uh, yeah, no, he loves it.

He's like--

always like, you know,

if music be the fruit of love,

play on.

- Yeah? A regular Orsino, huh?

- Yeah.

Yeah, sure.

- I really like him, Bianca.

- Oh?

- And when I see the way people

at this school treat him,

it just makes me so angry.

- Angry, you say?

- Yes, very angry.

- Cool, yeah, cool.

How angry are we talking?

You know, on a scale of 1 to 10?

- Let's just say

I've let my anger

get the better of me before.

Like in my old school.

- Interesting.

- Maybe that's why

I was so eager

to have a fresh start here.

To meet new people who

didn't know that side of me.

- Mm-hmm.

- But to see

the way people like Trevor

and Ginny treat

a great guy like Javier,

just reminds me

that new school or not,

people are all the same.

Shitty.

But maybe a trumpet serenade

will take his mind off that.

- Ginny? Is that you?

- Who's that?

- It's me.

- Javier?

- A murderous

trumpet-playing Casanova.

People are so weird.

- Hey, listen, I know this

is gonna sound really weird,

but you're in danger

and we have to get out of here,

like right now.

- What the f*ck

are you talking about?

- I'll explain it all later,

but right now we have to go.

For real.

- You're nuts.

- Bianca?

What the f*ck?

sh*t, my head.

- Sorry not sorry, Billy Loomis.

That's what happens

when you m*rder people.

- Please,

you just have to trust me.

- Okay, why should I?

- m*rder people?

What the f*ck are you--

Is this an extension cord?

- Yeah,

like where the f*ck am I

supposed to find rope

in this place?

- Listen, just let me go.

We can talk this out.

- Oh, as if, Norman Bates.

Once Javier gets here,

we'll figure out how to prove

that you're the one behind

this mysterious rash

of tragic teenage suicides

and then

we'll let you go, alright?

Into the custody of

the police, m*rder boy.

- Because I'm trying

to help you.

- Okay, that's exactly

what doesn't make any sense.

- What?

- What reason have I ever

given you to want to help me?

- I don't know

what you're talking about.

- I'm talking about Brad

and Trevor.

I'm talking about Ginny.

- Ginny's dead?

- Not yet. She--

um, I mean just--

Shut up!

We are on to you.

Javier has your

copy of Moby d*ck.

- What does that

have to do with this?

- I said shut up!

- No, what does

my copy of Moby d*ck

have to do with anything?

I lost it halfway

through the semester.

- What?

- Yeah, I finished

reading it early, then lost it.

I had to borrow a copy

to finish my final paper.

- Borrow?

From who?

- Ginny, we can discuss

the magnitude

of your cuntiness later.

Right now we have to go.

- Okay,

get the f*ck off me!

- He's here.

- Who is?

- We need to go. Right now.

- What the f*ck is going on?

- Brad and Trevor

didn't k*ll themselves.

- You're f*cking insane!

- No, they were m*rder*d.

And if you don't listen to

me, you're gonna be next.

- Are you threatening me?

- For someone

who's supposedly so smart,

you really are a dumb bitch.

- No.

- Okay, Mr. Arda,

what's going on?

- A balancing of the scales.

- What?

- What are you talking about?

- No, no, no, no, no.

Mr. Arda, you're

supposed to be William.

- Excuse me?

- I-- I saw the book.

I saw it.

You-- It can't be you.

You were the only teacher

who-- You're so kind to me.

- Javier, it's okay.

You're confused. I get it.

Just try to relax. Breathe.

I'm gonna take

care of everything.

- Mr. Arda,

I don't understand.

- Of course, you don't.

Understanding, compassion,

human decency,

all outside of your depth.

You f*cking bitch.

- Okay, sir,

that's the second time

you've called me a "bitch"

in the past two minutes.

I really don't appreciate

being spoken to like this.

- Oh, you really

don't appreciate

being spoken to like this?

That's a little rich

coming from you.

Do you think that I-- Do you

think that Javier appreciates

all of the abuse that you

and your little hormone-filled

boy-toys have heaped on

him this entire time?

- Mr. Arda, stop this.

I'm fine.

- You are not fine!

You aren't!

I see it.

I-- I-- I see everything.

I see the bullying,

the abuse, the harassment.

And it is not acceptable!

- What's going on?

- There's a m*rder*r!

- What?

- I'm sorry.

We thought it was you.

- Are you serious?

- We have to go find Javier.

Come on!

- Bianca!

- You'll be disciplined

for your behavior.

I know what

you're going through, Javi.

'Cause I went through it, too.

It got so bad, I didn't

think I had any other choice.

- Mr. Arda, please.

- So I tried to end it myself,

but I couldn't even

do that right.

I was such a f*ck-up.

But what have I always

tried to teach you, Javi?

In the moments

of your greatest failure,

you'll find

your greatest discovery.

And in that moment,

I'd realize something important.

It's not us that should be

driven to the depths of despair

by their cruelty.

So if I want to end it,

I have to end them.

- No. No. Look at me.

Look at me.

You have to calm down.

Why does everybody keep on

telling me to calm down?

You, Phil.

- Phil Casey?

- All these student athletes

think they're God's gift.

They really think they're

gonna make it to the majors?

They have no idea what it's like

out there in the real world.

Entitled little shits.

What they really are is animals.

- You k*lled Phil.

- And Trevor.

And Brad.

- No.

- Yes.

God, am I glad.

Finally, you little fuckheads

are getting what you deserve.

It doesn't matter who you are.

There's no privilege here.

Or bureaucracy to hide behind.

Valedictorian,

star athlete, rich parent.

It doesn't matter

who the f*ck you are.

If you behave like an animal,

you get put down like an animal.

- Mr. Arda,

you don't have to do this.

- Yes, Javier. I do.

My entire high school career,

fuckheads like Ginny, and Brad,

and Trevor made my

life a living hell.

And all the years since,

nothing has changed.

I see the same thing over,

and over, and over again.

But now, we don't have to

put up with their sh*t, Javi.

Now we can

stand up for ourselves.

- Hey, Moby d*ck!

- Javier!

f*cking theater geeks.

- Damn it!

Hey! m*therf*cker! God!

- Oh, oh sh*t, God, f*ck.

f*ck.

William, William.

Look, hey, hey, okay?

Sorry, I think you need

to apply pressure, okay.

- Javier.

- I know, I know.

- And Ginny.

- I know.

- You have to help them.

- Here. Here.

Here, call for help, okay?

Okay, I'll be right back.

f*ck, I shouldn't

have said that.

f*ck, f*ck.

God, if I die, trying

to save Ginny-f*cking-Macher.

I'll k*ll her.

- 911, what's your emergency?

- Help, help! Help!

Oh my God! Help!

Oh my God

Let go of me!

Oh my God!

- You think you're so much

better than anyone else

with your money

and your grades.

You think you can treat

everyone else like trash.

Well, not anymore, Ginny.

- Mr. Arda.

Please.

If you've ever

cared about me--

- Javier!

- Stop this now.

- Javier,

I'm doing this for you.

- Javier! Javi, Javier!

- Will you shut up!

I mean, they-- they put you

in the hospital, Javier.

And they gotta pay for that.

And once they finally get what

they deserve and they're gone,

that'll clear the way for

you to be valedictorian.

- I don't want--

I don't want that.

- This is our chance, Javier.

Please, help me.

Come on, man.

I've helped so many kids.

Just somebody help me once?

- Do you hear yourself?

- It's all for you, Javier.

All of it.

- No. No!

You're not doing this for me.

You're doing this for yourself.

Maybe you and I

weren't so different once.

But these aren't the

same people who hurt you.

- Come on.

Yeah.

They're all the same.

- William, are you still there?

- Ginny, now!

- I'll show you a bitch,

assh*le!

- Hold on.

Help is on the way.

- Better safe than sorry.

- Wait!

Don't k*ll him. Just--

Just wait.

- Oh, today's

your lucky day, assh*le.

- Hey, can-- can you hold on

just one sec, please?

Thank you.

Hi.

Um, listen, I just--

I just want to say

that I'm sorry.

I thought you were a m*rder*r.

Yeah.

What's the matter?

- Check it out.

Officially graduation.

Congrats.

We made it.

- You too.

- Who would-a thunk?

- I'm gonna need

so much therapy.

- Yeah.

That's high school for you.

- I was talking about

the whole m*rder thing.

He was just like me, you know?

- Yeah.

- And all of this he did it,

because of me.

- No, no, Javier,

he was a f*cking bat-sh*t--

- What if I end up like him,

Bianca?

Just-- just totally

twisted and-- and crazy.

- That's not gonna happen.

- How do you know?

- Because, stupid,

you've got me.

- Yeah, I do.

- What?

- Man, f*ck this place.

- Thank God, that's over.

For real, dude, oh my God.
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